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Romans - The Heart of the Gospel
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Romans - The Heart of the Gospel

Author: Annalong Presbyterian Church

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Paul's letter to the Romans is his longest letter, but it is written to a church he didn't plant and didn't know. But he writes about what unites them: the gospel of Jesus Christ. Each passage and chapter is immersed in the truth of the message that calls sinners unto righteousness in Christ.
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Unity in the gospel

Unity in the gospel

2024-06-1728:04

As Paul concludes his letter to the church in Rome, he is keen to impression them the importance of unity in the fellowship. Paul is writing here to the leaders of the church to give them some final instructions. He wants them to be discerning about those who will influence God's people through their teaching and preaching. He doesn't want them pulled away by various winds of doctrine. His letter as a whole has given them what they need to know to stand strong, in unity, against teaching that will pull people away.As Paul finishes he makes sure that he displays his heart to the church and to us. Romans is a rich, dense, glorious book, one saturated with the beauty of the triune God and the redemption he has accomplished. At the heart of it is how to know and live the gospel so that we don't fall away, but daily be captivated by his great love for us.Romans - The heart of the Gospel is a teaching series from Annalong Presbyterian Church. Find out more at www.annalongpc.org/sermons.
We have seen before that Paul has a deep heart for this church in Rome. Even though he hasn't visited Rome he knows some of its members. Chapter 16 details for us these people and their names tell us more about them. Long lists of names aren't simply in the Bible to fill space; they communicate important details of how God works through his people to build his church.The church in Rome was a diverse church made up of Jews, Greeks and Romans. It had nobility and slaves and it was a place where both men and women worshiped and served. This has bearing for us as a church today.Every church should strive to welcome and greet all who enter its fellowship. This includes those who are visitors and those who come week by week. The church should also express its affection and acceptance of one another in deeds as well as words. When we work together in the church we get to know each other and so our bond of fellowship grows. And when we do all of this then we should expect growth in the church as we live as the people of God.The picture Paul paints for us in Romans 16: 1-16 is a beautiful one of what the church should be and how God's people should be one in the Holy Spirit, under one gospel.Romans - The heart of the Gospel is a teaching series from Annalong Presbyterian Church. Find out more at www.annalongpc.org/sermons.
There is one more aspects of the church's maturity that Paul wants to address and it is to do with mission. In the second half of chapter 15 Paul affirms once again his calling to be a missionary to the Gentiles. So far this has been in the east of the Roman Empire, but now he knows his calling to the western part of the Empire and to places where the gospel has never been preached. Paul is writing the letter to the Romans while in Corinth and he will leave there to go to Jerusalem to leave with them the collection from the churches in Macedonia and Achaia and then head to Spain. En route he will stop in Rome to visit with the believers there.His purpose for stopping in Rome is two-fold: (1) to encourage the believers there and (2) to give them opportunity to share in this mission. They may not be able to go to Spain, but they can support Paul through their prayers and giving as he makes the journey and spends time at the ends of the earth of his day.Paul knows this is part of their ongoing discipleship, but he also knows that the work of the Holy Spirit is essential as they do this together. And so we learn of the need of the Holy Spirit in our lives as we undertake God's mission in the world. We can see these in three Ps:Power of the Holy SpiritPartnership in the gospelPrayer for all the churchRomans - The heart of the Gospel is a teaching series from Annalong Presbyterian Church. Find out more at www.annalongpc.org/sermons.
The church in harmony

The church in harmony

2024-05-2727:01

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.
The sacrifice of self

The sacrifice of self

2024-05-2029:41

As Paul continues the practical outworking of our Christian faith he address an issue that is not just fixed to the first century church, but a problem that has seen damage in the church in every generation. Paul addresses the human problem of judging. In the context of chapter 14 of Romans, Paul is telling the church then and now that there is no place for judging in the fellowship of believers. He makes this clear in a number of verses that conclude each time by taking us to God’s perspective. It is God alone who is judge and as judge he sees us through his son Jesus because our faith is in him for our salvation.Rather than judging, Paul takes us in the second half of the chapter to consider how we can build each other up. Once again, this doesn’t come without a challenge as Paul warns us that our freedom to do certain things can cause another to stumble. We are to be a church that speaks well of Jesus as we live well for him together. We are to think of others before ourselves and live Biblically as Paul directs us.Romans - The heart of the Gospel is a teaching series from Annalong Presbyterian Church. Find out more at www.annalongpc.org/sermons.
Love that lives well

Love that lives well

2024-05-0628:46

Continuing his great application of his rich theology, Paul presents a logical progression of how we are to live as followers of Jesus.  Having looked in chapter 12 at how worship through our service and love our brothers and sisters in Christ.  In chapter 13 he continues this theme of love, but this time Paul wants to tell us how love lives well in society.Beginning with looking at the civil authorities, out obedience to the law of land is part of the Christian's integrity.  Paul affirms that civil leaders are appointed by God's authority, therefore they are to serve as his agents in the moral law.  This does not mean that Christians simply sit back and take what comes their way.  If the civil authorities are not leading in a Christ-centred way, then we take a stand for what is right and true - we obey God rather than man.This leads Paul into the second part of the passage as he considers how love keeps us from sinning.  Sacrificial love means we stay on the path of light and not on the path of darkness.  Living in the light means we stay true to the gospel, whereas walking in the darkness will only lead to sin.  Paul urges us to be sincere in our love of Christ so that we can live well in the church and in society.Romans - The heart of the Gospel is a teaching series from Annalong Presbyterian Church. Find out more at www.annalongpc.org/sermons.
We have reached a key moment in our studies in the letter to the Romans. Paul has spent 11 chapters detailing his great theology on what the gospel is. But it has to be more than head knowledge and so in these closing chapters, chapters 12 to 16, Paul tells us how we apply this gospel in our daily lives. He begins by detailing what our response is to God. Knowing the gospel means we respond in love to God and understand that everything we do is our spiritual worship.Having established our response to the gospel is love for God, Paul goes on to talk of how the church its to be a place of sacrificial love. Believers are to be transformed by Jesus and not conformed by the world. We are to be different people who demonstrate a better way - the Jesus way. We are called to live as Jesus did so that we will show what the love of God looks like in our daily lives.Romans - The heart of the Gospel is a teaching series from Annalong Presbyterian Church. Find out more at www.annalongpc.org/sermons.
Verses 25 to 36 draw Paul's great theology of the gospel to a close. He has been directing us in the first 11 chapters to the heart of God's love towards us. As he concludes he speaks of a future time when the Jews (ethnic Israel) will come to know the fullness of the gospel through Jesus Christ. For now they have been partially hardened towards the good news, but when the fullness of Gentiles has been achieved (a time and number we do not know), then God will remain faithful to his covenant people. Paul is clear - the only way for Jew or Gentile to know salvation is and can only be through Jesus Christ.As we live gospel lives today we have great certainty that God is faithful to his promises and he will remain so. Our faith is not misguided, but is well placed.Romans - The heart of the Gospel is a teaching series from Annalong Presbyterian Church. Find out more at www.annalongpc.org/sermons.
Romans 11 is one of the hardest chapters of the Bible to understand. Looking at the first 24 verses we learn from Paul God's plan of salvation for both Jew and Gentile. Using the illustration of a grafted olive tree, the root and trunk are God's plan of salvation. Israel was the natural branches for the Lord's blessing of salvation, but due to their disobedience we now live in a time when their position has taken a back seat so that the Gentiles, now grafted in as a wild olive branch, can know the blessing of salvation for them also.The overarching message of this passage is that God knows what he is doing and that salvation is only through Christ alone. Paul has made this clear throughout this letter. He continues to show his mercy and grace on both Jew and Gentile, for none is excluded from the truth of the gospel.Romans - The heart of the Gospel is a teaching series from Annalong Presbyterian Church. Find out more at www.annalongpc.org/sermons.
Salvation for all!

Salvation for all!

2024-04-0827:29

Paul begins what are two difficult chapters with some great news. His message in chapter 10 is the truth that salvation is for all who will hear and respond. We need to be attentive to it. But we also must share it! We cannot keep the gospel to ourselves, hidden and locked away. It's to be shared in word and deed so that the world will know the truth of the risen Saviour.Our call as followers of Jesus is to know Christ each day and learn together from him what it means to be his faithful witnesses in this day, wherever he has placed us.Romans - The heart of the Gospel is a teaching series from Annalong Presbyterian Church. Find out more at www.annalongpc.org/sermons.
Righteousness by faith

Righteousness by faith

2024-03-1823:31

As Paul concludes Romans 9 he still wants to challenge those who think the law can save them. He categorically states that the law is for our benefit, but not our salvation. He particularly challenges Israel for their lack of faith and stuck rigidly to the law. This has been their stumbling block.But Paul is a man who hopes in the gospel. He eagerly desires that Israel may be saved. But their salvation can only come through Jesus Christ, who is the end of the law for righteousness to everyone who believes.The challenge for God's people today is that we do not rely on ourselves and our own efforts for salvation. We are to have faith alone in Jesus Christ as our Saviour.Romans - The heart of the Gospel is a teaching series from Annalong Presbyterian Church. Find out more at www.annalongpc.org/sermons.
The good news of the gospel is that we don't rely on ethnicity or culture for our salvation. The gospel is for everyone. Too often we can be too focused on a culture that appeals to us and so we think that to be a true believer then new converts must act and behave as we do in that culture. It is the gospel that frees us from these cultural pressures and makes us free in Christ.In Romans 9 Paul's heart is open before us to look beyond the culture of the Jews, who thought their faith and culture were dependant on each other. Paul says that if he could save them he would, but they reject the truth and look to their culture as their salvation. We cannot rely on who we are by birth, by tradition, or by culture. None of those things matter in salvation because God's free gift is for all without prejudice.Romans - The heart of the Gospel is a teaching series from Annalong Presbyterian Church. Find out more at www.annalongpc.org/sermons.
The gospel is great assurance for the believer because in the gospel we know that nothing can take us, or separate us, from Christ. Although it is an uneasy theological concept, predestination gives us this assurance. In Romans 8 Paul speaks of our predestined assurance before the Father because of Jesus and what he accomplished on the cross and through the resurrection. It is truly wonderful to know that nothing will take us away from the blessed hope we have if we are truly in Jesus Christ.And Romans 8 gives us an insight into our future. As predestined people then future glory is ours because God has planned it as such. Paul tells us that this earth is groaning with sin and will one day pass away. But this groaning must be endured so that we can know the glory of heaven. John Bunyan in hymn encourages us to keep going in the faith so that we will know the full blessings of our salvation.Romans - The heart of the Gospel is a teaching series from Annalong Presbyterian Church. Find out more at www.annalongpc.org/sermons.
Romans 8 is another change in the Paul's letter to the Romans. In chapters 6 and 7 Paul has been discussing the law and how it is of no benefit for our salvation. He went as far to say that depending on the law was sin! But things move on in chapter 8 as Paul give us great comfort in verse 1 by saying that when we are in Christ we are not condemned for our sin. He then goes on to list the great advantage there is in living life int eh Spirit of God.But a caution comes at the end of the passage as Paul tells us that anyone who follows Christ will face persecution. So the question comes is it all worth it? The answer is yes, because of the eternal hope we have in Christ.Romans - The heart of the Gospel is a teaching series from Annalong Presbyterian Church. Find out more at www.annalongpc.org/sermons.
Continuing in Romans 7, Paul remains on his thought about the law and how it can be sin when we look to it for salvation. In this next section Paul opens his heart to us and gives us an insight into how he sees himself. Verse 13-25 show a man who recognises that he doesn't do the things he should, but rather continues in sin because that is how we are naturally inclined.The climax of this passage is his honest statement in verse 24: Wretched man that I am! Who will deliver me from this body of death? Paul asks the question we all need to ask. How can we be free from sin. Paul comes back with the simple answer in verse 25. There he exclaims,Thanks be to God through Jesus Christ our Lord! So then, I myself serve the law of God with my mind, but with my flesh I serve the law of sin.Jesus is still the answer to our problem with sin and his arms are open wide to receive us. Our guest speaker, Alan Hanna, leads us through this passage so we might know how to live for Christ, free from sin.Romans - The heart of the Gospel is a teaching series from Annalong Presbyterian Church. Find out more at www.annalongpc.org/sermons.
Paul shifts gear in Romans 7 as he tackles how we can escape the penalty of sin. In verses 1 to 12 Paul presents sin as a contract. This contract simply can't be broken because God's righteous demand is that the penalty of sin can only be paid with blood. But this is how we break the contract: either the blood of Christ that leads us to heaven, or our own blood that leads to hell.In the second half of the passage, verses 7 to 12, he tells us that it is the law that points us to our sin. Sin is subtle and caused Paul to sin by his following of it. his problem was he was depending on the law for his salvation and this led him away from God and thereby to sin. We are cautioned to avoid sin and any attempt to think our works and good merits will contribute anything to our salvation. To break the contract with sin we need to trust in the sacrificial blood of Jesus.Romans - The heart of the Gospel is a teaching series from Annalong Presbyterian Church. Find out more at www.annalongpc.org/sermons.
Paul's heart is to see the believers in the Roman church love Christ deeply so that they won't lose their first love and fall away from faith. They are faced on every side with persecution and their only hope is the gospel in Jesus Christ. Paul wants them to know that they are slaves to Christ-and this is a good thing-rather than slaves to sin.This is the shocking message for us. We are salves to something. We are naturally salves to sin and the ways of the world and the only way to change this is to become a slave to God. As Paul tells us, in becoming a slave to God we then know his righteousness and know his love and security. Do not fear being a slave to God because if we are slave to sin (and we are a slave to either God or sin) then we will know eternal death and have no hope.The truth Paul rings through to us is that the gift of God is eternal life (Romans 6 v 23). This is the gift we need and is freely available.Romans - The heart of the Gospel is a teaching series from Annalong Presbyterian Church. Find out more at www.annalongpc.org/sermons.
In Romans 6 Paul brings us back again to talk about the dangers of our sin if it goes unchecked. But he also gives us a solution for how to deal with this problem. Continuing his logical progression for why faith is justified, Paul challenges the believers to question why if they say they are Christ's and have been saved by him they keep on sinning? This is a relevant question for us and Paul convinces us to love Christ more than the sin.In shaping our thinking Paul wants us to see the merit and value of union with Christ. Christ is not distant from us, rather is becomes part of us, an engrafting, as we trust in him for our salvation. Paul wants believers to keep their sin in check and says clearly that we cannot live in two worlds: a world of sin and a world of grace. We can only live by grace if we desire to know God and his goodness.But this grace is not to be abused and tested by how much we can sin and thereby allow God to demonstrate his great grace. If we are in Christ sinning should be expelled from us and we look to Christ and live for him.Romans - The heart of the Gospel is a teaching series from Annalong Presbyterian Church. Find out more at www.annalongpc.org/sermons.
The free gift of Jesus

The free gift of Jesus

2023-12-0626:15

We all love a free gift and in Romans 5 v 12 to 21 Paul tells us not only what the free gift is, but how to get it. Having spoken about peace with God that is unlike anything in this world at the start of the chapter, he moves on to the next logical step. This peace can only come through Jesus Christ, whom he describes as not only a free gift, but the greatest gift we can ever receive!In these 10 verses Paul speaks of the coming of three things to help us understand why we need to receive the free gift of Jesus and his salvation. The coming of sin in the first instance means we need a saviour because if we don't trust in Jesus then we will face the punishment for our sin. He then speaks of the coming of forgiveness through Christ's death on the cross and resurrection. Because of this we can know that our sin is dealt with.The final coming he speaks of is of eternal life. This is the natural conclusion of the gospel. Faith in Christ brings us into the eternal presence of God. And this is the value of the gift. We are reminded that eternal life can only come through the grave, or when Christ returns. But eternity will come—it is a certainty. Is it yours?Romans - The heart of the Gospel is a teaching series from Annalong Presbyterian Church. Find out more at www.annalongpc.org/sermons.
In his letter to the Romans, Paul makes a logical argument for why we need faith in Christ alone. He begins by considering our need of a saviour, followed by introducing us to the Saviour. In our passage for this podcast, Romans 5 v 1-11, Paul presents to us the benefits of faith and he begins with the peace that it brings.Followers of Jesus are called to turn away from the superficial peace the world seeks and eagerly pursue the radical peace of Jesus. The peace through him gives us hope in the glory of God and reconciliation with our Heavenly Father. Paul challenges us to be sure that we know this peace and not something that is fleeting.Romans - The heart of the Gospel is a teaching series from Annalong Presbyterian Church. Find out more at www.annalongpc.org/sermons.
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