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Love Is a Verb - Romans 12:9-21

Taught on | Topic: love | Keywords: action, authentic, demonstrate, enemies, follow, hostility, serve

Perhaps the most overused (but under-practiced) word in human language is the word love. We use the word for everything that includes a mild liking of a meal to having intense affection for another human. Paul is far more practical, knowing that love will show itself in the form of action. Love is a verb. He shows us how the hallmark virtue of Christianity, love, is shown among other believers and in the world, even when they hate us.

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Love Is a Verb
Romans 12:9-21
Skip Heitzig
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Perhaps the most overused (but under-practiced) word in human language is the word love. We use the word for everything that includes a mild liking of a meal to having intense affection for another human. Paul is far more practical, knowing that love will show itself in the form of action. Love is a verb. He shows us how the hallmark virtue of Christianity, love, is shown among other believers and in the world, even when they hate us.
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Heart & Soul: A Study through Romans

Heart & Soul: A Study through Romans

When the wrath of God meets the righteousness of God, where does that leave us? The apostle Paul says that we are marked by sin at birth but marked righteous at salvation. In this series through Romans, Skip Heitzig explains the essentials of Christian doctrine that can transform your thoughts, words, and actions. Move from sinner to saint, and from saved to Spirit-filled as you inscribe the essence of the gospel onto your heart and soul.

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Outline

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  1. Love in the Family (vv. 9-13)

  2. Love amidst Hostility (vv. 14-21)

  3. Love among Our Enemies (vv. 17-20)

Study Guide

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Connect Recap Notes: January 5, 2020
Speaker: Skip Heitzig
Teaching: "Love Is a Verb"
Text: Romans 12:9-21

Path

Perhaps the most overused (but under-practiced) word in human language is the word love. We use the word for everything that includes a mild liking of a meal to having intense affection for another human. Paul is far more practical, knowing that love will show itself in the form of action. Love is a verb. He shows us how the hallmark virtue of Christianity, love, is shown among other believers and in the world, even when they hate us.
  1. Love in the Family (vv. 9-13)
  2. Love amidst Hostility (vv. 14-21)
  3. Love among Our Enemies (vv. 17-20)
Points

Love in the Family (vv. 9-13)
  • The word love is so overused, it's lost its value. We should view love as a verb rather than a noun. A common word used for love in Hebrew is ahava, which is connected to action and obedience. In Romans 12, Paul connected belief and behavior in three areas.
  • The gold standard for love in the New Testament is agape, one of four Greek words for love: agape (godly or moral love); eros (romantic love, meaning "to grasp"); phileo (natural, friendly affection); storge (family affection).
  • Paul said that our love should be without hypocrisy (in Greek, the word hypocrisy refers to an actor wearing a mask). Genuine love is love without a mask. The church should not be a stage for fake love, but should be filled with authentic, committed love.
  • To love authentically means to hate what is evil and "cling to what is good" (v. 9). God loves good and hates evil. One of the great weaknesses within the church is tolerance for evil. In verse 10, Paul combined two words (phileo and storge) to create an idea of family affection.
  • In verse 11, Paul provided the motives for love: diligence, fervency, and serving the Lord. Our enthusiasm for God is what fuels our love for His people.
Love amidst Hostility (vv. 14-21)
  • In verse 14, Paul switched his focus from loving the church to loving the world, showing how we can love under pressure. Paul stressed two core principles:
    • Our love should be independent of the treatment we receive from others.
    • It is impossible to love others fully apart from the love of God; we can love others because of God's love in us (see Romans 5:5).
  • Loving the lovely is easy; the difficulty lies in loving our enemies. Paul provided two tools to help us better love people:
    • Sympathize (v. 15): Weep with those who weep. George Fox said, "I prayed to God that He would baptize my heart into all conditions so I might be able to enter the needs and conditions of all."
    • Harmonize (vv. 17-18): Live peaceably with others. It's not easy to live at peace when someone is not willing, but you can control your response. Never let the inability to live at peace be on your side of the fence. God reserves the right to use people who disagree with us.
Love among Our Enemies (vv. 17-20)
  • In verses 19-20, Paul gave explicit counsel for living with enemies. Enemies of God's people are prevalent throughout the Bible (see Psalm 23).
  • Great persecution is the result of the Great Commission. If Christians stand firm for what we believe, the world will want to cut us down at the knees. Yet, we are to respond to evil with good because Jesus commanded it (see Matthew 5:44); Jesus practiced it—He forgave (see Luke 23:34) and He did not fight back (see Luke 22:51-53); people notice it (see Romans 12:20).
  • Consider these three different approaches to life:
    • Socrates: "Know thyself."
    • Freud: "Be thyself."
    • Jesus: "Give thyself."
Practice

Connect Up: Love for people—especially those in the household of faith—is essential to our love of God. Why do you think Jesus connects the love of God and our love of people (see Mark 12:30-31)? Discuss how Jesus expanded Deuteronomy 6:4-9 to include love for people, tying Leviticus 19:17-18 to the Shema in Deuteronomy 6:4. The weaving of the two Old Testament verses is expressed in Matthew 22:37-39. Because "God is love" (1 John 4:8), He yearns for His people to represent His love for people in the world, as He did in Christ (see John 3:16).

Connect In: What does it mean to love people within the church? How are we to connect our doctrine with our duty? It's easy to say we love someone but not so easy to live a life of love in action as Pastor Skip discussed—connecting our belief to our behavior. In Pastor Skip's booklet, Jesus Loves the Broken, the following acronym is listed: L (listen to people), O (observe them to see how you can help), V (voice God's truth), and E (embrace and empathize with them based upon shared experience). What other words can you think of?

Connect Out: Love is essential when reaching out to non-believers. Without love, we are nothing but a clanging symbol in their ears (see 1 Corinthians 13). Without love, our witness will be lacking. Why is it imperative to love people in order to win them to Christ? Yet, with our love of people will come persecution, which is the result of the Great Commission, as Pastor Skip stated. Share a story when your love for a person (family member, friend, co-worker, etc.) resulted in a form of persecution (ended friendship, rebuke, hatred). What did you learn from the experience? Did it strengthen your love for that person, or lessen it? What did it teach you about how God loves us in Christ?

Detailed Notes

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"Love Is a Verb"
Romans 12:9-21
  1. Introduction
    1. The word love is overused in our culture
      1. We use it to mean so many different things
      2. When someone tells you they love you, how do they love you?
        1. Do they want what's best for you?
        2. Do they say they love you because they want something for themselves?
      3. According to the dictionary, love is a profoundly tender, passionate affection for another person; the dictionary defines it as a noun, a feeling
    2. We should start viewing love as a verb rather than a noun
      1. Love should be an action we are willing to take to demonstrate something
      2. The first time the word love is used in the Bible is in Genesis
        1. The Hebrew word, ahava, refers to an act of doing, directly connected with action and obedience
        2. The root of the word ahava is ahav, and it means to give
        3. The idea is that love wants more to give than to get
      3. Love is a verb—love is willing to act on something
    3. This section of Romans 12 can be summed up in one word: love
      1. Paul summarized the first eleven chapters of the book in Romans 12:1 as "the mercies of God"
      2. The first two verses of the chapter focus on the will of God generally; beginning in verse 3, the focus is the will of God specifically
      3. In the last 13 verses of the chapter, Paul listed thirty commands or exhortations concerning love—the heart of the Christian life
  2. Love in the Family (vv. 9-13)
    1. In verse 9, Paul began with a statement about the quality of love
      1. Paul used the Greek word agape, which is used to describe God's love for us
      2. Before this verse, the only time Paul had used agape was in reference to God's love
    2. Agape love is the gold standard for Christian love in the New Testament
      1. John 13:35
      2. In English, we only have one word for love; in Greek, there are four principal words:
        1. Eros: physical love (we get the term erotic from this root); refers to grasping or self-satisfaction
        2. Phileo: brotherly love; affection for a friend or fondness for another person
        3. Storge:family love; the love a parent has for a child or a child for a parent
        4. Agape love
    3. In verse 9, Paul said that our love should be "without hypocrisy"
      1. The Greek word Paul used for "without hypocrisy" is anypokritos
      2. Hypokritos (where we get the English word hypocrite) simply refers to ancient Greek actors who used masks to portray certain emotions
      3. Paul was saying that our love should be genuine—without a mask
    4. Church should never become a stage filled with fake love
      1. Our love must be absolutely genuine and not feigned
      2. "Hypocrisy is to do the devil's work in God's uniform" —Matthew Henry
      3. Judas betrayed Jesus with a hypocritical token of affection (see Luke 22:48)
    5. Paul followed this with another command
      1. After talking about love, Paul commanded us to "abhor what is evil" (v. 9)
      2. Part of authentic love is authentic hatred
        1. This is God's character
        2. God hates evil but loves what is good
    6. God hates hypocrisy and false religion
      1. Isaiah 1:13
      2. One of the greatest weaknesses in the church is tolerance for evil
        1. Paul rebuked the church of Corinth because they were tolerant of immorality
        2. Paul rebuked the church at Galatia because they tolerated legalism
        3. Jesus rebuked the church at Thyatira (see Revelation 2:20)
      3. You shouldn't tolerate evil in your own life
        1. Evil stains the fellowship and the love that we have in the body of Christ
        2. Instead, Paul says that we are to be "affectionate to one another with brotherly love, in honor giving preference to one another" (v. 10)
    7. In verse 11, Paul showed the motive for this family love: "serving the Lord"
      1. We serve the Lord because we want to please and honor Him
      2. Our love for Him and service to Him spills out in our love and service for others
    8. As Christians, we experience different seasons in our spiritual walk
      1. There are seasons of excitement in spending time with the Lord, but we can lose our excitement
      2. The burning of our hearts should mark our enthusiastic service to the Lord (see Luke 24:32)
        1. Our passion should match our knowledge
        2. It's possible to have zeal for God not according to knowledge, but it's also bad to have knowledge without zeal
        3. Our enthusiasm for God should fuel our love for God's children
    9. This first expression of love—love for God's family—is the most important
      1. Our love for others begins with our love for one another
      2. If Christians don't get along with one another, how will they face their enemies and make a positive impact on them?
  3. Love amidst Hostility (vv. 14-21)
    1. Beginning in verse 14, Paul made an obvious pivot away from love in the church to love amidst hostility—loving the world around us
      1. Paul was writing to believers in Rome
      2. Rome was a very hostile environment for believers
    2. How do you show love when you're under pressure from an unbelieving world?
      1. Paul listed four negative commands—how not to show love
        1. "Do not curse" (v. 14)
        2. "Repay no one evil for evil" (v. 17)
        3. "Do not avenge yourselves" (v. 19)
        4. "Do not be overcome by evil" (v. 21)
      2. Our love should be independent of the treatment we receive from others
      3. They may curse, but we will bless; they may hate, but we will love; they may avenge, but we will not
        1. That sounds good on paper, but it's impossible apart from being in Jesus Christ
        2. But when you're plugged into Jesus and abiding in Him, you have an endless capacity to show love; you'll never run dry
        3. God pours His love into us and never stops, so that the love we pour out to others can never stop (see Romans 5:8)
      4. Loving people who love is easy; loving hostile people is not so easy, but it's mandated that Christians do so
    3. Paul gave us two useful tools to love amidst hostility
      1. The first is to sympathize (see v. 15)
        1. Love tries to enter the emotions of others
        2. Jesus wept not because Lazarus was dead, but because Mary and Martha were weeping
      2. The second is to harmonize (see v. 17); Paul gave two qualifications to being peacemakers
        1. You initiate it, but both parties have to want it
        2. You're responsible only for the motive in your own heart; you can control your response, not theirs
        3. Never let the inability to live at peace be on your side of the fence
  4. Love among Our Enemies (vv. 17-20)
    1. Paul gave explicit counsel considering living with and loving our enemies
      1. "Do not avenge yourselves, but rather give place to wrath" (v. 19)
      2. We are to give place to God's wrath; God is always better at vengeance than we are, because He knows the motives
        1. He knows all the details; He would never, in dealing with someone, hurt that person too much
        2. That's why the Old Testament law called for an eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth—human nature overreacts
    2. Paul said our response should be to care for our enemies (see v. 20)
      1. We all have enemies
        1. David had enemies (see Psalm 23:5)
        2. Matthew 10:36
      2. Why do we have enemies?
        1. Because we're human, and because we're Christians
        2. If you love Christ with all your heart, follow Him passionately, and serve Him enthusiastically, you'll be vocal about your love for Him
    3. Paul gave Timothy a promise: "All who desire to live godly in Christ Jesus will suffer persecution" (2 Timothy 3:12)
      1. Do you think hell will give you a standing ovation if you're an obedient, evangelizing child of God?
      2. When you start being narrow-minded and vocal about your faith, you won't find a sympathetic ear because "men [love] darkness rather than light" (John 3:19)
      3. Great persecution is simply the result of the Great Commission
    4. What are we to do when we garner enemies?
      1. Vengeance is entertaining and satisfying; we love it because it feeds our base nature
      2. The idea of loving our enemies is unnatural, but Jesus commanded us to do it and also practiced it Himself (see Luke 23:34)
    5. People will notice when you love your enemies
      1. The illustration Paul used referred to an old Egyptian custom of demonstrating public contrition and shame
      2. When you love your enemy and don't retaliate against them, you shame them for their hatred
      3. This is what David did with Saul; after Saul tried to kill David, David refused to touch him (see 1 Samuel 24:6)
  5. Conclusion
    1. Some people, because they've been hurt, guard their hearts because they don't want to be hurt any further
    2. The worst prison in the world is to isolate yourself because people have trampled on your love
    3. When you show love to someone who has shown you hatred, people will sit up and take notice
Figures referenced: Matthew Henry, Joyce Landorf, C.S. Lewis

Cross references: 1 Samuel 24:6; Psalm 23:5; Isaiah 1:13; Matthew 10:36; Luke 22:48; 23:34; 24:32; John 3:19; 13:35; Romans 5:8; 12:1; 2 Timothy 3:12; Revelation 2:20

Greek words: agape, anypokritos, eros, hypokritos, phileo, storge

Hebrew words: ahav, ahava

Transcript

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Love Is a Verb - Romans 12:9-21 - Skip Heitzig

[MUSIC PLAYING]

We made it to 2020.

[APPLAUSE]

Happy new year. Now that it's 2020, we can see clearly, right? Well, you look all great. I hope you had a great holiday as we celebrated the advent of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ if you were here or you were traveling, but we're glad you're back with us.

Would you turn in your Bibles, please, to the book of Romans, Chapter 12? Romans Chapter 12. So there were two teenage boys that we were talking about dating. And one said to his friend, listen. I have a cousin. She's pretty girl. She's smart. I've set you up on a date with her Saturday night.

And his friends said, oh, no, no, no. I don't do blind dates. No, thank you. The guy said, no, really. She's a pretty girl. She's smart. You'll really like her. I've set it up. But if something happens where you just don't want to do this once you see here, do what I do.

He goes, well, what do you do? Well, what I do is I ask the girl out, go to the door, when she opens the door, if I take a look at her and go, nah, nah, I don't want to do this, what I do is I fake like I have an asthma attack. Put your hand over your throat and go [GASPING]. Just do that you and you can get out of it.

So the guy said, OK, I'll go out with your cousin. So he goes over to her house, knocks on the door. She opens the door. He takes one look at her and she's beautiful. And for him, this teenage boy, it's love at first sight. And so he's so pleased. But then that girl looks at him and grabs her throat. And goes [GASPING].

Hey, let me ask you a question. Would you agree that the word love is an overused word in our culture? In fact, Time Magazine said it's time to change the meaning of the word love.

You know how we use love. We throw that word around. It means so many different things. I love my wife. I love my children. I love your car. I love that color. I love pizza.

Well, when I say I love my wife, it means I care about her. I want to spend time with her. I want what's best for her. When I say I love pizza, I don't care all that much about a personal relationship with pizza. I don't want what's best for pizza.

When I say I love pizza, all I mean is I like it when I want to eat it. And when I'm done eating it, you can throw it away, give it to the dog, put it in the refrigerator till it gets moldy. I don't care.

When a person says to you they love you, how do they love you? Do they want what's best for you, or do they say they love you because really, they want something for themselves? So the next time somebody says I love you, you might just want to ask, at least in your own mind, is that pizza love? Or is that the real thing?

According to the dictionary, love is a profoundly tender, passionate affection for another person. A feeling of warm, personal attachment. In other words, the dictionary defines it as a noun that is a feeling. That's one of its definitions.

I suggest we start viewing love not so much as a noun but as a verb. Actions we are willing to take to demonstrate something. In fact, the very first time in the Bible the word love is used, it appears in the book of Genesis. So it's a Hebrew word. And the Hebrew word is [SPEAKING HEBREW]. And the word means an act of doing.

An act of doing. It is connected directly with action and obedience. The root of that word [SPEAKING HEBREW] is [SPEAKING HEBREW], and it means to give. So now we're starting to get the real definition, the biblical definition of love. The idea is it wants more to give than it does to get.

For years, I've enjoyed the movie Fiddler on the Roof. I think it came out in 1971. Anybody remember that film? One of the greatest films, in my opinion, ever. So I love it because it's a musical. I love it because it's quirky. There's some funny parts in it.

But I love the part when the patriarch named Tevye says to his wife Golda, they've been married a quarter of a century. And he turns to her and says, (SINGING) do you love me? And what he's waiting to hear is, oh, I have this warm, fuzzy feeling about you.

But rather she says to him, for 25 years. I've wash your clothes, I've cooked your meals. I've cleaned the house. I've given you children. I've milked your cow. If that's not love, what is? Bingo. Love is a verb. Love is willing to act on something.

Now, we come in the book of Romans Chapter 12, beginning in verse 9 to the end of the chapter, with a section that really is summed up with the word love. Paul is very practical, and especially in chapter 12. He gives us 11 chapters that he sums up as the mercies of God in chapter 12 verse 1. He's saying, all that you know of what God's plan is for you. Therefore, now, here's the will of God for you.

So chapter 12 verse 1 and 2 is the will of God generally. And then chapter 12 beginning in verse 3 is the will of God specifically. And we come now to chapter 12 verse 9 to verse 21. Section of 13 verses.

But get this. This is how practical Paul is. In 13 verses, he gives us no less than 30-- 3, 0-- commands. 30 commands, 30 exhortations, all dealing with love, the very heart, the very motive of the Christian life.

So what I want to do, because we're not going to be able to cover every nuance of these 30 commands and 13 verses, I want to sum it up by dividing love up into three areas. Love displayed in three areas.

First of all, love in the family, and what I mean by that is the Christian family. The body of Christ, the family of God. Second, love amidst hostility when we're out in the world and people don't sympathize with us. And then number 3, love among our enemies. When somebody is really poised against you.

Well, let's begin with the first. Love in the family. That begins in verse 9. Paul writes, "let love be without hypocrisy. Abhor what is evil. Cling to what is good. Be kindly affectionate to one another with brotherly love, in honor giving preference to one another." "Not lagging in diligence, fervent in spirit, serving the Lord, rejoicing in hope, patient in tribulation, continuing steadfastly in prayer, distributing to the needs of the Saints, given to hospitality."

First thing I want you to notice is that in verse 9, he begins with a statement about the quality of love. When he says let love be without hypocrisy-- I'm going to give you a quiz right now because I know you're Bible nerds. You're Bible students. When he says love, what word do you think he is using from the Greek language?

Agape. See, a lot of you know that already. He uses the term agape. Why is that important? Because up to this point, Paul has never used that term agape-- love-- for love describing our love to one another. So far in the book of Romans, the only time Paul has pulled out the word agape is when he wants to talk about how God loves us.

Now he takes the term, he is used to describe God's love for us and says that is the love you are to have for one another. Why? Because agape love is the gold standard for Christian love in the Greek New Testament.

It is the one thing Jesus said, the world will be able to tell that you belong to me. John, Chapter 13. By this shall all men know that you are my disciples, by the agape love that you have one for another. That's our calling card-- love.

Now let me just sort of brush up on some of these words. In Greek-- you know how I said we have one word for love? I love my car, I love your car, love your color, love your pizza, love whatever. My wife. We have the same word for many different things.

In the Greek language, not so. They have several different Greek words for love. There are four principal words. The first Greek word is the word eros. Eros is the term where we get erotic. It's physical love. It's never found once in the Greek New Testament.

It's a word that means to grab or to grasp because the idea is self-satisfaction. That's the first word. The second word that is used in Greek-- it is found in the New Testament-- is the word phileo. And phileo shows up in words like Philadelphia or philanthropy. This is brotherly love. This is affection for a friend, a fondness for another person.

A third word is the Greek word storge. Storge is family love, like when a parent loves a child or a child loves a parent. It is family affection.

But then there's that fourth term, and it's used here-- agape. It's as if the writers of the Greek New Testament wanted to come up with a word all in its own class to describe the kind of love God gives to us and that we in turn should give to others. So that's the word he uses.

And notice what he says. Verse 9. Let love, let agape, be anupokritos. It's one word. Anupokritos. Without hypocrisy. Hupokritos, where we get the word hypocrite, was a word that simply meant an actor.

In the Greek stage, because they didn't have many backdrops, actors would come out on the stage with a few different masks on a stick, like a happy face, or a sad face, or a somber face. And they would put the mask on and speak through the mask so that the word hypocrite came to mean somebody who wears a mask, or an actor.

So when he says let love be without hypocrisy, he means genuine love. Love without a mask. Not the kind of love where you give somebody a nice, sweet compliment, but when they leave you stab them in the back with gossip. That's fake love. That's love wearing a mask.

Church, the family of God, should never become a stage that is filled with fake love. I know some parts of the country where when they say bless your heart, that's not a compliment. It's a bad thing.

I remember hearing some people go well, I love him with Christian love, which could be translated, I can't stand him. But if I say that, it just sounds better. I kind of have to love him, so I love him with Christian love.

Let your love be absolutely genuine and not feigned. Not fake. Matthew Henry said hypocrisy is to do the devil's work in God's uniform. That would be fake love.

Let me give an example of feigned love, fake love. Judas Iscariot. On the same night that he sold Jesus out for a few pieces of silver, he met Jesus in the Garden of Gethsemane. And how did he greet him? With a kiss.

And that's so upset Jesus that he even said, you betray the son of man with a kiss? This signal of affection, but in your heart, you don't love. I have much more respect for an honest atheist than a bogus believer. Let love be without hypocrisy.

But notice, it's followed by another command. Right after he talks about love, what's the first word in verse 9, the second sentence? What does it say? Abhor. You know what abhor means? Hate very strongly.

Isn't it odd that after talking about genuine love, he immediately talks about hate as a command? Love, hate. I want you to love that, but I want you to hate that. Why? Because part of authentic love is authentic hatred.

What do I mean? I mean, that's God's character. God hates evil. God hates unrighteousness. But God loves what is good. And God especially hates hypocrisy. He hates false religion.

You remember in the first chapter of Isaiah, God through the prophet speaks to his people. They're coming to worship in the temple. They're bringing sacrifices. They're keeping the feast days, the Sabbath days, the new moons, they're doing all the religious activity.

And God says, who has required that you trample my courts like this? Bring no more vein ablation. Incense is an abomination to me. Your Sabbaths and your feast days my soul hates. God is saying he hates false religion.

Now, I think one of the greatest problems, one of the greatest weaknesses in the church, is not intolerance. I think one of the greatest weaknesses is tolerance for evil. You know, it's just so much around us. It's in every movie we see. And pretty soon, well, you know, that's just the world. You can't get rid of it. You and I should hate it. We should abhor that which is evil.

Paul rebuked the Church of Corinth because they were tolerant of immorality. Paul rebuked the Church at Galicia because they tolerated legalism. Jesus rebuked the Church at Thyatira, saying, I have this against you. You tolerate that woman Jezebel. She misleads my servants into sexual immorality and eating food sacrificed to idols.

Apparently one of the members of that church was very loose morally, and that started having repercussions as an example with some of the other church members. Jesus said, I have that against you. You tolerate that stuff. You shouldn't tolerate evil in your own life.

Why? Because it is evil that stains the fellowship, the love that we have in the body of Christ. It brings something foreign into it. It ruins it. In the very next verse, speaking of this family love, he says, be kindly affectionate to one another with brotherly love in honor, giving preference to one another.

I want to brag on you for just a second. I get lots of letters, texts, emails from different people, visitors of this church. You know, we have a thing where we welcome people. What you don't always hear is what I hear when people say, man, I just started coming here, or I visited your church last week, and the love that I experienced from people in your fellowship toward one another was overwhelming to me. It made such an impact on me.

One of the phone calls I got a while back was from a man who called to say thank you and to share this blessing. He said, he and his wife were in the 8,000 block of Central Avenue here in Albuquerque, which is not the best part of town. And he parked his car on the curb, went inside of a store. He left his wife in the car locked, parked.

Went inside to do some business in a store. And he said while I was in the store-- this is how he put it-- for Calvary Fellows approached the car, knocked on the window. My wife rolled down the window slightly. Looked up at these four guys. They said, excuse me, ma'am, but one of your tires is hissing. I think you have a flat. If you'd like, we'd be happy to change it for you.

Got the keys, opened the trunk, jacked the car up. Changed the tire on the car. He was inside. He came out. It was already done. All he saw is there's four guys by my car.

[LAUGHTER]

Only to find out they're four Calvary fellas. And what he said was, he said to me on the phone, he had just gotten out of the hospital. He would not have been able to fix that tire if he would have been there out there with them. He said, God sent them.

And so here's why I love it. Just when I get worried, and sometimes I do-- boy, this church is getting so big and so impersonal. And how could we ever so love one to another? I get letters like that, and thinking, you're doing it! [APPLAUSE] Awesome. Thank you for being such a great family.

Now, look at verse 11, because I see verse 11 as the motive for this family love. When Paul writes, not lagging in diligence but fervent in spirit, serving the Lord. That's the key.

Because we are serving the Lord and that's our motive-- we want to please Him and honor Him and serve Him-- it's that love for Him and service to Him that spills out in loving others. If we love the Father, we love the Father's children.

The New Living Translation renders verse 11, never be lazy in your work but serve the Lord enthusiastically. I love seeing enthusiastic believers. I love it when you sing enthusiastically. I love it when you serve enthusiastically.

But have you noticed maybe in your own life-- I have noticed it in my life-- there seems to be seasons of our spiritual walk? We come to Christ. We're so excited. We're so on fire. We can't wait to pray. We can't wait to read our bibles. We'll spend hours doing that. We want to talk to people about the Lord.

And then something happens somewhere along the line. We just sort of lose the wind in our sails. The spark is gone. The fire subsides. We're not as fired up about it.

That's why I love Luke chapter 24 when Jesus spoke to those two guys on the road after the Resurrection, the road to Emmaus. And after Jesus left, one guy turned to the other guy and said, did not our hearts burn within us as He spoke to us along the way and open to us the scriptures? It is that burning of heart that should mark our enthusiastic service to the Lord.

Now I know we live in a day and age where we have lots of knowledge. But our passion should match our knowledge. I know that you can have a zeal for God not according to knowledge, but I think it's also bad to have knowledge without zeal.

I know some people are a little bit afraid. I don't want to be a fanatic. I used to be that fanatic when I was a young Christian. But now that I am old and stale and sophisticated.

[LAUGHTER]

I've always found it's easier to cool down a fanatic than it is to warm up a corpse. You can always hold the thoroughbred back. But you get a horse that's just lazy and it's hard to get that thing going.

It's enthusiasm for God that should fuel our love for God's children. So this is family love. This is level number 1. This is the tightest circle that Paul draws.

Here's what I want you to see here. This first expression of love among God's people, among God's family, we got to get this. Because the next two levels are much harder. Loving a hostile world and then loving somebody who would be considered an enemy-- how are we ever going to do that if we can't love each other?

If you can't love the Christian family, if Christians can't get along with each other, how in the world are they going to face their enemies and make a positive impact on them? So that's where it begins. Family love. Love in the family.

Second level is love amidst hostility, verse 14. "Bless those who persecute you. Bless do not curse." Rejoice with those who rejoice, weep with those who weep. Be of the same mind toward one another. Do not set your mind on high things but associate with the humble.

Do not be wise in your own opinion. Repay no one evil for evil. Have regard for good things in the sight of all men. If it is possible as much as depends on you, live peaceably with all men. Beloved, do not avenge yourselves, but rather give place to wrath. For it is written, 'vengeance is mine. I will repay,' says the Lord.

Therefore, if your enemy is hungry, feed him. If he is thirsty, give him a drink. For in so doing, you will heap coals of fire on his head. Do not be overcome by evil, but overcome evil with good."

Beginning in verse 14, Paul makes a very obvious pivot away from loving in the church family to love amidst hostility. Loving the world that is around us. Now he's writing to a group of believers who live in Rome.

Rome was becoming a very hostile environment for believers. It was going to be hard-- it already was, but it was going to get much harder for them to live out their Christian belief system in the world of Rome because it was becoming so adverse to them.

So how do you show love when you're under pressure from an unbelieving world? Well, to answer that, let's work our way from general to specific. First of all, would you notice in what we just read there are 4 negative commands.

Don't do it this way. Four negative commands. And also for comparisons between good and evil. Like, don't do it this way but do it that way. So look at that. Verse 14. Bless those who persecute you. Bless and do not curse.

Verse 17. Repay no one evil for evil. Have regard for good things in the sight of all men. Verse 19. Beloved, do not avenge yourselves, but rather give place to wrath. Verse 21. Do not be overcome by evil, but overcome evil with good.

In other words, our love should be independent of the treatment we received from others. So they may curse. We will bless. They may hate. We will love. They may avenge. We will not.

Now that sounds good on paper. But let me say this. That is impossible. Apart from being plugged into Jesus Christ. If you try to do this on your own-- OK, I'm going to work my way up to it. I'm just-- won't work. You'll fail.

But here's the good news. When you're plugged into Jesus, you're abiding in him, you're connected to him, you have an endless capacity to show love. You'll never get to a place where you go, I'm out of love. It just ran dry.

It'll never happen. Because Romans chapter 5 verse 8, which we already covered, it says, for the love of God has been poured out in our hearts by the Holy Spirit. So God pours his love into us, and that never stops, so that the love we pour out to others can never stop. We have an endless capacity to show love because we endlessly receive it from his capacity.

Loving people who are lovely-- that's easy. Loving people who love you-- that's easy. Loving hostile people, people who are not sympathetic with you-- not so easy. But it's mandated.

You know, I do think that we live in a very divided world. In fact, heck, we live in a divided country. I think right now more than ever before politically, rhetorically, just the language that is used daily basis on news clips and by different parties with different candidates and different-- it's such a toxic environment.

I had one gal call me the other day and say, I'm just so confused by this. I feel like I'm in an emotional roller coaster. You know, we feel like those two kids who are, two young boys who were on a Little League team. They were both in the dugout.

They're sitting there in the dugout. One guy looks up and sees this pretty little girl sitting up in the grandstands. And he says to his friend, you know, when I stop hating girls, she's the one I'd like to stop hating first.

[LAUGHTER]

I've got a question for you. Who is it you need to stop hating first? A gender? You're always deprecating. Ah, that's just a woman. They drive like that. Or that guy. You know how guys people. Or a different skin color, or ethnicity, or background, that you find in your language you're always depreciating. Who will you stop hating first in the hostile world that we're in?

Now I said we're going from general to specific. Now let's get specific. To be able to love amidst hostility, Paul gives us two useful tools. The first tool is to sympathize. The second tool is to harmonize.

I want to show it to you. Verse 15. Rejoice with those who rejoice and weep with those who weep. That's to sympathize. That is, love tries to enter in to the emotions of others. If they're up, if they're down, if they're laughing, if they're crying, if they're disappointed, if they're elated. Love will try to do that.

Do you know what the shortest verse in the New Testament is? If you do, shout it out. What's the shortest verse?

Jesus wept.

Jesus wept. See, you're so smart. Shortest verse in the New Testament. Jesus wept. When I first read that, my first thought wasn't, you know, that must be the shortest verse in the New Testament.

My first verse when I read that Jesus wept is why? Why did Jesus weep? He wasn't crying because Lazarus was dead. That's the context of it. He shows up to Lazarus' funeral. It says, Jesus wept.

He's not crying because Lazarus is dead. He knows that in five minutes he's going to call the boy back from the dead. Why did Jesus weep? Because Mary and Martha were weeping. He was entering into their emotional state at that time, and probably even weeping for their unbelief that he saw in that crowd. But it says, Jesus wept.

Now, see if you agree with this. I've found that it's easier to weep with those who weep than it is to rejoice with those who rejoice. Give you an example. Somebody is suffering. Somebody is crying. Somebody is in anguish.

It's not a hard thing to walk up to them, put your arm around them, and I'm so sorry. Let me pray for you. It's going to get better, and encourage them. It's not that hard because you're not suffering, they are. So you come up and you really try hard to empathize, to sympathize. That's not hard.

But it is much harder to rejoice with those who rejoice. You go, it is? Yeah. Here's an example. You're at work. You've been waiting for a raise for five years. Your co-worker who, in your view, doesn't work as hard as you do, comes up to you and says, rejoice with me! I just got a promotion and a raise! And you're going, (THROUGH CLENCHED TEETH) praise God.

[LAUGHTER]

You did? 'Cause I didn't. That's harder. Or how's this one? It's the new year and your friend sees you at church and goes, I got a brand new car for Christmas. You're driving that beat up Ford Fiesta that never starts.

[LAUGHTER]

And it's hard for you to enter into joy. In my day, it was the Ford Pinto and that was, like, the worst car ever made.

[LAUGHTER]

So that's the first step-- sympathize. Second step is to harmonize. Look at verse 17. Repay no one evil for evil. Have regard for good things in the sight of all men. If it is possible-- I'm glad he wrote that-- as much as depends on you, live peaceably with all men.

All men. Believers and nonbelievers. Christians and the world. If it's possible, as much as depends on you, live peaceably with all men.

Two qualifications to being a peacemaker. Number 1, you initiate it. As much as depends on you. Don't sit there with your arms folded and go, well, I'll make peace only if they initiate it. They have to call me. They're the ones who hurt me. They got to call me.

No, you reach out to them. But there's a second qualification to making peace. Both parties have to want it. Sometimes they don't. So he says, if it's possible. Because sometimes, frankly, it's just not possible.

You initiate. You want to make peace. Let's talk this over. Let's pray together. They go, talk to the hand. Go away. Do not even want to engage with you. You're out of my life.

You're not responsible for that. You're only responsible for your motive, for your own heart. You can control your response, not theirs. But never let the inability to live at peace be on your side of the fence.

Years ago, there was a good book called Irregular People by Joyce Landorf. Tremendous book. Irregular people. Just the title makes you snicker, right? She in her book contends that every one of us has at least one person that we would classify as an irregular person.

How does she describe it? It's the person who has a knack of wounding you every time they see you. When you're with them, they seem to always say the wrong thing. They ruin your day. Your emotions are in constant coaster whenever you're around them. They are so insensitive. That's an irregular person.

I know. I don't even have to ask you to raise your hand. You're already thinking of one or two or three. But she also writes in her book, each one of us is also an irregular person to somebody else. So not only do you have them, you are one.

So as much as you can, take the initiative, sympathize, and then harmonize. So that's love in the family. Love amidst hostility. Now in the last section of our message, I want to zero down on something very specific, and that is love among our enemies.

I want to look at a few verses where he gives explicit counsel of living with and loving our enemies. Look at verse 19. "Beloved--" isn't that a sweet way to begin a sentence? Loved ones. Beloved. Ones that I deeply love. "Do not avenge yourselves, but rather give place to wrath."

Give place to whose wrath? God's wrath. "For it is written, 'vengeance is mine. I will repay,' says the Lord." You know, I've discovered that God is always better at vengeance than I am.

First of all, he knows the motives. My motive, their motives. He knows all of the details. My details, their details. He would never in dealing with that person hurt them too much. I probably would.

That's why the Bible says eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth. That's an Old Testament law because our first gut reaction is you took out one of my teeth, you're going to get dentures. All of them. You took out one of my eyes, you're going to be blind in both of yours. That's human nature.

So God says, don't do that. Let me handle that. Therefore, verse 20. "If your enemy is hungry--" your enemy now-- "if your enemy is hungry, feed him. If he is thirsty, give him a drink."

Now if you actually do that, you will blow his mind and probably annoy him. In fact, I'll get to it, but that's sort of the thought in the next sentence. "For in so doing, you will heap coals of fire on his head. Do not be overcome by evil, but overcome evil with good."

Now some of you may be sitting up right now thinking, well, I don't have any enemies. Number 1, if you say that, you don't have a pulse.

[LAUGHTER]

Or you're lying through your teeth. Because we all have enemies. Webster's Dictionary defines an enemy as one who is antagonistic to another. Got any of those? Yeah, probably a bunch of them.

David in Psalm 23 said in his prayer, you prepare a table before me in the midst of my enemies. The midst of my enemies. Did David have enemies? He was a servant of God. Did David have enemies? Oh, he had tons of them.

Goliath was an enemy. The Philistines army was a group of enemies. The Amalekites were enemies. The Moabites were enemies. The Syrians were enemies. Those are obvious ones.

David had not so obvious enemies. His father-in-law Saul became an enemy. His own son Absalom became an enemy. His trusted counselor Ahitophel became an enemy.

And Jesus said, a man's enemies will be those of his own household. Now why do we have enemies? Well, because we are human, number 1. But number 2, because we are Christians. And if you love Christ with all of your heart, if you follow Him passionately, if you serve Him enthusiastically, which means you will be vocal about your love for Him in this world, it's not going to go well.

Paul gave Timothy a promise. All those who live godly in Christ Jesus will suffer persecution. Do you think hell is going to give you a standing ovation if you're an obedient, evangelizing child of God? The minute you say, I believe there's only one way to heaven. I believe you need to come to Jesus Christ. That's the only way your sins can be forgiven.

When you start being that narrow-minded and that vocal about who you are and what you believe, you're not going to have a sympathetic ear. And Jesus tells us why. For men love darkness rather than light.

It's like when you're in a dark room, you become accustomed to the dark room, and somebody turns on a bright overhead light. You want to cover your eyes and say, turn that thing off. So when you go into a situation and you bring Jesus into that situation, people will cover their eyes to their hearts and say, turn that thing off. Great persecution is simply the result of the great commission. Go into all the world and preach the gospel.

So what are we to do? What are we to do when we garner enemies? When we garner the scorn of the world? Are we to strike back? That'd be more fun. Are we to hit them harder. Are we to plot ways to make them crazy?

There's an old Chinese proverb that says if your enemy wrongs you, buy each of his children a drum.

[LAUGHTER]

Listen, I'll be the first to admit it. Vengeance is fun. It is entertaining. It is wholly satisfying. We love it because it feeds our flesh, our base nature. There was a housekeeper that worked for a family for decades, and she was fired by the homeowner without notice. Just go. You're done. Here's your last check. Go away.

The housekeeper reached into her purse, took out a $5 bill, went over to the family dog and threw it on the floor to the dog. The owner said, why'd you do that? She said, I never forget a friend. It's for helping me clean your dishes all this time.

[LAUGHTER]

You know why we laugh? Because we like it.

[LAUGHTER]

Yeah. Vengeance is mine. I'll admit to you, when I'm driving, I get turned into another person. I am not good behind a wheel. At least I have a slower vehicle because, you know, it drives me nuts! It's like, where did all the stupid people come from? They all moved to Albuquerque and they're driving.

And I'm driving down the road and they'll get up, cut me off, and then slow down. Oh, I want to follow them all over town! I've only done it a couple of times. No, I'm just kidding.

[LAUGHTER]

Now why should we love that? Why should we forgive that? Why should we feed and clothe and bless that? I'm glad you asked. I'll give you three reasons why we should. Number 1, because Jesus commanded it.

Jesus said in the Sermon on the Mount, you have heard that it was said you shall love your neighbor and hate your enemy. But I say to you love your enemies. Bless those who curse you. Do good to those who hate you. Pray for those who spitefully use you.

Boy, that's so foreign to our thinking. It is so radical because it's so unusual. Nobody does that. But Jesus said to do it. He commanded it.

Second reason. Not only Jesus commanded it, Jesus practiced it. He lived it. They hurled insults at him. They beat him up. They put a crown of thorns on his head. They pinned him to a cross. And when he was hanging on that cross, did he go, Father, nuke them.

Did he turn to the crowd and say, I'm coming back in three days. I'm going to hunt you down.

[LAUGHTER]

He said, Father, forgive them. First word out of his mouth. Father, forgive them. They don't know what they're doing. Peter in describing Jesus in First Peter chapter 2 wrote, when they hurled insults at him, he did not retaliate. When he suffered, he made no threats, but he entrusted himself to him who judges justly.

So here's why we should do it. Jesus commanded it. Jesus practiced it. Here's the third reason. People will notice it. When you do that, people will sit up and notice it because nobody does that. He just blessed him. He just gave me a gift. He was nice to that guy.

Nobody does that. People will notice that. That's the gist of verse 20. Look at it once again. Therefore, if your enemy is hungry, feed him. If he's thirsty, give him to drink. For in so doing, you will heap coals of fire on his head.

What does that mean? It's an illustration. It's a reference to an old Egyptian custom in antiquity. When a person wanted to demonstrate public contrition, put a cloth on their head for insulation, and on the cloth put a little pan of burning coals to represent burning pain and shame of guilt. It's like a way of saying, I'm really sorry about that and I want you to see how sorry I am. That's what all that is about.

So what Paul is saying in using this illustration is when you love your enemy, when you don't retaliate, when you feed him, when you bless him, we shame him for his hatred. People are going, man, I was really rotten to that guy. He was so nice to me.

You want an illustration of that? David and Saul. Saul tried to kill David. Saul hunted David. One day, Saul went into a cave. David was there. Saul didn't know it. David's buddy said, kill him. This is the Lord. God delivered him into your hands.

David said, no. He's the Lord's anointed. I won't touch him. He cut a little piece of cloth off of his robe. When Saul left, David was on the other side of the valley. He started waving that little cloth around saying I couldn't killed you, but I didn't because you're God's anointed. I love you.

It says when, Saul saw that and heard that, he wept. And he cried out to David, saying, you are more righteous than I am, for you repaid me with good and I repaid you with evil. That's heaping coals of fire on one's head.

Now, we're closing. And I just want to say something to some who will be able to relate to this. I feel some people, because they've been hurt, they guard their hearts so tightly, so much. They don't want to be hurt anymore by others. They will not give their love away to anyone, because every time they do, they get burned. They get hurt. So they build walls up and they isolate.

They're imprisoned. They don't want to be vulnerable anymore I'll be honest with you. I have had my own heart broken hundreds of times in public ministry. And every time, God says, love them again. Be vulnerable again. Again, again, again. That's what we just read.

C.S. Lewis in his book The Four Loves writes, to love at all is to be vulnerable. Love anything and your heart will certainly be wrung and possibly be broken. If you want to make sure of keeping it intact, you must give your heart to no one, not even to an animal.

Wrap it up carefully round with hobbies and little luxuries. Avoid all entanglements. Lock it up safe in the casket or coffin of your own selfishness. But in that casket, safe, dark, motionless, airless, it will change.

It will not be broken. It will become unbreakable. Impenetrable. Irredeemable! The only place outside of heaven where you can be perfectly safe from all the dangers of love is hell.

It's the worst prison in the world to be so isolated because people have trampled on your love. The love of God is still being poured out into your heart. Receive it afresh and give it a fresh so that the world goes, man, that guy showed love to me when I showed hatred to him. They'll notice it. Jesus commanded it. Jesus did it. People will sit up and take notice.

Father, thank you for your love. It is like no other. And that's the love we can tap into. As an act of will, as an act of obedience, whether we feel like it or not, eventually, because we obey you, we're going to feel it. It's going to feel really good. Even when our hearts break because they've been trampled on.

Because we know at the end of the day, we have lived to please you.

[MUSIC PLAYING]

May we be known by our love to one or another. Our love amidst a hostile world and our love even among enemies. In Jesus' name, amen. Let's all stand.

Hey, we're going to sing the song. But as we close, I needed to say something to you at the beginning of this year as your pastor. I love you. I love you deeply.

[APPLAUSE]

During my stay in the hospital and this recovery from back surgery, I felt so loved and encouraged and carried, buoyed, really, by your prayers. And I just want you to hear it from me. I love you. And it's not pizza love.

[LAUGHTER]

It's the real deal. Let's sing together.

How will you put the truths that you learned into action in your life? Let us know. Email us at mystory@calvarynm.church. And just a reminder, you can support this ministry with a financial gift at calvarynm.church/give. Thank you for joining us for this teaching from Calvary Church.

Additional Messages in this Series

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5/5/2019
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The Heart and Soul of the Gospel
Romans 1:1-7
Skip Heitzig
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Today we embark on a thirty-two-week journey through the book of Romans. Considered to be Paul the apostle’s magnum opus, this book is largely responsible for igniting the fires of the Protestant Reformation and the Wesleyan Revival. As Paul introduced himself to the church at Rome, he got right to the heart and soul of the matter—the gospel—the good news that presents Jesus Christ as God’s great answer to the pressing need of the human race.
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5/19/2019
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Unashamed!
Romans 1:16-17
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Standing up for and speaking out about our faith in Jesus Christ can sometimes feel awkward and intimidating. Often our message is not received with glad faces or with open arms by the people we work with and live next to. As Paul was planning to visit Rome, he expressed eagerness rather than hesitation to herald this message. Why was that? The apostle gives us five reasons for his readiness and enthusiasm.
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5/26/2019
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Is God Mad?
Romans 1:18-32
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The Wrath of God Is Revealed God is full of love, right? Right! That’s the good news. And Paul gets back to that theme and develops it fully in the chapters ahead. But first, there’s some bad news. Like a powerful prosecuting attorney, Paul made the case as to why we need the good news of Christ. God’s grace is necessary because of our guilt. In this section, we learn about the wrath of God—an attribute that many people can’t wrap their heads (and hearts) around.
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7/7/2019
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Four Mistakes Religious People Make
Romans 2:1-11
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Jesus was not a religious leader. He was a righteous leader. And He was often confronting the religious leaders of His day. Likewise Paul found many enemies among the religious elite of his day, among both Jews and Gentiles. After announcing his theme of good news in Jesus, Paul promptly plunged into the bad news of God’s wrath—a subject that religious people sometimes love (but for all the wrong reasons). Paul tells us some of their most common mistakes.
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7/14/2019
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Hypocrisy Gets an Audit
Romans 2:17-29
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All businesses, corporations, and individuals have blind spots. Auditors can help by giving a clear and unbiased reading of practices and procedures, and then give appropriate recommendations for change. Here, Paul played the role of auditing the hypocrite—the one who has spiritual style but no substance. Let’s consider the assets, the deficits, and the net appraisal of the one who wears a spiritual disguise.
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7/28/2019
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The Advantage of Having the Bible
Romans 3:1-8
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Those who have been raised in a home with spiritual foundations and the teaching of Scripture have an edge over those who were never exposed to such benefits. The advantage of having access to the Bible is enormous, but it is not a fail-safe. Paul addressed the Jews who were caretakers of God’s own words, and much can be applied to anyone who has the advantage of revealed truth but fails to take it to heart.
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8/4/2019
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How Prisoners Go Free
Romans 3:9-26
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Freedom is a huge word for the Christian believer. Picture yourself nervously standing in a courtroom before a judge who has just read the pile of evidence against you. Just before the gavel strikes the bench proclaiming your guilt, a piece of evidence strikes his gaze and he unexpectedly announces your innocence. You can now go free! Here Paul explains how any person anywhere can find hope and freedom because of the gospel.
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8/11/2019
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Old Age; Young Faith
Romans 4
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Our skin may wrinkle but our faith never has to. Abraham’s faith was vibrant and youthful even when he was nearing one hundred years of age. As Paul points to the patriarch Abraham as an example for justification by faith, we can learn what it means to believe God through all the ages of life. How vibrant is your Christian faith? Have you let cynicism and doubt choke out your confidence in God?
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8/18/2019
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Our Benefits Package
Romans 5:1-5
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Why is being a Christian so great? Every unbeliever you meet is asking that question as they observe your life. What are the benefits of living with a committed faith in Jesus? After explaining what it means to be right with God by believing in Christ, and after illustrating that principle with Abraham, Paul gives a short list of some of the benefits of a saved life.
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8/25/2019
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Unrivaled Love
Romans 5:6-11
Skip Heitzig
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Modern wisdom continually tells us, “Love is a verb,” rather than a sentimental feeling. Love is a commitment that involves action. For the first time in the letter to the Romans, Paul introduced the word love and a very singular kind of love—God’s love for us. Wanting to show how secure we are in this salvation, he described the greatest demonstration of love—its proof, its provision, and its product.
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9/1/2019
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A One-Man Show
Romans 5:12-21
Skip Heitzig
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Just one person can do a lot of damage, and conversely just one person can do a lot of good. Paul here showed the effect that Adam brought on by his rebellion and the effect that Jesus bought with His blood on the cross. One caused death. One conveys life. One brought guilt. One bought the gift of grace. The big question is, have you received the gift?
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9/8/2019
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Don’t Look Back
Romans 6:1-7
Nate Heitzig
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Returning to a life of sin after becoming a Christian is like winning the lottery but choosing to continue to live in poverty. Pastor Nate Heitzig poses this question: Can one be a Christian and continually pursue a sinful lifestyle? In examining Romans 6:1-7, we find the biblical answer: No. Because of what God has done for the Christian, the Christian's rightful response to God should be to pursue a transformed lifestyle.
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9/15/2019
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Winning the War with Sin
Romans 6:11-14
Skip Heitzig
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There is not a person I know who doesn’t struggle with sin. Evil thoughts, bad habits, immoral impulses, and recurring temptations all rear their ugly heads, leaving us exhausted and disappointed in ourselves and wondering if any deliverance is possible. This struggle is real. The war can be fierce. How can we believers (who still have our old natures) win in these battles? Consider this four-step strategy.
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9/22/2019
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The Struggle Is Real
Romans 7:14-25
Nate Heitzig
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Christians can struggle with consistency. Like everyone, we sin and fall short in many areas. It's easy to get discouraged and think to ourselves, "I'm weak," or "I must not be called to the Christian life." The struggle with sin is real for every Christian. In this message, Pastor Nate Heitzig examines the believer's situation and struggle with carnality as well as the solution for victory.
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9/29/2019
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Safe and Secure
Romans 8:1-11
Skip Heitzig
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As the old saying goes, “It’s always darkest before the dawn.” That’s certainly true of Paul’s authorship of this book. He closes chapter 7 on a low note, only to crescendo to a swelling high point in chapter 8. “Don’t despair! You’re in secure hands and you’re safe,” Paul tells us. He reminds us of four facts that should settle every heart.
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10/6/2019
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The New You
Romans 8:12-18
Skip Heitzig
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Most people love new stuff: a new car, a new set of clothes, a new puppy, a new haircut, a new adventure. But the best new thing you could have is a new you! Being a Christian isn’t a temporary reformation but a total transformation. When the Holy Spirit gets hold of a person’s life, He begins the process of a total makeover—changing you from the inside out. As a Christian believer these are among the changes you can expect to see.
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10/13/2019
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The Steady Hand of a Caring God
Romans 8:28-30
Skip Heitzig
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The world to many people seems to be a random place where anything can happen. But a believer can (and should) step firmly onto the soil of life. Why? Not just because God exists, but also because God cares! There is not a single atom nor molecule out of place in God’s universe; His hands and heart are steadily controlling your every breath. Let’s examine some of the richest truths about the quality of care from a loving God.
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10/20/2019
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A Midterm Exam: Five Questions to Test Your Understanding
Romans 8:31-34
Skip Heitzig
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In the middle of any given course or semester, a test consisting of questions is given. This does two things: it measures the student’s grasp of the course materials, and it helps identify any areas that need work. Right in the middle of his sixteen-chapter book, Paul gives his readers a series of questions to jog our spiritual memory and face some wonderful realities about the love of God. Let’s consider five questions in these verses.
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10/27/2019
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For the Love of God
Romans 8:35-39
Skip Heitzig
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Can anyone really comprehend unconditional love? Perhaps the love that parents have for their children is the closest to unconditional love from a human point of view. But life’s circumstances certainly can challenge the idea that God loves us unconditionally. We’ve all heard about God’s love, we’ve sung about it, and we’ve affirmed it with our “Amens!” But as Paul closes out this section of Romans, he moves us into a fixed and secure confession that no matter what life can throw at us, we need never doubt God’s love for us.
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11/10/2019
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God, the Jew, and You
Romans 9:1-26
Skip Heitzig
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We now come to the third major section of Paul’s letter to the Romans that reveals God’s plan for Jew and Gentile. The early church in Jerusalem was entirely Jewish, but by this point, in most other parts of the world, it had become predominantly non-Jewish. But if God made so many promises to the Jewish nation, does that mean those promises are all now annulled? How does Israel’s rejection of Jesus as Messiah fit into God’s sovereign strategy, and where do we fit in?
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11/17/2019
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Salvation: Reverse Engineered
Romans 10:1, 14-17
Skip Heitzig
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Right in the middle of Paul’s great trilogy about Israel (Romans 9, 10, and 11), he gave an expanded view of how salvation operates. These are the seven components that make up the journey for anyone (Jew or Gentile) who comes to know Christ. Evangelism always begins with God’s sovereign election, but it also involves human cooperation. It takes both someone who will transmit the gospel and someone who will receive it.
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11/24/2019
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God’s Plan for Israel—and the World
Romans 11:25-27
Skip Heitzig
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Can God be trusted? More to the point, can God’s promises be trusted? If He promised to the Jews a kingdom, won’t their rejection of Christ cancel out His promises to them? Wouldn’t that mean that God is finished with Israel as a nation? Does their blindness forfeit God’s blessing? Today we’ll get the big-picture view of Israel, the church, and the kingdom age, and I think you will have a few loose ends tied up about God’s future plan for the world.
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12/8/2019
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Now It’s Your Turn
Romans 12:1-2
Skip Heitzig
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The blessings of God and the work of Christ have been flowing like a dynamic stream for eleven chapters so far. He saves, He justifies, He promises, He gives peace, He works everything together for good in our lives, and He plans an epic eternity for us. So how should we respond to all of this? What is our part? That’s what the next five chapters of Romans are all about. The thrust of this next section is: Based on all that God has done for you, now it’s your turn!
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12/15/2019
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Made for Purpose
Romans 12:3-8
Nate Heitzig
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The beauty of God's creation is evident all around us, yet nature is not God's greatest work; mankind is God's greatest masterpiece. It's estimated that to write down one person's DNA blueprint would require 200,000 pages. And God knows every sentence on every page. For the Christian, there's a custom design—a purpose in life to partner with God through gifts from the Holy Spirit. Pastor Nate Heitzig explains how believers can find their purpose in Christ in this message from Romans 12:3-8.
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12/22/2019
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Exercise for Your Soul
Romans 12:6-8
Nate Heitzig
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Americans seem obsessed with fitness and exercise, yet the U.S. is one of the most obese nations in the world. It’s similar in the body of Christ—many Christians are idle, preferring to sit around rather than exercise our spiritual gifts. The key to both spiritual and physical health is balancing exercise and rest. In this teaching, Pastor Nate Heitzig discusses why God gives certain gifts to each member of the body of Christ as well as how those gifts are given so that the entire body might grow and be strong.
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1/12/2020
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The Christian and Government
Romans 13:1-7
Skip Heitzig
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There has always existed a tension between God’s people and human government, especially when we are not in favor of those who are in power. We may find it hard to “render therefore to Caesar the things that are Caesar’s” (Matthew 22:21) while being faithful to God. The Christians in Rome were no different when Paul wrote this letter. Let’s consider five principles that form a practical theology for Christian believers in relationship to secular human government.
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1/26/2020
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Wake Up Call
Romans 13:11-14
Nate Heitzig
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We are a fallen people living in a fallen world. Romans 3:10 says "none is righteous." There is evidence all around us that Jesus is setting the scene for His return, and Romans 13 is Paul’s call for the church to prepare for that event. Jesus Himself told us to "occupy till [He] comes" (Luke 19:13, KJV). In this message, Pastor Nate Heitzig explores the apostle's wake-up call to believers and helps us understand how we can effectively occupy until Jesus returns.
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2/2/2020
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Acceptance, Judgment, and the Essential Point of Nonessential Points
Romans 14:1-6
Nate Heitzig
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Today it seems that the church has become known for being judgmental and critical, not just toward unbelievers but even among fellow Christians. That's why we must focus on our commonality in Christ alone. In Romans 14, Paul addressed two groups of Christians—Gentile believers and legalistic Jews—who were causing division and friction among the early church. In this teaching, Nate Heitzig shares how to navigate the nonessential points of our faith while embracing unity in the essentials.
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2/16/2020
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The Cure for "I" Disease
Romans 15:1-6
Skip Heitzig
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Selfishness is part of our basic human nature. It is the default position for every human being. Left unchecked, everybody would focus on himself and live only to please himself. But redemption brings with it a different lifestyle—one that is focused on others, patient with faults, and motivated by a sense of unity in the church. Let’s consider a fourfold strategy to counteract selfishness and promote harmonious living.
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3/15/2020
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How to Treat Your Family
Romans 16:1-24
Skip Heitzig
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I am so honored and thankful to be part of this spiritual family. You are one of God’s greatest gifts in my life! In this last chapter of Romans, Paul’s tone and subject matter is familial—he approaches them not as Paul the theologian, but Paul their brother in Christ. It’s unfortunate that many believers don’t pay much attention to chapter 16 because in it we get a great example of how to treat our own spiritual family.
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There are 30 additional messages in this series.
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