Living worthily as recipients of the best gift (1)
[Romans 6:1-11]
We have already learned through meditation on Romans
5:12-21 that the greatest gift God gives us is eternal life. We must believe in Jesus Christ if we want to
receive this gift of eternal life. Whoever
believes in his heart that God raised Jesus from the dead and confesses with
his mouth that Jesus is Lord will be saved (10:9) and can enjoy this greatest
gift, eternal life, not only in the world to come but also in this world. If there are people who have not yet received
this blessing of eternal life, I hope and pray that you will receive this
blessing today. Believe that Jesus died
on the cross to forgive all your sins. Also,
believe that Jesus, who died to justify you, rose from the grave (4:25). To all those who believe in the death and
resurrection of Jesus Christ, God will give you eternal life, the greatest gift
that cannot be exchanged for anything in this world.
If among you, those of you who have already received
the blessing of eternal life through your faith in Jesus Christ, you can enjoy
this blessing of eternal life not only in the next world, but also partially in
your current life on earth. Are you
currently enjoying the blessing of eternal life? Are you partially enjoying eternal life in
heaven while living in this wilderness-like world? Are you enjoying the blessing of becoming like
Jesus in the work of sanctification of the indwelling Holy Spirit? Are you also enjoying the gift of love, the
fruit of the Holy Spirit? Are you
enjoying a life of love in heaven, at least partially, while loving God and
loving your neighbor in this earth? Also, while living in this world without
peace, are you enjoying the peace of God that the world cannot give? It is entirely by God's grace that we are
able to enjoy all these blessings of eternal life, at least partially, on this
earth (5:15). How should we live the
more we realize this grace of God?
Today's Bible, Romans 6:1-11, as those who receive the
greatest gift of eternal life through God's total grace, teaches us how to live
a proper life as those who have received the gift of eternal life in two ways.
First, as those
who have received the gift of eternal life, we must live a proper life as if we
were dead to sin.
Look at Romans 6:11 – “In the same way, count
yourselves dead to sin but alive to God in Christ Jesus.” Here, how does the word to live as dead to
sin mean to live? To live as if we were
dead to sin means not to dwell in sin. Look
at Romans 6:1 – “What shall we say, then? Shall we go on sinning so that grace may
increase?” Here, the saying that those
who are dead to sin do not go on sinning means that sin no longer reigns in
death (5:21). The words ‘sin does not
reign in death’ mean that sin no longer has dominion over those who have
eternal life (6:14). Now that we have
received the gift of eternal life, sin and death no longer rule us in our lives
(6:9). An example we can have to better
understand this verse is Genesis 4:7. Because
God accepted Abel's offering and disapproved of Cain's offering (Gen. 4:4-5), Cain
was angry and his face downcast (v. 6). So,
God said to Cain, “If you do what is right, will you not be accepted? But if you do not do what is right, sin is
crouching at your door; it desires to have you, but you must master it.” However, as we know, the result was that Cain
could not master his desire to sin and killed his younger brother Abel (v. 8). This life in which we cannot master our desire
to sin is what our life looked like before we believed in Jesus. In other words, before we believed in Jesus,
our lives were governed by sin. Sin
reigned in our lives. That's why we all
turned away, and all together had become worthless, and did not do good (3:12).
We couldn't do what was right in the
sight of a good God. However, since we
believed in Jesus, were justified, and enjoyed the bliss of eternal life, sin
no longer had dominion over us. Sin no
longer reigns in death, nor can it do so. Why? The
reason is that we are already dead to sin (6:2). In other words, sin no longer reigns in death
and has dominion over us because our old self has been crucified with Jesus and
therefore dead to sin (v. 6). How do we
know that we are already dead to sin? If
we want to know that a person is dead, we can tell by looking at the body. No one will go to a funeral and see a dead
body lying in a coffin and say he is alive.
We know that the person has passed away and died when we see the dead
body lying in the coffin. Likewise, when
we look with faith to the death of Jesus, who died on the cross about 2,000
years ago to forgive our sins, we must admit that we are dead to sin. In other words, the shedding blood of Jesus
on the cross proves that we are dead to sin. Paul expresses this by saying that the saints
were baptized into the death of Jesus and buried with Him (vv. 3-4). This expression, in one word, points to union
with Jesus. Union with Jesus, which is
difficult for us to understand, means that Jesus died on the cross “once for
all” (v. 10), so our old self also entered into the death of Jesus and died. In other words, the death of Jesus was the
death for our own sins. Therefore, the
relationship between sin and us was eventually severed as if it were dead
(Park). So Paul, writing a letter to the
saints in Rome, clearly told them in verses 6-7: “For we know that our old self
was crucified with him so that the body of sin might be done away with, that we
should no longer be slaves to sin-- because anyone who has died has been freed
from sin.”
Our old self, who belonged to the flesh before
believing in Jesus, who committed sins by doing things to the sinful nature in
the lust of the flesh, died when Jesus was crucified. Therefore, sin and death no longer have
dominion and dominion over us, nor can they.
In other words, believers who are united in the death of Jesus on the
cross are no longer slaves to sin because their old self has already died. Why? The
reason is that we have been freed from sin through the death of Jesus on the
cross. That's why we sing this hymn to
the Lord: (v. 1 & chorus) “Would you be free from your burden of sin? There's pow'r in the Blood, pow'r in the
Blood. Would you o'er evil a victory
win? There's wonderful pow'r in the
Blood. There is pow'r, pow'r, wonde rworking
pow'r In the blood of the Lamb. There is pow'r pow'r wonder-working pow'r In
the precious blood of the Lamb.” Then
why do we continue to sin even though we have been set free from sin by the
blood of the Lord? Why do we sin even
though we are already dead to sin by being united in the death of Jesus? If we explain this with Paul's theology, we
have to look at it from the perspective of “Already” and “Not-yet” that we have
already been saved and will be saved in the future. In other words, we have already received
salvation through our faith in Jesus, but the completion of salvation will
occur when Jesus returns. In other
words, on the day Jesus returns, we will be suddenly transformed and put on a
glorious body. At that time, we will
have a glorious, spiritually strong body that not only does not sin, but also
does not know what sin is. But until
then, we must continue to fight sin as we live in the Church Age between
"already" and "not yet." That is why we say that the church is a
victorious church and also a militant church.
Then, how should we engage in this spiritual battle?
(1) We
must not forget God's grace.
In
other words, we believe that God bestowed grace on us, sinners, and enemies of
God, even sending His only begotten Son, Jesus, to die on the cross in order to
give us the blessing of eternal life. should not be forgotten. As we engage in the spiritual battle, we must
go deeper and deeper into this grace of God.
(2) We
must not forget the grace of Jesus.
Jesus,
who obeyed even to the point of dying on the cross to save us and all our sins
were forgiven because He shed His blood on the cross and died. If we have been justified by faith, we have
been reconciled to God and are enjoying the privilege of fellowshipping with
God, calling Him Abba, Father. Therefore,
we must not forget the grace of the cross of Jesus.
(3) We
must not let this grace of God and the grace of Jesus be in vain.
As
it says in Romans 6:1-2, in order not to waste God's grace, we must no longer
live in sin as if we were dead to sin. In
particular, what we need to keep in mind in this part is not to misunderstand
the words where sin abounded, grace abounded more (5:20), and to realize that
the more we sin, the more God’s grace abounds. This is a foolish idea and a
foolish action. That is why Paul is
strongly saying, “By no means!” (v. 2). How
can we live in sin to increase grace? Believers who truly realize the grace of God
and Jesus strive to lead a life of separation from sin so as not to make the
grace of God in vain. We are no longer
enslaved to sin. We live our lives of
faith, counting ourselves as dead to our own sins. In particular, as those who are united to the
death of Jesus on the cross, we do not allow sin to rule ourselves. In the midst of the work of the Holy Spirit,
we live by mastering our sins.
Let us remember that we are dead to sin. Let us cry to ourselves, ‘I am a corpse for
sin’. As dead to sin, let us keep in
mind that sin no longer reigns in death.
In the midst of this, even when we fall into the temptation of sin and
commit sins, let us remember that we are dead to sin, looking with faith to
Jesus who died on the cross in order to forgive our sins. Let's live far away from sin as those who
have died to sin. Even though sin comes
close and rushes to eat us like a roaring lion, let us fight and overcome by
relying on the power of the precious blood of the cross of Jesus. Since Jesus was victorious on the cross, we
too can be victorious.
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