Romans 14 | Grace: Applied Christianity

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And. I appreciate you being here
this morning.

We had a great celebration
last week at Easter at Less.

And now we're gathered together
back at our own home

to wrap up the last two weeks
of the book of Romans.

As we've gone through this study, chapter
by chapter.

This morning,
I'm going to be in chapter 14.

And, this is an interesting chapter.

This chapter, chapter 14

is going to hit a little differently,
for all of us.

And for those who are kind of old school
church folk,

it's going to hit a little bit harder.

For newer church folk, newer Jesus people.

It'll be like, yeah, yeah,
if you church people could get this right,

that'd be great.

So I just think that, you know, it's
going to hit a little differently.

And I'm going to have to do

a lot of interpretation and explaining,
because in the context

when it was written,
it made complete sense for us.

We have to translate a little bit.

So and I'm going to do that
as we go through chapter 14.

And so if you
have a Bible, you brought one with you.

I want you to go to chapter 14.

But but I want you to understand
chapter 14 is what I call

a study in applied Christianity.

This is a this goes beyond

I believe in Jesus and what he did
on the cross for my salvation.

Now this is how now that I believe that
this is how I apply it and work it out

and flesh it out in my life
in super practical ways.

So chapter 14, to study of what I call
applied Christianity.

And there's a big idea.

The overarching idea for this chapter
is this

spiritual maturity

includes
private liberty and public restriction.

Now, let me just tell you,
as we go through this is going to fill up.

I'm going to warn you upfront.

It's going to feel a little two faced.

You're going to feel a little bit like,
that doesn't it?

It feels

like you're waffling.

I'm not.

And it's not two face and it's not fake.

It's biblical.

But but we have to understand
on the front end that spiritual maturity

includes private, liberty
free, and Christ.

But public restriction

went around other people. It's
not to face.

It's not fake.

It's biblical. It's Christlike.

It's discipleship.

And so in chapter 14,

let's just read this, verses one and two.

As for the one

who is weak in faith, welcome him,

but not to quarrel over opinions.

One person believes he may eat anything,

while the wheat person

is for some reason a vegetarian.

And it's it's only vegetables.

So this is this is part of the
this is part of the translation

that I have to

that I, that I've got to do to so that
this makes a little bit more sense.

As for the one who is in this translation,

the English Channel version,
it says the one who is weak in faith.

There's a word missing in this translation
that should be there,

and it is in some other translations

and just helps us
understand a little bit more.

As for the one who

is weak in the faith,
that word does important

because Paul is a Paul is obviously
comparing two groups of people, right?

The what's the first one? The what?

The what?

The weak.

And he's talking to the strong.

And so he's addressing

those who are strong in the faith, talking
about those who are weak in the faith.

The word that's really important because
he's not talking about saving faith.

He's not talking about salvation. Faith.

If you believe in Jesus, you're saved.

But there's an element to this faith
thing.

The faith

strong and weak,
and what he's talking about

for those who are weak in the faith,
the faith he's talking about

is everything he's talked about in Romans
up to this point.

So like Romans five one,

we are justified by faith.

So so that's.

Romans eight one.

Those who are in Christ, there's
no condemnation for those in Christ.

And there are some people
who are weak in the faith

and are those who are strong in the faith.

And to those who are strong in the faith.

He says about those
who are weak in the faith.

Don't quarrel over opinions.

Don't argue about stuff that aren't clear.

Sin issues and salvation issues.

And so

these two groups are going to be compared
throughout this chapter.

Those who are weak in the faith

have an overly cautious conscience.

There's a lot of rules around their lives.

There's a lot of stipulations.

You don't do this. You don't do this.

You don't do this. Be very careful.

Those who are strong in the faith

understand I'm

justified by faith because of God's grace,
not because of rules.

There's no condemnation.

This gospel of grace is complete freedom.

Those are those who are confident,
living in the freedom of grace

and will.

Paul seen as those who are confident
and secure, living

in the freedom that grace brings.

Have to be very careful
with those who are who,

who live by an overly cautious conscience,
with a lot of rules.

Those who are weak in the faith,
in our vernacular, we would say, are

we know what these are like.

Like some virtue signalers

right?

And so he says,
you got to be very careful now.

He's not talking about sin issues.

He's talking about disputable matters.

He's talking about opinions
of what it means to follow.

And so here's the translation.

In verse 21, we understand

he's talking about the meat eaters
versus vegetarians.

It has it.

It has to do with religious
practice behind them.

And so the

context he's writing to Christians in Rome

and in Rome, their religious system
had a whole bunch of gods.

And it's almost like
every god had their own temple,

and they would
all practice animal sacrifices.

And when they would practice
animal sacrifices, these animals

sacrificed to these pagan gods
in these occult, cultish practices,

the church, always looking for
ways to raise money right,

would take the good cuts of meat
after being sacrificed

and sell it at a meat market right
next to the church.

And there were a lot of Christians in Rome

who felt as though it is wrong

to give your money to evil enterprises.

Things that are attached to the cult,

and to participate

in meat
that have been sacrificed to pagan idols.

You just don't do it.

God's called us to be separate
from all that stuff.

So why would you give your money?

Why would you participate
by eating what they've set?

Does that make sense?
Yeah, like you need to have some.

And some thought it was very, very wrong.

And there were others

who were very confident
living in the freedom of grace.

This meat has nothing to do
with my salvation relationship with Jesus.

It's meat, for goodness sake.

It has nothing to do with.

If my love of the Lord

and thought nothing wrong
with taking advantage

of a great price at the meat market,

I'm going to give me a good prime rib.

I had no problems with it

because it wasn't a salvation issue.

And they understood grace is greater than

that. Who Paul is talking about here.

So in our context, most of us
don't have rules around our lives.

Religious rules regarding meat,
like we'll eat bacon and ham

and all oysters and,
you know, lobster and all that, like, but

there are many in our context

who have religious issues
with other things that aren't clear.

Sin issues,

for instance, drinking alcohol.

There are some who would say no,

God's called you out of that.

You don't participate in that.

Like having a good Cuban cigar.

God's called you out of that.

It's not appropriate for a Christ follower
anymore.

Like celebrating Halloween.

Like those people watching the Chosen.

Did you know that some of the executive
producers are Mormons

and they give your attention
to that right?

It's like

homeschooling.

As if that is God's approved message
method of educating kids.

These are all disputable matters
and they're not clear send issues.

What is a clear sin issue
regarding alcohol is getting drunk,

not having a drink.

And so what Paul
is saying is there are some who are strong

in the faith,
who live in the freedom of grace.

There are those who are weak in the faith,

who have a lot of rules
around their lives.

Both are okay

because they're not clear sin issues.

Here's the danger

in the religious world

to make essentials out of non-essentials

and to make non-essential the essentials.

There are things that are essential
to the faith

one faith, one Lord, one

baptism, one Scripture.

But there's more that are not essential.

And Paul's talking about these things
that are not

essential.

People of grace

ought not despise the legalists.

Let them have all the rules they want.

But the legalists

ought not judge
the freedoms of the grace and joyous.

Everybody understand?

I want you to notice how important this is

in first Timothy four.

But the Holy Spirit tells us
clearly that in the last time,

the last days, some in
the church will turn away from Christ

and become eager followers of teachers
with devil

inspired ideas.

Now, understand what I'm saying.

We all want to turn our attention to the

people not in

the politics and the agendas.

What the Bible tells us in the last days,

some of these devil inspired
is going to be in the church.

And here's what it looks like.

These teachers will tell lies
with straight faces,

and do it so often that their conscience
don't even bother them.

They will say it's wrong

to be married and wrong to eat meat.

Even though God gave these things
to well taught Christians to enjoy

and be thankful for. Here's
what he's saying.

He's saying in the last time.

So there's going to be people who teach
with straight faces that it's wrong

to enjoy the pleasures
that God has given us to enjoy.

When it says wrong to be married.

That's a polite way of saying wrong.

To enjoy the pleasures of marriage

and eating meat is wrong.

To enjoy the delicacies
that God has provided people to enjoy.

And he's saying, in the last days
people will teach with straight faces.

That is a wrong to enjoy
what God has provided.

And Paul saying, listen,
there are some people who will live

in the freedoms of grace and enjoy,
and there's others who will,

out of a way to honor God, will put strict
restrictions around their life.

Just just let it be.

Be it.

Each of us will answer to God.

You won't answer to me.

I won't answer
and we won't answer to each other.

We'll answer to God.
That's where Paul's coming from.

So let's go on.

Watch this.

Verses three and four.

Let not the one who eats
despise the one who abstains.

And let not the one who abstains
pass judgment on the one who eats.

For God has what?

What?

God's welcome to both of us.

Who are you

to pass
judgment on the servant of another?

It is before his own master
that he stands or falls.

And he will be upheld.

For the Lord is able to make him stand.

But the Bible says

God will make his servant stand.

Again, we're not talking about issues
that are clear sin issues.

We're talking about issues of conviction,
personal issues of conviction

that God says for you.

I want you to abstain for you.

Go ahead and enjoy. We're talking
about these disputable matters.

But the point is this.

And this is what we have to understand.

I must not make God's convictions

of me to be commandments for you,

and you must not make God's convictions
of you

to be commandments for me to understand.

You understand

God may be convicting me of something,

but that doesn't mean
it's his commandment for you.

God may have convicted you of something,
but that doesn't mean

it's his commandment for me
over these disputable matters.

To his own master, I will stand or fall.

You will stand or fall.

You won't stand or fall before me.

I will stand, fall for you.

We will stand or fall before God.

And God is able to make me stand.

God is able to make you stand
as long as we are abiding.

The leading of the spirit in us.

In these beautiful matters
and some hope with great liberty,

and some will be with great restriction.

Now watch this.

One person esteems

one day as better than another,
while another esteems all days alike.

Each one should be fully convinced
in his own

mind.

Look at the one who observes the day.

Observes it in honor of the Lord.

The one who eats, eating

honor of the Lord.

Since he give thanks to God,
while the other, who abstains, abstains

in honor of the Lord and give
thanks to God.

For none of us lives to himself,
and none of us dies to himself.

For if we live, we live to the Lord.

And if we die, we die to the Lord.

So then, whether we live
or whether we die,

we are the Lord's.

So Paul's dealing

with not only this, these kosher laws

and the freedoms

in his context of this meat,
these liberties.

He's also dealing with the issue
of when you worship

against in that culture,
it was really important

the Jewish holidays and celebrations
and abiding by them and the day of worship

before the resurrection,
the church worshiped on Saturdays

because that was according to the the,
the example of God, the Sabbath.

After the resurrection,

the church moved its worship
to Sunday in honor of the resurrection.

But there are some who said, no, no, no.

Biblically, this is the day you worship,
and some of those people

still are around today.

And Paul says,
I don't care when you worship God

if you're worshiping as to honor the Lord,
how about it?

If you want to say this is the one day
for you to honor, great.

But honestly, every day is God's.

So whenever you choose,
do it now in America,

we set that aside that day aside
for Sunday because it fits culturally.

It fits who we are.

That's why
we have corporate church on Sunday,

and we do it as honoring the Lord.

Does it make sense?

You know, this is

this.

This even gets to the idea of the Sabbath.

And there are some who say, like,
like like the Sabbath.

You don't you don't do anything

you like, put on Netflix
and take a nap like you don't, do.

You? Just.

And and we forget

that unless it's done to honor the Lord,
it's wrong.

Even if it is obeying the law.

And we forget that Jesus

said the Sabbath wasn't

man wasn't made to keep the Sabbath.

The Sabbath was given to man
as a gift to recalibrate.

And so I still serve the kingdom
on the Sabbath.

I'm still industrious
for the kingdom on the Sabbath.

I still serve people on the Sabbath,

but I don't work for my future
on my Sabbath.

Does it make sense?

And I do that to honor the Lord.

This.

I like how the Living Bible translates
this.

The Living Bible says like this.

Some think that Christians

should observe the Jewish holidays
as special days to worship God,

but others say it's wrong and foolish
to go

through all that trouble for every day
like belongs to God.

On the questions of this kind, everyone
wants to say, must decipher himself.

If you have special days for worshiping
the Lord, you're trying to honor him.

You're doing a good thing.

So is the person who eats meat

that has been offered to idols.

He's thankful to the Lord for it.

He's doing right.

And the person who won't touch such meat.

He too is anxious to please the Lord
and is thankful

we are not our own bosses to live or

die, as we ourselves might choose.

For this very reason,
Christ died and returned to life,

so that he might be the Lord of both
the dead and the living.

You then why do you
judge your brother or sister,

or why do you treat them with contempt?

For we will all stand before
God's judgment seat.

It is written as surely as I live,
says the Lord.

Every knee will bow before me.

Every tongue will acknowledge God.

So then each of us
will give an account of ourselves to God.

Here's what he's saying.

He's saying this whole idea,

whatever we do is to be done
in honor of God,

not in pushing my liberty

on someone who has experience it,
and not in restricting myself.

Because I think out of my restriction,
it makes me more religious

and righteous.

When Paul talks about

everyone of God will make us stand.

Everyone of us will
then stand before the judgment seat.

I want to understand what that is.

When Paul

talks about the judgment seat
in Romans 14,

he's not talking about the judgment of God
over salvation.

He's talking about a different judgment
seat.

Did you know there's just a couple
of different judgments?

What he's talking about here

is the judgment seat of Christ,
and it's called the Bema Seat.

Everybody say bema.

That's the Greek word that's used for
the judgment seat is the Bema Seat.

Here's why this is important.

The Bema Seat here in other places
is different

from the great White Throne of Judgment

in Revelation 20

that deals with sin, salvation,
and damnation.

That's not what Paul's time is not saying
that we will all stand before that seat.

He's saying every Christian will stand
before the Bema Seat.

Here's why that's important.

Because the beam is seat.

This is different
from the seat of judgment.

This Bema seat

is the seat of reward judgment,
not salvation.

Judgment.

So everybody who has a relationship
with the father through the son

will stand
before the reward judgment seat.

That's called the Bema Seat in Scripture.

Let me show you where
it comes up in other places

at the Bema Seat.

We're not judged for salvation.

We're rewarded for sacrifice.

This is really important
for us to understand.

Amen.

Second Corinthians 510

for we must all appear
before the judgment seat of Christ.

That's the BMC,
the same one that Paul uses in Romans 14.

We will all him for the judgment
seat of Christ, the Bema Seat,

so that each 1st May receive what is due

for what he has done in the body,
whether good or evil.

This is a different judgment
than salvation, because salvation

is not dependent upon what we do,
but on what Jesus has done.

Rewards are based on what we've done.

Do you understand?

And there are real rewards in heaven

on a real new earth.

And those rewards are not salvation.

That's faith.

By God's grace,
but the rewards that we will be given

will be based on throughout all eternity

on what we've done on earth.

You need to understand this.

This is what Paul saying.

Each one of us will stand before the beam
and see the Christ

and receive

from him the rewards for what we've done.

Again, not salvation, but rewards.

Jesus told a parable in Luke

19 that the servants of a master.

When the master went away,
the servants were expected

to be industrious
and serve the interests of the master.

And the master returned and demanded
an accounting of what they've done.

He said, such is the kingdom of God.

How you and I invest

and increase
what's been given us to further

the kingdom of God in this world,
and to serve the kingdom

interests in this world
has profound impact

on our experience
and rewards throughout eternity.

You have to understand this.

We are

saved because of God's grace
through faith.

Done.

But we are rewarded

and how we invest and propel the Kingdom
of God and the interest of the kingdom

on this earth
in real time, with our time, our talents,

and our treasures.

The neglect

of investing our time, our talent
and our treasure on earth

and the Kingdom of God
has profound detriment

on your eternity,

not your salvation,

but your rewards in eternity.

And every one of Christ's
people will stand before him

at the Bema Seat.

And face the ledger.

Do you understand?

Understand?

So towards that end,

I have these serve brochures

that.

Time, talent and treasure.

For some, it's going to require a profound

reorganizing
and reprioritizing of your time,

of your schedules,

of your priorities and your finances.

If you're not

involved in the work of the Kingdom

and the advancement of the kingdom
and the kingdom's interests

through your local church,

this will help you find out where.

Now, I don't have a brochure
about your finances.

Just start giving.

We all I you

need to invest, actively invest your time,

your talent and your treasure. Now

your eternal rewards are based on that,

not your salvation.

Here's here's I want you understand this.

Grace saves you.

Faithfulness rewards you.

And what you and I do

today will echo in eternity.

And we will stand before

the Bema Seat of Christ.

Be clear. Clearer.

Not clear. For.

Romans 14 hits, doesn't it?

Yeah. Yeah.

Like some of you're thinking.

Okay, I didn't like Easter was fun.

This is an Easter.

You know, I.

Do realize that

this is what Easter leads to.

This is applied Christianity.

This is Christianity 101.

All right.

You want to be apprentice of Jesus?

This is what we're talking about.

Look at verses 13 through 16.

Therefore, anytime you find the word
therefore, you have to ask, what's it?

Therefore. Sorry.

In light of everything Paul said.

Let us not pass judgment on one

another any longer, assuming that we have,

but rather decide
never to put a stumbling block

or hindrance
in the way of a brother or sister.

I know and am persuaded in the Lord
Jesus that nothing is unclean in itself,

but it is unclean
for anyone who thinks it to be unclean.

For if your brother is grieved by what you
eat, you are no longer walking in love.

But what you eat do by what you eat.

Do not destroy
the one for whom Christ died.

So do not let what you regard

as good be spoke of as evil.

So like this.

You got complete freedom in grace.

You got complete liberty and grace.

But here's what he's saying.

This is the best way I can say it.

Freedom isn't to be flaunted.

My freedom

and grace is not to be flaunted
in front of other people

who haven't understood that,
or who don't live in it yet.

My freedom is to be yielded
in consideration of others.

And let me just tell you this
I got this wrong for a long time.

I've been on both sides of this equation.

I grew up in a church
that was really religious

and really strict, and everybody knew

you don't smoke, you don't chew, you don't
go with girls that do like their.

You just are you just
there's a lot of rules around life

and what it means to be a Christian.

Now, I grew up in that culture,

and when I had this, like,
I kind of refer to as,

almost like a, conversion of grace.

And I finally understood the freedom
I have in Christ.

Like, I'm completely free
from all those stupid rules

that, like,
I just explode, like, yes, I love this.

It's so liberating.

And here's why I was at fault.

I flaunted that freedom

in front of other people
that weren't there yet.

And I was like, well,
you know, too bad for you.

Like, this is Grace and you better love it
because it's awesome.

And I allowed what was good

and the grace of God to be spoken.

Evil of.

Because of my immaturity.

Yeah.

My ignorance and arrogance.

So I've been on both sides of this.

I'm still learning.

I'm still learning what it means
to be an apprentice of Jesus.

And I got. So I got some.
I got some ways to go yet, but.

But what Paul is saying is, look,
these are not sin issues.

So if you enjoy this grace, enjoy it,
but don't flaunt it.

You might have to sacrifice it

for the sake of some other people
that Jesus died for.

Verses 70, 17 or 19

for the kingdom of God
is not a matter of eating

and drinking,
but of righteousness and peace and joy.

And the Holy Spirit,

whoever that serves Christ, is acceptable

to God and approved by man.

So then let us pursue

what makes for peace
and for mutual upbuilding.

Here's what he's saying.

When we get this and start living this way
that I enjoy the freedoms God has given,

I enjoy grace,

and I let people who live with a lot
of church and stuff with restriction.

If that's where God's
let them, God's let them. They're.

But I'm going to

sacrifice my freedom
for the sake of someone else's

faith.

And when I do that,
God approves of that life.

Living,

and it makes other people think,

well of God and his people.

And I'm to live in this way,
because this helps keep the peace

amongst God's people and builds them up.

See what he's talking about?

Here is the overarching rule,
and here's what it is.

Do not, for the sake of food,
destroy the work of God.

Everything is indeed clean,
absolutely complete liberty.

But it is wrong for anyone
to make another stumble

by the expression of their liberty.

It's good not to eat me.

It's good not to exercise your liberty
in public or drink

or do anything that causes your brother
to stumble.

Here's the overarching rule
that Paul's talking about.

It's the law of love.

It's the law of love.

And this is this is my concern for me.

And this is my concern
for American Christians,

because some are more American
than they are Christlike,

because I'm out to protect
my freedoms at all costs.

And if God hasn't said, I can't do this,

I'm going to do it regardless.

Because I am free.

Free indeed.

And we teeter on being more American

than we are Christlike.

So the idea is this that we live
like this.

You belong to him rather than like

freedom belongs to you.

Amen.

I must learn to live
like I belong to Jesus.

Not like freedom belongs to me.

He says don't put a stumbling block.

I need to be a stepping stone.

And if laying down my freedom,
that's good.

Freedom.

So that someone else can take a step
forward.

That's living by the law of love.

And how much more attractive would I
and the church be

if that's how we lift up?

All of this

reminds me of one of the affirmations
of the Reformation.

The Reformation was this.

In the essentials for salvation,
we show unity and the non-essentials.

We show liberty in all things.

We show charity or love.

So in the essentials,
there are essentials to the faith.

There's one faith, one Lord, one Christ,
one cross, one baptism, one Scripture.

We are unified in that,
but in all the other stuff

we have great liberty.

We let people stand or fall before God,

but in all things we show love.

This is back to where we started
verses 22.

The faith that you have keep
between yourself and God.

I'm going to talk about that
because it doesn't mean what you think

in first reading

between you and God.

Blessed is the one who has no reason
to pass judgment on himself for what

he approves.

But whoever has doubts is condemned

if he eats
because the eating is not from faith.

For whatever does not proceed from
faith is sin.

What he's saying is just listen.

If you have doubts about the liberties
that are yours in Christ

and you transgress those doubts,

it's sin for you
because you're not doing it to honor God.

You're doing it in opposition
to your own conscience.

That the way God is leading
you internally.

So don't violate
what the spirit is telling you.

If the Spirit's telling you,
I need to avoid these things

for my own conscience
on my own, then avoid them.

But if the Holy Spirit's telling you like
this are these are negotiable.

These are nonessential things,
and you want to enjoy it,

but just do it
with the overarching law of love,

and don't use it as a stumbling block
for somebody.

What he's saying here is, is.

Spiritual maturity.

Do you understand?

This now involves private liberty

and public restriction.

And so if I am one who loves and enjoys

the freedoms of grace,
then I have every right under God

because he has made me stand to enjoy
all those freedoms

in private.

I don't mean like,

you know,
I I'm day drinking in the closet.

That's not what I'm talking about.

Like,

well, what I'm talking about is like,

I can enjoy those amongst
other people who also enjoy the freedoms,

but in public, where people might struggle
with that,

then I have to practice
public restriction.

This makes sense.

You follow.

Guys, this is applied Christianity 101,

and I do it

because I'm so desperately

desiring to honor my Lord

and show love to other people.

The Living Bible translation

of this is, as you may know, that
there's nothing wrong with what you do,

even from God's point of view, but

keep it to yourself.

Don't put your faith in front of others

who might be hurt by it.

That's a good word

when it says,
keep your faith between you and

God is not talking about your witness.

It's not talking about first Peter 315.

Always be ready to give a reason
for the hope that you have.

Like you're still vocal with your witness.

You don't keep your faith private.

You keep your liberties
between you and God.

Does that make sense?
Not your witness and testimony.

You understand the difference between
stand up and be clear about that.

So I can't go through chapter 14

without diving into the first part of 15,
because this all ties right in.

So just bear with me. Let me get through.

Let me get through the first part of
chapter 15, because at the end of the day,

if I love my brother,
I will limit my public liberty,

because love for you
is greater than liberty for myself.

That's what Paul saying.

I mean, it's exactly what Jesus did

on the cross.

He laid down his liberty.

Because of our failings and weaknesses.

Verses
one, two and three of of chapter 15.

We who are strong.

You understand
what he's talking about on the right.

When you are strong, have an obligation

to bear with the failings of the weak
and not to please ourselves.

Let each of us please
his neighbor for his good to build him up.

A law of love for Christ
did not please himself, just like we said.

But as it was written, the reproaches of
those who reproached you for fall on me.

Spoken love of Christ.

And so he says, listen.

Jesus laid down

all of his rights and liberties.

For you and me.

And to live
according to the law of love means

we do the same with our liberties
for the sake of others.

Now watch this verse for

for whatever was written in former days.

Well, what's the former days?

Was the former days

for you?

You seem unsure for what was in the former
days was written for our instruction

that through endurance

and through the encouragement
of the scriptures, we might have hope.

What's the former days
and what's the scriptures?

Paul's talking about

the old times, everything before
Matthew, he's saying, listen

for whatever.

Whatever was written in the former days
was written for our instruction,

that through endurance

and through the encouragement
of those scriptures, we might have hope.

Listen, ask yourselves this question.

Ask yourself, are you tired?

Are you discouraged?

Are you losing hope?

Some of you are like,
oh, I'm not losing. I'm.

I lost it already. It's gone.

See, it's through the scriptures,

the Old Testament and the New Testament
that you get those back.

Alright. Are you tired?

The Old Testament,
New Testament work together.

Are you discouraged?
The Old Testament doesn't work together.

Are you losing hope?

The Old Testament, New Testament work
together. Here's what we need.

We need both.

It's important for both the Old Testament
and to gain hope,

because we get the beauty and the truth
in the New Testament, and we get the death

and the foundation. The old.

And he's saying what we need
is both the depth

and the foundation of the Old Testament
and the beauty and the truth of the new.

All my friends,

we get a lot of good New Testament
beauty and truth.

On Sunday morning, and we've dive.

We've, we've we dive into the Old
Testament once in a while, too.

But here's what I want you to know.

This that currently we are drinking deep
from the Old Testament.

Well, on Wednesday nights,
you people who come, you know,

we're diving deep in the Old Testament

for the depth
and the foundation of our faith.

And we get the beauty

of the New Testament on Sunday morning.

But if you and I neglect

the study of both,
we do so to our own detriment.

I want to understand that.

There's a truth in second Timothy 316

that says all Scripture,
new and old, is profitable

for teaching, rebuking, correcting,
and training in righteousness,

that the person of God may be approved
and equipped for everything.

And he both.

But watch this

again.

Second Timothy,
for the time will come in the end times,

when people will not put up a sound
doctrine.

Sunday is good,

I'm telling you.

Wednesday is deep.

Sound profound Old Testament doctrine

that feeds the beauty
and the truth of the New Testament.

I love my wins in that group.

You guys are in it.

It's good stuff.

And you're all invited,

but at some point you need both.

Let me wrap up with this.

May the God of endurance.

May the God of encouragement
grant you to live in such harmony

with one another, in accord with Christ
Jesus.

May the God of encouragement
and the God of endurance,

because you're in the word,
you're living by the law of love.

Grant you to live
in harmony with one another.

The old story goes like this.

Charles Spurgeon and Dwight Moody,
great preachers,

great theologians, contemporaries.

The story goes like this.

One of them loved a good cigar

and the other love the good food.

And Charles Spurgeon

met D.L.

Moody for a meeting, and Charles
Spurgeon was smoking a cigar.

And D.L.

Moody said, how can you, man of God,

smoke that cigar?

And so Spurgeon

patted Moody on his big belly and said,

the same way that you men of God
can be so fat.

Here's the point.

I have to be mindful

of chastising sin and another

while cherishing it in myself.

You have to be mindful

of chastising your sin
and someone else for cherishing it

in yourself.

Do you understand?

This is a law of grace.

This is
the freedom that we have in Christ,

and freedom to lay our freedoms down
for the sake of someone else.

Because we remember

that grace is greater than.

The experience

of grace begins with repentance.

And with repentance comes freedom.

That's the invitation.

To live freely in Christ

and to abide by the promptings
of the Holy Spirit in you.

To restrict
what he encourages you to restrict,

to enjoy what he gives you, to enjoy.

To answer to God for those things
because we're not sin issues,

and to let other people live in that same

freedom.

Chastising the sin in ourselves

rather than what we see in others.

Follow

applied Christianity.

This is how we live. It.

Why don't you pray with me?

Father.

Thank you. Thank

thank you
for the opportunity that you've given us

to interact with you through your word.

Thank you that it is so,

so plain and so relevant,

that it's so transformed,
that it's alive and active,

and that we to interact with this life

being called your word.

Thank you that through it
we find encouragement and endurance,

freedom

and restriction.

I pray, father, that you allow us

who are yours, to live simply to honor

you both in our restrictions
and in the enjoyment of freedom.

But to do so under the auspices of

not just honoring you,
but loving those around us.

Holy spirit,

I ask that in this moment

that for those issues in me,

that for those issues
in us that are sin issues,

that we repent.

And that in repentance

you allow us the experience of your grace.

And in that grace we find freedom.

Friends,
I'm gonna invite you in this moment.

Like at.

Would you just ask if you so dare

say God,

what's my sin stuff?

Where have I cherished sin in me?

And maybe where have I chastised

sin and others?

And then seek his forgiveness.

Repent of it.

God. I'm sorry.

I've winked at sin in me.

I've cherished it.

Maybe it's God. I'm sorry.

I flaunted my grace and my freedom
in front of other people, and it spits.

It's caused some to stumble.

And I repent of that.

And father, as your people repent,

as they as we.

Come before you in repentance

and thanking you for the forgiveness
that you've offered through your son.

I ask in the

name of your son that you give us all,

that your grace will allow you.

We love you.

Thank you that you loved us first.

In your name I pray. Amen.

Alright.

Romans had been a good study, hadn't it?

It hits

if you're listening.

It hits.

We're going to wrap it up next week.

Last part of 15 or 16
and it gets real personal.

And so my my, my, my ask of you this week

read chapter
14 and 15, read it with some new eyes.

And as you read it, just say, God,
would you speak to me through your word?

What do you want to tell me
through your word?

What's your word? Saying?

And the read verse.

Chapters 14 and 15.

Okay. And then get into 16 a little bit.

We'll talk about it next week.

Listen, I love you.

It's been good for us to go through.

You okay?

Yeah. Yeah, yeah.

All right. Hey,

either go from this place and live

in all the restrictions
that God's put on you

or go from this place

and live and enjoying the freedoms
God's placed on you.

Either way,

do it to honor him. Yeah. Let's sing.

Romans 14 | Grace: Applied Christianity
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