Teacher: Rusty Kennedy Series: Romans (Acts) |
Rusty's Notes | |
- Look back to see where Paul is going…
- Chapter 12 – Live in harmony; don’t be proud
- Chapter 13 – Submit to government and love your neighbor as yourself.
- Paul was telling the Church how to live out their life in Christ in a dark world.
- 1) This is your moment – each day – not just a few times a week
- 2) Judge soberly but don’t think to highly of yourself
- 3) Just love one another
- But specifically to the Roman Christians who were meeting in homes. (20-30 people consisted of church)
- Different teachers, interpretations and opinions from house to house.
- If division is present, how do you accomplish the main thing?
Romans 14:1-23
1 Welcome anyone who is weak in faith, but don’t argue about disputed matters.
- Is Paul talking about new believers and veteran believers?
- Or is Paul talking about those who are free (walking by the Spirit) and those who are bound up (walking by their flesh).
- Paul is talking about the difference in what their faith will allow them to do.
- 1) Judging people based upon what they are comfortable with eating.
- 2) Judging people because the celebrate specific holidays or else they see every day as the same.
- Are we talking about a “strong Gentile Christian faith” vs a “weak Jewish Christian faith”?
- Remember that Paul was a Jew and he sides with the strong in chapter 15.
- Are we talking about Jewish Holidays vs Roman pagan god holidays?
- Are we talking about abstaining from meat and wine because they believe it was contaminated from pagan idolatry?
- Daniel 1 – Daniel and his friends refrained from eating from the King’s table… No meat or wine.
- Daniel diet today.
- What Paul is talking about here is specific issues that he would consider “indifferent”.
- If they choose to follow holidays found in the Torah… so be it.
- If they choose their freedom in Christ so be it.
- This is the non-negotiable.
- Our commonality.
As I live, says the Lord,
every knee will bow to me,
and every tongue will give praise to God. (Isaiah 45:23)
12 So then, each of us will give an account of himself to God.
THE LAW OF LOVE
13 Therefore, let us no longer judge one another.
- In trying to unify these two groups, it’s also interesting to see that Paul spends a lot more time talking to the strong than he does to the weak in faith.[1]
- So Paul is saying, “If what you’re doing—if by using your liberty and flaunting your liberty to do these things you think you can do—if those activities are spiritually hurting brothers and sisters in Christ, stop doing them.
- You have the liberty, but you also have the choice whether to exercise that liberty or not.”
- And Paul’s fundamental concern here is that the exercise of our liberty be done with a heart of love to others in Christ.[2]
- This statement right here brings value to all believers.
- We get caught up in the doing and comparing our faith based upon what we do rather than who we are in Christ.
- One’s traditions, opinions and expectations cannot be forced on another believer.
- It is the Holy Spirit who teaches, directs and causes us to rest in our freedom… to understand our righteousness and the peace and joy we already have.
19 So then, let us pursue what promotes peace and what builds up one another. 20 Do not tear down God’s work because of food. Everything is clean, but it is wrong to make someone fall by what he eats.
- Their concern, rather, should be the values of God’s kingdom and the spiritual health and development of their fellow brothers and sisters.
- So Paul encourages the strong in faith not to do anything that might bring harm to the weak in faith.[3]
- Paul is concerned that the weak in faith might start doing things that in their own conscience they continue to think is wrong.
- Paul doesn’t want that to happen.
- Paul doesn’t want our activity to run ahead of our conscience.
- We must first be convinced that something is right before we do it.[5]
- “everything that is not from faith is sin” – What does this mean?
- We have two choices: 1) Faith or 2) Not faith...
- 1) Walk by the Spirit or 2) Walk by the flesh…
- 1) Submit to the Spirit or 2) Be selfish
- 1) Rest and let the Spirit do it through you or 2) Do it in your own strength…
[1] Moo, D. J. (2014). NT331 Book Study: Paul’s Letter to the Romans. Bellingham, WA: Lexham Press.
[2] Moo, D. J. (2014). NT331 Book Study: Paul’s Letter to the Romans. Bellingham, WA: Lexham Press.
[3] Moo, D. J. (2014). NT331 Book Study: Paul’s Letter to the Romans. Bellingham, WA: Lexham Press.
[4] Christian Standard Bible. (2020). (Ro 14:1–23). Nashville, TN: Holman Bible Publishers.
[5] Moo, D. J. (2014). NT331 Book Study: Paul’s Letter to the Romans. Bellingham, WA: Lexham Press.