Category: The Parson’s Patch
Preaching Romans 3:9-24
I continue my journey through Paul’s letter to Romans. It occurred to me this morning as I was thinking about my sermon that one might best understand the message of Romans (Which I believe to be, “God is faithful”) by understanding Jesus as presented in all four gospels. Not theologically, not historically but in reality. Who Jesus was is who he is today.
My text this morning was Romans 3:9-24. Prior to this “summary” Paul has spent 3 chapters winding his way through the maze of human sin and he now reaches the climax. Paul is a bad news first kind of guy. If we finished reading Romans in 3:20 the news would be disastrous. Fortunately for us Paul says “But now…” in verse 21. I love the way the message describes it, “The God setting things right has become Jesus setting things right for us – not only us, but everyone who believes in him!”
God has, in Jesus, restored us to the way it was always meant to be. We have become living testimonies to the way in which the world will one day be. There is one phrase in verses 21-24 which summarise, in my opinion, the love of God in Christ. In verse 22 the Greek says, “dikaiosyne de theo dia pisteos Iesou Christou” translated says, “the righteousness of God through the faith of Jesus Christ”
Let us consider that word “faith” for a moment:
- I grew up in a tradition in which faith was something we owned. It was ours and our responsibility. If we wanted healing, prayers answered we trotted “our faith” out.
- In many translations the Greek word “pisteos” is translated “faith”
- The inference versions like the NIV give us is that it is “our faith in Christ” which gives us our righteousness or our right standing before God.
- However, the argument can be made just as strongly that the word we translate “faith” in fact means, “the faithfulness of Jesus Christ” meaning, it is Jesus’ faithfulness which gives us our standing before God. It is the faithfulness of Jesus to the task set to him by the father which has ensured our place in relationship with God.
- When we think of faith as something we have and give to God in exchange for “righteousness” we are inadvertently saying we have created our righteousness.
- If we accept faith as the faithfulness of God in Jesus Christ we in fact place Jesus is at the centre of our relationship with God, not us.
It is not that God is only faithful to us – He has in Jesus Christ acted faithfully and undertaken the entire task of making us right before God! He has done what we could never do for ourselves!
Jesus is God’s faithfulness in action and therefore he is God’s faithfulness revealed. Not in the abstract but personally. Furthermore, the resurrection lies at the heart of the Christian faith. Not as a symbol of our sin but of God’s faithfulness to us, to all of creation.
Jesus is the centre of Paul’s arguments. At every turn he is arguing out of his understanding God’s faithfulness revealed through the faithfulness of Jesus Christ. If this is the case we would do well to keep Jesus at the centre of our lives.
I told our church this morning that as their pastor it is my role to help them keep Jesus at the centre of their life. How will I do that?
- I will keep him at the centre of my own life!
- I will seek to lead you faithfully in worship on Sundays as we inhabit the story of God
- I will be here for you, to talk with you, pray with and for you
- In everything I do I will seek, along with the elders, to help you live faithfully as God’s people by keeping Jesus at the very heart of everything we do.
And then I encouraged them to do two things for me. I encouraged them to be honest with themselves as to where they are in relationship with Jesus? Not church, not Bible reading or prayer – but Jesus. Secondly, I encouraged them to read the Gospel story of Jesus as portrayed by John and to immerse themselves in His story as a way of connecting again with the Jesus presented by Paul in Romans and present to us on a daily basis.
Peace be with you..
The Parson’s Patch: Sunday 29th May 2011
John 12:24-26
“24 Very truly, I tell you, unless a grain of wheat falls into the earth and dies, it remains just a single grain; but if it dies, it bears much fruit. 25 Those who love their life lose it, and those who hate their life in this world will keep it for eternal life. 26 Whoever serves me must follow me, and where I am, there will my servant be also. Whoever serves me, the Father will honor.” NRSV
This was not my sermon text this morning however, without it, I don’t think I could have preached! It has been a difficult week for me personally. About what? It doesn’t matter, it is personal. Let’s just say I was confronted with some of my own sinfulness (I know it will shock many of you that I am not perfect). Thank goodness for God’s faithfulness. This morning I had a choice; I could hold on to my attitudes and take them into the pulpit or follow the words of Jesus in John chapter 12:24-26 and die to myself. Thankfully I chose the latter. It has only taken me 2 years but I suspect it will now be a daily decision.
Last night I was at the church quite late. It was my turn to clean the church. had a bit of time to think and pray. This week was so hard for me personally (not directly church related) I wondered what it would be like do something else. Maybe if I wasn’t a pastor I wouldn’t have to face this attitude (or maybe it wouldn’t feel so obvious). Nevertheless, as I vacuumed the church and prayed, I was grateful for the vocation gifted to me by God. There is nothing else in this life I would rather be doing in Jesus’ name. I am so very blessed to pastor the church I do. God is indeed faithful!
Finally, hopefully this week I will be able to post some more of my review of Dave Black’s “Why Four Gospels?” and I hope to ask for some advice on learning Greek.
Peace be with you,
Mark
The Parson’s Patch…
Sunday 22nd May 2011
I hate preaching. I enjoy preaching. I hate preaching (and on it goes).
I usually find the first week back from holidays difficult. This week more so because I decided to begin a series on Romans! I have always wanted to preach through the letter and figured now was as a good a time as any. Furthermore, I accpeted an invitation to preach at another church in the evening. I shouldn’t do that first week back!
I don’t know about others but I have a rhythm when it comes to preparing sermons. If I try to short cut the process even a little I find myself lost and I struggle to ever get to a place where I am comfortable with what I am saying. It doesn’t mean God won’t speak but I know I haven’t been true to what I know need to be done in order to hear the Word of God. It happened this way this week. You think I would learn!
My text this morning was Romans 1:1-7:
Paul’s letter to the Romans (Paul’s authorship is rarely challenged) is a breathtaking vision of the Christian life. The letter towers over the rest of the New Testament. I am sure when Paul was writing the letter from Corinth or nearby he had no idea the controversy his words would spark through the ages. I will leave my last word to the great Bishop who says this about Romans,
“This letter is about the way in which, through the lens of the gospel, the covenant plan and purpose of the one true God has been unveiled before the world…the creator of the world has brought world history to its climax. Paul is urging the Roman Christians to understand this purpose, and their own place in it so they can live and work appropriately” (NT Wright, NIB, P.416)
Peace be with you,
Mark


