Day 113, Romans 2 
Paul's logic is
indisputable. When we condemn others for wrongdoing, we testify before the
court of heaven that we know what is right and wrong. Moreover, we desire that
wrongdoers be justly punished for their selfish deeds, don't we? So when
we do what we have condemned in others, we stand self-condemned, bearing
witness that we deserve to be punished for our own selfishness. Yet most people
continue in their sin, "storing up wrath for themselves" (2:5),
completely unprepared for the day when God, the righteous Judge, will
"render to each person according to his deeds" (2:6). This is the
foundation upon which the gospel is built: All of us, Jew and Gentile, are all
self-condemned sinners who deserve God's wrath.
Anyone who may have
accused Paul of proclaiming a gospel that nullified either God's righteousness
or the necessity of righteous living to gain eternal life would have been
silenced by today's reading. Paul declared that God will give eternal life to
"those who by perseverance in doing good seek for glory and honor and
immortality," and that He will give "glory and honor and peace to
everyone who does good" (2:7, 10). In contrast, "wrath and indignation"
awaits those who "are selfishly ambitious and do not obey the truth,
but obey unrighteousness" (2:9). Moreover, "there will be tribulation
and distress for every soul of man who does evil" whether they are Jew or
Gentile (2:10).
These same statements
also contradict the modern message of "grace" that is being proffered
and that gives license to sin. Only the holy will inherit eternal life, and
since all are sinners, the only way to gain holiness is through repentance,
forgiveness and empowerment by the Holy Spirit. But I'm getting ahead of Paul!
Just as so many in our
day assume that they are saved by virtue of being baptized church members, so
Jews in Paul's day were convinced that, as God's chosen people, they had
salvation "in the bag" by virtue of the fact that they were
circumcised and had been given the Law of Moses. Paul exposes the fallacy of
those assumptions. How absurd it would be to think that God would accept and
eternally reward law-ignoring but circumcised Jews while rejecting and
punishing a Gentile who, although uncircumcised, kept the moral aspects of the
Mosaic Law as he followed his God-given conscience. To say otherwise would be
to make God unjust and elevate circumcision above morality.
So Paul puts
circumcision in its proper perspective: "For indeed circumcision is of
value if you practice the Law; but if you are a transgressor of the Law, your
circumcision has become uncircumcision" (2:25). That is, your circumcision
is useless, because it will not save you. A true Jew, Paul says, is one who is
not just circumcised outwardly, but circumcised inwardly in his heart
by the Spirit, that is, one who is born again.
With this first
subject matter, Paul is preparing to demolish the grand Jewish objection to his
message---that Gentiles can be justified, or made righteous, through faith
apart from the Law of Moses. The plain truth was that the Jews were not obeying
the Mosaic Law and were sinners every bit as much as Gentiles. They themselves
could not hope to be saved through the Mosaic Law which they didn't keep, and
so they needed some other way of salvation--one that would obviously require
grace from God. That way of salvation, as you know and as Paul will soon
reveal, is through the sacrificial death of Jesus. Jews can only be
saved through faith in Him. That being so, it seems reasonable to conclude that Gentiles, as well, cannot be saved through the Law of Moses, but like the Jews, only through faith in Christ. Paul's logic is quite compelling.
One final note. Paul
wrote, "the kindness of God leads you to repentance" (2:4). Based on
this verse, some say that we should never mention God's wrath or humanity's
guilt when we preach the gospel, since God's kindness is what leads people to repentance.
Might that be taking Paul's words out of their context? (Hint: The answer
begins with the letter Y!)
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