Lamenting over the chains of our carnal nature
and the shackles of our feeble efforts, the apostle Paul cries
out in Roman’s 7:24, “O wretched man that I am! Who shall
deliver me from this body of death?” If Paul were to leave
this cry unanswered and end his discourse here, we might be
left to believe that the Christian life was forever sentenced
to a life of failure. If it were not for the glorious verses
which follow, we would likely assume that we were doomed to
a fruitless, frustrated life as a “redeemed” soul trapped within
a spiritual dungeon. But in response to that fundamental and
vital question, “who shall deliver us,” Paul begins
his magnificent reply, “I thank God through Jesus Christ
our Lord….”
Still today desperate souls groan and travail
with this familiar cry, awaiting a genuine emancipation from
lives bound by the power of sin. Sadly however, in most cases,
instead of liberating the captives, the chains are made heavier
and the shackles tighter by the lie that in this life there
is no real freedom from the bondage of sin.
Sadder still is the fact that this enfeebling
doctrine is the one most commonly taught among a broad spectrum
of those who call themselves Christians today. Masses of Christians
from many denominations have been led astray by this teaching
and have been robbed of ever experiencing the life-changing
power of Jesus Christ in their lives.
A Hopeless Condition…
The scripture most frequently misquoted by
countless defeated souls is that of Romans 7:15, “For that
which I do I allow not: for what I would, that do I not; but
what I hate, that do I.” This verse is often presented
as the evidence of our fatal diagnosis—the incurable disease
of sin. Once incorrectly labeled, the cancer of unbelief spreads
its subtle infection and sin soon finds a comfortable home under
the bleak prognosis of hopelessness. Many are left to a meager
existence and many more simply die as they embrace this fallacy.
There have always been those in the church
who have taught against holiness and godly repentance, using
grace as a cloak. The book of Jude records evidence of this
ancient menace and gives us a glimpse of just how soon this
problem came into the early church. “For there are certain
men crept in unawares, who were before of old ordained to this
condemnation, ungodly men, turning the grace of our God into
lasciviousness [lawlessness], and denying the only Lord God,
and our Lord Jesus Christ.” (Jude 4)
Since then, many other groups such as the Gnostics,
the Dualists, the Antinomianists and some Dispensationalists
have maligned the church with pernicious heresies, sowing seeds
of unbelief and denying the sanctifying power of the Holy Spirit.
Today however, instead of being the annoying nuisance of a minority
voice, this has become the predominant view in most churches.
During the Reformation, many who were reacting against the “works
oriented” doctrines of the Roman Catholic Church back-lashed
into these lawless teachings. Consequently, carnality and worldliness
quickly abounded, even among the Protestant churches. This heresy
soon became the accepted norm and many of the early reformers
began to consider holiness an optional teaching intended only
for the few.
Probably the most outrageous statement from
the early reformers was that by Martin Luther, himself, in a
letter addressed to his friend, Melanchthon, where he stated:
In defense of Luther, I would caution that
not all of his writings present such a low view of holiness.
Nevertheless, I believe that this statement reveals a critical
defect in his theology and in the theology of many others that
have followed after him.
The main force of this teaching is generally
founded on the premise that the Christian has “liberty” in all
things and so he is considered “free,” even if he continues
to walk in sin. However, far from being a true liberation, this
defeated teaching actually brings a Christian into deeper bondage
by making him comfortable in his sin. Once comfortable in sin,
the defeated Christian no longer feels the need to seek Christ
for deliverance by faith. Peter spoke of this false liberty
when he said, “While they promise them liberty, they themselves
are the servants of corruption: for of whom a man is overcome,
of the same is he brought in bondage.” (2 Pet. 2:19)
A Divine Power…
In the book of Romans Paul presents us with
the wonderful truth of God’s saving grace. He teaches, without
exception, that there is nothing a man can do to earn his salvation.
He teaches that none of our motives are pure enough and none
of our deeds are good enough to earn God’s favor. This teaching
is succinctly presented, “Therefore by the deeds of the
law there shall no flesh be justified in his sight…Therefore
we conclude that a man is justified by faith without the deeds
of the law.” (Rom. 3: 20, 28)
With such a definitive conclusion, the question
that naturally comes to mind is this: “If performing the deeds
of the law does not justify us before God, then after we are
saved, does obeying the law really matter anymore?” Fortunately,
Paul does not leave us to ponder this for long. If we will simply
read on to the end of the chapter he answers any question which
may remain with this rebuke, “Do we then make void the law
through faith? God forbid: yea, we establish the law.”
(Rom. 3:31)
Paul’s view of grace was not just divine forgiveness,
it was also divine power. The whole tenor of Paul’s teaching
throughout this book takes the sinner from the hopelessness
of living in the flesh, to the invincibility of living in the
Spirit. As far as Paul was concerned on this matter, living
in Christ and still continuing to be bound to sin was out of
the question. Just in case any doubt could be still lingering
in our minds, Paul further clarifies in his own words, “What
shall we say then? Shall we continue in sin, that grace may
abound? God forbid. How shall we, that are dead to sin, live
any longer therein?” (Rom. 6:1-2)
A Divine Rescue…
In the seventh chapter of Romans, Paul starts
out by painting a very grim, yet familiar picture of our spiritual
struggle, “For I delight in the law of God after the inward
man: But I see another law in my members, warring against the
law of my mind, and bringing me into captivity to the law of
sin which is in my members.” (Rom 7:22) There is no doubt
that we are soldiers in a war and the carnal nature will always
be at enmity with the Spirit within us. Nevertheless, it is
unfortunate that this chapter has been used so frequently to
justify defeat. While most of the church today teaches that
this chapter is proof of our impotence, on the other hand, holiness
and conservative churches have provided little help by offering
conflicting testimonies of sinless perfection.
I feel that most of the confusion over this
chapter exists due to theories which try to solve Paul’s dilemma
either by: (1) eradicating our sin nature or (2) strengthening
our human effort to such a degree that we become super-human.
However, instead of stating that our deliverance comes through
either of these two avenues, Paul teaches very clearly that
our deliverance comes by a new law–“the law of the Spirit
of life.” “For what the law could not do, in that it was weak
through the flesh, God sending his own Son in the likeness of
sinful flesh, and for sin, condemned sin in the flesh: That
the righteousness of the law might be fulfilled in us, who walk
not after the flesh, but after the Spirit.” (Rom. 8:3)
In other words, the holy requirements of the
law are accomplished through us by the enabling power of the
Holy Spirit. “But if the Spirit of him that raised up Jesus
from the dead dwell in you, he that raised up Christ from the
dead shall also quicken your mortal bodies by his Spirit that
dwelleth in you.” (Rom 8:11) But we must beware of entering
into a spirit of unbelief by attempting to accomplish these
works in our own strength. It is a dangerously narrow way and
unless we look to Him by faith, believing that He will do this
work in us, we labor in vain. Our works will fail and exhaust
us; but His Spirit will empower and deliver us!
To illustrate: If you were shipwrecked and
found yourself drowning in the ocean, you would immediately
find two laws working against each other. First, you would notice
the law of gravity as it threatened to draw you to the bottom
of the ocean. The next law you would immediately experience
would be the law of your mind or effort, as you would naturally
attempt to save yourself from the effects of the law of gravity.
Your mind would undoubtedly want to stay afloat, so it would
relentlessly motivate your body to strive with all its might
to defeat the first law, the law of gravity. Eventually, in
spite of your best efforts, you would find the law of gravity
winning over and would be forced to cry out, “Who shall
deliver me!”
But just when you thought there was no hope
and death seemed certain, a new law, the law of buoyancy, comes
to your rescue in the form of a lifeboat. You labor to enter
this boat, and then, as you lay prostrate there on the deck,
exhausted from your time of striving, you look up into the captain’s
face and say, most meaningfully, “Thank you for saving me!”
This new law, the law of buoyancy, manifested
its superiority in the form of the life boat and was able to
make you free from the drowning effects of the law of gravity.
But please note, the lifeboat did not eradicate the law of gravity;
if you get out of the boat, the law of gravity is still there
and it will once again threaten to draw you to your death. Rather
this new law, being superior, superseded the law of
gravity, thus giving you life.
A Divine Liberty…
As we lay on that lifeboat we are completely
liberated from the power of drowning. If we stay in the boat,
the law of gravity is overpowered and so we no longer need to
violently kick our hands and feet to fight for life. As a result,
we are delivered from our peril and we are then able to go wherever
the captain desires us to go. It is in this very way that we
can say with Paul that our faith establishes the law.
In Ezekiel 36:26, it was prophesied, “A new heart also will
I give you, and a new spirit will I put within you: and I will
take away the stony heart out of your flesh, and I will give
you an heart of flesh. And I will put my spirit within you,
and cause you to walk in my statutes, and ye shall keep my judgments,
and do them.”
When Paul spoke of salvation to the Ephesians
he taught that this salvation would allow the works and will
of God to be manifested. “For by grace are ye saved through
faith; and that not of yourselves: it is the gift of God: Not
of works, lest any man should boast. For we are his workmanship,
created in Christ Jesus unto good works, which God hath before
ordained that we should walk in them.” (Eph. 2:8)
Holiness preacher Evan Hopkins said it this
way, “Liberty is not freedom from law—that would be
license. It is freedom in law. There is so-called liberty
which is without law. This may be natural man’s ideal of true
freedom. But ‘lawlessness’ is, in God’s judgment, the very essence
of sin. There is a condition which is under law; but
this is a state of bondage, the condition of the legalist. A
third and blessed relation in which we may be free to the law
is that of being inlawed, having it with us, written
by the Spirit of God on the fleshly tables of our heart.”
Liberty is only freedom when we are unhindered
from fulfilling the object of our desire. For example, if we
were locked up in a dungeon bound by shackles, it really would
not matter if we had been pronounced free or not. Our chains
would hinder our desire for freedom. We would first need a deliverer
to break the chains and open the dungeon before we could experience
the freedom that we were promised. But if our deliverance was
nothing more than the issuing of a document telling us to be
content in our chains and satisfied with our dungeon, then we
would have more need of an anesthetic than a deliverer. If this
is the case with our faith, then Karl Marx was right in his
criticism of the church, and our religion is nothing more than
“the opium of the masses.”
Christ has come to preach deliverance to
the captives, and recovering of sight to the blind, to set at
liberty them that are bruised. (Luke 4:18) Christ overpowered
the stain and power of sin that was initiated by Satan. The
power of the cross triumphed over the corruption of the forbidden
fruit. We have been liberated so we can give glory to God and
have fellowship with Him. “For if through the offense of
one many be dead, much more the grace of God, and the gift by
grace, which is by one man, Jesus Christ, hath abounded unto
many.” (Rom. 5:15)
A Holy Environment…
It must be understood that a pure and holy
environment is the atmosphere in which we were created to exist.
In other words, it is the object of our deliverance. Paul called
us to dwell in this atmosphere when he reminded us of the nature
of our new birth saying, “Put on the new man which was created
according to God, in true righteousness and holiness.”
(Eph. 4:24, see also Col. 3:10)
As Hopkins put it, “And so in nature, we say
a creature is free when it can move in its own native element.
The bird is free in the air, and the fish in the water. Take
either of them out of its element, and its liberty is gone.
Change or modify the character of the element, and you limit
or destroy the freedom of its life.” Just as the fish suffers
asphyxiation on land and the bird drowns in the water, the Christian
will finally die if left apart from the holiness of God.
A Sanctifying Truth…
The realization of God’s desire for our holiness
is a truth that is life-changing. If we do not desire a real
rescue, then we will die in our own confinement. Jesus frequently
taught about the Father’s desire for us to live in this environment
of holiness. In His most intimate hour with His disciples Jesus
prayed, “I pray not that thou shouldest take them out of
the world, but that thou shouldest keep them from the evil.
They are not of the world, even as I am not of the world. Sanctify
them through thy truth: thy word is truth. As thou hast sent
me into the world, even so have I also sent them into the world.
And for their sakes I sanctify myself, that they also might
be sanctified through the truth.” (John 17:15-19)
God uses His truth, the Word of God, as an
instrument for our sanctification. By hearing the words given
for our instruction, and understanding God’s law, His holy requirements,
His ordinances, His teachings and His desires, we open ourselves
up into a wonderful channel of sanctifying grace by allowing
Christ to accomplish this work within us. “So then faith
cometh by hearing, and hearing by the word of God.” (Rom.
10:17)
A New Hope…
Finally, I would like to reiterate that we
must keep our hope hidden in Him. When we hear God calling our
heart to new areas of holiness and sanctification, let us not
make the mistake of trying to accomplish them in the flesh,
nor should we allow a spirit of unbelief to hinder us from growing.
With faith, we must press on, submitting our will to Jesus and
watching with joy as He accomplishes His work in us!
John Wesley, in an anointed sermon taken from
the passage, “Do we then make void the law through faith,”
summed up this teaching with remarkable clarity in this statement:
The sinner’s commandment: Thou shalt
not
Becomes the saint’s promise: Thou shalt not
In other words, the very thing that used to
bring us condemnation now brings us comfort! What used to be
a sentence of death is now our blueprint for life! What used
to discourage, corrupt, tempt and deceive, now implanted by
God’s grace, encourages, purifies, sanctifies and instructs!
Praise the Lord! From this perspective, we can look through
even the strongest teachings in the Bible with excitement over
the expectation that God will accomplish them through us! What
a beautiful truth this is! Let us place our confidence in God,
just as Paul did in these closing words to the Thessalonians,
“And the very God of peace sanctify you wholly; and I pray
God your whole spirit and soul and body be preserved blameless
unto the coming of our Lord Jesus Christ. Faithful is he that
calleth you, who also will do it.”