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Will you join me this morning by taking your Bibles and turning to Paul’s epistle to
the Romans, Romans chapter eight. This morning I will begin a two part series on the Christian’s
exultation. We have much to praise God about and we see some of these great truths detailed
for us beginning in verse 31. Romans chapter eight verse 31. And even though we will only
look at a few of these verses this morning, I want to read this last section of this great
chapter two you. What then shall we say to these things? If
God is for us, who is against us? He who did not spare His own Son, but delivered Him up
for us all, how will He not also with Him freely give us all things? Who will bring
a charge against God’s elect? God is the one who justifies; who is the one who condemns?
Christ Jesus is He who died, yes, rather who was raised, who is at the right hand of God,
who also intercedes for us. Who shall separate us from the love of Christ? Shall tribulation,
or distress, or persecution, or famine, or nakedness, or peril, or sword? Just as it
is written, "FOR THY SAKE WE ARE BEING PUT TO DEATH ALL DAY LONG; WE WERE CONSIDERED
AS SHEEP TO BE SLAUGHTERED." But in all these things we overwhelmingly conquer through Him
who loved us. For I am convinced that neither death, nor life, nor angels, nor principalities,
nor things present, nor things to come, nor powers, nor height, nor depth, nor any other
created thing, shall be able to separate us from the love of God, which is in Christ Jesus
our Lord. Indeed, this is a passage that speaks to the
Christian’s exaltation. I pray that you have come here starving for the greatness
of God, because, once again, we have a passage set before us that brings us to his very throne
in humility, an amazing passage that should arrest the attention of every saint, one that
allows us to behold the grandeur of the gospel from yet another vantage point. In fact, whenever
you view your salvation it is like looking at light being refracted through a diamond.
Every vantage point gives you get another opportunity to see something beautiful and
brilliant. So today we will once again examine the great doctrines of our salvation.
Before we look closely at the text, may I remind you that the apostle Paul has told
us in Ephesians six that we are to be strong in the Lord and in the strength of his might?
And he tells us that we are to put on the full armor of God that you may be able to
stand firm against the schemes of the devil. And one of the devil’s greatest schemes
is to distort the Word of God. We saw this, for example, back in the Garden in the very
beginning. And in that text in Ephesians six the way we stand firm against these schemes,
especially the schemes of distortion and other types of temptation is to gird our loins with
truth, put on the breastplate of righteousness, have our feet shod with the preparation of
the gospel of peace. In other words, know that that great war is over because of what
Christ has done. We are to take up the shield of faith. We are to wear the helmet of salvation,
take up the sword of the Spirit which is the Word of God and so forth.
And here in Romans chapter eight as you look at this text, you will see many of the elements
of this great panoply that we are to wear, the armor of God that helps us to stand firm.
And if you understand these truths and live consistently with them, you will not suffer
defeat in your Christian life. And so it is for this reason that we are going through
every verse, every word very, very slowly and carefully and systematically so that we
don’t miss anything that God would have for us. Because frankly, dear friends, if
you lack doctrine, if you do not understand Bible doctrine, you will lack discernment
and if you lack discernment in your life, you will be vulnerable to defeat. We see it
all of the time. You will be vulnerable to moral compromise. You will be vulnerable to
spiritual depression. You will be vulnerable to apathy, especially with respect to the
Word of God. It is really not all that important to you. You will be vulnerable to living a
superficial Christian life. You will lack a zeal for evangelism and on and on it goes.
Now may I remind you again that theme of Romans chapter eight is the assurance of the believer?
It speaks to our eternal security. Now I understand that many of you have been taught that somehow
you are responsible for your salvation, that because you chose God he chose you. Therefore,
since you are in charge of your salvation, given your sin and sometimes your stupidity,
it is possible that you just might stop trusting in Christ and, therefore, lose your salvation,
forfeit your salvation that you once embraced. This is a very serious issue. This is not
some secondary or tertiary issue reserved just for theologians to haggle over. I have
spent literally hundreds of hours over the course of my ministry dealing with people
to struggle with these things in a very significant way. They have been taught that you just can’t
know for sure if you are going to make it to heaven. So you better get to work. You
better get serious about living right and serving Christ. And then every group has its
lists of things that you better do, what you need to do, what you need to think, what you
need to wear, how you need to look and so on and so forth.
In fact, one who came out of such a background said that they remembered hearing over and
over again, quote, “If you lack assurance, you are probably lacking in church attendance.”
Well, that settles it. Just go to church more and that will take care of your assurance.
Well, many people struggle with this attitude of just not feeling they are good enough to
make the cut. How sad to live life as a believer being weary and burdened and unhappy and sometimes
angry, certainly anxious, frankly miserable. So much for grace.
Another dear friend who came out of this background remembered being told, quote, “When you
get to the end of your rope, tie a knot in it and hang on.”
How sad. The emphasis seems to always be in these circles what man must do versus what
God has done, a huge difference. Jesus said:
“Come to Me, all who are weary and heavy-laden, and I will give you rest.”
He said: “For My yoke is easy, and My load is light.”
Beloved, it is God who hangs on to us. 1 Peter 1:3 and following we are told that
we have been born again to a living hope. He gores on to say that our inheritance is
protected by the power of God through faith. And then he goes not o say:
“In this you greatly rejoice.” How sad those who do not greatly rejoice who
are always trying to hang on. Well, this is the very error that the apostle
Paul tries to dispel here in chapter eight. Well certainly the Holy Spirit knew that many
people would struggle with their assurance. And so he reveals these amazing truths in
this last section of chapter eight, verses 31 through 39. It is what I would call the
grand finale of this grand symphony of assurance. This is the hallelujah chorus of triumph and
joy knowing that there is nothing that can separate us from the love of God.
So God knew this would be a problem, so Paul now is trying to put their minds at ease.
May of the early saints were confused by the Judaizers who had infiltrated the church.
These were legalistic Jews that confessed to Christ. They professed him to be their
Savior. In fact they were deceiving themselves because they insisted that in order to maintain
your salvation, that if you were a Jew or even a Gentile, you must be circumcised and
you must also continue to obey the law. Otherwise your salvation would be lost. This is exactly
what the council of Jerusalem repudiated in Acts chapter 15. This is what plagued the
Church at Galatian causing Paul to write in chapter five beginning in verse one:
It was for freedom that Christ set us free; therefore keep standing firm and do not be
subject again to a yoke of slavery. Behold I, Paul, say to you that if you receive circumcision,
Christ will be of no benefit to you. And I testify again to every man who receives circumcision,
that he is under obligation to keep the whole Law. You have been severed from Christ, you
who are seeking to be justified by law; you have fallen from grace.
He is saying there that you have lost your grip on the principle of saving grace, the
very heart of the gospel, that it is by grace alone through faith alone and this proves
that you never had salvation to begin with. You have turned your back on the gospel, the
gospel that you have been exposed to. Now you are seeking to be justified by keeping
the law. So he goes on to say in verse six.
For we through the Spirit, by faith, are waiting for the hope of righteousness. For in Christ
Jesus neither circumcision nor uncircumcision means anything, but faith working through
love. In other words, that is the important thing.
So, obviously God knew that false teachers would come along and exploit those who misunderstood
the Word of God and therefore had doubts about their salvation. He understood that these
teachers would come along and exploit these individuals by giving them all manner of things,
religious works that they would have to do to somehow maintain what God began.
So in anticipation of all of this, the apostle is going to reaffirm the positive doctrines
that he has previously stated and he is going to do this by restating them in the negative.
He wants to squelch, once and for all the opposition. So he begins in verse 31 with
a question. “What then shall we say to these things?”
“These things” refers to all that has come before in this chapter, but not just
this chapter, all that has come before in this epistle, the entire explanation of the
way of salvation. What are we going to say to these things, that the just shall live
by faith, not by works? May I remind you of just a few of the things
that he has said thus far. You will remember in chapter five he gives us the wonderful
benefits of our justification, that we have peace with God. We have access to God. We
have a permanent standing in grace before God. We have a jubilant hope of glory. We
have joy in tribulation. He gives us proof of our salvation. We have a subjective awareness
of God’s love. There we learn that we can rejoice in God to the degree that he becomes
then unequaled delight of our heart. All of this because of his grace, that we have been
saved from the wrath to come. We have been given eternal life.
So he is saying: “What then shall we say to these things?”
But not just those things that I mentioned. What about just in the verses before in chapter
eight? He has already said: “There is therefore now no condemnation
for those who are in Christ Jesus,” in verse one.
In other words, we have been delivered from the penalty of the law. In verse two he tells
us how we have been united to Christ by the Holy Spirit, that this is a supernatural,
a living and indissoluble union by which Christ’s life becomes ours. What are we going to say
to this? This forms the very basis of our salvation and all of its blessing.
In verse five he tells us that the whole realm of our spiritual living, the whole realm of
our being now, our bent of life is dominated by the Spirit of God, not by the flesh. We
have been adopted as his children in verse 15.
Verse 16. “The Spirit Himself bears witness with our
spirit that we are children of God.” In verse 17 he reminds us that we are joint
heirs with Christ. In verse 23 we have the first fruits of the Spirit, the Spirit of
God that indwells us and therefore guarantees that we will have the redemption of our body.
In verse 26 he tells us how the Spirit helps us to pray as we should. He intercedes before
us before God. Can you imagine that? And we are also told in verses 29 and 30 that
we have been foreknown, that we have been predestined, that we have been justified and
glorified. All of these things presented to us in the past tense to demonstrate that our
glorification is so absolutely certain that God can speak of it as if it has already happened.
So Paul says: “What then shall we say to these things?”
I mean, there is the sense of incredulity here. He is just incredulous. It is like you
have got to be kidding me. Do you really think in light of all of this that you can’t have
assurance of salvation? That is his point here. It is unbelievable to think that.
But, in light of this, yes, there will still be those who think, well, I am just not real
sure. So he begins to offer up a series of challenges
against doctrine of the perseverance of the saints to show the utter impossibility that
anything could ever separate us from the love of God. And then he starts with the question:
“If God is for us, who is against us?” Number one challenge is a challenge against
the power of God. He is saying here, “What foe could possibly foil the purposes of God?
What foe could possibly prevail over those for whom God has done all of these things?
Who is going to disannul what God has determined?” That is the point. If God is for us... it
could literally be translated since or because God is for us, who is against us? We would
call this, by the way, a no brainer. That is the idea here. Our confidence is in the
very character of our omnipotent God. And who is more powerful than God? That is what
he is saying. Who is more powerful than God? All of the sudden the hands begin to raise.
Well, I am. You see, my free will is more powerful than
God’s sovereign will. You see, I might stop believing and I have the power to do that
and I might foolishly stop trusting in Christ. I might fall into some grievous sin and therefore
cancel out his plan for me. So I must constantly keep working, keep believing. I have got to
constantly keep my sin at bay lest it overtakes me and I forfeit my salvation.
How sad. Once again, I would say to you if you believe that, don’t you realize, again,
what Peter said in 1 Peter one verse four? That we have an inheritance which is imperishable.
It is undefiled and will not fade away. It is reserved in heaven for you who are protected
by the power of God. That is good enough for me right there,
“... protected by the power of God through faith for a salvation ready to be revealed
in the last time.” I would ask you, dear friend, how much work
must you do? How much work does it require to maintain your salvation? How holy must
you be, especially in light of the fact that you only see the very snow flake on the very
tip of the iceberg of your sin? Since we were powerless to save ourselves
in the first place, salvation being a work of God’s grace, how is it that we now have
the power to nullify that same grace, that grace that he began in us and that he has
promised to protect? Is the imputed righteousness of Christ not enough? Do you not believe what
we are told here in the very first verse of chapter eight?
“There is therefore now no condemnation for those who are in Christ Jesus.”
Well, yes, yes, I... I... I... I know all of that, but I could only stay saved if I
persevere to the very end, because, after all, didn’t Jesus say in John 15:6:
“If anyone does not abide in Me, he is thrown away as a branch, and dries up; and they gather
them, and cast them into the fire, and they are burned.”
So what if I stop abiding? So sad to see these kinds of misinterpretations
of Scripture. You see, the imagery there speaks of the judgment that awaits those who were
never saved to begin with. The word “abide” means to remain and to stay around. And obviously
those who remain prove the genuinous of their faith. Those who don’t abide never believed
in the first place. 1 John 2:19 reminds of this.
“They went out from us, but they were not really of us; for if they had been of us,
they would have remained with us; but they went out, in order that it might be shown
that they all are not of us.” Jesus said in Mathew 24:13:
“But the one who endures to the end, he shall be saved.”
You see, enduring does not maintain your salvation, it proves it. It is God who maintains our
salvation, not us. This is why Peter addressed the saints in 2 Peter one and verse two by
saying, quote: “Grace and peace be multiplied to you in
the knowledge of God and of Jesus our Lord.” He goes on to say:
“...seeing that His divine power has granted to us everything pertaining to life and godliness,
through the true knowledge of Him who called us by His own glory and excellence.”
And this is why he said in his first epistle that true believers are protected by the power
of God through faith for a salvation ready to be revealed. This is why he said, “In
this you greatly rejoice.” You see the magnificent power of God to save
is exactly what animated David’s praise. You will remember in Psalm 27 verse one he
said: “The LORD is my light and my salvation;
Whom shall I fear? The LORD is the defense of my life; Whom shall I dread?”
In fact, inherent in the new covenant is a divine promise that guarantees our perseverance.
We read of this in Jeremiah 32 and verse 40. There God says:
“I will put the fear of Me in their hearts so that they will not turn away from Me.”
Well, yes, pastor, I hear all of this, but... but we are told in Philippians 2:12 that we
have got to work out our salvation with fear and trembling.
Well, that is true, but that does not speak of maintaining your salvation through human
works. In fact, the Greek verb rendered “work out” means to continually work to bring
something to fulfillment. And that can’t possibly refer to salvation, because we know
from other passages, for example in Romans chapter three verses 21 through 24 and Ephesians
2:8-9, there we are told that we are justified as a gift by his grace. It is not through
works. If it was through works, we would have reason to boast.
So to work out our salvation means to be actively involved in a personal pursuit of holiness
and fear and trembling. In other words, we don’t just passively let go and let God
and just disengage and live our lives for ourselves and just wait for God to take us
to glory. But we are to have a health fear of offending him and a reverential awe of
his holiness. But, my friends, we do this as part of the
process of sanctification over which God superintends. That is why he goes on to add in the very
next verse, in verse 13: “...for it is God who is at work in you,
both to will and to work for His good pleasure.” It is for this reason that Paul said earlier
in that same epistle, chapter one verse six: “For I am confident of this very thing,
that He who began a good work in you will perfect it until the day of Christ Jesus.”
I would remind you that repeatedly in Scripture God uses pleas and various kinds of warnings
as his means to secure our perseverance in the faith. For example, Jude urges believers
in verse 21: “...keep yourselves in the love of God...”
But then he immediately points out to them in verse 24 that it is God who is able keep
you from stumbling. He is the one that will make you stand in the presence of his glory
blameless with great joy. In 2 Peter one verse 10 Peter expresses his
desire for believers to enjoy the blessings of assurance and just the joy of perseverance
that continues to validate the genuineness of our faith. And so he urges believers to,
quote: “... be all the more diligent to make certain
about His calling and choosing you.” “Make certain” means to validate, to confirm.
And he has called and chosen you. And dramatically there it is literally saying that we are to
assure ourselves of God’s effectual call upon us to salvation based upon his sovereign
election. He goes on to say:
“...for as long as you practice these things...” And the things that he is referring to are
the moral virtues essential to holy living that he had just described, moral excellence,
knowledge, self control, perseverance, godliness, brotherly kindness and love. As long as you
practice these things you will never stumble. He is not referring to losing your salvation.
He is referring to stumbling into doubt and discouragement, living in fear that, perhaps,
you are not saved or that you have forfeited your salvation, which, by the way, will always
be the experience even of a true believer if he is not practicing and increasing these
virtues of righteous living and bearing spiritual fruit.
He goes on to say in that same text in verse 11:
“...for in this way the entrance into the eternal kingdom of our Lord and Savior Jesus
Christ will be abundantly supplied to you.” Boy, that is what I want. I want that abundant
supply, the idea that we can have this rich joy of assurance in our life and we can have
the hope of eternal blessing in our future life in heaven.
Now you must also understand that professing Christians that immerse themselves in the
things of this world and live as if God doesn’t even exist will inevitably struggle with the
assurance of their salvation. And they should, because there could be good reason that they
are not saved and they think they are. Matthew seven Jesus warns of that very thing
that most people who profess Jesus do not really know him. There are the few and there
are the many. I have talked to many people who have that
haunting reality in the middle of the night when you can’t sleep and it is all quiet
and suddenly you have that experience of wondering: Do I really know Jesus? Am I really going
to heaven? Certainly, as 1 John 2:15 tells us, if you
love the world, the love of the Father is not in you.
But those how are practicing moral virtues essential to holy living will prove their
salvation. They will enjoy the blessings of assurance or the fruit of perseverance even
as we read earlier in our Scripture reading in 1 John three verse 21.
“Beloved, if our heart does not condemn us, we have confidence before God.”
So this is the Christian’s exaltation. This is that euphoric joy that we can have because
we are living in Christ and we are living for Christ who said in John 10:10:
“I came that they might have life, and might have it abundantly.”
My friend, if you are struggling with the assurance of your salvation you are not enjoying
that abundant life. What a miserable life it would be to live with that gnawing fear,
always wondering if your salvation is in jeopardy because, after all, it is up to me to maintain
it. Dear Christian, since God is for you, no one
can be against you, not even yourself. As powerful as you might think you are.
Millions live under this bondage. Think of the apostate religious system, the
Roman Catholic Church that insists that it has the power to both grand as well as revoke
grace, a power they believe has been given to the Church by Christ. They also teach that
you can forfeit your salvation if you commit mortal sins, sins that are very serious, grave
sins they call them as specified by the 10 Commandments, sins that you have committed
deliberately and with full knowledge, sins that you know have enormous offense before
God. They believe that this will destroy the life of grace within a man, assuming they
ever had it. It would result in eternal condemnation. But nowhere in Scripture do we see any person
or any ecclesiastical system given any power whatsoever to either grant or revoke grace.
Salvation, once again, is a work of God. It is not a work of man.
The great English Puritan theologian of the 1600s Stephen Charnock spoke so eloquently
about the power of God and I believe I put this in your bulletin. He said this. “The
power of God is that ability and strength whereby he can bring to pass whatsoever he
pleases, whatsoever his infinite wisdom may direct and whatsoever the infinite purity
of his will may resolve. As holiness is the beauty, all God’s attributes so power is
that which gives life and action to all the perfections of the divine nature. How vain
would be the eternal counsels if power did not step in to execute them. Without power,
his mercy would be but feeble pity, his promises an empty sound, his threatenings a mere scarecrow.
God’s power is like himself: infinite, eternal, incomprehensible. It can neither be checked,
restrained nor frustrated by the creature,” end quote.
Beloved, I ask you. If God is resolved to accomplish his purposes on behalf of those
he has chosen to save that he might make his Son preeminent in all things, then don’t
you think our enemies will be his enemies? Obviously the answer is yes. Whether it is
our own sinful flesh or whether it is Satan who is described in Revelation 12:10 as the
accuser of the brethren or whether it is some apostate religious system that tells us we
have got to keep the law or some system that arrogantly believes that it has the power
to grant or revoke grace. Beloved, since God is for us, nothing can stand against us.
But then Paul poses a second challenge. This is a challenge against the love of God. Notice
in verse 32. “He who did not spare His own Son, but delivered
Him up for us all, how will He not also with Him freely give us all things?”
This is an argument from the greater to the lesser. And Paul employed this frequently
in his writings. He starts with a proposition that is greater to prove one that is lesser.
He is saying that God has already done the greatest thing, the greatest thing he could
possibly do. He gave us his Son. He did not spare his own Son, but he delivered him up
to death for us all. So why would he not also, along with this gracious gift of the sacrifice
of his Son, lavish upon us that which, by comparison is so trivial? If he loved us while
we were yet sinners, would he not continue to love us after he has cleansed us from that
sin by the blood of Jesus? Of course. He loved us so much even in eternity past knowing that
one day when we were born and as we began to live our life we would be rebellious and
yet even in light of all of that, according to 2 Corinthians 5:21:
“He made Him [referring to Christ] who knew no sin to be sin on our behalf, that we might
become the righteousness of God in Him.” The point here is given the immeasurable greatness
of God’s love in his supreme sacrifice on our behalf, it would be absolutely inconceivable
to think that he would fail to continue his work to ultimately bring us to glory that
his Son might have the glory of redemption. Galatians one verse four says this.
“[He] gave Himself for our sins, that He might deliver us out of this present evil
age, according to the will of our God and Father.”
And in chapter three verse 13 he says: “Christ redeemed us from the curse of the
Law.” And Jesus has promised, has he not, that he
has gone away to prepare a place for us. We read about this in John 14 verses two and
three. Jesus says that I have gone to prepare a place for you and I will come again. I am
going to receive you unto myself that where I am, there you may be also, that is, if you
want to, that is, as long as you maintain your salvation, as long as you keep trusting,
you keep hanging on, you keep obeying. Beloved, that is nowhere in the text.
John 6:37 Jesus said: “All that the Father gives Me shall come
to Me, and the one who comes to Me I will certainly not cast out.”
There is no unless after that. In verse 39 he says:
“And this is the will of Him who sent Me, that of all that He has given Me I lose nothing,
but raise it up on the last day.” In other words, I will accomplish all of the
Father’s will. But what is the Father’s will? Well, we have already learned that even
in chapter eight here. It is to conform all those whom he fore loved and predestined into
the image of Christ. It is to make sure that they are justified, that they are glorified,
that Jesus might have the preeminence in all things.
Given all of this we can see the rhetorical nature of Paul’s question in verse 32.
“He who did not spare His own Son, but delivered Him up for us all, how will He not also with
Him freely give us all things?” The phrase “freely gives” translates the
Greek word χαριζομαι (khar-id’-zom-ahee) and it means to bestow graciously or out of
grace. This includes the idea of God’s gracious forgiveness as well as his gracious giving
to us all things. Obviously he will give us all things.
Ephesians 1:3. “[He] has blessed us with every spiritual
blessing in the heavenly places in Christ.” Beloved, this is our present possession waiting
to be fully realized. So surely God who has already done the greater
will likewise do the lesser. He will not refuse the lesser. That is Paul’s argument. There
is nothing that can separate us from the love of Christ as he will go on to affirm.
But notice verse 33 where Paul poses yet another perceived challenge to our security. Number
three, this is a challenge against our justification whereby God has declared us to be righteous
based on the imputed righteousness of Christ. Now here the perceived accuser is trying to
prove that we remain in a state of condemnation and the challenge is set forth here in two
questions, both of which the inspired apostle will answer. Beginning in verse 33 he says:
“Who will bring a charge against God’s elect?”
And the beginning of verse 34 he says: “Who is the one who condemns?”
Now, first of all, I want you to notice closely what the text says. Notice how the Spirit
of God describes believers. In verse 33 we are called “God’s elect.”
I humbly ask you. Is this how you describe yourself? You should. This is how God describes
you. You know, if we did describe ourselves this way more often, I believe it would go
a long way to eliminate most all of the unnecessary debate about God’s sovereignty in salvation
and the doctrine of the of perseverance of the saints because, indeed, we are God’s
elect through no merit of our own. We are debtors to his grace.
Beloved, please hear me. Based don the Word of God, we are people of promise according
to God’s purpose in which we have no power to interfere, none whatsoever.
In Hebrews chapter six the writer assures us of our eternal security on this very basis.
Beginning in verse 17 he says: “In the same way God, desiring even more
to show to the heirs of the promise...” Don’t you love that? We are heirs to the
promise. “...to show to the heirs of the promise
the unchangeableness of His purpose, interposed with an oath, in order that by two unchangeable
things, in which it is impossible for God to lie, we may have strong encouragement,
we who have fled for refuge in laying hold of the hope set before us.
Oh, dear Christian, please hear this. You have fled to Jesus for refuge and, therefore,
you must lay hold of this great hope, a hope that is anchored in the unchangeable purpose
of God. You are an heir of his promise, a promise to give you eternal life, to bring
you home to glory. So on what basis could you possibly question
your eternal security? So here the apostle Paul brings the Christian
before God’s bar of justice to try to prove his point. It is a courtroom scene that is
in view here. But who can possibly bring a charge against us? Who could present this
legal challenge in the highest of all courts? Well, perhaps, as I said earlier, Satan could
be in mind here. He is the accuser of the brethren, revelation 12:10. You will recall
that he accused Job’s faith as being a sham, that is righteousness was really untested,
that he worshipped with impure motives, he just acted righteously in order to manipulate
God to bless him and just all a hoax and that his faith would falter if it was tested. But
it didn’t. In Zechariah chapter three, an amazing text
where the prophet reveals a vision that God gave him where he saw Joshua the high priest,
quote, “...clothed with filthy garments...” in verse three meaning the priest living in
a perpetual state of defilement because of his sinful flesh and so therefore from Satan’s
perspective, his life rendered the priesthood as well as all of the people to be morally
impure and unworthy of God’s protection and therefore subject to condemnation, not
to blessing. And so the text goes on to read. Then he showed me Joshua the high priest standing
before the angel of the LORD, and Satan standing at his right hand to accuse him. And the LORD
said to Satan, "The LORD rebuke you, Satan! Indeed, the LORD who has chosen Jerusalem
rebuke you! Is this not a brand plucked from the fire?"
My, what a great example of God’s faithfulness to protect those whom he has chosen for himself?
Satan’s accusations are absolutely meaningless because God protects those on the basis of
his righteousness, not theirs. In Luke chapter 22 you will recall how Satan
tried to do the same thing to Peter. In verse 31 Jesus warned him saying:
“Simon, Simon, behold, Satan has demanded permission to sift you like wheat; but I have
prayed for you, that your faith may not fail.” And certainly it is one of Satan’s greatest
passions to try to destroy the faith of the Lord’s faithful servants. But his efforts
are in vain. Sometimes other people will be the ones that make these accusations against
your Christianity. Other times it will be even your own conscience, because, indeed,
we still sin, do we not? Of course we do. But all of these challenges are utterly meaningless.
Why? The end of verse 33. “God is the one who justifies.”
God is the one who has declared you righteous. So Paul asks in verse 34:
“...who is the one who condemns?” Now, again, he is just incredulous here. It
is as if he is saying, “I am not believing that anyone could possibly think that a legitimate
charge could be made against a person whom God has justified. So who is the one who condemns?”
Now think about it. There is only one who has that authority and that is the lawgiver.
My friend, there is no higher tribunal than that of our holy God. God alone is judge and
what has he done? He has already declared us to be without guilt. There is no condemnation.
So we are cleared of all charges. Even though in some cases they are true, because we continue
to sin. But because God is the one who justifies, all of our sins—past, present and future—have
been covered by the blood of Christ. We are no longer under the law, Romans 6:14. We now
live in the realm of grace. There is not ever going to be that kind of a tribunal. We are
not merely pardoned and forgiven—please hear this. We are not merely pardoned and
forgiven. We have been declared just in his sight.
And, dear friends, justification is not some kind of legal fiction here. God does not declare
righteous those who are really guilty. In other words, we are not standing before the
holy judge in all of our filthy rags of sin with a sign hanging around our neck that says,
“Guilty, but pardoned.” Not at all. What the sign would say is, “Not guilty, blameless,
completely righteous.” And we would be clothed in the righteousness of Christ because, my
friends, we have been hidden in him. That is what justification is, don’t you see?
And Christ died in some unfathomable way. We also died with him. In our spiritual baptism
we are united to Christ in his death and in his burial and his resurrection and the ritual
of baptism pictures this astounding truth. So we will never stand before the judge clothed
in filthy garments, merely pardoned and forgiven. But now, again, as Jude’s great doxology
tells us we will stand in the presence of his glory blameless with great joy all because
of God’s work. So the only one who could condemn us says,
“Not guilty. Get out of here. There is no court here. This person is in Christ, totally
righteous.” That is why Paul went on to say in verse 34:
“Christ Jesus is He who died, yes, rather who was raised, who is at the right hand of
God, who also intercedes for us.” And here he closes with four reasons why our
salvation is secure in Christ. And the enumeration of these realities that protect our salvation
is presented to us in an ascending order so that the final reality is the most profound
with respect to our security. Notice what he says. Number one, because of
what he tells us in verse 34 the first reality is that he died in our stead. Now may I remind
you of this great theology lest you forget it. There are two possible ways to meet the
demands of God’s law. Number one, you have got to keep that law perfectly in all of its
parts, ok? Or, number two, you must pay the penalty for breaking that law and, thus, offending
the law giver. Now the former no man save Jesus of Nazareth
has ever done or could ever do. And the latter no man can ever do even if he tried for all
eternity. Therefore, Christ on the cross being our infinite sacrifice, holy and pure, totally
righteous voluntarily satisfied all of the demands of the broken law and fully propitiated
or satisfied that law. He satisfied the offending holiness of almighty God. And at salvation
the sinner appropriates that payment for himself by faith in the finished work of Christ as
Galatians 2:16 tells us. So our justification, dear friends, is based
upon our union with Christ. We are hidden in him. Therefore God declares us to be wholly
righteous because he sees us in his Son. And, thus, in fact, we are righteous in the sight
of an all holy and all knowing sovereign God. So he died in our stead. This is why our salvation
is secure. But, secondly, Christ was raised from the dead. This proves that his satisfaction
was perfect, that he fully satisfied the demands of the law, that it was paid in full. Jesus
conquered both sin and death. He therefore gives eternal life to all who trust in him.
But, thirdly, Chris is now, notice, at the right hand of God. This speaks of the fact
that the work is finished. You may recall that there were no seats in
the temple of the priests to sit in because they had to constantly offer up sacrifices
of the sins of the people. Their work was never finished.
In Hebrews chapter 10 beginning in verse 11 we read:
And every priest stands daily ministering and offering time after time the same sacrifices,
which can never take away sins; but He [referring to Christ] having offered one sacrifice for
sins for all time, SAT DOWN AT THE RIGHT HAND OF GOD.
So in Christ all sin is completely, it is forever removed for all who trust in him,
for all who trust in the one who now sits in the most highly exalted position of honor.
The work is finished. But notice what he continues to do on our
behalf. And this is the capstone of Paul’s argument. This is the most profounding reality
of all. Christ also, number four, intercedes for us.
You must understand that because Christ lives and he has ascended, he is now able to intercede,
which literally means to plead on our behalf. It is an amazing thing. I never cease to marvel
at this. In verse 26 of chapter eight we read how the Holy Spirit intercedes for us. But
also we see here that the glorified Christ does the same thing.
Hebrews seven verse 25 Jesus Christ, quote: “... is able to save forever those who draw
near to God through Him, since He always lives to make intercession for them.”
What an incredible reality, what a profound comfort. Even as we read in 1 John 2:1.
“...we have an Advocate with the Father, Jesus Christ the righteous.”
So, my friend, if you still deny the security of the believer, you are, in fact, claiming
that Christ’s work of intercession is somehow deficient, that somehow it is ineffective.
So I close by simply saying in light of all that the apostle is saying, to somehow dispel
any fear that you can be separated from the love of God, if you still insist that assurance
of salvation is unattainable that, as many say, it is actually dangerous and that our
security is somehow up to us, you simply are refusing to see the obvious. I don’t know
why. That is between you and the Lord. But for you—and I say this all love—two plus
two is five. The truth is, because we are God’s elect,
we have been justified, we are heirs of promise according to the purposes of God and our salvation
is eternally secure. As the hymnist so perfectly summarized when he said, quote:
Behold shall I stand in that great day, For who ought to my charge shall lay,
Fully though thee absolved I am, From sin and fear, from guilt and shame.
End quote. This, beloved, is the Christian’s exaltation.
Let’s pray together. We pray you have been edified by this presentation.
You have been listening to pastor, Bible teacher and author David Harrell. For more information
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