Like any honest
Believer, we readily confess that we are far from perfect. Regrettably, we
still sin against God, disappoint our love ones, and ourselves. Acknowledging
that we are SAVED sinners and not perfect saints is helpful, but not enough.
Deep inside we truly yearn for the day when sin will be something we use to do
before we were glorified in Christ. For now, we fight the good fight of faith
against indwelling sin. Sometimes we win these battles with our old nature
while other times we are too painfully aware of our repeat failures. Our
situation could deteriorate to the point where it gets harder and harder to
face family, friends, and our pastor; they all desire the very best in Christ
for us. We are afraid of disappointing them...again.... If we are not careful
to confess and repent of sin, feelings of shame will begin to dominate our
choices and lifestyle. As a result, temptations to pretend everything is
alright, cover up the truth, just put on the mask, and hope no one discovers
the truth will developed into a habit. Eventually, we will feel trapped in
hypocrisy and afraid to trust anyone with our...real situation.... Who can you
turn to? What can a Believer do to win more of these battles? Must we struggle
in defeat until the Rapture? God must have designed something to help us win these
battles with the flesh more consistently…right?
Actually, our
wonderful all-wise Lord has made provisions for consistent spiritual victory
for every Believer. The key is our identification with Jesus Christ and His
death, burial, and resurrection. Christ is victorious over sin and we share in
His victory by faith in Him. The procedure for translating Christ’s triumph
into our personal experience is the vital objective. Converting our
identification with our mighty Lord Jesus into our daily experience for
continuous victory and progressive sanctification is our focus. It is one thing
to know intellectually the Spirit seeks to sanctify Christians; it is quite another
matter to experience God’s life-giving power transforming us from within. Such
changes may be small at first, but as we depend more on the Spirit for specific
spiritual needs more significant changes will occur. As we continue in this
manner, our motives, ambitions, and behaviors will become more like those of
Christ than those of our “old man.”
These positive
developments do not unfold automatically; each believer must make the right
choices, walk in the Spirit, believe God for changes, and discipline ourselves
with great diligence (1 Cor. 9:24-27; Gal. 5:13-26; 2 Pet. 1:3-21). Then progressively,
we will begin to realize more victories over the old lifestyle and sinful
responses. Eventually our life will be more characterized by winning over
indwelling sin than being defeated repeatedly and frustrated continually. It is
not that we as Believers will become sinless, but we do sin less and less under
the Spirit’s life-altering influence. It is as the Spirit of grace empowers us
that we win these internal battles; as Christians we become winners in Christ!
This is God's design and provision for you and me.
But how can we
translate the life and power of the risen Christ into our personal experiences
on a daily basis? Four vital attitudes of mind and action on a believer’s part
should be recognized in order to experience victory continually. These Paul
discussed in Romans 6:5-23 and the key actions are (a) Know (Rom. 6:3-6), (b) Reckon (Rom. 6:5-11), (c) Yield (Rom. 6:12-14), and (d) Serve (Rom. 6:15-23). It is the Spirit
who does the work of sanctification, but each believer must choose, trust,
cooperate, and participate in their spiritual transformation. Yes, there is a
mysterious blending of the divine and human efforts to experience genuine
change that will glorify God and prove good for the child of God (Phil. 2:12,
13). Consider then these four actions each Believer must learn and master.
KNOW
First we must
“know” (Rom. 6:3, 6, 9, 16) the truth of victory through Christ. Yes, we
presently have victory through Jesus Christ; every Believer needs to realize
this truth. It has been well said, that we are not fighting for victory but
from victory. Consider Wiersbe’s (1997) observation in Wiersbe's Expository Outlines on
the New Testament regarding
what the believer needs to “know.”
This is the wonderful truth of our identification with Christ. Not only did Christ die for us, but we died with Him. When the Spirit baptized us into the body of Christ, then we were buried with Him and raised to newness of life.1
While we still
grapple with indwelling sin, we also have freedom from sin’s domination because
Christ broke the power of sin through His death. We need to 'know' these facts
and their significance to our daily experience in Christ. Again Dr. Wiersbe
(1997) said,
Read 6:1–10 again and see for yourself that the believer is dead to sin (v. 2); the old nature has been crucified (v. 6); the believer is freed from sin (v. 7). The old nature can no longer reign as king over the Christian who knows the truth, reckons on it, and yields to the Lord.2
Paul describes the struggle that
goes on in a Believer who does not “know” the truth of his identification with
Christ in death and resurrection (Rom. 7:15). It is the conflict between the
two natures in the person who attempts to keep the Law in the energy of the
flesh in search of holiness. Harry
Foster in an article entitled Toward
the Mark explains:
Here was a man trying to achieve holiness by personal effort, struggling with all his might to fulfill God’s “holy and righteous and good” commandments (v.12), only to discover that the more he struggled, the worse his condition became. It was a losing battle, and no wonder, for it is not in the power of fallen human nature to conquer sin and live in holiness (MacDonald & Farstad 1995, p. 1707).3
Notice how often
the first-person pronouns—I, me, my, myself appear in this passage; they occur
over forty times in Romans 7:9–25! Believers grappling with the Romans Chapter
Seven experiences have “taken an overdose of “Vitamin I”4 observed MacDonald and Farstad (1995,
p. 1707) in the Believer’s
Bible Commentary. They are introspective to the core, searching for
victory in self, where it cannot be found. The Believer’s Bible Commentary (MacDonald & Farstad 1995, p.
1707) also affirmed,
Sadly, most modern Christian psychological counseling focuses the counselee’s attention on himself and thus adds to the problem instead of relieving it. People need to know that they have died with Christ and have risen with Him to walk in newness of life. Then, instead of trying to improve the flesh, they will relegate it to the grave of Jesus.5
In describing the
struggle between the two natures, Paul relates feelings of perplexity and
uncertainty about what to do (Rom. 7:15). People would lightly describe
him today as having a split personality, a Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde. He was
repulsed by the fact that he commonly finds himself indulging in things that he
did not want to do, and practicing things that he hates. This is the
battle each believer struggles with as we attempt to clean up our act before
the Lord. Again the Christian must “know” the fact of his vital union with
Christ in death and resurrection!
But, what is the
elemental principle of the Believer’s union with Christ? The fundamental
rule of the Believer’s union with Christ demonstrates how salvation in Christ
is not partial; it is an entire and complete salvation. Paul proves this
in the key verse Romans 6:14, which says, “For sin shall not have dominion over
you: for ye are not under the law, but under grace.” Thus sin shall not
dominate the life of Believers, it must not be allowed. This is because
Believers are no longer under law, but now under grace. Our union with
Christ makes all the difference. As we were in Adam, so now we are in
Christ. Believers have reaped all the consequences of what Adam did; we
also have reaped all the consequences of what Christ has done. That is
the parallel. Christians are joined to Christ in every respect. We are not only
joined in some respects, we are united to Christ entirely; one cannot divide
Christ. That is, we have been crucified, died, buried, and raised with
Christ. Currently we are considered seated with Him in heavenly places
(Eph. 2:6; 1Cor. 1:30; Col. 3:1). Through union with Christ, every believer is
a winner in our spiritual position. As struggling Christians we need to 'know'
this truth!
In addition, as
Believers we are not under Law, but we are under grace. Under the Law, Old
Testament Believers could only struggle in their own strength to live up to
God’s requirements. They had not the new nature, nor the Spirit’s power.
Failure is the characteristic and ultimate outcome. But under grace the
child of God can live in the energy of the Spirit enabling us to satisfy all
that God requires. Under grace we are endowed with the divine nature to enable
spiritual living. As Christians, we must “know” we have the position,
potential, and power to live out God’s will in the Lord Jesus Christ.
RECKON
Then secondly, the
believer has the responsibility to “reckon” (Rom. 6:11). This is somewhat
related to the concept of accounting. While it is good to 'know' we have a
new position in Christ; we must, by faith, reckon it to be true in our own
individual lives. We must count this reality as true of us personally. It is
much like having money directly deposited into our bank account and concluding
that it is actually there on a certain date of the month. We don’t have to verify
the money has been deposited, we know that it has been and simply begin to use
it to conduct our business. Dr. Wiersbe (1997) noted that “reckoning is simply
that step of faith that says, “What God says about me in the Bible is now true
in my life. I am crucified with Christ.””6 Reckoning is believing God’s
Word and living accordingly; it is acting on what God said by faith (Heb.
11:13-16). It is the all-important appropriation step! Remembering and
reflecting on this fact about oneself. Since Christians have identified with
Christ (we enjoy a complete spiritual union with Him), what is true for Him can
also be true for us as well. Again “knowing” relates to our position in Christ,
but “reckoning” refers to appropriating Christ into our experience. This
association takes root in our minds by an act of mental accounting. We can consider ourselves dead to sin
just as Christ is, and alive to God like Him also. We are to reflect on the
actual fact that Christ’s death and resurrection stand between whom we were and
who we are presently in Christ. The old life has ended and the new one has
begun. We have absolutely no obligations to that old life before Christ.
All obligations are now toward the God we love because of His mercy and grace.
On this non-pretentious basis the new life and lifestyle takes shape and issues
into righteous expressions that glorify God.
Please bear in
mind this is not straining oneself to obey human rules or even commandments
from the Bible in human energy. This is counting on our union and
identification with Christ in crucifixion and resurrection to supply the desire
and the dynamic where-with-all to live obediently to God in the power of the
Spirit. That is, we count on the truth and the power of the Spirit to work
through our commitments and decisions. The Spirit’s power, not human power is
in view. As such, we can refuse the domination of any sinful practice
while living in triumph in Christ (Rom. 6:11, 12). Therefore, account Christ's
death and resurrection as realities in your experience.
YIELD
The next
action identified by Paul is “yield” (Rom. 6:13, 16). Yielding involves handing
over control to another or giving them the final say about what should happen.
It is the surrender of self and all at our disposal to God. Since Believers have been given new
life by God, our bodies are to be given to Him to use for promoting
righteousness. Instead of giving in to sin, we are to refuse sin’s tyrannical
rule. Instead we are to wholly surrender our entire being in commitment to
living for God’s glory. This in practical terms is a moment by moment
presentation of ourselves to His service and will.
It has been
recognized (Wiersbe, 1997) that by yielding, believers can have victory over
our fallen nature. This yielding
is an act of the will, a step of conscious obedience to Christ. We must take
this… step of yielding the members of our bodies to the Lord.7 It is submitting our will to God’s
will while embracing the Spirit’s power and leadership. This is the power to
dethrone sin in our lives. Yielding is releasing ourselves to explore all
aspects of God’s plans. Resultantly, God literally runs—directs—our lives and
decisions through His Spirit. He is in charge in an experiential manner
of our personal life, relationships, finances, priorities, problems,
complications, the future, and the unknown. As Christians, you and I must
yield; that is, hand over control to Him. Have enough confidence
in the love, wisdom, grace, and power of God to give over control to Him. This
is the only reasonable response to The God who sacrificed Himself for our
eternal welfare and redemption.
SERVE
The last step to
victory over indwelling sin through the believer’s union with Christ is
“serve.” Clearly Paul acknowledged how all believers once served ‘Master Sin’
before conversion, but upon trusting Christ and being united to Him, we can now
serve righteousness. The apostle Paul said, in Romans 6:16-19,
Know ye not, that to whom ye yield yourselves servants to obey, his servants ye are to whom ye obey; whether of sin unto death, or of obedience unto righteousness? 17 But God be thanked, that ye were the servants of sin, but ye have obeyed from the heart that form of doctrine which was delivered you. 18 Being then made free from sin, ye became the servants of righteousness. 19 I speak after the manner of men because of the infirmity of your flesh: for as ye have yielded your members servants to uncleanness and to iniquity unto iniquity; even so now yield your members servants to righteousness unto holiness.
The words “serve”
and “servant” occurs repeatedly in this brief paragraph to signify this
emphasis on service. The reason we Believers yield (8:13-16) the members of our
bodies to God is that we may serve the Lord. Again Wierbe’s (1997) comments in Wiersbe's Expository Outlines on
the New Testament are very
helpful to understanding this important concept.
Before we were saved, we yielded ourselves to sin, and were the servants of sin. Consequently we received the “wages” of sin—death (v. 23). But now that we have received Christ as Savior, we have been made free from sin; that is, our new position in Christ gives us a new Master as well as a new nature. We are now the servants of righteousness instead of the servants of sin! As we yield the members of the body to Christ as his “tools” or “weapons” (“instruments,” v. 13), then He comes to control our lives, and we bear fruit unto holiness (v. 22).8
The answer to the problem of sin is not simply determination, discipline, reformation, legislation, or any other human endeavor. Victory comes through crucifixion and resurrection.9
Even though every
believer is dead to sin and alive to God, and even though the life of Christ is
in every believer, it does not mean that we are completely sinless and perfect.
While these things are true of our redeemed spirit, which is entirely delivered
from sin, it is not true of our bodies. As spiritual beings, we are dead
to sin because Christ has redeemed our spirits perfectly. Until the Rapture,
our bodies remain in the struggle with indwelling sin (Rom. 6:6-18). Therefore,
we must choose to live for God and yield our bodies to righteous service.
Though we are redeemed by God’s grace, our bodies still struggle with
indwelling sin, which persistently attempts to drag us down. Praise the
Lord for Jesus Christ who delivers us from “the body of this death”! So, all
believers can be winners instead of frustrated losers. God’s design is that we
recognize our complete union/identification with Jesus Christ who died, was
buried, and rose again to live in the power of resurrection life forever. Because
of Jesus Christ, we should not only desire to be winners, but literally become
winners continually!
Converting our identification with our mighty Lord Jesus into our daily experience for continuous victory and progressive sanctification is our focus. It is one thing to know intellectually the Spirit seeks to sanctify Christians; it is quite another matter to experience God’s life-giving power transforming us from within. Such changes may be small at first, but as we depend more on the Spirit for specific spiritual needs more significant changes will occur. As we continue in this manner, our motives, ambitions, and behaviors will become more like those of Christ than those of our “old man.”
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It is one thing to know intellectually the Spirit seeks to sanctify Christians; it is quite another matter to experience God’s life-giving power transforming us from within. Such changes may be small at first, but as we depend more on the Spirit for specific spiritual needs more significant changes will occur. As we continue in this manner, our motives, ambitions, and behaviors will become more like those of Christ than those of our “old man.”
ReplyDeletehttps://maxevangel.blogspot.com/2013/12/want-to-be-winner-but-feeling-more-like.html
#Power #Change #Growth #Triumph #Win #Winners #Union #Jesus #Identification #Spirit #MaxEvangel
The next action identified by Paul is “yield” (Rom. 6:13, 16). Yielding involves handing over control to another or giving them the final say about what should happen. It is the surrender of self and all at our disposal to God. Since Believers have been given new life by God, our bodies are to be given to Him to use for promoting righteousness. Instead of giving in to sin, we are to refuse sin’s tyrannical rule.
ReplyDeletehttps://maxevangel.blogspot.com/2013/12/want-to-be-winner-but-feeling-more-like.html
#Power #Change #Growth #Triumph #Win #Winners #Union #Jesus #Identification #Spirit #MaxEvangel