Sunday, August 9, 2015

Slaves, Sons, and Saints - August 09, Readings: Job 29-30, Romans 1, Psalm 92:1–3, Proverbs 19:28–29

Links to Today's Readings

Donald Grey Barnhouse was the pastor of Tenth Presbyterian Church in Philadelphia for decades. He spent many of those years preaching verse by verse through the Book of Romans and compiled a wonderful set of commentaries on the book.

This raises a crucial problem as we begin reading through Romans. Chapter 1 has so much depth, I could do devotionals from this chapter for a month and not run out of topics. It starts with some introductory personal greetings, then Paul sets his theme. "I am not ashamed of the gospel." "The righteous will live by faith." We relate to God not on the basis of our own works, but by God's grace, by the righteousness Christ won for us at the cross.

Having set that theme, Paul begins to systematically develop that theme - righteousness by faith. He begins by explaining human sin and depravity, the reason we need a righteousness from God. He will go on to teach the glories of our salvation and of the Christian life, all the way through the end of chapter 11.

If it took Dr. Barnhouse 30 years and several volumes of commentary to teach Romans, I am certainly not going to do it justice in these devotionals.

But I saw something simple today that I thought was encouraging, something about Paul and his attitude toward others. In verse 1, Paul describes himself.
Paul, a servant of Christ Jesus.
A slave. A common household servant - a position of humility, even humiliation that no Roman wanted to accept. The Romans viewed being a servant as intolerable and awful. But Paul embraced it. Serving Jesus was not humiliating, it was glory. He embraced the concept of devoting his life fully to the service of Jesus Christ.

But when it came to describing other believers, he focused on something completely different, in verse 7.
To all those in Rome who are loved by God and called to be saints.  
When speaking of others, he emphasized their position in Christ, their high status. They were loved by God, adopted into the heavenly family and recipients of the glorious love of God. He also mentions that they are saints, made holy by the work of Christ, set apart for God.

The Roman Christians were also servants of God. Paul was also loved by God and called as a saint. But when he spoke of himself, he focused on his own humble place in the economy of God. He was a lowly servant, the chief of sinners who has been redeemed and brought into the service of Jesus Christ. He chose to honor the Romans believers, emphasizing their exalted place in Christ. He humbled himself and honored his readers.

What a great lesson that is for all of us. Our normal, human tendency is to lift ourselves up and often to put others down in the process. He did the opposite. He imitated the humility of Christ during his earthly ministry, who came not to be served, but to serve others, to seek and to save the lost.

You want to build a biblical "self-image?' Base it on these truths!

Father, may I imitate the humility of Paul who imitated the humility of Christ. May I honor others and serve them in Christ's name. 

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