Sharing is caring.
[Romans 15:22-29]
There is a Naver blog website that I personally
operate. The motive for starting the
website was a challenge from a nephew of an elder of our church a few years ago
while staying overnight at the elder's house.
According to that brother in Christ, in Korea, the Koreans do not use
the search engine google.com like in the US but use naver.com more. So, I opened the Naver blog website and
started this blog ministry with the hope that by posting all the articles I
have posted on our church website, such as sermons, meditation, family stories,
etc., it will be beneficial to many people in Korea, their spiritual life, and
their family life. And actually, it seems
that the average number of people who come to my website every day now is about
450-500 people a day. And it seems that
these people come not only from Korea, but also from international students
here in the US or people who use the Naver search engine. And when I look at the people who comment or
scrap my writings, they mostly take the Psalms that I meditated on every
Wednesday prayer meeting every week, or they say ‘Thank you for helping me
meditate on the words’. As those of you
who have visited it once know, the title of my Naver blog website is “Sharing
is Caring,” which is the title of today’s word meditation, that is, “Sharing is
caring.” The reason I chose this title
is to reach out to people through my personal Naver blog website by sharing the
word of God and family stories. And the
person who taught me this title is Karis, my youngest daughter. One day, Karis came home and chatted with her
sister Yeri for a while. And then Karis
said “Sharing is caring” to her sister, probably because Yeri did not give her
something. I think Karis said that Yeri
had something she wanted to keep, but she didn't give it to her. So, she might have learned from her teacher
at school that 'Sharing is caring'. Lol. When I first heard that word, I thought, 'This
is such a cool word'. So, this word I
heard at that time became imprinted on my mind, so I set them as the title of
my Naver blog website. And I am still
managing the blogging ministry. What do
you think? Do you really think that sharing
is caring? If you think so, what are you
sharing with your loved ones in your life?
What do your spiritual members share with the brothers and sisters of
the church community while living a life of faith?
In today's text, Romans 15:27, Paul writes a letter to
the saints in Rome and comes to this conclusion to talk about how Jewish and
Gentile saints can be a model to share with each other. What kind of sharing can serve as a model? Look at verse 27: “Yes, they were pleased to
do so, and they are indebted to them. For if the Gentiles have shared in their
spiritual things, they are indebted to minister to them also in material
things.” Here, Paul explains that the
model of sharing that the Roman saints should imitate is that the Jewish
brothers share “the Jews’ spiritual blessings” with their Gentile brothers, and
the Gentile brothers share “the Gentiles’ material blessings” with their Jewish
brothers. Then, the question we cannot
help asking here is what the spiritual blessings the Jewish brothers shared
with their Gentile brothers, and what the material blessings the Gentile
brothers shared with their Jewish brothers.
First of all, what
are the spiritual blessings that the Jewish brothers shared with their Gentile
brothers?
That spiritual blessings are, in a word, the spiritual
grace through the gospel of Jesus Christ. Think about it. How did the gospel of Jesus Christ spread to
the Gentiles? Isn't it because of the
Jews? Looking at Romans 1:16, the
gospel, which is the power of God for salvation to all believers, was first
preached to the Jews. Although Paul was
an apostle to the Gentiles, he preached the gospel to the Jews first. In a word, the Gentile brothers were indebted
to their Jewish brothers (15:27). What did
the Gentile brothers owe to their Jewish brothers? It was the gospel and a spiritual blessing. What do you think of when you hear “spiritual
blessing”? On the first day of the 30th
anniversary sermon meeting of Victory Presbyterian Church, I remembered the
sermon title of the guest speaker, “A Spiritual Blessing from Heaven.” Where is that title based? It is based on Ephesians 1:3 – “Praise be to
the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, who has blessed us in the heavenly
realms with every spiritual blessing in Christ.” What is the spiritual blessing that the Jewish
brothers shared with the Gentile brothers, that is, the spiritual blessing of
heaven? That is, in a word,
"salvation" (eternal life) that the Gentile brothers enjoyed by
hearing the gospel of Jesus Christ and accepting Jesus as their Savior. God loved from before the foundation of the
world (v. 4) and chose (v. 4) and predestined (v. 5) those whom He loved not
only from the Jews but also from the Gentiles (v. 5), gave them redemption
through the blood of Jesus, the forgiveness of sins (v. 7), and made them God’s
children (adoption) (v. 5). Therefore,
Paul is now writing a letter to the Roman church saints, thinking especially of
the Gentile saints in the Roman community, saying, ‘You owe spiritual blessings
to your brothers, the Jewish saints.
Then, how should
the Gentile saints, who owe these spiritual blessings, repay their debts to
their brothers, the Jewish saints? What
should the Gentile brothers who owe spiritual blessings share with their Jewish
brothers?
They are “material things” (Rom. 15:27). Paul says, “they (the Gentiles brothers) are
indebted to minister to them (the Jewish brothers) also in material things” (v.
27). What are the material things that
Paul is talking about here? Paul is
telling Gentile saints to share with their Jewish brothers, the material
blessings they have received by grace from God.
Isn't that interesting? The
Jewish saints already shared spiritual blessings with Gentile brothers, and the
Gentile saints shared material blessings with Jewish brothers. As Paul writes a letter to the Roman church
saints, he gives an example of this, saying that it is proper for Gentile
brothers to share material blessings with Jewish brothers. One example is the almsgiving donation that
the Gentiles, the Macedonians and Achaia people, joyfully collected for the
poor among the Jewish believers in the Jerusalem church (v. 26). At the time of Paul, there was a severe
famine in Judea due to a famine (Acts 11:28-30). As a result, the Jewish believers of the
Jerusalem church suffered great hardship (Ref.: Gal.2:8-10). At that time, the Gentile brothers in
Macedonia and Achaia collected alms money to help the Jewish believers of the
Jerusalem church financially. And Paul
intended to take the alms money and deliver it to the Jewish believers in
Jerusalem (Rom.15:25). And he says that
when he goes to Rome, he will go in the fullness of the blessing of Christ (v.
29). What does it mean? It means that Paul will go to Rome full of
spiritual grace and share it with the Jewish believers there (Park).
How beautiful is this? How beautiful is it to see Paul, the spiritual
leader, exhorting the saints in Rome to live a life of sharing with each other,
while wanting to take and share the full spiritual grace with the Jewish and
Gentile saints in Rome? Just imagine. First, as a leader, Paul fully shares
spiritual grace with the Roman church saints, both Jewish and Gentile, who have
become one in the Lord. When you think
that the Jewish saints share spiritual things with their Gentile brothers, and
the Gentiles share material things with their Jewish brothers, what a beautiful
community this is. Personally, I think
the beauty of the church community is right here. The church is beautiful when we obey Jesus'
command to love each other as ourselves.
Now, as Paul writes letters to the saints of the church of Rome, he
already exhorts them in Romans 13 with “Owe nothing to anyone except to love
one another” (v. 8) and “Love your neighbor as yourself” (v. 9). And when he comes to Romans 15, he says
‘please one another’ (vv. 1-2), and “Accept one another” “just as Jesus Christ accepted
you” (v. 7), and then in verses 22-29, he exhorts them to 'share with each
other'. In the end, I think that the
message that Paul is giving to the Roman church saints and our church members
is telling us to 'pay each other a debt of love' or 'love one another'. Briefly put again, Paul is now reminding the
Roman church and our church of Jesus' second commandment, 'Love your neighbor
as yourself'. And I believe that when
the church loves each other according to the commandment of Jesus, the church
will not only be beautiful in the eyes of God, but also attractive to the
world. Wouldn't you like to dream of a
church like this? Do you not want to
participate in the ministry of the Lord who is building such a church?
I came up with these thoughts while meditating on the
words of Isaiah 5:2 during the morning prayer meeting last Thursday. God put all His heart and effort into me and
planted the choicest vines in this American land and wants me to bear good
grapes. At that time, the voice of God
heard was the first half of Isaiah 5:4 – “What more could have been done for my
vineyard than I have done for it? …” What
does it mean? God loves you and me and
devotes all His sincerity and effort like the finest products. He even gave up His only begotten Son, Jesus,
on the cross for our salvation. What else does God have to do more? If God shared the life of His only begotten
Son, Jesus, for the sake of those who are weak, sinners, and enemies like us,
what more could He share? Today, this
God wants you and me to share Jesus. God
wants us to share the gospel of Jesus Christ.
God wants to share eternal life. I hope and pray that we are able to share this
amazing love of God with our neighbors.
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