Thursday 11 May 2023

The Love of God

A sermon for Bloomsbury Central Baptist Church
14 May 2023
 

Romans 3.28-30; 5.1-11
  
A man fell into a pit and couldn’t get himself out.
 
A Subjective person came along and said ‘I feel for you down there’
            Objective - ‘Its logical that someone would fall down there’
 
Pharisee - ‘Only bad people fall into pits’
            News reporter wanted the exclusive story on the man’s pit
 
Confucius - ‘If you had listened to me, you wouldn’t be in that pit’
            Buddha - ‘Your pit is only a state of mind’
 
Realist - ‘Yep, that’s a PIT you’re in there, my friend’
            Scientist calculated the pressure necessary in PSI to get him out of the pit
 
geologist told him to appreciate the rock strata in the pit
            tax man asked if he was paying taxes on his pit
 
council inspector asked if he had a permit to dig a pit
            evasive person came along and avoided the subject of his pit altogether
 
self pitying person - ‘You haven’t seen anything until you’ve seen MY pit!’
            Charismatic - ‘Just confess that you’re not in a pit’
 
Optimist - ‘Things could be worse’
            Pessimist - ‘Things will get worse;
 
Jesus - seeing the man,
            took him by the hand and lifted him out of the pit
 
And this little parable takes us, I think, right to the heart
            of what Paul is trying to demonstrate in his letter to the Romans:
which is that the way Jesus responds to the depths of the human situation
            is quite unlike that of anyone else.
 
Jesus does not come along with helpful words of encouragement,
            he doesn’t muck around with solutions that won’t work.
 
Rather, God’s response to human sin, to human suffering,
            to our collective and individual ‘pits’
was to reach out to us at the moment of our deepest need
            by sending Jesus on a rescue mission for humanity.
 
In his death on the cross, Jesus opened the way
            for people to be lifted out of their pits of isolation from God.
 
This is what Paul was getting at
            when he wrote his letter to the Romans.
 
Paul’s letter to Rome can sometimes seem very confusing,
            and even a fairly short passage such as ours for today
            could sustain multiple sermons.
 
Famously, Martyn Lloyd-Jones preached every week for 13 years
            on the book of Romans,
            at Westminster Chapel.
 
Well, I promise not to do that,
            unless you ask really nicely!
 
But do you remember studying poetry at school?
            How you have to keep reading same small section over and over
                        and how you get more from the words, each time you read it?
            I’ve always been amazed at how much meaning can be generated
                        from so few words
 
Well, the letter to the Romans is rather like poetry,
            and on first reading it can be rather confusing,
            with careful word choice conveying whole rafts of ideas.
 
But this is also what makes it so interesting,
            and it repays careful and detailed study.
 
So, to set the scene for our passage for today:
            Paul has spent the first part of the letter looking at the story of Abraham;
                        exploring how Abraham came to know God,
                        and explaining how Abraham’s relationship with God
                                    was not something he earned
                                    but rather emerged from his faith in God.
 
The key issue that Paul’s addressing in the opening chapters
            is that of how it can be right
            for God to deal with Jews and Gentiles on the same basis.
 
The children of Abraham, the Jewish people,
            are the people of God, the heirs of the covenant.
So how, Paul is asking, can it be true
            that God is now also seeking a relationship with the gentiles?
With those who have not history of being God’s people,
            no story of covenant faithfulness to define them?
 
To begin answering this, Paul speaks of sin,
            and he frames sin as a universal plight, experienced by all people,
            regardless of their heritage, ethnicity, or behaviour.
 
And so Paul issues his great statement of human sinfulness,
            proclaiming that ‘all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God’ (3.23).
 
None of us, whatever our religious tradition or faith background,
            can attain the glory of God.
 
We are, each of us, whoever we are, broken people,
            and our relationship with God is correspondingly broken.
 
There is no-one who is righteous in their own right,
            not Jew, not Gentile, not even Father Abraham himself.
 
The keeping of the Covenant Law doesn’t make a person righteous,
            any more than any other moral code.
 
And so we come to the next step in Paul’s logical progression through the letter,
            and we heard it in our reading earlier:
 
‘For we hold that a person is justified by faith
            apart from works prescribed by the law.’ (3.28)
 
Whatever good the Jewish Law achieved,
            and certainly from Paul’s perspective as a Torah-observant Jew
            there were many good reasons to live within the demands of the Law,
but despite these goods, the law itself did not make a person righteous,
            it did not make a person in right relation with God.
 
And this is because there is nothing we can do,
            in and of ourselves, to make ourselves right with God.
 
Rather, the broken relationship with God, characterised by human sin,
            can only be mended by God’s action.
 
We cannot find our own way out of our own pit,
            only God can rescue us.
 
And so Paul says that a person is justified by faith, not by works.
 
This word ‘justified’ probably needs a little explanation…
            in modern colloquial language, we would often use ‘justify’
                        to convey a sense of ‘finding a good excuse for something’.
 
For example, I might come up with a reason to justify losing my temper,
            or being late for a meeting.
 
This isn’t the meaning Paul has in mind in Romans.
 
Rather, I think we can get closer to his meaning,
            if we think about how we use the word ‘justify’
            when we’re typing a document in a word processor.
 
Unjustified text has a raggedy right edge,
            whereas ‘justified’ text lines up neatly at both the left and right margins.
 
This sense of justify being to ‘make something right’,
            is closer to what Paul means
            when he says a person is justified by faith, not by works.
 
A person is made right, straightened out
            in their relationships with other human beings and with God,
            by faith, and not by works.
 
If ‘sin’ is a relationship with God gone wrong, with a raggedy edge,
            then ‘faith’ is that relationship with God straightened out, put right.
 
We are justified by faith, not by works.
 
And so, Paul takes pains to show that even Abraham,
            the founding father of the Jewish people,
                        knew God by faith first, not by works.
 
And, he goes on, if this is true for Abraham
            then it is true for all people, Jew or Gentile.
 
None of us know God by our own efforts,
            and none of us can lift ourselves out of the pit
            of our broken relationship with God.
 
The only solution on offer
            is that God first reaches out to us;
and Paul’s conviction is that God does this in Jesus Christ
 
He makes the point three times in our passage:
 
while we were still weak … Christ died for the ungodly (5.6)
while we still were sinners … Christ died for us (5.8)
while we were enemies … we were reconciled to God (5.10)
 
the mending of the broken, unjustified relationship between humans and God
            must begin with God reaching out to people in their pits of despair and sin.
 
What comes next, of course, is the human response,
            as people then have to learn to live in the light of God’s gracious act of mercy.
 
This, for Paul, is where the Jewish Law fitted,
            it was Israel’s appropriate response,
            to God’s calling them to be a holy chosen people.
 
But, as one might say,
            other appropriate responses are also available…
 
Do the Gentiles need to keep the Jewish law?
            Well, Paul will argue that they do not.
 
Rather, they must live by an equally demanding ethic,
            the ethic of the Spirit.
 
The person pulled from their pit,
            who has had their life restored to them,
has not been rescued to then dig new pits and fall into them!
            Rather they are rescued to live life as life should be lived,
            in renewed relationship with their creator.
 
The result of this, says Paul, is that
            “We have peace with God through our Lord Jesus Christ”
 
Compare this with the basic human condition…
            Most people are not at peace with God.
Just look at the world around us:
            a world characterised by wars, arguments, and fighting.
The sad truth is that most people are not at peace!
 
And this is a symptom of the underlying problem,
            which is that humanity lives most of the time in rebellion against God.
The power of Sin over people’s lives
            separates them from God,
            and creates the context for all kinds of destructive behaviours.
 
Whereas Paul asserts that, through Christ
            a new relationship with God is possible – a peaceful one.
 
In dying for all people, Christ has broken the power of sin
            to dominate and distort human lives and relationships.
 
We are lifted out of the pit of conflict with God,
            and have the possibility of peace with God.
 
The sad truth is that as Christians,
            we frequently don’t live out the reality this relationship.
But it is still there,
            and we often need reminding of that
 
So Paul goes on to do just that:
            He underlines the new relationship available to those
                        who accept Christ as their Lord and saviour.
 
Paul says that those who have the grace and peace
            that comes from this restored relationship
            “rejoice in the hope of the glory of God”
 
Another word for “rejoice” here is “boast”,
            and so Paul says that we ‘boast in our hope of the glory of God’.
 
This good news of a restored relationship with God
            as something to be excited about,
            something we can boast of!
 
This is a proper response to what God has done
 
Often we read or hear great theological truths about God:
            Truths such as:
                        We are saved!
                        We have peace!
                        We have grace!
            And these truths inspire us!....
                        to nod politely and say “what wonderful theology!”
 
Well, for Paul, this is more than theology:
            this is a relationship, and a life-changing one
 
But Paul doesn’t leave it there (he rarely does)
            Not only are we to rejoice, or boast, when things are going well,
He also says that we are to boast in suffering and affliction.
 
The point here, is that the life of faith
            is not a life of guaranteed success.
 
Contrary to what preachers of health, wealth, and prosperity might assert,
            in either the first- or twenty-first centuries,
the true life of faith is a life after the pattern of Jesus,
            and that includes the suffering of the cross:
 
Against those who would try to shame him
            because of his sufferings for the sake of the gospel of Christ,
Paul rather asserts that such suffering
            is a clear indication that salvation is under way.
 
It is not a reason to renounce God,
            nor is it a contradiction of faith.
 
Rather, suffering strengthens patience,
                        and matures character
                        and leads to hope
and Paul assures his readers that this hope is not idle,
            that the process has already begun:
 
“Hope does not put us to shame,
            because God’s love has been poured into our hearts
            through the Holy Spirit” (v.5)
 
The love of God is already in our hearts through the Holy Spirit,
            and it is this concept of ‘the love of God’
            which ties together all the various theological and ethical concepts
            we find in this passage.
 
Note: it’s not our love of God;
            rather, it is God’s love for us,
            made known in sending Jesus to rescue us.
 
God’s love is unconditional, not earned.
 
And this love which God has for us,
            is expressed in his gift of Jesus, which gives us peace with God,
            and is expressed in a certain hope for the future
                        which in turn gives us a new perspective on suffering.
 
This hope, this confidence in the future, has a firm foundation:
            it is grounded in the death of Jesus.
 
We have already seen what this has achieved,
            as sin ceases to be a barrier between ourselves and God,
            and we enter into a relationship with God
            that would not be possible otherwise
 
The death of Christ, understood in this way,
            is an expression of the love of God.
 
On the cross, as Jesus dies,
            the love of God is satisfied.
 
God’s wrath is reserved for the twin forces of sin and death,
            at work in the world to diminish, distort, and demean humans.
 
Paul makes this point by building up to us:
            Someone might die for a good person
            they might even die for a righteous person
            but it is very unlikely that someone would choose to die for a bad person.
 
And yet… Christ died for sinners
            “God proves his love for us
            in that while we still were sinners Christ died for us.” (5.8)
 
No-one can claim to be “good” before God,
            and thankfully none of us needs to!
 
God shows love for us by doing, through Jesus,
            what not one of us could do for ourselves.
 
We are, by God’s grace, reconciled to God,
            justified, declared righteous,
            gifted a restored relationship with God.
 
And this is not something that can be earned,
            it comes only because of God’s love for us.
 
And so Paul returns to the subject of rejoicing:
            Not only in the hope of glory,
            not only in afflictions,
            but also in God
 
He encourages Christian congregations
            to show their joy in their relationship with God.
 
“we also rejoice in God through our Lord Jesus Christ,
            through whom we have now received reconciliation”
 
Our restored, renewed relationship with God
            is something about which we can be profoundly joyful.
 
And as such, it should affect our worship and the way we live.
 
This is not just something to try and tease out
            of a rather complicated letter
            which was written nearly 2000 years ago.
 
Because Paul’s letter was written to real people,
            in a real church, with real problems, facing real issues.
 
They were trying to share the Gospel of Christ
            in a community which was not really interested in what they had to say.
 
Does this sound familiar?
 
If so, then Paul’s message to the Christians in Rome
            is as relevant today as it was then.
 
If we want others to come to know the good news of Jesus
            if we want people to find the way out of the pit in which they are trapped,
 
Then we need to let the relationship we have with God
            affect our worship and the way we live.
 
What if we can grasp in our lives what it means for God to love the unlovely,
            to desire deep relationship with those currently far off,
            and to be willing to take the first step towards reconciliation.
 
What if we can live these godly values into reality in our lives?
 
Dare I suggest that if we allow God to work in us in this way,
            if our worship is real and joyful
            if our relationship with God in Christ by the Spirit is all-important to us,
then others too will be saved.
 

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