Sermon Tone Analysis

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We can never fully understand the grace of God until we understand our human condition.
We have such a distorted, twisted view of our condition by nature.
Our western world view and 1st world comforts only further work against us to give us a sense of indifference to our situation.
If only we would see the truth of our condition, if only we could have our eyes opened to the spiritual realities, then we would see people running to Jesus, we would see Christians living their faith, striving for godliness with gratitude toward their saviour Jesus Christ.
This is why we really need to pay attention to Paul’s words here in Romans.
We need to ponder them and meditate on them.
I was reviewing Rom chapter 5 this week just looking at the words used to describe our condition.
let me read them out to you.
Without Strength
Ungodly
Sinners
Enemies of God
Under the Reign of Death
This list should cause us to break out in a cold sweat.
It should terrify us.
But the gospel we find interwoven in these verses is over and above.
The term “much more” is used 5 times in this chapter.
Christmas dinner illustration
Super abundance
As we begin looking at these verses from 5:12-5:21 we find a comparison is made between Adam and the supper abundance of Christ in order to teach us some very deep and powerful truths about justification by faith.
I think it will take us some time to get through these 10 verses.
I don’t know how long but I know that we won’t be getting through them today.
My first point this morning is....
Just as Adam So Christ
A comparison is made here in these verses between Adam and Christ.
in vs 12 it says...
The sentence is unfinished at this point and in some bibles there is a parentheses from vs. 13-17 and in verse 18 Paul continues this thought.
So we can see a comparison is made between these two men.
The one who sinned and brought judgement to all men and the one who’s righteous act brought the free gift of justification. the first being Adam the second being Christ.
With any comparison you have similarities and differences and both are important to help us to understand the point.
Why compare Christ to Adam?
In verse 14 it says that...
A type is a foreshadowing.
First and Last Adam
So we have 2 humanities.
One is natural all coming from our father the first Adam.
The other is spiritual and comes from the Last Adam, Christ.
Or as Jesus put it “that which is born of flesh is flesh and that which is born of spirit is spirit.
This comparison made in Rom 5 is given specifically to help our understanding of how Jesus dying one death on the cross is able to save all those who believe on Him.
In order to understand how we all can be made righteous we must first understand how all are made sinners.
Which brings us to my next point.
All Sinned
in verse 12 it says...
and then his sentence just drops off.
I believe that the reason that Paul cuts off his sentence right here is because it is extremely important for us to know what he means by all sinned.
Now we could read this … …because all commit individual sins.
Paul did say before in Rom 3:23 that all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God.
And he does say in Rom 6:23 that the wages of sin is death.
So isn’t that what he’s just reiterating here that death spread to all men because all have sinned?
That’s true but I don’t believe that that is what Paul is saying here.
Let’s look at the context.
Paul stops abruptly mid sentence to clarify and he uses two arguments here.
1st.
argument is based on the law. he says in vs 13
So then sins, that is individual acts of sin were in the world before God gave the law to Moses But sin is not imputed when there is no Law.
Imputed = means to reckon, or to put to one’s account or lay to one’s charge.
So, even though people committed sinful acts this was not put to their charge because there was no law...
The condemnation of death still reigned over those to whom their sins were not imputed.
2nd argument “death reigned from Adam to Moses even over those who had not sinned according to the likeness of the transgression of Adam.
He could be talking about those who did not sin as Adam did by breaking a direct command of God but I believe, as do many other commentators, That Paul has something else in mind here, namely infants.
The Jewish Rabbis believed that a child under the age of one year was not capable of sinning, and that their deaths were a result of the parents sin.
That is why the disciples when they saw the man that was blind from birth asked Jesus “which man sinned this man, or his parents?”
But what Paul tells us here is that the reason that death takes even those who have not sinned is because of Adam’s sin.
So I believe that what is meant in vs 12 by “all sinned” is that we all were in Adam when he sinned and therefore we all receive the condemnation.
The whole human race was in Adam our father when he sinned and so the condemnation of death passed upon all humanity.
This is a hard thing for us to take as postmodern westeners with our sharp sense of fairness.
And yet it is key to our understanding of how we can be justified through one man’s righteous act.
In verse 16 is says plainly For the Judgement which came from one offence resulted in condemnation.
One man, one sin, condemnation for all.
And what is that condemnation?...
Death Reigns
The proof of this passage is all around us.
Most of us have been already touched by it in some way.
If death is just part of the natural process of life then why do we feel such loss?
We were not created to die.
Death is the condemnation of the sin of Adam.
But I don’t want to finish on such a negative point.
Paul certianty doesn’t finish on a negative point but since we don’t have time to finish this passage today I’ll finish with this well know verse.
In Adam death in Christ much more eternal life.
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