Sermon Tone Analysis

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The winter Olympics are about to begin and one of the things that interests me about athletic competition are the various ways athletes get themselves in the proper mindset to compete.
Although these athletes come from different cultures, it seems that many have in common the techniques they employ.
For example, we often see an athlete with headphones on listening (presumably) to music.
Have you ever watched a weightlifting competition?
Right before the lift, you’ll usually see the athlete smack themselves and, as they lift, they’ll usually let out a loud yell.
This is what they do to get themselves “pumped up” for the competition.
While most of us are not professional athletes, we still must get ourselves ready to face the day, to get “in the zone” to go do what it is we need to do.
I would like to help us all this morning get ready to face the competition.
As we end our study of the eighth chapter of Romans, perhaps the greatest chapter in all the Bible, I’m reminded of these words from a commentator I read some time back.
The task of teaching Christian people to think and live on the basis of a unique event that happened in the first century, but that was the turning point of cosmic history, is therefore, hard though it may seem, one of the most Pauline tasks facing a preacher and teacher today.[1]
So, here’s what I hope to do this morning.
I hope to demonstrate that the incomparable love of God for his people—for you and me—gives us the assurance that we belong to the invincible family of God.
And this is the kind of Christian assurance that is the fruit of saving faith.
I want every Christian, especially in this church, to see Romans 8, and these last ten verses in particular, as their own.
I want every Christian to know, as one of the historic Christian confessions says, that they “may in this life be certainly assured that they are in a state of grace and may rejoice in the hope of the glory of God.”[2]
These verses point the way forward toward Christian assurance, and help prepare us for the jobs we are called to do in this life, by reminding us that God is for us, that Christ died for us, and that the Spirit has united us, forever, to the one true God.
God Is For Us
So we begin with verse 31.
“What then shall we say to these things?”
Paul is speaking here not only of the last few verses, though if Romans 8:28 is true, then it by itself is enough to lead us to what Paul says next.
These verses are the conclusion to what Paul has said in Romans 5-8.
His thesis has been, “If we have been justified by faith, we are at peace.
We are at peace with God (Rom 5:1), and we have so much to look forward to—'we rejoice in hope of the glory of God’ (Rom 5:2).
And our sufferings in this life cannot take us down because even they become fruit-bearing tools in the hands of God whose love for us has been poured into our hearts through the Holy Spirit who has been given to us (Rom 5:3-5).
All of this Paul has unpacked for us in the last four chapters, and if we miss it, we will undoubtedly not have the same assurance Paul has when he says, next, “If God is for us, who can be against us?”
Is God for Us?
Of course, to say that God is for us is the ultimate claim of confidence.
If we’ve got God on our side, we know we are on the winning side every time.
There simply is no one or no thing that can succeed in opposing us.
But how can we be sure that God is for us?
But how do we know that God is for us?
Plenty of Christians are tempted to doubt this, especially when the circumstances of life make us wonder if God is angry with us or maybe just doesn’t really care all that much about us.
This is a problem that comes from being near-sighted.
The previous verses, verses 28-30 in particular, are meant to keep our focus on the whole scheme of God’s work.
All things work together for good, but this does not mean all things are inherently good.
God is up to something, and verses 29-30 make it plain what exactly it is he is up to, so don’t conclude prematurely that God has failed or has turned against you.
While plenty of us will be tempted to do such a thing, countless other Christians have found strength to endure great struggles and trials of their faith with the purpose of God described in Romans 8:29-30 in view.
We best learn to do the same.
But Paul says more.
Here in verse 32 he reminds us of the clearest evidence we have that God is for us.
He uses a little Greek word to put the spotlight on what he says first, literally, “He who even his own Son did not spare but for us all gave him up.”[3]
The language is reminiscent of Abraham’s near sacrifice of his son, Isaac, in Genesis 22.
That story, as shocking as it is, demonstrated the extent of Abraham’s love for God; he was willing to give to God his greatest treasure on earth.
Now just consider how God feels about his people, the genuine love that he has for them, that he has not withheld even his own Son from us.
God gave us his all when he gave us his Son.
This is how we know that God is for us.
What greater evidence could there be?
Love, Not Tolerance
Let me tarry here for a moment.
Do not see in the sacrificial language used here the idea that God felt obligated to give his Son for us.
There is no doubt from the biblical text that Abraham loved his son, Isaac, as much as any father could love his son.
The comparison to that story in God’s own giving of his Son is to put a spotlight on God’s love for us.
The story of the gospel is not seen in all its glory if we think of it as our rich Father paying an exorbitant sum to get his prodigal children out of jail; the real problem in that story being our profligate living.
Rather, the story of the gospel is our gracious God torpedoing the compound of our cruel taskmaster because he wanted us for himself.
Again, remember the exodus theme that lies behind so much of Romans 8. God is for us; he does not merely tolerate us.
The gospel must be understood as a love story in which God, whose love for his own Son cannot be questioned, displays the enormous scope of his love precisely in saving sinners like you and me.
God is for us because God loves us.
I mean, he really loves us.
The Coming Glory
And if God really loves us, then the story is not over.
There is a glory coming that we simply cannot comprehend.
The argument in verse 32 is an argument from the greater to the lesser.
If God has already given us his greatest gift, we can expect he will not withhold from us the lesser things, like, you know, everything.
God has held absolutely nothing back from us.
He gave his own Son to us, not just “for” us: it is “also with him” that he will certainly, graciously give us all things.
Yes, the knife went through the Son of God; he died for us.
But this was not because God chose us over Jesus; God raised Jesus from the dead.
The extraordinary love of God for us is not that God loved us more than Jesus.
What assurance would we have if God was a Father who would kill his own Son so he could have us instead?
No, God also raised Jesus (as Abraham assumed God would do for Isaac if he had gone through with the shocking sacrifice, Heb 11: 19) and with him brought us into his royal family.
Again, now, see the heart of God for you, Christian.
The “all things” must certainly be comprehensive.
Because we possess the Son of God himself, crucified and risen, everything in our lives is turned for our good, for our benefit and even enjoyment, in our union with him.[4]
Jesus is not simply the debt paid for our sins but also the source of our everlasting joy and freedom.
We are “heirs of God and fellow heirs with Christ,” verse 17 said.
This is the gospel promise.
Believing it gives us the assurance that no one could possibly stand against us.
Christ Died for Us
But now, moving on to verses 33-34 we see another way Christian assurance will grow.
God is for us, yes, and remember what it means that Christ died for us.
It means that there can be no charge against us, and there can be no cause of condemnation for us, either.
Notice the Accuser
These two verses put us back into a judicial setting, the one most of us are most familiar with when we think of the gospel story.
In this setting, God clearly takes up the role as the Judge and you and I and all humanity are the ones on trial.
But what Paul has emphasized in this scene in Romans is something we don’t tend to see.
If I’m correct, we usually think of how we are, in fact, guilty and deserving of wrath and condemnation, but that Jesus pays the penalty in our place, and we are declared not guilty.
Without denying this, Paul’s emphasis is elsewhere.
Notice in our passage that Paul does not say, “What can be against us?” or “What can condemn us?” or “What can separate us from the love of Christ?”.
The question is about who rather than what.
This demonstrates, as we’ve been saying all along, that it is a personal entity, not impersonal circumstances, that is our enemy.[5]The
problem that has been resolved is the silencing of the accuser in the court.
The Accuser Condemned
The announcement that opened this chapter (“there is therefore now no condemnation for those who are in Christ Jesus”) has been expounded and explained throughout the rest of the chapter.
In particular we noted verse 3: “For God has done what the law, weakened by the flesh, could not do.
By sending his own Son in the likeness of sinful flesh and for sin, he condemned sin in the flesh.”
On the cross, in the flesh of the Messiah, it was our Accuser, sin personified, that mysterious, dark power we know as Satan, the accuser, or the devil, our adversary.
The sly Serpent in the Garden of Eden has had his head crushed by the offspring of the woman, just as God had promised in Genesis 3:15.
And just like the woman taken in adultery, Jesus has turned the tables.
There is no question that we, like the woman, are guilty.
But when the stone has hit our accuser square in the head, like David’s missile fired at Goliath, we find ourselves standing there alone with Jesus, and we hear his words.
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