This
morning I want to turn to Paul’s Letter to the Romans, in Chapter 10.
Paul
was specially and uniquely called by God to be an Apostle to the Gentiles, but
he never forgot his own Jewish people.
This Letter was directed to the Jews who were carrying a mistaken
belief, but its teaching is equally applicable to us, as all Paul’s Letters
are.
Paul’s greatest desire was to make
people Christians, a noble cause and one we could wish all preachers to-day to
adopt. He was concerned the Jews were
being misled to follow the wrong way to salvation, which can only be achieved
by accepting Jesus Christ as Lord.
The
Jews believed that all that was necessary for salvation was to keep the Ten
Commandments, but no one can keep the Commandments for it is like a chain, if
you break one link it all falls apart, and the Bible states if you break one
you break the lot, and we have all, without exception broken at least one. Therefore one cannot be saved by the
Commandments.
The
word ‘saved’ does cause an emotional response with a lot of people, as it
conjures up an image of being approached by a Charismatic Christian asking are
you saved brother (sister).
I
read of a man sitting in a theatre when someone came up and asked if the vacant
seat next to him was saved, and he wittingly answered, ‘no, but I am’, at which
the person moved away quickly.
God
sent Jesus to supplant the Law, and make it possible for all people to be saved
if they accepted Christ as having died on the Cross to obtain forgiveness for
the sins they committed.
Coming
to the heart of this passage, verse 9 states, ‘if you confess with your mouth
that Jesus is Lord and believe in your heart that God raised Him from the dead,
you will be saved’.
Confession
that Jesus is Lord, and singing the hymn, is not an intellectual title or a
casual statement, it means much more.
You have to believe fully in your heart this is so, and have no doubt
that God raised Him physically from the dead; that is the heart of the
Christian message. So when you do
believe and are prepared to confess with your mouth, God accepts you as
righteous.
The
Bible states, ‘by grace you have been saved through faith, it is not your own
doing, it is the gift of God and not by your own works.’
Something in us always wants to add to God’s
free grace. It’s humbling to admit that we can do nothing to earn our
deliverance from sin. Imagine what heaven would be like if we had to earn our
way there. People would be trying to outbid each other and probably boasting
how important they had been in the world.
When I was being inducted to a parish the Rural Dean who was a
real traditional English gentleman, introduced me to a man who wanted me to know how important he was. Heaven would
be just like that if you had to earn your way there. But it won’t be like that,
when Jesus died on the cross, he paid the full price for your salvation. God
alone gets the glory in your salvation. Jesus did all the work when he died on
the cross.
I
have been told countless times all one has to do is to be good, be kind and
honest, and you will go to heaven; no need to go to Church, sing hymns and read
the Bible. They will learn to regret
this belief.
There was a series on television in which a
young police constable is partnered on duty by an attractive young police woman
who is fond of him, but he does not respond. His Sergeant tells him he should
make a decision and respond, as one day he will regret not doing so; and then
says The
two saddest words in the English language are, if only.. There are so many people who will one day
appear before the Lord and say, ‘if only’.
esus himself warned that
on the Day of Judgment many will claim to have been His followers, but He will
say to them, ‘depart from me. I never knew you.’ Millions have not the
slightest idea of what it really meant to be a Christian.
People have been
attending church for years, listening to the Bible being read, singing praise
to the Lord, and have been very religious, yet have never come to the time when
they have acknowledged Jesus as Lord, yet the Bible calls on us to do so.
We have admit to the fundamental fact that we live in an evil
world and we all become tainted and lost, but by the grace of God He gives us
an opportunity to come to Christ and be saved. The majority of people do not
consider they need saving as they think their lives are already safe. The thought they are sinners is mortally
wounding, as one Vicar discovered when he put a notice outside his church
saying this Church is here for sinners; half his congregation were absent the
next week. Sin is not just murder, theft
and immorality; it includes pride, jealousy, envy, anger and hatred
Verse 11 states that all who believe in
Jesus will not be put to shame, but there are too many Christians who are
ashamed to admit they follow Jesus.
Verse12
reminds us that God has no favourites, and will accept all who call on Jesus.
A question often asked is what about
those who have never heard of Jesus. If someone is in such a remote place where
the Bible has not been taught, they will be judged by how they responded to
their conscience, for everyone has a sense of what is right and what is
wrong. However, if it is a case of just
not bothering to listen or find out, then the responsibility will be on them.
Behind the message, of course, is the
messenger. The message has to
be communicated and the way that God chooses is through the preaching of the
Word and the praying of Christians, the yearning of their hearts over those who
are not yet saved.
People are touched by God
by various means, perhaps through a poster, a friend, an occurrence in one’s
life, but the principal way is through the preaching of the Bible.
This I
believe is where we are failing badly, right across the Church. The Bible calls on us to preach the Word; in
other words the Scriptures, with sound doctrine, not adding, subtracting or
amending what God caused His writers to state in the Bible. Yet at this very
pulpit I have twice heard it said by ordained Ministers that you shouldn’t take
the bible literally. This in complete negation of ordination vows.
We in the Churches must make a greater effort
to concentrate on the fundamentals of the faith. There is too much a willingness to amend
Bible teaching to be popular, or ally with society’s standards and beliefs; avoid
being called narrow minded or bigoted, and take every opportunity of doing so.
On
Easter Sunday one year a service was held in one of our great Cathedrals,
offering a wonderful opportunity of getting the message out, but instead there
was a sermon which completely wasted the chance by an address on climate change,
which seems to obsess a lot of people.
Regularly
Church leaders are eager to write to the press on a variety of matters social
and political. A Bishop wrote asking for
everybody to fast one day of the week in prayer for climate change; this at a
time when the Church attendances are falling.
As people have a cause to believe in with an
eternal future at issue, one might have thought that would have been a prime
issue for him to concentrate his mind on.
There
is however a marked reluctance to speak out on moral and ethical matters when
the Church should be giving a lead to the country.
The Bible states
that it is God who adds to the number of people attending a Church. In the book of Acts, He did so because the
people were devoted to the teaching of the Apostles. Therefore, we should be sure that all
preaching and teaching will be that given by the Apostles and left for our
learning in the New Testament.
The glory of Christianity is that it has a message that is
grounded in history. It is objective truth, not just something that someone has
made up. . It is not some feeling that
you are following that you hope will work out; it is the story of historic
events. One of these events is the coming of Jesus as a baby in the manger of
There is an urgent need for such message to be preached without
fear or favor, but I have been at Churches barely mentioning the basic facts of
our faith. We have to be as forthright
and determined to preach our faith as we see the preachers of Islam doing so in
respect of their faith. You will never
hear a Muslim cleric challenging anything in their Holy book.
In the absence of any person at national level with the charisma
to inspire, each local Church has to be its own evangelist and I pray that the
teaching you hear here will be that passed down from the Apostles..
Praise God for His Holy Gospel
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