Let's open our Bibles to the
book of Romans, chapter 5, and we study down through verse 12.
I believe we must read verse 12 again to get the connection
with the thirteenth verse, because otherwise we wouldn't be really
having a full statement of the thirteenth verse. Verse 12. Wherefore,
as by one man sin entered into the world, and we know that to
be by Adam, that first man, our federal head, and death by sin. Because Adam sinned, the sentence
of death came upon all men. So death passed upon all men,
for that all have sinned. Actually, the sentence of death
came upon Adam. The Bible says, In the day that
thou eatest thereof, thou shalt surely die. And Adam died spiritually,
but he had the sentence of death in him physically. And his spiritual
death was a direct result of his sin, and the sentence of
physical death was a direct result of his sin. And because Adam
sinned, he gave us a sinful nature. And it says in verse 13, For
until the law of sin was in the world, But sin is not imputed
when there is no law. Sin is not counted unless someone
has transgressed the law. So what I want to get you to
see is that even though Adam sinned and we inherited sin from
him, he passed his sinful nature on down to us, yet we are not
judged because of Adam's sin, but because of the fact that
we sin and we transgress the law of God. We are judged for
our own sin. And it says, nevertheless, death
reigned from Adam to Moses, even over them that had not sinned
after the similitude of Adam's transgression, who was the figure
of him that was to come. So what it's saying here is that
in spite of the fact that man must transgress in order to be
spiritually dead and to suffer spiritual death, yet because
of Adam's sin, the physical death reigned. from Adam to Moses before
the law was given, before man could actually transgress the
law of God that was given, and Moses was the great lawgiver,
then it still reigned that man would be physically subject to
death. And of course, spiritual death
would be the result of continuing to reject God and his word. any knowledge whatsoever of transgression
of God's holy laws. But we have the laws given in
written form under Moses. But nevertheless, death reigned
from Adam to Moses. But we're going to see here that
the transgression is on our part and not upon Adam's part. Even
those that had not sinned after the similitude of Adam's transgression,
they died not because of Adam's transgression, but because of
their own transgression. that they were guilty of. And
then, of course, when the law entered, when the law came, we
had the direct transgression of God's laws so that man was
really condemned and under the curse and judgment of the law.
It says in verse 15, But not as the offense, so also is the
free gift. He says, Not as the offense,
so also is the free gift. Now, it would be very easy if
he said, As the offense, so also is the free gift. In other words,
just comparing one to another, wouldn't it? That would be easy
enough. But when he says, not as, that means you've got to
contrast them. You've got to see wherein the
offense differs from the free gift. What is different about
Adam as our federal head and the offense? And the free gift,
see, Adam was a figure of Christ. Look in verse 14, Adam's transgression,
who is a figure of him that was to come. Adam was a figure or
a type of Christ, because as Adam was our federal head, and
because of Adam's offense and transgression, many were made
sinners. So by the free gift, or so by
Christ himself who gives us the gift of life through him, he
is our spiritual head. Just as Adam was our physical
and fleshly and earthly head, federal head, so Christ is our
spiritual head. But there is not just the comparison
of the two, there is a contrast of the two. So the offense is
different then from the free gift. Now look at verse 16. For the judgment was by one to
condemnation, but the free gift is of many offenses under justification. Do you see the difference? One
and many. There is the contrast. The judgment
was by one to condemnation. One sin of one man brought judgment. But the many offenses of many
men, the free gift is because not only Adam sinned, but because
many multitudes, in fact all of us, have sinned and come short
of the glory of God. And the many offenses are the
many people that have committed not just one offense, but many.
Not only the many people, but the many offenses. We might say
that each one of us has committed one offense after the other.
In other words, we're all guilty of more than one sin and offense,
aren't we? And the whole world is guilty
of more than one, because all the multitudes of people. So
there you have the contrast, and it says, notice the not here
in verse 16, and not as It was by one that sinned, so is the
gift. So when you see the word not, it means you've got to say,
I'm not going to compare the offense with the gift. I'm going
to contrast it and see how it is different. How is it different
than the offense? It's different because there
are many offenses unto justification of life. It's not only different
as to the number of offenses and sins, but it's different
as far as the The result of one man's sin brought judgment, but
the many offenses of many, the free gift brought forgiveness
and pardon and justification, just as if we had never committed
those many offenses. Not as. We've got to see that
contrast, don't we? You know, let me say in passing,
and we'll continue with our expounding of each verse. But this is one
of the most difficult passages in the Bible for a preacher to
expound, because there are so many little words, simple words,
and yet to get the contrast and to really understand what we're
talking about is a difficult thing. And it's difficult for
people to understand the fullness of it, but if you look at it
very carefully, I think you're on the right track in your mind
now if you'll see that you must contrast and you must see how
that is different. And then we're going to find
the word, much more, coming into view in verse 17. Now look at
verse 17. For if by one man's offense death
reigned by one, much more, you're still carrying out a contrast
between the thoughts, aren't you? If by one man's offense
death reigned by one, much more they which have received abundance
of grace and of the gift of righteousness shall reign in life by one Jesus
Christ." So one might say, well, if by Adam's offense death reigned,
death came, condemnation came, but still the contrast is that
much more through the gift of grace and the gift of life through
Christ, not only one shall reign, But many shall reign in righteousness
by and in and through Jesus Christ." By one man. It's still by one
man. But it's by that one man, Jesus
Christ. And what's the difference? Many. Much more. The gift of grace,
the gift of righteousness, the abundance of grace and the gift
of righteousness. Then in verse 18, notice what
it says, This seems to sum up and explain again and more fully
what we are talking about. Therefore, by the offense of
one, judgment came upon all men to condemnation. Even so, by
the righteousness of one, the free gift came upon all men under
justification of life. So we see Adam's person as a
type of Christ here, a figure of Christ. and also the fact
that his is the opposite of what we find in Christ. Because what
Adam brought by his offense was judgment. What Jesus brought
by grace and the free gift was righteousness, and it came unto
us bringing about justification of life. Now I want us to notice
something, that some people read into this that just because by
Adam all men were under condemnation and under judgment, that because
of Christ and his righteousness and the free gift, that all men
then are justified. Well, that's making universal
justification, but that's not true, that it's universal. The free gift is only to those
who believe. Adam's offense was upon all of
those that followed him. But the free gift comes only
to those that become united to Christ spiritually, as in contrast
to those that were united to Adam naturally. So we have to
spiritually be united to Christ before the free gift of justification
is ours, and before we can say that we're justified and have
Christ's righteousness. So there's provision. All that
you see in this verse, then, is provision for the righteousness
of men through the free gift and the abundance of grace. There
are many people that would like to argue by this, then, that
therefore God has, in Christ Jesus, saved the whole world.
That the fatherhood, the thought of the fatherhood of God and
the brotherhood of man, that regardless of whether any man
is a sinner or not, that he's been redeemed. through Christ. Just because he inherited sin
through Adam, he has been redeemed through Christ. But that's not
what this verse is teaching. It says, Therefore, as by the
offense of one, judgment came upon all men to condemnation,
even so by the righteousness of one, the free gift came upon
all men under justification of life. The all here, all men,
under justification of life, is qualified by the man's faith,
or he is not justified. Because if you read back in the
4th chapter, it says he was delivered for our offenses and raised for
our justification. In chapter 5, verse 1, therefore
being justified by faith, we have peace with God through our
Lord Jesus Christ. So it's only those who are justified
by faith, that have received by faith this gift of righteousness,
that are justified by Jesus Christ. Now notice in verse 19. man's
disobedience, many were made sinners, so by the obedience
of one shall many be made righteous." Now, then, those that are made
sinners are all men, because all have sinned and come short
of the glory of God. But all are not made righteous,
only those who have trusted Christ. You see, only those who have
received him become righteous. Moreover, the law entered that
the offense might abound. The law came, the law entered,
that the offense might abound, that we might see that the offenses
were many and that the offenses were against God and that the
offenses were against man, that the offenses might abound, that
sin might abound. And that's how we know that we
have sinned so defiantly against God. How do we know it? Because
the law entered and says we have sinned. The law says, Thou shalt
have no other gods before me. The law says, Thou shalt not
make unto thee any graven images. Thou shalt not take the name
of the Lord thy God in vain. And four of the commandments
given in the law in Moses' day and received by Moses were against
God. To break them, we would be defying
God. And then the other six of the
commandments were against man, man's relationship to man. Thou
shalt not commit adultery, thou shalt not steal, thou shalt not
bear false witness. all the others. So we see that
the law entered that the offense might abound, our offense against
God, our offense against our fellow man, and that the number
of those offenses, that there might be an abounding of transgression
and sin against God. But where sin abounded, and it
did, grace did much more abound. That's the difference. between
the law and grace, grace did much more abound. God's grace
was sufficient to cover all the sins of all men and all the multiplied
sins of every man. See, it doesn't cover only all
individuals, but it covers the multitude of our own individual
sins. We've sinned in more than one
way, is what I'm trying to say, before God. We've sinned in many
ways. And where sin abounded, grace
did much more abound. The grace of God is sufficient
for not only all the sins of all men, but the grace of God
is sufficient for all of my sins that I have sinned against God
and against man and against myself." Man's sin is against many. It's against not only our fellow
man, we sin against our own soul. The Bible says, "...the soul
that sinneth, it shall die." We sin against our brother. We
sin against God. And the Bible teaches that we're
guilty of all. We're guilty of all sin. Now
then, I know that there's forgiveness so that we're not held and counted
as guilty after we're saved by grace. God has wiped it all out
and the slate's clean and we're not guilty anymore. And we're
not only not guilty, but we're completely justified in the sight
of God. But there was sufficient grace
to cover all of our sins. However many sins, however awful
the sins were, whoever they were against, God or man or ourselves,
there was sufficient grace and is sufficient grace to cover
every one of them. So that in the sight of God,
we are perfectly righteous through Christ, through the gift of life
and the gift of righteousness. We're perfectly declared righteous
in the sight of God. We're not any longer considered
even guilty of sin. And we're pardoned from the sins
that we were guilty of. And we're forgiven of all of
them. And they're not even remembered. And moreover, we're justified. We're counted in the sight of
God just as if we had never sinned. And that's for the believer.
I don't know how we're able to digest this, but we're touching
on one of the most wonderful and gracious and broad and fulfilling
spiritual truths that's ever been preached upon. And that
is that a sinful man, regardless of how deep and how awful our
sins may have been, and how many, how multiplied they are, and
how far away we were from God, that all of those sins are under
the blood of Christ, that they are completely pardoned, they
are forgiven, they are put away, they are hidden in the depths
of the sea. They are scattered as far as
the east is from the west. God has said concerning them,
I will remember them no more. And moreover, above all of that,
he has classified us and put us in a place to where he says,
I'm going to count that one who was such an awful sinner as completely
righteous and have the righteousness of Christ. That's where you stand
before God. That's a pretty good place to
be standing, isn't it? Isn't it a pretty good place to be standing
that you're standing before a holy God dressed and robed in the
righteousness of Christ who never transgressed the law and who
never sinned against God and who was perfectly holy and sinless
in every respect? And you're standing robed in
Christ's righteousness. Now then, we don't look at ourselves
that way. We say, well, my, I'm an awful fellow. And if we look
inside, we can see that. It doesn't take much to bring
that out, does it? We can look inside. We know that
that old carnal nature is still there. We know it exists. We hate to admit it. Well, even
if we do admit it, we hate to come face to face with him. If
we openly admit the fact that he's there, we still hate to
deal with that old carnal, sinful nature. And he's there. But we
also have the divine nature given to us of God. Yet we can see
that we are actually declared to be righteous in the sight
of God. He says in verse 20, but where sin abounded, grace
did much more abound. Look at verse 21, that as sin
hath reigned unto death, sin ruled, sin reigned, sin had dominion
unto death, even so might grace reign. Let grace reign or rule
in us now. through righteousness unto eternal
life by Jesus Christ our Lord." Just as surely as sin has reigned
unto death and brought about death, even more so by the grace
of God and through Christ, righteousness might reign and grace might reign
through righteousness unto eternal life by Jesus Christ our Lord. So I think that is a wonderful
passage of Scripture. But I don't think that it should
be cut off with the end of chapter 5. What shall we say, then, if
this be the case? Now, there's a continuation of
thought here, isn't there? Sometimes the chapter divisions
are not the best, but I suppose that the dividers had to divide
the chapters in some place. You know, it was the 12th and
13th century before we had chapter and verse divisions of the Bible.
twelve or thirteen hundred years before there was any. There wasn't
any at all. You just read it all. So that
your place in the Scripture would be pretty hard to find, wouldn't
it, if you didn't have a division of some kind. But I'm thankful
for the divisions. We're not knocking at it in any
way. But sometimes they come in an unfortunate place. But
we won't go into that. Let's continue the thought. It
says, What shall we say then? So shall we continue in sin that
grace may abound? If we are sin abounded, grace
does much more abound. Are we going to just deliberately
then continue in sin that this wonderful grace might continue
to abound? No, certainly not. Paul says,
God forbid! God forbid such a thought, that
we would deliberately continue in sin, that the abundance of
grace might just continue to abound. Because he goes on to
show, and he says in verse 2, how shall we that are dead to
sin live any longer therein? How can you continue to live
in sin if you're dead to sin? How was it that we became dead
to sin? We're going to have all this
explained in the 6th chapter. If you're dead to something,
it doesn't have any power or control over you whatsoever. And as a Christian, as a child
of God, you are dead to sin through Christ. Let's see what it says. We'll read several verses of
Scripture and then come back and try to explain. We'll read
on down through verse 8. Know ye not that so many of us
as were baptized into Jesus Christ were baptized into his death. Therefore we are buried with
him by baptism into death. That like as Christ was raised
up from the dead by the glory of the Father, even so we also
should walk in newness of life." Now then, in verse 5 it says,
"...for if we have been planted," or buried, "...together in the
likeness of his death." Baptism then is a likeness. It's a picture. If I pull up my billfold out
and open it up to where you have little snapshots in your billfold,
and you say, that's a likeness of one of my family or a friend
or whoever, say that's a picture. Baptism is a picture of something
that's happened. For if we have been planted together
in the likeness of his death, we shall be also in the likeness
of his resurrection. Knowing this, there was something
of fact that took place when Christ died. Knowing this, that
our old man is crucified with him. that the body of sin might
be destroyed, that henceforth we should not serve sin, for
he that is dead is freed from sin. In some way or another,
Christ's death made us completely free from sin. Now, we'll discuss
the sins of the saints at another point, but we want to see the
freeness from sin that we have at this point. Now, if we be
dead with Christ, did we die with Christ? We certainly did
if our sins were upon him. Then it says, We believe that
we shall also live with him. Let's stop there for just a moment
and come back and look at some verses. Verse 3 again, Know ye
not that so many of us as were baptized into Jesus Christ were
baptized into his death? Now, then, we're talking about
baptism, aren't we? And we're going to see that the
baptism that is referred to here is I believe, without a shadow
of a doubt, and a lot of people argue differently, I believe
it is water baptism, because that's where you have a likeness.
That's where you have the picture of it. You can't see anything.
If it were spirit baptism, we wouldn't be able to see that
it was a likeness. Maybe it would have taken place,
but you wouldn't see the likeness with it. You only see what you
have a picture of. But notice some facts concerning
here that's already taken place. Know ye not that so many of us
as were baptized into Jesus Christ were baptized into his death?
Now then, how is it that we were actually, the word baptized means
to be immersed into Christ. How is it that we were actually
immersed into his death? Baptism pictures that, water
baptism does. But we were actually immersed
in Christ when He died on the cross. We were actually immersed
into His death. So that our death and our sins
were there being paid for when Jesus died on the cross. And
we're going to have to consider ourselves as having died when
Jesus died. And having been resurrected when
Jesus was resurrected. And to consider that baptism
pictures that fact, or that truth, that we were actually crucified
when Jesus was crucified. It says if we be dead with Christ,
verse 8, we believe that we shall also live with him. So were we
dead with Christ? Yes, our sins were there. When
Christ died, he died for our sins. So we were actually dead.
The penalty of sin was upon us. And he as our substitute died
in our place, but we were dead there because if he was our substitute,
we had to die there, right? We had to be dead with Christ.
And if that be true, then when he was resurrected, we also were
resurrected with Christ. And baptism pictures that death
and burial and resurrection of Christ by which we have already
been united by faith. We have by faith received Christ
as our Savior, and he has already resurrected us in spiritual life.
You read John 5.24. And it says this, let me give
it to you. Verily, verily, I say unto you, he that heareth my
word, and believeth on him that sent me, hath everlasting life,
and shall not come into condemnation, but the believer is passed from
death unto life. How is he passed from death unto
life? He is passed from spiritual death unto spiritual life by
faith in Christ, because his faith is in Christ as a substitute
and as our sin bearer. and as the one that has died
for our sins, and so we are dead with Christ and we are resurrected
with Christ and we are passed from death unto life by faith. And baptism then pictures that.
Let's look at it quickly and carefully. In verse 4, Therefore
we are buried with him by baptism into death, that like as Christ
was raised up from the dead by the glory of the Father, even
so we also should walk in newness of life. We were the same as
dead in Christ, buried in Christ, and this baptism pictures that
which is already actually a fact, scriptural truth. It says an
experimental truth, too, because we've experienced this. We have
considered ourselves as such, and therefore we are the subject
and candidate of baptism. But look in verse 5. For if we
have been planted or buried together in the likeness of his death,
In the likeness of his death, we shall be also in the likeness
of his resurrection." So that when we were baptized, we were
actually picturing or showing a likeness of what? Of Christ's
death and of Christ's burial and of Christ's resurrection,
and we were showing that likeness in our experience of baptism,
being immersed. But we were not only showing
that likeness as what Christ did for us, being dead, buried
and resurrected, but we were showing that we also, by faith,
have considered ourselves to be in Christ in that way. We
have accepted Christ. We are pointing back to the fact
that Christ died, all right, and was buried and rose again.
And that baptism pictures that. But we're pointing back to the
fact that we received him and we were spiritually accounted
as dead with Christ, and buried with Christ, and resurrected
with Christ. And now, in baptism in the water,
we're going to show that likeness. 4. And it says, knowing this,
in verse 6, knowing this that our old man is crucified with
him. That old man is put to death.
It wasn't put to death in the waters of baptism. It was put
to death before. It was put to death when Jesus
died on the cross. And for our own experience, it
was put to death when we received him as the one who died in our
place on the cross. But it says that our old man
is crucified with him that the body of sin might be destroyed. That doesn't mean that this flesh
would be destroyed. It doesn't mean that this sinful
nature would be destroyed, but it means that that body of sin,
that power and control of sin that we were the servants of
before we were saved, might be put in subjection and might be
destroyed. That from this time forward,
from henceforth, look at it, we should not serve sin. Now
we're not going to serve sin anymore. Why? Because it doesn't
have any dominion over us because we're freed from it. is freed
from sin. You see, sin really doesn't have
the claim upon you now as a child of God that it used to. You're
not under its dominion, or his dominion if you want to put it
that way. You're not under the dominion
of sin. He cannot control you anymore. You say, well, but preacher,
I do sin. Yes, but you're not under the
power and control of sin. When you sin as a child of God,
you do so as one that still has the old carnal nature within,
but that old carnal nature does not completely control you. You
have a divine nature, and you can submit to the things of God
and can be led by the Word of God and be led by the Spirit
of God and thus overcome those sins of the flesh. because you
are not subject to the control and the rule and dominion of
sin. It says, For he that is dead
is freed from sin. You are set free. Now, if we
be dead with Christ, and that is a fact, we are, we believe
that we shall also live with him. Look at this in verse 9.
Knowing that Christ being raised from the dead dieth no more,
death hath no more dominion over him. For in that he died, he
died unto sin once, but in that he liveth, he liveth unto God.
Christ is raised from the dead, and death has absolutely no more
dominion over Christ. And in that he died, he died
unto sin once. He died one time for our sins. And in that he lives, he lives
unto God. Now look at verse 11. This connects us with it. Likewise,
reckon ye also yourselves to be dead indeed unto sin, but
alive unto God through Jesus Christ our Lord. We are to reckon
ourselves, just as sure as Christ died for our sins, we are to
reckon ourselves or count ourselves as dead indeed, Paul says, unto
sin. We are just as dead to sin as
Christ was dead in the grave. We are just as dead to sin. And
he says we're to count ourselves as such. See, we're not dealing
with that casual sin of the believer or when Satan comes along and
catches us on the wrong foot and we stumble and fall. Or we
yield to temptation in an hour when we're not aware that it's
going to overtake us and overcome us. We're not talking about that.
We're talking about the fact that we're to reckon or count
ourselves just as sure as Jesus died for our sins to be dead
indeed unto sin, but alive unto God through Jesus Christ our
Lord. Just as alive as Christ is alive and seated on the right
hand of God. And then, if we will settle that
fact that sin does not have any more dominion over us, we're
not under its control or reign or rule, but we're under the
rule of the gift of life and of righteousness by Christ that
we studied in the last chapter, that we then are not going to
let sin, verse 12, look at it, reign in your mortal body that
you should obey it in the lust thereof. We know it's in our
body, don't we? We know that that old nature
is still there, but we're not going to let it rain anymore
because we're reckoned or counted as if we are dead indeed under
sin. Where do you stand then before
God? You are reckoned as not only crucified with Christ, the
old man and the old sins buried, but you are reckoned as being
alive with Christ because he is alive. And then how are you
going to deal with sin? Let not sin therefore reign in
your mortal body. It appears to me that Paul is
saying we don't have to let sin rule us. We are not talking about,
as John said, if any man sin, we have an advocate with the
Father because we know that once in a while that does catch up
with us. And we know that we cannot say that we have not seen.
We would deceive ourselves and his word wouldn't be in us, would
it? But Paul is encouraging us here not to let it rule over
us. Because of what we reckon in
Christ and count to be a fact in Christ, let's not let it rule
over us. It doesn't have to rule your
life. It may come along once in a while. You may yield unto
temptation. You may need to confess your
sins and shortcomings daily, and I'm sure we all do. But you're
not going to let it rule you all through the day and every
day of your life and keep on being in control of you. You're
going to slough it off and shove it off from time to time by the
Word of God and by the power of the Holy Spirit and by the
new nature, the spiritual nature that is within you, you are going
to put up a fight against sin. You are not going to let it reign.
And Paul says, Let not sin therefore reign in your mortal body. So
if he tells us not to let it reign, that means that we can
or we may let it reign or we may not. If we completely succumb
and say, well, I'm just going to give up and let sin take the
best of me, we'd let it reign in our mortal bodies, wouldn't
we? But we're not going to do that as a Christian. We're going
to put up a fight. We're going to put up a fight
against the world and the flesh and the devil. And when any time
sin comes our way, we're going to deal with it as an enemy.
And we're not going to let it therefore reign in our mortal
body. You should obey it in the lust thereof. You may lust. You
may have evil thoughts and evil desires from time to time, but
you're not going to let those completely control you. God is
going to, by his Holy Spirit's sin conviction, you're going
to say, well, I'm a child of God and this ought not to be
in my life, and this is too wicked or too sinful for me to go along
with. And you'll turn your back upon
it and you will not have anything to do with it. All from time
to time it will be filtered in. You know they filter it in on
TV, don't they? They filter it in every now and then. You'll
be watching something on TV and all of a sudden Boy, you're just
right in the middle of it. And what is it? Nothing but sin
and evil and wickedness. And then your conscience says,
well, that's not right for me. And you'll either switch the
channel or turn it off or something. Because you can't stand it as
a child of God. You'll say, that's just not for
me as a Christian to listen to or to see. And God be merciful
to any person that doesn't have any conviction about those things.
Because it means simply this, that if there is no conviction
about it, that that Holy Spirit is not living within and telling
you that certain things are wrong and listening to them or seeing
them on television. So it says we are not to let
sin reign in our mortal body. You should obey it in the lust
hour. Neither yield ye your members as instruments of unrighteousness.
Don't let your body be an instrument. of unrighteousness unto sin,
but yield yourselves unto God as those that are alive from
the dead, and your members as instruments of righteousness
unto God." That's what we're to do and what we're not to do,
isn't it? Neither yield ye, and yet yield ye. Don't let the devil
use your members of your body unto sin, but let God use those
same members unto the things of righteousness. Now, we can
do either. We can do one or the other. That's
what accounts for a lot of backslidden Christians today. They can let
the devil, they can let sin do these things to them, and many
do. And they become broken in their
fellowship with God and out of the house of God and away from
the children of God and the fellowship of God's people. And you know,
a lot of times when you invite people to church, it's not because
Christian people. And they fail to come, they refuse
to come. It's not because of the church
itself, it's because of themselves. There's something wrong there,
and they feel uncomfortable in the house of God and under the
preaching of the Word. I'm convinced that the more the
Word is preached, the more division will be made in Christendom.
You just preach it and see how it thins out the crowd. You see
how it makes a difference. Now, I don't mean by that that
there cannot be great crowds, because there can be if people
get right with God. But those that will refuse an
invitation to the house of God, that will use excuses, that will
go ahead and try to find some reason, it's because deep down
there is a broken fellowship there, and until they really
get back in church and really get under the preaching of the
Word and really get right, first of all, with God themselves,
they're going to feel that uncomfortable condition. Because you'll be
comfortable if you're a child of God. under the preaching of
the Word, you'll say, I'm glad I came. You'll say, I know where
I stand. You'll have fellowship with the
brethren. But if you get out of harmony with God and His Word,
and you come to the place that you're yielding to sin instead
of yielding to the things that are righteous, then you'll find
yourself in a sad state of affairs. It says in verse 14, For sin
shall not have dominion over you, for ye are not under the
law, but under grace. Why does it make this statement?
It's simply saying that though you would have a shortcoming
in your life, though that you might transgress the law of God,
you're not under the law. Christ has redeemed you from
it. You're under grace. But you're not to use this grace
of God to continue in sin. That was verse 1, wasn't it?
You're to use the grace of God. God forbid that you should continue
in it, because we're dead to it. But we're not to let it have
dominion over you, and it shall not, because you're not under
the law, but under grace. What then? Shall we sin because
we're not under the law? The same question comes up. But
under grace? God forbid! If we were to continue
to sin as under grace and say, well, now because I'm under grace
and not under the law, and the law will no longer condemn me,
I'm just going to sin all I want to, it would reveal the fact
that we were really not saved. Look at the next verse. Know
ye not that to whom ye yield yourselves servants to obey,
his servants ye are to whom ye obey, whether of sin unto death
or of obedience unto righteousness. You see, it just reveals your
nature. So the fellow that says, I'm saved by grace and I'm not
under the law, I'm under grace and yet I'm going to continue
in sin, he's just making a mockery of the grace of God is what he's
doing. Now look at the next verse. It says, "...but God bethanked
that ye were," look at that, past tense, "...ye were the servants
of sin, but ye have obeyed from the heart that form of doctrine
which was delivered unto you. Being then made free from sin,
ye became servants of righteousness." So whose servant are you now?
You're not a servant of sin, you're servants of righteousness.
Even though sin may still try to creep in, you're not sin's
servant, and sin shall not have dominion over you, for you're
not under the law, but under grace. He says, I speak after
the matter of men because of the infirmity of your flesh.
Paul says, I know that you are capable of sins and shortcomings. I know that you need to be spoken
unto as men that still have the carnal nature. But he says, For
as ye have yielded your members servants to uncleanness and to
iniquity unto iniquity, even so now yield your members servants
to righteousness unto holiness.