| August 19, 2001 |
Bethlehem Baptist Church |
|   |
John Piper, Pastor |
Who Is This Divided Man?
Part 5
(Romans 7:14-25)
For we know that the Law is spiritual, but
I am of flesh, sold into bondage to sin.
15 For what I am doing, I do not understand;
for I am not practicing what I would like
to do, but I am doing the very thing I hate.
16 But if I do the very thing I do not want
to do, I agree with the Law, confessing that
the Law is good. 17 So now, no longer am
I the one doing it, but sin which dwells
in me. 18 For I know that nothing good dwells
in me, that is, in my flesh; for the willing
is present in me, but the doing of the good
is not. 19 For the good that I want, I do
not do, but I practice the very evil that
I do not want. 20 But if I am doing the very
thing I do not want, I am no longer the one
doing it, but sin which dwells in me. 21
I find then the principle that evil is present
in me, the one who wants to do good. 22 For
I joyfully concur with the law of God in
the inner man, 23 but I see a different law
in the members of my body, waging war against
the law of my mind and making me a prisoner
of the law of sin which is in my members.
24 Wretched man that I am! Who will set me
free from the body of this death? 25 Thanks
be to God through Jesus Christ our Lord!
So then, on the one hand I myself with my
mind am serving the law of God, but on the
other, with my flesh the law of sin.
Is the experience of this divided man in
Romans 7:14-25 the experience of Paul, the
born again, Christian man and therefore
a picture of part of our own Christian experience
or is this divided man a description
of Paul before he was converted? We have
answered: It is Christian experience. And
therefore there is much to learn here about
who we are as Christians. And oh, how crucial
it is that we know ourselves realistically
lest we become proud with the presumption of perfection in this life, or become hopeless
with the impossibility of perfection in this life. Pastorally,
the great aim of these messages on Romans
7 is to draw you away from presumption to
humility and away from despair to hope.
I have given you seven reasons, so far, for
seeing the passage this way. Today I will
give you two more, and then wrap up Romans
7 on the following Sunday at least
that's my plan. And, as always, the point
is not merely to argue for the view that
this passage is about Christian experience,
but to explain the view and show its relevance
to all of us. Reasons for believing something
usually explain better what you are believing.
That is what I hope happens today
with the effect of humble hope and hopeful
humility in our lives.
8. The Body of This Death
Some would ask, "Can a real Christian cry
out with the words of verse 24b, 'Who will
set me free from the body of this death?'
Is a Christian trapped or enslaved or imprisoned
in a 'body of death'"? My answer to this
is: "Can a real Christian NOT cry out, 'Who
will set me free from the body of this death?'"
Of course the cry is accompanied by the answer
to the cry in the following words in verse
25, "Thanks be to God through Jesus Christ
our Lord!" In other words, God will set me
free from the body of this death. And he
will do it through Jesus Christ our Lord.
But we must ask, "What does it mean not to be set free now from the body of this
death?" That is what gives some people pause
to think that a believer should think
of himself as unfree, or imprisoned in a
"body of death." What does that mean? And
what does Paul mean by being set free from
this body of death?
First, let's make sure we clarify what he
does not mean. Someone might hear Paul talk about
being set free from the body of death and
think that he regards the body itself as
evil and the spirit as good, and that salvation
consists in the spirit flying free from the
carcass of the body. There are philosophies
and religions that think that way about body
and spirit, the material world and the immaterial
world. Spirit is good. Body is bad. The material
stuff of the universe is unreal and burdensome.
But the immaterial stuff the spirit
is real and good. Salvation means
shedding the material and being caught up
in and united to the universal Spirit.
That is emphatically not what Christianity
teaches. Paul faced that kind of teaching
about the material world and about the body.
He was emphatic in denying it. For example,
when some people in Corinth said that certain
foods were unclean, he said in 1 Corinthians
10:25-26, "Eat anything that is sold in the
meat market without asking questions for
conscience' sake; for the earth is the Lord's,
and all it contains." In other words, God
made it, God owns it, and it is good. You
are free to eat it.
But what about the body? In 1 Corinthians
6:13 he said, "The body is not for immorality,
but for the Lord, and the Lord is for the
body." The body is not a piece of throw-away
junk that we are glad to get rid of at death.
It is designed by the Lord for the Lord:
"The body is for the Lord, and the Lord is
for the body." In 1 Corinthians 6:19b-20,
Paul says, "You are not your own. For you
have been bought with a price: therefore
glorify God in your body." Christ died to
buy your body. For what? It does not belong
to you. You have it as a trust for one ultimate
purpose: to use it in ways that make God
look like an all-satisfying treasure
to glorify God. That is what the body is
for. (See Philippians 1:20; Romans 6:13,
19.)
Resurrection, not Throw-away Junk
That is why the Christian hope is resurrection
of the body, not trashing of the body. You
will have a body forever and ever. If being
set free from the curse of a material body
were the Christian hope, then Paul would
not have taught us that our bodies will be
raised from the dead. In Philippians 3:21
he says, "[Christ] will transform the body
of our humble state into conformity with
the body of His glory." You will have a body
in the resurrection forever and ever
either a glorious, satisfied one in the kingdom
of God, or a horrible, suffering one in hell.
So when Paul says in Romans 7:24b "Who will
set me free from the body of this death?"
he does not mean that the body is evil and
that salvation is to shed the body the way
a butterfly sheds a cocoon. What then does
he mean? What does "body of this death" refer
to?
He means two things, at least: First, the
body is going to die because we all inherit
the curse of Adam (Romans 5:12); and second,
the body joins forces with sin and bears
fruit for death (Romans 7:5). The body is
going to die because we are all fallen creatures;
and the body is going to die because it is
a traitor. It partners with sin to bring
us into bondage over and over again (Romans
6:13). So the body is a "body of death" not
because it is intrinsically evil, but because
it is fallen and sells out to evil.
Paul explains the term "body of this death"
a few verses later in Romans 8:10. He says,
"If Christ is in you, though the body is dead because of sin, yet the spirit is alive because of righteousness."
This body is as good as dead. It is going
to die. That's the effect of the curse.
So what is Paul crying out for when he says
in Romans 7:24, "Who will set me free from
the body of this death?" He is not crying
out for separation of body and spirit. He
could accomplish that with suicide. He is
crying out for deliverance from the body's
temptations now and finally for the redemption
of his body at the resurrection. Romans 8:11
goes on to say, "But if the Spirit of Him
who raised Jesus from the dead dwells in
you, He who raised Christ Jesus from the
dead will also give life to your mortal bodies
through His Spirit who dwells in you." Your
body is going to be raised. That's what he
yearns for a redeemed resurrection
body.
In other words, the redemption the
liberation that Christ purchased on
the cross is applied to us in stages, not
all at once. We saw it in Romans 8:10, that
your spirit is alive and will never die but
your body is doomed to die. Or look how Romans
8:23 says it: "We ourselves, having the first
fruits of the Spirit, even we ourselves groan
within ourselves, waiting eagerly for our adoption as sons, the redemption of our body."
Our redemption comes to us in stages: Already,
now we have the Holy Spirit. And already
now our spirits are alive because of Christ's
righteousness. But we still groan. Why? Because
we must wait for our bodies to be redeemed.
When will that happen? At the resurrection.
"Wretched man that I am! Who will set me
free from the body of this death?" That is
the real cry of a Christian saint. Not because
we are not redeemed, but because the redemption
Christ bought for us comes to us in stages.
First, life in the Spirit and justification
and progressive sanctification; then at the resurrection, the redemption of the
body. Till then it is a body of death, and
we groan. We groan because of its diseases
and we groan because of its treasonous complicity
with sin. Romans 7:24 is a Christian cry.
9. The Law of Sin and Death
How shall we answer the counter-argument
that Romans 8:1-2 seems to signal that in
Christ the failures of Romans 7 are left
behind? Paul begins Romans 8 with these words:
"Therefore there is now [!] no condemnation
for those who are in Christ Jesus. For the
law of the Spirit of life in Christ Jesus
has set you free from the law of sin and
of death." Many commentators take this to
mean that the experience of Romans 7 is past
and done with.
Note especially the term "law of sin and
death" in verse 2 and compare it to Romans
7:22-23, "I joyfully concur with the law
of God in the inner man, but I see a different
law in the members of my body, waging war
against the law of my mind and making me
a prisoner of the law of sin which is in my members." There you see the
term, "law of sin." It is a principle or
power or rule of sin working through the
body (just as we have seen making
the body a "body of death"), and taking Paul
captive so that he does what he doesn't want
to do.
But in Romans 8:2 it says, "Now . . . the law of the Spirit of life in Christ
Jesus has set you free from the law of sin." So those on the other side of this debate
say, "You see, Romans 7 is describing the
experience of a person before they are in
Christ before they are Christian.
Before you are a Christian and have the Holy
Spirit, the 'law of sin' takes you captive.
And after you become a Christian and have
the Holy Spirit, you are free from the law
of sin."
But is it that simple? Does Romans 8:2 have
to mean that after you become a Christian
this principle or rule or authority of sin
never gets the upper hand? I have tried to
show for several sermons now that this is
not what Paul teaches. In fact, he teaches
just the opposite. Sin does threaten all
the time to get the upper hand in
the Christian life and we must fight against
it. Verse 13 of chapter 8 says, we must "put
to death the deeds of the body." Romans 6:13
says, "Do not go on presenting the members
of your body to sin as instruments of unrighteousness."
The battle is real. Temporary defeat is possible.
So what does the freedom of Romans 8:2 mean
then when it says, "The law of the Spirit
of life in Christ Jesus has set you free
from the law of sin"? I think it means exactly
what Romans 6:14 means when it says, "Sin
shall not be master over you, for you are
not under law but under grace." Virtually
nobody takes that to mean that at the moment
you are justified you become sinlessly perfect.
Most people agree that it means: the decisive,
final power of sin to dominate and destroy
your life is broken. You enter a new freedom.
With the power of the Spirit you can defeat
sin.
So when Paul says in Romans 7:23 that the
"law of sin" takes him captive, and then
says in Romans 8:2 that the Spirit of life
in Christ Jesus has set him free from the
law of sin, I think he means that the defeat
and captivity of Romans 7:23 is not his chief
or final condition. The Spirit has set him free from the "law of sin" as the
decisive, final power to defeat and destroy
him. The Spirit often gives him the victory.
And increasingly gives him the victory. And
in the end will give him the final victory.
And he cannot be destroyed by the "law of
sin" because the back of the enemy has been
broken. His head has been severed from his
body. We fight him as we fight a defeated
foe. And in Christ Jesus who has bought the
victory we will win. Let me close with this
application. In view of the Bible's description
of our human condition that there
is a "law of sin and death," and that the
body is under a curse and becomes the base
of operations for this law of sin, and is
therefore a body of death, and in view of
the fact that our redemption in Christ Jesus
from the "law of sin" and the body of death
comes progressively and in stages
all this should prepare us not to be surprised
or unduly shaken when we meet in ourselves
and in others excessive and distorted bodily
desires that tempt us to sin.
Excessive and Distorted Desires
We see excessive desires for leisure tempting
us to laziness. We see excessive desires
for food tempting us to gluttony. We see
excessive desires for drink tempting us to
alcoholism. We see excessive desires for
sex tempting us to lustfulness. And on top
of that the law of sin not only stirs up
excessive desires, it produces distorted
desires. We see distorted desires for food
tempting people to eat gray river clay in
some southern states or binge on bags of
cookies. We see distorted desires for sex
tempting people to go after satisfaction
with people of the same sex. We see people
with distorted desires for pleasure tempting
people to use marijuana or speed or cocaine
or LSD.
And what I want to do, as always, is point
you to a Biblical realism in Jesus Christ.
By faith in Christ we are united to him.
He becomes our pardon and our righteousness.
And his Spirit is given to us. And the issue
now is not: Do you have excessive desires
or distorted desires? The issue is: Will
you continue to cry out with Paul: "O wretched
man that I am" and look away from yourself
to Christ as your only hope, and fight in
the power that he supplies and put to death
the deeds of the body (Romans 8:13)? Or will
you surrender and sell out finally to an
alien slave-master and make peace with the
body of death and the law of sin?
Jesus Christ, who died to purchase your body
for his glory, is worthy of your fullest
allegiance. Christ can save. No one else.
Don't forsake him for the fleeting pleasures
of the law of sin and the body of death.
Copyright 2001 John Piper
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