Friday, 20 September 2013

The duties of disciples


Matthew 6:33 "But seek first His kingdom and His righteousness, and all these things will be added to you.

            It should be the supreme purpose of everyone to seek the kingdom of God. We study the next through five questions:-

1.      What is to be done?
 “Seek” Put your heart into this enterprise. Seek earnestly, diligently, enthusiastically, steadily, with your whole life, hands, head and heart.

2.      Who is to seek?
“Ye” all who believe in the Lord Jesus Christ. All who name the name of Christ? All who are members of his church and all who have a desire to do his way and will? All who have had an experience of grace and possess a new heart, a new purpose, a new hope, a new outlook, and a new Master. “Seek you”.

3.      When shall we seek?
“First” in time, in aim, in activity.

4.      What shall we seek?
 His kingdom and his righteousness. Seek to the right in every relation of life, in relation to God, to Christ, to the church, to all Christians, to all sinners.

5.      Why should we seek?

Because when we attain righteousness and seek the kingdom, all lesser blessings will be added unto us. When we seek the kingdom and righteousness of the Lord, He will see that we have all necessary food, clothing, and raiment. It is promise of the Lord.

Thursday, 19 September 2013

Love the house of God


Psalm 26:8   O LORD, I love the habitation of Your house And the place where Your glory dwells.

I.                   God house in its relation to the devout worshiper
1.      As the appointed place for divine worship. We are not indifferent to the truth that there is no spot on earth where the throne of grace is not accessible. Yet the sacred sanctuary, set apart for God’s special worship, and hallowed by the prayers of many of his people, claims to be regarded with special love and reverence, whether it is tabernacle or temple, church or chapel.
2.      As the place where God has especially promised to reveal himself to his people.
God allowed a visible emblem of his presence to dwell in the Tabernacle of old; and in his House, today. He is especially present to convict, to comfort, and to bless.
3.      God’s house is loved by the Christian because of hallowed experience there. Its services develop and sanctify the social bond in all its relations. It is loved as the type of the house not made with hands, eternal in the heavens.

II.                Love for God’s House
  1. Desire to attend in the house of the Lord, Loving one another as God Love us.
  2. A willing to support it, both by taking part in its services, and by loyally and generously giving of our substance for its maintenance. Prayerfully and taking care of his property.
  3. By consistency of life, lest outsiders be given cause of offence against religion, because of the sad difference between the prayers and practices of Christians.

Love the house of God


Psalm 26:8   O LORD, I love the habitation of Your house And the place where Your glory dwells.

I.                   God house in its relation to the devout worshiper
1.      As the appointed place for divine worship. We are not indifferent to the truth that there is no spot on earth where the throne of grace is not accessible. Yet the sacred sanctuary, set apart for God’s special worship, and hallowed by the prayers of many of his people, claims to be regarded with special love and reverence, whether it is tabernacle or temple, church or chapel.
2.      As the place where God has especially promised to reveal himself to his people.
God allowed a visible emblem of his presence to dwell in the Tabernacle of old; and in his House, today. He is especially present to convict, to comfort, and to bless.
3.      God’s house is loved by the Christian because of hallowed experience there. Its services develop and sanctify the social bond in all its relations. It is loved as the type of the house not made with hands, eternal in the heavens.

II.                Love for God’s House
  1. Desire to attend in the house of the Lord, Loving one another as God Love us.
  2. A willing to support it, both by taking part in its services, and by loyally and generously giving of our substance for its maintenance. Prayerfully and taking care of his property.
  3. By consistency of life, lest outsiders be given cause of offence against religion, because of the sad difference between the prayers and practices of Christians.

THE GLORIOUS CHURCH

Introduction
            Modern secular man pays little attention to the church. Following the steps of the Roman Church many religious people pay it a wrong kind of attention. In the Bible, the "church" is simply God's people -- from Pentecost till the end of the world. It is not an institution or organization separate and apart from the people.
            Ephesians talks more than once about the church, the people of God. In a familiar passage (5:22-27), Paul makes a passing reference to the church, while urging husbands and wives to proper behavior toward each other. In this statement we find the expression "the glorious church." While Paul is here speaking of the church (God's people) as it will be when Jesus takes it to Himself at the end, there are also now many glorious aspects of the church as well. This lesson deals with some of them, particularly as mentioned in Ephesians. For a study of this passage in context, see Expository Outlines on Ephesians, by this author.

I. The church has a glorious origin.
            Ephesians 1:13, 14. The church is created when people hear the gospel, trust in Jesus, then are sealed by the Holy Spirit for redemption when Jesus returns (see also Acts 2:38; 5:32).
            Ephesians 2:4-9. This was possible because while we were dead in sin, God was merciful and Jesus died for our sins. Our existence is grounded in grace and is a fact only through faith. There is no room for human boasting, though good works are the proper response to what God has done.
            Ephesians 4:32. God, for Christ's sake (KJV), in Christ (ASV) forgave us. This was the glorious basis on which the church is called together.
            Ephesians 5:25, 26. Christ loved the church (all who would be His people), gave Himself for it (them), sanctifies and cleanses it (them) with the washing of water by the word (confession of faith and baptism). What a glorious origin!

II. The church has a glorious relationship.
            Ephesians 1:3-10. In union with Christ, so that He represents us, we (the saved, the church) share all spiritual blessings in the heavenly places. We are beneficiaries of God's eternal planning, recipients of His present blessings, and heirs of all that He will do in the future for good. All this because we are joined to Jesus in faith.
            Ephesians 1:22, 23. Because the church is Christ's body and He is its head, what has happened to Him will happen to it. The head is already glorified in heaven; the body will one day follow!
            Ephesians 5:23, 24. As head of the body, the church, Christ saves and defends it now and in judgment. As His body, the church is obligated to follow Christ's guidance in all things.

III. The church has a glorious mission.
            Ephesians 3:1-11. As the community of God's people, the church is composed of both Jew and Gentile, people of every race, color and fleshly background. This is the fulfillment of God's promises and plan, and His plan was hid from view until after the work of Jesus had made it possible. Now angels see in the conversion and transformation of sinners the "manifold wisdom of God" which even they did not understand before. As those who show forth God's glory, the church indeed has a "glorious" mission!
            Ephesians 3:20, 21. God is the source of power, and He is due all the praise. Because of what God has done, first in Jesus Christ and then in the church, He is due all glory on earth (in the church) and in heaven (where Christ sits in power).

IV. The church has a glorious unity.
            Ephesians 4:1-6. God has blessed His people (the church) with a glorious oneness, and they are to preserve it by proper concern and self-control as they live together. Every Christian shares in great blessings with every other child of God. There is only one body, Spirit, hope, Lord, faith, baptism and God, and all Christians share these in common. This is the oneness or unity God has given His people.
            They are to preserve this oneness, in bonds of peace. They are not told to create it or arrive at it -- it exists already and is a gift of God. They are rather to preserve it in peace, by exerting diligence and care.
            The means of preserving it in peace is the exercise of lowliness and meekness, longsuffering, and forbearing one another in love. When in a local fellowship each Christian will practice these, the oneness God has given will be preserved in peace. This is a glorious oneness indeed!

V. The church has a glorious future.
            Ephesians 1:22, 23. As Christ's body, the church will someday share in the glory that is now His.
            Ephesians 2:7. In the ages to come, God will demonstrate still more of His riches in Christ than we have yet enjoyed.
            Ephesians 4:30. This will be the day of redemption, and for it we are sealed with the Holy Spirit now.
            Ephesians 5:27. When Christ comes again, He will present the church (His people) to Himself, without spot or wrinkle. This is the glorious future for which we wait.

Conclusion
            We must say that we are not all we should be, we are not all we want to be, but by the grace of God we are what we are. And by the same grace of God we anticipate a still more glorious future in Christ. For all that is and will be we give God the glory -- and commit ourselves to serve Him in a way that honors Him each day.


Wednesday, 18 September 2013

SELF-CONTROL


Introduction

            Self-control, or "temperance," as it is often called in the King James Version, is urged, commended and encouraged in both Old and New Testaments. It is part of "the faith in Christ," and a proper subject for gospel preaching (Acts 24:25). Christians are to "add" or "supply" it as part of their maturing (II Peter 1: 6). This word translates a Greek word from which we get "choreography," and it had to do with bringing to the theatre stage the appropriate props at the right time during a play. The Christian is to "bring to the stage of life" this quality, at just the times it is needed. It comes by God's power through the Holy Spirit; it is not the "natural" way for the flesh or lower nature to behave (Galatians 5:23).

In this lesson we consider three areas where self-control is needed.

I. We need to have a controlled life.
I Corinthians 6:9-11.
            Those who practice such unrighteous behavior as here described will not inherit the kingdom of heaven.
            Christians are not to be deceived about this; what Paul says may be sobering and severe, but it is true.
            Because they formerly lived in such sins, those who now serve Jesus must use special control to avoid their practice any longer.
            They should not continue in guilt over past sins, however, for they have been washed clean, set apart as holy, and declared righteous before God, based on faith in Jesus and by the power of the Holy Spirit.

Galatians 5:26-35.
            We must serve one of two masters: flesh or Spirit. Because the two are by nature opposed to each other, it is impossible to serve them both at the same time. Their orders always contradict! The Christian must choose between them.
            The works of the flesh are obviously recognized, and Paul names them in verse 19-21. He repeats the warning of I Corinthians 6 those who practice them will not inherit the kingdom of God.
            The fruit of the Spirit (including "temperance" or self-control) violates no law, of God or man, for it flows from life that is in Jesus in the power of God Himself.

Ephesians 4:22-32.
            Paul here names many specifics in which self-control is exercised. In each case, the easier thing is to do wrong, but the Christian uses self-control to do (with God's help) what is right instead.
            The uncontrolled life is called "the old man," and it holds no promise of life. Although it is "corrupt," it continues its power through "deceitful lusts," never telling the truth about its origin (Satan) or end (destruction). The 64 new man" is a new creation of God, made in the moral image of God as seen in Jesus.
II. We need to control our speech.
Matthew 12:34-37.
            The speech is a window to the heart; one cannot long conceal his true heart if he opens his mouth!
What we say, being a reflection of what is in our hearts, will face us in judgment -- even the "idle" (pointless, empty) words.

Ephesians 4:29.
            Our language is not to be "corrupt" (tainted with evil, unwholesome, a little on the "rotten" side).
            It is rather to be positively beneficial -- good, serving a useful purpose. That purpose is to build up those who hear, as an instrument and vehicle of God's grace in our own lives.

Colossians 4:3-6.
            Paul asked the prayers of other believers for him, that God would give him opportunities to speak the gospel, and give him wisdom to make the message clear (manifest) to those who heard it.
            The responsibility of speaking the gospel is not given only to evangelists and pastors or teachers, as the verses continue. The speech of every Christian is to be used to advance the gospel. We are all to speak at every opportunity, graciously (always with grace) and tastefully (seasoned with salt).

James 3:2-12.
            It is hard to over-emphasize the power of the tongue, though it is a very small member in our body. James compares it to other small things which have great power or influence: the bit in the mouth of a mighty work-horse, the rudder of a great ship, a tiny flame that becomes a raging holocaust.
            At the same time, it is hard to stress enough how difficult a task this is, to control the tongue. Although men have subdued and trained every kind of creature, no man has completely trained his own tongue so that he could safely forget to control it.
            Yet train it we must, so far as we are able, for our character is betrayed by what we say, and there are only two basic choices: good or bad.

III. We need to control our thoughts.
Proverbs 4:23 As the fountain-spring, the heart gushes a stream which becomes the flow of our whole life. We must therefore guard it with all diligence, as one would guard the water-supply of a city from contamination or pollution.
Matthew 15:18-20 Moral contamination comes from the inside, out not from outside us, in. Jesus repeats the same warning given in Proverbs 4:23, in a slightly different way.
II Corinthians 10:4, 5 Our greatest struggle is within ourselves, and we are engaged in a conflict that must be unending. The battle ground is our own heart. Let us take it for the Lord, then guard it as exclusively His!

Conclusion
We cannot be so self-controlled as to earn salvation, for at best we will come short of perfection, which is God's standard. But we can be saved by faith in Jesus (who was perfect, and who died for our sins), and the same faith which receives His salvation also demands self-control. Because we belong to Him, let us control our hearts, our speech and our lives for His service and to His eternal glory!


Tuesday, 17 September 2013

Be a model

            When we said model, many things can come in our mind. Some may think they like the modeler, those who are acting in the film. Each one of us must have a model to which we are following or like their style. But in this short passage we would like to ask who your model as a Christian is? To whom you’re following? Let us keep in mind and look:

1.      Holiness
            When we said holiness, it is in the highest intellect belongs to God, and to Christians as sacred to God’s service, and in so far as they are conformed in all things to the will of God (Rom 6:19,22; Eph 1:4; Titus 1:8; 1 Peter 1:15). Holiness is all about the living God who is above us all. He is the only one who can be holy and blameless. As our Lord is Holy he wants all his follower must be Holy like he is holy. As a Christian our duty is to become holy, here we may ask why we need to be Holy. We need to be Holy because our Lord is holy we can be holy through following his footstep, through reading and meditating his words, prayer and persistence. He is the real model for the Christian, if he is our model we have to follow his teaching and also doing well for him.

2.      Love
Love is the most important in Christian life. If we don’t have love we are lack of all things in this world. Jesus said, as I Love you love one another. We can see that Jesus love his own enemy. We should also follow what Our Lord wants us to do. Because of one person the whole world become sin. And one person becomes the whole world saved. Those who ever believe in Him will not perish but have everlasting life.

This word is given to us, to love one another, as we mention in the first part, now that is our model, is it the film star or some other person. Jesus is calling us to be our great model. So let us fix our eyes on him and try to make him as our model.

Monday, 16 September 2013

WHAT MAKES A CHRISTIAN?



            A man is not a Christian simply because he lives a good moral life, attends worship, understands correct doctrine or does good works. He is a Christian because of faith in Jesus and union with Him. One who is a Christian, however, is to live a good life which befits the gospel, worship God and encourage other saints, grow in knowledge and be zealous for good works.


I. Some things do not make a Christian.
   A. A moral life does not make a Christian.
        1. Cornelius was a good moral man, but he was not a Christian (Acts 10:1ff).
        2. All men break God's laws and are sinners before Him. No one is good enough to be a Christian.
   B. Church attendance does not make a Christian.
        1. Jeremiah was told to make such an announcement to God's people of his day (Jeremiah 7:1ff).
        2. Being in the company of Christians does not make one a Christian today. Some who sit "in church" will be cast out in the day of judgment (Matthew 7:21-23).
   C. Doctrine and issues do not make a Christian.
        1. Knowledge is not a matter of pride, or sufficient alone (I Corinthians 8:2, 3).
        2. One may have "all knowledge" and still be nothing (I Corinthians 13:2).
        3. The demons hold "right doctrine," but they are far from saved (James 2:19).
   D. Good works do not make a Christian.
        1. Salvation is not of our works (Ephesians 2:8, 9).
        2. We are not saved by works of righteousness which we have done (Titus 3:5, 6).

II. The Christian is one who has faith in Jesus, repentance toward God, and has become a new creation in Christ (Acts 20:21; II Corinthians 5:17-21; Colossians 2:12, 13).

III. Those things mentioned above do not "make" a Christian, but they are to be part of the growing Christian life.
   A. The Christian is to live a moral life appropriate to one who is in Christ (Ephesians 4:20; Colossians 3:1ff).
   B. Church attendance is for the Christian's edification and development (Hebrews 10:24, 25).
   C. The Christian is to grow in the knowledge of God's Word, and in healthy doctrine (Ephesians 4:14, 15; II Peter 3:18).
   D. Good works are to accompany the Christian wherever he goes (Ephesians 2:10; Titus 2, 3).

Confessing Christ



Matthew 10:32 “Therefore everyone who confesses Me before men, I will also confess him before My Father who is in heaven.”

1.      The object to be confessed.
a.       Not our good works, church membership or worthy desires and purposed
b.      Not some remarkable experience
c.       But Christ as our savior and King, our trust in Him for Pardon, and our obedience to Him as our law giver.
2.      To whom the confession is to be made
a.       To Christ-the heart
b.      To men – “before men” (Romans 10:9-10). Do not hesitate from any cause: remember,
i.                    Christ require it
ii.                  He knows all about you
iii.                He wants to use your confession

3.      The manner of confessing
a.       By words, “with the mouth confession is made unto salvation.”
b.      By acts the ordinances and an upright life.

4.      The promise to those confessing
They shall be confessed before the Father.
  1. Confessed now, which means forgiveness, reconciliation and unspeakably rich blessings in the life that is now.
  2. Confessed hereafter; received into glory; welcomed by the king in his beauty; “Come ye blessed of my Father.”

Satan’s Policy


Introduction
“Be sober, be vigilant; because your adversary, the devil, as a roaring lion, walk about, seeking whom he may devour” (I Peter 5:8).
            Christians need to be aware of Satan’s presence, his temporary power, and the methods of his deceit. This lesson shows five ways Satan works in his never-ending fight against Christians and God.

I. Satan always tries to Spoil God’s Word.
            Mark 4:14-19. The parable of the soils, often misnamed the parable of the sower, shows this. Satan tries to snatch away God’s Word as soon as it is received. If this fails he does not stop, but tries to deaden its influence, choke it out, or distract attention from it by the cares of the world.
            Revelation 2:9; 3:9. Believers at Smyrna and at Philadelphia were subjected to Satan’s assault in this way. The “synagogue of Satan” probably refers to Jewish persecutors in these cities, and the methods of their attack were in part the misuse of Scripture and denial of truth taught by the Christians. Jesus encouraged the saints to persevere, and He assured them that He was indeed on their side.

II. Satan concepts teaching to mislead.
            II Corinthians 11:12-15. Paul faced opponents at Corinth who claimed to represent Christ but who denied Paul’s apostleship and gospel. He says they were “ministers of Satan.”
            II Thessalonians 2:9-12. Paul by the Spirit predicted a “man of sin,” who would mislead through error and false signs. This might have had reference to the then-budding emperor cult of the Roman government, which finally required token emperor-worship. It might have been fulfilled again in the Roman Pope. It might be seen again near the end of time with a powerful antichrist that claims worship and persecutes true Christians. However this spirit is manifested, it is from Satan, and it uses false teaching to mislead and destroy.
            II Timothy 2:25, 26. Through error, Satan snares people to do his will. Paul tells Timothy that the man of God must be gentle in dealing with misled individuals. Satan is the enemy; they are his victims. God can give repentance and recovery, however, releasing Satan's prisoners of war and leaving him empty-handed.

III. Satan gives evil thoughts.
            John 13:2. The wicked thoughts of Judas to betray Christ were put there by Satan. We are held responsible to resist the devil, but he is all too ready to enter our mind if we lower our guard of faith in Jesus and dependence on Him.
            Acts 5:3. Ananias and his wife were also given evil thoughts by Satan to lie regarding their contribution. They sought undue glory but instead found sudden death. Satan's arsenal depends on deceit; he never tells the truth about the results of sin.
            II Corinthians 10: 3-5. Here Paul uses the language of battle in describing our constant struggle against Satan. The battle-field is between our ears -- it is in our mind! Through the power of God, we are to tear down the fortresses of pride and self-reliance. We are to attack with full force every wicked imagination, taking as prisoners of war every thought, now captured by obedience to Christ.

IV. Satan Develop our weaknesses.
            II Corinthians 2:6-11. A Christian at Corinth who had sinned was publicly shamed by the other saints and had repented. Now Paul urges them to receive and comfort him, so that through sorrow he not becomes a victim of Satan. The horrible devil stands like a vulture, waiting for our moment of weakness, ready to swoop and destroy. Christians need to encourage each other in every possible way to help avoid such moments of openness to Satan.
            I Corinthians 7:5. God ordained marriage for the satisfaction of sexual desires. Paul says that Christians ought not to be separated from their partners too long, lest Satan use the opportunity to exploit their natural desires and lead one or both to sin.
            I Timothy 3:6. The bishop is to be a Christian man of maturity, not a novice (new convert). One too soon charged with this noble responsibility might be tempted by Satan with pride to his downfall.
            Whether one's weakness is discouragement, desire, pride, or something else, Satan knows it and will seek to take advantage of it to destroy. Through God we can have the victory, for He will strengthen us if we ask and look to Him in trust (Ephesians 3:20; Colossians 1:11; I Peter 5:10).

V. Satan Slowdown and hinders our good plans and work.
            II Corinthians 12:7. Paul was troubled by his “thorn in the flesh,” which he calls a “messenger of Satan.” Whatever it was, this “thorn” hindered his full freedom and pleasure in the work of God. In this case, God did not remove the obstacle, but He taught Paul by it to rely more on divine grace and power.
            I Thessalonians 2:17, 18. After Paul had left Thessalonica, he became anxious concerning the new believers there. They were facing persecution for their faith in Jesus, and Paul desperately wanted to visit them personally to encourage and strengthen. Every time he planned to go, something happened to prevent it. Satan was the hindering cause, Paul here tells these believers. Today Satan will interfere with circumstances of life to hinder progress in God's work, using other people, situations and the timing of events. Only in the Lord and by far-reaching faith can we overcome (Romans 8:28).

Conclusion
            Satan hates God and always tries to destroy His work of salvation in Christ. Jesus triumphed over him by His perfect life, however, and He stripped him of power by His resurrection from the dead. Satan then turned on the followers of Jesus, trying in every way possible to destroy them. He thwarts God's Word, falsifies teaching, gives evil thoughts, exploits personal weaknesses, impedes, and hinders good works and plans. Of ourselves, we are helpless prey. But in Christ and by faith, we have the victory. In the name of Jesus we can send Satan scurrying for cover! Let us be aware of his devices, and let us trust solely in the Lord to "deliver us from evil.”


Sunday, 15 September 2013

The fact of judgment


            When we say the detail of judgment we will able to know the judgment will sure take place when the time will come. Judgment to everyone who is living in this world, no one will be left without judging. So everyone will face judgment when all things are completed. So let us see what is the fact of judgment?

God has appointed a day to judge the world
            It is clearly mention in the book of Acts 17:30-31 While God has overlooked the times of human ignorance, now he commands all people everywhere to repent, 31 because he has fixed a day on which he will have the world judged in righteousness by a man whom he has appointed, and of this he has given assurance to all by raising him from the dead." Here we can see that the judgment will clearly take place, so before the judgment is announce all the people in this world are commanded to repent, if they don’t repent from their sin the judgment will surely fall upon them. This judgment will not be only those who are bad but also everyone in this world who are still alive and also those people who are already dead.
            So this is the time for us are we living in the right way, or are we following the law of the Lord, are accepting Jesus as our personal savior, we need to clear our own way when the time of Judgment come to us if we complain nothing will work out. So it is the time to repent and follow the foot step of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ.

 It is appointed for man to die, then will come the judgment
            In this verse we can see that Hebrews 9:27. And just as it is appointed for mortals to die once, and after that the judgment.  “The author has made it clear that Christ’s death has instituted a better covenant, which is superior to animal offerings. The author clearly underscored the measureless superiority of the sacrificial death of Christ.”
           
            Because Jesus Christ died for our sins we do not need to fear condemnation after death (v. 27; Rom. 8:1), but we can look forward to ultimate deliverance (v. 28). He provided the first benefit of salvation, deliverance from the penalty of sin, at the end of His first advent. He will provide the second, deliverance from the presence of sin, at the end of His second advent.
“There is finality about death, which is not to be doubtful. But if it is the complete and final end to life on earth, it is not, as so many in the ancient world thought, the complete and final end. Death is more serious than that because it is followed by judgment. Men are accountable, and after death they will render account to God.”
When the Lord returns at the Rapture all Christians will enter into His presence, but only believers who have remained faithful to Him will enter into their full inheritance. “Those who eagerly await Him” (v. 28) evidently refers to faithful believers. Specifically what will take place is that at the Rapture all believers will go to be with Christ.
            The body which we are living will destroys one day. All our mortal body will die, and the new body will be given to us. The life which we are living will be destroys and the new life will be given to everyone. That life will not able to die anymore, then the judgment will come to us. This is the right time to change the life we are living if we are living in God’s side we can be save but if we are living in the other side after our life when we have a new life the whole life will to torture.


Saturday, 14 September 2013

Looking without Finding and Finding without Looking

Romans 9:30-10:4 
1. The Gentiles find righteousness without seeking it
2. The Jews cannot find righteousness because they seek it the wrong way
3. Righteousness for everyone who believes in Jesus Christ

Introduction
Today’s biggest question is How Do We Get Right in God’s Sight?  It’s not new to our day and age. It was already a big question back in the middle fifties AD, when the Apostle Paul wrote this letter overseas to the people at Rome. In fact, it was an especially big question back then: because there were two groups quarreling considerably about which of their two ways of salvation was the right one.

The Writer of this letter to the Romans was the Apostle Paul. Paul never even met Jesus while He was here on the earth. Paul was very strict Jew. When the gospel of Christ began to spread, Paul violently persecuted the believers. Then one day, as he was on his way to the city of Damascus, Paul suddenly met the risen and living Lord Jesus Christ, and became a believer himself. It was then that Jesus appointed Paul to be an Apostle. Jesus sent Paul to preach the gospel primarily among the Gentiles, that is, non-Jewish. But, same time he has burden for his Jewish people also.

First of all, there were the Jews of the time. Paul deals with them in the middle six verses here. He begins: Israel, who pursued a law of righteousness, has not attained it. Why not? Because they pursued it not by faith but as if it were by works.

The Jews of Paul’s day aimed to get right in God’s sight by good deeds in conformity with God’s standards. Immediately, Paul says, they didn’t make it; they didn’t attain their goal of God’s righteousness. Why not? Their old sinful nature, inherited from their parents, all the way back to Adam and Eve, their old sinful nature made it impossible for them perfectly to love God and perfectly to love others.

This entire section emphasizes the difference between “Law righteousness” and “faith righteousness.” The contrasts are seen in the following.

Law of Righteousness                       Faith Righteousness
Only for the Jews                                For “whosoever”
Based on works                                  Comes by faith alone
Self-righteousness                               God’s righteousness
Cannot save                                        Bring salvation
Obey the Lord                                                Call on the Lord

1. The Gentiles find righteousness without seeking it (Romans 9:30-31)

The Jews on one side and the Gentiles on the other, two observable cultures. The Jews are devoting themselves to God’s law and keeping their distance from Gentile culture, which they see as unclean. The Gentiles have cooties. Not that every Jew feels that way, but it’s a pattern – pursuing a law that leads to righteousness. The Jews are serious about that. The Old Testament (the Bible) is the rule-book, and they’re following the rules, to be righteous and ready for the Messiah. But the Gentiles, over in their culture, aren’t pursuing righteousness. They’re like many people today, focused on other things.

When Paul preached to gentiles, they did not show any doubt on his words. But when he tried to preach Jewish, they always argued with him, and they show many doubt to him. But when gentiles heard the gospel, many of those Gentiles received, by putting faith on God, and they accepted it, and had thus find righteousness. However, it was not a righteousness based on their own goodness in the sight of God. It was God’s righteousness, appropriated by God given faith. It was a righteousness purchased by Christ’s redeeming blood.

The Gentiles have received right standing with God and covenant membership in the family of God by faith, not through the Law of Moses. Gentiles, who were not pursuing a right status with God and were not pursuing covenant membership with God, have been offered this status and the Gentiles have accepted this status by faith. They did not receive this status through the Law of Moses. The Gentiles did not receive this status by keeping the works of the Law (circumcision, Sabbath keeping, keeping clean and unclean ordinances, etc). They received this status of justified and covenant membership in God’s family through faith. This faith is not simply mental agreement to God’s promises for Paul has never defined faith this way in the letter to the Romans. Faith describes truly trusting in God and living faithfully to him.

Application
Even today, people find what they do not look. They read a book, listen to a song; somehow it sets them on the path toward God. They go to a wedding, a funeral, a baptism, and behold. God found them and they received righteousness by faith. Others have the opposite experience. They seek, but do not find, because they pursue righteousness the wrong way.

We need to decide what kind of righteousness we are seeking, whether we are depending on good works and character, or trusting Christ alone for salvation. God does not save people on the basis of birth or behavior. He saves them “by grace, through faith” (Eph. 2:8–9). It is not a question of whether or not we are among God’s elect. That is a mystery known only to God. He offers us His salvation by faith. After we have trusted Christ, then we have the witness and evidence that we are among His elect (Eph. 1:4–14; 1 Thess. 1:1–10). But first we must trust Him and receive by faith His righteousness which alone can guarantee heaven.

2. The Jews cannot find righteousness because they seek it the wrong way (Romans 9:32-33)

The Jews sought for righteousness but did not find it, while the Gentiles, who were not searching for it, found it. The reason is that Jewish did not pursue right standing by faith, but by works. They rejected “grace righteousness” and tried to please God with “Law righteousness.” The Jews thought that the Gentiles had to come up to Israel’s level to be saved; when actually the Jews had to go down to the level of the Gentiles to be saved. “For there is no difference: for all have sinned and come short of the glory of God” (Rom. 3:22–23). Instead of permitting their religious privileges (Rom. 9:1–5) to lead them to Christ, they used these privileges as a substitute for Christ.

But see the grace of God: Israel’s rejection means the Gentiles’ salvation. Paul’s final quotation was from Isaiah 28:16. (The words quoted by Paul here in verse 33 are a combination of two biblical passages: Isa. 28:16 and 8:14:“Behold, I lay in Zion a tested stone, a precious cornerstone for a solid foundation. The one who trusts will never be dismayed” (Isa. 28:16). “For both houses of Israel he will be a stone that causes people to stumble, and a rock that makes them fall” (Isa. 8:14).) It referred to Jesus Christ; God’s Stone of salvation (see Ps. 118:22). In Zion was placed a stone that made people stumble and a rock that would trip them up. God gave Christ to be a Foundation Stone, but Israel rejected Him and He became a stumbling stone. Instead of “rising” on this Stone, Israel fell (Rom. 11:11); but, as we shall see, their fall made possible the salvation of the Gentiles by the grace of God.

Israel, on the other hand, pursued a law of righteousness (v. 31), but didn’t obtain it? Because they did not have faith; rather, they tried to get righteousness by works (v. 32). They trusted in their own efforts. They said: “Because we are descendants of Abraham by birth, surely we must children of God.” but in thinking this, they had made a big mistake. They thought that because they were circumcised on the eighth day that they were in God’s family. They thought because they possessed the Law of Moses that they were the people of God. But Paul has shown that no one is justified by the works of the Law (Romans 3:20). Even though they were indeed God’s chosen people on the basis of their natural descent from Abraham, in the end they lost the privilege of being God’s people, God’s children, because of their refusal to believe in Christ. Our election, our righteousness, our salvation are all by faith, not by works. Most of Jews tried to obtain righteousness and salvation by their own religious works, and they failed. The Gentiles, who in the Jews’ eyes didn’t even pursue righteousness, ended up getting it through faith.

When the Jewish rejected Christ, they lost their salvation – that is, they stumbled (Isaiah 8:14, 28:16). The Jews could not believe that their savior – who the Old Testament Promised would come – would turn out to be the son of an ordinary carpenter and then, worse than that, end up dying on a cross like a poor criminal. Instead of worshiping such a savior, they despised Him. Therefore, Christ became for the Jews “stumbling stone” over which they stumble and fell.

They did not live faithfully to God. They did not put their trust in God, but opposed God. Instead, the Jews thought they had right standing before God and covenant membership in God’s family by the works of the Law.

Application
Israelites come upon Jesus, look him over carefully and reject him. Why? Because Jesus himself is not bowed toward law and the righteousness people try to earn. He didn't care about their rules. He didn't promote righteousness as they understood it, so they rejected him. Of course, jealousy of Jesus’ popularity made them more angry. But they were right about this: Jesus did not tell people to pursue legal righteousness by their work. He offered righteousness by grace (9:33).

Sometimes we show ourselves that we are very righteous and spiritual. And we are tried to judge others by our lives. But, actually we ourselves not worthy to judge others, because our own lives itself not worthy for that, so how we can judge others.

Christ was stumbling block for Jewish same way he become stumbling block for today’s people. Sometimes, we are also finding something but we are not looking God’s will. We are tried to find according to our will, our desire. But, we become fail to find that things, because that is not God’s will. But, we should try to find according to God’s desire, so we can get it.
Because Jesus is the foundation stone, so that those who reject him must stumble and fall (Matt 21:44). Indeed, Jesus told those who rejected him, “The kingdom of God will be taken away from you and given to a people who will produce its fruit” (21:43). And everyone who follows Jesus, Jew or Gentile, will receive that fruit.

3. Righteousness for everyone who believes in Jesus Christ (Romans.10:1-4)

Jewish pursued righteousness but failed to achieve it because they seeking it by personal value rather than by faith. But, the Gentiles find it without seeking it. The deep longing of Paul’s heart was that his countrymen experience salvation. The reality of his love is seen in the fact that he prayed for them. He, like they, belonged to that special race through whom God had revealed himself in history. Reflecting on his pre-conversion days, he told the Galatians of his extreme zeal for the traditions of the fathers (Gal 1:14; cf. Acts 22:3). But God met him on the Damascus road, and his eyes were opened to God’s way of righteousness. The experience did not turn him bitter against his former associates but rather kindled within his heart a burning desire that they too might experience the forgiving grace of God through Jesus Christ.

There was a time when Paul would have agreed with his people, for he himself opposed the Gospel and considered Jesus Christ a fraud. Paul himself had been zealous for the Law and the traditions (Acts 26:1–11; Gal. 1:13–14). Israel considered the Gentiles in need of salvation, but certainly not the Jews. In several of His parables, Jesus pointed out this wrong attitude: the elder brother (Luke 15:11–32) and the Pharisee (Luke 18:9–14) are two examples. Israel would have been happy for political salvation from Rome, but it did not feel it needed spiritual salvation from its own sin.

Everything about the Jewish religion pointed to the coming Messiah (their sacrifices, priesthood, temple services, religious festivals, and covenants). Their Law told them they were sinners in need of a Savior. But instead of hire the Law bring them to Christ (Gal. 3:24), they worshiped their Law and rejected their Savior. The Law was a signboard, pointing the way. But it could never take them to their destination. The Law cannot give righteousness; it only leads the sinner to the Savior who can give righteousness.

Paul’s comment in last verse of passage is mysterious: Christ is the end of the law so that there may be righteousness for everyone who believes (10:4). “Law” means the Law of Moses. But in what sense is Christ the end of the law? The word “end” in English and the Greek word for “end” - TELOS - can have three meanings that make sense here: it can mean “fulfillment” or “purpose” (as in “the chief end of man is to glorify God”), it can mean “termination” (“come to an end”), or it can mean “goal” (“means and ends”). It is hard to decide what Paul means here, because all three applications of the word make sense in context and are consistent with other biblical teaching. Christ “fulfills” the righteousness which the Law can only describe; he “terminates” the Law as a means of salvation; and he is the “goal” toward which the whole Mosaic legislation pointed--the Law is our “schoolmaster” to bring us to Christ.

Christ is “the end of the Law” in the sense that through His death and resurrection, He has terminated the ministry of the Law for those who believe. The Law is ended as far as Christians are concerned. The righteousness of the Law is being fulfilled in the life of the believer through the power of the Spirit (Rom. 8:4); but the reign of the Law has ended ( Eph. 2:15; Col. 2:14). Jesus himself said, “Do not think that I have come to abolish the Law or the Prophets; I have not come to abolish but to fulfill” (Matt 5:17). “Therefore we are not under the Law, but under grace” (Rom. 6:14). (John 1:17 says, “the law was given through Moses; but, grace and truth came through Jesus Christ.”)

Paul further testifies that Israel did not understand how God was keeping his promised covenant. They did not understand God’s plan through Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob. God’s righteousness was not just for Israel, but was through them. God was not just giving right standing to Israel. Israel was the vehicle through which the Messiah would come so that the whole world could receive right standing before God. The promises were not exclusive to Israel.

Since the Jews did not know the righteousness that comes from God - that is, the righteousness that comes through faith in Christ, they did not submit to it. They didn’t understand that Christ himself was the embodiment of God’s righteousness.
When Paul says that Christ is the end of the Law – that is, the Jewish law. The law has now been replaced by Christ Himself. No longer is the law necessary as a means of obtaining righteousness or salvation. Now Christ stands in place of the law. He is the new way for men and women to obtain righteousness; He is the new way to the heavenly Father for everyone who believes in Him (John 14:6). Christ is not only the end of the law; He is also fulfillment of the law.
Application
It is sad to say, many religious people today are making the same mistake. They think that their good works and religious deeds will save them, when actually these practices are keeping them from being saved. Certainly many of us are sincere and religious, but sincerity and devotion will never save the soul. “Therefore by the deeds of the Law there shall no flesh be justified in His sight” (Rom. 3:20).

Today, many churches want the status of right standing with God to be based on belief without obedience or external works and not on faith. But Paul has taught that those who are children of God are those who walk in the footsteps of faith of Abraham, who put sin to death by being united to Christ through baptism, conforming themselves to the image of his Son. Zeal alone does not put one in God’s body of saved people.

Finally I want to reminds two things
First, the Law of Moses was not the ultimate goal. Christ was the ultimate goal. The law itself was not God’s end purpose. Christ was the goal and the completion of the Law of Moses. Righteousness comes through Jesus, not through the Law. Second, right standing before God and covenant membership in God’s family is to everyone who believes. It is not to Jews who believe. Righteousness is to every person who believes.

Conclusion
So now we can have a better understanding that we are not under the Law as a way of salvation. Christ has freed us from the curse of the Law (Gal. 3:10, 13). He has freed us from the penalty of the Law (Rom.6:23, 8:1-2). He has freed us from the requirements of the ceremonial law--the sacrifices, circumcision, ritual cleanness--for they only existed to point forward to him and are no longer needed. But he has not freed us from the Law itself, which still continues to perform its original function of driving us to him.

Brothers and sisters, we need to confess our sin; then take Christ as our foundation stone. Turn to God and say: “Father, I’ve stumbled into sin as I’ve tried to obey you. I can’t claim any righteousness of my own. But Jesus, my Savior, did not sin. Invited by you, prompted by you, I claim his righteousness as my own.”

Paul gave us the spiritual understanding of this warning. He told us that God’s way of salvation was not difficult and complicated. We do not have to go to heaven to find Christ, or into the world of the dead. He is near to us. In other words, the Gospel of Christ—the Word of faith—is available and accessible. The sinner need not perform difficult works in order to be saved. All he has to do is trust Christ.


If you hold to my teaching, you are my disciples. Then you will know the truth, and the truth will set you free.