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Enslaved to
Righteousness
In Romans 5, Paul says that Christ saved us even
while we were sinners. We are saved by grace, not by keeping the law. He ends
that chapter by saying, “Where sin increased, grace increased all the more”
(Rom. 5:20). God’s grace is always larger than our sin.
In chapter 6, Paul deals with a
possible objection: What shall we say, then? Shall we go on sinning so that
grace may increase? (Rom. 6:1). If grace is so easy,
should we bother to change our ways? Whenever the gospel is clearly presented,
this question comes up. If all our sins are so easily forgiven, why worry about
sin? Should we continue to sin?
By no means! Paul exclaims.
We should avoid sin, even though our salvation does not depend on our success in
quitting sin. Obedience has a different purpose. Of course, if faith in Christ
led to automatic victory over all sin, then the question would not come up. But
sin continues to be a reality we must deal with in our lives—a reality we must
resist.
Death of the sinful self
In verse 2, Paul says: We died to
sin. How can we live in it any longer? If we want to escape death, then
we should also want to escape the cause of death—sin. But more importantly, when
we believe in Christ, we become new people. In the language of Romans 5, we are
no longer people of Adam, but now we are people of Christ Jesus. We are to live
in him.
Paul explains this in verse 3:
Don’t you know that all of us who were baptized into Christ Jesus were baptized
into his death? We are baptized not just into the name of Christ—we are
baptized into him and united with him. When we are identified with Adam, we get
the death that Adam brought. When we are identified with Christ, we get the
righteousness and life that he brought. When he died, we died, and when he was
buried we were buried, and when he rose we also rose. We were with him, because
he represented all of us.
We don’t tend to think of many
people being “in” one person, but this is the way Paul is describing our
salvation. Because we are united with Christ, his death counts as ours.
Paul then draws this conclusion in
verse 4: We were therefore buried with him through baptism into death...
Baptism pictures not only a sharing in Jesus’ death, but also a sharing in his
burial. But why is that significant for the question about sin?
Paul explains the purpose in the
last part of verse 4: ...in order that, just as Christ was raised from the
dead through the glory of the Father, we too may live a new life. In the
same way that we died with Christ, we also rise with Christ into a new life, and
this implies that we should live in a different way than we used to.
Although baptism could symbolize
this burial and new life, Paul’s point does not depend on symbolism—it depends
on our union with Jesus Christ. Not only does baptism unite us with Jesus in his
death and burial, it also unites us with his resurrection and his life. The old
self is dead, and yet we live—we have a new life, and that means a new approach
to life.
Paul explains more in verse 5:
If we have been united with him like this in his death, we will certainly also
be united with him in his resurrection. Our union with Christ brings not
only justification, the benefit of sharing in his sacrificial death—it also
brings the benefit of eternal life, of sharing in his resurrection. This affects
the way we live.
Paul seems to be saying something like
this: Why would anyone want to be joined to sin on the one hand, and joined to
Christ on the other? Why would anyone want to live forever with righteousness,
if they want to live in sin right now?
For we know that our old self was
crucified with him so that the body of sin might be done away with (v.
6). Our old self was a descendant of Adam, a body under the power of sin, and
that was killed on the cross. Our former identification with Adam is dead; we
are no longer his, but we belong to Christ.
Here’s why we were killed: ...that
we should no longer be slaves to sin—because anyone who has died has been freed
from sin (vv. 6-7). In baptism, our former selves were given the
penalty of sin - death. Since the penalty has been paid, sin has no authority over us.
Paul is introducing some new
imagery: slavery and freedom. Sin is not just something we do—it is a power that
works against us, a power that enslaves us, a power we must be freed from. When
we die with Christ, we are liberated from this evil slavemaster. We do not go on
serving it, but we live a new way of life. We do not do it perfectly, but this
is what the Christian life is for.
Alive to God
Paul now starts to emphasize life.
Now if we died with Christ, we believe that we will also live with him
(v. 8). We will live with him in the resurrection, but the question in this
chapter is about life right now. So what is Paul’s point?
For we know that since Christ was
raised from the dead, he cannot die again; death no longer has mastery over him (v. 9). Jesus was not brought back to mortal life, as Lazarus was.
Rather, Jesus was raised to immortal, imperishable life. Death once had mastery
over him, just as sin once had mastery over us. But Jesus has been freed from
that power, and as we are united with Christ, we will be freed from those
powers, too.
The death he died, he died to sin
once for all (v. 10). If
we believe we will live with Christ in the future, we should also believe that
he has conquered the power of sin and death, and that he liberates us from these
powers in this life. Of course, we still sin, and we still die, but those powers
do not have the final authority in our lives. Sin may attract us at times, but
it cannot force us to sin. We are no longer slaves of sin.
Paul mentions the example of Jesus
in the last part of verse 10: but the life he lives, he lives to God.
This is the choice set before us. We can serve sin, or we can serve God, and
this is the new life we are to live.
So we are to model our lives after
Christ: In the same way, count yourselves dead to sin but alive to God in
Christ Jesus (v. 11). When sin offers us something tempting, we are to
answer: No, that’s the old way, and I am supposed to die to that. This is
certainly not automatic, or Paul wouldn’t have to tell us to do it. We must
remind ourselves of who we are: children of the Savior, not children of the
sinner. Just as Christ died to sin, we are to resist sin day by day.
But the Christian life is not simply
a matter of refusing sin, of playing dead. We are supposed to be alive—alive to
God, because we are in Christ Jesus. Our desire to live for him should be very
much alive!
Therefore, Paul writes in
verse 12, do not let sin reign in your mortal body so that you obey its evil
desires. Paul’s conclusion is clear: Christians should not continue in sin.
We do sin, but we can be confident that God does not count our sins against us. Our salvation is not in jeopardy, but we are still commanded to obey God and
to quit sinning.
There is a battle going on for our
bodies. The old slavemaster, sin, has been defeated by Christ, but sin continues
to attack us nevertheless. It tries to rule us, but we are not supposed to let
it. Sin will take over as much as we allow, so we must resist it—not let it rule
in our mortal bodies. Paul says: Don’t give up. Fight against it.
Do not offer the parts of
your body to sin, as instruments of wickedness, but rather offer yourselves to
God, as those who have been brought from death to life; and offer the parts of
your body to him as instruments of righteousness (v. 13).
There’s a battle going on for control
of your body. Will you let sin have its way, or will you let God have his way?
You have been brought from death to life, so let God win, Paul says.
How do we do that? By giving him our
bodies as tools or weapons he can use for righteousness. We shouldn’t let sin
use our body parts as tools to make us more wicked. Instead, we need to let God
use our bodies as weapons of righteousness, as people who work for his kingdom.
For sin shall not be your master,
because you are not under law, but under grace (v. 14). If we were
under the authority of the law, then we would be condemned as sinners, and sin
would have the final say in our lives. We would die. But we are not under the
law, and not under its penalty. Death has been conquered, the power of sin has
been broken, and the captives of sin have been set free!
And since we are under grace, sin is
not our master. Going back to sin makes no more sense than running back to our
old slavemaster, or for a prisoner who has been pardoned running back to his old
jail cell. In grace and in salvation, sin is what we are getting away from.
If it weren’t for grace, we would be
condemned whether we tried to do right or not. If there were no grace, we might
as well continue in sin, because our efforts wouldn’t make any difference. So
grace gives us the freedom to escape from sin and to live for righteousness. It
makes no sense to seek salvation at the same time as seeking sin.
Slaves of righteousness
“What then?” Paul asks in verse 15.
Shall we sin because we are not under law but under grace? By no means!
God does not want us to sin. We are supposed to obey God.
Paul then develops the analogy of
slavery a bit further to make his point: Don’t you know that when you offer
yourselves to someone to obey him as slaves, you are slaves to the one whom you
obey—whether you are slaves to sin, which leads to death, or to obedience, which
leads to righteousness? (v. 16).
If you choose sin, you are enslaving
yourself to a master who will beat you, make your life miserable, and work you
to death. We are not independent of all authority—we are slaves of one power or
the other. We have no choice about that, but we do have a choice as who will be
our master. We can choose sin, or we can choose God. Why not choose to be a
slave of obedience, a slave of doing right? The rewards are much better, not
only in the next life but in this one, too.
The Romans had already made the
right choice: But thanks be to God that, though you used to be slaves to sin,
you wholeheartedly obeyed the form of teaching to which you were entrusted. You
have been set free from sin and have become slaves to righteousness
(vs. 17-18). Obedience is a normal result of faith (1:5).
Why was Paul using the analogy of
slavery? I put this in human terms because you are weak in your natural
selves. Just as you used to offer the parts of your body in slavery to impurity
and to ever-increasing wickedness, so now offer them in slavery to righteousness
leading to holiness (v. 19).
The Romans were weak—all Christians
are, in their natural selves. The Romans were slaves of righteousness, and yet
they needed to be exhorted to continue. We fight against sin as long as we live
in our mortal bodies. It is an enemy that should be resisted. If we don’t
resist, it gets worse and worse—ever-increasing wickedness.
We want to be enslaved to doing
good. That is because we are already saved, not because we are trying to earn
our salvation. We do good works because they are good, because our Savior wants
us to do good. And when we do that, it gets better and better—righteousness
leading to holiness.
When you were slaves to sin, you
were free from the control of righteousness (v. 20). Each slavery has a
form of freedom. When we sin, it might look like we are free from outside
control, but we are really in slavery. What benefit did you reap at that time
from the things you are now ashamed of? Those things result in death!
(v. 21). Sin produces death, and we do not want to serve that kind of master.
What looked like liberty, actually brought bondage.
But now that you have been set free
from sin and have become slaves to God, the benefit you reap leads to holiness,
and the result is eternal life (v. 22). Now, we are no longer
under sin’s authority. We are freed from one power, but we are also under
obligation: We are slaves to God. However, his benefits are infinitely better:
holiness and eternal life. The word slavery is useful as an analogy in
that we should obey God.
In what sense is eternal life the
“result” of obeying God? Paul would vigorously deny that our obedience causes
our salvation—he clearly says that salvation is a gift, based on faith rather
than works, on grace rather than payment. Here, Paul is simply making a
contrast: obedience leads to holiness instead of shame, and eternal life instead
of death.
Why should we deny sin and obey God?
For the wages of sin is death, but the gift of God is eternal life in Christ
Jesus our Lord (v. 23). If we serve sin, we get what we deserve: shame and
death. If we serve God, we get eternal life as a gift we didn’t deserve. Choose
life, Paul says. Let righteousness rule! Be alive in Christ, not dead in your
sins.
Questions
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Does the abundance of grace encourage sin? Does
it give me any motivation to fight sin? (v. 1)
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In what way is my life different now than
before Christ? (v. 4)
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Do I feel freed from sin? Do I have habits that
enslave me? (v. 14)
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In what way did Jesus die to sin? (v. 10). How
can I count myself dead? (v. 11)
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In what way am I “under” grace? (v. 14)
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What sins enslave people today? Are there
“respectable” sins?
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Do I feel enslaved to righteousness? (v. 18)
Michael Morrison
To a study
of chapter 7
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