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| PARTIALS ROMANS 2:1-11 Series: Roaming Through Romans - Part Three Pastor Stephen Muncherian August 16, 2015 | 
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 Would you join me at Romans 2.  We are Roaming
                Through Romans - studying our way through Paul’s letter
                to the church in Rome. 
                We are in the first major section of Paul’s
                letter - the first 5 chapters of Romans - where Paul is
                bringing us face to face with our need for God.    Paul is writing about how God has responded
                to our need for Him - what is the message of the gospel
                - what God offers to us through Jesus’ work on the
                cross.  How
                that gospel is relevant to our lives.  What it means
                for us to live by faith - to live the reality of the
                Gospel in our lives - as we live in the real world of
                where we live our lives. 
                   Where we’re going this morning - here in
                chapter 2 - we are continuing  what we began
                looking at last Sunday - Paul’s teaching that apart from
                God we’re in serious serious trouble.  All of us -
                without exception - all of us are deeply enmeshed in the
                sin of this world. 
                Apart from God stepping in and rescuing us we
                have no hope.   Thank God that He does step in and we do
                have hope.   If you would take a deep breath and let’s
                read together 2:1-5.   Therefore you have
                no excuse, O man, every one of you who judges.  For in passing
                judgment on another you condemn yourself, because you,
                the judge, practice the very same things.  We know that
                the judgment of God rightly falls on those who practice
                such things.  Do
                you suppose, O man—you who judge those who practice such
                things and yet do them yourself—that you will escape the
                judgment of God?  Or
                do you presume on the riches of His kindness and
                forbearance and patience, not knowing that God’s
                kindness is meant to lead you to repentance?  But because of
                your hard and impenitent heart you are storing up wrath
                for yourself on the day of wrath when God’s righteous
                judgment will be revealed.   Verses 1 to 5 can be summed up as Man’s Partial Justice.  Which
                is the kind of favoritism that we tend to show
                ourselves.  We
                generally skew justice in our favor.   Paul
                beings with a “therefore” - in verse 1 - the therefore
                is there for to remind us of what Paul just wrote back
                in chapter 1.  Which
                is online if you’d like to review that teaching.   A quick reminder of that:  God revealing
                Himself to us in His creation.  Looking
                around.  All
                of what we see is about God revealing Himself to us -
                God inviting us into a relationship with Him - to seek
                Him - to know Him. 
                Yet, man - seeing all that - man chooses instead
                to trust ourselves - our own whit, wisdom, and working.  Man choosing
                to go our own way through life.   Paul wrote that God responds to our choice
                by giving us up to the consequences of our choice.  Not that God
                gives up on us.  But
                that God lets us experience the consequences of our
                choice to trust ourselves not Him.  God gives us
                up to the consequences of our choice so that when we hit
                bottom - and we will - we will choose to turn to God.   Which is how Paul ended chapter one - this
                list - along with a description of our sexual and
                relational brokenness - and the foolishness of our
                philosophy and religion and intellectual achievements.  Verses 18 to
                32 of chapter one are a sad description of where our
                society is.  An
                ugly list of consequences - the gutter of where man left
                to himself - apart from God - where man has ended up.   Paul’s “therefore” - here in 2:1– Paul’s
                “therefore” continues that thought - the ugliness of
                man’s sin.  Paul
                writes, “therefore” - keeping all that ugliness in mind - “you have no
                excuse.”   A
                long time ago in a metropolitan area far far away - I
                was driving my VW Bug to the beach - down in Malibu -
                and I was probably doing just a few miles per hour over
                the limit.  Seriously.  I think the
                speed limit was 55 and I think I was doing about 57 or
                58.   When an officer pulled me over and informed
                that I had been driving about 70 plus mph - way over the
                limit he said - and passing numerous vehicles going up
                the hill - weaving in and out of traffic - driving in an
                unsafe manner.  He
                gave me a slip of paper that I had to sign - promising
                to appear before the local judge.  A lot of us
                have been there? 
   When I got to the court there were a ton of
                people waiting to go before that judge.  As I waited
                for my shot at the judge - watching what was going on -
                the trend was obvious. 
                Think small town judge.  Judge with a
                reputation for hanging people.  This judge was
                out for blood.  The
                more I listened.  The
                more I realized that my puny little arguments were going
                no where.  And
                - bottom line - I was speeding.  Even if only a
                little.  1
                mph over the limit is still over the limit guilty.   The judge asked me, “How do you
                plead?”  Moment of truth:  “Guilty” - of course. 
                I had no excuse.   That’s what Paul means here.  You have no
                excuse.  There
                is no possible defense you can offer.  You’re guilty.  End of
                argument.   Paul writes that “you” are with excuse.  The “you” here
                in verse 1 - “you” is singular.  Meaning that
                Paul has moved from a planet wide - empirical - generic
                summary of the mess mankind has made of humanity - Paul
                has moved to what is very personal:  “you - the one sitting on the comfortable cushy
                teal colored chair - you have no
                excuse.” 
   Have you seen this?  “Just when you
                think you’ve won the rat race along come faster rats.”  Life
                is a rat race and the rats are... winning.  What’s hard is
                to see ourselves as a rat. 
                Rats are other people.   We can look at Paul’s “therefore” - his
                list in chapter 1 - look at the condition of what goes
                around us - the many ways our society is broken and
                coming apart at the seams - we can look at the sin - and
                somehow convince ourselves that what we personally are
                caught up in isn’t all that bad.  But Paul’s
                point is that it is.    “You” also are without excuse.  There is no
                defense for our behavior. 
                Paul writes, “You who judge -
                you practice the same things.”   Lily
                Tomlin put it this way: 
                “The trouble with
                the rat race is that even if you win you’re still a
                rat.”   Not that any of us would ever do this.  But its like
                being in the #1 lane on the freeway - the fast lane -
                and driving just a tad above the limit.  Going 66
                instead of 65.  A
                guy zooms up behind us - flashing his lights at us -
                weaving back and forth - getting all ticked because - of
                course - we take our own sweet time moving over.  Put the
                blinker on.  Check
                our mirror…     Maybe as he flies by he might even do some
                communicating with us. 
                Our response is justifiable.  “What a jerk.”  Maybe we even consider doing some
                communicating back. 
                None of us would ever do that.  Right?   We’re both breaking the law.  But I can’t
                see my own guilt because the other guy is a worse jerk.   Paul writes that we’re condemning people
                for the same things we ourselves are doing.  Someone wisely
                observed that when we point one finger at someone else
                we’re point three fingers back at ourselves.  If they all
                are worthy of condemnation for doing what they’re doing
                and we’re doing the same thing we’re just pointing out
                how guilty we are.    Let’s be clear.  One reason
                people say there are hypocrites in the church is because
                there are hypocrites in the church.  We’re all in
                danger of being hypocrites.  We need to
                grab that the difference between someone saved by God’s
                grace and the worst sinner condemned by their sin.  The difference
                is the saving grace of God applied to our lives.     It would be way too easy - while we’re
                hearing this - to fall into the trap of thinking to
                ourselves, “This isn’t about
                me.  I’m not
                that bad.  Oh,
                I suppose in some sense that may be true.  But, I’m not
                really in that bad a shape.”   Are we grabbing Paul’s point?  Stop making
                excuses.  “You have no
                excuse.”  There’s no wiggle room in that.     Excuses are like people who want to loose
                weight by taking a pill or having a surgery - or maybe
                they go on some kind of diet.  They loose all
                the weight and then they gain it all back again.   Why is keeping weight off harder than
                loosing it?  Because
                real sustained weight loss means a change of life.  Which is where
                most people don’t want to go.  We might deal
                with the surface issues - the symptoms of the disease -
                our outward behavior - without getting down to the core
                of what’s really messed up in our lives.  So we make up
                little excuses for why we go on fudging with the fudge.   We want results without dealing with the
                issues.  We
                want to come across as righteous without dealing with
                the sin.  So
                we make excuses.  We
                point fingers.    People come to church only enough to be
                here but we avoid deeper relationships - greater
                openness - potential accountability.  We excuse
                ourselves with being busy with the really important
                stuff of life.  When
                things get too close to home we find an exit strategy -
                blaming the pastor or some fault in the congregation as
                an excuse to move on.   We can go through life making excuses.   “I know it’s
                killing me.  But,
                I’m quitting.  It’s
                only taken 5 years to get down to 5 packs a day.”   “Its not hard core
                porn.  I’m
                not paying for it. 
                I can handle it. 
                Besides it’s on YouTube so it has to be family
                friendly.”   “What’s wrong with
                a drink now and then. 
                I’m not getting drunk… too often.”   “Please excuse my
                French.”   “Its not gossip.  It’s a prayer
                request.”   “Everyone else is
                doing it.  It’s
                how things are done.”   Excuses about how we use our time.  How we spend
                our money.  Who
                really is in control of all that.   Reality check.  Have we
                surrendered all?  Have
                we taken up our cross? 
                Have we died to self?  Are we really
                being honest about the sin in our lives?  Or, are we
                making excuses and comparison condemning?   Please please hear this:  When we make
                excuses or comparison condemn - we condemn ourselves to
                remain in the consequences of our sin because we are
                choosing not to allow God to deal with the real issues
                in our lives.   Paul writes - verse 2 - We know that the
                judgment of God rightly falls on those who practice such
                things.     Do we really think God is going to buy into
                our excuses for our sin. 
                “You know, you are
                so right.  You
                really aren’t as bad as they are.  What was I
                thinking?  I
                obviously made a mistake. 
                Sin on!”   Let’s be clear:  God judges
                rightly.  He
                sees behind our excuses. 
                His judgment is going to fall on us because He
                loves us too much to let us keep making self-justifying
                excuses for behavior that’s destroying us.   Verse 3: 
                Do you suppose, O
                man—you who judge those who practice such things and yet
                do them yourself—that you will escape the judgment of
                God?     “Do you suppose” translates a Greek word that if we do all
                the word studies and trace it down to its roots it
                relates to the Greek word we get our English word
                “logic” from.  Its
                a Star Trek moment. 
                Spock:  “To condemn others
                for what we ourselves are guilty of is not logical.”   “Do you suppose” is about how we’re thinking this through -
                or not.  Our
                considering the reality of the way things are -
                reasoning all this out. 
                Do we really think that God is going to look the
                other way when we sin? 
                Is that really the defense we want to stand
                behind?    The Pharisees brought the woman they’d
                stalked and caught in “the very act of
                adultery” - brought the women to Jesus.  Demanded God’s
                decreed judgment to be enacted upon the woman.  Death by
                stoning.  Jesus
                instead exposes their own sin.  Their
                self-righteous judgment backfires before God.  (John 8:1-11) 
   Verse 4: 
                Or do you presume
                on the riches of His kindness and forbearance and
                patience, not knowing that God’s kindness is meant to
                lead you to repentance? 
                   God is kinda like Santa Claus.  Right?  Santa Claus is
                suppose to check his list to find out who’s naughty or
                nice.  Coal
                in the stocking verses an iPod touch.  But everyone
                knows that Santa Claus is going to bring them presents
                even though they weren’t very good.   We have a tendency to misinterpret God’s
                attitude towards us - His kindness and forbearance and
                patience - thinking that God doesn’t care about our
                little sins.  Just
                the big ones.  Sort
                of.   Kindness in Greek means... kindness.  Forbearance
                has the idea of enduring - persevering - hanging in
                there with us even when we’re not all that hanging in
                there-able.  Patience
                is a word in Greek that has the idea of God holding back
                on leveling us.   Peter writes: 
                “But do not
                overlook this one fact, beloved, that with the Lord one
                day is as a thousand years, and a thousand years as one
                day.  Meaning... 
                The Lord is not
                slow to fulfill His promise as some count slowness - meaning don’t misinterpret God’s slowness
                - meaning judgment and wrath will come - but - God - is patient toward
                you, not wishing that any should perish, but that all
                should reach repentance.” 
                (2 Peter 3:8,9)    God is kind to us - hangs in there with us
                - holds back on leveling us - because our loving God
                desires for us to repent. 
                Repent meaning God desires for us to change our
                minds about how we’re living our lives and the choice
                we’ve made about God. 
                180 degree change of mind and direction of our
                lives.   To stop trying to make excuses for how
                we’re living.  To
                stop trying to justify our lives.  To stop being
                so stubborn about hanging on to our own self-willed -
                self-focused - so called control of our lives.  Instead to
                agree with God that we desperately need His salvation
                and forgiveness - and to turn our lives completely over
                to Him.   We’re together?   Verse 5: 
                But because of
                your hard - meaning hard to penetrate - and impenitent - meaning unchanged - purposefully
                unrepentant - heart you are
                storing up wrath for yourself on the day of wrath when
                God’s righteous judgment will be revealed.   We’re like hogs at a trough.  Eating slop.  Thinking we
                are really something. 
                “Pass me another
                watermelon rind.”  Thinking that Satan’s delusional world of
                sin - that we’re captivated by and making excuses for
                how we’re living in it - that all that is really of such
                great value.  All
                the time we’re just fattening ourselves up for the
                slaughter.  Storing
                up more wrath for ourselves.   Processing verses 1 to 5 is hugely
                sobering.  If
                we could ever really grab on to the reality of God’s
                character and how God does things - how loving and
                gracious and merciful is God - that His kindness and
                forbearance and patience is God holding back a little
                longer.  Not
                because He doesn’t care. 
                Not out of weakness.  Not because
                He’s buying our excuses. 
                But out of determination and purpose - that we
                should recognize the precariousness of our lives - our
                great need - and to stop making excuses - and to turn
                from our sin and turn our lives over to Him.   Bottom line: 
                Regardless of how we may see our lives - in
                comparison to others - through our rose colored glasses.  We need God.  On God’s
                terms.  Not
                ours.     Verses 6 to 11 focus on God’s Impartial Justice.  Take
                a breath.  Let’s
                read these together. 
                   He will render to
                each one according to his works:  to those who
                by patience in well-doing seek for glory and honor and
                immortality, He will give eternal life; but for those
                who are self-seeking and do not obey the truth, but obey
                unrighteousness, there will be wrath and fury. There will be
                tribulation and distress for every human being who does
                evil, the Jew first and also the Greek, but glory and
                honor and peace from everyone who does good, the Jew
                first and also the Greek.   For God shows no
                partiality.   Paul
                writes that God “will render to
                each one according to his works…”     The word translated “render” in Greek has
                the idea of paying wages. 
                In other words what we earn by our works - by
                what we do - God will pay us.   Let’s be careful.  That almost
                sounds like Paul is saying is that our salvation from
                eternal damnation is based on our works.  Salvation by
                works.  Kinda
                sounds like that.  Doesn’t
                it?     Which of course would be Paul contradicting
                Paul - Ephesians 2:8,9: 
                “For by grace you
                have been saved through faith - not works.”  Worse - Paul contradicting God.  Not a good
                thing.   Let’s be clear.  We know that a
                day is coming when there’s going to be one terrifying
                before the throne of God courtroom scene.  Every human
                being who has ever lived - each one us here - are going
                to be there.  Everything
                that everyone has ever done is going to be laid out
                before God and for everyone to see.   Evidence of our relationship with God - or
                not - on display for everyone to see - the works we’ve
                done.  Evidence
                presented without any pretense or partiality.   John Stott put it this way:  “The presence or
                absence of our faith in Christ will be evident by the
                presence or absence of love and good works in our
                lives.” (1)    In other words, there are only two choices
                in life…  God
                or self.  Either
                we’ve come to the point of trusting God with our lives -
                trusting Jesus as our Savior - or we’re trusting
                ourselves.  Salvation
                by what God has done for me or salvation by what I hope
                to do for myself.  God
                saves us by His grace when we by faith trust Him for
                what He’s done for us in Jesus.   How we live out our lives - all the other
                choices we make day to day - are going to be based on
                whether we’ve chosen to trust God with our lives or if
                we’re still trusting ourselves.   Either we’re a person who’s repented and is
                living seeking after God - seeking to grow closer to Him
                every day - yearning for God - longing to do what is
                right before God - seeking after what He offers us in
                Jesus - glory - honor - eternal life - or we’re not.   Are we together?  The reward of
                life in Christ now and forever… salvation is given by
                grace to those who by faith have made the initial choice
                to trust God with their lives.  What comes
                from that - the works we produce - what we do for God -
                those aren’t some great holy human achievement - but a
                result of living by our hope in God.  Our trust
                isn’t in our works - but in God who rewards those works.  God who’s the
                only source of glory and honor and eternal life.   Point being: 
                God knows the choice we’ve made - our heart - the
                source of our works. 
                Why we do what we do.  God will
                render to us what is our due based on why we do what we
                do.   Verse 9: 
                There will be
                tribulation and distress for every human being who does
                evil, the Jew first and also the Greek, but glory and
                honor and peace from everyone who does good, the Jew
                first and also the Greek.   The Jews figured that since they we’re
                God’s chosen people they had an “in” with God.  In a sense
                they were using their status as Jews as an excuse to
                live however they wanted and to look down on everyone
                else as being spiritually “less than” who they were.   Paul is saying that - when it comes to
                God’s judgment - that isn’t what’s going to cut it with
                God.  It
                doesn’t matter if we’re Jews or Greeks - and in this
                context Greek means everyone else who isn’t a Jew - us.   It doesn’t matter if we’re part of
                Creekside or a Baptist or Methodist or a Lutheran or a
                whatever - whether we were raised in a Christian home or
                not - if we tithe 1% or 100% or if we’re at church 1 day
                a week or 8 days a week - whether we sing hymns or
                chorus or screamo and throat singing.  All that isn’t
                the bottom line.   Bottom line - verse 11:  For God shows no
                partiality.   Partiality meaning God isn’t concerned with
                how He’s trending on YouTube.  He’s not
                counting the number of “likes” on Facebook.  He’s not
                concerned with what the polls or surveys are saying
                about the decisions He’s making.  God isn’t
                running for political office.  God’s justice
                can’t be bought off with our excuses.     Deuteronomy 10:17:  “For the Lord your
                God is God of gods and Lord of lords, the great, the
                mighty, and the awesome God, who is not partial and
                takes no bribe.”     God is God. 
                What could we possibly offer God as a bribe?  What works?   Whatever we come with - wealth, power,
                status, ethnicity, nationality, heritage, culture,
                philosophy, religion - all that counts for nada - zip.  However we
                might compare ourselves with others will mean nothing.  Our own
                self-estimation counts for nothing.  Not even a
                smidgin or a tad.    At the end of days - each of us standing
                before God as the judge - everything that we’ve ever
                done is going to be placed on God’s scale and weighed
                against the character of the one holy righteous God.  God’s holy
                character is the true standard of righteousness.  Not the
                righteousness of other people or even our own
                conscience.     If the weight of our righteousness fails to
                tip the balance in our favor, we will be found guilty.  Period.  We’re toast.   Do you see what Paul is getting at here?  How intensely
                concerned God is with how we’re living our lives because
                of our relationship with Him.  The works -
                the way our lives are lived - based on the choice we’ve
                made - either to live in our self-defending - world of
                self-delusion - or to live in honesty and openness
                before God.  God
                holds us accountable because He loves us.   Putting that practically.   One reason we hang back from making any
                real change in our lives is a fear of what that change
                may mean.  We
                need to be convinced that what’s on the other side of
                the change is better than what we’re putting up with
                now.  “I know what I’m
                living in now is painful. 
                But at least that pain is something I know.  Honesty -
                change - I have no idea what that may mean.”   Paul is showing us two possible sets of
                consequences based on our choice of honesty before God
                or not.  To
                by faith trust God or to keep on trusting ourselves.  Our choice to
                let God deal with the core of our lives - our deeper
                issues - or not.  The
                real life deep down we crave - glory and honor and
                eternal life verses chubbiness - tribulation and
                distress and wrath and fury.  All of what
                God offers us verses all of where our lives are without
                Him.   We need to see that reality.  God Who is
                intensely interested in how we are living our lives and
                the consequences of how we are living - our loving
                Heavenly Father offers us is infinitely better than
                where we might be living without Him.   Processing
                all that…  God being impartial give’s us great certain
                hope.  Two
                reasons - among many - but two for us to act on as we
                head out of here to out there. 
 Great certain hope giving reason number
                one:  We know where we stand.  
                It may be ugly. 
                But its honest.   History
                quiz.  Anyone
                recognize this man? 
                Jeffrey Dahmer.   Let me read for you some of what Philip
                Yancey writes about Jeffrey Dahmer in his book:  What’s So Amazing
                About Grace?   Dahmer, a mass
                murderer, had abused and then killed seventeen young
                men, cannibalizing them and storing body parts in his
                refrigerator.  His
                arrest caused a shake-up in the Milwaukee police
                department when it became known that officers had
                ignored the desperate pleas of a Vietnamese teenager who
                tried to escape by running, naked and bleeding, from
                Dahmer’s apartment. 
                That boy too became Dahmer’s victim, one of
                eleven corpses found in his apartment.   In November of
                1994, Dahmer himself was murdered, beaten to death with
                a broom handle wielded by a fellow prisoner.  Television
                news reports that day included interviews with the
                grieving relatives of Dahmer’s victims, most of whom
                said they regretted Dahmer’s murder only because it
                ended his life too soon. 
                He should have had to suffer by being forced to
                live longer and think about the terrible things he had
                done.   One network showed
                a television program taped a few weeks before Dahmer’s
                death.  The
                interviewer asked him how he could possibly do the
                things he had been convicted of.  At the time he
                didn’t believe in God, Dahmer said, and so he felt
                accountable to no one. 
                He began with petty crimes, experimented with
                small acts of cruelty, and then just kept going, further
                and further.  Nothing
                restrained him.   Dahmer then told
                of his recent religious conversion.  He had been
                baptized in the prison whirlpool and was spending all
                his time reading religious material given him by a local
                Church of Christ minister. 
                The camera switched to an interview with the
                prison chaplain, who affirmed that Dahmer had indeed
                repented and was now one of his most faithful
                worshipers. (2)   When that account came out most people
                found it troubling. 
                We still do. 
                Grace for a cannibal?  It would be so
                easy for us to say, “Nope.  Not that easy.  Not after what
                you did.  God
                is forgiving.  But
                grace is for average sinners.  Not someone
                like you.”   Reading what Paul wrote in chapter one -
                that list of sinners and sins - it would be easy to say,
              “Yep - those are
                sinners.”  Coming to chapter two isn’t so easy.  Its hard to
                think of ourselves with same standing before God as a
                Jeffery Dahmer or an Adolf Hitler or the jerk in the car
                behind us.  But,
                like Dahmer - and every sinner who has ever lived - we
                all need God’s kind of grace - His forgiveness.  His healing.   We may not like it.  But we need to
                know where we stand. 
                God is impartially honest with us because He
                desires - by His grace - to forgive even us - to heal us
                - to put right our relationship with Him.  We need that
                honesty if we’re going to stop making excuses and
                honestly turn to God.   Great certain hope giving reason number
                two:  We know where God stands.  
                What God will render and why.   Is the glass half empty or half full?  Good news or
                bad news?   Take your pick.  We could focus
                on the wrath and tribulation and distress part of what
                Paul writes.  Which
                is 100% certain.  Its
                coming.  Or
                - much more hopeful - we can focus on the glory and
                honor and peace and eternal life part of what our loving
                Heavenly Father promises. 
                Which is 100% certain.   Hear Paul again:  “Therefore you
                have no excuse...  For
                God shows no partiality.”   God will render to each one of us one or
                the other based on the choice we’ve made.   When you stand before God as your impartial
                judge what defense will you offer?  What verdict
                will He render?       _________________________ 1. Cited by Gary Vanderet, Judging The
                Judgmental, sermon from Romans 2:1-16, 03.21.1999,
                PBC Cupertino 2. Philip Yancey, What’s So Amazing
                About Grace?, Zondervan, 1997, page 95   Unless otherwise indicated, Scripture
                quotations are from The Holy Bible, English Standard
                Version®  (ESV®), copyright © 2001 by Crossway Bibles, a
                publishing ministry of Good News Publishers.  Used by
                permission.  All
                rights reserved.   |