00:00
00:00
00:01
Transcript
1/0
Please turn now in the Bible
to Romans chapter 14. Romans chapter 14. You can find
it on page 948 and 9 in your Pew Bible. Romans 14. I'm going to read
from verse 1 to verse 12 to give your attention to the Word of
God. Romans 14. As for the one who is weak in
faith, welcome him. but not to quarrel over opinions. One person believes he may eat
anything, while the weak person eats only vegetables. Let not
the one who eats despise the one who abstains, and let not
the one who abstains pass judgment on the one who eats, for God
has welcomed him. Who are you to pass judgment
on the servant of another? It is before his own master that
he stands or falls. and he will be upheld, for the
Lord is able to make him stand. One person esteems one day is
better than another, while another esteems all days alike. Each
one should be fully convinced in his own mind. The one who
observes the day, observes it in honor of the Lord. The one
who eats, eats in honor of the Lord, since he gives thanks to
God. While the one who abstains, abstains in honor of the Lord,
and gives thanks to God. For none of us lives to himself,
and none of us dies to himself. If we live, we live to the Lord,
and if we die, we die to the Lord. So then, whether we live
or whether we die, we are the Lord's. For to this end, Christ
died and lived again, that he might be Lord both of the dead
and of the living. Why do you pass judgment on your
brother, or you? Why do you despise your brother?
For we will all stand before the judgment seat of God. For
it is written, as I live, says the Lord, every knee shall bow
to me, and every tongue shall confess to God. So then, each
of us will give an account of himself to God. I must say, it seems to me that
this chapter is rather neglected in discussion in the circles
that we run in. Those who know their Bibles well
often have discussions. Who do you think chapter 7 is
about? Is it about the Christian or
the non-Christian? Or chapter 11, do you think it's
about the Jews being converted or do you think it means something
else? Or chapter 9, is it about predestination or is it not?
Some chapters have a lot of discussion on. And then other chapters,
we often memorize things out of. Certainly, we memorize Romans
3.23, for all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God.
Or we memorize something out of Chapter 6, for the wages of
sin is death, but the free gift of God is eternal life in Christ
Jesus our Lord. Or we memorize things out of
Chapter 8, and we know that God causes all things to work together
for good, for those who love him, those who are the called
according to his purpose. We could spend a great deal in
chapter 12, that we ought to be transformed by the renewing
of our minds. Or if you want to talk about government, you
have to talk about chapter 13 of Romans. There's a lot of chapters
in Romans that get a great deal of attention. And on chapter
14, that was good. It was very quiet there. Exactly.
It's very quiet when you come to Romans chapter 14. But this
chapter is crucial for church life. It is crucial. if we are to live together as
the body of Christ. And that is crucial for the continuance
of the gospel on earth, since, as Calvin says, the church is
mother of all the godly. And so this chapter tells us
something crucial. We're to give thanks to God and not judge his
servants on secondary matters. Or to put it another way, love
one another includes your fellow Christian with the strange ideas. That's what it means. Because
quarreling and jealousy, they were in the works of darkness
at the end of the previous chapter. Now, as you can see, food here
is the main thing in focus. And the church in Rome was being
urged, do not fight about food. Now, it's worthwhile for us to
dig into why food was a problem for them. Because at this point,
by and large, the Christian church has really absorbed Jesus' teaching.
Jesus said, it is not what goes into a man that makes him unclean,
but what comes out of a man. And we have that explained. The
apostles needed it explained. They're like, Jesus, what is
this? He said, well, anything you eat goes in your stomach and out
into the toilet. There's no problem for you. It's what comes out
of you. The evil thoughts and the wicked
words, the slanderings and the raging, this is what defiles
a man. But to eat with unwashed hands,
to eat in anything, this does not make a man unclean. We have
that very clearly in Mark chapter 7 and Matthew chapter 15, but
we need to understand why it was difficult for them. It was
difficult for them, first of all, because it was such a change
from the Old Testament. In the Old Testament, God set
Israel apart in a sea of paganism. And one important thing that
he did to set them apart was he said, you will not eat just
anything. There are rules and restrictions
on clean food and unclean food. You shall not boil a kid in his
mother's milk. You shall not eat pig. You shall
not eat shellfish, and so on. They had rules about what kind
of animal can you eat, study the animal, study its foot, and
does it choose a cut, and so on. And so when Jesus said, it
is not what comes into a man that makes him unclean, but what
comes out of a man, even the apostles didn't really get the
point for a while. Years later, we find Peter having a vision,
and animals are coming down, some of them unclean, and he's
being told, kill and eat, and he's telling the Lord, no. He's
like, not so, Lord, I have never eaten anything that is common
or unclean. And God has to say to him, do
not call unclean what I have made clean. And he gives his
vision to Peter three times to drive it home. And while the point was food,
the point was more than food. Because immediately at the end
of the vision, men came from a robin, that is pagan, army
officer. And he came and calling for Peter. And the spirit told Peter, go
with these men. and go into his pagan house. And when the Holy Spirit is poured
out on them, go on and baptize them. It was a point about people,
ultimately. The point about food was a necessary
step on the way there. This is because God had set Israel
apart to nurture them and to build up until the time of the
Messiah. But then Jesus takes down the wall between Jew and
Gentile, so the gospel can go out without restriction to all
nations, and therefore food is no longer to divide the people
of God. Now, we get that. Why didn't they instantly get
that? Well, first of all, because they did not all instantly have
Matthew and Mark in their hands to read. They had the memory
of what Jesus had said. And they had the reports of what
Peter had witnessed. But for some years, they did
not have Matthew and Mark to read in church, and they did
have the Torah. And so this was a challenging
thing for a while. They go, I hear this, but I can read that. And
so it took some time for the Gospels to be written and for
the church to absorb the message, also some time for those who've
been raised for centuries don't eat pork. It takes a while to
get over that. Or perhaps that generation doesn't
get over it, but the next generation perhaps does. That's one reason. Clinging to the mosaic law, you
should be able to understand that once you enter into their
situation. The second reason, because they had another reason
that food was difficult for them, and that was that they did not
simply go to Acme and go into the meat section and pick up
some frozen ground beef. It wasn't like that. First of
all, there's no refrigeration, so it has to be slaughtered that
day. And secondly, when they slaughtered animals back then,
they generally did it, you could say, in a religious way. That
is, they would kill the animal in a god's temple and offer it
to the god. And then if they were offering
enough animals, the priest would need it all, some of that meat
would then be sold in the market. We don't know enough to know
if it was sold labeled. Get your Zeus beef over here
and your Aphrodite beef over there. But we do know that a
fair amount of this meat for sale in different parts of the
cities would have been sacrificed to idols. And you might not be
able to know which one was which. That's the issue in 1 Corinthians
8 to 10. And it goes on at some length, working out what are
the implications of this. Food in and of itself is fine.
but you're not to be wrapped up with evil spirits. Idols may
be nothing, but behind the idol is an evil spirit, and you're
not to participate with idolatry. So these are the two reasons
that food was a trouble for them. And just think about it. What
kept you alive today? Well, the Lord's Spirit and the
food you ate yesterday. Now that food is relatively easy
to come by, we don't think as much about it. But for most people,
most of the centuries, you spend all of your time, practically,
thinking about how to get prepared and eat your food. That's why
food caused tensions. Some were worrying about keeping
kosher. Others were worrying about food offered to idols.
Others were saying, look, Jesus said it doesn't matter. And so
you have tension about food. Now, Paul here is quite clear
about who has it right theologically. You will notice that he says
the person who eats only vegetables is the weak person. He goes on
further on to say, you know, everything is indeed clean, verse
20. So certainly you can tell where
he stands. He's saying indeed what Jesus
said is what's binding. You can eat anything that's food,
really. But what's more clear here is
he says, don't fight about it. That's more important here than
sorting out who has it correct about the kosher laws. And so
he says, do not fight, do not quarrel, do not judge, do not
despise. That's the whole burden here. When it comes to food, even in
that environment with all those issues circulating, what was
most important was that they not dispute with each other about
it. Now, this is somewhat odd, perhaps,
because we should be striving to be pure. You might wonder,
how is that idolatry argument not a stronger argument? Why
not judge when things seem so important? And so he enforces
this by saying, God alone is master and judge. That is why
you are not to judge your brother, because we have a judge, and
that would be the Lord. He says, this is not your place
to boss somebody else's servant. Now that may, you may get that
on an intellectual level, but we don't usually talk about having
servants in our culture. So let's transfer this to something
that we are familiar with. I was in the mall the other day,
regular friends. Should I get a job in the mall?
Should I be a manager of a department in Bloomingdale's? Then in that
job, I would boss those who were working in my men's clothing
department in Bloomingdale's. But it would not be for me to
walk out of Bloomingdale's and into, I don't know, Nordstrom's
and start bossing the employees in Nordstrom's. I have no place
in Nordstrom's. I don't work for Nordstrom's.
What am I doing there? In fact, even within Bloomingdale's, I'm
not to go into women's clothing and start telling them how to
fold things. I'm the manager in the men's clothing. This is
kind of the way we need to take this. Understand your lane, and
stay in your lane. Who are you to judge another
person's servant? Jesus is the boss, and you're
not. If Jesus is the Lord, that means
he gives the commands. Then he goes on in verses 10
to 12 to give us another way of looking at it, where he changes
the language from servants to children. Why do you pass judgment
on your brother? Now, we have many brothers and
sisters here. And of course, sometimes life at home is nothing
more than judging brother and sister. We also know how that goes. And
so he's saying, there is one father, one teacher, one judge. What are you doing judging your
brother? And he also fleshes out, and
we are not to despise our sister. is despising is especially nasty. If you feel that somebody despises
you, you have a hard time not hating that person. Or at least
not deeply resenting the person who despises you. Even if they
don't say anything, if you feel like they're despising you, there's
the contempt in that person for you, how difficult it is to maintain
that feeling of love and friendship. And so we're told here, it is
Jesus' job to judge. And we ought to praise God for
that. But the one who will judge us is the one who laid down his
life for us. Kishtim says something to this
effect. He who has paid such a price for us while we were
still his enemies, will he lightly cast us aside now that we are
his children? But if we are to take comfort
in that ourselves, we need to extend that comfort to someone
else and not be quick to judge them and to correct them. And
you'll notice here, as you went through verses 7, 8, 9, 10, 11,
that he says God, and he says Lord, and he says God, and he
says Lord, and it's a little bit hard to tell, does he mean
God or the Lord? And you might say, well, he means
the same thing, but no, no, because then he says that the Lord is
Christ. So it becomes difficult to say, so when he's talking
about God, and when is he talking about Christ? It's hard to tell. And he's careless about that,
because Jesus is the God-man, the second person of the Trinity,
The Father has given all judgment to the Son, and so He doesn't
have to be very clear. Because Father and Son, they
are the judge. The Father has given judgment
to the Son, and so we entrust that judgment to Him. Now, aren't
we supposed to rescue our brother from sin? Isn't the Church supposed
to stand for clear teaching? How do we understand this chapter,
though? Well, yes, the Church is to teach what is true. Galatians
1, the Apostle Paul, the same guy who writes this. He says,
if anyone teaches a different gospel, let him be accursed.
If it's an angel, let him be accursed if it is not this gospel.
Philippians 3, he says, watch out for the dogs and the evil
workers. Acts chapter 20, he tells the elders, watch out.
Men will spring up among you speaking perverse things. Certainly
the elders are to be looking out for false teachings. And
as to rescuing our brother, we have that. James says, beloved,
if anyone turns a sinner from the error of his ways, know that
he will rescue his soul from death and cover a multitude of
sins. Galatians 6, Paul says, brothers,
if anyone is caught in a trespass, let you who are spiritual deliver
such a one in the spirit of gentleness, looking also to himself, lest
he himself be tempted. And so there is to be church
discipline. We have that not only in theory, you might say,
with Jesus and Matthew 18, we have Paul calling for it in 1
Corinthians 5. What is this man still doing?
Let the Lord suffer with you. He is to be put out. And here we have this, do not
judge your brothers. How do you hold this together?
That is the crucial question in the Christian life. How do
you hold Romans 14 while also holding all these other passages
that I have been talking about? We might try to formulate it
this way. As long as our brother is holding to Christ and not
violating some clear moral teaching, then we're not to judge him.
What is difficult, of course, is what is central to the gospel
and what is the clear moral teaching? Well, the gospel, of course,
is what is central. We're saved by Jesus and not by ourselves.
We're saved because of God's grace and not because of our
works. And so this same guy, Paul, if someone began to say,
in order to be saved, you must not eat pork. If you talk that
way, Paul was the first guy to go to war with you. That's why
he says in Galatians, if anyone preaches another gospel, he's
talking about that kind of teaching. If someone tries to make eating
this or not eating that central to salvation, Paul is right there
to say, you are not to teach that way. But if someone says,
you know, I'm a vegetarian, Paul says, that's fine. Do you
want to say, you know, I don't eat shellfish or pork? All right,
food really doesn't matter. If it doesn't matter, then don't
make it matter. And let everybody be master, other than babies,
of what goes through their teeth. Don't judge someone else's servant.
Food is not central. Now, that's difficult for us
first on an intellectual level. What is it that is central that
must be guarded? And what is not central and so
we're not to judge? That's the first thing that is difficult.
So we ought to consult with one another, perhaps, and say, you
know, I really am bothered by this, but help me understand
this. The second thing that's difficult,
of course, is that we all like to have our own way. And we like
to have everybody do it our way. So alongside the intellectual
problem, we have a spiritual problem, number one. We want
people to do it my way. And for that, of course, he's
reminding us who the boss is, who the master is, who the judge
is, Jesus Christ. And then I think we also have
a second spiritual problem. And that is that sometimes you
come into a nice little church like this one, and we find people
who are really quite like-minded on many things. And we say, ah,
my safe space. My safe space for all of my opinions. And so everybody should be holding
all of my opinions together. You come in and perhaps you say,
ah, ah, a place where we all understand homeschooling is the
way to do it. Or that we all understand that
we are not to celebrate Halloween. Now, I'm sympathetic to a degree
for that desire for a safe space. But you know what's more beautiful
than that? What's more beautiful than your
safe space is a place that is safe for all those that the Lord
is working on. That is a more beautiful, more
expansive, and more difficult thing than your own safe space.
Yes, when your brother is sinning, rebuke him in private, or to
guard the Gospel. That is indisputably something
that must be done. But not everything that you are
convinced of is a necessary part of the Christian life. Now it's
good to be convinced. He says, let everyone be convinced
in his own mind. We'll speak more about conscience
next week. We must know how to hold these different kinds of
things. Now what things do we mean? What
topics fit here? in this area where Christians
conscientiously hold this, and other Christians conscientiously
hold that, and each one can explain from the Bible why they think
this is what God wants them to do, and the apostle here is saying,
and you're not going to fight about it. What things fit into
this kind of category? Well, first of all, food. I dare
say I'm pretty sure we're not to be cannibals. We can rule
a couple of things out. And don't ask me about blood,
because I don't understand that one, so please don't ask. But
for the most part, if it's food, you may eat it. But if someone
does differently, you're to let it be. I'm going to praise my
wife right here. A dozen years ago, we had three
vegetarians in the congregation. And so every church lunch, she
would make sure that they had something to eat. She would bring
something vegetarian. Now, is my wife a vegetarian?
No, she's Greek. And those two things are antithetical. But out of her generosity of
spirit, she would make sure that there was a vegetarian thing
for the vegetarians to eat. What you drink. Now, drink is
not quite in the same category as food. Because there is greater
evil potential in alcohol. And so you go back a couple of
verses, and he just said, let us walk properly, not in drunkenness. is a danger to avoid. And yet,
as you read the scripture, it is permissible for the believer
to drink only in moderation. Not for drunkenness. Not for
being addicted to it. So you have to take care. Some
believers will say, because of the danger of drunkenness, I
will drink nothing at all. And that may be the wise and
right thing to do. And no one is to urge them otherwise.
At the same time, they are not to judge those who do drink in
moderation. But take care, brothers. We're
there not to judge one another until it's obvious that we have
a problem. We're never to despise one another.
And often on this issue, I think there's some despising going
on. Let's take care not to pass judgment on the one who drinks,
nor to despise the one who does not drink. What is wise and proper
for one is not the same as for someone else. We understand that.
So let us encourage one another in the path that it seems necessary
for us to walk. is becoming necessary to talk
about drugs. May you smoke marijuana. Well,
first of all, we just did Romans 13. We owe the state allegiance
and obedience, unless it's directly contradicting what God says.
So as long as it is illegal in these states, you're not to be
smoking it. But let us suppose it becomes
legal. It seems quite possible. You know, we are told to be sober-minded
and be on the alert. We're told that the devil is
like a raging lion going about for someone to destroy. I have
a hard time seeing where the mind-altering stuff comes in
there. That seems to me to be outside
of what God would have us to do. I'm thinking here of Ephesians
5 and 1 Peter 5 and so on. Now, what about these days? You
wish he'd said more at this point. It's so brief. He gives you a
verse and a half about days, and he doesn't explain what kind
of days he's talking about. Christendom, who was closer in
both time and culture than us, he thought that he was talking
about days of fasting. Now, American Christians don't really fast,
so that doesn't even occur to us as something that would be
a plausible explanation. But I actually think it's quite
plausible. That brings food and days together, days of fasting. That would fit the context. And
we know the early church did a lot more fasting than we do,
and so did Judaism at the time. Jesus, in his parable, has the
self-righteous Pharisee boasting that, I fast twice a week. And
that's what many of them did. In the prophet Zechariah, we
have the Jews going to the prophet, asking him, should we keep fasting
in the fifth month and in the seventh month as before? And
he says, I'm going to make the fifth month and the seventh month
and the fourth month and the tenth month, these are all the
fasts, I'm going to make them days of gladness. So then, if
some wish to fast on a given day, you may. But don't hold it as something
necessary, something that the real Christians fast on their
days, nor the opposite. If anyone wishes to fast, let
him fast. Now, I think as you look at some
other passages here, Galatians 4 and Colossians 2, You have
to go beyond fasting to say, in the Torah, God told His people
that three times a year, all the males were to appear before
Him in Jerusalem for the three great festivals of Passover,
and weeks, and also the festival of booths. And indeed, in this
neighborhood, you can see the Jews are still keeping these
great festivals. As for us, they are in no way
mandatory. As he says here is, if you want
to build a tent in your backyard and sleep in it, you certainly
may, I suppose. But we are not to imagine that
this is some kind of necessary part of the Christian life. Now,
what about the Sabbath? It's rather amusing to read the
different commentators. Charles Hodge, of course, this
is not about the Christian Sabbath. The current heavy hitter, oh,
of course it's about the Christian Sabbath. Christensen, well, of
course, it's about fasting. Thanks, guys. Yes? As I already said, we should
view this as a creation ordinance, and so there is a Sabbath to
keep. However, we're not to keep it the way the Pharisees did.
We're not to be keeping it, indeed, in a strict mosaic fashion. Let
us not be quick to judge one another. Let us take care, though,
to obey the God's 10 commandments. Now, what other topics would
fit in here? I've stayed right with the text so far, food and
days. But you know, there's a couple
other days that trouble us. Halloween and Christmas. And
indeed, you follow this and it says, let everyone be convinced
in his own mind. One is convinced he should keep
Christmas. Let him keep Christmas. Let him
do it to the Lord and give thanks. Another one is convinced that
he should not keep Christmas. Let him not keep it. Let him
abstain and give thanks to the Lord. One believes he may send
children out, just like Superman, to collect candy. Let him do
so. Another one abstains. Let each family make up its own
mind. So in alignment with this, we take no church position on
this, nor will we be taking any church position on this. Let
each one be fully convinced in his own mind. What other topics
fit in here? Well, how children are schooled.
Do you send them to the public school? Do you send them to a
secular private school? Do you send them to a private
Christian school? Do you teach them at home? You know those
families where you cover all the bases in a single family?
Why is there such a thing? Well, because there's so many
variables to work on, so many variables of whether there are
two parents or one, whether both parents are working or not, whether
There's a parent who has the aptitude for such a thing, whether
it would work well with those particular children. There are
so many different things that we do not make any such rules.
Let every family decide for itself how this will happen. And let
the rest of us support and encourage them in whatever their choice
is. Let me say that again. Let the rest of us support and
encourage them in whatever choice is made in each family. Yes,
what modesty and dress requires? That we are to be modest, that
is in Scripture. And so some, of course, if you run a school,
you have to start trying to define modest, and that becomes difficult.
If you go to such a school, just obey the rules there. But within
the church, we say, yes, we are to be modest. And for the most
part, every family and individual work out what that means. It
means such different things in different cultures, in different
situations, and so on. We do not prescribe a length
of skirt or any such thing. Whether to vote and for whom.
That the church should denounce evils, that is certain. We should
denounce injustice. Yes, that is the church's duty,
and we will continue to do it. But when it comes down to for
whom to vote, it becomes so difficult with so many candidates and so
many issues, and whether one should vote at all. And we find
it difficult not to impose, not to insist on our own way. Don't
you know my way is best? I can defend it from the Bible. It turns out there's a fair number
of things on this sort of score that you can defend opposing
positions from the Bible. And by the time we get to heaven,
God will make it clear to us who was in the right. But in
the meantime, we are not to let such issues divide Christ's body. I don't know who said it, but
it's a good slogan. In the essentials, there must be unity. In the non-essentials,
there is to be liberty. And in everything, there is to
be charity. And such a word, charity, does
not mean a handout. It means a generous attitude
of love. Let us transition now. We've
discussed what it is that we are not to do, not to judge our
brother. We've discussed why it is, because we're not the
brother's boss. We've discussed what kinds of topics this may
be talking about. Now let us talk about what we
are to do. It says here that we are to focus on our common
Lord. He has welcomed your brother,
strange though he is. And He has welcomed you, strange
though you are. So let us rejoice in this. Let's
rejoice in the Judge and the Savior, who has welcomed us all
together. And as He has welcomed us, let
us extend that welcome to one another. Yes, our brother lives
to the Lord. That's why we know he's a brother.
So let us take care that we are also living to the Lord and giving
thanks. Giving thanks in that which we enjoy, giving thanks
in that which we abstain from. Let us study the Word, so that
we may become fully convinced in our own mind. This chapter
is not a call to laziness. It's not a call to say nothing
matters. But it says, let us have an informed conscience,
and let us live according to it. In heaven, we'll come together
in the same place. But for now, we come from different
places, with different problems and concerns, on different trajectories. So let us welcome one another.
Let us obey the Lord. That certainly comes through.
We have a Master and Lord. Let us obey that Master and obey
that Lord. Let us respond to Him in faith
and in obedience. And let us not do His job. He
is the Judge. And that is something that is
a great comfort to us. So let us not usurp His position.
Yes, we have here the first half of Romans 14. Distinguish between
what is central and what is not. You may have many passions, and
that is great, but they are not all central to the faith. So
do not judge the Lord's servants. Live modestly before the Lord,
giving Him thanks and praise and honor in whatever you do.
And understand that you will not judge better than He does.
He is the one whose love is so great that He gave Himself for
us all. So then let Him carry out the
judgment as we stay in our lanes and as we live for Him. Let us
pray together. Heavenly Father, we thank you
for your blessings to us, that you call us together, that you
call together people from every tribe and language and nation,
and you bind us into one body in Christ. So help us, Lord,
help us, Lord, to stick to the head. Help us to stick to Jesus
Christ altogether, encouraging and welcoming one another. Lord,
forgive us for the times in which we have judged one another, or
which we have despised one another. Help us, Lord, not to hold contempt
for any fellow believer. And Lord, we pray that you would
continue to bless us and build us up in the faith. We pray this
in Jesus' name. Amen.
Crucial Christian Restraint
Series Romans
This neglected chapter urges us not to judge the Lord's servants, our brothers, on secondary matters. In this sermon we discuss what these might be.
| Sermon ID | 112519119393730 |
| Duration | 33:59 |
| Date | |
| Category | Sunday Service |
| Bible Text | Romans 14:1-12 |
| Language | English |
Documents
Add a Comment
Comments
No Comments
© Copyright
2026 SermonAudio.