Romans 7:15-25. What
is wrong with me?? 9/7/17
I do not understand what I do. For what I want to do I
do not do, but what I hate I do. {16} And if I do what I do not want to do, I
agree that the law is good. {17} As it is, it is no longer I myself who do it,
but it is sin living in me. {18} I know that nothing good lives in me, that is,
in my sinful nature. For I have the desire to do what is good, but I cannot
carry it out. {19} For what I do is not the good I want to do; no, the evil I
do not want to do--this I keep on doing. {20} Now if I do what I do not want to
do, it is no longer I who do it, but it is sin living in me that does it. {21}
So I find this law at work: When I want to do good, evil is right there with
me. {22} For in my inner being I delight in God's law; {23} but I see another
law at work in the members of my body, waging war against the law of my mind
and making me a prisoner of the law of sin at work within my members. {24} What
a wretched man I am! Who will rescue me from this body of death? {25} Thanks be
to God--through Jesus Christ our Lord!
What is wrong with me? As I look back over the past
week, month, years, I see that I have done any number of things that I know I
shouldn’t have done, and didn’t want to do. At the same time there are things
that I know I should have done, but didn’t, and I should know better. What is
wrong with me? What a wretched man I am! And I am your pastor.
Time and time again I fail to live the kind of life
that I know I should. And then to make matters worse, someone comes along with
a smart comment, like, ‘Christians are supposed to be good people, aren’t
they?’ ‘What a Hypocrite!’ Or, ‘you
can’t possibly die a sheep if you are living a goat’s life’. In a sense they
are right. So Again then what is wrong with me?
For most of us we easily fall into the thinking that to
be a Christian is all about living a good moral life. We are simply to be good
people and the church is there to encourage us to do this. So we look to the
church and the bible to tell us how to live the Christian life. It is all about
‘me’ and what I must do. But all too often all we see is our failures and the
failures of others around us.
This is a struggle I have, and I am sure that many of
you have also. We know the good that we want to and need to do, but far too
often we find ourselves doing just the opposite. We want to do the right thing
but so often it all seems to go wrong. This is a problem for all of us,
including Paul here in our reading. ‘For
what I want to do I do not do, but what I hate to do.’
Now we could go along with those out there and say
that we have a real problem and that we are hypocrites and much more. But here
we are reminded that this struggle and difficulty that we have is not
faith-shattering, but in fact the opposite – faith-building.
In fact, this is what the Christian faith is all
about. Yes, God calls us to live good, holy lives, but because of our
sinfulness we will never be able to achieve this. So the Christian faith is all
about what God has done through Jesus Christ and the cross to rectify the
situation. Then for us to recognise our weakness and look to God and the help
that he has provided.
So it is not faith-shattering; because when we
struggle in this way we know that certain laws and forces are at work in our
lives. It makes us ever aware of the sinfulness that is continually at work in
our lives and the sinful nature that we have - even now as Christians. It also
makes us aware that God’s good Law is there and at work pointing out our
failings and shortfalls – our sin – and so our need to look beyond ourselves
for forgiveness and help.
It also helps to show us that when we look to
ourselves and seek to live under our own strength and ability we are in trouble.
We just cannot do it as we should, and so we are forced to acknowledge our
weakness and failure and then look again to the one who truly can give us what
we really need. So this struggle that we have is good.
In fact, there is a real problem for us if we do not
have this struggle, because it shows that there is a lack of conscience: that
there is the absence of any understanding of God’s Law and any desire to live
in accord with the will of God. If anybody does not have this struggle in their
lives, they are lawless in the full sense of the word, and so are in deep
trouble.
Their only desire is to please themselves and to get
out of life what they can for themselves: to hell with anyone else. We can
already see that our society is well down this track, and the churches are
sadly following suit. They seem to think that they can ignore what God has to
say to us in his Word because God loves us and accepts us never-the-less. “We’ll
all be up there when we die! So it doesn’t matter.” Sadly, despite these hopes,
God’s Word is clear that this will not be the case for most.
However, for those of us who are aware of God’s Law
and have this struggle in our lives, of doing what we know we shouldn’t be
doing and all of that, means that we become painfully aware of who we really
are. In light of God’s Word, we know that something is drastically wrong in our
lives and that when we look to ourselves and our goodness we are in deep
trouble.
Now as Paul says here and elsewhere, that does not
mean that God’s Law is bad or that he has fouled up. It means that we have
fouled up: that we are not living up to the expectations that God has set for
us and created for us to do: and that there is an evil force at work in our
lives. It also points us to the consequence of hell for those who do not trust
in Jesus Christ and the importance of his death on the cross for the
forgiveness of sins.
Yes, it shows that we are all too human: that we are
full of sin, and that, nothing good lives in us. That is what is wrong with us!
So it shatters any faith we may have in ourselves, and compels us to cry out, ‘what a wretched person I am’.
Having done that it drives us to seek help beyond
ourselves. So we cry out with Paul, ‘who
will rescue me from this body of death?’ Who is there that can truly help
us?
Certainly it is not the saviours that our world is
putting forward today: The power of positive thinking; or the doing away with
all religious thinking; the accumulation of wealth and material possessions; the
conservation of our environment; our technology, and the like. Nor does it help
to bury our heads in a glass of beer, or drugs and sex, or some other form of
avoiding the big issues of life. No, there is only one way out!
‘Thanks be to
God, that it is through Jesus Christ our Lord.’ It is through Jesus Christ alone that we can
find any real and lasting hope, and the only way out of the mess we are in.
Through his life, death and resurrection, we have a sure way out: God’s way out
for us all.
All who look to Jesus Christ and the cross, no matter
how big their struggles and failures in life may be, they have the assurance of
perfection in God’s sight, through the forgiveness of their sins. Because of
his death on the cross, God forgives everyone and accepts those who now look to
Jesus and put their trust in what he has done for them.
So now again there is hope and joy, now there is a
future; despite ourselves and our failure to be the people that we were
intended to be. Now we can go forward with confidence; not in ourselves, but in
Jesus Christ. Now we can again go forward to live. But not in our strength and
ability anymore, but in Jesus Christ alone. As we look to him and live in him,
we know that it will all work out.
So our struggles in life are not faith-shattering, but
faith-building. Instead of destroying our faith, it turns us away from
ourselves to the only one who can truly help us. As we look to our Lord Jesus
Christ and trust in him and his promises to us, we can continue on with our
struggles, recognising that they are not always in this life going to be taken
away from us, for they are a part of life in a sin-ridden world.
These struggles will dog us each and every day of our
lives, and yes, will even still cause us a great deal of anguish and pain. But
now they will be God’s means of turning us away from ourselves, and help us to
continually look to him who is now our Lord and Saviour. As a result, all glory
will again go to our great God.
So now we can readily acknowledge our weaknesses and
failures. Instead of ignoring, downplaying or denying their existence in our
lives; and so truly being hypocritical. We can accept that everyone of us are
far from perfect, but at the same time remind ourselves that God’s ways are
Good and beneficial for us and our lives in this world.
So we remind ourselves and one another of our need for
forgiveness and also of the need for God’s help and the support of and for one
another. In this way we are then enabled
and enabling each other to live in the face of all kinds of troubles and
hardships. We are in this way living the Christian life as God sees that we need
to. We are then enabled to see that great value of Jesus Christ and his death
on the cross. He will then be held up as Lord and as that which is all
important in life for us.
So what is wrong with me? Sin and evil! But thanks be
to God that through our Lord Jesus Christ he has provided a way out. So to him
alone again then, be all praise, honour and glory, now and always. AMEN
Pastor Roger Atze
Glandore/Underdale Lutheran Parish
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