Paul is approaching his final conclusion and in chapter 15 he wants to address what it means for the church to be a welcoming place. If it is to welcome new converts into the faith then it must be a welcoming place for each other. The believers are to be of one accord in Jesus Christ.
Paul continues to use Scripture to show us the enteral plan of God in ingrafting Gentiles into his covenant family. He demonstrates why our knowledge of Scripture is important as we live for him today.
Romans - The heart of the Gospel is a teaching series from Annalong Presbyterian Church. Find out more at www.annalongpc.org/sermons.
When picking the hymns for our Sunday services,
2
:I don't always appreciate the
significance that they might have.
3
:And I didn't expect, maybe in my mind
anyway, uh, just how good that would be
4
:fitting for what we're about to look at.
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:Because actually, as we fix
our eyes on Jesus, the things
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:of earth grow strangely dim.
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:And that's what Paul is pointing us
to in this penultimate chapter of
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:his letter to the church in Rome.
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:Chapter 15 of Romans sees Paul head
towards his conclusion because chapter
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:16, although it is the final chapter,
it's going to contain greetings and
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:some final instructions for the church.
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:It will let us know of some of
the things that are going on.
13
:It'll introduce us to some
of the people that are there.
14
:But this is a book, as
we've known, of two halves.
15
:The first half ended in chapter 11
and that, those first 11 chapters
16
:considered what faith in Jesus means
and the second half from chapter 12 has
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:explored how this faith is lived out.
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:Well chapter 15 is really Paul's great
conclusion of living well for Jesus
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:and living well together as the church.
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:Chapter 14 has very much set us
on the path of how we worship
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:together as God's And not only how
we worship together but how we live.
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:together as people in the world.
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:Paul knew then, as we experience still
now, that the world is not a welcome
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:place for the followers of Jesus.
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:We've said this throughout these,
uh, studies in the book of Romans.
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:So the great hope for the church, and
by the way, that's a word that's going
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:to come up again and again tonight.
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:We've already mentioned it a number
of times, but this great hope for
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:the church is its togetherness.
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:in the gospel as it
worships and as it lives.
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:So these first 13 verses of chapter 15
draw our focus to a great reception,
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:with verse 7 being our central verse,
because there we read, Now this might
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:already give you an indication of what
Paul is building up to, certainly up
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:until the halfway point of this passage.
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:There's an expectation that
there will be action, on the
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:part of the followers of Jesus.
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:Paul encourages the church to
recognize the unique position
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:that it has in its togetherness.
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:No other part of society
is like the church.
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:We don't have to support the
same sports teams because if we
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:FA Cup final yesterday, be at
opposite ends of that spectrum.
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:We don't even have to
have the same hobbies.
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:We don't even have to attain
the same level of education or
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:all work in a similar industry.
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:We don't even have to be
of the same age range.
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:And the one thing that's been
lovely about our evening service
47
:is this greater spread from younger
through the older who are coming.
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:Now, not those who are a thousand
years, as some of our children might
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:have thought this morning, a thousand
year old people in the building.
50
:You see, the church is unique
because you don't get anywhere
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:else in society like it.
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:The church is the gathering place
of all peoples, from all places,
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:and it is all because of Jesus
Christ and the message of Jesus.
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:Now I think we all like to feel welcomed.
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:Wherever we go, be it to the shop,
be it out for a walk, into the school
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:playground and into the church, we
like to see a smiling face and a
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:word of greeting, be it hello, or
some other form of acknowledgement,
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:or welcome and a handshake.
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:And we, when we are welcome to wherever
it is we're going into, it communicates
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:that we are wanted and valued.
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:What makes you feel more like a valued
customer when someone at the checkout or
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:someone on the aisle spends time with you,
talking to you or helps you and supports
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:you in what you're trying to find?
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:And even if the greeting is coming
from a complete stranger, be it along
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:the shore path, it still acknowledges
our humanity, that this is a place
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:in which we recognize each other for
who we are, from our perspective of
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:course, made in the image of God.
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:And Paul begins in this chapter by picking
up on a theme that we saw in chapter 14.
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:Uh, that, that difference
between the strong and the weak.
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:Not that he's looking to point out
what those differences are, but how
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:the strong and the weak continue
to live and worship together.
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:And tonight he's going to focus
on what a welcome, given by both
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:and to both, should look like.
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:In verse 19 we read the conclusion
of how the strong and weak
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:in faith worshiped together.
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:And so in chapter 14 he wrote,
So then let us pursue what makes
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:for peace for mutual upbuilding.
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:Because Paul's whole thrust in chapter
14 was to see the church built up
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:together, not separated off by those
who believed they were stronger in the
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:faith than others, and looking down on
those who they perceived had weak faith.
81
:But notice what he says now
in verse 1 of chapter 15.
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:We who are strong have an obligation
to bear with the failings of the
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:weak and not to please ourselves.
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:Paul clearly recognises here himself
as being among those stronger in
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:faith, and we would say rightly
so, the great Apostle himself.
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:But he is not using this as
a position of superiority.
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:Rather, he is making it clear that his
maturity and strength in faith is to bear
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:with those who just don't get it yet.
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:He wasn't to rush on without them,
but to support them and build them up.
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:And this is the example
that Paul gives in verse 2.
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:When Paul speaks of pleasing our
neighbor here, he's not referring to
92
:some sort of cheap amusement, but as
an act of, or gesture that will meet
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:a real need, or enhance a spiritual,
uh, spiritual stability in their lives.
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:And so Paul's letter to the Romans is an
example of a huge effort For their sake.
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:And if the Romans get behind what
Paul's talking about, and in due
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:course get behind his Spanish
mission, which we'll come to in verse
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:24, they will be building him up.
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:Not because he is weak, but because they
recognize their strength as a church in
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:their role in sending out a missionary.
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:who is strong and to
continue to support him.
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:And so that's where the rest of this
chapter will take us to see how even
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:this church, mixed with the weak and the
strong, can still be one to support Paul
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:in his plan to be a missionary in Spain.
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:And Paul's basis for writing verses 1
and 2 is seen now in verse 3 as he points
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:us to the example of Christ when he
says, For Christ did not please himself.
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:But, as it is written, the reproaches
of those who reproached you fell on me.
107
:Paul presents to us the
life of Christ as Exhibit A.
108
:Paul, we know, has written a defense
of the faith, and here we have
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:another defense of how we are to live.
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:Christ did not live as an overlord,
but was himself someone who lived.
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:for the Father's pleasure.
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:Paul finds support from Christ's
attitude and practice in the latter
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:half of Psalm 69 verse 9 which
is quoted here in these verses.
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:And here Paul is pointing us to
the reproaches that the Jews had,
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:or that Jesus had to bear from
the Jews because they chose to
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:ignore the truth of who he is.
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:They thereby then have reproach
for God, as they reject the Son,
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:so they are rejecting the Father.
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:But Christ is the one who bore that
reproach, because he was faithful to
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:the mission of the Father in sending his
Son to be the propitiation for our sins.
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:And as ever, Paul is the lawyer here,
and in verse 4, he continues his
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:argument for why we are to live in
a way that bears each other in the
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:faith as he points us to Scripture.
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:Now, none of us can ignore the
amount of Scripture that Paul
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:uses throughout this letter.
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:And these aren't simply proof
texts to justify his argument.
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:Rather, they show us how the
full counsel of God, as revealed
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:in Scripture, fits together in
one great message of the Gospel.
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:And here in verse 4, he impresses on us
the intention of the written Word of God.
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:It has its importance for the times
and places first intended, but it
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:was also written for successive
generations too, since God's
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:wisdom and God's spirit transcends
localities and transcends times.
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:The spirit who first inspired scripture is
the same spirit who renews its message in
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:subsequent generations, including our own.
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:But scripture isn't just a record for
us, It's not simply telling us a story,
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:it gives us instruction, and in using
this word here, the word instruction,
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:Paul is reminding us of a central
component of the Christian faith.
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:We are to learn scripture
and we are to know it.
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:That's why what we do with the girls
and boys, although we may not remember
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:everyone we do, it at least is a start
of remembering some aspects of God's
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:word and hiding them in our hearts.
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:You see, the Bible is not a novel.
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:We don't simply pick it up, read
it, say that it's a good story,
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:and put it back down again.
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:Scripture is given to
us to learn and to live.
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:That's why we call it a standard.
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:It is God's revealed standard to us
as to how we are to live for him.
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:As question three of the Westminster
Shorter Catechism asks and answers, what
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:do the scriptures principally teach?
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:The scriptures principally teach
what man is to believe concerning God
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:and what duty God requires of man.
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:Do you remember that from
your Sunday school days?
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:Well, if you do, it's now
coming back to bear good fruit.
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:Because in this one succinct answer,
we know what Scripture is all about.
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:Scripture is for our good.
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:Scripture teaches us about
what we are to believe.
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:It reveals to us who God is, so
that we might believe in Him.
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:And thereby, as we worship together
as His people, our worship will,
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:we know what we're worshiping for.
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:But it also tells us
what God requires of us.
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:God has a standard.
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:And we are to live by that standard.
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:So scripture is for our good.
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:We are to read it.
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:We are to love it.
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:We are to enjoy it.
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:And we are to follow its instructions.
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:In doing so, Paul says, we will have,
and hope is important, because hope is a
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:motivation that is required each and every
day for that long term perseverance in the
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:reading and understanding of God's Word.
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:What is the Bible to you?
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:I've told you before, I have
two shelves full of Bibles.
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:What is it to you?
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:Isn't it amazing how we can fit so
many other things into our day and
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:ignore even a five, ten minute reading?
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:And by the way, you don't
even have to read it alone.
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:There's audio Bibles that you can
listen to, you can download, and put
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:things on in your car as you drive to
pay attention to what God's Word says.
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:Of course, nothing beats sitting
in a quiet room, reading it.
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:But can't we even give 10,
15 minutes a day to the Lord?
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:First thing in the morning, last
thing at night, over our lunch
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:break, going out into our car, at
whatever opportunity we have at work.
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:Can't we do that for the Lord?
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:Because scripture is for our good.
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:And Paul says that it is
scripture that gives us hope.
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:So he tells us, read the Bible,
understand what it principally teaches us.
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:That it teaches us what we are to
believe concerning God and what duty
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:God requires of us as we worship him.
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:And so now as we come to the climax
of this first half of this portion
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:of Scripture this evening, Paul now
tells us why all of this is important.
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:And once again we have one of these
moments in Romans where it seems
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:Paul is so excited about this truth
that his words run away from him.
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:Listen to what he says
in verses five and six.
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:May the God of endurance and encouragement
grant you to live in such harmony with one
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:another, in accord with Christ Jesus, that
together we may with one voice glorify the
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:God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ.
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:Here we have a blessing for the
church and a vision for what
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:Paul sees the church to be.
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:Look at the outcome that he tells us of.
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:Living in harmony together.
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:That with one voice we may glorify.
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:That's a wonderful picture.
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:It's a wonderful image of
what the church should be.
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:Imagine it for a moment.
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:If you've ever listened to a piece of
music played by an orchestra, you don't
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:hear its full depth in the first listen.
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:It's the second, third or fourth listen
that you hear all the instruments and
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:all the harmonies coming together.
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:Harmony is to be natural.
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:and unobtrusive.
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:You notice when an orchestra hits a
wrong note or an instrument is slightly
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:out of tune but you really don't notice
the harmony when it is all together.
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:You simply enjoy the music that
they're playing because harmony
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:should be natural to an orchestra.
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:This is the picture that
Paul is painting for us.
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:As the church in its local expression,
here, we are to be in harmony and
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:in one accord with Jesus Christ.
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:We may not always agree on everything,
but our focus is not on the secondary,
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:but on the primary of the gospel.
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:And notice that we don't do this on
our own strength, because verse 5 tells
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:us that we do this in God's strength.
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:Paul describes him as the God
of endurance and encouragement.
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:He is the one who will
keep us in fellowship with
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:himself and with each other.
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:All that we may worship, and all so that
we may worship him well in Jesus Christ.
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:This is why verse 7 tells
us to welcome each other.
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:We will do this because
we are together in Christ.
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:And that's why this first half
is about a welcome for us.
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:A welcome that should be the
demonstration of our love of
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:Christ that we have for each other.
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:And I think here in Analong, we
do well in how we greet each other
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:and how we encourage each other.
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:But like everywhere, we could
probably do a little better.
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:But we don't do this in our own effort.
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:We do this in God's strength.
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:If the welcome is not what we're
hoping to receive, then we have to
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:ask ourselves, have we welcomed well?
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:Have we given a welcome to a brother or
a sister as we would like to be welcomed?
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:Because remember how all of this started.
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:We who are strong have an obligation
to bear with the failings of the
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:weak and not to please ourselves.
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:If you want the strongest reason
why there shouldn't be grumblings
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:in the church, this is it.
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:The church is not about
pleasing ourselves, It is
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:about the body of believers.
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:And so when we see things from this
perspective, then our actions and
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:our attitudes change as we submit
to God's standard, not our own.
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:And why all of this matters is now
detailed for us in verses 8 to 13.
249
:Because Paul explains his teaching so far
in this chapter by saying in verse 8, 8.
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:For I tell you that Christ became a
servant to the circumcised to show
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:God's faithfulness in order to confirm
the promises given to the patriarchs
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:and in order that the Gentiles
might glorify God for his mercy.
253
:Again, Paul brings us
back to Christ's ministry.
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:The church is to be a place so different
from the world because it follows the
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:example and the teaching of Jesus.
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:If it doesn't, then it
actually has nothing to offer.
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:William Haslam lived in England
in the:
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:into Christian ministry, but
he knew nothing of the gospel.
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:He didn't, in fact, know Christ at all.
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:So, what did he do when
he became a reverend?
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:Well, he worked on his building.
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:That's all he could see.
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:He made it really pretty.
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:And then he helped others who were
also lost in churches to work on their
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:buildings, to make them better buildings.
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:But he had nothing to say
to the people who came.
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:Until he was preaching one Sunday.
268
:And as he was preaching, his
kind of blind, tedious, boring
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:sermon suddenly spoke to him.
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:He suddenly realized in the middle
of his own sermon who Christ was.
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:And the whole sermon took off
with zeal and with great joy.
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:And a visiting preacher sitting in the
back row stood up and called out to the
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:church, Your parson has been converted!
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:Hallelujah!
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:And the whole church stood
up and sang the doxology.
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:Praise God from whom all blessings
flow over and over again because their
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:minister had finally been converted.
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:Maybe we wouldn't expect
that in a church service.
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:I would be very surprised if someone
stood up and shouted hallelujah
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:that I'm only being converted now.
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:But that's another story.
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:I hope you know my proclamation of faith.
283
:But you see what happens to a dead
church where there is no gospel?
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:Nothing happens.
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:Nothing flourishes.
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:Yes, our buildings are
good and we need them.
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:But if they're our only
focus, then we offer nothing.
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:But the point is not about buildings.
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:That's just what this illustration that
I heard someone else give helps us with.
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:What Paul is drawing us to is that we
follow an example that is the gospel.
291
:Not dead religion.
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:See what's interesting about
Haslam is that he was religious.
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:Yes, he was.
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:He was a good man.
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:He prayed prayers.
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:He loved the prayer book
as an Anglican reverend.
297
:He was an upright man, but he
was completely spiritually lost
298
:until the lights came on and the
gospel took hold of his life.
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:Paul is saying here that the
gospel needs to take hold so that
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:we can proclaim this good news.
301
:Jesus came and spoke truth to the
Jews and they ignored it so that
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:in this present age the Gentiles
would benefit from salvation.
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:But it is all to do with the truth.
304
:And again, we see the power of
scripture as Paul now quotes from
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:four passages from the Old Testament.
306
:H1 assuring the reader that
the mission to the Gentiles is
307
:not simply quickly thought up.
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:God has had his plan for
salvation and we can trust it.
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:And here Paul is quoting from Psalm 18
verse 49, Deuteronomy 32 and verse 43.
310
:Psalm 116 verse 11 verse 10.
311
:And each one points us to the truth that
the Gentiles now have the opportunity to
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:be engrafted into the family of God and
become full heirs of his covenant promise
313
:because of the gospel of Jesus Christ.
314
:And this is done through the church.
315
:And so the church must be a place ready
to welcome and to receive, no matter
316
:what spiritual level people are at.
317
:For the hope of the unsaved is not
in themselves or in the world, but
318
:in Jesus, who is the root of Jesse.
319
:And so Paul concludes this section with
a blessing as he says in verse 13, May
320
:the God of hope fill you with all joy
and peace in believing, so that by the
321
:power of the Holy Spirit you may abound.
322
:Paul wishes on this mostly Gentile
audience the joy and peace that the Old
323
:Testament references have just spoken of.
324
:This growth and maturity in faith
comes from God as we believe
325
:the truth of Jesus Christ.
326
:And Paul gives us an aspiration of
the Father that we would abound in
327
:hope by the power of the Holy Spirit.
328
:It is the Holy Spirit's act of
work that moves us towards the
329
:Lord and the worship of God.
330
:This then is the natural response to God
so that indeed our hope would abound.
331
:I've said already that there'll
be a lot of mentions of the word
332
:hope in this service this evening.
333
:So let me ask you, what are
you hoping for in this life?
334
:Are you hoping for longevity, freedom
from pain, riches, stability, security,
335
:or perhaps the more practical things
like employment, safety of family, peace?
336
:Paul points us to a hope that
secures us in the Father, regardless
337
:of our human circumstances.
338
:It is the hope in the Gospel,
because the Gospel truly changes
339
:us, and that's why Paul, or what
Paul wants to see in the Church.
340
:It changes us from eternal
death, to eternal life.
341
:It changes our attitudes to one another
and sets us on a course of upbuilding one
342
:another and it should change the church
so that it may live in such harmony with
343
:one another in accord with Jesus Christ.
344
:Tonight our response to God's word
is to live as hope filled people.
345
:people who trust in Jesus so
that we can be built up together
346
:as His and glorify the God and
Father of our Lord Jesus Christ.
347
:True hope rests only in Him.
348
:That's why our opening hymn said,
Rejoice in glorious hope, because
349
:Jesus the judge shall return and take
his servants up to their eternal home.
350
:See, that's what glorious hope is.
351
:The assurance that on that day when
Jesus returns, we indeed will be caught
352
:up with his servants and go to what is
promised as our eternal inheritance.
353
:Because this is what Peter says to us.
354
:We're not to waver from this living
hope, but to live as he says in
355
:1 Peter chapter 1 and verse 3.
356
:Blessed be the God and Father
of our Lord Jesus Christ.
357
:According to his great mercy, he
has caused us to be born again
358
:to a living hope through the
resurrection of Jesus Christ.
359
:You see, this passage started with
a welcome that indeed we would truly
360
:welcome one another, that we wouldn't
lord it over each other, but that
361
:we would live together as God's
people, strong and weak together.
362
:And it concludes with pointing us to
the great welcome that awaits us in
363
:heaven and what a day that will be.
364
:Is this your hope?
365
:Is this your hope tonight?
366
:Hope so much that you will be changed
to live for Jesus here and now as you
367
:await the future eternal realities.
368
:Will you live by His standard, not by
your own self righteous standard, but live
369
:by what He has revealed to us, so that
indeed, truly together, we will be of one
370
:accord in Jesus Christ and glorify our
Father God for His goodness towards us.
371
:May this be our response
to His Word this night.
372
:Let's pray.
373
:Our Father God, the heart of the
gospel challenges us to think deeply
374
:about what it means to live for you.
375
:The first step is simply
knowing salvation in Christ and
376
:knowing Christ is our Savior.
377
:But the steps that follow
are about living your way.
378
:So may we never be fooled into believing
that what happened to us in a moment
379
:is all that is concerning to us.
380
:Father, we need to live what we profess
so that our faith will be proved
381
:genuine and that our good works will
demonstrate what is our core, what is
382
:our heart, and what we fully believe
about this gospel and about Jesus Christ.
383
:So Father, by your grace,
your grace so irresistible and
384
:free, may we live well for you.
385
:In what is truly glorious hope
as we await the coming of Jesus
386
:to take us to our eternal home.
387
:So keep us in fellowship and in sweet
communion with you and your people.
388
:And we ask it in Jesus name.
389
:Amen.