7 January 2020
Text: Romans 1:1-17
In the name of +
Jesus. Amen.
St.
Paul writes to the Church at Rome, the eternal city, the capital of the empire
– the center of the known world. He is
taking the battle for the Christian faith right to the enemy – to the seat of
Caesar himself. And it is the apostle’s
earnest desire and intention to come to Rome to minister to the saints there.
St.
Paul wishes to “reap some harvest” among the Roman Christians, as well as “the
rest of the Gentiles” that he is evangelizing.
He wishes to “preach the gospel” to the Romans, as the Lord has called
him to do, and as this letter is preparing them for this preaching.
The
Book of Romans is indeed a beautiful presentation of the Gospel in its
fullness, beginning with the law and the painful reality that we do not keep
it, that we cannot save ourselves, and that apart from Christ, we are
doomed. But of course, along with the
Law comes the Gospel, the good news that our Lord has indeed come to rescue us
by means of His blood, by grace and through faith.
The
very first theological statement that St. Paul makes in this letter sums up the
entire Christian faith, that the Gospel “is the power of God for salvation to
everyone who believes, to the Jew first and also to the Greek.” Salvation’s power, dear friends, lies not in
our own righteousness, our own struggle to achieve holiness, or even in the
Law. It has nothing to do with our
ethnicity or station in life. Salvation’s
power is in the Gospel, the good news that Christ has come to redeem us poor,
miserable sinners. Paul’s letter to the
Romans is not only a systematic theological treatise, it is a joyful epistle
that celebrates the Lord’s victory over sin, death, and the devil, and proclaims
this Good News unabashedly, even as the apostle has said, “I am not ashamed of
the gospel.”
And
his next sentence put Dr. Luther into the trajectory of rethinking the Gospel,
even as we Lutherans are known as “Evangelicals” in Germany, meaning, we are the
confessors of the Gospel! For Luther
contemplated Paul’s assertion that “The righteous shall live by faith.” And that one powerful verse from the Word of
God and the pen of St. Paul changed Luther’s life, and the lives of millions
who were liberated by the Gospel.
Let
us savor the Word of God, dear friends, for in the Word, we receive the gift of
everlasting life, through Christ our Lord.
Amen!
In the name of the Father
and of the + Son and of the Holy Spirit.
Amen.
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