Problems with the Law: Romans 7: 7 – 8 Tape7.
Overview
In Romans 3 &
4 Paul outlined justification, that man is justified because he possesses the
righteousness of Christ. At the moment of salvation God the Father imputes to
us the perfect righteousness of Jesus Christ. There is a logical development
but chronologically it all happens simultaneously but we are imputed the
perfect righteousness of Jesus Christ and God looking at that perfect righteousness
declares us to be righteous. That is the meaning of justification. We are
declared to be judicially righteous and because God’s righteousness has been
satisfied by Christ’s work on the cross. That is laid out at the end of Romans
3 and Romans 4 and is the illustration of Abraham from the Old Testament that justification
is by faith.
Romans 5 deals
with one consequence of that which is that now we have peace with God and reconciliation
and developing that out leads to the discussion of sanctification in Romans 6.
It is important to understand that there is a shift in subject matter here.
Justification is covered and there is a thematic doctrinal development, which
is very logical through Romans. It starts off with the condemnation of Gentiles
and Jews in Romans 1 & 2, then justification, then reconciliation, then sanctification
and then it deals with how God is righteous in His dealings with
In the first five
verses of Romans 6 a foundation is laid which is the fact that we are
identified with Jesus Christ in His death, burial and resurrection that is
positional truth. Retroactive positional truth means that at the moment we are
believers we are instantly identified with His death in the past, that’s why it
is retroactive. We are instantly identified with His death, burial and
resurrection and that is the baptism of the Holy Spirit. With that
identification with Christ in His death, burial and resurrection we are entered
into union with Him and that union can never be severed. Because we have this
new position in Christ, just as Christ died and went to the grave and rose from
the grave to live to the Glory of God for ever and ever, so we too by analogy
enter into a newness of life and that is the purpose.
We are saved for a
purpose; the Glory of God, that is why we are saved. Salvation is a means to an
end, its newness of life, we are saved to this newness of Life so that we can
advance to spiritual maturity and it is only at spiritual maturity when we are
bearing much fruit. According to John 15 and the vine analogy, “by this is the
Father Glorified that you bear much fruit.” John 15:8.
Romans 7
Overview
Last time in
Romans 7: 1 – 6 we saw that Paul uses the analogy of the death of a spouse as breaking
the legal bondage, legal requirement of a marriage contract to illustrate what
happens at salvation. You are under law when you are alive but once a death
occurs as in a marriage you are married but when your spouse dies you are no
longer under obligation to the law and you are free to remarry. What happens
with the believer is, when the believer is born they are married to the Law but
it is not the Law that dies, it’s the believer that dies in Christ. So that
divorces the believer from the Law.
Now having said
that and a few things that Paul said in Romans Chapter 6, it would be easy to
infer that, ‘Paul, are you saying that the Law is really bad?’ Paul has to
correct this wrong inference in verse 7; “...What shall we say then? Is the Law
sin? May it never be! On the contrary, I would not have come to know sin except
through the Law; for I would not have known about coveting if the Law had not
said, ‘You shall not covet.’ ...”
Now a couple of
things we have to notice in terms of what’s going to happen starting in verse 7
through the end of the chapter; Paul shifts to a first person singular pronoun.
That raises an important hermeneutical question; ‘Is Paul talking about his own
personal autobiography here?’ ‘Or is Paul just using ‘I’ as a sense of a
reference to what is common to all people?’ The second thing that we have to
note is that the verb tenses in verses 7 through 12 either are imperfect aorist
or perfect tenses which are all past tenses. When you get down to verse 13 all
of a sudden the verb tenses begin to shift to present tenses.
So what this means
is starting in verse 13 and following to the end of the chapter, he is talking
about the experience present tense of a Christian but the struggle in Romans 7
is between the regenerate believer who has a new nature verses his sin nature.
There is no mention of the Holy Spirit here. Now there is the foreshadowing of
the Holy Spirit which was given in verse 6, but starting in verse 7 down
through the end of the chapter there is no mention of the Holy Spirit.
Now we studied Galatians
5: 16 where Paul says “...Walk by means of the Spirit and you will not bring to
completion the deeds of the flesh...”
The conflict in Galatians
5 is a conflict between the sin nature and the Holy Spirit. The Holy Spirit is
not mentioned in Romans 7; the conflict in Romans 7 is between the believer’s
sin nature and his new nature. But what we see is that because there is no
mention of the Holy Spirit there is nothing but failure and frustration and the
attempt is to try and live a moral life, to try to please God and the result is
always going to be the domination of the sin nature.
The only solution
comes in when Paul introduces the Spirit beginning in Chapter 8. That’s the
flow, he is going to start in 7 through 12 with what I think is pre conversion
examples, whether this is his personal autobiography or if he is talking
generally of anyone pre conversion and including himself as an example.
In 7:7, he raises
the question as through this whole section building his argument logically
through the use of rhetorical questions.
“...What shall we
say then? Is the Law sin? May it never be! On the contrary, I would not have
come to know sin except through the Law; for I would not have known about
coveting if the Law had not said, ‘You shall not covet.’ ...”
It is not that the
Law is sinful; it is that the law reveals sin. Without the law it is not clear.
Without the law you are still a sinner. It may not be as clear, it may not be
as precise, but its still there. He has already said that the Gentiles (back in
Romans Chapter 2) have an internal sense and they have a conscience and just
because they have a conscience they know that there is right and wrong. Now their
values might be screwed up but they know there are absolutes and because they
know there are absolutes they know that they fail and that they are sinners.
There is some
sense there that even Gentiles without the Mosaic Law know they are violating
the standard of God even though it is in a more vague sense. The Jew has the
Law and it is when it is brought into the open and into the spot light of the
Law that it is revealed in all of its hideousness of the violation of the
standard and righteousness of God.
i.
So just as Abraham is called/elected, then you have
redemption, you have adoption (Exodus 19), then you have the baptism into the
Now Peter picks up that same terminology of Exodus 19:
1 – 3, in 1 Peter 2:9 and quotes it and applies it to the church, that we are a
unique kingdom of priests, we are a royal priesthood and that is for every
single believer. That is why we have the word of God that is our code of
conduct in the New Testament Church age to replace that.
ii.
So if
you follow this across the top you have the call, the election, redemption,
adoption, baptism and then the giving of the ethical system or the code of
conduct/ the protocol plan of God for
iii.
So the
Law, the Mosaic Law is analogous to an overt ethical system for a redeemed
nation but it is replaced by the New Testament because you have a new entity
called into being, the church. The precedent for the church age sanctification isn’t
the Mosaic Law because they didn’t have the Holy Spirit, that’s what makes the
difference they could only go so far. What you have in the New Testament and
what comes in-between is the Hypostatic Union where Jesus Christ demonstrates
the Spiritual life of the church age by living and walking by means of the Holy
Spirit, filled by means of the Holy Spirit and that establishes the precedent
for the church age spiritual life.
iv.
The New
Testament clarifies that the purpose of the Law was never for salvation. Romans
The second problem that people have with the Law is not just that they
make the Law the basis for salvation but they make it the basis for
sanctification or the spiritual life. This is the problem of legalism and Paul
addresses this in Galatians chapter 3: 3. The problem with the Galatians were that
they had Judaizers, these were Jews who were coming along claiming to be
Christians and they said, ‘if you want to experience everything that God has
for you, you didn’t get it all from the apostle Paul, now he told you about
salvation and that’s good, but if you really want the full Christian life and
the full blessing from God then you need to be circumcised and come in under
the Abrahamic covenant and live the Mosaic Law that is how you become
sanctified.’
So Paul really has to straighten them out, he straightens them out
about justification in Galatians two and starting in Galatians three he shifts
to the spiritual life and he says “…are you so foolish having begun by means of
the Spirit, are you now trying to be matured by the flesh [sin nature]…” and
then he is going to use that when he comes into Galatians chapter 5 showing
that living by the flesh and living by the law become parallel concepts because
we have been freed from the Law and freed from the sin nature. So that
emphasises that the Law is not the basis for living the spiritual life and
sanctification, it is merely to reveal man’s sinfulness and the law has been fulfilled,
Romans says, “...Christ is the end of
the law...”
Now the problem is that we don’t understand the sin nature. The sin
nature is driven by lust patterns. Now this is the meaning of the word
covetousness when we get down to the second part of verse 7, Paul says “…I
would not have come to know sin except through the Law; for I would not have
known about coveting if the Law had not said, ‘You shall not covet.’
Now he doesn’t mean he wouldn’t have known he was a sinner, there is a
general sense of that but to understand it precisely he uses the word here
GINOSKO which is to learn something from studying. The word for ‘coveting’ is
the same word for lust over in Galatians
This is what drives the mental attitude sin of lust, whether its power
lust, approbation lust, material lust, sex lust what ever it is that drives and
motivates the sin nature. “… I would not have known about coveting [lust] if
the Law had not said, ‘You shall not covet [lust]...’ So it is the clarity of the
law that brings sin out in all of its fullness.
Now we have a lust pattern in the sin nature and that is the
motivation, remember the sin nature produces in two areas, it has an area of
strength that produces human good, this is morality. When you look at Galatians
5:16, (and we must always compare when we get into this section of Romans as
there is so many parallels between this and Galatians 5), you have the
imperative “…walk by means of the Spirit and you will not fulfil the lusts of
the flesh…”, what Paul is saying in
Galatians 5:16 is “…walk by means of the Spirit and it will be impossible for
you to bring to completion [TELEO] the lusts [EPITHUMEO] of the flesh…”, now
what does that tell you? That means you can not even commit a sin of ignorance
unless first you stop walking by the Spirit. Those are those absolutes. You are
either walking or you are not walking. And when you sin whether it’s a sin of
ignorance or cognisance, when you sin you have already stopped walking by means
of the Spirit and you are out of fellowship.
This is one of the points I brought out in John 15 and the fruit
bearing and abiding. If abiding in Christ is the sole and necessary condition
for producing fruit, Jesus says in John 15: “…apart from Me you can do
nothing…” and if walking by the Spirit is the sole and necessary condition to
produce fruit in Galatians 5, then fellowship with Christ, abiding in Christ is
tantamount to walking by means of the Spirit and its walking by the Spirit that
we maintain fellowship with Christ. Now the problem is the instant we decide to
sin we stop walking by the Spirit and that fellowship is broken and we have to
have some kind of recovery. But what happens is we usually go on some kind of
guilt trip and start operating on morality, ‘I’m going to impress God with how
good I really am’ and that is human good and that is exactly what the Galatians
were doing, they are following the Law and it is nothing but doing the right
thing and reducing spirituality to morality.
The opposite end of the spectrum is personal sins which are produced by
the area of weakness and the lust pattern produces trends. We have trends
towards antinomianism leading to licentiousness on one end and legalism on the
other.
We have a trend towards asceticism which is the idea that ‘I’m going to
give up something to gain approbation from God’ and legalism (an external code
adhered to that will gain approbation from God), on the intellectual level and this
will be manifested in rationalism and empiricism and is expressed in moral
degeneracy like the Pharisees.
The other trend is towards antinomianism leading to licentiousness, on
the intellectual level this will be manifested in irrationalism, subjectivism,
emotionalism and mysticism and is expressed in immoral degeneracy. That
expresses the sin nature problems, so the Law can not be the basis for
sanctification because that is just the expression of the legalistic trend of
the sin nature.