We are finally in chapter 6. We are
still talking about the details of God’s grace, but now we are entering
into Part II, which is our new life that we have in Jesus Christ.
I want you to look at
Romans 5:20. There is something I want to point out that may help you as we
enter into chapter 6. It says,
"And the Law came in that the transgression
might increase; but where sin increased, grace abounded all the more."
Now
there are two words used in that verse for "abound" or "increase." The
first one is pleonazo, which means "is more than enough; to have
enough." The other word used, perisseuo,
is actually a synonym, but when they are used together, they are saying
two different things. So perisseuo is the last word "grace
abounded much more." When you use the two together, pleonazo
means to abound, but perisseuo means to go even beyond that. Even
though they’re synonyms, when the two words are used together, one takes
it to a greater extreme. Not only that, but Paul put took a
little preposition, huper, and put it in the front of the word
perisseuo. So what he is saying is, not only does it go beyond
increasing, where sin increased, but it goes way beyond.
There is another difference in the words.
Grace has abounded over what sin did to man. The word perisseuo
means you are conscious of this abounding. The first word, when it says
"sin increased," is something that you may not be conscious of. But the
second word is a word that means you are conscious of this.
This is very important. How did sin abound? When you cry out to the Lord
Jesus Christ and grace super abounds over that sin that you were once in, the
grace of God is extended to you. Now are you aware of it? Oh, yes! You’re
aware of it! You’re aware of the fact that something happened to your
life. We’re going to be looking at this in Romans 6.
First, you are aware that the
penalty of sin is gone.
No longer will you have to endure the penalty of death. Even when
you die physically on this earth, immediately you are in the presence of
God. Death no longer reigns over you. He took your death for you. He went
to the cross for you. The penalty fell on Him. He went to the cross.
Therefore, when we put our faith into Him, it has no effect on us.
Secondly, the power of sin,
now, has no more claim over our lives.
Whereas, when we were in Adam, it
ruled and reigned in our lives. We were sinners, ungodly, all of us! But
when you reach out to Christ, His grace is something you experience. It’s
not just something you preach about! It’s not just something you talk
about! You actually experience the grace of God. You are conscious of His
grace, of the fact that now something new has happened in your life.
Not only does it deal with the power of
sin, it even deals with the desire to sin. I think Paul is trying to get
us to the point of understanding, "When you become a Christian, you are
aware that something brand new has taken place in your life. It’s not like
when you were in Adam. You didn’t know what the problem was until the
scriptures came and revealed it. But when you put your faith into Christ,
you seek after Him. When the Holy Spirit opens it up to you, you reach out
to Him.
Now when I say, "You seek after Him" I
really mean He sought after you! But when you see the grace, you reach out
for it. That grace coming into your life transforms you!
2Cor5:17 says, "Therefore, if any man is in Christ." Where was he
before? In Adam. How did he get in Christ? He put his faith into Christ,
and the result of that was baptized into His body with the
Holy Spirit. There is no such thing as the baptism of the
Holy Spirit. That is never found in Scripture. It’s the baptism with
the Holy Spirit or by the Holy Spirit into
the body of Christ. The moment you reach out for that grace, it super
abounds over the sin and you are consciously aware of it.
"Therefore, if any man is in Christ, he
is a new creature; the old things [all of that old life style in
Adam] passed away; behold, new things have come."
What? The old becomes new. Here it is, right here
in Romans. Oh, if you can get this down in your thinking, it will
radically change and transform your lifestyle.
In Romans 6:1 the Apostle Paul has
anticipated a question being asked by those who see grace as a license to
sin—the Antinomians. These were the party-goers. "I’m under grace—I can do
what I want to do! I’m free in Jesus—I can do what I want to do." Freedom
is not the license to do what you want to do, to do what you please. It’s
the power to do as you should. It’s a totally different thought. The
Antinomians would take what Paul said and try to pervert it.
Paul anticipates that, so he says in
6:1, "What shall we say then? Are we to continue in sin that grace might
increase?" That’s the question he anticipates. The term "shall we continue
in sin" is the word epimeno. He is referring to habitual sin.
Understand the difference. A believer can sin, but he doesn’t live in
habitual sin as he did when he was under the effects of Adam.
Adam had a son. His name was Cain. In
Cain was his daddy Adam. Everything Cain was, his daddy was, and he
continued to pass it down until it got to us. But when we are born again,
born into Christ, something changes in our lives, and where sin used to
have rights over me and cause me to do what I perhaps now would not want
to do, it has no rights over me any more. So when you talk about habitual
sinning, there is no possible way a believer can go back and live as if he
is still in Adam. Paul is going to show you why in Romans chapter 6.
When I taught in
1John 3, I had
people come to me and say, "That’s too harsh. John says you can’t live in
habitual sin. Oh, come on, let’s be realistic."
I had to say to them, "I
didn’t write that. John wrote it under the inspiration of the Holy Spirit
of God. If you’ve got a problem with it, don’t take it up with me. Take it
up with Him!"
Now in Romans 6 you’re going to see what John was
talking about. You see, a lot of people still think, "I
made a decision years ago. I walked the aisle. I cried big tears and asked
God to forgive me. I’m a Christian now, and I can live like I want to live
because of God’s grace. He saved me, and He forgave me." Hold it! Hold it!
What were you saved from and what were you saved to? You must understand
what Paul is saying here. There is no possible way a Christian can go back
and live the lifestyle he lived when he was in Adam. Because he is not
in Adam any more. He is now in Christ. That is the question he
anticipates, and he is going to answer it.
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Why is it
that a believer cannot continue to live in sin? |
Why is what Paul is speaking of here so absurd?
Well, first of all, we are dead to sin. Make sure you get this down in
your mind.
Look at verse 2: "May it never be!" Paul asks, "How shall we
who died to sin still live in it?"
Now, he is going to really drive this
one home. The little phrase there, "May it never be," (in reference to:
"Can I go back and live like I used to live?") is the term me
genoito . It is found about 14 different times in the New
Testament. Paul uses it almost every time, and 11 of them are found right
here in the book of Romans. I want to go through every one of them because
I want you to see how Paul uses that phrase.
|
MAY
IT NEVER BE!
me
genoito
"That is absolutely
absurd!"
|
When I would get in trouble as a
teenager, sometimes I would be grounded—I wasn’t supposed to leave the
house or use the car. Now, suppose I walked up my dad and said, "Aw, come
on, Dad! Give me the car tonight." Well, Dad would say, "May it never be!"
(He may not say it like that. He’ll probably say, "Absolutely out of the
question! It’ll never happen!") That’s exactly what Paul is doing here. He
is saying, "It is absolutely, totally an absurdity to think you can go
back and live the lifestyle you once lived in Adam when you put your faith
into Jesus Christ."
Let me show you that. I’m going to show
you every time he uses it in the Book of Romans. I think it will help you
to realize that when he makes that statement, it’s referencing an
absurdity. He is saying, "That is absolutely absurd!"
After the statement of Paul concerning
the unbelief of many Jews, in Romans 3:3-4, he says, "What then? If some
did not believe, their unbelief will not nullify the faithfulness of God,
will it? May it never be! [He says, "It can’t. What do you mean nullify
the faithfulness of God?"] Rather, let God be found true, though every man
be found a liar, as it is written, ‘That Thou mightest be justified
in Thy words, and mightest prevail when Thou art judged.’"
After the absurd thought that God is
unrighteous because He inflicts wrath upon humanity, look at Romans 3:6.
Paul says, "May it never be! For otherwise how will God judge the world?"
In Romans 3:31, after the absurd thought
that we could somehow nullify the Law through faith, Paul says, "Do we
then nullify the Law through faith? May it never be! On the contrary, we
establish the Law." You see, every time he says, "It can’t be—it’ll never
be!
Look in Romans 6:15: What then? Shall we
sin because we are not under sin but under grace? May it never be!"
Romans 7:7 reads, "What shall we say
then? Is the Law sin? May it never be! On the contrary, I would not have
come to know sin except through the Law; for I would not have known about
coveting if the Law had not said, ‘You shall not covet.’"
Paul, speaking of the Law, says in 7:13,
"Therefore, did that which is good become a cause of death for me? May it
never be! Rather it was sin, in order that it might be shown to be sin by
effecting my death through that which is good, that through the
commandment sin might become utterly sinful."
In Romans 9:14 he says, "What shall we
say then? There is no injustice with God, is there? May it never be!"
You’ll never find an instance where there will be injustice in God.
In Romans 11:1, speaking of Israel he
says, "I say then, God has not rejected His people, has He? May it never
be! For I too am an Israelite, a descendant of Abraham, of the tribe of
Benjamin."
Then in Romans 11:11 he says, "I say
then, they did not stumble so as to fall, did they? May it never be! But
by their transgression salvation has come to the Gentiles, to make them
jealous."
Why is it so absurd to bring up the
question, "Can a believer go back and live the lifestyle he once lived
when he was in Adam?" Well, he says back in 6:2, "we who died to sin."
When he mentions the sin there, it is the sin. The
sin refers to everything we used to be in Adam.
Paul says we have died to sin. This is
important because some people say repentance is not necessary. Do you
realize how we mess up witnessing to people if we don’t show them first of
all that they are lost? If they are lost and helpless in Adam, then there
is going to have to be repentance, a change of mind, a turn toward that
which God has done. It’s not just turning away from; it’s turning to
Him! We are participating in what God now has revealed to us. Repentance
is part of salvation.
You may know people who say, "I can live
like I want to live." Ask them, "What did you get saved from? Do you
understand what you came out of? Do you understand what salvation really
is?"
Paul says, "We have died!" He goes on to
say, "That means to me that I am dead to what I was in Adam." That old
life that I used to live in Adam as an ungodly sinner, an enemy of God, is
no longer existent. I am dead to that old lifestyle. Not only what I
was in Adam, but what I did as a result of being in Adam. I
am dead to that! Death is final. If you have died to one kind of life,
you cannot go back and live in that life. Life and death are incompatible.
I have died to an old way of living.
Since there is death to the old life of
sin in Adam for believers, then how in the world can we go back and live
in it? If I am dead to it, how can I go back and participate in that life
anymore?
You can just see some of the people Paul
is writing to wondering, "When did I die? I don’t remember dying. When did
I die to the old lifestyle? When did that take place?"
Well, the Apostle
Paul answers it for us in Romans 6:3: "Or do you not know [The word "know"
there means "understanding"—are you walking around with no understanding
of this?] that all of us who have been baptized into Christ Jesus have
been baptized into His death?"
You mean to tell me when I put my faith
into Him, when I turned away from that old lifestyle, when I turned to Him
and put my faith into Him, then He does something? It says He
baptizes me into His body with His Holy Spirit. The word baptize means "to be identified
with." Over in I Corinthians 10:2 it says, "and all were baptized into
Moses in the cloud and in the sea." Now show me how they are going to be
baptized into Moses. That’s identification. They were identified with
Moses.
So, when you come to the word "baptize,"
the key meaning here would be more than just immersed into His body. I
think the "identification with" here is really what he is bringing out. We
were identified with His death. All of us who have put our faith into
Jesus Christ, who are baptized into Him, are identified with His death.
Now how in the world have we been
baptized into His death? When did that death occur to the old life style
of Adam? Well, it occurred when Jesus died on the cross. This is what
you’ve got to realize! Why did Jesus have to be a man? He died on the
cross not as God. Yes, He’s the God-man, but He died as a man. God doesn’t
die! He died as a man, and He rose as a man! He was our representative.
Everything I was in Adam was represented in Christ. He became sin for me.
He went to the cross to pay the penalty of what I owe. He paid a debt He
did not owe. I owed a debt I could not pay. The moment I put my faith into
Jesus Christ, miraculously I am cast back 2000 years. I’m up on the cross
with Him, and the old person I was—in sin: controlled by it, absolutely
disrespectful of what God wanted, and living a life that was
irreverent—died at that point. I’m identified with His death.
How can a person who is a Christian go
back and continue to live in the sin that he used to live in? Something
has drastically happened from within. We have been talking about
justification. Now we are changing gears. Though the word is never
mentioned, now we are looking at regeneration; of what takes place in
salvation. Something happened on the inside. Something died. But not just
died—and we’ll get to that in a moment. When I put my faith into Jesus
Christ and in His death, I am identified with Him. What I was in Adam—all
that old lifestyle, controlled by sin, couldn’t help myself—died with Him.
But now look. Not only am I dead to sin,
but secondly, I am now alive in Jesus. Verses 4 and 5 tell us that. If you
can’t get excited about this, you just need to go back and work through
the process one more time. This is what happened to you when you put your
faith into Jesus! It ought to help you tomorrow and every day from that
point on to understand that you can’t go back and live like a dead man!
That old man is dead! You are no longer in its power. The penalty has been
paid by Jesus. It is no longer accounted to you. When you die, death won’t
reign over you. Your spirit will go immediately to be with the Lord Jesus
Christ. Of course, when He died, Jesus conquered death. So death doesn’t
reign over me any more. His life reigns in me!
Watch this: verses 4 and 5 of chapter 6.
"Therefore we have been buried with Him through baptism into death, in
order that as Christ was raised from the dead through the glory of the
Father, so we too might walk in newness of life. For if we have become
united with Him in the likeness of His death, certainly we shall be also
in the likeness of His resurrection."
We had to die with Him. Look at that
little phrase in verse 4, "Therefore we have been buried with Him through
baptism into death in order that." That’s the little word hina.
In other words, "a" comes before "b". I’ve got to put my faith into Jesus
Christ. When I put my faith into Him, there’s a death that’s going to
occur. He’s going to baptize me and identify me with His death. That’s got
to happen in order that I might now participate in His newness of life.
The word for "new" there means qualitatively, totally, brand new.
Now ask me again, "Can a Christian go
back and live like he used to live?" Well, how can you if you are dead and
you have been risen to walk in NEWNESS of His life? A life that is brand
new, qualitatively different? "How different?" In the sense that sin no
longer controls you. In the sense that you have Someone who lives in you
now that gives you power to do what you couldn’t do before; Someone to
convict you of sin; Someone to give you knowledge that you didn’t have
before. I can’t go back! I’m walking in newness of His life. He says, "as
Christ was raised from the dead through the glory of the Father, so we too
might walk in newness of life."
Verse 5 just paints the picture crystal
clear. "For if we have become united with Him in the likeness of His
death, certainly we shall be also in the likeness of His resurrection."
That little word "have become" is perfect active indicative. Perfect tense
means something happened back here that is bearing a present result over
here. That’s perfect tense. Now he says, "if we have become united with
Him." The word "with" is the Greek word meta. We are with one
another. The Lord Jesus was with them when He was on this earth. He was
alongside them, in a room together with. That’s the word meta.
Another word for "together with" is the
little word sun, which means not only are we together with one
another, but we are so mixed in that nobody can tell the difference one
from the other. We can’t get apart from each other. Let me give you the
illustration I have given you before—making biscuits. Let’s just say you
take all the ingredients and put them out on a piece of waxed paper. You
put the flour down and the shortening or whatever else goes in them. You
put it all on the piece of paper. Now all of those ingredients can be
separated, but at the same time they are with each other—meta.
Okay? But take all of those ingredients and mix them together. Just stir
them all together. Cut them out and put them on a pan. Let’s put them in
the oven, and let’s bake them. After they have baked for a while they come
out as luscious biscuits. Once they are baked, that’s that little word
sun. No scientist has ever been able to separate those ingredients out
again.
"You mean to tell me that I’ve been
united so much into His death that now I am united in His resurrection?
When He raised from the dead, that’s when the newness of life started for
me?" Absolutely. Now let me ask you again. Can a believer, one who has put
his faith into Jesus Christ, go back and live as if he is still in Adam?
You make up your own mind! No wonder John says you can’t habitually sin
and call yourself a Christian! You are dead to that lifestyle! You have
been united. The word has the idea of planted together with. It’s like
taking a branch and grafting it into a tree. The life of the tree now
floods into the branch. Jesus used that same picture in John 15. He said,
"I am the vine; you are the branches. And because you abide in Me, you
will bear much fruit. It’s not you doing it, it’s Me in you doing
it!" This is the resurrected life that we are now intertwined into. There
is nothing that can separate us from that!
When you were in Adam, sin caused you to
do what you were doing. You couldn’t get away from it. But now that you
have put your faith into Christ, you have been taken out of Adam and put
into Christ and you are so united with Him that His Spirit lives in you.
The "Divine Referee of God" has changed you from within. That’s
regeneration.
"You mean I sinned before because I was
a sinner, so now if I sin it is only because of choice. Is that right?"
You are exactly right! When you find a Christian saying, "Hey, I can’t
stop sinning," you have a Christian who is really saying, "No, I won’t!"
You have the life of Jesus in you now! You can’t go back and live like you
want to live. There is no way you can do that! You bring total blasphemy
to everything Jesus Christ did for you. You shame what salvation is all
about. You are a new person in Christ. You’re saved "out of sin" and "into
Him."
Why do I still sin? Paul is going to
tell you that the lust of our flesh is entrenched into this body that we
still live in. It still pulls us away from what our spirit is trying to
get us to do. But we are no longer in Adam. That means that I am
responsible for choices of sin. I am responsible. You see, when I come to
Christ, I don’t necessarily confess my sins. I mean I do, but I confess my
sins to prove evidence that I am a sinner. I’m saved from sin—the
sin of Adam that I was tagged with that made me do what I did! Now God has
changed me.
Now I have to deal with sins.
I have to deal with sins! As a believer, we must remember that we don’t
sweep sin under the rug. We must put it under the blood. John tells us how
to deal with it. There is only one way to deal with it. Confess it with a
willingness to turn away from it in the power of His life that now lives
resident within us. We can live in the victory that God gives to us