GOD IS FOR US
by Steve Zeisler
I have a friend who was married not long ago to a man she had been acquainted
with in high school. The man was very shy. The woman had a lot of personality,
vivaciousness and energy.
After graduating from high school, she had many problems---she took drugs
for awhile, got married at least once, had children by a couple of different
men, and raged her way through life. She eventually came to Christ.
She went to her twentieth high school reunion and there met the man she
would later marry. He had been raised in a Christian home and had taken
his faith seriously over the years since high school. They realized they
were both Christians, began to develop a relationship, and eventually were
married. Early in the course of their friendship, he told her, "I fell
in love with you when I was sixteen. I have loved you and I have thought
of you every day since." She was unaware, during twenty years of unhealthy
relationships, that someone could love her.
What the end of the eighth chapter of the book of Romans says, to put it
succinctly, is that God thinks of us every day. And not just every day,
but every minute of every day. We fill his thoughts. He is enthusiastic
about us and committed to us. Last week we saw that the Spirit prays for
us with groanings too deep for words. The Spirit who indwells us speaks
to the Father about us. His attention is completely on us; he prays in language
that could never find human expression. As we go through the passage before
us this week, we will see that the Lord God of the universe has thought
about us before anything else was created. He knows everything that is true
about us. He is bringing about our glorification. We will also find that
when evil assails us the Lord Jesus intercedes for us, speaking to the throne
of heaven on our behalf, defending us from accusation. In every expression
of himself---Father, Son and Spirit---God cares for us.
Last week we considered the word "groaning." It occurred three
times in the passage we studied: a sighing, a deep anguish that characterizes
our age. We are told that if we are co-heirs with Christ, we must suffer
with him. So it is appropriate to look at the hard things in our lives,
to be honest about ourselves---in fact, to groan, wishing that things were
different and better.
But this week we move on from thinking about our groanings, struggles and
difficulties, to focus on the thinking of God about us. In this eighth chapter
of Romans, which ends a marvelous section (Romans 6 through 8) in which
the process of sanctification is laid before us, the final note that is
sounded is the triumph that comes from knowing how deeply God cares for
us. It is not our thoughts that are the last word, it is his thoughts
that are the last word. It is having a heavenly perspective, not an earthly
one. This is the great truth that underlies everything else.
THE LAST WORD
Romans 8, verses 28-30:
And we know that in all things God works for the good of those
who love him, who have been called according to his purpose. For those God
foreknew he also predestined to be conformed to the likeness of his Son,
that he might be the firstborn among many brothers. And those he predestined,
he also called; those he called, he also justified; those he justified,
he also glorified.
Romans 8:28 is one of the best loved and most often memorized verses in
the Bible. There are three phrases in this verse that we should attend to.
First, in all things God works for the good of his own. It is not just in
the pleasant, delightful, anticipated things of our lives, not just in the
beautiful sunsets and moving hymns, that we find God at work. In all things
he works for our good.
That doesn't mean he works toward our short-term happiness or delight. He
works towards what is best for us, doing what is eternally good in us and
for us. But in all experiences of life, even the most difficult and painful,
God is still at work doing something good.
The second phrase we should attend to here is that God works good in all
things to those who love him. You can't make a deal with God. You can't
say, "I'll be very attentive, I'll give you ten percent of my money,
I'll shake hands with people I don't like, I'll memorize boring Bible verses.
Here's how much I'll give if you'll give me good in return."
It has absolutely nothing to do with bartering. You may remember the story
of Simon Magus in the book of Acts, who saw the power of the Holy Spirit
resident within Peter and other apostles, and wanted it too. He offered
them money, wanting to make a deal to have spiritual power for himself.
Peter said, "May you perish with your money, thinking you could buy
the gift of God."
It is those of us who love him in whom he works good: those who have already
given their hearts away; who have been persuaded that he is worthy, kind,
merciful and gracious; and who fall in love with him for himself before
receiving all that he will give.
The second qualifier, and the third phrase we must attend to, is that we
realize that it is his purpose that defines what good is. We're called
according to his purpose, which is to make us like Christ. He has one Son,
but he intends to have many more, men and women who qualify as sons. All
that is true of Christ Jesus---his character, glory, love and authority---becomes
true of us. We are made like him. That is God's purpose and that is what
good is.
For those who love him, who are on the way to becoming what he intends them
to be, who are called according to his purpose, in all their experiences
God will work to bring about what is truly good. This is a remarkable promise.
Instead of facing life fearfully, caving in and pulling the covers over
our head, crying out, frightened of what we have to experience, we know
that the Sovereign of the universe is doing what is best for us.
THE PROCESS
Verses 29 and 30 show us the process: "For those God foreknew he also
predestined to be conformed to the likeness of his Son, that he might be
the firstborn among many brothers. And those he predestined, he also called;
those he called he also justified; those he justified, he also glorified."
To begin with, these verses speak of the foreknowledge of God. In Ephesians
we're told that before the foundation of the world, before anything was
made, before time itself existed, he looked down the corridors of time and
saw us. He knew everything that is true of us. Jesus says that every single
hair on our heads is numbered.
My friend was told by the man she later married, "I have thought of
you every day. Over all the years of your life when you thought no one cared
for you and you never believed you were in the thoughts of anyone, I thought
of you every day for all those years."
God thought of us before he even created us, and we have filled his thinking
ever since. Everything that is true of us matters to him. Those whom he
foreknew he intended for greatness. Those whom he knew ahead of time and
now thinks of all the time, he also determined to make into something great:
We should be like Christ. That is our destiny, the choice he has made for
us: not just that we'll merely get by or survive, but that we will be made
into sons and daughters of the Sovereign of the universe.
"For those God foreknew he also predestined...And those he predestined,
he also called...." He doesn't ravage or dominate. He invites; he calls
us who will hear him into a relationship with him. Just as my friend finally
responded to the man who had cared for her for years, so are we given the
opportunity to respond to the love of God for us.
Those who respond to the call are cleansed. That's what justification means.
We have been justified, fixed and cleansed from all of the sins that we
would otherwise be guilty of, all of the laws that we have broken.
And the very end of the process is glorification, the finished course, being
like Christ as we were intended to be.
This is the mind of the Lord for us. We fill his thinking. There is nothing
true of us that he doesn't know or embrace. There are no days in which we
are not his deepest concern. We groan when we look at ourselves and at the
world. We still have territory to get across and suffering to undergo. But
God is absolutely committed to us, and what he determines cannot fail to
be accomplished.
OUR HYMNS OF PRAISE
Verse 31 takes up an important question. Paul has asked this question four
times in this section of Romans (6:1; 6:15; 7:7; 8:31):
What, then, shall we say in response to this?
At various points in his explanation of what it means to have Christ formed
in us, he asks, What conclusion should we draw? Or, if this is really true,
what difference should it make to us? What should be our response?
Paul goes on to write a magnificent hymn of praise to God, saying what it
means to him to know that he is in the mind of his Father every minute of
every day, and that he is cared for by the triune God. It is one of the
most powerful written statements of any kind anywhere in the world. Verses
31-39:
If God is for us, who can be against us? He who did not spare
his own Son, but gave him up for us all---how will he not also, along with
him, graciously give us all things? Who will bring any charge against those
whom God has chosen? It is God who justifies. Who is he that condemns? Christ
Jesus, who died---more than that, who was raised to life---is at the right
hand of God and is also interceding for us. Who shall separate us from the
love of Christ? Shall trouble or hardship or persecution or famine or nakedness
or danger or sword? As it is written:
"For your sake we face death all day long;
we are considered as sheep to be slaughtered."
No, in all these things we are more than conquerors through him who loved
us. For I am convinced that neither death nor life, neither angels nor demons,
neither the present nor the future, nor any powers, neither height nor depth,
nor anything else in all creation, will be able to separate us from the
love of God that is in Christ Jesus our Lord.
What shall we say to these things? The world in all its hardship, deprivation
and agony cannot separate me from the love of God. It cannot ruin what God
intends for me. No created thing in this world will destroy, alter, or
weaken the love of Christ.
What shall we say? What is it like to live knowing God loves you this way?
What is it like to walk around in your shoes, in your world, your circumstances?
Do you believe it enough that you can say it in your own words? Or, if words
are hard for you, can you take Paul's words and personalize them so they
belong to you?
Janna Sanders of our body showed me some marvelous psalms that she has written
recently. As a congregation we have sung a number of hymns that Bill Connor
and Glenn Pickett have written together, reflecting deep, powerful, wise
theology, expressing in their own words what it means to them to know that
God loves them. Many of you write in journals, or find other ways of taking
the truth seriously, applying it to yourselves and making it your own.
What shall you say to these things?
THE SHEPHERD'S SONG
Let me compare the verses here with another well-known passage of Scripture
that will show that men and women in generation after generation have been
writing of the love of God, putting it in their own words.
David the King wrote the twenty-third Psalm based on his experience as a
shepherd. He grew up raising sheep, and wrote of the streams, pastures and
valleys that he experienced, and hence was able to write of the shepherd
care of God.
Paul wrote as an apostle
in the Roman era of the first century; he wrote about swords, travels and
dangers, the experiences in his world that were true of him at some time
in his life. What David wrote was true of him. And you and I can write what
is true of us, or take another person's writings and personalize them to
make them true for us.
The theme that is here in verse 31 is: If God is for us, who can be against
us? David wrote in Psalm 23:1:
The Lord is my shepherd....
It is exactly the same point. David writes of himself as a sheep. Sheep
are horrible at caring for themselves, absolutely defenseless, in danger
from everything. But David writes that there is nothing to be afraid of,
because he has a great defender who cares for him and is capable of defending
him against everything. No enemy can assail him or defeat him. And that's
the point that Paul makes here. If God is for us, who can be against us?
Who can ruin you or me? Who can undermine and destroy if God is for us,
if the Lord is our shepherd?
Verse 32 says, "He who did not spare his own Son, but gave him up for
us all---how will he not also, along with him, graciously give us all things?"
In writing the shepherd's Psalm, David said in verse 1:
...I shall not be in want.
There's nothing that I need in this life, and no longing placed in me by
God that will go unmet. There is no requirement for success as a child of
God that I will not be given. And Paul says it is impossible to conclude
that the one who gave us his Son will not freely give us everything else
as well.
It is true that God will teach us to want different things than we want
right now. Things that we think are critically essential, that we can't
possibly live without, may turn out to be things that we can very easily
live without. And we have not yet learned that lesson. Those who will walk
with him till the end of their lives will look back and say thank you for
the hard things that turned them into the person they needed to be. If God
will give us his Son, he won't withhold from us anything else we need.
Verse 33 says, "Who will bring any charge against those whom God has
chosen?" God justifies. Christ died for us, was raised again, and is
at the right hand of God interceding for us. Whose voice of condemnation
is going to be raised against us? Who will say of us that we are evil, unrighteous,
wicked, unholy or unworthy? Jesus died for us, and God has forgiven us.
There is no condemnation.
David wrote in the shepherd's Psalm the same truth (Psalm 23:4):
Even though I walk
through the valley of the shadow of death,
I will fear no evil....
Evil has no right any more to attach itself to me, to command me, or drag
me down. I will not be owned by evil. And Paul is saying Christ has justified
us, and has interceded for us, so do not fear evil.
We will not go through life without the things we need; we will not go through
life unforgiven, condemned, accused or overtaken by evil.
Verses 35 through 39 are ringing, glorious poetry. Name the thing that will
separate us from the love of Christ. Trouble? Hardship? Persecution? Famine?
Nakedness? Danger? Sword? We are put to death all day long for his sake.
Does that separate us from his love? It does not. We are considered as sheep
to be slaughtered, and we are conquerors in spite of these things. Neither
death, life, angels, demons, the present, the future, powers, height, depth,
nor any other thing in all creation can separate us from the love of Christ.
David drew the same conclusion a thousand years before, writing in shepherd's
language of a shepherd's life, knowing that God loved him as well. Psalm
23:6:
Surely goodness and love will follow [chase after] me
all the days of my life,
and I will dwell in the house of the Lord
forever.
I will never be separated from him.
What shall we say then? Shall we use the language of the New Testament?
The language of the Roman Empire? We think with Paul of the days that he
was at sea, in jail, beaten, threatened, stoned, accused, abandoned. Shall
we use his language and say, "God has never once separated himself
from me; the love of Christ is greater than all of that"?
Shall we use David's language?
"The Lord is my shepherd, I shall not be in want...
I will fear no evil...
I will dwell in the house of the Lord
forever."
We have language of our own. And we can be as certain as the king and the
apostle were that even though we groan, suffer, and fail, the last word
in the sanctification process is that God thinks about us every day. He
is determined to make us like Christ. Nothing will keep him from doing what
he intends to do. He intends to have many children. He intends that Christ,
our older brother, will be the model that stamps us and makes us like him.
He has brought one Son to glory and many more are to follow.
Catalog No. 4348
Romans 8:28-39
Steve Zeisler
July 11, 1993
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