Thursday
Evening Bible Study
March
26, 2009
Introduction
Paul has moved through his doctrinal section in Romans and now has moved on
to the practical side of things. He’s talking about what a real Christian looks
like.
Last week we talked about the subject of submission.
Submission is
one of our least favorite topics. Yet it is one of the most critical subjects
for the “real” Christian.
Submission isn’t just for women. We are ALL obligated to learn to submit to
those in authority over us – whether it’s our boss at work or our government.
The issue is this – learning to submit to those in authority helps us learn
to submit to God.
One of the outcomes of submitting to the government is that of paying
taxes:
(Rom
13:7 NKJV) Render therefore to all their due: taxes to whom taxes are due, customs to whom
customs, fear to whom fear, honor to whom honor.
due – opheile – that which is owed; a debt
The idea is that we “owe it” to the government to pay our taxes. We “owe
it” to show respect to certain people. We “owe it” to show honor to others.
:8 Owe no one
anything except to love one another,
owe – opheilo – to owe; to owe money, be in
debt for
You might miss it in English, but Paul is basically using the same word
translated “due” in the previous verse. He’s continuing the same thought.
The idea here is that we should not have any outstanding debts.
If you owe somebody some money, pay your debt.
If you owe someone “fear” or “honor” (Rom. 12:7), then pay your debt.
But there is one debt that you can never finish paying off…
to love
– agapao – to love.
Love based on the will, giving value to a person;
as opposed to spontaneous, emotional, natural affection.
Lesson
Payment due
The early church father Origen
said, “The debt of love remains with us
permanently and never leaves us. This is a debt which we pay every day and
forever owe.”
Keep in mind what kind of love we’re
talking about:
(1 Cor 13:4-8
NLT) Love is
patient and kind. Love is not jealous or boastful or proud {5} or rude. Love
does not demand its own way. Love is not irritable, and it keeps no record of
when it has been wronged. {6}
It is never glad about injustice but rejoices whenever the truth wins
out.
There is a difference between godly love and our romantic,
mushy, warm-fuzzy concept of love. God’s kind of love doesn’t look the other
way or ignore injustice. In fact, God’s love is the very foundation of His
“discipline” of us, His chastisement of us when we’re disobedient (Heb. 13). We
think that “love” means that I have to turn my head and let someone get away
with something, but God’s love will step in and deal with the problem, OUT OF
LOVE, to stop the sin.
{7} Love never gives up, never loses faith, is always hopeful, and endures
through every circumstance. {8} Love will last forever…
If you think that you’ve already given a certain person
“enough love”, you’re wrong. You still owe more. But don’t be confused with
what you owe them – it’s not affection, it’s agape.
How’s your “credit rating” in regards to love?
:8 for he who
loves another has fulfilled the law.
has fulfilled
– pleroo – to make full, to complete
:9 For the
commandments, "You shall not commit adultery," "You shall not
murder," "You shall not steal," "You shall not bear false
witness," "You shall not covet,"
The Ten Commandments were divided into two parts or two “tables” or “tablets”.
The first
“table” (Ex. 20:3-8) contained the commandments about how we relate to God
(don’t have other gods, no images… etc).
The second
“table” contained the commandments about how we relate to people.
This is what Paul is quoting from, a little out of order and he doesn’t mention
the command to honor your parents (Ex. 20:12-17).
adultery
– moicheuo – to
commit adultery; to break the marriage vows
murder – phoneuo –to kill, slay, murder
steal – klepto – to steal; to commit a theft
bear false witness – pseudomartureo
( “false” + “to be a witness) – to utter falsehoods in giving testimony, to lie
covet – epithumeo – to have a desire for, long
for; to lust after, covet
We may never let anyone see the strong
desires inside of us, but don’t think that the “lust” isn’t harmful. It is one
of those “root causes”, one of those things that can drive all of our actions
if we aren’t careful.
:9 and if there
is any other commandment, are all summed up in this saying, namely, "You
shall love your neighbor as yourself."
summed up – anakephalaiomai
– to sum up (again), to condense into a summary
God simplifies it for us. Instead of having to worry about five things NOT
to do, we only have to focus on doing ONE thing – loving.
Paul is quoting from:
(Lev
19:18 NKJV) 'You shall not take vengeance, nor bear any grudge against the
children of your people, but you shall love your neighbor as yourself: I am the
LORD.
This is what Jesus taught as well:
(Mat 22:35-40 NKJV) Then one of them, a
lawyer, asked Him a question, testing Him, and saying, {36} "Teacher,
which is the great commandment in the law?" {37} Jesus said to him,
"'You shall love the LORD your God with all your heart, with all your
soul, and with all your mind.' {38} "This is the first and great
commandment. {39} "And the second is like it: 'You shall love your
neighbor as yourself.' {40} "On these two commandments hang all the Law
and the Prophets."
The first “table” of the Law is
taken care of when you learn to love God.
The second “table” of the Law is
taken care of when you learn to love others.
Illustration
Talking about neighbors …
During his sermon, a pastor quoted from Matthew, “Love your neighbor as
yourself.” To emphasize the point, he asked three times, with increasing
intensity: “Who is my neighbor?
Who is my neighbor?
Who is my neighbor?!”
Each time he asked, a young boy in the congregation answered (mimicking the
pastor’s intensity, but not quite as loud): “Mister Rogers! Mister Rogers! Mister Rogers!”
• Ed Arida, Stow, OH, Christian Reader, “Lite
Fare.”
:10 Love does
no harm to a neighbor; therefore love is the fulfillment of the law.
harm – kakos – wrong, wicked; troublesome,
injurious, destructive
If you will love people, then you won’t be hurting them.
Lesson
Love obeys the law.
Some people have the idea that living the Christian life has nothing to do
with “the Law”. People will tell you, “Hey, I’m no longer under the Law,
brother!”
But what they ignore is the fact that while our lives are no longer judged
by the Law, and while our righteousness and the ability to make the grade in
heaven is based on what Jesus has done for us, our lives will still conform to
the Law.
Jesus said,
(Mat
5:17-19 NKJV) "Do not think that I came to destroy the Law or the
Prophets. I did not come to destroy but to fulfill. {18} "For assuredly, I
say to you, till heaven and earth pass away, one jot or one tittle will by no
means pass from the law till all is fulfilled. {19} "Whoever therefore
breaks one of the least of these commandments, and teaches men so, shall be called
least in the kingdom of heaven; but whoever does and teaches them, he shall be
called great in the kingdom of heaven.
As we learn to pay attention to loving others like we ought, we will find
that our actions will parallel what is commanded in the Law.
You can tell a lot about a person by whether or not they are obedient to
the law.
Illustration
During his time as a rancher, Theodore Roosevelt and one of his
cowpunchers lassoed a maverick steer, lit a fire, and prepared the branding
irons. The part of the range they were on was claimed by Gregor Lang, one of
Roosevelt’s neighbors. According to the cattleman’s rule, the steer therefore
belonged to Lang. As his cowboy
applied the brand, Roosevelt said, “Wait, it should be Lang’s brand.” “That’s
all right boss,” said the cowboy. “But you’re putting on my brand,” Roosevelt
said. “That’s right,” said the man. “Drop that iron,” Roosevelt demanded, “and
get back to the ranch and get out. I don’t need you anymore. A man who will
steal for me will steal from me.”
• The Little, Brown Book of Anecdotes, Clifton Fadiman, General Editor,
Little Brown & Company, 1985, p. 476.
Roosevelt knew he couldn’t trust the man as an employee because the man was
a law-breaker.
Let’s say that a married
man starts getting close to another woman other than his wife at work. Let’s
say that he tells the woman that he “loves” her. Can that be true love? No,
because the man is breaking the law by committing adultery against his wife. If
he breaks the law against his wife, what’s going to keep him from breaking the
law again with you?
Lesson
How can I love like that?
1. Let God love you first.
(1 John 4:19
NKJV) We love Him because He first loved us.
I can only begin to understand how to love God with my
heart, mind, and strength when I begin to understand how much God loves me.
2. Let God fill you with His Holy Spirit.
(Gal
5:22-23 NKJV) But the fruit of the Spirit is love, joy, peace, longsuffering,
kindness, goodness, faithfulness, {23} gentleness, self-control. Against such
there is no law.
The chief result of the Holy Spirit being in control of
your life will be love.
3. Irritate others towards love.
(Heb
10:24 NKJV) And let us consider one another in order to stir up love and good
works
stir up – paroxusmos – an inciting; irritation.
I don’t always enjoy
being an irritation to others, but there is one way in which I hope I excel at
irritating people. I hope I irritate them into loving others.
:11 And do
this, knowing the time, that now it is high time to awake out of sleep;
the time – kairos – a measure of time, a fixed and
definite time
Paul is not referring to chronological time (chronos) but to kairos, time as an era, epoch, or
age (MacArthur).
Do you know what “age” we’re in?
(Mat 16:1-3 NKJV) Then the Pharisees and Sadducees came, and testing
Him asked that He would show them a sign from heaven. {2} He answered and said to
them, "When it is evening you say, 'It will be fair weather, for the sky
is red'; {3} "and in the morning, 'It will be foul weather today, for the
sky is red and threatening.' Hypocrites! You know how to discern the face of
the sky, but you cannot discern the signs of the times.
The Pharisees knew a lot about how to
predict the weather, but they were ignorant to the fact of the times they were
in. The Messiah was standing right in front of them.
sleep – hupnos – sleep. Sometimes we can get
“hypnotized” by the world. We get a little “sleepy” to the things of God.
to awake – egeiro –
to arouse, cause to rise; to arouse from sleep, to awake
It is also used to describe resurrection:
Lu
9:22 saying, "The Son of Man must suffer many things, and be rejected by
the elders and chief priests and scribes, and be killed, and be raised the third day."
:11 for now our
salvation is nearer than when we first believed.
Paul is saying
that Jesus’ return is now closer than it’s ever been before. And for us, it’s
even closer.
Paul uses the picture of somebody sleeping through the night and now it’s
about time to wake up.
Every day that goes by gets us closer to the day of our “salvation”, when
we will see God.
Lesson
Get ready to go
It’s not hard to get cynical about Jesus’ return and say something like, “People
have been saying for years that Jesus was about to come back, and He hasn’t
yet. Why should I be concerned?”
(Mat 24:45-51 NKJV) "Who then is a
faithful and wise servant, whom his master made ruler over his household, to
give them food in due season? {46} "Blessed is that servant whom his master, when he
comes, will find so doing. {47} "Assuredly, I say to you that he will make
him ruler over all his goods. {48} "But if that evil servant says in his heart, 'My
master is delaying his coming,' {49} "and begins to beat his fellow
servants, and to eat and drink with the drunkards, {50} "the master of that servant will come
on a day when he is not looking for him and at an hour that he is not aware of,
{51} "and will cut him in two and appoint him his portion with the
hypocrites. There shall be weeping and gnashing of teeth.
Which servant thinks that the Lord is delaying His coming? The evil
servant.
Which servant is ready for his Master’s return? The faithful and wise
servant.
Jesus is coming for us. It may be that we could suddenly
die, and then we will find ourselves in His presence. It may be that the time
of His return will finally come. Get ready.
:12 The night
is far spent, the day is at hand. Therefore let us cast off the works of
darkness, and let us put on the armor of light.
far spent – prokopto
– to beat forward; to lengthen out by hammering (as a smith forges metals)
There’s not much night time left.
cast off
– apotithemi – to put off or aside or
away
Illustration
There are going to be some things that will
definitely “slow you down” in life. If
you don’t learn to unhook them from your life you’re not going to get too
far. Paul calls them “works of
darkness”.
put on – enduo
– to sink into (clothing), put on, clothe one’s self
The picture is like getting up in the
morning and changing out of your pajamas and into your daytime clothes.
armor – hoplon – any tool or implement for
preparing a thing; arms used in warfare, weapons
Illustration
A bunch of recruits were having a written examination,
and when one of them was asked why he wasn’t working, he replied, “Sir, I have
neither paper nor pencil.”
“Well!” exclaimed the instructor, “what would you think of a soldier who went
into battle with neither rifle
nor ammunition?” The recruit thought for a moment, and then answered, “I’d
think he was an officer,
sir.”
Unfortunately, too many Christians
today think they are officers in God’s army and have no need of the Spirit’s
weapons. Don’t underestimate the enemy!
works of darkness … armor of light
Paul is going to clarify these in the next two verses.
:13 Let us walk
properly, as in the day, not in revelry and drunkenness, not in lewdness and
lust, not in strife and envy.
properly – euschemonos –
in a seemly manner, decently
The words that describe the works of darkness, the things we put off, come
in pairs. The first two deal with intoxication:
revelry
– komos – drunken party, carousal; a
nocturnal and riotous procession of half drunken and frolicsome fellows who
after supper parade through the streets with torches and music in honor of Bacchus or some other
deity, and sing and play before houses of male and female friends; hence used
generally of feasts and drinking parties that are protracted till late at night
and indulge in revelry
drunkenness
– methe – intoxication; drunkenness. Some
folks don’t need a party as an excuse to get drunk. They drink when they’re
alone.
The next two words deal with sexual sin:
lewdness
– koite – a place for laying down; a
bed, couch; we’d call it “sleeping around”
Illustration
Two rabbis, one
Reformed and the other Orthodox, were discussing their respective congregations
one day. The Reformed rabbi asked the Orthodox leader, “Why don’t you let the
men and women of your congregation
sit together, as they do in my synagogue?” The Orthodox rabbi, known for his
sense of humor, replied, “If you want to know the truth, I don’t really mind
them sitting together at all. But, you see, my sermons aren’t that interesting
and I just can’t have them sleeping together.”
The word Paul uses here is not talking about sleeping in church. He’s
talking about sexual intercourse.
lust – aselgeia – unbridled lust, lacking
sexual restraints, outrageousness, shamelessness; the fundamental thought is
the acknowledging of no restraints, rudely doing whatever the latest impulse
leads you to do.
The last two words deal with conflict with others:
strife –
eris – contention, strife, wrangling
envy – zelos – an envious and contentious
rivalry, jealousy
These are all “night time” activities,
things we are to “put off”.
:14 But put on
the Lord Jesus Christ,
put on –
enduo – to sink into (clothing), put
on, clothe one’s self
How do we get “dressed” with Jesus? Perhaps the key is in the title given
to Jesus – “Lord”
Lesson
Making Him Lord
Victory over sin doesn’t come only by
denying the flesh.
It comes by making Him your “Lord”.
You’ve got a “throne” inside your
heart. It’s that seat inside you where
the pilot sits,
where the one sits that calls the shots, that makes the decisions.
Illustration
There’s a story about a photographer
for a national magazine who was assigned to take pictures of a great forest fire. He was
advised that a small plane would be waiting to fly him over the fire. The
photographer arrived at the airstrip just an hour before sundown. Sure enough,
a small Cessna
airplane was waiting. He jumped in with his equipment and shouted, “Let’s go!”
The tense man sitting in the pilot’s seat swung the plane into the wind and
soon they were in the air, though flying erratically. “Fly over the north side of the fire,” said
the photographer, “and make several low-level passes.” “Why?” asked the nervous
pilot. “Because I’m going to take pictures!” yelled the photographer. “I’m a
photographer, and photographers take pictures.” After a long pause, the “pilot”
replied: “You mean, you’re not my instructor?”
Who is sitting in the “pilot’s seat” of
your life?
Who makes the decisions? Do you have a “beginner” behind the
stick? Do you let Jesus fly the plane?
I think God’s desire is that we learn
to stop and ask Him, “What
do YOU want me to do?”
Sometimes He simply leaves the decision
up to us.
But sometimes His answers are pretty
obvious and clear. There are some things
that are simply NOT what He wants us to do.
There are other things that He does want us to do.
:14 and make no
provision for the flesh, to fulfill its lusts.
provision
– pronoia (“before” + “to
understand”) – forethought, providential care; to make provision for a thing
It’s like planning for a trip and packing what you think you’ll need.
flesh – sarx – flesh; the sensuous nature of
man, the “animal nature”, the sin nature; the part of me that loves to sin and
rebel against God
lusts – epithumia – desire, craving, longing,
desire for what is forbidden
My “flesh” wants certain things. Am I going to “pack a bag” for my flesh? Am
I going to “provide for” my flesh?
Lesson
Don’t pack for the flesh.
Illustration
When these extreme explorers try to
climb Mount Everest,
it’s very important that they have figured out how much supplies they’re going
to need. They have special camps
along the way to rest and be re-supplied. One of the keys to surviving Everest
is having adequate provisions.
Having victory over sin is related to
how we “re-supply” our sin nature.
Illustration
There’s the old Eskimo proverb: “Every man has two dogs
fighting inside of him. The dog you feed is the dog that wins”
Are you feeding the
“flesh dog” or the “Spirit dog”
(Acts 19:18-20
NKJV) And many who had believed came confessing and telling their deeds. {19}
Also, many of those who had practiced magic brought their books together and
burned them in the sight of all. And they counted up the value of them, and it
totaled fifty thousand pieces of silver. {20} So the word of the Lord grew
mightily and prevailed.
These people
in Ephesus were coming to Jesus and as a result, started cleaning out their
closets, getting rid of all their junk. Note that one result was that the Word
of God grew and prevailed.
What are the kinds of things that
“feed” our flesh? Are you aware of the
things that make you want to sin more?
Be careful not to have the things close
by that will tempt you. Clean out your closets. Get rid of the provisions.