Romans 3:9-20 – Everyone Guilty

What is sin?

In Romans chapters 1 and 2, we saw sin defined as disobedience to truth, a transgression against what’s right and falling short of the glory of God.
The standard is God’s glory and anything less is sin.
In this episode we summarise Romans 3:9 before moving through to verses 10 to 20.

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Romans 3:9-20 – Transcript

We’ve been dealing with the first section in Romans 3, which presents four objections to what Paul’s proven in chapters 1 and 2—that all are under sin, whether Jew or Gentile. Paul demonstrates this through creation, conscience, Jewish law, and Israel’s history. Romans 3 begins with a series of objections to this.

The first objection is: “If both Jew and Gentile are sinners, what profit is there in being a Jew?” Paul answers, “Much every way,” because the Jews were entrusted with the oracles of God.

The second objection asks: “If some did not believe, shall their unbelief make the faith of God without effect?” In other words, if some Israelites didn’t believe, does that mean God failed to keep His promises? Paul responds, “God forbid!” God is true; it’s people who are liars.

The third objection is: “If our unrighteousness commends the righteousness of God, is God unrighteous who takes vengeance?” This implies that God needs sinners to demonstrate His righteousness. Paul rejects this absurd idea, affirming that God doesn’t need us to be righteous. If God were unrighteous, how could He judge the world?

 

In verse 7, Paul turns the argument to himself personally: “If my lie enhances God’s truth, why am I judged as a sinner?”

If so, Paul should be praised for lying.

But he clarifies, “I speak as a man,” exposing the absurdity.

 

Then in verse 8, he condemns those who slander him by saying that he teaches, “Let us do evil that good may come.” He affirms, “Their damnation is just.”

This objection, as stupid as it seems, is constantly used against the gospel of the grace of God right up to today.

People say, “If you could be saved just by faith in Christ, then you could go out and live in sin. Since God’s grace superabounds over man’s sin, then the more you sin, the more His grace abounds.”

Paul simply answers by saying that the condemnation of people who talk like that is well-deserved.

 

The final objection in verse 9 asks: “Are we better than they?”

Paul would be hated so much by Israel for what he’s about to answer that they picked up stones to stone him, because he’s going to make statements that’re far removed from Israel’s belief system.

 

Paul answers, “No, in no wise: for we have before proved both Jews and Gentiles, that they are all under sin.” This challenges both the Jewish belief and all human tendency to think, “I’m better than others, so God’s judgment shouldn’t apply to me.”

But sin is measured by God’s standard, not ours.

 

As we’ve shown, Paul’s addressing objections from a hypothetical religious Jew, the same one condemned in Romans 2, who rests in the law and believes in his own moral superiority.

These objections stem from a belief that, because Israel’s a nation chosen by God, that should exempt them from judgment. But Paul insists that God’s judgment is righteous.

The “they” in verse 9 includes unbelievers (verse 3), the world (verse 6), Gentiles (verse 9), and sinners (verse 7).

 

Paul’s answer to the verse 9 question, “Are we better than they?” is that he’s already proven in Romans 1 and 2 that all people are under the power of sin.

This means that Jews are no different from Gentiles in this respect.

 

In chapter 1 he dealt with Gentiles, covering thousands of years of human history and in chapter 2 he addressed Israel’s failure despite having the law, God’s promises, and His revelation.

Paul’s argument is airtight: all are under sin, all are guilty, and all need salvation.

 

As we continue on in Romans 3, we’ll see that Paul’s going to absolutely lay waste to Israel. Remember, they had every advantage but the point of this section is they’re losing every advantage. They’re being identified right alongside the Gentiles rather as having no hope and no standing.

 

You and I might say, “But we’re better than those sinners.” Well friends you and I are still a sinner.

So what’s the question? Am I a better sinner? A worse sinner? I’m still a sinner. Sin is still all in the same category of not being holy and not being worthy of God.

This leads us to define the word “sin,” and we note that this is the first time the word “sin” in the singular appears in the book of Romans.

We saw “sinner” in verse 7, and “him that sinned” in chapter 2, but so far, not “sin” singular.

 

So how do you define sin? Well, go back to Romans 1 and 2. We won’t find the word “sin” there, but we’ll find the definition. We’ll find “sinner,” we’ll find “sinned,” but what we really find is a drastic description of what sin is, and Paul proves that we’re under it.

 

So what is sin? There’re many definitions, but from Romans 1 and 2 we see that sin is disobedience to truth.

It’s an offense to righteousness. If what we do, or think, is an offense to righteousness, that’s sin and it’s a transgression of the law.

Sin is anything unworthy of God.

 

Romans 3:23 says,

All have sinned and come short of the glory of God.

 

That’s an impossibly high standard, the glory of God, and if we don’t meet that, we’re sinners. Who can reach that standard? Nobody, and that’s exactly the point.

And it’s not just what we do that constitutes sin. Our very thoughts are sin!

In Genesis 8:21, God said that “the imagination of man’s heart is evil from his youth.”

Genesis 6:5 has this,

And GOD saw that the wickedness of man was great in the earth, and that every imagination of the thoughts of his heart was only evil continually.

 

1 Chronicles 28:9 says,

for the LORD searcheth all hearts, and understandeth all the imaginations of the thoughts:

 

Psalms 56:5,

Every day they wrest my words: all their thoughts are against me for evil.

 

Isaiah 66:18

For I know their works and their thoughts:

 

Matthew 9:4,

And Jesus knowing their thoughts said, Wherefore think ye evil in your hearts?

 

1 Corinthians 3:20,

And again, The Lord knoweth the thoughts of the wise, that they are vain.

 

Hebrews 4:12,

For the word of God is quick, and powerful, and sharper than any twoedged sword, piercing even to the dividing asunder of soul and spirit, and of the joints and marrow, and is a discerner of the thoughts and intents of the heart.

 

We see that the actions, the outworking of sin is because it first takes place in the thoughts of the heart.

 

Matthew 12:34,

O generation of vipers, how can ye, being evil, speak good things? for out of the abundance of the heart the mouth speaketh.

 

Human sin is not new, and standards of morality fall as people become more willing to give in to their worst desires of the heart.

People now celebrate acts of evil that should bring shame and much of the population competes to see who can take evil to its most bizarre extremes.

 

It’s not that God wants to condemn us, He’s always wanted to show us His grace. But to know grace, we first have to know our relationship to Him. And that relationship is: I am a sinner and I’m unworthy of Him. Anything He gives me, life, righteousness, peace, joy, I don’t deserve.

That should produce gratitude.

 

But back in Romans 1, that’s not what happens. People receive from God and don’t thank Him or glorify Him. His standard is too high, so they lower His standard to their own and that’s the problem.

 

Sin is that which is unworthy of God and it’s self-condemning. “Are you telling me I’m unworthy of God?” Yes, exactly.

That’s the problem with modern Christianity, which flips the tables and says, “I’m so worthy that God died for me.” No, we’re unworthy, so Christ had to die for us to commend God’s love to us. There was no other way. Modern Christianity’s got it backwards.

We tend to see good people and bad people. But God sees only sinners. And that’s what’s going on here.

 

There’s no worth in the sinner.

There’s value in human life only because God gave it. There’s value in the earth because God made it. There’s value in wisdom and knowledge—even outside Scripture—because God made things to be known and gave us minds to understand. All worthy things come from Him.

Nothing man’s ever created is independent of God’s creation.

 

So sin is what’s unworthy of God. It’s what’s contrary to what’s right and true.

That’s what Paul proved in Romans 1 and 2, that we’re all under sin,  Jew and Gentile alike. Everybody. “Gentiles” means nations while “Jews” refers to the people God created as His nation.

 

Israel, in this the dispensation of the grace of God, is counted as uncircumcised in heart and ears as Romans 2:25-27 states and Stephen in Acts 7:51 charges, and we read,

Ye stiff-necked and uncircumcised in heart and ears, ye do always resist the Holy Ghost: as your fathers did, so do ye. 

 

So Israel needs the same gospel of the grace of God as you and me.

All are under sin and so we all deserve God’s wrath and righteous judgment.

Israel no longer has an advantage.

One of the greatest errors made in the church, the body of Christ today is to think that in some way it’s Israel’s replacement.

 

Now, a couple of things we should be aware of before we continue on to Romans 3:10.

Romans 3:9-20 consists of 12 separate verses but, remember that chapter and verse divisions weren’t added to the Bible until around 1227. In fact these 12 verses are actually one paragraph.

We also need to always be aware of 2 Timothy 3:16-17,

All scripture is given by inspiration of God, and is profitable for doctrine, for reproof, for correction, for instruction in righteousness: 

That the man of God may be perfect, throughly furnished unto all good works. 

 

The epistles of Romans through to Philemon are where we find the doctrine for the church, the body of Christ today, given to us by Jesus Himself through Paul, the apostle to the Gentiles.

Doctrine means the teaching of principles or truths.

As we look at every verse in this passage we see Paul doing exactly what he tells us to do in 2 Timothy 3:16-17. He uses all scripture, in this case the Jewish books we call the Old Testament.

 

Of course, if we’re going to deal with Israel, then it’s common sense to use Israel’s scriptures to demonstrate their condition and this is exactly what Pauls going to do, prove to the Jews that they’re no different from the Gentiles in that they’re under sin, just as he’s stated in Romas 3:9, and he’ll prove it using scripture, Jewish scripture, and he’ll lean very heavily on Isaiah and Psalms.

 

Notice that Paul doesn’t quote the chapter and verse of scripture he refers to. Two reasons for this are that there were no chapter and verse divisions in his day and secondly, he didn’t need to. His Jewish objectors already knew the scriptures. They were bought up on them virtually from birth. They knew them intimately even though they couldn’t obey them.

It was the same when Jesus quoted scripture during His earthly ministry. The most Jesus ever did was mention the prophets name when He quoted them such as Isaiah in Matthew 15:7–9 and in multiple other places.

 

Romans 3:10,

As it is written, There is none righteous, no, not one: 

 

Paul answers the question of Romans 3:9 saying that the Oracles of God that were given to you say that there’s none righteous no not one.

Pauls drawing from Psalms 14:1 here and we read,

To the chief Musician, A Psalm of David. The fool hath said in his heart, There is no God. They are corrupt, they have done abominable works, there is none that doeth good. 

 

We see that Psalm 53:1 says almost the exact same thing and it’s one of those places in the Bible where God repeats himself.

The fool says “There is no God.”

He doesn’t want there to be a God, therefore he denies His existence.

It’s not a rational position because firstly it’s a claim that says, “I know everything. It’s not possible that a God could exist beyond my knowledge.”

This position ignores the wonders of God in creation, the immensity of the universe, the amazingly precise movement of the planets, the marvellous ways that the earth sustains life, the intricate design of the human body, the fantastic complexity of the human brain and the extraordinary properties of water and soil and the endless other proofs of a great and mighty Creator.

The reason why it’s a fool there is not because he’s name calling. A fool is defined in the Bible as one who doesn’t have wisdom.

 

There’s none that doeth good. They are corrupt, they’ve done abominable works.

Their works are not abominable because they’re Psychopathic killers or something.

It’s because they’re not doing the work that God would have them do. They’re doing the work that they want to do and that’s why it’s abominable.

It’s corrupt because they weren’t made for that sort of work they were made for a different type of work and so he says there’s none that doeth good and this is what Paul’s quoting.

 

Romans 3:11,

There is none that understandeth, there is none that seeketh after God.

 

This is a reference to Psalms 14:2. Let’s read,

The LORD looked down from heaven upon the children of men, to see if there were any that did understand, and seek God. 

 

This is David in the Psalms where the nation of Israel has already been created.

God had gave these people the law by the time David writes this Psalm and He already gave them prophecy.

 

If left to himself, fallen man would never seek God. It’s only through the work of the Holy Spirit that anyone ever does.

David’s declaring the wickedness of humanity, even Israel, even the writer of these Psalms, King David himself was guilty of abominable sins.

Some might say, “That’s obviously not true. There are people in the world that understand things.”

But Paul’s not talking here about the understand of anything.

He’s talking about those who understand God and spiritual things and he says people don’t understand those things.

 

Look at 1 Corinthians 2:14-16,

But the natural man receiveth not the things of the Spirit of God: for they are foolishness unto him: neither can he know them, because they are spiritually discerned. 

But he that is spiritual judgeth all things, yet he himself is judged of no man. 

For who hath known the mind of the Lord, that he may instruct him? But we have the mind of Christ.

 

The unregenerate man, the unsaved man, the unbeliever cannot understand the spiritual things that God’s given us to understand. We can only understand them if we’re saved, if we believe the gospel, which doesn’t make any sense to unbelievers.

lt’s the same words on the page the same messages for both believers and unbelievers, but it’s simply that the spiritual things must be spiritually discerned to actually understand and if we don’t believe in the spiritual things we won’t understand what those things mean.

Sure, we can play around with them like ideas and philosophy, a kind of fantasy world, but when we believe it to be true suddenly the message changes and it says things about us that we never knew before we believed.

 

To Romans 3:12,

They are all gone out of the way, they are together become unprofitable; there is none that doeth good, no, not one.

 

All have gone astray from God. All mankind has become corrupt. Unprofitable means to render useless or bringing no glory to God.

 

Here Paul’s quoting from Psalm 14:3,

They are all gone aside, they are all together become filthy: there is none that doeth good, no, not one. 

 

Filthy in this verse means to turn morally corrupt, defiled by sinful practices.

There’s none that do good.

That flies in the face of the pop psychology and psychobabble of today’s world, where everything is about self-actualisation and tripe such as “living in alignment with your highest values” and “realizing your fullest human expression”.

People are all into loving themselves. Most live in a fantasy world where their efforts, their actions, are mistakenly believed to be making them good and making them acceptable to God.

But, the reality of human history is that men don’t seek God and that’s what Romans 3 says and what Psalm 14 says.

 

Ephesians 5 17 says this,

Wherefore be ye not unwise, but understanding what the will of the Lord is. 

 

People say they want to know the will of the Lord.

Then you tell it to them and show them in the scriptures in black and white such as 1 Timothy 2:1-4

I exhort therefore, that, first of all, supplications, prayers, intercessions, and giving of thanks, be made for all men; 

For kings, and for all that are in authority; that we may lead a quiet and peaceable life in all godliness and honesty. 

For this is good and acceptable in the sight of God our Saviour; Who will have all men to be saved, and to come unto the knowledge of the truth. 

 

Then, people say, “No that’s not what I meant. I want something else.”

We really want our own will with God’s Authority behind it! That’s the natural sinful reaction.

Paul’s answer to these religious Jewish objections is based also on Isaiah 31:1. Isaiah’s referring to Israel, not the Gentiles,

Woe to them that go down to Egypt for help; and stay on horses, and trust in chariots, because they are many; and in horsemen, because they are very strong; but they look not unto the Holy One of Israel, neither seek the LORD! 

 

Then we move to Romans 3:13,

Their throat is an open sepulchre; with their tongues they have used deceit; the poison of asps is under their lips: 

 

Here Pauls referencing Psalms 5:9 and Psalms 140:3.

Psalms 5:9,

For there is no faithfulness in their mouth; their inward part is very wickedness; their throat is an open sepulchre; they flatter with their tongue. 

 

Psalms 140:3

They have sharpened their tongues like a serpent; adders’ poison is under their lips. Selah.

 

A Sepulchre is a tomb that’s full of dead things. There’s no life in a tomb, but people make tombs look very pretty from the outside.

In fact that’s the purpose of a sepulchre; to make something full of dead things look pretty.

Paul’s idea here is that they may look pretty on the outside, all whitewashed and everything, until they speak and you really see the dead and the stench coming out.

As we’ve just pointed out, it’s not just the outside, it’s the inside. It’s not what people see. It’s what’s inside because out of the heart the mouth speaks. There’s no faithfulness in their mouth, their inward parts are full of wickedness.

 

With their tongues they have used deceit; the poison of asps is under their lips:

Deceit is described in Websters Dictionary like this, “a catching or ensnaring. Hence, the misleading of a person; the leading of another person to believe what is false, or not to believe what is true, and thus to ensnare him; fraud; fallacy; cheat; any declaration, artifice or practice, which misleads another, or causes him to believe what is false.”

 

By the way, who is the figure in the Bible who’s the greatest pattern of a deceiver, the number one most notorious deceiver of all time from one end of the Bible to the other, apart from Satan  himself.

We find him in Daniel Chapter 11:21. He’s the Antichrist and his deception lies in the use of flattery.

 

Today deceit is everywhere.

We’ve got a deceitful system of government, of news media, within education and even within traditional and not so traditional churches, from Roman Catholicism and their appalling traditions right through to the mega Pentecostal churches that place music, emotional love, friendship and self-improvement above the unadulterated gospel.

Pastors and supposed teachers are raised to celebrity status, often amassing great wealth and privilege, while Paul, our apostle to the body of Christ today and his epistles are ignored.

Few people see through the hype to Paul’s lonely walk in the truth as he explains in 2 Timothy 1:15,

This thou knowest, that all they which are in Asia be turned away from me; of whom are Phygellus and Hermogenes. 

 

and in 2 Timothy 4:16 where he writes,

At my first answer no man stood with me, but all men forsook me: I pray God that it may not be laid to their charge. 

 

We’ve got so much confusion out there. We can go years and never hear of anybody who agrees with the apostle Paul while the mega pastors receive homage and glory from their followers who’ve fallen in to the 2 Timothy 4:3-4 trap,

For the time will come when they will not endure sound doctrine; but after their own lusts shall they heap to themselves teachers, having itching ears; 

And they shall turn away their ears from the truth, and shall be turned unto fables.   

 

Now it’s interesting that the best chapter on the tongue is not in Romans, our doctrine for the dispensation of the grace of God, but in James Chapter 3.

Now, we need to be encouraged and reminded that the doctrine in the book of James is not our doctrine for the body of Christ in the Dispensation of Grace, however, we can gain definition and learn from every page of the Bible cover to cover.

James has a lot to say about the tongue that gets us into so much trouble.

James 1:26,

If any man among you seem to be religious, and bridleth not his tongue, but deceiveth his own heart, this man’s religion is vain.

 

James 3:5,

Even so the tongue is a little member, and boasteth great things. Behold, how great a matter a little fire kindleth!

 

James 3:6,

And the tongue is a fire, a world of iniquity: so is the tongue among our members, that it defileth the whole body, and setteth on fire the course of nature; and it is set on fire of hell.

 

James 3:8,

But the tongue can no man tame; it is an unruly evil, full of deadly poison.

 

On to Romans 3:14 now and remember this passage from verse 9 to verse 20 is all one paragraph and it’s Paul using scripture to prove that the Jew is no better than the Gentile where sin is concerned.

Romans 3:14,

Whose mouth is full of cursing and bitterness: 

 

Here Pauls using Psalms 10:7. Psalm 10 is all about the wicked person who does evil from his pride. Verse 7 reads,

His mouth is full of cursing and deceit and fraud: under his tongue is mischief and vanity. 

 

People talk don’t talk a lot about what God hates but He tells us clearly what He hates in Proverbs 6:16,

These six things doth the LORD hate: yea, seven are an abomination unto him: 

A proud look, a lying tongue, and hands that shed innocent blood, 

An heart that deviseth wicked imaginations, feet that be swift in running to mischief, 

A false witness that speaketh lies, and he that soweth discord among brethren. 

 

Notice how many of the things that God hates have their seed in the pride of man which works through the heart and thoughts first, then through the mouth and then to the physical actions.

 

Then we have Romans 3:15 and 16,

Their feet are swift to shed blood: 

Destruction and misery are in their ways: 

 

Paul refers to Isaiah 59:7 here,

Their feet run to evil, and they make haste to shed innocent blood: their thoughts are thoughts of iniquity; wasting and destruction are in their paths. 

 

Romans 3:17,

And the way of peace have they not known:

 

Paul again refers to Isaiah 59 here, this time verse 8 (Isaiah 59:8),

The way of peace they know not; and there is no judgment in their goings: they have made them crooked paths: whosoever goeth therein shall not know peace.

 

Rom 3:18,

There is no fear of God before their eyes.

 

Here’s Psalms 36:1,

To the chief Musician, A Psalm of David the servant of the LORD. The transgression of the wicked saith within my heart, that there is no fear of God before his eyes. 

 

It’s Israel’s sin that held God back from delivering them when they needed it most. It wasn’t God’s fault.

Their hands, fingers, lips, and tongue are all active in murder and lying. There’s widespread perversion of justice and dishonesty. People conceive evil which leads to crime.

Their activities are as deadly as the black plague and as useless as a solar-powered torch.

Sin controls every area of their lives—what they do, where they go, and what they think. They care nothing for peace and justice, preferring what’s crooked. What was true of Israel is also true of the entire human race.

 

So Paul’s point is that no, Israel, you’re not better than them Gentiles.

 

To Romans 3:19 now,

Now we know that what things soever the law saith, it saith to them who are under the law: that every mouth may be stopped, and all the world may become guilty before God. 

 

Now remember, you and I as believers today under the dispensation of grace are armed with the progressive revelation given to Paul directly by Jesus Christ.

Paul’s passing on this revelation to us through the Book of Romans. You and I today are not under the law but under Grace.

Paul in Romans 3 is talking to and about people who had a relationship with the law. So don’t be confused and don’t use Romans as a kind of book full of one line memes and miss what Paul’s dealing with here.

Now we know that whatsoever things the law sayeth, it sayeth to them who are under the law that every mouth may be stopped.

See the law basically tells them to shut up justifying and reasoning themselves out of guilt, that all the world, Jew and Gentile may become guilty before God.

Here’s where Paul’s been heading since Romans chapter one, verse 20.

At the outset he’s demonstrating the error and the failure of the Gentile. Then from Romans 2:17 he moves to Israel and concludes that they’re also without hope that every mouth may be stopped and all the world may become guilty before God, as we are right now.

 

Then, from this point in Romans, Romans 3:19 and 20, we’re at a point of transition.

From here we’re going to move into the solution to the problem that’s been highlighted in the first 3 chapters.

Paul’s going to move from condemning everything and everybody to showing Christ as the solution, to the Jew first and also to the Gentile.

We’ll see that as we press on with our study of Romans.

 

So, we note now in verse 19 everybody’s guilty just as back in Romans 1:20 everybody’s guilty.

Romans 1:20 deals with the time from the creation while Romans 3 deals with those under the law, Israel.

Everybody’s guilty at the beginning of it and everybody’s guilty up to here.

 

Now Paul’s about to release the revelation of the mystery, the Gospel of the Grace of God and he’ll do that, starting from Romans 3:21. So we’ve come a long way and we’ve got some important doctrines under our belt.

We’ve added to our understanding and now we’re ready to press on in the next episode with the understanding of where we are and what’s going on now, here, today.

 

We’ve got a lot of issues to deal with in the future, many of which are controversial, but all those issues will come from the Bible and a rightly divided bible at that. So be patient. We’ll get there. Remember, my point of view and your point of view don’t matter, only the word of God presents us with the truth.

 

I hope this is all useful and helpful to you and I’m enjoying bringing it to you as it helps me as much, even more, than I hope it helps you.

Thank you.

Romans 3:5-9 – God’s Vengeance

In this episode we’re in the final parts of Paul’s teaching that all men are without excuse and all are under sin and it’s a continuation of the previous chapters.
As you know, the chapter divisions and the paragraphs in our Bible are not inspired but words, every one of them, are and we’ve got them as exactly as God wants us to have them.

“Speed Slider”

Romans 3:5-9 – Transcript

In this episode we’re in the final parts of Paul’s teaching that all men are without excuse and all are under sin and it’s a continuation of the previous chapters.
As you know, the chapter divisions and the paragraphs in our Bible are not inspired but words, every one of them, are and we’ve got them as exactly as God wants us to have them.
The chapter and paragraph division weren’t added until the fourteenth century.
Paul will eventually get to the gospel in Romans 3, 4, and 5, but at first, he’s dealing with these objections.
He’s talking about the righteousness that God has to judge sinful man.
Before we start, you’ll notice all scripture refences are now from the King James Bible. Quite frankly, I couldn’t put up with the variations of other translations any longer, which, although touted as making the Bible clearer to understand actually have the opposite effect. I have a series about this coming out soon.

Lord please guide us through these passages of Your Word as we try and understand our purpose in You and Your purpose in us and the importance of knowing why Your salvation has been given to the world the way it has. Amen

Romans 1:18 states:

For the wrath of God is revealed from heaven against all ungodliness and unrighteousness of men, who hold the truth in unrighteousness; 

When we hear the statement that God’s going to punish everybody, some might respond by saying, “But when was my trial and when was I condemned?”

Romans 1 and 2 present the condemnation of humanity—everyone from creation, whether they’re Jews or Gentiles. It doesn’t matter; are all under sin.

In Romans 3 Paul’s engaged in a back-and-forth argument with a hypothetical objector. These objections are common even today, even within Christian circles, where God’s righteous judgment and teachings on hell are often hidden or ignored because they’re seen as unattractive. However, ignoring these truths has serious consequences.

These first 3 chapters of Romans are necessary for anyone who objects to God’s judgment.

The objector doesn’t deny that they’re a sinner, the undeniable truth that all men are sinners has already been established, but they dispute the righteousness of God in response to their sin.

Put another way, they object to God’s judgment. At this point. Now, the objection shifts to God’s judgment itself.

It’s like this objector’s saying, “Yes, I’m a sinner, and you said God’s wrath is going to be poured out on me, but I object on the grounds that His wrath is unrighteous, that His judgment’s wrong!”

We finished off last episode in Romans 3:4 after the question was asked in Romans 3:1,

What advantage then hath the Jew? or what profit is there of circumcision? 

Romans 3:3 followed with:

For what if some did not believe? shall their unbelief make the faith of God without effect? 

Then in Romans 3:5, where we’re starting from in this episode, we have this objection, which we read:

But if our unrighteousness commend the righteousness of God, what shall we say? Is God unrighteous who taketh vengeance? (I speak as a man). 

The phrase “our unrighteousness” specifically refers to Jewish unrighteousness. This objector is a Jew operating under the Law who hasn’t yet grasped Salvation in Christ. It’s from an Old Testament Jewish understanding.

The Jews already recognised that the Gentiles were sinners. But now Paul spends time addressing the religious people of the day, those who were set up to judge others.

Israel’s unbelief and disobedience appear to interfere with God’s fulfillment of His promises. This raises a question that’s often debated today: “Can man interfere with God’s purpose?”

It’s the leading question in debates about free will and fate. Some argue that human choices can prevent God from accomplishing His purposes. Paul, however, rejects this notion entirely in Romans 3:4 by saying:

God forbid: yea, let God be true, but every man a liar;

He’s arguing that God remains faithful and will fulfill His promises, even though Israel failed in obedience. Paul reinforces this truth in Romans 3:4 by quoting scripture, in fact Psalm 51:4 where David speaks to God with a repentant heart, saying, “You’re the judge of me.”  :

That thou mightiest be justified in thy sayings, and mightiest overcome when thou art judged. 

Paul’s stating here that God is justified in His declarations, and He’ll ultimately be proved correct even when judged by those questioning Him.

This objector doesn’t have David’s repentant heart but instead a rebellious heart. He’s saying, “I’m going to judge God.” Paul clearly shows that God is right whether humans try to judge Him or whether He judges them.

He remains righteous because He’s the ultimate judge. The issue here is the condition of a person’s heart in response to Him.

David responded in repentance, even though he was a sinner. He was confronted with the guilt of his sin, the inevitability of death, and God’s wrath against sin. Yet, he had a repentant heart and a promise from God, and he recognised God’s righteousness in judging him.

This objector, however, hasn’t accepted that God’s judgment and wrath against him are righteous. He admits, “Yes, I’m a sinner—you got me there. I don’t do the things that I preach.” But he resists the idea that God’s righteous in judging him. Paul counters, saying, “God is true; and He’s the only one that’s true.”

Then Paul presents this question of verse 5 (Romans 3:5): “If our unrighteousness demonstrates the righteousness of God, how’s that supposed to work?”

In Romans 2:24 we read that:

For the name of God is blasphemed among the Gentiles through you, as it is written. 

Paul’s referring to Israel, saying that because of their disobedience, God’s name, which was associated with the nation of Israel, was blasphemed. This was prophesied, and prophecy declared that they’d fail to keep God’s law.

Even way back in Deuteronomy where the law was given, God anticipated their failure. He said, “When you fail to keep this, then remember to do this.”

God knew they’d disobey and embedded the reality of that into His Law and His prophets. When they sinned, they fulfilled what’d already been foretold.

Here’s an example: Jesus’ death was prophesied. The Romans, Israel, everyone killed Him.

Now, if God said this would happen, and we, humanity, simply fulfilled what He said, aren’t we actually helping God and doesn’t that make us righteous in some way?

This’s saying that God’s righteousness is established through human sin fulfilling prophecy, but Paul demolishes that idea.

Let’s look at Acts 2:23:

Him, (Jesus) being delivered by the determinate counsel and foreknowledge of God, ye have taken, and by wicked hands have crucified and slain: 

Peter’s making it clear that they killed Jesus. They’re guilty. And yet, God knew this would happen. They didn’t foil God’s plan; they did what was already foretold.

So, many argue that if God said this would happen, and we played a role in making it happen, aren’t we supporting His righteousness?

But in Acts 4:27-28, Peter and John on confronting the rulers of Israel clarifies this:

For of a truth against thy holy child Jesus, whom thou hast anointed, both Herod, and Pontius Pilate, with the Gentiles, and the people of Israel, were gathered together, For to do whatsoever thy hand and thy counsel determined before to be done. 

Some interpret this to mean that God predestined everything, but Paul clarifies that just because God foresees the future doesn’t mean He forces people to act it out. He foreknew Jesus’ death, but He didn’t force sinners to crucify Him.

This is where debates around free will and election come to the fore. Some argue that God must control human choices to know the future, but Paul rejects this idea.

Humans are the ones who sin, but God remains faithful despite their failures.

Acts 4:27-28 reinforces that Jesus’ death happened because of sinful men acting by their own choices, not because God forced them to do it.

Peter praises God, saying that Jesus died at the hands of many people, and yet, this fulfilled God’s plan. Jesus’ own prayer the night He was betrayed in Matthew 26:42 was,

He went away again the second time, and prayed, saying, O my Father, if this cup may not pass away from me, except I drink it, thy will be done.

The prophets had already foretold it, and now, Peter proclaims that prophecy has been fulfilled.

Jesus fulfilled everything written in the Law and the prophets concerning Him.

Peter’s preaching shows that God knew they’d kill Jesus.

So weren’t they just doing what God wanted them to do?

That reasoning shows up the flaw of sinful humanity, the idea that God needs sinful humans to do His will because He declared what would happen.

This is the false reasoning that Paul confronts in Romans 3.

You can see the same thinking in our culture today. Many people deny that they’re sinners; they don’t like the label, but they will acknowledge that they’re not perfect. While few people will openly claim personal self-righteousness, they will still argue that God’s unrighteous for judging them and that’s precisely what’s happening in Romans 3.

So, this argument is that if evil results in good and evil commends or glorifies good, then evil’s necessary therefore without evil, the good that results from evil would not exist.

It’s like an abusive father who violently mistreats his child. The child grows up and vows that they’ll be a good parent, unlike the father. So, the wicked father then says, “Well, if I hadn’t been so cruel to you, you wouldn’t have thought that way!”

This’s absurd thinking but it’s the reasoning Paul’s addressing.

The miracle’s not that the father was wicked but that the child overcame that wickedness. Good triumphs over evil.

“Let God be true, but every man a liar.”

God is justified in all things, and He will overcome. Yes, good triumphs over evil, but that doesn’t mean evil’s necessary.

Paul made this defense 2,000 years ago but it’s still echoed today by people who resist the idea of God as a righteous judge.

Human history revolves around Christ’s death on the cross. Paul will discuss how Jesus Christ entered the world to deal with sin. But, in this reasoning, if there’d never been sin, Christ wouldn’t have had to come.  That’s the argument being made.

Of course, this is all nonsense because it’s people trying to claim credit and insist that their sin brings about good outcomes. They argue that because the end is good, the means to get there must also be justified.

But the end never justifies the means.

Now, in verse 5, we deal with another question:  Does God need us?

If His righteousness is so great because it’s contrasted against our sinfulness—if He needs sinners to die for, then isn’t sin necessary?

After all, He prophesied that humanity would fail.

Didn’t God know before the world began that Adam would eat the fruit?

So, it must be part of His plan and if He has a plan, a written script in which everybody plays their role, how can He blame us?

This leads directly to debates about Calvinism or the claim that God’s predetermined plan means that everything, including sin, was scripted.

These people argue whether Adam had free will or not. If God knew Adam would sin, then He must have planned and ordained sin itself.

The extreme end of the argument says that God created some people to go to hell and condemned them from the start, making it impossible for them to be saved. That’s how He elected them.

This raises serious concerns about God’s righteous judgment. If righteousness is simply a predetermined concept rather than true justice, then there is no actual judgment, just a script being followed.

But that’s just not biblical.

We’ve all heard many people say that God’s evil and cruel. He uses others for His selfish needs.

This flawed reasoning assumes that God needs people to believe in Him and that He needs religions to worship Him, that He created us to worship Him forever because He desires worship.

But does God need worship? No.

He doesn’t need glory. He is already glorious and whatever we humans do or don’t do doesn’t change that one iota.

We hear Paul saying this to the Athenians in Act 17:25,

Neither is (God) worshipped with men’s hands, as though he needed any thing, seeing he giveth to all life, and breath, and all things; .

People claim God’s evil and cruel because He judges people for things they were never told. They argue that He condemns the innocent unfairly.

They insist that they’re much better judges because they understand that nobody’s perfect, some are better or worse, sure, but nobody’s completely perfect. So, they’d judge fairly! All through history to the present day proves that wrong!

Yet, these objections in these verses in Romans 3 accuse God of lying, claiming that He promised advantages in circumcision, to Israel, that didn’t come true. They argue that He’s unreliable and that He intended to fulfill His purposes through Israel but failed because of their unbelief.

God has no effect on the world! If He did, the world would’ve already changed the way He said it would.

People claim He’s cruel, evil, and unfair, using Israel for His own purposes.

He needed a people to control, to promote His teachings. But now, they’re all condemned.

An honest examination of these objections reveals something striking:

Each accusation against God is actually true of the accuser, not God Himself.

– It’s men who falsely claim personal profit and deceive themselves.

– It’s men who are unreliable and have little effect on the world.

– It’s men who’re cruel, evil, unfair, and use others for selfish reasons.

These statements describe humanity, not God.

But to recognise this requires faith.

If we doubt and object to God, we naturally believe that the problem lies with Him. But, in reality, it’s with us.

The last part of Romans 3:5 is in brackets or parenthesis and says

 (I speak as a man.) 

Paul’s saying that In these objections he’s raising he’s using a typically human argument.

He didn’t speak from his own mind, he represented someone else, who spoke as an objector.

Paul continues in Romans 3:6 where his response to the question of, “Is God unrighteous for inflicting His wrath,” is clear:

God forbid: for then how shall God judge the world? 

That’s an interesting question. The answer is that God doesn’t need sin or sinners, and He didn’t create sin and that’s what Paul’s saying here.

Isaiah 45:7 is often used to tie God into the causal relationship of sin. Some argue that God made me this way and this’s another attempt to blame God.

This argument’s not saying, “I don’t think murder is a sin.” Instead, it’s claiming, “If I commit murder, then it’s God’s fault for making me capable of it!”

Isaiah 45:5 states,

I am the LORD, and there is none else, there is no God beside me: I girded thee, though thou hast not known me: ,

That’s the truth of it. God’s done things in our lives we don’t even realise.

Isaiah 45:6

That they may know from the rising of the sun, and from the west, that there is none beside me. I am the LORD, and there is none else.

Isaiah 45:7

I form the light, and create darkness: I make peace, and create evil: I the LORD do all these things.’ 

See, God made the world, right? So, if there’s sin in the world it’s His fault!  Blame the Manufacturer!

This verse is often misunderstood. Some claim it proves that God creates sin, but it doesn’t say that at all.

Sin is evil, but not all evil is sin.

Look it up in the dictionary.

Yes, evil can refer to wickedness and sin, and the Bible uses it in that way. However, evil can also mean destruction, lack of peace, and calamity—which is the meaning in Isaiah 45:7.

I make peace and create evil. 

Do you see the comparison? What’s the opposite of peace? No peace.

Isaiah is discussing judgment, God’s hand in bringing consequences upon nations that disobey Him, as part of the covenant He made with Israel.

In the beginning, God told Adam:

Eat this fruit, and you’ll die.

That’s not a peaceful thought.

How does God create no peace?  When wicked people reject Him, He judges them.

Many today believe that God only gives messages of peace and comfort. But they really need to read the Bible.

God speaks of destruction and punishment.

He declares vengeance for sin, if you disobey, if you harm others, if you reject His commands.

God punishes sin in the Bible.

The flood is the ultimate example, where the whole world died except for eight souls saved by His grace.

Does this mean God caused the flood randomly? No.

God isn’t fickle, changeable or spiteful and hostile. He doesn’t say, “I’m just going to destroy everything now!”

People say this, but they misunderstand.

God warned people that sin leads to death, but they kept sinning. He provided a way of escape. They rejected it. He warned them for over 100 years. Then, finally, He judged them.

What God permits, He’s often said to create. The word evil doesn’t mean wickedness in this instance, but sorrow, difficulties, or tragedies, those things which are the fruit of evil, the fruit of sin. It’s kind of like the Old Testament way of saying, “The wages of sin is death …” (Romans 6:23).

You ignored every warning, and now you’re facing the consequences.

In Genesis 1 God says, “Let there be light.” And God separated the light from the darkness.

What He didn’t say was that He’d create beautiful things over here and some really nasty sinful things over there and let’s watch them battle it out for a few thousand years!

That’s not what He did, and we know that from the Bible.

Genesis 1 describes God’s creation of the universe as very good.

Sin entered afterward.

Where did sin come from?  Well. it wasn’t invented. Sin is contrary, opposite to God.

If God had created beings without the ability to choose, there’d be no sin, just a universe of rocks and lifeless things incapable of free thought or rebellion.

But then there would also be no people with the free choice to experience His love and grace.

Some ask, “What kind of God would create beings knowing they would sin?”

It’s a question that’s been asked for thousands of years.

But it’s not difficult to understand when we consider God’s purpose, to give grace to humanity.

The reason He created all things was so that all things could ultimately be in Christ, redeemed and saved by Him, experiencing His love and grace.

Sure, God knew sin would occur, but He didn’t create it.

It was the result of human choice, a choice made by beings who God created with a free will.

So, why not just make it so we don’t have free will?

Well, now there’s another problem.  Real love is impossible without choice.

How would we experience God’s love if we had no choice?

Without choice, we’re no different from a machine.

In John 8:44, Jesus called the Pharisees children of the devil.

Ye are of your father the devil, and the lusts of your father ye will do. He was a murderer from the beginning, and abode not in the truth, because there is no truth in him. When he speaketh a lie, he speaketh of his own: for he is a liar, and the father of it. 

We notice here that the term “devil” is not the name of the being God created in the beginning.

The word devil means slanderer or adversary, just as Satan refers to opposition. These are terms that describe his wickedness, and they were given to him after he sinned.

Sin didn’t originate with God; it originated with the devil who was the first sinner.

He deceived Eve, persuaded Adam, and so sin entered the world through man as Romans 5:12 details.

1 John 2:16 also speaks of the origins of sin:

For all that is in the world, the lust of the flesh, and the lust of the eyes, and the pride of life, is not of the Father, but is of the world. 

God didn‘t make sin, nor did He make us sin.

Some say that God needed failure, a dark side, to make the story look real.

But this is life and reality not a movie script.

Sin is not of God, but of the world.

Carrying on from 1 John 2:16 in verse 1 John 2:17 we see,

And the world passeth away, and the lust thereof: but he that doeth the will of God abideth for ever.

God is where truth is, and sin is anti-truth.

Romans 3 raises another crucial point and that’s that good never ever comes from sin.

Genesis 50:20 and the story of Joseph is often used as evidence that good can come from sin, but let’s examine what it really says.

Joseph’s brothers sold him into slavery, a sinful, evil, wicked act.

Joseph says to them:

But as for you, ye thought evil against me; but God meant it unto good, to bring to pass, as it is this day, to save much people alive. 

Some say, “See! If Joseph’s brothers had never sinned, he would never have ended up in Egypt, where he later became a ruler. So sin led to good!”

But that’s not so.

God meant it for good and used it for good, but He didn’t need the sin.

Joseph’s brothers don’t get any credit for what they did.

They sinned and all their sin did was put Joseph into prison.

How did Joseph get out of prison? Dreams. And Who interpreted the dreams? God.

It didn’t have anything to do with the brothers’ sins. God could have and would have done it regardless of the brothers.

Now, God certainly knew the end from the beginning, but He didn’t need sin.

Good never comes from sin but from God.

That’s the truth that we learn from the Bible.

This is what Paul argues in Romans 3:5.

These objectors in Romans 3 don’t question sin. They question God’s righteous judgment.

They understand that vengeance will be executed by God.

Romans 12:19 says:

Dearly beloved, avenge not yourselves, but rather give place unto wrath: for it is written, Vengeance is mine; I will repay, saith the Lord. . 

Why does scripture say this?

Because vengeance means to return or repay affliction for an offense. It’s punishment, retribution.

Vengeance is the righteous judgment in response to sin. It’s His righteous repayment for wrongdoing.

When we place ourselves in the position of receiving God’s wrath, we often try to explain it away. I did it because…

There’s always some exterior force that drove me to it, as if that lessens the sin somehow.

Universalism takes this to the extreme, by saying that God is loving so He would never seek retribution, judgment, punishment, or vengeance!

But Romans 3 directly opposes this idea and if that reasoning were true, God would not be a righteous judge.

Romans 3:1-9 is neglected in this thinking. In these passages Paul discusses God’s vengeance and His righteous judgment, and he also discusses damnation.

So, is God unjust for inflicting wrath or vengeance? No.

That claim would only be true if sinners don’t deserve judgment.

But, if sinners do deserve judgment, then it is not cruel it’s righteous.

Paul says that God is able to bring good out of evil, but there’s no excuse for committing that evil.

God’s purpose is never for people to sin.

God knew they’d crucify Jesus on the cross, but He didn’t cause them to do it.  He didn’t force them to hammer the nails into His hands.

Likewise, God didn’t make Judas betray Jesus.

God foresaw these events. He knew beforehand what would happen and He prophesied them, but He did not make them do it.

Sometimes, people use Exodus 4:21, which says that God hardened the heart of Pharaoh to justify the idea that God causes man to sin.

Sometimes the Bible says that Pharaoh hardened his own heart as in Exodus 8:15.

It also says that Pharaoh’s heart was hardened, without saying who did it as in Exodus 7:13.

But who really hardened Pharaoh’s heart? We could say that it was both God and Pharaoh; however, whenever God hardened Pharaoh’s heart, He never did it against Pharaoh’s will.

Pharaoh never said, “I want to do what’s good and right and I want to bless these people of Israel” and God answered, “No, for I’ll harden your heart against them!”

When God hardened, He allowed Pharaoh’s heart to do what Pharaoh wanted to do. God gave Pharaoh over to his sin just as Romans 1:18-32 explains.

The Old Testament showed God’s judgment through the law.

The New Testament doesn’t remove judgment. It offers salvation from judgment because Someone else, Jesus Christ, paid the penalty that the judgment required.

People love stories about retribution where the villain deserved punishment!

We understand justice and vengeance and righteous retribution.

However, we also know that if punishment is given to those who’re innocent, that’s evil.

Many claim that eternal damnation in hell is evil because they believe sinners don’t deserve it.

But God doesn’t send innocent people to hell.

Romans 12:19 tells believers:

Dearly beloved, avenge not yourselves, but rather give place unto wrath: for it is written, Vengeance is mine; I will repay, saith the Lord. .

It’s not ever our job to be the avenger.

Ultimately, God’ll judge all things and set everything right.

Now in Romans 3:7-8 we hear aul expand on this idea of man’s unrighteousness leading to God’s glory and we read,

For if the truth of God hath more abounded through my lie unto his glory; why yet am I also judged as a sinner?

And not rather, (as we be slanderously reported, and as some affirm that we say,) Let us do evil, that good may come? whose damnation is just.

Paul’s drawing attention to the fact that there was a movement around that was slandering him by reporting, wrongly, that he was preaching that it was ok to do evil because good would come of it.

He’s forecasting a just damnation on those that are propagating this lie. Pretty strong language that!

Now we move to Verse 9 – Romans 3:9,

What then? are we better than they? No, in no wise: for we have before proved both Jews and Gentiles, that they are all under sin; 

We’ve seen that the previous verses Paul uses a hypothetical objector who questions what Paul says in the previous chapters of Romans chapters 1 and 2.

This hypothetical Jewish objector that Paul uses to illustrate his point goes on by asking the question, “Are you saying, then, that we Jews are better than those sinful Gentiles?

The answer is that the Jews are no better and no worse. All are sinners.

Paul’s shown, through using these objections, that the Gentiles and the Jews are lost as are all men. All people are under the power of sin and the Jews are no different from Gentiles in this respect.

Paul quotes scripture Scripture to confirm all that he’s said.

Psalms 14:1, Psalms 14:3 ; Psalms 53:1-3 ; Psalms 5:9 ; Psalms 140:3 ; Psalms 10:7 ; Isaiah 59:7-8 ; Psalms 36:1 .

The whole human race is proved to be bad and nothing good and everything bad is in man.

We need to be reminded of this truth in this day where man’s lost condition’s no longer believed, and where religious teachers, unwilling to upset their audience, lead them into a false sense of their own goodness and greatness.

Thousands follow the unscriptural teaching of a Fatherhood of God apart from true and saving faith in the Lord Jesus.

Mankind largely rejects the very idea that they’re lost in sin and believe they can do something themselves, without the word of God and without His saving grace and without the cross of Christ to meet God’s requirements, but they cannot. All human efforts in doing good works are futile.

If there is salvation at all, it must come from God.

“That’s so negative,” many people say. Well, very often reality is negative however, smack in the middle of this dark and dreary reality a righteous God beams through to mankind another reality.

This time it’s a reality of overwhelming joy.

It’s the wonderful story, the good news of His redeeming love and His perfect wisdom where not only does He satisfy justice perfectly but at the same time is able to offer amazing grace freely to all sinful mankind at an unimaginable cost to Himself, the death of His perfect, only begotten Son, the Lord Jesus Christ.

Romans 3:1-4 – Jewish Advantage?

We finished last time in Romans 2:29 and we discussed in detail the foundation that Paul laid in Romans 2 about righteousness, sin and self-righteousness and what that looks like. We saw how circumcision becomes uncircumcision by failing to actually do the law. This is all vital to our understanding of salvation and why salvation is by grace through faith alone.
We start out today in Romans chapter 3 where Pauls expands on this critical doctrine.

“Speed Slider”

Romans 3:1-4 – Transcript

Romans is a foundational book, so we want to make sure it’s laid out correctly and that we understand what’s going on.

In Romans 1 we saw that Paul establishes that all humanity is under sin and without excuse before God. We’ll never face God’s judgment with a valid excuse for our sin.

Paul proves how man knows the invisible things of God, and that makes us without excuse.

In Romans 2, Paul turns toward those who were judges over other men.

He makes arguments based on the conscience and how that even our conscience proves that we’re without excuse.

Romans 2 finishes by addressing Israel.

Paul speaks directly to Jews, describing who a Jew is under the Law.

Even though they had the Law, and they boasted in it and rested in it, they didn’t keep the Law.

Romans 3 continues that topic, but then, it’ll transition into discussing salvation.

If you recall, in Romans 1:16 Paul discusses four reasons why he’s not ashamed of, and ready to preach, the Gospel.

He says, “For the Gospel of Christ is the power of God unto salvation.”  That’s the first reason for Paul preaching the Gospel of Christ and he explains that he’s an apostle of Jesus Christ separated to this gospel of God.

Then in Romans 1:17 the next reason is that “The righteousness of God is revealed from faith to faith and here Paul quotes scripture from Habakkuk and speaks about the righteousness of God and justification by faith.

So, scripture is another reason that supports Paul’s teaching.

Then the third reason is in Romans 1:18-19 where Paul discusses the wrath of God being revealed from Heaven against all ungodliness and unrighteousness.

He refers to men’s conscience and how God’s wrath is poured out so man has no excuse, and their own conscience testifies to that.

Romans 1:20-21 speaks of creation itself revealing God to man as the fourth reason to preach the gospel.

In Romans 2 Paul makes conscience-based arguments such as, “Don’t you know God is long-suffering and merciful?”

“Don’t you know that, if you have the Law, but don‘t keep it, you’re a hypocrite?”

Now, in Romans 3 and eventually in chapter 4 Paul presents the case for justification by faith—based on scripture.

Romans 3 talks about, “The witness of the Law and the Prophets.”

Paul references the fathers of Israel using scripture to prove justification by faith.

Romans 4 quotes David and Abraham and then we reach Romans 5, 6, 7, and 8, where Paul presents information that was previously unknown through prophecy. It was hidden by God since before the foundation of the world.

We tried to emphasise the importance that although Paul heavily references the Law he does not place believers today under it and Romans 7 will clarify that perfectly.

Romans 5, 6, and 7 present what we might call positional truth or who we are in Christ now, today.

This is part of the mystery teaching.

So, the structure of Romans 1–8 follows this pattern:

– Sin and condemnation

– Faith and salvation

– The application of salvation—the mystery

Romans 5–8 presents the mystery truth, who believers are in Christ. This is this mystery that God did not reveal throughout history but is now revealed, or made known to us through until Paul, given to each of us by Jesus Christ, through Paul.

These first 8 chapters of Romans are very different but the teaching of each one builds on the previous one.

Romans 1–3 defines the problem.

Romans 3–5 presents the solution in Jesus Christ.

Romans 5–8 explains what this means for us today and how we apply it to our lives.

This first section, which Romans 3 is part of,  is concerned with the Old Testament, and the only conclusion we can come to, that all are under sin.

We’ll learn in Romans 3 that the law brings the knowledge of sin. In itself, it was never going to save anyone.

Romans 1–3 is basically Old Testament material, dealing with creation, conscience, and the law in Israel.

Romans 3, 4, and 5 could be described as New Testament material, and we’ll see a bit of that in this episode.

It describes Israel’s failure, but how they still have an advantage, as stated in Romans 3:1–2. These chapters speak of Jesus’s sacrifice and the remission of sins that are past, giving a sort of New Testament type description. Paul doesn’t use the phrase “New Testament”. That’s a man made division, but the progression from the Old Testament and Israel to the need for Jesus is pretty plain.

Paul explains this in Romans 3 and 4, detailing how Christ and faith can justify Abraham, David, and anyone who believes.

Romans 5, 6, and 7 specifically address the mystery truth, which applies only to believers in the body of Christ and it’s something uniquely revealed to Paul. It’s not found anywhere else in the Bible, making Romans a unique book.

The beginning of chapter 3 raises four questions or objections to what Paul wrote in Romans 1 and 2, relating to God’s righteous judgments and how they affect the Jew as well as the gentile.

Paul explores whether God is righteous to condemn the world. Do people have an excuse? Is God just saying that all are under sin? Paul’s put a lot of effort into proving this case already, yet questions and objections arise and he addresses them.

These are these questions that Paul deals with.

Romans 3:1,

What advantage then has the Jew, or what is the profit of circumcision? 

If Paul’s argument is correct, then everyone is condemned, no one has an advantage, and all are under sin. But what about Israel? God made them, after all, and spent a lot of effort forming the nation. What does this mean for them?

Romans 3:3

For what if some did not believe? Will their unbelief make the faithfulness of God without effect?

In other words, if some reject God’s truth, does that nullify His faithfulness?

Romans 3:5

But if our unrighteousness demonstrates the righteousness of God, what shall we say? Is God unjust who inflicts wrath?

If human sinfulness demonstrates God’s righteousness, then how can He judge us?

Romans 3:9

What then? Are we better than they? Not at all. For we have previously charged both Jews and Greeks that they are all under sin. 

This question explores whether Israel has an excuse, whether Gentiles are better off, and whether believers today are somehow superior to past generations.

Romans 3:1 asks,

What advantage then has the Jew, or what is the profit of circumcision? 

Despite having the law, were ultimately revealed as law breakers. They boasted in the law and trusted in it, and it was given to them as a benefit and a privilege and yet they broke it. If they were lawbreakers, that meant they were subject to judgment and punishment like everybody else. They were condemned under the law and without excuse, just like the Gentiles. Their circumcision then, was meaningless.

Now we don’t know if these questions were asked by an actual Jew, or whether Pauls anticipating that these questions will be asked by those receiving this letter.

But after what he wrote in Romans 2:17 we do know that there were Jews who would be receiving this letter. He wrote,

Indeed you are called a Jew, and rest on the law, and make your boast in God, 

In Romans 2:25-29 it’s clear that circumcision is only profitable if you keep the law. If you don’t keep the law, your circumcision becomes uncircumcision and that’s where we left off last episode.

Here’s Paul’s answers to each of these question or objections.

Romans 3:1

What advantage then has the Jew, or what is the profit of circumcision? 

If all you have said in 2:17-29 is true, then what’s the advantage of being a Jew and what profit is there from circumcision?

Are you saying all of that should be thrown away—the Old Testament, the scriptures, the time past, the things God did for His people and the privileges He gave them? Were all those things for nothing?

What, then, is the advantage? What is the profit? The law, in a sense, made things harder for Israel.

Yes, God gave them the law, and it was a privilege that God spoke to them. But now they had 613 commands, most of which were not given to the Gentiles. While this was a privilege, what if they failed to obey them?

Circumcision, as we learned in Romans 2, is of the heart.

This was stated in the Law of Moses, meaning it was not a New Testament teaching but an Old Testament one.

Circumcision was of the flesh, yes, but it was a token of circumcision of the heart. They were required to circumcise their hearts. The challenge, however, was that no one could visibly tell if someone had truly circumcised their heart, only God could see it. This is Paul’s point: God’s judgment is not based just on the outward appearance. He sees the inner condition of a person.

Paul quotes the law in Romans 2:29, stating that circumcision is of the heart and in the spirit. This reference comes from Deuteronomy 10:12-13 and Deuteronomy 30:6 .

His point is that a true Jew is one inwardly as well as outwardly. A person who is outwardly Jewish but lacks inward faith is like an empty tomb.

Even as a Jew, as Jesus said, adultery is not just the physical act but also the lust in the heart and no one can pass that test.

So what advantage is there to being a Jew?

Pau answers this objection in Romans 3:2,

Much in every way! Chiefly because to them were committed the oracles of God. 

We need to keep pointing out that this’s no longer true in this current dispensation, in which being a Jew or a Gentile does not provide an advantage. Circumcision is meaningless in salvation today. It’s only faith in the gospel of Jesus Christ that saves. But Paul, speaking in Romans, is talking about Israel in time past and, interestingly, in the future after this dispensation of grace is over and God’ prophetic timeline for Israel is restated.

What are oracles? You may notice the word “oral” in “oracle.” “Oral” refers to something spoken verbally, while an “oracle” refers to the instrument or the means through which something is spoken. Oracles are the instruments of communication.

The oracles of God are the instruments through which God communicated His words.

This’s not only scripture and the prophets (which were given to Israel) but also the temple. The priests served in the temple, where God dwelt. The Ark of the Covenant contained the actual tablets of the law, God’s literal words.

God spoke to the world through Israel. He entrusted the oracles of God to the Jews, to the circumcision and that was a major advantage.

Yes, Israel was full of sinners and lawbreakers, but God still spoke to them. Hebrews 1:1-2 states,

God, who at various times and in various ways spoke in time past to the fathers by the prophets, has in these last days spoken to us by His Son, whom He has appointed heir of all things, through whom also He made the worlds; 

God came to Israel and no other nation, because He’d prophesied He would and that was a great advantage.

And so we have God’s eternal, inspired, and infallible word in a book that’s available to everyone today.

But they also had access to God’s words. Just because people are judged as sinners, without excuse and guilty, doesn’t mean it’s not an advantage to know that truth.

We think that something’s only an advantage if it doesn’t expose our faults or say anything bad about us. But when we read in scripture of faithful men such as Job, Moses, and David and we see that when God pointed out their faults, they praised Him anyway.

Acts 7:38 talks about Moses receiving the law, and it calls the law the Lively Oracles. God spoke to Israel through the law.

In 1 Peter 4:11, we see Peter talking about this to his audience—New Testament Remnant Israel, New Covenant Israel. “If any man speak,” Peter says, “let him speak as the Oracles of God.” How do you do that exactly? You speak as the mouthpiece of God.

New Covenant Israel, Remnant Israel, in their Kingdom, was a royal priesthood. Peter himself defined that in First Peter 2: “Because you’re a holy nation, a royal priesthood.” They were given the Holy Spirit unction to be able to say things that they hadn’t even studied. They were given the Holy Spirit unction to keep the statutes and commandments of the law according to the New Covenant. Therefore, they became the Oracles of God to the world, as a nation in that Kingdom, which of course has not yet come.

How will the world know what God’s doing at that time? Israel, the royal priesthood, would speak it.

Now, is that like us today? We speak God’s words, yes, but we can speak them wrong, in error.

We don’t have the Holy Ghost unction to speak things perfectly correctly even though we haven’t studied them. And we’re not a royal priesthood, even though many teach that we are. We don’t have a physical temple; we’re the Temple of the Holy Spirit. There’re no priests in the body of Christ. First Peter’s language doesn’t fit us today unless we twist it to make it work and that’s to our own destruction.

But Israel had an advantage. They were given the Oracles of God.

In Deuteronomy 30:14, Moses wrote,

But the word is very near you, in your mouth and in your heart, that you may do it. 

That’s talking about Israel. This’s not a general truth to everyone in the world, it’s about Israel. The Lively Oracle came to Moses. He came down from the mountain and put the law in the Ark, in the temple that was in the middle of Jerusalem. It was the nation of Israel that had the law. God’s words were close to them.

If you were a Gentile country, you had to do a bit of traveling to get to where God’s words were. The Oracles were in Israel.

Jesus, in John 4:22, spoke to a Samaritan woman and they’re having a conversation about which mountain they were going to worship on.

In John 4:19-20, the woman said to Jesus,

“Sir, I perceive that You are a prophet. 

Our fathers worshiped on this mountain, (that was mount Gerizim) and you Jews say that in Jerusalem is the place where one ought to worship.”

There was that religious and political battle between the Samaritans and the Jews.

Samaritans were the northern tribes of Israel, and were kind of corrupted by some Gentile nations. Then you had the southern tribes, the Jews from Judah, and this woman’s bringing that issue up: “You’re a prophet, and this is the issue, what do you say about it?”

In John 4:21,

Jesus said to her, “Woman, believe Me, the hour is coming when you will neither on this mountain, nor in Jerusalem, worship the Father.

Why is that?

Because Jerusalem will be in unbelief, and so will Mount Gerizim, this Samaritan mountain here.

Neither one’ll be correct.

John 4:22,

You worship what you do not know; we know what we worship, for salvation is of the Jews. 

What a strange verse that you’ll never see in Jesus movies.

It can even seem a bit racist, as if salvation was given specifically to the Jews rather than to the whole world.

Didn’t God love the world?

So, just one chapter after John 3, where God’s love for the world is emphasised, Jesus says that salvation is of the Jews.

Does He simply mean that He Himself was Jewish?

No, He’s referring to what Paul says in Romans 3:2: to Israel.

To the Jews, were committed the oracles of God.

The Samaritans didn’t have this; they abandoned it, and we can read about this in the Old Testament.

The Samaritans were originally part of Israel, but they split off and entered pagan territory. They remained in the land, but religiously speaking, they began inventing their own temples, synagogues, and priesthoods, something we see in Judges and Joshua.

They departed from what God commanded, and as a result, they became lost in their understanding.

A historical conflict arose over which group had the correct worship. The answer was clear. It was Judah, Jerusalem, Hezekiah, David, and the house of David in the city of David.

Jesus boldly states, “You worship what you do not know.” A striking rebuke. The woman had just told Him what she worshiped in John 4:20

Our fathers worshiped on this mountain, and you Jews say that in Jerusalem is the place where one ought to worship.” 

She believed she knew what she worshiped. But Jesus contradicted her, saying, “You worship what you do not know.”

Today we’d say that Jesus should’ve been more tolerant of her beliefs, but if someone’s wrong, it’s better to tell them. Isn’t that a rebuke? Yes, it is. And as Proverbs 27:5 says, Open rebuke is better Than love carefully concealed.

Jesus practiced this.

Jesus say, “We know what we worship, for salvation is of the Jews.”

Who’s the “we” here?

Jesus doesn’t say “I.” He says “we.” The “we” refers to the Jews.

Salvation is of the Jews, meaning that the knowledge of salvation—the oracles of God—were entrusted to them.

Even when the nation of Israel split, the truth remained in Jerusalem. Jesus affirms that the Jews know what they worship, even if they did it wrongly.

They worshiped hypocritically and sinned, as Romans 2 points out.

Jesus also pointed out their sins in His ministry.

But they knew what they worshiped—they had the knowledge of who and how, even though they corrupted it, they still had the oracles of God to refer back to.

Jesus often used scripture to correct his Jewish audience. He’d say, “Doesn’t the law say this?” and “Look at the scripture,” instructing them to search the scriptures. He could do this because they had them.

A Gentile who didn’t know scripture, couldn’t make that argument. Instead, He would appeal to creation and conscience.

Romans 3 tells us that even though the Jews failed to keep the law, they still had an advantage. Though they broke the law, Romans 3:2 says they still had the oracles of God. This points to the need for a better covenant. The Old Testament demanded perfect obedience and failure meant being cut off. What was the new covenant? It provided a way for salvation, blessing, and advantage even after failure.

Jeremiah 31 speaks of this new covenant. God revealed it to Jeremiah, who delivered it to Israel. Even in Genesis, the book of the law, we see promises given to Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, promises made specifically to the nation of Israel.

What does this mean? Even if Israel failed, God still had a promise to fulfill. That was their advantage. Paul says, “Chiefly because to them were committed the oracles of God. ” The Jews received things no other nation had or could claim. Even in failure, they still possessed the oracles of God, including specific promises that were exclusively theirs.

Later in Romans, Paul will expand on how this connects to the broader salvation available to the world today. How can God provide salvation and grace to the Gentiles while still keeping His promises to Israel? That discussion comes in Romans 9, 10, and 11. But he raises the issue here because the question naturally arises: What happens to Israel if they failed so terribly in Romans 2?

That’s question or objection number one.

The next question’s asked in Romans 3:3

For what if some did not believe? Will their unbelief make the faithfulness of God without effect?

God spoke to Israel. He entrusted them with the oracles of God. But not all Jews have believed. When we look at their history, we see that unbelief was widespread.so does this mean that God will go back on His promises? After all, He did choose Israel as His people, and He made definite covenants with them. Can the unbelief of some cause God to break His word?

Israel were God’s people. They had His covenants, they had the law, and yet, prophets frequently visited them and addressed either the king himself or the nation.

Rather than boasting in their privileged relationship with God, they boasted in other things—the size of their army, their alliances with Gentile nations, their wealth, and their success. These were things that God warned them about. He knew they’d break His commandments.

There were also faithful believers, and the Bible includes many accounts and testimonies of those who remained faithful to God and because of their faithfulness, God blessed them. That is encouraging, comforting, and hopeful.

But the objection here is: Israel is under sin, and though they were entrusted with the oracles of God,  and that was their advantage, what if they didn’t believe in those oracles committed to them?

Many, in fact most of them, didn’t believe and most rejected them. For example, the Sadducees denied the resurrection. They didn’t  believe in a literal coming of the Messiah. They totally disregarded what’d been committed to them.

Wicked generations arose among them. Jesus Himself said, “A wicked and adulterous generation seeks after a sign.” He was the sign! He lived among them.

These wicked generations rejected John the Baptist, Jesus, and Peter at Pentecost and finally Stephen.

Israel had wicked kings, false prophets, and even doubtful saints. Saints in the Old Testament—men considered faithful or godly—had their own doubts and failures.

Samson failed. Although he found some redemption at the end, he failed. David failed, yet found redemption too—but his story is filled with failure as well. Not everyone who had faith was perfect.

Gideon is another example. Didn’t he fleece God? Many Christians take that as permission to do the same. “Gideon did it, so I can do it too!”

But fleecing God was actually an expression of doubt. A strong man of faith would have simply obeyed. Instead, Gideon put God to the test—not once, but twice. It was an expression of doubt, yet God responded to him.

That doesn’t mean God’s obligated to do the same for everyone.

Someone might say, “God, I’m having trouble believing—convince me with a sign or miracle.” But God’s not obligated to do that.

It only does damage to people’s understanding of how God works when books like “The Prayer of Jabez” or teachings on Gideon’s fleecing or modern healing ministries make it seem like these practices should be performed today.

Remember that many of the people Jesus healed didn’t become believers.

These’re not models for modern believers.

The Jews had an advantage because they were entrusted with the oracles of God. Certain individuals, like Gideon, had an even greater advantage because God specifically chose them. That’s why He answered Gideon’s request. David had a covenant of mercy, so God forgave him despite his sins of murder and adultery. The nation didn’t receive that individual benefit. The nation had its advantages, but some individuals had greater blessings.

Even though Israel failed, there was still an advantage. So the question is:

What if some did not believe? Will their unbelief make the faithfulness of God without effect? 

How does their unbelief make God’s faith ineffective? What does this objection even mean?

The idea is this: God chose Israel to be His people. He committed His oracles to them. He promised to keep them, uphold them, and preserve them. But then they failed. Does that make it God’s fault?

This was His system—the law, the nation, everything. And it didn’t work.

So, should we blame God? Was it His fault?

Paul answers: Absolutely not. It’s their fault.

Some might argue that the system itself was flawed, and that God should be blamed for setting up a faulty system.

But Paul makes it clear: no!

In fact, later in Romans, Paul says that the law is perfect, holy, just, and good. The oracles God gave to Israel were good. The problem was not with God—it was with Israel. They didn’t believe.

This is a common and objection even today. Many people point out the corruption in the Catholic Church, the fallen preachers and the hypocrites and use them as a reason to reject God.

But the unbelief or failure of God’s ministers doesn’t mean God Himself has failed.

People tend to reject the Bible and God based on man’s unbelief.

Maybe people have simply misunderstood concepts like hell, judgment, and why God would allow such things to happen. The fault lies with people, not God.

Unbelief doesn’t make God’s word untrue.

Our belief, or lack of it, is irrelevant to truth itself.

The faithfulness of God remains intact regardless of whether people believe in Him or not.

Yet this objection is constantly raised. “If God had a system in place and it doesn’t seem to be working the way we expect, or people don’t believe in it, then isn’t that God’s fault?”

No, that’s not the case!

Israel’s unbelief,  as Paul’s discussing here, doesn’t affect God’s truthfulness, His existence, or His righteousness. He remains perfectly righteous. He’s true and He exists whether anyone believes it or not. Whether people acknowledge or receive the benefits of His truth is another matter.

We haven’t even reached the discussion of salvation yet, this’s simply the failure of people’s understanding of God’s righteous judgment and that’s why Romans 2 is so important.

Today, God has abundantly given His grace to the world, and many people refuse to receive it. Does that change His truth? No. He’s just as loving and righteous as He would be if everyone appreciated His gifts.

The objection raised here is whether God is right and true. But He’s not wrong, we are. We’re the ones without excuse.

John 1:11 says, speaking of Jesus,

He came to His own, and His own did not receive Him.

His own was Israel.

A common thought is that Jesus came, Israel rejected Him, and, along with the Romans, killed Him. The Jews were particularly obsessed with killing Him.  Some people think that as a result, God gave them up.

But did God say that because they didn’t believe His Son, He’s done with them?

We should understand what happened when Jesus died on the cross. It’s incorrect to say that just because Israel, in their unbelief, killed the Messiah, God would no longer fulfill His promises.

Even after they rejected Jesus, they still had ample opportunity to repent, to change their mind.

They could reject Peter, James, John, and even the Holy Spirit—but God remained committed to certain promises He made to Israel. That was their advantage.

In Acts 3:15-17 Peter addresses this point.

This was not even Pentecost it was after Pentecost. The theme of Peter’s preaching in Acts 2, 3, and 4 was: “You killed your Messiah, yet He’s offering you forgiveness.”

Jesus, while on the cross in Luke 23:34 said,

“Father, forgive them, for they do not know what they do.”

It’s not true that Israel’s unbelief made the faith of God without effect.

Acts 3:17 Peter states,

“Yet now, brethren, I know that you did it in ignorance, as did also your rulers.

They didn’t know what they were doing. They didn’t realise who Jesus was. This was clear even in His earthly ministry where He constantly spoke about their unbelief.

Peter continues in Acts 3:18:

But those things which God foretold by the mouth of all His prophets, that the Christ would suffer, He has thus fulfilled. 

Jesus died according to the scriptures.

Notice, this passage doesn’t mention dying for sins—it simply states that He died according to prophecy.

In Acts 3:19 Peter goes on:

Repent therefore and be converted, that your sins may be blotted out, so that times of refreshing may come from the presence of the Lord, 

He’s appealing to the unbelieving Jews who killed the Messiah. Even though they acted in unbelief, they could still repent and change their minds. Their sins, specifically, the sin of rejecting and killing their Messiah, could be blotted out.

They still had an opportunity to be saved, to repent, and to receive refreshing.

Acts 3:20–21 says,

and that He may send Jesus Christ, who was preached to you before, whom heaven must receive until the times of restoration of all things, which God has spoken by the mouth of all His holy prophets since the world began. 

This was not a mystery. The prophets spoke of these things. Paul discusses the mystery that was hidden later, but in Acts 3, everything is still following prophecy.

What made Acts 2 unique was that the Holy Spirit filled all who believed, but this was still in accordance with scripture.

So, the objection that unbelief renders God’s faith ineffective is not supported by Peter’s own testimony.

Now, what does the question, “Will their unbelief make the faithfulness of God without effect” actually mean?

Does God’s judgment of Israel, their being under sin and their failure to obey the law which God committed to them, mean that His promises are nullified?

This is not the only time Paul addresses this issue. In fact, Paul is the one who exclusively deals with it. Hebrews touches on it slightly, but not to the same extent, because Paul’s gospel depends on the truth and understanding that all are under sin—meaning there’s no hope for anyone apart from God’s grace.

Galatians 3:17 explains this as well:

And this I say, that the law, which was four hundred and thirty years later, cannot annul the covenant that was confirmed before by God in Christ, that it should make the promise of no effect. 

See, Abraham was given the promise, and then the law was given 430 years later. That later law can’t overturn or invalidate the earlier unconditional promise.

God says, “I will do this for you,” addressing the children of Israel, Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob.

Then, He institutes the law, and Paul makes it clear that the law doesn‘t annul the promise.

No one can simply disregard Israel and say they’re just like everyone else. God made promises and covenants with them that no one else can claim.

Romans 9:4–5 supports this:

Who (Paul’s countrymen) are Israelites, to whom pertain the adoption, the glory, the covenants, the giving of the law, the service of God, and the promises; of whom are the fathers and from whom, according to the flesh, Christ came, who is over all, the eternally blessed God. Amen. 

Paul states that Christ came to them according to the flesh, fulfilling prophecy and meeting their need for sacrifice.

Psalm 147:20 affirms that God has not dealt with any other nation as He had with Israel.

This relationship didn’t cease when Jesus died, nor when Israel rejected the Holy Ghost at Pentecost, nor when Paul received the revelation of the mystery. Even though today God’s not building the nation of Israel but the body of Christ, Israel still retains its historical advantage.

What does this part of Romans 3:3, “the faith of God” mean?

It doesn’t mean that God has faith. He doesn’t “believe” in people, He knows everything. Faith is trust in things unseen, but God sees all. Therefore, He can’t have faith in the way humans do. Specifically, it refers to what God has spoken.

In the context of Romans 3, what has God spoken?

God spoke things and committed them to the Jews.

Thus, “the faith of God” refers to the things God spoke that were entrusted to Israel.

He didn’t commit the same oracles to us that He gave Israel. Instead, He’s committed the dispensation of grace to us.

We don’t have a physical temple or prophets we have scripture. Romans 3 speaks of scripture given to Israel. However, the New Testament epistles were not originally committed to Israel.

Paul stated in 2 Timothy 3:16 that all scripture is given by inspiration of God—not just the Old Testament, but also the writings given to the church.

The completed Bible was made for the church, the body of Christ, so that we can read it, know it, and believe it. It is the effectual Word of God.

“The faith of God” refers to the truth God’s put in place to be believed. It changes with dispensations. The truth given to Abraham was later expanded upon when the law was given to Moses. David received a promise of mercy that no one else had.

Jesus came revealing more truth. Then He revealed truth to the Apostle Paul. This is progressive revelation.

Paul’s point in Romans 3 is simply this: if Israel, who had an advantage because they were committed the oracles of God, what God had said and spoken to them, did not believe what God had spoken to them, does that mean the things God promised them are nullified? Does it mean the promise that He would make them a nation above all nations and bless them won’t happen because they failed and didn’t keep the law?

It can’t mean that.

Why? Because the law’s not what will get them there. The Old Covenant law could never bring them to that promise. It was always going to be about the promises God had made. As we said, the promises of a great nation that would bless the world was made 430 years before the law.

There was going to be a covenant built on better promises—a better covenant, a new covenant.

Israel should read their own scriptures.

There is a better covenant, and they’re justified by faith. The scriptures themselves say this. Habakkuk 2, which Paul quotes in Romans 1, states that “the just shall live by faith.”

As Paul answers the question, “Will their unbelief make the faith of God without effect?”

No! God keeps His promises.

This doesn’t mean Israel was righteous. It doesn’t mean they kept the law. It means that God is faithful, and we can trust Him to be faithful.

He’ll do what He said.

Romans 11:26-27 supports this:

And so all Israel will be saved, as it is written: “THE DELIVERER WILL COME OUT OF ZION, AND HE WILL TURN AWAY UNGODLINESS FROM JACOB; FOR THIS IS MY COVENANT WITH THEM, WHEN I TAKE AWAY THEIR SINS.

This speaks of Israel’s future salvation. God will keep His word to them.

Israel couldn’t keep the things that God told them to keep, but God must keep what He said He would keep.

Paul’s point in Romans 3 is not that God’s finished with Israel. That’s the discussion in Romans 9, 10, and 11.

Romans 3 is about God’s truth, how He’s not lying. Israel was given a special, privileged position but it doesn’t mean that privilege was taken away simply because they sinned.

They still have an advantage.

Look at Jeremiah 29—this is an example of God’s faithfulness to Israel. Jeremiah 29:10 is often quoted in discussions about God’s perfect plan for someone’s life. However, Jeremiah has nothing to do with our personal lives today.

Jeremiah 29:10-11 states:

For thus says the LORD: After seventy years are completed at Babylon, I will visit you and perform My good word toward you, and cause you to return to this place. 

For I know the thoughts that I think toward you, says the LORD, thoughts of peace and not of evil, to give you a future and a hope. 

Why were the Jews in Babylon?

They broke God’s covenant. They disregarded it so much that He had to uphold His part of the covenant, punishing them by removing them from the land. Most of them were killed, while others were taken as slaves to Babylon.

This was all written in Moses’ law—the “lively oracles.”

God made a promise to Israel: they would not be removed from the earth forever. This was a promise made to the nation, not to individuals.

God had to bring them back. He said so before they were exiled. Jeremiah 29 was written before they left for Babylon, stating that after seventy years, He would bring them back.

Books in the Bible like Daniel, Ezra, and Nehemiah confirm that He did bring them back.

What happened to Gentile nations like the Canaanites?

They were destroyed.

But to Israel God says, “You have broken My law, and I’ll punish you. But I made a promise, and you will return.”

This is not an advantage for you and me today. It can’t be our “life verse,” it was theirs, Israel’s, in time past.

In Malachi 1:2-3 The Lord says through the prophet,

“I have loved you,” says the LORD. (that’s Jacob) “Yet you say, ‘In what way have You loved us?’ Was not Esau Jacob’s brother?” Says the LORD. “Yet Jacob I have loved; 

But Esau I have hated, And laid waste his mountains and his heritage For the jackals of the wilderness.”

Malachi refers to the nations that descended from Jacob and Esau, not the individuals themselves. God says He loved Jacob’s nation, Israel, because He had made a promise to them. Esau’s descendants, Edom, were destroyed.

He destroyed Israel also, but He brought them back. Malachi understood this, as the book was written after Israel’s return from Babylon.

They asked, “How have You loved us?”

The answer: “I brought you back from political death.”

Their nation was completely gone, and yet, there they were again.

And how did they repay God?

Malachi details the corruptions taking place.

In Malachi 2:17, it says:

You have wearied the LORD with your words; “Yet you say, “In what way have we wearied Him?” In that you say, “Everyone who does evil Is good in the sight of the LORD, And He delights in them,” Or “Where is the God of justice?”

If we are doing wrong, why does God not judge us? People still say this today.

God says, “You weary Me because you don’t know what’s right or wrong, even though I’ve told you what’s right and wrong. Then, you blame Me because you don’t think I’m judging you.

God’s faithfulness ensures He keeps His promises even after judgment. What do we learn from the Old Testament? Even after Israel’s judgment, He remains faithful to His promises.

They killed the Messiah.

Even after that, God will keep His promises. But, just as in the judgements of the past, when God took his hand off Israel and they went into exile and slavery the same thing happened when they continually rejected and murdered the Messiah when He came.

Even after the many opportunities they were given to be forgiven even for that, which they also rejected, they suffered the same setting aside as they had in the past.

But what took place after that setting aside, the great mystery that was never prophesied, was different than Israel’s past setting aside as we’ll learn through Romans.

Romans 2 states that all Israel, the circumcision, was made uncircumcision. They broke the law.

But God will bring mercy and keep His promises, even after their judgment.

So, the Romas 3:3 question is,

For what if some did not believe? Will their unbelief make the faithfulness of God without effect? 

Romans 3:4  gives the answer,

Certainly not! Indeed, let God be true but every man a liar. As it is written: “THAT YOU MAY BE JUSTIFIED IN YOUR WORDS, AND MAY OVERCOME WHEN YOU ARE JUDGED.

The idea that Israel’s unbelief could make God’s faithfulness ineffective is ridiculous.  That’s what Paul’s saying.

For let God be true and every man a liar.

God can’t be untrue, and scripture affirms that in multiple places.

Again, this objection is being uttered by someone who simply does not know the Bible or their own conscience. They fail to see that they, not God, are the ones at fault.

Romans 1 already declares that creation reveals God’s eternal power and glory. If there’s anything that’s true, it’s God.

That’s part of the very definition of God. He’s the source of truth, the foundation of reality. Only God can define truth. He can’t lie!

Titus 1:2

in hope of eternal life which God, who cannot lie, promised before time began, 

2 Timothy 2:13

If we are faithless, He remains faithful; He cannot deny Himself.

There is nothing impossible for God—except that He cannot deny Himself.

Also we see in Romans 11:29

For the gifts and the calling of God are irrevocable. 

God doesn’t change His mind when He gives a gift. When He makes a promise, He fulfills it. There are times, though, that He declares that If you do this, then I’ll do that,” and if the condition’s not met, He doesn’t act. But when He says, “I will do this,” He always does it.

When God makes a promise to Israel, committing certain things to them, He remains true to His word.

Numbers 23:19 states:

God is not a man, that He should lie,

He cannot lie.

So, to think that because people are in unbelief that God’s not been faithful is wrong thinking.

The phrase in this verse of Romans 3:4 that states,

let God be true but every man a liar.

That “every man” includes you and me and the very smartest of all mankind. We’re all sinners.

That is difficult to swallow in this postmodern world where, apparently, according to surveys, most people don’t believe they’re sinners.

Romans 3:4 makes that clear.

Romans 2 affirms this as do many other scriptures. People do things outwardly in alignment with what God commanded—things others can see—but they fail to do what God requires inwardly, what only He can see. That’s their failure. Every man’s a liar.

So, if we’re looking at the failures of humanity, the failures of ministers, or those given an advantage by God’s words, and we conclude that those men failed, so therefore God’s wrong, we’re missing the point.

Every man’s a liar.

God is the only One Who always speaks truth.

Anything truth that you and I utter is because God spoke it first.

If men have an excuse, then God’s wrong.

That is what the Bible says.  The Bible is right about everything that it says.

If we don’t come to that realisation sooner, we’ll face condemnation later. That’s the truth.

Sometimes we fail to understand how in the world God can be right if He condemns everyone.

The issue’s simple. We’re not God. He is.

God overcomes that judgment man makes against Him and clears Himself.

We see this in Revelation.

The world condemns God.

Then He shows up and sets things right, not merely by force.

It’s not just that God’s more powerful (though He is).

It is by His righteous judgment.

The atheist says they can’t imagine how they could be wrong.

And that’s exactly the problem. We can’t even imagine that we’re wrong.

It’s not just that we don’t understand, it’s that we assume that there’s no way I could be wrong.

What audacity. What pride in the face of God.

Let God be true but every man a liar.

That is one of the hardest things for people to accept. But it’s the beginning of belief.

That’s why, in the next episode of Romans 3, Paul’s about to discuss salvation.

Until then may God bless you and keep you in the knowledge of Him Who paid such an enormous price for your salvation.

Romans 2:16-23 – MY (Paul’s) Gospel

Paul writes in Romans 2:16
…in the day when God will judge the secrets of men by Jesus Christ, according to my gospel. 
We understand that Paul was given apostleship and a gospel, and a  dispensation was revealed to him directly by the Lord Jesus Christ and we know that his apostleship was separate from that given to the Twelve Apostles. So we hopefully see all that clearly, but what’s not so clear is why it’s here in Romans 2?

“Speed Slider”

Romans 2:16-23 – Transcript

Paul’s just finished talking about how it’s not the hearers of the law but the doers of the law and how all men will be judged by what they do, according to their deeds. So why’s Paul talking about his gospel in this context—about the law and about deeds?

Firstly, that phrase “my gospel” shows up three times in Paul’s writings. Twice in Romans, Romans 2:16 is the first time, and Romans 16:25 is the second, where Paul says that you can be established according to “my gospel” and the preaching of Jesus Christ according to the revelation of the mystery.

The last time is in his final epistle, 2 Timothy 2:8, where he reminds Timothy that Jesus Christ, of the seed of David, was raised from the dead according to “my gospel.”

Nowhere else in scripture do we find someone saying, “my gospel.” The term “the gospel” shows up a lot and even Paul uses that often, but “my gospel”? Why’s Paul so personal with this gospel?

Many say that Paul just really loved Jesus, so he made it a very personal thing.

But actually, every time Paul uses the phrase “my gospel,” he’s using it in defence of his apostleship which was unique.

We covered in Romans 1 that he was made an apostle to the Gentiles. He’s always defending his apostleship.

In Romans 2 the context is judgement, the law and the separation of Jew and Gentile in times past.

In the middle of this, he speaks of “my gospel”. It’s as if this final judgment, in the day when God will judge the secrets of men by Jesus Christ according to “my gospel,” somehow makes his gospel the key to God’s future judgment.

In the Romans 16:25 instance of “My Gospel”, he’s just finished warning people about those who teach a contrary doctrine, and then he says that God is able to establish you according to “my gospel,” and the preaching of Jesus Christ, according to the revelation of the mystery kept secret since the world began

In 2 Timothy, it’s the same thing.

2 Timothy 2:8,

Remember that Jesus Christ, of the seed of David, was raised from the dead according to my gospel, 

Every time that phrase shows up, it is in defence of his apostleship—something personally given to Paul.

Paul also uses the phrase “our gospel” and what’s interesting is that

In 2 Corinthians and 1 Thessalonians, as well as 2 Thessalonians, he always uses that phrase “our gospel” when he’s speaking with Gentiles.

So, in the three places where he says, “my gospel,” he seems to be defending his apostleship but, when he says, “our gospel,” he’s speaking to Gentiles, as if it’s something shared between them.

He says “my gospel” when confronting Jewish issues, as in Romans 2. But “our gospel” when talking to Gentiles which suggests that there was a gospel specifically given to Gentiles. This is fascinating because according to scripture, as Jesus said in John 4:22, salvation was of the Jews.

Paul tells the gentiles in 2 Thessalonians 2:14  to which He called you by our gospel, for the obtaining of the glory of our Lord Jesus Christ. They, the Thessalonian gentiles, were partakers in it and were a part of it.

Paul uses other phrases referring to the message he was given. Here are some passages that remind us of this:

2 Timothy 1:10-11

but has now been revealed by the appearing of our Savior Jesus Christ, who has abolished death and brought life and immortality to light through the gospel, to which I was appointed a preacher, an apostle, and a teacher of the Gentiles.

That last phrase in the verse is important because it refers to the gospel he was appointed to.

In 1 Timothy 1:11 we see,

according to the glorious gospel of the blessed God which was committed to my trust. 

Paul’s gospel stands against teachings of the law, which makes sense because Paul teaches grace, not law.

In 1 Thessalonians 2:4, he says,

But as we have been approved by God to be entrusted with the gospel, even so we speak, not as pleasing men, but God who tests our hearts. 

Paul’s speaking about his ministry to the Thessalonians, about being entrusted with the gospel.

If we go back to Colossians 1:25, we see the same language. A dispensation was given to him specifically and he preaching of the gospel was entrusted to him.

Galatians 1:11:

But I make known to you, brethren, that the gospel which was preached by me is not according to man. 

By the way, as we’re going back in time in these epistles. Galatians is one of Paul’s earliest epistles.

All of Galatians 1 is Paul proving that this gospel was given to him by Jesus Christ directly.

Back in 1 Corinthians 9:17, Paul says,

I have been entrusted with a stewardship.  The better King James rendition reads, A dispensation of the gospel was committed unto me.

Ephesians 3:2-3

if indeed you have heard of the dispensation of the grace of God which was given to me for you, how that by revelation He made known to me the mystery

Multiple other passages reinforce this. Over and over again, Paul points out the things that were given to him by the Lord Jesus Christ, not just given to all believers in general, but specifically entrusted to him, as though he was responsible for delivering it to others.

The real question from Romans 2:16 is how can judgment according to “my gospel,” be the same as judgment according to deeds as in verse 6?

There seems, on the surface to be a conflict here because Paul’s teaching the gospel of grace, which is not a gospel of law—it’s not a works-based system. Grace is not of works. But in Romans 2, here’s Paul talking about deeds and works? Is Paul saying that my gospel is based on deeds or grace?

Well, Paul’s “my gospel,” doesn’t remove judgment. We learn that from understanding  Romans 2:16:

in the day when God will judge the secrets of men by Jesus Christ, according to my gospel.

In fact judgment’s based on it. It proves God’s judgment to be righteous, which is why it’s included in Romans 2 which justifies the righteous judgment of God against the sinfulness of humanity, tracing history and proving that men have always been without excuse.

Romans 3:31 expands this idea. After explaining the gospel, Paul states in Romans 3:31:

Do we then make void the law through faith? Certainly not! On the contrary, we establish the law. 

This is another passage that can challenge the teaching of grace. Didn’t Christ take the judgment for us?

Yes, He did. He removed the penalty of our sins and took them upon Himself. But we’re still going to be judged by Christ and Romans 14:10 speaks of that.

Romans 2 explains how God judges. We’ve already seen last time how He’s not a respecter of persons—He renders judgment to all men according to their deeds, both Jew and Gentile.

So whether we’re under the law or not, we’ll be judged accordingly.

How can the good news of salvation not all also be a means of judgment?

Salvation is offered to everyone under sin, without exception.

However God’s righteous judgment means He’ll judge according to Paul’s “my gospel,” which declares that it’s offered to all, no matter who they are.

What about the gentiles, who didn’t have the law? Well,  as Romans 2 explains they have consciences.

They have secret things, and God knows their hearts as well. They’ll perish without the law, just as those with the law will be judged under the law. That’s what Paul says.

In 1 Timothy 2: we see God’s will and that,

desires all men to be saved and to come to the knowledge of the truth. 

That Paul’s gospel.

Why do all men need to be saved? Because all men are sinners. That’s Paul’s gospel also. So when he says that God will judge the secrets of men according to “my gospel,” that’s what he’s talking about.  Our eternal destiny relies on our faith and acceptance of or our rejection of Pauls’ gospel.

God desires all men to be saved, through the one mediator between God and man, and Christ who gave Himself as a ransom for all.

Gentiles will perish without the law, and Jews will perish under the law unless we trust the finished work of Christ and receive righteousness apart from the law.

Because we understand how God can save outside of Israel’s covenants and laws, it makes perfect sense that Paul would say this in Romans 2.

Now, let’s move on to Romans 2:17,

Indeed you are called a Jew, and rest on the law, and make your boast in God, 

This is a new thought, but it’ll further explain the question in verse 16.  “according to my (Pauls’) gospel.

Most of the time, the questions we have when we’re reading a text will be answered in the surrounding context, reading around the verse in question.

Romans 2:16 is not a standalone verse, it’s part of a larger context.

Notice that verses 13, 14, and 15 have brackets or parenthesis around them.

These are punctuation marks used to enclose extra information in a sentence such as explanations, examples, or clarifications that aren’t essential to the main sentence but still provide useful details.

This means that Romans 2:16 actually began in verse 12.

Without the parentheses it would read,

For as many as have sinned without law will also perish without law, and as many as have sinned in the law will be judged by the law  in the day when God will judge the secrets of men by Jesus Christ, according to my gospel.

With or without the law, is the explanation of this passage.

Inside the  parentheses is discussing Gentiles who didn’t have the law and how God will judge them.

Then, in verse 17, Paul turns to the Jews: and we’re still in the context of

God judging the secrets of men by Jesus Christ according to my gospel.

He’s about to explain the judgment he’s referring to—”according to my gospel.”

It won’t be the gospel explained in Romans 3—we’ll get there eventually—but it will clarify what he means in Romans 2:16, which is that whether you’re a Jew or a Gentile, it doesn’t matter.

The rest of chapter 2 examines if being a Jew really benefits anyone.

If you’re a Jew, what profit does that bring? There’s no profit. If you’re circumcised but don’t keep the law, you’re considered uncircumcised. It doesn’t matter, so Jew or Gentile—your identity doesn’t matter in God’s judgment.

In Romans 2:17, ” Indeed you are called a Jew ” tells us that Paul’s speaking to an individual Jew.  He’s addressing a Jew directly and it may or may not be an actual person, but it tells us that Paul’s audience includes Jews.

Romans wasn’t exclusive to gentiles, there were Jews there too.

Romans 2:17 explicitly says, ” Indeed you are called a Jew.”

That means Paul is writing to Jews as well, those who know about what God gave to the Jewish people.

Also Romans 1:7 speaks of “all who are in Rome,” indicating believers and possibly unbelievers.

Romans 16 describes those “who were in Christ before Paul,” meaning they were part of Peter’s group—the little flock.

He’s about to explain the judgment he’s referring to—”according to my gospel.”

As we said, he won’t explain the gospel until Romans 3, which we’ll get to soon, but it will clarify that whether you’re a Jew or a Gentile, it doesn’t matter. The rest of the chapter examines if being a Jew truly benefits anyone.

And what’s the conclusion?  No! If you’re circumcised but don’t keep the law, you’re considered uncircumcised.

Romans 4:1 says:

What then shall we say that Abraham our father has found according to the flesh? 

Here’s another often misinterpreted phrase.

“Our father”—does that mean Abraham is the father of Gentiles?

Well, first of all, Abraham was neither a Jew nor an Israelite.

Secondly, when Paul says, “our father,” he could be uniting with other Jews among his audience and using an example from Jewish scripture to address them.

Paul’s not blaming them as if to say, “You rest in the law—don’t you know that you shouldn’t do that?” or “You boast of God—didn’t you know you shouldn’t boast?”

He’s not calling them boasters in a negative sense. These are true statements about Israel. They aren’t bad things—at least, not yet.

For example, there are quite a few Psalms that justify what Paul says in this passage.

Psalm 1:1 which many of us know,

Blessed is the man Who walks not in the counsel of the ungodly, Nor stands in the path of sinners, Nor sits in the seat of the scornful; 

But his delight is in the law of the LORD, And in His law he meditates day and night. 

He shall be like a tree Planted by the rivers of water, That brings forth its fruit in its season, Whose leaf also shall not wither; And whatever he does shall prosper.  

That’s peaceful a pretty peaceful and restful scene.  The person who keeps the law will be like that.

So if you were a Jew and you had the law, you would seek rest in it.

If that seems like a stretch, let’s look at the well-known Psalm 23 which, interestingly, speaks about Israel during the tribulation.

The LORD is my shepherd; I shall not want. He makes me to lie down in green pastures; He leads me beside the still waters. 

That’s peace and rest.

He restores my soul; He leads me in the paths of righteousness For His name’s sake. 

Yea, though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death, I will fear no evil; For You are with me; Your rod and Your staff, they comfort me. 

No fear. Restoration. Green pastures. Waters.

Psalm 23 is read at funerals because it sounds peaceful. But people often skip over the “rod and staff” part.

A shepherd’s staff is a weapon against evildoers.

If you’re a wolf in sheep’s clothing—guess what the rod and staff do? They strike and you’re done.

And that’s the law sometimes.

As long as they followed the law, they found comfort in it. The Shepherd gave them this law to follow.

Psalm 119:165 says:

Great peace have those who love Your law, And nothing causes them to stumble. 

We need to think about verses like this.

We’re not under the law and Romans 6:14 clearly says that,

For sin shall not have dominion over you, for you are not under law but under grace. 

Galatians 3 calls the law a curse.

For as many as are of the works of the law are under the curse;

Yet David in Psalm 119:165 says:

Great peace have those who love Your law

See. they knew that if they kept the law, they’d receive liberty, peace, and righteousness.

It was a special privilege that God gave to them.

Psalm 119 continues:

LORD, I hope for Your salvation, And I do Your commandments. 

My soul keeps Your testimonies, And I love them exceedingly. 

I keep Your precepts and Your testimonies, For all my ways are before You. 

Psalm 119:174 says:

I long for Your salvation, O LORD, And Your law is my delight. 

That statement seems at odds with what we know in the gospel today.  Didn’t David know that the law condemns him?

Well, David doesn’t know anything about Christ’s finished work on the cross yet.

Psalm 119:176 says:

I have gone astray like a lost sheep; seek thy servant: for I do not forget thy commandments.”

Remember Jesus seeking the lost sheep?

A sheep goes astray, and the Shepherd—Jesus—finds the lost sheep.

But what does David say about the lost sheep?

The lost sheep is seeking His commandments.

Psalm 119 aligns with what Jesus says in His earthly ministry.

If the sheep isn’t seeking His commandments, He lets it go.

People sometimes force Paul’s grace toward sinners onto what Jesus teaches—but that’s not what Jesus was saying.

Jesus also said:

“If you don’t build your house on the rock, you won’t stand.”

What was the rock?

In context, it was doing what Jesus said—not just believing what He said.

Loving Jesus’ words meant obeying the law.

The point is that the law was righteous, holy, good, and just and that’s what Paul teaches in Romans 7.

It was a good thing.  However, Paul states in Romans 2 that the law is great—if you do it and that’s exactly what Psalms teaches.

What happens if you don’t do? That’s what Paul’s talking about, righteous judgment in Romans 2.

Psalm 34:2,

My soul shall make its boast in the LORD; The humble shall hear of it and be glad.

We might think, it’s not good to boast, and we shouldn’t boast in ourselves. The Bible teaches that boasting in ourselves is self-centred, and prideful.

However, boasting in God is right. That’s what we should boast in.

What is boasting?

It’s praising, taking pride in something but often we praise and take pride in ourselves when we should glory in and take pride in God the creator of all things—because He’s worthy of it.

Whenever scripture speaks against boasting, it’s always directed at boasting in ourselves, our works and accomplishments, but in Psalm 34:2 David says,

My soul shall make its boast in the LORD; The humble shall hear of it and be glad.

They’re not boasting in themselves because they’re humble.

Then in Psalm 44:8 David says,

In God we boast all day long, And praise Your name forever.

Then Psalm 135:4 says:

 For the LORD has chosen Jacob for Himself, Israel for His special treasure. 

So, the Jews made their boast in God—and that was a good thing.

It wasn’t just that they were boasting about their own works.

Reading through the Psalms shows many reasons to boast in God.

Of course, this was under the law. It applied to the Jews.

Israel boasted in God not only because He was the Creator (which anyone could acknowledge), but because God specifically chose them.

Israel wasn’t special because of their own merit; it came from God.

They boasted that “The Lord made us special.”

But we see the fine line here.

If God made your nation, there’s a delicate balance between boasting in what God did and boasting in yourself.

That same caution applies to Christians today.

Didn’t God make us a new creature in Christ?  Yes, and we don’t forget that. It’s not about us.

If we, in the western nations think God has a covenant with our nation, the Bible makes it clear that God hasn’t dealt with any nation the way He’s dealt with Israel.

The New Covenant was made with the house of Israel and the house of Judah (Jeremiah 31:31) and not with anyone else.

That was their boast.

Romans 2:18 continues this thought with another description of the Jew.,

And (The Jews) know His will, and approve the things that are excellent, being instructed out of the law,

Paul’s speaking of the past. Jews today who don’t know the gospel don’t know the will of God.  But in Romans 2:17, when Paul speaks to “a Jew called a Jew under the law in time past,” they did know the will of God.

Where do we find God’s will for Israel?  In the law and in the prophets.

Some people approach the Old Testament statements about seeking God’s will as if it were a great mystery.

But when God revealed the scriptures to Israel, they knew His will making them more excellent than the Gentiles, who didn’t have God speaking to them.

Israel had God telling them His will in the law.

In Deuteronomy 30:11, in the law given to Moses, the commandments were given to Israel—they weren’t a mystery.

John 4:22, Jesus, speaking to the Samaritan woman, says:

You worship what you do not know; we know what we worship, for salvation is of the Jews. 

Even the Samaritans, who had corrupted Israel’s religion, needed to understand that salvation was found in the Jewish scriptures and the word of God.

Matthew 6:10  the prayer Jesus taught His disciples begins,

“Our Father…” 

Whose Father?  Israel’s.

They made their boast in God.

“Hallowed be thy name”—there’s the boast.

“Thy kingdom come. Thy will be done in earth, as it is in heaven.”

There’s the land and the covenants—on earth, just as He promised them.

“Thy will be done.”

They knew His will, a kingdom coming to earth, from the law and the prophets.

Paul goes on to say in Romans 2:18:

and approve the things that are excellent, being instructed out of the law, 

A Jew called a Jew under the law knew excellent things.

When we know Romans from the beginning we tend to focus on the excellency of the Cross of Christ and the gospel—but we forget the excellency that was the law, and we miss something important.

We should understand the function of the law, or we’ll be lead to confusion, problems and wrong teachings.

That’s why we need to learn Romans 2 well.

The law instructed Israel on how to discern right from wrong, how to make righteous judgments, and how to approve things that were more excellent—by teaching them what those excellent things were.

Deuteronomy 4:7-8 is a testimony to Israel’s unique privilege:

For what great nation is there that has God so near to it, as the LORD our God is to us, for whatever reason we may call upon Him? And what great nation is there that has such statutes and righteous judgments as are in all this law which I set before you this day? 

Israel had God’s law, and there was no nation with a law so great as theirs.

So, they knew things that were more excellent—because the things given to them were from God.

Hebrews 8:6 shows us the New Covenant for Israel, just as Deuteronomy discussed the Old Covenant for Israel:

But now He has obtained a more excellent ministry, inasmuch as He is also Mediator of a better covenant, which was established on better promises. 

When Jesus came to Israel, He performed a more excellent ministry—more excellent than what they already had, which was already excellent.

To illustrate this:

First, the Gentiles had nothing.

Then, Israel was given God’s law—which was more excellent than anything.

Then, Jesus came and introduced something even more excellent, the New Covenant (Hebrews 8:6).

So, Israel had something greater than anything, and Christ brought something greater than that.

Isaiah 60:15 speaks of excellent things. Part of Israel’s promised covenant fulfillment was their nation becoming the glory of the earth.

Let’s try and visualise this increasing excellency through scripture:

Excellent—Israel in their Kingdom.  That’s Isaiah 60:15.

An eternal excellency on the earth that Jesus spoke of—the kingdom to come even though He didn’t bring it at that time.

That law was excellent.

But when their covenants are fulfilled, that’ll be more excellent than everything Israel had under Moses.

We see this increasing excellency throughout scripture even though the kingdom hasn’t yet come.  Israel’s “eternal excellency” isn’t present today.

Christ came—but then He died and ascended to heaven.

So, what’s happening now?

Romans 5 explains that there’s something that abounds over sin and over the consequence of the law:

Grace.

Romans 5:20 states:

Moreover the law entered that the offense might abound. But where sin abounded, grace abounded much more, so that as sin reigned in death, even so grace might reign through righteousness to eternal life through Jesus Christ our Lord. 

What Paul talks about here regarding grace is that it is more excellent than anything that’s come before.

It abounds over the law and sin.

In 1 Corinthians 12:31, Paul tells the Corinthian gentiles—”Yes, you have spiritual gifts, but I show you a more excellent way.”

He’s not teaching the law, nor is he teaching the New Covenant

He’s speaking of charity that comes from grace and in Philippians 1:9-10, Paul tells the Philippians that he prays they’ll abound in knowledge, wisdom, and judgment so that they may know things that are more excellent.

They can discern those more excellent things according to the revelation of the mystery that Paul has received.

We’ve been given the manifold wisdom of God—to know the length, depth, and height of the love of God in Christ Jesus and that’s an excellent thing, knowledge and information that speaks of things higher than anything God’s ever revealed before.

These truths are higher than Israel’s kingdom, and we’ve been given graces that were never prophesied about.

Romans progressively reveals the excellency of grace.

Romans 2:19 is still speaking of the Jew,

and are confident that you yourself are a guide to the blind, a light to those who are in darkness, 

If you were a Jew, you had the tools to guide the blind—meaning those who didn’t know the truth.

Isaiah speaks of this—how Israel would be a light to the Gentiles.

Their Messiah would be a light to the Gentiles, but Israel, as a nation, was meant to be a city on a hill—a light to the nations.

In Luke 2:32—when Jesus was born, the prophecy about Him spoke of this,

Some use this verse to argue for the dispensation of the grace of God, claiming this passage refers to the church.  It doesn’t.

It is a prophecy fulfilled about Israel.

This is Simeon speaking of Jesus in Luke 2:29-32.

“Lord, now You are letting Your servant depart in peace, According to Your word; For my eyes have seen Your salvation Which You have prepared before the face of all peoples, A light to bring revelation to the Gentiles, And the glory of Your people Israel.” 

Jesus is the light referenced in Isaiah 42 and 49.

But notice the last part of the verse:  “… And the glory of Your people Israel.”

Simeon is talking about Jesus fulfilling prophecy to Israel—to make them the city on a hill.

Psalm 119:105 says:

Your word is a lamp to my feet And a light to my path. 

That was David speaking about the law. Light.

Proverbs 6:23 says:

For the commandment is a lamp, And the law a light; Reproofs of instruction are the way of life, 

The law and the prophets were the light of Israel.  But what we have now excels over all of that.

In Matthew 5:13 Jesus says:

You are the salt of the earth; but if the salt loses its flavour, how shall it be seasoned? It is then good for nothing but to be thrown out and trampled underfoot by men. 

What does it mean to be salt?

Some think this is referring to the church, the Body of Christ, that they must be salt and light in the world.

But what does that actually mean?

It was one of Israel’s covenants the Covenant of Salt.

God gave Israel the Covenant of Salt in Leviticus 2:13, Numbers 18:19 and 2 Chronicles 13:5

Salt’s incorruptible nature made it a symbol of enduring covenants.

They were to be the salt of the earth.

So, when we, the Body, claim we’re the salt of the earth, we unknowingly take possession of God’s purpose for Israel.

How did Israel get its savour?  What was the flavour God gave to them?

The law.  They had the law.  They had the privilege of a promised covenant.

They had a King—a Messiah come to them.

Yet Jesus warns them:

“but if the salt loses its flavour, it’s good for nothing.”

If Israel rejected the Messiah, they’d lose their flavour, because their flavour was never about themselves, but about God.

If man doesn’t make his boast in God’s Son, we’ve lost our entire purpose.

Jesus continues in Matthew 5:14:

“You are the light of the world. A city that is set on a hill cannot be hidden. 

Where does that light come from? Jesus.

Christians often apply this to themselves.

They say that Jesus is our head—our Savior—so He’s our light now.

He’s our source of salt and Yes, it is from Jesus.

But Jesus was speaking to a nation, saying:

“You are a city on a hill.”  A real city.

When the prayer says, “Thy kingdom come, Thy will be done in earth,” it means the actual earth and the actual kingdom coming on the earth.

The city is Jerusalem, it’s not all Christians. We’re not a city.

We’re a body, members of the Body of Christ.

A city on a hill cannot be hidden.

Matthew 5:15-16,

Nor do they light a lamp and put it under a basket, but on a lampstand, and it gives light to all who are in the house. 

Let your light so shine before men, that they may see your good works and glorify your Father in heaven. 

How do they shine their light, and how do they act as the salt?

By living according to the law that God gave them.

That’s why Matthew 5, 6 and 7 speak of law-keeping and explain how to keep the law.

After stating this, Jesus goes on to say in Matthew 5:17,

“Do not think that I came to destroy the Law or the Prophets. I did not come to destroy but to fulfill. 

He’s saying, “I’ve got salt for you all. I’ve got light bulbs. Here’s the law.”

So, what’s our light in this dispensation, the dispensation of grace?

Are we communicating the law to the world, or has it been given to us to communicate God’s grace?

Grace is our light.

That’s what makes us “children of light” as Ephesians 5:8 and 1 Thessalonians 5:5 describe. It’s by grace.

See the danger here?

Yes, this is scripture, and we must understand it properly.

These are Christ’s words, and we need to know what He’s saying.

But He was sent to Israel, Israel’s Messiah.

Jesus’s earthly ministry was to Israel—to confirm the promises made to the fathers.

In John 3:18 Jesus says:

“He who believes in Him is not condemned; but he who does not believe is condemned already, because he has not believed in the name of the only begotten Son of God. 

You must believe Jesus is the Son—that’s the point of His earthly ministry.

John 3 continues:

And this is the condemnation, that the light has come into the world, and men loved darkness rather than light, because their deeds were evil. 

What constitutes darkness here?  Evil deeds.  What constitutes light?  Good deeds.

“But isn’t He talking about believing in Jesus?”  Yes.

And if you believe Jesus is the Son of God, you will do what He says.

This is what Jesus repeats throughout His earthly ministry:

“If you believe who I am, do what I say.”

Belief was necessary. Why would they follow a carpenter’s son unless they believed He was the Son of God?  Yet, belief always led to obedience.

“Faith without works is dead,”

John 3:20 continues:

For everyone practicing evil hates the light and does not come to the light, lest his deeds should be exposed. 

Many stop at John 3:16—”God so loved the world…”  but Jesus talks a lot about works immediately following John 3:16

That’s the verse about believing and not perishing.

But then Jesus keeps talking about deeds and you have to do them.

John 3:21 Jesus still speaking says,

But he who does the truth comes to the light, that his deeds may be clearly seen, that they have been done in God.” 

This is the same message in John 5 and John 14.

Jesus says, “Believe in me and do what I say.”

See? The law and obedience to it! The problem? We can’t do it! But that doesn’t water down it’s importance.

Back to Romans and Paul states in Romans 2:19-20

and are confident that you yourself are a guide to the blind, a light to those who are in darkness, an instructor of the foolish, a teacher of babes, having the form of knowledge and truth in the law. 

An instructor of the foolish—what does that term mean?

What’s a fool?

Someone who doesn’t know.  A fool isn’t simply an insult—it describes ignorance.

A fool lacks understanding and, as a result, makes foolish choices.

Here, the Jews had the knowledge of God’s will and were instructors of the foolish—to make them no longer foolish.

They were teachers of babes. You teach them, so they learn how to act and behave.

What did they teach?

The law.

Romans 2:20 explicitly states that they had the form of knowledge and the truth in the law.

Now, remember in Romans 1:18, Paul speaks of those who have the truth and how they’ll be judged too.

Isaiah 65:5 states, speaking of Israel:

Who say, ‘Keep to yourself, Do not come near me, For I am holier than you!’ These are smoke in My nostrils, A fire that burns all the day. 

This is where the common term “holier than thou” comes from.

This is an accusation often levelled at religious or “churchy” people and some of them certainly deserve the accusation—but the phrase itself comes from Isaiah 65.

Israel had become self-righteous—even while breaking the law themselves.

The law gave Israel an advantage—it allowed them to know God’s will.

They could be guides, instructors, and teachers.

But the prophets—who spoke alongside the law—brought their sins to light.

The law was light.

When they obeyed it, they walked in light, shining that light to others, but the prophets revealed when their light had gone out.

That was the prophets’ role.

But the people didn’t think they were wrong—or they just didn’t care.

But the prophets called out their sins anyway. That’s why the prophets were hated—they manifested people’s sins, and in response, people killed them.

Jesus was the same and Paul was the same.

But what about God’s word?  Can The Word judge us?

Yes.

Yet people don’t want it to.

That’s why many leave churches—they see hypocrites and walk away.

And yes—there are hypocrites in the church.

We’ve all been hypocritical at times.

Yet people assume that because there’s hypocrites in the church, the Bible must create hypocrites and that may sometimes be true.

Everyone Jew, gentile, Christians today, and the unbelieving world can be hypocritical.

But God’s word calls hypocrites out. That’s what Paul does in Romans 2.

In Romans 2:21, Paul starts asking questions.

You, therefore, who teach another, do you not teach yourself?

Paul’s asking exactly what the Old Testament prophets did.

“You who have the law—what are you doing behind closed doors?”

Isaiah, Jeremiah, Ezekiel and David all said that.

And now, Paul says it.

Paul, speaking about the law and the prophets in Romans 2, teaches as the prophets did.

In Paul’s gospel, there’s a bigger problem than Israel failing to keep the law.

That was a problem—but there was more to it than that.

Romans 2:21 continues:

You who preach that a man should not steal, do you steal? 

That’s hypocrisy, enforcing the law yet breaking it themselves.

Hypocrisy abounds.

Romans 2:22 states:

You who say, “Do not commit adultery,” do you commit adultery? You who abhor idols, do you rob temples? 

How do you define adultery.

Jesus defined adultery in Matthew 5 as including thoughts.

But Jews, however, didn’t define it that way.

Why?  Because, for them, it was about deeds, not thoughts.

Their religion had created this system.

Romans 2:23 continues:

You who make your boast in the law, do you dishonour God through breaking the law? 

Do we in the church today worship idols?

We have a Bible in the bookshelf, never read, we have a cross necklace or a statue of Jesus on the cross, we have a picture of Jesus on the wall and altars in the church.

Are we sure we don’t worship idols?

What is idolatry?

It is the wrong worship of God, and it happens quite a bit in churches today and there’s very little instruction in the church about what idolatry really is.

Ask a Jew who follows the Jewish religion are they keeping the law perfectly?

They’ll say, “Yes, we can.”

At first, we might think they’re saying they’re without sin.

But that’s not what they mean.

They aren’t claiming to be sinless because, under the law, transgression was accounted for through sacrifices and offerings.

Keeping the law included sinning and then making the necessary sacrifice and offering.  That was part of the law.

The law didn’t necessarily expect people to keep it perfectly.

That’s why sacrifices for sin were built into the law itself.

So, a Jew might say, “Yes, I can keep the law.”

If someone broke a commandment, they would offer the proper restitution.

Then, they’d be in good standing—until the next transgression, at which point they’d offer another sacrifice.

Christians sometimes think this way.  They sin, then confess repeatedly.

So, they feel “up to date” and  spiritually clean at that moment.

Paul challenges this idea by asking this Jewish audience, “do you dishonour God through breaking the law?”

Sure, sacrifices are offered.

But isn’t that testimony against a person’s own righteousness?

The fact that you have to kill an animal, offer a sacrifice, and confess your sin—doesn’t that prove that we’re dishonouring God?

What about divorce?

Jesus said that God allowed divorce because of human sin.

Moses permitted it because of their transgressions and the law provided for it.

Some people say the Bible teaches slavery. It does not.

But there are laws about it.

Why?

Because sin exists in the world.

Slavery existed everywhere until the last couple of hundred years.

It was common across many cultures.

So, the Bible had laws that were actually opposed to slavery, even though it also regulated it.

Just as it regulated divorce.

But that’s not how it was in the beginning.

That wasn’t God’s intent, but sin caused these allowances.

Romans 1:18 states that God’s wrath is revealed now, not just in the future. While this may seem the opposite to grace, it actually reinforces the need for salvation. No one can save themselves, human righteousness is insufficient, and only God’s grace offers hope.

We’ve seen already that Paul teaches in Romans 1:20 that God’s truth is evident in creation, making people without excuse. Even without scripture, His power and nature are clearly seen.

Romans 2 reinforces that God’s judgment is fair and applies to everyone, both Jews and Gentiles. Hypocrisy—claiming morality but failing to live by it—is condemned.

We saw in Romans 2:1-5 that just hearing the law is not enough; a person must live by it.

God’s judgment is based on deeds, not words as we saw in Romans 2:6-10. Even those without the written law instinctively know right from wrong, proving that moral awareness is universal.

Gentiles, who weren’t given the law, still follow moral principles, showing they have an internal moral compass, and we see that in Romans 2:14-15 and we’ll read that passage,

Romans 2:13-15

(for not the hearers of the law are just in the sight of God, but the doers of the law will be justified; for when Gentiles, who do not have the law, by nature do the things in the law, these, although not having the law, are a law to themselves, who show the work of the law written in their hearts, their conscience also bearing witness, and between themselves their thoughts accusing or else excusing them).

Paul explains that God sees beyond actions—He judges thoughts, motives, and intentions.

Romans 2:16

in the day when God will judge the secrets of men by Jesus Christ, according to my gospel. 

Hebrews 4:12,

For the word of God is living and powerful, and sharper than any two-edged sword, piercing even to the division of soul and spirit, and of joints and marrow, and is a discerner of the thoughts and intents of the heart. 

Jesus demonstrated His divine knowledge in Matthew 9:4,

But Jesus, knowing their thoughts, said, “Why do you think evil in your hearts? 

Knowing people’s thoughts!

Paul confirms that we’ll all will stand before Christ at judgment in Romans 14:10,

But why do you judge your brother? Or why do you show contempt for your brother? For we shall all stand before the judgment seat of Christ. 

God judges fairly and without favouritism.

Romans 2:16 introduces Paul’s gospel, aligning judgment with God’s complete revelation which was always revealed progressively throughout man’s history.

Salvation has always been by grace through faith but Pauls’ gospel, salvation by grace through faith without works offered freely to all, including directly to the gentiles, and the new creature, the body of Christ, was hidden since before the creation, a mystery, but is now fully known through Paul’s gospel.

The gospel doesn’t condemn—it offers salvation.

Romans 1:16, Paul writing,

For I am not ashamed of the gospel of Christ, for it is the power of God to salvation for everyone who believes, for the Jew first and also for the Greek. 

All mankind is condemned by sin, whether they have the law or not. Justification comes only through faith in Christ, not through works which we’ll see in Romans 3:21-22.

Paul continues proving in Romans 2:17-29 that all men are without excuse, reinforcing that righteousness is found only through faith in the completed work of Jesus Christ.

Paul hasn’t yet quoted scripture.

Instead, he’s making arguments based on creation and conscience, stating that people can recognise truth through nature. He doesn’t quote scripture again until Romans 3.

His arguments in Romans 2 don’t require an understanding of scripture—we only need to be alive. This applies to everyone, which is why all men are without excuse.

Manmade systems of justice come to the same conclusions: judgment should be fair, applied equally to all, and based on truth and deeds.

Romans 2:9-13 states that wrath or glory comes to each soul based on their actions. Those who pursue righteousness receive glory, while those who reject righteousness face wrath, indignation, and tribulation.

Romans 2:9-11 explains that God’s judgment applies to all. Paul makes it clear that judgment is not only for the Gentiles but also for the Jews, who might assume they’re exempt because they had God’s law and were His chosen people. However, God’s judgment applies equally to everyone.

Tribulation will come to every soul that does evil, whether Jew or Gentile and likewise, glory, honor, and peace are given to those who do good.

This judgment is based on deeds, not national heritage, meaning Jew and Gentile alike are judged fairly.

Romans 2 is not describing the gospel of grace but rather judgment according to works and Paul clarifies that.

Once again, we need to understand that Romans 1 and 2 is laying down the case that all mankind needs God’s salvation because it’s utterly impossible for us to make God’s standard of righteousness on our own merits.

God’s not judging people’s works today, but Paul hasn’t got to the Gospel as yet. He’s laying this foundation of man’s state first.

He refers to the time when God gave the law to Israel. The law wasn’t meant to make them superior but to prove that even with the guidance of the law they’d still fail.

In Romans 2, Paul’s not yet fully introduced the law—this comes in Romans 3. He speaks about Jews and Gentiles, emphasising their real separation in the Bible.

The Jews were given divine revelations, scriptures, and prophetic messages, while Gentiles didn’t have these privileges. However, this doesn’t alter judgment. God doesn’t show favouritism. He’s the One truly just judge.

All are judged equally.

Romans 2:12 states,

For as many as have sinned without law will also perish without law, and as many as have sinned in the law will be judged by the law 

Paul’s saying that judgment isn’t based on scripture alone but on creation, conscience, and moral understanding—things that all people have, regardless of religious knowledge. Therefore all are without excuse.

With that in mind, it’s important to define conscience. Conscience is the natural ability to judge right from wrong. Some may call it a moral sense, but the Bible refers to it as a righteous standard. This isn’t something people learn—it’s an ingrained part of human nature.

Conscience can be shaped or hardened over time, but it’s something everyone’s born with.

If people didn‘t have a conscience, morality would have to be taught completely from scratch to every human being. But that isn’t the case.

Even children naturally understand guilt, justification, and blame. They excuse themselves, accuse others, and instinctively feel shame when doing wrong. Some of this comes from instruction, but much of its simply there.

Over time, repeated exposure to sinful actions and thoughts leads to a hardened conscience. Many adults become numb to shame, making laws necessary to enforce morality.

The Bible describes people without feeling, acting without concern for right or wrong. Some justify their behaviour by saying they’ve done this thing for years, and they feel no guilt.

The law exists to awaken the conscience, reinforcing what people instinctively know.

All people know that judgment is real and just. Across cultures and ages, people recognise moral guilt. However, pride often makes people, believe they’re morally perfect. Pride and guilt both stem from conscience.

Pride occurs naturally—it’s not taught. People easily believe they’re better than others.

If humans had no natural moral sense, they’d act purely on instinct, like animals, but people form rules, societies, and governments, even without scripture. Where does this moral structure come from? It’s built into human nature.

Atheists often argue that morality is created by human reason, and they dismiss conscience as common sense. But where does common sense originate from?

Morality is God-given—an instinctive understanding of right and wrong. Animals don’t possess the same moral awareness, proving that conscience is uniquely human.

If a person has a desire for say, a thousand dollars, and his neighbour has a thousand dollars in his wallet, what stops that person overpowering the neighbour and taking the thousand dollars? Conscience! The inner voice that distinguishes right from wrong.  And only those with a hardened, or seared, conscience would do such a thing, hence the necessity for laws in this fallen world. If mankind could live by their God given conscience there’d be no need for law or law enforcement.

This is the foundation of the New Covenant given to Israel in Jeremiah 31:31 and referred to by Jesus in Matthew 26:28, during the Last Supper, and referred to by Peter at Pentecost in Acts 2. God will put His law in their minds, and write it on their hearts; Israel’s hearts and minds as we see in Jeremiah 31:33.

The Bible teaches that conscience can be seared—meaning people lose sensitivity to right and wrong.

1 Timothy 4:2 describes people,

speaking lies in hypocrisy, having their own conscience seared with a hot iron, 

They reject the truth, and they say one thing but do another. This is hypocrisy—knowing what’s right yet failing to act on it.

In Romans 2 points out that those who had the law and judged others were guilty of the same sins. They condemned people for their actions while harbouring evil thoughts and desires themselves.

Ephesians 4:19 describes people as being without feeling, meaning their conscience no longer influences their choices.

Ephesians 4:18 explains that Gentiles have their understanding darkened,

having their understanding darkened, being alienated from the life of God, because of the ignorance that is in them, because of the blindness of their heart; 

See, they lose their moral sense, giving themselves over to sinful desires. Many become numb to guilt, justifying their actions instead of acknowledging their wrongdoing. Society often educates people out of listening to their conscience, teaching them to reject guilt as an unnecessary burden. This leads them to an entitled or it’s someone else’s fault mentality.

When people ignore their conscience, they make choices that contradict God’s truth. The Bible speaks of losing innocence, meaning exposure to evil eventually makes it seem normal.

What once shocked them becomes acceptable. The world promotes this idea, dismissing morality as subjective or something that changes depending on how people look at it, but scripture warns against it.

Moral insensitivity exists on different levels. While psychopaths lack moral awareness altogether, many people suppress guilt in everyday life, justifying actions they once knew were wrong. The Bible frequently warns against self-deception or people convincing themselves that wrong is right. Eve, for example, deceived herself; the serpent introduced the lie, but she chose to believe it.

The phrase, “You should know better” reflects this concept. People instinctively recognise moral truth, even when they deny it.

As we’ve already seen in Romans 2:12,

For as many as have sinned without law will also perish without law, and as many as have sinned in the law will be judged by the law 

This means that even without scripture, conscience convicts them.

If people claim ignorance of what’s right and wrong, it’s because they’ve hardened their conscience, convincing themselves that truth doesn’t apply to them.

Remember Romans 1 explains that people knew God but refused to honor Him. See their rejection became the norm. Over time, absence of God leads people to demand proof of His existence, not because He’s absent, but because their conscience no longer recognises Him.

People often ask for evidence of God, but such a request comes from a heart that has been hardened to reality. Throughout history, only a minority have questioned God’s existence and most of them are from recent generations.

Romans 2:6 states that God will judge every person according to their deeds, whether they have the law or not. This idea is not exclusive to Jewish tradition; throughout history, pagan religions have shared the same belief of “If we do good, our god will bless us. If we do evil, our god will curse us.” This reflects human conscience, which naturally recognises righteous judgment.

Romans 2:8 explains that those who reject truth and obey unrighteousness will face indignation, wrath, and tribulation. In other words if someone does evil, they’ll be judged accordingly.

Romans 3:19 says,

Now we know that whatever the law says, it says to those who are under the law, that every mouth may be stopped, and all the world may become guilty before God. 

Israel was not exempt from guilt. Romans 1 explains that, and God gave the Gentiles over to a reprobate mind, meaning they were guilty in their sin. However, Israel, despite being God’s chosen people, was also guilty.

God rescued them from Egypt, yet they sinned and died in the wilderness. Even after entering the promised land, they continued to sin. The law was given to prove that no one’s innocent, not to show that some are superior.

Romans 2:13 clarifies that,

(for not the hearers of the law are just in the sight of God, but the doers of the law will be justified; 

This was a major statement against Israel, as many believed they were righteous simply because they had the law. John the Baptist and Jesus taught the same principle—being part of Israel did not guarantee salvation.

Likewise, just because a person owns a Bible or attends church doesn’t mean they’re saved. Many churches hold the truth, but that doesn’t mean all members believe, or understand, or trust the gospel. Salvation only comes through faith in Christ, not simply through an association with Christianity.

This levels the playing field. Salvation is not determined by nationality, culture, or religious affiliation. We may ask, “What about those who live in non-Christian societies?” The truth is, Christian civilisation doesn‘t save people. Being in the Western world doesn’t guarantee salvation, just as political leaders claiming Christianity don’t make their nation righteous.

Ultimately, all people are guilty before God, regardless of location or upbringing. The question is not who’s guilty, but how can we be saved?

God has provided a solution through Christ.

Faith in Jesus Christ is the only way to receive true righteousness.

Romans 3 confirms that none are righteous, and none do good enough to justify themselves. No amount of good deeds can outweigh or cover past sins. Someone must pay for those sins, and Christ is the only one who could. He was sinless, God in the flesh.

James 1:22 says,

But be doers of the word, and not hearers only, deceiving yourselves. 

This aligns with Paul’s message in Romans 2. Paul discusses judgment, while James exhorts his audience to maintain a pure conscience.

James wrote to the twelve tribes of Israel scattered after Acts 8, when believers fled Saul (Paul’s) persecution.

His teachings summarise what Jesus taught during His earthly ministry, reinforcing obedience and faith under the law. Unlike Paul’s writings, James doesn’t introduce new revelation, the mystery of the church, or the body of Christ.

James 1:22 urges Israel to act on their faith, while Paul explains why human effort alone is not enough for justification. Both emphasize that hypocrisy occurs when people hear the truth but don’t act on it.

James describes this principle with an illustration in James 1:23 – 24,

For if anyone is a hearer of the word and not a doer, he is like a man observing his natural face in a mirror; for he observes himself, goes away, and immediately forgets what kind of man he was. 

This shows man’s tendency to ignore truth and convince ourselves that actions don’t matter.

Both Paul and James emphasise righteousness through action, but Paul clarifies that no one can fulfill God’s standards, therefore, justification comes not through works but through faith in Christ.

The difference is that in James this as instruction, urging his audience to follow through on their faith with works, while Paul reveals the deeper issue—that no one can keep God’s law, leading to the ultimate solution which is that Christ died because we couldn’t fulfill righteousness ourselves.

James makes very little reference to the revelation of the mystery given to Paul. It closely resembles Old Testament teachings and Jesus’ ministry to Israel under the law. His focus is on righteous living and moral purity.

Ezekiel 33:31 also addresses the issue of hearing but not doing. It speaks of Israel, who had received the law but failed to act on it.

“They sit before you as my people; they hear your words, but they do not do them.”

This principle applies universally—many listen to truth yet.

They love with their words but fail to do, following their own selfish desires. Hypocrisy, professing faith while not living according to God’s commands.

The same principle appears in Matthew 7 where Jesus teaches about building a house on the rock. Many people miss what Jesus is saying.

Matthew 7:24-25

Therefore whoever hears these sayings of Mine, and does them, I will liken him to a wise man who built his house on the rock: and the rain descended, the floods came, and the winds blew and beat on that house; and it did not fall, for it was founded on the rock.

Jesus continues, in Matthew 7:26-27

But everyone who hears these sayings of Mine, and does not do them, will be like a foolish man who built his house on the sand: and the rain descended, the floods came, and the winds blew and beat on that house; and it fell. And great was its fall. 

This passage doesn’t simply teach faith—it emphasises faith followed by obedience.

Many mistakenly assume these passages say that just believing in Jesus automatically establishes a firm foundation, but Jesus teaches hear that faith must be accompanied by doing. Without the doing of the word, the foundation crumbles. Same as James 2’s message—faith without works is dead.

James, Matthew 7, and Ezekiel all address righteous judgment, urging people to act according to God’s commands.

Paul’s the same in Romans 1 and 2. He  acknowledges these principles but instead of saying, “Do this because judgment is coming,” he explains that no one can do it.

As we’ll see when we get to Romans 3 that human effort is not enough to satisfy God’s standard of righteousness therefore all are condemned.

What do we learn from Matthew 7, Romans 2, James 2 and Ezekiel 33? That righteous judgment is required. The fact that not everyone who believes in God or Jesus always acts righteously. It’s proof that we’re all without excuse and that’s Paul’s point, no one can claim innocence.

First John reinforces this idea. Some might think everything changed after Jesus’ resurrection, but it didn’t.

First John is known as the “love epistle,” but it teaches love under the law, just like the Old Testament.

The first commandment was to love God with all your heart, mind, and soul, and the second was to love your neighbour. In the same way that the Old Testament taught love, First John emphasizes the law’s role in defining righteousness.

1 John 3:7

Little children, let no one deceive you. He who practices righteousness (does righteousness) is righteous, just as He is righteous. 

Clearly righteous comes only if they do righteously. Just claiming righteousness without action is hypocrisy.

1 John 3:18 backs this up:

My little children, let us not love in word or in tongue, but in deed and in truth. (In deed, works).

This aligns with James’, Jesus’s, and Ezekiel’s teaching, which Paul confirms in Romans.

Conscience should convict those who fail to act on what they know is right. God’s law explicitly defines righteousness and magnifies human failure.

Returning to James 1, we see his emphasis on purity of conscience.

James 1:25

But he who looks into the perfect law of liberty and continues in it, and is not a forgetful hearer but a doer of the work, this one will be blessed in what he does. 

And then James 1:26 warns:

If anyone among you thinks he is religious, and does not bridle his tongue but deceives his own heart, this one’s religion is useless. 

This highlights hypocrisy appearing religious but not acting accordingly.

James 1:27 describes true religion:

Pure and undefiled religion before God and the Father is this: to visit orphans and widows in their trouble, and to keep oneself unspotted from the world. 

This is a noble, righteous call to holiness, but it’s impossible to achieve perfectly.

James is writing to people who received the Holy Spirit at Pentecost, those under God’s new covenant. The Old Testament taught “Do what God commands.” Now, James says: “Do it because you love Jesus.” The principle’s the same. Obedience, doing, is expected.

However, in this dispensation of grace, the Holy Spirit seals believers in Christ because we just can’t fulfill righteousness on our own and Paul expands on this in Romans 3.

James 2:8 states this:

If you really fulfill the royal law according to the Scripture, “YOU SHALL LOVE YOUR NEIGHBOR AS YOURSELF,” you do well; 

Again, this aligns with Paul’s teaching that those who do righteousness receive life. However, James 2:10 warns:

For whoever shall keep the whole law, and yet stumble in one point, he is guilty of all. 

Here’s the whole problem, no one can fully keep the law.

The disciples, after understanding this from Jesus’s words to the rich young ruler, asked him in Matthew 19:25,

When His disciples heard it, they were greatly astonished, saying, “Who then can be saved?” 

Jesus responded in Matthew 19:26,

But Jesus looked at them and said to them, “With men this is impossible, but with God all things are possible.” 

With human effort alone this’s impossible!

James doesn’t immediately direct his audience to Christ as the solution. Instead, James 2:12 states:

So speak and so do as those who will be judged by the law of liberty.

He essentially says, “If you claim righteousness, then live by it consistently.” But how? That’s unanswered.

James continues in James 2:20, that Faith without works is dead.

He urges the twelve tribes to keep doing good works.

This leads to a question: What is faith, and where does it come from?

Paul will answer this in Romans 3, explaining that faith—not works—is the key to justification.

Romans 10:17 says,

So then faith comes by hearing, and hearing by the word of God

However, Romans 2 makes it clear that it’s not the hearers of the law who are justified, but the doers. If someone hears God’s law, hears Jesus’ teachings, and has faith because of what they hear, but doesn’t act on His words, they fall into the category James warns about.

Now, James is not discussing Romans 3, 4, and 5, which focus on the gospel of grace. He’s not saying that trusting in Christ’s finished work requires additional actions for justification. He’s not talking about the gospel that saves at all. Instead, he’s saying that if someone hears what God has said, whether in the Old Testament or in Jesus’ teachings, but doesn‘t act on it, their faith is dead.

Jesus says in Matthew 7, “If you hear my words and do not act on them, your house is not built on the rock.” He’s not saying, “I’m dying for your sins and offering grace because you can’t fulfill righteousness.”

Instead He warns that entering the kingdom may require carrying one’s own cross, even unto death. If someone claims belief in Jesus but refuses to stand for Him, their faith is empty.

Today’s salvation is by grace alone through faith alone, trusting in Christ’s finished work on the cross. However, Romans 2 and James aren’t teaching this yet.

James has no knowledge of faith without works. **

James 2:21 states,

Was not Abraham our father justified by works when he offered Isaac his son on the altar? 

He doesn’t of  Romans 4, which clarifies justification by faith alone.

James continues, James 2:22,

Do you see that faith was working together with his works, and by works faith was made perfect?

He insists that Abraham’s work was necessary to fulfill the righteousness declared in Genesis 15:6

And he believed in the LORD, and He accounted it to him for righteousness. 

James then concludes James 2:24,

You see then that a man is justified by works, and not by faith only. 

His point is that if God commands something, a person must believe it and act on it. Abraham first in Genesis 15, then obeyed in Genesis 22.

In this dispensation, this dispensation of grace that was revealed to Paul after James’, God says, “I’ve done it for you,”. He did the works that man could not you see.

We simply believe it.

However, God never commanded additional works for justification, unlike the system James is talking about.

James doesn’t acknowledge faith apart from works because his audience was taught to obey. He doesn’t address Paul’s revelation of the gospel of grace at all.

Instead, he speaks to people who should know better those who’ve heard but don’t act.

Hearing truth but failing to act on it hardens the conscience. This is how hearts become hardened, by constantly hearing without responding. People open their Bible once in a blue moon, yet never apply it. Over time, this numbs the conscience and the line between right and wrong and fact and fantasy is blurred.

What James and Romans 2 emphasise is not the gospel of grace but obedience to the law. Romans 2 states plainly that it’s not the hearers of the law who are justified, but the doers.

Returning to Romans 2:14, we see Paul’s alignment with other scriptures. Paul was given God’s manifold wisdom, fulfilling His word and explaining His plan. He teaches from creation, law, and history because understanding God’s mystery of free salvation is easy when we see it in light of how we’re condemned because of our inability to keep the law. However, James never explains this.

Read James, we don’t learn about Paul’s teachings, but reading Paul explains explain James and that’s crucial.

Romans 2:14 continues, stating,

for when Gentiles, who do not have the law, by nature do the things in the law, these, although not having the law, are a law to themselves, 

Here, Paul clarifies that the law is demonstrated through actions, not merely hearing it.

Clearly, the law itself doesn’t justify anyone, only obedience to it does. Gentiles who instinctively do what’s morally right, despite not possessing the law, demonstrate that righteousness is known by everyone.

Non-Christians often misunderstand these arguments. They claim that morality is separate to belief in God. They argue that civilisations have developed moral systems without religion.

Some people say that no moral thing that a believer can do that an unbeliever can’t, or religion doesn’t add to morality, and we agree agreeing unbelievers can give to the poor, help their neighbours, and avoid wrongdoing. However, this overlooks the first commandment whish is to love God with all your heart, mind, and soul, which unbelievers can’t possibly obey since they don’t believe God even exists. Some say this doesn’t affect other aspects of morality, but recognising and honouring the Giver of Life is foundational. Gratitude and awareness of God as the source of all things is vital to truth.

An unbeliever can’t believe in God, understand spiritual truths, judge spiritual matters, and bear the fruit of the Spirit. While unbelievers may show kindness, their motivation is different. By contrast, believers walk by faith, through grace, in Christ Jesus while a non-believer can’t be justified by faith because they reject the very source of justification—Christ.

This is not because believers are morally superior. They’re certainly not. It’s because of Christ. Sure, unbelievers can give to charity and help the poor, but morality isn’t just about physical actions. Spiritual righteousness requires faith in God.

This also shows the blindness of heart in those who think they can be just as righteous as God, without God. It is an incredible form of pompous insolence to claim, “I don’t believe in God, but I can be as righteous as Christians claim He is.”

This suggests they view themselves as the moral standard while rejecting the very foundation of morality.

Now, back to Romans 2:14 where Paul asks, “How can Gentiles, who do not have the law, be condemned?”

Some argue that since they were never given the law, they have an excuse. If the law gives knowledge of sin, and Gentiles don’t have the law, how can they be guilty? Paul answers this by pointing out that Gentiles still have conscience, which serves as a moral guide. Even without written commandments, they instinctively know right from wrong. Paul’s clear all are without excuse.

Gentiles who don’t have the law still, by nature, do the things in the law. This refers to conscience, that internal awareness of good and evil.

They may not follow specific Jewish customs, such as wearing tassels or observing the Sabbath, but they still understand foundational moral principles like not murdering and showing kindness.

Even humanism, which rejects God, promotes love for humanity. But where does this concept originate? From conscience that inbuilt moral code placed by God. Even those who reject divine law still follow moral reasoning, proving that morality is inborn, not invented.

Paul writes that even without written law those who act against their conscience are guilty and their own awareness condemns them. If someone breaks the law of their conscience, they stand judged before God and that’s every one of us.

Some say that if conscience is my law, then I determine my own rules, but God placed conscience within humanity, ensuring a universal moral code. People don’t invent morality, it’s instinctive, and shapes societies and laws.

Romans 2:14-15 says,

although not having the law, are a law to themselves (the gentiles), who show the work of the law written in their hearts, their conscience also bearing witness, and between themselves their thoughts accusing or else excusing them 

This describes how laws, rules, and governments develop based on moral awareness, even without direct religious influence. This applies gentile nations like Australia and America which were never commanded to enforce Israel’s laws but still built its legal system upon those moral principles.

Even if those nations reject biblical law, their societies establish laws and governments according to the conscience placed within humanity.

Anarchists and many libertarians claim human governments are unnecessary, and we just need rely on human conscience to maintain order. But without government, individual moral responsibility becomes essential, and when people reject moral responsibility because of their hardened conscience lawlessness and chaos would follow.

Romans 13 explains that governing authorities exist to uphold righteousness. Rom 13:5 says,

Therefore you must be subject, not only because of wrath but also for conscience’ sake. 

This shows that the role of government should not be simply about force but also about moral accountability.

Many Libertarians argue that governments enforce laws at gunpoint and while it’s true in some cases, many laws align with human conscience, such as prohibiting murder and theft. The non-aggression principle which is central to libertarian thinking relies on a basic moral awareness which as we’ve seen is flawed at best.

Survival of the fittest means the strong should dominate the weak, yet human conscience rejects this idea and even anarchists recognise the need for individual moral responsibility to maintain social stability.

Romans 2:15 states,

who (and the who is the gentiles) show the work of the law written in their hearts, their conscience also bearing witness, and between themselves their thoughts accusing or else excusing them)

This doesn’t mean people automatically follow God’s law, but rather that they possess this natural understanding of right and wrong.

The law serves two primary functions: to justify and to condemn. While no one is truly righteous, the law defines morality and holds us accountable.

Romans 3:19 confirms,

Those under the law have their mouths stopped, for all are guilty before God.

Paul describes the law in 2 Corinthians 3:7, stating, “If the ministry of death, written and engraved in stone, was glorious…”

Here, Paul refers to the Mosaic Law as the ministry of death. See, the law reveals sin but doesn’t bring salvation, it only shows that people have failed.

2 Corinthians 3:9 further emphasises this, calling the law the ministry of condemnation.

This challenges those who take pride in the law, whether it’s ancient or modern Israelites or modern Christians who display commandments publicly. The law is righteous, but it also brings death and condemnation.

It can’t save anyone. Only God’s grace can. Paul explains that the law is for the unrighteous, not the righteous. However, since no one is truly righteous, the law convicts all people.

Romans 2:15 confirms that the law’s role to justify or condemn is reflected in human conscience. People instinctively create laws and rules that mirror the moral principles found in God’s law. However, once someone begins judging others based on law, they must judge themselves as well, proving that no one perfectly keeps the law.

This universal guilt confirms Paul’s key message, that All are guilty before God, and none can uphold righteousness perfectly.

Romans 2 warns those who judge others to be careful. Paul’s argument is not based on the law of Moses but on conscience. Though the Mosaic law is often referenced, he’s making a bigger point, that God’s given every person a conscience that testifies to right and wrong.

Romans 5:20 states that the law was added, causing sin to abound.

This is reinforced in Romans 7:5, where Paul describes how the law stirs sinful desires, leading people into further condemnation. However, believers are now delivered from the law, serving in the newness of the Spirit rather than the old letter.

Paul poses a question in Romans 7:7, “Is the law sin?”

His response: “God forbid!” The law itself is not sinful, but it exposes sin. Without the law, people would not recognise lust as sinful until confronted with “Thou shalt not covet.”

Conscience acts as an internal moral law but does this mean conscience is bad because it condemns wrongdoing. The world says yes. In modern psychology, people are often encouraged to reject guilt, convincing themselves there’s nothing wrong with their actions. Instead of recognising their faults, they’re told, “You’re fine as you are. If God doesn’t accept you, then forget God.”

This is a bold and arrogant stance that hardens the conscience against truth.

The reality is that we’ve broken the moral laws of our own conscience. Conscience isn’t bad—it helps us understand right and wrong.

Romans 2:15 God’s truth is written in people’s hearts and that conscience bears witness to their accountability before Him.

Paul’s argument is not based on scripture alone but on the undeniable truth of conscience.

Once someone begins accusing or excusing others, they prove that they recognise morality. Their conscience bears witness.

For example, someone may say, “I accuse you of being a hypocrite.”

By making that accusation, they reveal their own understanding of right and wrong. They admit that moral failure exists—even in themselves.

People often excuse their wrongdoing by saying, “I’m not as bad as you.” But this is still an admission of guilt. Excusing sin means judging it according to a standard, but whose standard? If the standard is based on humanity, then judgment is flawed, because God’s standard is absolute.

Paul says that everyone is guilty before God. The common assumption that “Nobody’s perfect” proves that all people fall short. Some people reject religions that acknowledge this human imperfection and insist that sin must be accepted as normal. However, the Bible refuses to excuse sin, even if it means condemning everyone.

Despite humanity’s failure, God has given a way to be saved through Jesus Christ. Salvation is not earned; it’s a gift of grace. However, a person must first recognise their sinful condition before they can believe in salvation through Christ from that sin and the curse that goes with it.

In Romans 2:16 Paul states,

in the day when God will judge the secrets of men by Jesus Christ, according to my gospel

This verse speaks of judgment. Some readers, knowing that Paul preached a gospel different from others, may assume this refers to Romans 3, 4, and 5, or Ephesians. However, Paul hasn’t got there yet. He hasn’t explained salvation by grace in this passage.

The last time Paul mentioned the gospel was in Romans 1:16, saying,

For I am not ashamed of the gospel of Christ, for it is the power of God to salvation

This clarifies that Paul’s gospel doesn’t condemn—it saves.

Some believe that not accepting the gospel is what condemns a person, but that’s not true.

Romans 1:16 makes it clear that people are already condemned because of sin and the gospel is the only hope for salvation.

People are already condemned.

When God judges righteously, He does so without favouritism, according to truth and based on each person’s deeds. The gospel can save people from judgment, but everyone’s already condemned.

Some ask, “What about those who have never heard the gospel?”

The real question should be, “How can we reach them so they can be saved?” Everyone’s guilty before God, and no one deserves eternal life. If someone has never heard the gospel, they should be told because they can be saved by it.

If we were to ask people directly, “Have you ever heard the gospel that Christ died for yours and my sins and rose from the dead?”, some might reply, “No, I have never heard.” But at that moment, they’ve heard it. They don’t need it repeated a million times throughout their lives. It is nearly impossible to find someone who’s never heard the gospel without also sharing it.

The reality remains that everyone is condemned until they accept salvation. Being born in a Christian nation doesn’t justify anyone. Every individual must believe and understand the truth personally.

Romans 2:16 states in the context of the gentiles not having the law but knowing the law written in their hearts,

in the day when God will judge the secrets of men by Jesus Christ, according to my (Paul’s) gospel.

What are the secrets of men?

People don’t reveal all their thoughts, actions, and motives. Many things remain hidden, sometimes even unknown to themselves. However, God knows every thought, every deed, every hidden intention.

One day, God will expose all things in judgment. Will anyone be without excuse on that day? God judges not only actions but also thoughts.

Paul explains that judgment is not based on hearing the law but on doing it. Even if someone claims ignorance, the Bible refutes this idea, stating that God manifests His truth within each person. Everyone has a conscience, and those who ignore it have hardened their hearts.

Humans can hide truths from one another, but nothing’s hidden from God.

Romans 2:16 confirms that Jesus Christ will judge all people, proving that He must be both omniscient and divine. Some claim that Jesus was only a man, dependent on the Father’s knowledge. But if this were true, He couldn’t judge perfectly. To render judgment, He must be fully God, knowing all things, and fully man to be able to atone for sins.

Hebrews 4 speaks about the Word of God and God Himself and declares, that The Word of God is alive and powerful, sharper than any two-edged sword. It pierces and divides the soul and spirit, joints and marrow, and discerns the thoughts and intents of the heart.”

This book, containing the words of the Creator, is more than ink on a page. It reveals and judges what’s hidden in the human heart.

Hebrews 4:13,

And there is no creature hidden from His sight, but all things are naked and open to the eyes of Him to whom we must give account. 

Who is the “He” here?

The Word of God that the previous verse is talking about! The Word of God is personalised.

Many believe they can hide behind walls, clothing, or darkness, thinking they’re concealed but, these barriers only affect human perception, not God’s. He sees everything and nothing’s hidden from Him.

This realisation is terrifying, which is why Paul, in 2 Corinthians 5:11  refers to knowing, the terror of the Lord,

Paul’s not referring to God’s anger but to God’s perfect knowledge. He says he speaks openly to their conscience because God knows his heart and theirs.

Matthew 9:4 records Jesus perceiving men’s hearts, questioning their thoughts even though they hadn’t spoken.

Romans 14:10 emphasizes that by saying we will all stand before the judgment seat of Christ. See Christ Himself sits on that throne, proving yet again His divinity.

Romans 2:16 states that God will judge the secrets of men by Jesus Christ, according to my (Paul’s) gospel.

This raises an important question: What does it mean that God judges according to Paul’s gospel?

At this point, Paul hasn’t yet explained grace in Christ, yet he includes this statement here.

The answer lies in Paul’s unique revelation.

Jesus Christ Himself entrusted Paul with the mystery of God’s will, the manifold wisdom of God, and the dispensation of grace. Because of this knowledge, Paul could understand God’s judgments more fully.

Any judgment God makes will always be in accordance with His complete revelation. He doesn‘t judge outside of His eternal wisdom. While He has revealed truth gradually throughout history, He has always known that salvation comes by grace through faith.

Though it was once hidden, it’s now been revealed. When Paul says God will judge according to his gospel, he means that God will judge in light of His full plan.

This is good news, especially when considering Romans 3, which reveals that no one can be justified by their own righteousness. God looks not at a person’s works but at their faith in Christ.

Paul has not yet fully explained the gospel here in Romans 2, except for his statement in Romans 1:16 that the gospel of Christ is the power of God unto salvation to everyone that believes—first to the Jew, then to the Greek.”

In Romans 2, Paul repeatedly emphasises that God does not show favouritism—He judges all people equally. Since all are guilty before Him, everyone faces the same problem. Romans 1:16 assures us that the gospel is the solution—it is the power of God for salvation.

Paul understands how God interacts with humanity today—through conscience, morality, and creation and this wider understanding allows us to see the righteousness of God’s judgment.

Paul teaches in Romans 2 that all are condemned, whether they have the law or not, and that justification comes through faith alone, with or without the law and that message is different from the gospel of the circumcision, the kingdom, or the law of Moses.

There is now justification available through Christ, something that could not be achieved through the law of Moses. This is why God will judge the secrets of men according to the gospel revealed to Paul.

Next, in Romans 2:17, Paul will continue proving that every person is without excuse, as he shifts focus to those actually under the law and begins quoting scripture.

Romans 2:11-16 – Works of the Law

We’re moving slowly through Romans 2 for a good reason.
While it’s exciting to reach the gospel message in Romans 3, 4, and 5, we’ve got to first understand Romans 1 and 2, which address truths that many in our culture, including churches, often neglect. If we don’t we’ll misunderstand the very reason for the gospel.

“Speed Slider”

Romans 2:11-16 – Transcript

Many people are uncomfortable discussing judgment, sin, and hell, and even churches avoid these topics today. Today’s society doesn’t like having the reality of who they really are exposed.

This leads many to embrace universalism, the belief that all people will ultimately be saved, rejecting any idea of condemnation. However, Romans 1 and 2 doesn’t go down that road but instead directly points out the state of mankind, judgement, wrath and righteousness and how all people are without excuse before God, and this is the reason these chapters of the bible are so critical.

They’re the hub around which salvation spins. No one can understand why the Son of God had to come to the earth He created and die to bring salvation to mankind without a full understanding of Romans 1 and 2. And Paul, fully realising that, lays this foundation for salvation to ensure mankind fully understands why salvation through faith in Christ’s birth, death and resurrection is the only hope for condemned mankind.

Romans 1:18 states that God’s wrath is revealed now, not just in the future. While this may seem the opposite to grace, it actually reinforces the need for salvation. No one can save themselves, human righteousness is insufficient, and only God’s grace offers hope.

We’ve seen already that Paul teaches in Romans 1:20 that God’s truth is evident in creation, making people without excuse. Even without scripture, His power and nature are clearly seen.

Romans 2 reinforces that God’s judgment is fair and applies to everyone, both Jews and Gentiles. Hypocrisy—claiming morality but failing to live by it—is condemned.

We saw in Romans 2:1-5 that just hearing the law is not enough; a person must live by it.

God’s judgment is based on deeds, not words as we saw in Romans 2:6-10. Even those without the written law instinctively know right from wrong, proving that moral awareness is universal.

Gentiles, who weren’t given the law, still follow moral principles, showing they have an internal moral compass, and we see that in Romans 2:14-15 and we’ll read that passage,

Romans 2:13-15

(for not the hearers of the law are just in the sight of God, but the doers of the law will be justified; for when Gentiles, who do not have the law, by nature do the things in the law, these, although not having the law, are a law to themselves, who show the work of the law written in their hearts, their conscience also bearing witness, and between themselves their thoughts accusing or else excusing them).

Paul explains that God sees beyond actions—He judges thoughts, motives, and intentions.

Romans 2:16

in the day when God will judge the secrets of men by Jesus Christ, according to my gospel. 

Hebrews 4:12,

For the word of God is living and powerful, and sharper than any two-edged sword, piercing even to the division of soul and spirit, and of joints and marrow, and is a discerner of the thoughts and intents of the heart. 

Jesus demonstrated His divine knowledge in Matthew 9:4,

But Jesus, knowing their thoughts, said, “Why do you think evil in your hearts? 

Knowing people’s thoughts!

Paul confirms that we’ll all will stand before Christ at judgment in Romans 14:10,

But why do you judge your brother? Or why do you show contempt for your brother? For we shall all stand before the judgment seat of Christ. 

God judges fairly and without favouritism.

Romans 2:16 introduces Paul’s gospel, aligning judgment with God’s complete revelation which was always revealed progressively throughout man’s history.

Salvation has always been by grace through faith but Pauls’ gospel, salvation by grace through faith without works offered freely to all, including directly to the gentiles, and the new creature, the body of Christ, was hidden since before the creation, a mystery, but is now fully known through Paul’s gospel.

The gospel doesn’t condemn—it offers salvation.

Romans 1:16, Paul writing,

For I am not ashamed of the gospel of Christ, for it is the power of God to salvation for everyone who believes, for the Jew first and also for the Greek. 

All mankind is condemned by sin, whether they have the law or not. Justification comes only through faith in Christ, not through works which we’ll see in Romans 3:21-22.

Paul continues proving in Romans 2:17-29 that all men are without excuse, reinforcing that righteousness is found only through faith in the completed work of Jesus Christ.

Paul hasn’t yet quoted scripture.

Instead, he’s making arguments based on creation and conscience, stating that people can recognise truth through nature. He doesn’t quote scripture again until Romans 3.

His arguments in Romans 2 don’t require an understanding of scripture—we only need to be alive. This applies to everyone, which is why all men are without excuse.

Manmade systems of justice come to the same conclusions: judgment should be fair, applied equally to all, and based on truth and deeds.

Romans 2:9-13 states that wrath or glory comes to each soul based on their actions. Those who pursue righteousness receive glory, while those who reject righteousness face wrath, indignation, and tribulation.

Romans 2:9-11 explains that God’s judgment applies to all. Paul makes it clear that judgment is not only for the Gentiles but also for the Jews, who might assume they’re exempt because they had God’s law and were His chosen people. However, God’s judgment applies equally to everyone.

Tribulation will come to every soul that does evil, whether Jew or Gentile and likewise, glory, honor, and peace are given to those who do good.

This judgment is based on deeds, not national heritage, meaning Jew and Gentile alike are judged fairly.

Romans 2 is not describing the gospel of grace but rather judgment according to works and Paul clarifies that.

Once again, we need to understand that Romans 1 and 2 is laying down the case that all mankind needs God’s salvation because it’s utterly impossible for us to make God’s standard of righteousness on our own merits.

God’s not judging people’s works today, but Paul hasn’t got to the Gospel as yet. He’s laying this foundation of man’s state first.

He refers to the time when God gave the law to Israel. The law wasn’t meant to make them superior but to prove that even with the guidance of the law they’d still fail.

In Romans 2, Paul’s not yet fully introduced the law—this comes in Romans 3. He speaks about Jews and Gentiles, emphasising their real separation in the Bible.

The Jews were given divine revelations, scriptures, and prophetic messages, while Gentiles didn’t have these privileges. However, this doesn’t alter judgment. God doesn’t show favouritism. He’s the One truly just judge.

All are judged equally.

Romans 2:12 states,

For as many as have sinned without law will also perish without law, and as many as have sinned in the law will be judged by the law 

Paul’s saying that judgment isn’t based on scripture alone but on creation, conscience, and moral understanding—things that all people have, regardless of religious knowledge. Therefore all are without excuse.

With that in mind, it’s important to define conscience. Conscience is the natural ability to judge right from wrong. Some may call it a moral sense, but the Bible refers to it as a righteous standard. This isn’t something people learn—it’s an ingrained part of human nature.

Conscience can be shaped or hardened over time, but it’s something everyone’s born with.

If people didn‘t have a conscience, morality would have to be taught completely from scratch to every human being. But that isn’t the case.

Even children naturally understand guilt, justification, and blame. They excuse themselves, accuse others, and instinctively feel shame when doing wrong. Some of this comes from instruction, but much of its simply there.

Over time, repeated exposure to sinful actions and thoughts leads to a hardened conscience. Many adults become numb to shame, making laws necessary to enforce morality.

The Bible describes people without feeling, acting without concern for right or wrong. Some justify their behaviour by saying they’ve done this thing for years, and they feel no guilt.

The law exists to awaken the conscience, reinforcing what people instinctively know.

All people know that judgment is real and just. Across cultures and ages, people recognise moral guilt. However, pride often makes people, believe they’re morally perfect. Pride and guilt both stem from conscience.

Pride occurs naturally—it’s not taught. People easily believe they’re better than others.

If humans had no natural moral sense, they’d act purely on instinct, like animals, but people form rules, societies, and governments, even without scripture. Where does this moral structure come from? It’s built into human nature.

Atheists often argue that morality is created by human reason, and they dismiss conscience as common sense. But where does common sense originate from?

Morality is God-given—an instinctive understanding of right and wrong. Animals don’t possess the same moral awareness, proving that conscience is uniquely human.

If a person has a desire for say, a thousand dollars, and his neighbour has a thousand dollars in his wallet, what stops that person overpowering the neighbour and taking the thousand dollars? Conscience! The inner voice that distinguishes right from wrong.  And only those with a hardened, or seared, conscience would do such a thing, hence the necessity for laws in this fallen world. If mankind could live by their God given conscience there’d be no need for law or law enforcement.

This is the foundation of the New Covenant given to Israel in Jeremiah 31:31 and referred to by Jesus in Matthew 26:28, during the Last Supper, and referred to by Peter at Pentecost in Acts 2. God will put His law in their minds, and write it on their hearts; Israel’s hearts and minds as we see in Jeremiah 31:33.

The Bible teaches that conscience can be seared—meaning people lose sensitivity to right and wrong.

1 Timothy 4:2 describes people,

speaking lies in hypocrisy, having their own conscience seared with a hot iron, 

They reject the truth, and they say one thing but do another. This is hypocrisy—knowing what’s right yet failing to act on it.

In Romans 2 points out that those who had the law and judged others were guilty of the same sins. They condemned people for their actions while harbouring evil thoughts and desires themselves.

Ephesians 4:19 describes people as being without feeling, meaning their conscience no longer influences their choices.

Ephesians 4:18 explains that Gentiles have their understanding darkened,

having their understanding darkened, being alienated from the life of God, because of the ignorance that is in them, because of the blindness of their heart; 

See, they lose their moral sense, giving themselves over to sinful desires. Many become numb to guilt, justifying their actions instead of acknowledging their wrongdoing. Society often educates people out of listening to their conscience, teaching them to reject guilt as an unnecessary burden. This leads them to an entitled or it’s someone else’s fault mentality.

When people ignore their conscience, they make choices that contradict God’s truth. The Bible speaks of losing innocence, meaning exposure to evil eventually makes it seem normal.

What once shocked them becomes acceptable. The world promotes this idea, dismissing morality as subjective or something that changes depending on how people look at it, but scripture warns against it.

Moral insensitivity exists on different levels. While psychopaths lack moral awareness altogether, many people suppress guilt in everyday life, justifying actions they once knew were wrong. The Bible frequently warns against self-deception or people convincing themselves that wrong is right. Eve, for example, deceived herself; the serpent introduced the lie, but she chose to believe it.

The phrase, “You should know better” reflects this concept. People instinctively recognise moral truth, even when they deny it.

As we’ve already seen in Romans 2:12,

For as many as have sinned without law will also perish without law, and as many as have sinned in the law will be judged by the law 

This means that even without scripture, conscience convicts them.

If people claim ignorance of what’s right and wrong, it’s because they’ve hardened their conscience, convincing themselves that truth doesn’t apply to them.

Remember Romans 1 explains that people knew God but refused to honor Him. See their rejection became the norm. Over time, absence of God leads people to demand proof of His existence, not because He’s absent, but because their conscience no longer recognises Him.

People often ask for evidence of God, but such a request comes from a heart that has been hardened to reality. Throughout history, only a minority have questioned God’s existence and most of them are from recent generations.

Romans 2:6 states that God will judge every person according to their deeds, whether they have the law or not. This idea is not exclusive to Jewish tradition; throughout history, pagan religions have shared the same belief of “If we do good, our god will bless us. If we do evil, our god will curse us.” This reflects human conscience, which naturally recognises righteous judgment.

Romans 2:8 explains that those who reject truth and obey unrighteousness will face indignation, wrath, and tribulation. In other words if someone does evil, they’ll be judged accordingly.

Romans 3:19 says,

Now we know that whatever the law says, it says to those who are under the law, that every mouth may be stopped, and all the world may become guilty before God. 

Israel was not exempt from guilt. Romans 1 explains that, and God gave the Gentiles over to a reprobate mind, meaning they were guilty in their sin. However, Israel, despite being God’s chosen people, was also guilty.

God rescued them from Egypt, yet they sinned and died in the wilderness. Even after entering the promised land, they continued to sin. The law was given to prove that no one’s innocent, not to show that some are superior.

Romans 2:13 clarifies that,

(for not the hearers of the law are just in the sight of God, but the doers of the law will be justified; 

This was a major statement against Israel, as many believed they were righteous simply because they had the law. John the Baptist and Jesus taught the same principle—being part of Israel did not guarantee salvation.

Likewise, just because a person owns a Bible or attends church doesn’t mean they’re saved. Many churches hold the truth, but that doesn’t mean all members believe, or understand, or trust the gospel. Salvation only comes through faith in Christ, not simply through an association with Christianity.

This levels the playing field. Salvation is not determined by nationality, culture, or religious affiliation. We may ask, “What about those who live in non-Christian societies?” The truth is, Christian civilisation doesn‘t save people. Being in the Western world doesn’t guarantee salvation, just as political leaders claiming Christianity don’t make their nation righteous.

Ultimately, all people are guilty before God, regardless of location or upbringing. The question is not who’s guilty, but how can we be saved?

God has provided a solution through Christ.

Faith in Jesus Christ is the only way to receive true righteousness.

Romans 3 confirms that none are righteous, and none do good enough to justify themselves. No amount of good deeds can outweigh or cover past sins. Someone must pay for those sins, and Christ is the only one who could. He was sinless, God in the flesh.

James 1:22 says,

But be doers of the word, and not hearers only, deceiving yourselves. 

This aligns with Paul’s message in Romans 2. Paul discusses judgment, while James exhorts his audience to maintain a pure conscience.

James wrote to the twelve tribes of Israel scattered after Acts 8, when believers fled Saul (Paul’s) persecution.

His teachings summarise what Jesus taught during His earthly ministry, reinforcing obedience and faith under the law. Unlike Paul’s writings, James doesn’t introduce new revelation, the mystery of the church, or the body of Christ.

James 1:22 urges Israel to act on their faith, while Paul explains why human effort alone is not enough for justification. Both emphasize that hypocrisy occurs when people hear the truth but don’t act on it.

James describes this principle with an illustration in James 1:23 – 24,

For if anyone is a hearer of the word and not a doer, he is like a man observing his natural face in a mirror; for he observes himself, goes away, and immediately forgets what kind of man he was. 

This shows man’s tendency to ignore truth and convince ourselves that actions don’t matter.

Both Paul and James emphasise righteousness through action, but Paul clarifies that no one can fulfill God’s standards, therefore, justification comes not through works but through faith in Christ.

The difference is that in James this as instruction, urging his audience to follow through on their faith with works, while Paul reveals the deeper issue—that no one can keep God’s law, leading to the ultimate solution which is that Christ died because we couldn’t fulfill righteousness ourselves.

James makes very little reference to the revelation of the mystery given to Paul. It closely resembles Old Testament teachings and Jesus’ ministry to Israel under the law. His focus is on righteous living and moral purity.

Ezekiel 33:31 also addresses the issue of hearing but not doing. It speaks of Israel, who had received the law but failed to act on it.

“They sit before you as my people; they hear your words, but they do not do them.”

This principle applies universally—many listen to truth yet.

They love with their words but fail to do, following their own selfish desires. Hypocrisy, professing faith while not living according to God’s commands.

The same principle appears in Matthew 7 where Jesus teaches about building a house on the rock. Many people miss what Jesus is saying.

Matthew 7:24-25

Therefore whoever hears these sayings of Mine, and does them, I will liken him to a wise man who built his house on the rock: and the rain descended, the floods came, and the winds blew and beat on that house; and it did not fall, for it was founded on the rock.

Jesus continues, in Matthew 7:26-27

But everyone who hears these sayings of Mine, and does not do them, will be like a foolish man who built his house on the sand: and the rain descended, the floods came, and the winds blew and beat on that house; and it fell. And great was its fall. 

This passage doesn’t simply teach faith—it emphasises faith followed by obedience.

Many mistakenly assume these passages say that just believing in Jesus automatically establishes a firm foundation, but Jesus teaches hear that faith must be accompanied by doing. Without the doing of the word, the foundation crumbles. Same as James 2’s message—faith without works is dead.

James, Matthew 7, and Ezekiel all address righteous judgment, urging people to act according to God’s commands.

Paul’s the same in Romans 1 and 2. He  acknowledges these principles but instead of saying, “Do this because judgment is coming,” he explains that no one can do it.

As we’ll see when we get to Romans 3 that human effort is not enough to satisfy God’s standard of righteousness therefore all are condemned.

What do we learn from Matthew 7, Romans 2, James 2 and Ezekiel 33? That righteous judgment is required. The fact that not everyone who believes in God or Jesus always acts righteously. It’s proof that we’re all without excuse and that’s Paul’s point, no one can claim innocence.

First John reinforces this idea. Some might think everything changed after Jesus’ resurrection, but it didn’t.

First John is known as the “love epistle,” but it teaches love under the law, just like the Old Testament.

The first commandment was to love God with all your heart, mind, and soul, and the second was to love your neighbour. In the same way that the Old Testament taught love, First John emphasizes the law’s role in defining righteousness.

1 John 3:7

Little children, let no one deceive you. He who practices righteousness (does righteousness) is righteous, just as He is righteous. 

Clearly righteous comes only if they do righteously. Just claiming righteousness without action is hypocrisy.

1 John 3:18 backs this up:

My little children, let us not love in word or in tongue, but in deed and in truth. (In deed, works).

This aligns with James’, Jesus’s, and Ezekiel’s teaching, which Paul confirms in Romans.

Conscience should convict those who fail to act on what they know is right. God’s law explicitly defines righteousness and magnifies human failure.

Returning to James 1, we see his emphasis on purity of conscience.

James 1:25

But he who looks into the perfect law of liberty and continues in it, and is not a forgetful hearer but a doer of the work, this one will be blessed in what he does. 

And then James 1:26 warns:

If anyone among you thinks he is religious, and does not bridle his tongue but deceives his own heart, this one’s religion is useless. 

This highlights hypocrisy appearing religious but not acting accordingly.

James 1:27 describes true religion:

Pure and undefiled religion before God and the Father is this: to visit orphans and widows in their trouble, and to keep oneself unspotted from the world. 

This is a noble, righteous call to holiness, but it’s impossible to achieve perfectly.

James is writing to people who received the Holy Spirit at Pentecost, those under God’s new covenant. The Old Testament taught “Do what God commands.” Now, James says: “Do it because you love Jesus.” The principle’s the same. Obedience, doing, is expected.

However, in this dispensation of grace, the Holy Spirit seals believers in Christ because we just can’t fulfill righteousness on our own and Paul expands on this in Romans 3.

James 2:8 states this:

If you really fulfill the royal law according to the Scripture, “YOU SHALL LOVE YOUR NEIGHBOR AS YOURSELF,” you do well; 

Again, this aligns with Paul’s teaching that those who do righteousness receive life. However, James 2:10 warns:

For whoever shall keep the whole law, and yet stumble in one point, he is guilty of all. 

Here’s the whole problem, no one can fully keep the law.

The disciples, after understanding this from Jesus’s words to the rich young ruler, asked him in Matthew 19:25,

When His disciples heard it, they were greatly astonished, saying, “Who then can be saved?” 

Jesus responded in Matthew 19:26,

But Jesus looked at them and said to them, “With men this is impossible, but with God all things are possible.” 

With human effort alone this’s impossible!

James doesn’t immediately direct his audience to Christ as the solution. Instead, James 2:12 states:

So speak and so do as those who will be judged by the law of liberty.

He essentially says, “If you claim righteousness, then live by it consistently.” But how? That’s unanswered.

James continues in James 2:20, that Faith without works is dead.

He urges the twelve tribes to keep doing good works.

This leads to a question: What is faith, and where does it come from?

Paul will answer this in Romans 3, explaining that faith—not works—is the key to justification.

Romans 10:17 says,

So then faith comes by hearing, and hearing by the word of God

However, Romans 2 makes it clear that it’s not the hearers of the law who are justified, but the doers. If someone hears God’s law, hears Jesus’ teachings, and has faith because of what they hear, but doesn’t act on His words, they fall into the category James warns about.

Now, James is not discussing Romans 3, 4, and 5, which focus on the gospel of grace. He’s not saying that trusting in Christ’s finished work requires additional actions for justification. He’s not talking about the gospel that saves at all. Instead, he’s saying that if someone hears what God has said, whether in the Old Testament or in Jesus’ teachings, but doesn‘t act on it, their faith is dead.

Jesus says in Matthew 7, “If you hear my words and do not act on them, your house is not built on the rock.” He’s not saying, “I’m dying for your sins and offering grace because you can’t fulfill righteousness.”

Instead He warns that entering the kingdom may require carrying one’s own cross, even unto death. If someone claims belief in Jesus but refuses to stand for Him, their faith is empty.

Today’s salvation is by grace alone through faith alone, trusting in Christ’s finished work on the cross. However, Romans 2 and James aren’t teaching this yet.

James has no knowledge of faith without works. **

James 2:21 states,

Was not Abraham our father justified by works when he offered Isaac his son on the altar? 

He doesn’t of  Romans 4, which clarifies justification by faith alone.

James continues, James 2:22,

Do you see that faith was working together with his works, and by works faith was made perfect?

He insists that Abraham’s work was necessary to fulfill the righteousness declared in Genesis 15:6

And he believed in the LORD, and He accounted it to him for righteousness. 

James then concludes James 2:24,

You see then that a man is justified by works, and not by faith only. 

His point is that if God commands something, a person must believe it and act on it. Abraham first in Genesis 15, then obeyed in Genesis 22.

In this dispensation, this dispensation of grace that was revealed to Paul after James’, God says, “I’ve done it for you,”. He did the works that man could not you see.

We simply believe it.

However, God never commanded additional works for justification, unlike the system James is talking about.

James doesn’t acknowledge faith apart from works because his audience was taught to obey. He doesn’t address Paul’s revelation of the gospel of grace at all.

Instead, he speaks to people who should know better those who’ve heard but don’t act.

Hearing truth but failing to act on it hardens the conscience. This is how hearts become hardened, by constantly hearing without responding. People open their Bible once in a blue moon, yet never apply it. Over time, this numbs the conscience and the line between right and wrong and fact and fantasy is blurred.

What James and Romans 2 emphasise is not the gospel of grace but obedience to the law. Romans 2 states plainly that it’s not the hearers of the law who are justified, but the doers.

Returning to Romans 2:14, we see Paul’s alignment with other scriptures. Paul was given God’s manifold wisdom, fulfilling His word and explaining His plan. He teaches from creation, law, and history because understanding God’s mystery of free salvation is easy when we see it in light of how we’re condemned because of our inability to keep the law. However, James never explains this.

Read James, we don’t learn about Paul’s teachings, but reading Paul explains explain James and that’s crucial.

Romans 2:14 continues, stating,

for when Gentiles, who do not have the law, by nature do the things in the law, these, although not having the law, are a law to themselves, 

Here, Paul clarifies that the law is demonstrated through actions, not merely hearing it.

Clearly, the law itself doesn’t justify anyone, only obedience to it does. Gentiles who instinctively do what’s morally right, despite not possessing the law, demonstrate that righteousness is known by everyone.

Non-Christians often misunderstand these arguments. They claim that morality is separate to belief in God. They argue that civilisations have developed moral systems without religion.

Some people say that no moral thing that a believer can do that an unbeliever can’t, or religion doesn’t add to morality, and we agree agreeing unbelievers can give to the poor, help their neighbours, and avoid wrongdoing. However, this overlooks the first commandment whish is to love God with all your heart, mind, and soul, which unbelievers can’t possibly obey since they don’t believe God even exists. Some say this doesn’t affect other aspects of morality, but recognising and honouring the Giver of Life is foundational. Gratitude and awareness of God as the source of all things is vital to truth.

An unbeliever can’t believe in God, understand spiritual truths, judge spiritual matters, and bear the fruit of the Spirit. While unbelievers may show kindness, their motivation is different. By contrast, believers walk by faith, through grace, in Christ Jesus while a non-believer can’t be justified by faith because they reject the very source of justification—Christ.

This is not because believers are morally superior. They’re certainly not. It’s because of Christ. Sure, unbelievers can give to charity and help the poor, but morality isn’t just about physical actions. Spiritual righteousness requires faith in God.

This also shows the blindness of heart in those who think they can be just as righteous as God, without God. It is an incredible form of pompous insolence to claim, “I don’t believe in God, but I can be as righteous as Christians claim He is.”

This suggests they view themselves as the moral standard while rejecting the very foundation of morality.

Now, back to Romans 2:14 where Paul asks, “How can Gentiles, who do not have the law, be condemned?”

Some argue that since they were never given the law, they have an excuse. If the law gives knowledge of sin, and Gentiles don’t have the law, how can they be guilty? Paul answers this by pointing out that Gentiles still have conscience, which serves as a moral guide. Even without written commandments, they instinctively know right from wrong. Paul’s clear all are without excuse.

Gentiles who don’t have the law still, by nature, do the things in the law. This refers to conscience, that internal awareness of good and evil.

They may not follow specific Jewish customs, such as wearing tassels or observing the Sabbath, but they still understand foundational moral principles like not murdering and showing kindness.

Even humanism, which rejects God, promotes love for humanity. But where does this concept originate? From conscience that inbuilt moral code placed by God. Even those who reject divine law still follow moral reasoning, proving that morality is inborn, not invented.

Paul writes that even without written law those who act against their conscience are guilty and their own awareness condemns them. If someone breaks the law of their conscience, they stand judged before God and that’s every one of us.

Some say that if conscience is my law, then I determine my own rules, but God placed conscience within humanity, ensuring a universal moral code. People don’t invent morality, it’s instinctive, and shapes societies and laws.

Romans 2:14-15 says,

although not having the law, are a law to themselves (the gentiles), who show the work of the law written in their hearts, their conscience also bearing witness, and between themselves their thoughts accusing or else excusing them 

This describes how laws, rules, and governments develop based on moral awareness, even without direct religious influence. This applies gentile nations like Australia and America which were never commanded to enforce Israel’s laws but still built its legal system upon those moral principles.

Even if those nations reject biblical law, their societies establish laws and governments according to the conscience placed within humanity.

Anarchists and many libertarians claim human governments are unnecessary, and we just need rely on human conscience to maintain order. But without government, individual moral responsibility becomes essential, and when people reject moral responsibility because of their hardened conscience lawlessness and chaos would follow.

Romans 13 explains that governing authorities exist to uphold righteousness. Rom 13:5 says,

Therefore you must be subject, not only because of wrath but also for conscience’ sake. 

This shows that the role of government should not be simply about force but also about moral accountability.

Many Libertarians argue that governments enforce laws at gunpoint and while it’s true in some cases, many laws align with human conscience, such as prohibiting murder and theft. The non-aggression principle which is central to libertarian thinking relies on a basic moral awareness which as we’ve seen is flawed at best.

Survival of the fittest means the strong should dominate the weak, yet human conscience rejects this idea and even anarchists recognise the need for individual moral responsibility to maintain social stability.

Romans 2:15 states,

who (and the who is the gentiles) show the work of the law written in their hearts, their conscience also bearing witness, and between themselves their thoughts accusing or else excusing them)

This doesn’t mean people automatically follow God’s law, but rather that they possess this natural understanding of right and wrong.

The law serves two primary functions: to justify and to condemn. While no one is truly righteous, the law defines morality and holds us accountable.

Romans 3:19 confirms,

Those under the law have their mouths stopped, for all are guilty before God.

Paul describes the law in 2 Corinthians 3:7, stating, “If the ministry of death, written and engraved in stone, was glorious…”

Here, Paul refers to the Mosaic Law as the ministry of death. See, the law reveals sin but doesn’t bring salvation, it only shows that people have failed.

2 Corinthians 3:9 further emphasises this, calling the law the ministry of condemnation.

This challenges those who take pride in the law, whether it’s ancient or modern Israelites or modern Christians who display commandments publicly. The law is righteous, but it also brings death and condemnation.

It can’t save anyone. Only God’s grace can. Paul explains that the law is for the unrighteous, not the righteous. However, since no one is truly righteous, the law convicts all people.

Romans 2:15 confirms that the law’s role to justify or condemn is reflected in human conscience. People instinctively create laws and rules that mirror the moral principles found in God’s law. However, once someone begins judging others based on law, they must judge themselves as well, proving that no one perfectly keeps the law.

This universal guilt confirms Paul’s key message, that All are guilty before God, and none can uphold righteousness perfectly.

Romans 2 warns those who judge others to be careful. Paul’s argument is not based on the law of Moses but on conscience. Though the Mosaic law is often referenced, he’s making a bigger point, that God’s given every person a conscience that testifies to right and wrong.

Romans 5:20 states that the law was added, causing sin to abound.

This is reinforced in Romans 7:5, where Paul describes how the law stirs sinful desires, leading people into further condemnation. However, believers are now delivered from the law, serving in the newness of the Spirit rather than the old letter.

Paul poses a question in Romans 7:7, “Is the law sin?”

His response: “God forbid!” The law itself is not sinful, but it exposes sin. Without the law, people would not recognise lust as sinful until confronted with “Thou shalt not covet.”

Conscience acts as an internal moral law but does this mean conscience is bad because it condemns wrongdoing. The world says yes. In modern psychology, people are often encouraged to reject guilt, convincing themselves there’s nothing wrong with their actions. Instead of recognising their faults, they’re told, “You’re fine as you are. If God doesn’t accept you, then forget God.”

This is a bold and arrogant stance that hardens the conscience against truth.

The reality is that we’ve broken the moral laws of our own conscience. Conscience isn’t bad—it helps us understand right and wrong.

Romans 2:15 God’s truth is written in people’s hearts and that conscience bears witness to their accountability before Him.

Paul’s argument is not based on scripture alone but on the undeniable truth of conscience.

Once someone begins accusing or excusing others, they prove that they recognise morality. Their conscience bears witness.

For example, someone may say, “I accuse you of being a hypocrite.”

By making that accusation, they reveal their own understanding of right and wrong. They admit that moral failure exists—even in themselves.

People often excuse their wrongdoing by saying, “I’m not as bad as you.” But this is still an admission of guilt. Excusing sin means judging it according to a standard, but whose standard? If the standard is based on humanity, then judgment is flawed, because God’s standard is absolute.

Paul says that everyone is guilty before God. The common assumption that “Nobody’s perfect” proves that all people fall short. Some people reject religions that acknowledge this human imperfection and insist that sin must be accepted as normal. However, the Bible refuses to excuse sin, even if it means condemning everyone.

Despite humanity’s failure, God has given a way to be saved through Jesus Christ. Salvation is not earned; it’s a gift of grace. However, a person must first recognise their sinful condition before they can believe in salvation through Christ from that sin and the curse that goes with it.

In Romans 2:16 Paul states,

in the day when God will judge the secrets of men by Jesus Christ, according to my gospel

This verse speaks of judgment. Some readers, knowing that Paul preached a gospel different from others, may assume this refers to Romans 3, 4, and 5, or Ephesians. However, Paul hasn’t got there yet. He hasn’t explained salvation by grace in this passage.

The last time Paul mentioned the gospel was in Romans 1:16, saying,

For I am not ashamed of the gospel of Christ, for it is the power of God to salvation

This clarifies that Paul’s gospel doesn’t condemn—it saves.

Some believe that not accepting the gospel is what condemns a person, but that’s not true.

Romans 1:16 makes it clear that people are already condemned because of sin and the gospel is the only hope for salvation.

People are already condemned.

When God judges righteously, He does so without favouritism, according to truth and based on each person’s deeds. The gospel can save people from judgment, but everyone’s already condemned.

Some ask, “What about those who have never heard the gospel?”

The real question should be, “How can we reach them so they can be saved?” Everyone’s guilty before God, and no one deserves eternal life. If someone has never heard the gospel, they should be told because they can be saved by it.

If we were to ask people directly, “Have you ever heard the gospel that Christ died for yours and my sins and rose from the dead?”, some might reply, “No, I have never heard.” But at that moment, they’ve heard it. They don’t need it repeated a million times throughout their lives. It is nearly impossible to find someone who’s never heard the gospel without also sharing it.

The reality remains that everyone is condemned until they accept salvation. Being born in a Christian nation doesn’t justify anyone. Every individual must believe and understand the truth personally.

Romans 2:16 states in the context of the gentiles not having the law but knowing the law written in their hearts,

in the day when God will judge the secrets of men by Jesus Christ, according to my (Paul’s) gospel.

What are the secrets of men?

People don’t reveal all their thoughts, actions, and motives. Many things remain hidden, sometimes even unknown to themselves. However, God knows every thought, every deed, every hidden intention.

One day, God will expose all things in judgment. Will anyone be without excuse on that day? God judges not only actions but also thoughts.

Paul explains that judgment is not based on hearing the law but on doing it. Even if someone claims ignorance, the Bible refutes this idea, stating that God manifests His truth within each person. Everyone has a conscience, and those who ignore it have hardened their hearts.

Humans can hide truths from one another, but nothing’s hidden from God.

Romans 2:16 confirms that Jesus Christ will judge all people, proving that He must be both omniscient and divine. Some claim that Jesus was only a man, dependent on the Father’s knowledge. But if this were true, He couldn’t judge perfectly. To render judgment, He must be fully God, knowing all things, and fully man to be able to atone for sins.

Hebrews 4 speaks about the Word of God and God Himself and declares, that The Word of God is alive and powerful, sharper than any two-edged sword. It pierces and divides the soul and spirit, joints and marrow, and discerns the thoughts and intents of the heart.”

This book, containing the words of the Creator, is more than ink on a page. It reveals and judges what’s hidden in the human heart.

Hebrews 4:13,

And there is no creature hidden from His sight, but all things are naked and open to the eyes of Him to whom we must give account. 

Who is the “He” here?

The Word of God that the previous verse is talking about! The Word of God is personalised.

Many believe they can hide behind walls, clothing, or darkness, thinking they’re concealed but, these barriers only affect human perception, not God’s. He sees everything and nothing’s hidden from Him.

This realisation is terrifying, which is why Paul, in 2 Corinthians 5:11  refers to knowing, the terror of the Lord,

Paul’s not referring to God’s anger but to God’s perfect knowledge. He says he speaks openly to their conscience because God knows his heart and theirs.

Matthew 9:4 records Jesus perceiving men’s hearts, questioning their thoughts even though they hadn’t spoken.

Romans 14:10 emphasizes that by saying we will all stand before the judgment seat of Christ. See Christ Himself sits on that throne, proving yet again His divinity.

Romans 2:16 states that God will judge the secrets of men by Jesus Christ, according to my (Paul’s) gospel.

This raises an important question: What does it mean that God judges according to Paul’s gospel?

At this point, Paul hasn’t yet explained grace in Christ, yet he includes this statement here.

The answer lies in Paul’s unique revelation.

Jesus Christ Himself entrusted Paul with the mystery of God’s will, the manifold wisdom of God, and the dispensation of grace. Because of this knowledge, Paul could understand God’s judgments more fully.

Any judgment God makes will always be in accordance with His complete revelation. He doesn‘t judge outside of His eternal wisdom. While He has revealed truth gradually throughout history, He has always known that salvation comes by grace through faith.

Though it was once hidden, it’s now been revealed. When Paul says God will judge according to his gospel, he means that God will judge in light of His full plan.

This is good news, especially when considering Romans 3, which reveals that no one can be justified by their own righteousness. God looks not at a person’s works but at their faith in Christ.

Paul has not yet fully explained the gospel here in Romans 2, except for his statement in Romans 1:16 that the gospel of Christ is the power of God unto salvation to everyone that believes—first to the Jew, then to the Greek.”

In Romans 2, Paul repeatedly emphasises that God does not show favouritism—He judges all people equally. Since all are guilty before Him, everyone faces the same problem. Romans 1:16 assures us that the gospel is the solution—it is the power of God for salvation.

Paul understands how God interacts with humanity today—through conscience, morality, and creation and this wider understanding allows us to see the righteousness of God’s judgment.

Paul teaches in Romans 2 that all are condemned, whether they have the law or not, and that justification comes through faith alone, with or without the law and that message is different from the gospel of the circumcision, the kingdom, or the law of Moses.

There is now justification available through Christ, something that could not be achieved through the law of Moses. This is why God will judge the secrets of men according to the gospel revealed to Paul.

Next, in Romans 2:17, Paul will continue proving that every person is without excuse, as he shifts focus to those actually under the law and begins quoting scripture.

Romans 2:5-11 – Judgment and Deeds

In this episode we’re still in Romans 2 and Paul’s describing God’s judgment.
We’re actually still in the context of Romans 1 where Paul’s giving reasons why he’s ready to preach the gospel, the power of God to salvation. He’s writing the believers in Rome and gives his credentials as an apostle, and he tells them how he longs to see them. He’s not yet been to Rome.

“Speed Slider”

Romans 2:5-11 – Transcript

Up until chapter eight of Romans, Paul gives’ a detailed breakdown of why this gospel, God’s power to salvation, is necessary.

It’s because of the condition that mankind has fallen into which is a result of God graciously giving them up to their own darkened hearts after their failure to acknowledge Him, even though they knew Him from how He’s revealed Himself from creation.

God has revealed Himself to man to the extent that no man has an excuse for rejecting God.
We saw that one day every man will be judged either on their own righteousness, which doesn’t exist, or their acceptance of His salvation that He has provided freely for every man.
We haven’t reached that part yet in Romans and Paul’s still building the case of man’s condition and the righteous judgment of God which hasn’t yet come. This aligns with the dispensation of the grace of God.

In the timeline of Christ coming to Israel, everything occurred according to prophecy. He rose from the dead and sent the Holy Spirit—all according to prophecy. Even in Acts 1 through 7 and 8, everything was unfolding according to prophecy. In Acts 7, Peter, filled with the Holy Ghost, was preaching at Pentecost. He stood up and said, “These are the last days that the prophet Joel spoke about.” Then Stephen repeated the same message, saying that all the prophets were speaking of these days. However, they stoned Stephen.

It wasn’t until Paul that we started seeing something unprecedented something not prophesied happening. Why, in the Lord’s plan, is Jesus coming back in Acts 9 and saving the chief persecutor of the believers? Why is He giving him an apostleship? What’s that all about?

Not only was Paul’s grace conversion a unique situation, but his mission in Acts 9; to go to Gentiles, Kings, and the children of Israel to preach God’s grace was also not prophesied.

According to Peter’s message and the timeline of prophecy, what should have been happening was God’s judgment and wrath against unbelievers in a terrible tribulation period and then the setting up of the kingdom of heaven on earth with Christ Himself as the ruler, reigning from David’s throne in Jerusalem as prophesy had said for many hundreds of years.

God’s judgment was meant to be poured out from heaven before Christ’s return. Instead, here’s Paul, travelling around the Mediterranean, for years, preaching God’s grace and free salvation to all.

Now, the message of salvation to all—God wanting to save people by His grace—is a completely different from the message from what’s been preached up until then, that Christ is coming soon to judge the world and pour out His wrath.

When Paul talks about the judgment of God here in Romans 2, he’s not only speaking about times past, under the law, when Israel was without excuse and yet they judged others while committing the same sins, but he’s raising this an important question:  “Why isn’t God judging sin?”  If all men are without excuse, and God is perfectly righteous why isn’t He stopping sin? Why isn’t He taking action? The answer is Grace. God desires all people to be saved and that’s by His grace because that’ll never happen through their own righteousness.

To understand God’s grace, we must first grasp the reality and presence of sin, both in ourselves and in the world and Paul will discuss this in Romans 3, 4, 5, and 6.

We saw in the last episode in Romans 2:1-3,

Therefore you are inexcusable, O man, whoever you are who judge, for in whatever you judge another you condemn yourself; for you who judge practice the same things.

But we know that the judgment of God is according to truth against those who practice such things. And do you think this, O man, you who judge those practicing such things, and doing the same, that you will escape the judgment of God?

Romans 2:4 says:

Or do you despise the riches of His goodness, forbearance, and longsuffering, not knowing that the goodness of God leads you to repentance?

Paul highlights two common excuses made by people who judge others:

  1. Some believe there are worse sinners in the world than them and that they know better than others.
  2. Some believe they are not as bad as others, so they don’t need to be concerned about God’s judgment.

Yet, despite these excuses, they don’t seek God, they don’t thank Him, and they don’t glorify Him as we saw in Romans 1:21.

Paul’s teaching that in times past, God allowed sinners to exist without pouring out judgment on every sin. He did this because of His goodness, and we can also apply this to today’s dispensation. God’s still not judging the world with wrath. Instead, He’s delaying judgment, offering time for salvation to all.

Paul’s message to the Romans is clear:

“Do you despise His goodness? Do you dismiss His patience? Do you think His long-suffering gives you an excuse to continue in sin?”

 

We need to understand why God’s judgment and wrath have been delayed.

Although God’s wrath has been revealed in prophecy, it hasn’t yet come—not since the flood, nor since Israel’s captivity.

Paul clarifies that God delays judgment not because He’s weak, blind, or indifferent, but because He has a purpose. That purpose is to see souls saved in this dispensation.

So, God’s patience testifies to His goodness. When we understand what He’s doing, we recognise that His delay in judgment isn’t neglect, but an act of mercy—He’s giving sinners the opportunity for salvation today and that should lead to repentance, a change of mind toward God.

However, they (the world) don’t know or care about His goodness, and they even think He’s bad for not judging today.

Now, how in the world does God not judging lead you to repentance? How does that work? Well, it only works if you have a sensitive conscience.

When someone does wrong and isn’t judged for it, a person with a sensitive conscience feels the weight of their actions. They can’t help but plead for forgiveness and mercy, even though they’re not facing immediate punishment. That’s because their moral sense, the knowledge of the difference between good and bad, right and wrong, is alive and active.

God gave every person a conscience—a knowledge of moral truth. That’s what Romans 1 says: He revealed His truth within us, in our conscience, which is why no one is without excuse. The wrath of God has been revealed from heaven, and God has already shown people what’s wrong within themselves. Romans 2 continues this theme.

So how does God’s delayed judgment lead to repentance, to a change of mind? It does if our conscience is sensitive to right and wrong, which it should be. That’s a healthy, functioning conscience.

Even for those who’re saved by grace, their conscience should still be active. Yes, salvation is not by works, but that doesn’t mean our moral sense should be dulled. If our conscience is seared over—perhaps because we’ve been suppressing it or misinterpreting grace—then we’re not walking in truth. A true conscience still acknowledges wrongdoing, even for those living under grace.

It’s usually those who reject God as Judge who try to harden their hearts and silence their conscience so they don’t have to feel guilty. But guilt isn’t erased by ignoring our conscience. The only way to deal with guilt is by pressing into the grace of God and recognising that Christ paid the price for our sins.

Paul calls God’s delay in judgment “goodness”, because it leads people to repentance when their conscience is still sensitive. But in Romans 2:5-6, Paul speaks about a different kind of person. Are they sensitive in their conscience? No. We read,

But in accordance with your hardness and your impenitent heart you are treasuring up for yourself wrath in the day of wrath and revelation of the righteous judgment of God, who “WILL RENDER TO EACH ONE ACCORDING TO HIS DEEDS”: 

Paul says:

“Because of your hardness and unrepentant heart, you are storing up wrath for yourself…”

Their hearts are hard, not soft. They’re impenitent, meaning they don’t regret their wrongdoing. They refuse to change their minds. Instead, they’re set in their ways, continuing to do evil, while judging others for their sins.

Many say, “Well, no one ever told me.” But the truth is, they didn’t need to be told. They already have this God-given conscience, but they ignore it, and that’s what makes them guilty.

God knows every secret thought, every suppressed feeling of guilt, every moment when the conscience warned them, but they pushed it aside. He remembers what people have long forgotten.

This is not some mystical experience where we’ve been overwhelmed by the Spirit or by God’s mysterious powers. This is simply God saying, “You deserve judgment. You know that in your conscience but I’m not giving it to you.” That shows His mercy.

When we’re guilty, and God, the Judge, has given us mercy, that changes our relationship with Him. That’s why we should be led to repentance, to say, “I’m sorry. I regret that. I don’t want to do that again.” But not for these people. Their hearts are hard and unrepentant, which, of course, we can testify to ourselves as well.

Some harden their conscience, making it difficult to listen to their own moral compass or to God’s Word. They simply refuse to hear.

How many opportunities does God need to give before someone admits, “Yes, I was sufficiently warned?”

There’s creation, there’s conscience, there’re hundreds of years of Scripture, and there’re preachers and pastors in the Church, the Body of Christ.

Romans makes it clear: men are without excuse.

Let’s look at Proverbs 24:12,

If you say, “Surely we did not know this,” Does not He who weighs the hearts consider it? He who keeps your soul, does He not know it? And will He not render to each man according to his deeds? 

This means that God, who created us and knows our heart, knows what’s truly inside us. So if we claim ignorance, He’ll put that to the test.

In this case, it refers to the absence of good works or not helping when we should have helped.

James 4:17 says:

Therefore, to him who knows to do good and does not do it, to him it is sin. 

This makes it clear; there’s no escape from sin.

Unless were constantly walking in a good conscience, seeking the Lord day and night, doing good, and esteeming others above yourself, sin will always be present and that’s precisely the point that Romans 1 and 2 makes.

We must see sin clearly and not water it down.

Sin is everything contrary to God’s character and to the moral conscience He’s given. When we go against that, we’re acting against His truth.

2 Peter 3:5-6 teaches a similar principle:

For this they willfully forget: that by the word of God the heavens were of old, and the earth standing out of water and in the water, by which the world that then existed perished, being flooded with water. 

Here, Peter’s speaking about scoffers in the last days. Those who follow their own desires and mock God’s promises, saying:

“Where is His coming? Everything has remained the same since the beginning of creation!”

But they’re deliberately ignorant of the truth.

Peter reminds them that by God’s Word, the earth was flooded, destroying everything.  And yet, people refuse to acknowledge it.

This is more than simple ignorance it’s willful rejection.

They know better, yet they deny what their conscience tells them.

And how do they know? Genesis 6, 7, and 8 record God’s judgment through the flood—the same flood Peter speaks of here.

This is why Romans and 2nd Peter warn us about ignoring God’s truth.

The evidence is clear, yet people actively suppress it, allowing their conscience to grow dull rather than listening to what God’s made plain to them.

These are people who have a conscience but think God has never judged. They claim there’s no record of God ever judging the world.

When someone brings up the flood, pointing to what we know from God’s Word, they laugh and dismiss it, saying, it’s all just myth and legend.

See they know about it; they just choose to ignore it. That’s willful ignorance. They’re not oblivious to the truth; they simply reject it.

The scientist says, “There is no scientific evidence for that”? We should never trust the science that makes such a claim.

Scientists will offer different perspectives based on how they interpret the data. One scientist may say one thing, another may say the opposite, because their analysis differs, or they have “new discoveries”.

To claim absolute certainty and that there’s no evidence anywhere, would be to claim omniscience, which is absurd.

So Romans 2 makes clear that people are willingly ignorant. They harden their hearts. They’re impenitent and don’t want to thank God or align themselves with His goodness.

There’ s a written law, which God can use to hold people accountable, but He doesn’t need a written law to do so.

There’s conscience and there’s the heart’s thoughts and intentions as Hebrews 4:12 says,

For the word of God is living and powerful, and sharper than any two-edged sword, piercing even to the division of soul and spirit, and of joints and marrow, and is a discerner of the thoughts and intents of the heart. 

Now, Romans 2:5-6 says

But in accordance with your hardness and your impenitent heart you are treasuring up for yourself wrath in the day of wrath and revelation of the righteous judgment of God, who “WILL RENDER TO EACH ONE ACCORDING TO HIS DEEDS”:

We mentioned this last week but didn’t go into detail about the day of wrath.

There’s a coming day when Christ will return to pour out God’s wrath upon an unrighteous world.

No one should want to be on the wrong side of that moment in history. We want to be right with the Judge.

Some people don’t like what’s called “fear evangelism”, but the truth is, it’s wise to fear God’s judgment.  Yes, God’s goodness is revealed in His glory, peace, and grace, but people should also fear the judgment of the Creator of the universe.

Sadly, most people harden their hearts and get defensive, saying:

“If that’s the kind of God described in the Bible, I don’t want to serve Him!”

However we need to look at the fact that if God did not judge with righteousness, He wouldn’t be a God worth serving.

If God is the Creator of all things He knows how everything works. He has a standard for how things should function.

If He exists at all, He’s obviously far wiser than us, and His standard is absolute.

Many are arrogant before the Creator, but we must learn humility.

So in Romans 2:5, Paul speaks of the day of wrath, which is the same day as the day of the Lord, spoken of by the prophets for centuries before Christ.

Look at Zephaniah 1:12 where God, speaking through the prophet describes the day of the Lord’s wrath,

And it shall come to pass at that time That I will search Jerusalem with lamps, And punish the men Who are settled in complacency, Who say in their heart, ‘The LORD will not do good, Nor will He do evil.’ 

In other words, people claim that God is inactive that He does nothing.

Why do they say that? Because they believe that history has continued unchanged since the beginning.

So many assume that because judgment hasn’t come yet, it never will—but that reasoning is completely false. It’s flawed reasoning, like saying, “I’ve never ever had cancer so I’m never going to get it.”

Zephaniah 1:13 states:

Therefore their goods shall become booty, And their houses a desolation; They shall build houses, but not inhabit them; They shall plant vineyards, but not drink their wine.” 

These are the curses of God’s law given to Moses.

Then in Zephaniah 1:14

The great day of the LORD is near; It is near and hastens quickly. The noise of the day of the LORD is bitter; There the mighty men shall cry out. 

Zephaniah is prophesying about this future day of judgment—a day of wrath.

Zephaniah continues to describe God’s in Zephaniah 1:15:

That day is a day of wrath, A day of trouble and distress, A day of devastation and desolation, A day of darkness and gloominess, A day of clouds and thick darkness, 

There have been moments of God’s judgment on Israel throughout history, but His global wrath has not yet occurred since the flood.

In Matthew 16 Jesus Himself spoke of this future day of wrath.

Some people claim that the Old Testament God was wrathful, but the New Testament God is loving.  That’s completely false.

We can find just as much love and mercy in the Old Testament, just as you can find warnings of judgment and hell in the New Testament.

The idea of separating God’s nature between the Old and New Testaments is an ancient heresy.

In Matthew 16:26 Jesus says:

For what profit is it to a man if he gains the whole world, and loses his own soul? Or what will a man give in exchange for his soul? 

This’s an important question to mull over.

Jesus continues in Matthew 16:27,

For the Son of Man will come in the glory of His Father with His angels, and then He will reward each according to his works. 

This’s the day of wrath.  It’s the righteous judgment of God.

In Romans 2:5 we heard Paul speak of treasuring up wrath against the day of wrath and the revelation of God’s righteous judgment.

Some people argue that Paul doesn’t speak much about hell, judgment, or wrath.  But actually, Paul does talk about it, just not in relation to believers.

Why?

Because believers are assured of salvation, completely secure in Christ, by God’s grace.  They have nothing to do with hell.

However, when Paul speaks about the world, he mentions wrath, first in 1st Thessalonians, and then in 2nd Thessalonians, where he discusses future events that will happen on the earth, not within the body of Christ.

Paul clearly teaches in 1 Thessalonians 1:9-10 that if we’re in Christ, we’re delivered from the wrath to come.

Romans 2:5 says You are storing up wrath for yourself against the day of wrath and the revelation of God’s judgment and that’s what Book of Revelation is about.

The Book of Revelation is a book of judgment, the revelation of God’s righteous justice.

Some people approach Revelation without reading and understanding the rest of the Bible, thinking it is just a prophetic timeline of future events.  But Revelation is not just a list of future signs, it’s tying together all the loose ends of prophecy.

When Paul speaks of the day of wrath, he’s echoing the prophets.

Zephaniah spoke of it. Joel spoke of it.  Isaiah spoke of it. Jeremiah spoke of it.

However, the prophets left out certain details.

If we read Isaiah, for instance, it speaks of judgment and the coming kingdom, but it doesn’t fully explain how they fit together.

The prophets provided pieces, but they didn’t assemble the puzzle.

They simply laid out the individual prophecies without knowing themselves how they’d all connect.

The Book of Revelation, however, puts all those puzzle pieces together.

If we already have all the pieces, then Revelation starts making sense.

If we approach Revelation without knowing the rest of prophecy, it’ll be confusing.

Tying up loose ends is great, but only if you already have loose ends to tie up.

Otherwise, we’re trying to make sense out of disconnected things.

Revelation 6 deals with the opening of six seals.

If we understand God’s dispensations we know about seals, trumpets, and vials and these judgments unfold in order.

There was a time when studying God’s dispensations was deeply focused on studying Revelation but thankfully, today, we can also appreciate the greater mystery of Christ, understanding the dispensation of grace, which many who traditionally studied God’s dispensations overlooked.

So, Revelation 6 unfolds the seals of judgment.

After the sixth seal is opened, stars fall from heaven in Revelation 6:13, and the sky vanishes like a scroll in Revelation 6:14.

What happens when the sky is rolled up like a scroll?  Christ returns!

Revelation 6:15-17 continues:

And the kings of the earth, the great men, the rich men, the commanders, the mighty men, every slave and every free man, hid themselves in the caves and in the rocks of the mountains, and said to the mountains and rocks, “Fall on us and hide us from the face of Him who sits on the throne and from the wrath of the Lamb! 

For the great day of His wrath has come, and who is able to stand?” 

This is pretty early in Revelation in terms of the book’s timeline. How do these people know it’s the day of the wrath of the Lamb?

If we recognise that the day of the Lord’s wrath is when He returns, then we understand that Revelation begins before that.

The day of the Lord’s wrath occurs.

Then Christ returns Himself.  Here is Christ returning and the Kingdom coming when all things are fulfilled.

The Book of Revelation takes place throughout the timeline from the beginning of the Great Tribulation, and resumes God’s prophetic purpose, which Peter began speaking about in Acts 2, all the way through to the Kingdom.

So in Revelation 6, people declare: “The great day of the Lord’s wrath has come!”

Now, if we structure Revelation like this, Chapter 1 → 2 → 3 → etc., then chapter 6 seems a long way before the actual wrath occurring later in the book. But what if it’s not written that way?

If this is the day of the Lord’s wrath, then it belongs here, at Christ’s return.

Now we have to move events around in our timeline, because other things happen later in Revelation, but, Revelation 6 marks the day of the Lord’s wrath.

Now, we jump ahead 9 chapters and look at Revelation 15:1 which says,

Then I saw another sign in heaven, great and marvelous: seven angels having the seven last plagues, for in them the wrath of God is complete. 

These are the vials (the bowls) of God’s wrath and yet Revelation 6:17 already declared that “The day of God’s wrath has come!”

Is this the same event?

Perhaps those people recognised the wrath of the Lamb because the trumpets had already sounded, warning of coming judgment and when judgment finally arrives, they say: “Now it’s here! The angels have been warning about this!”

Revelation 16:1 says:

Then I heard a loud voice from the temple saying to the seven angels, “Go and pour out the bowls of the wrath of God on the earth.” 

This means God’s wrath had not yet been fully poured out. It actually begins in Revelation 16.

So, we don’t confuse the wrath of God with everything happening in Revelation especially the tribulation period. Not all events are part of God’s wrath.

Some argue that Revelation isn’t all about the wrath of God. There’s tribulation and other events, and yes, there is evidence for that.

But whether we speak of tribulation or wrath, we must remember that if we’re in Christ we’re delivered from the wrath to come.

Those living through the early part of Revelation, before the wrath, are Israel, not the Church, the Body of Christ.

Revelation 19:15 is Christ’s return,

Now out of His mouth goes a sharp sword, that with it He should strike the nations. And He Himself will rule them with a rod of iron. He Himself treads the winepress of the fierceness and wrath of Almighty God. 

Jesus returns after the bowls of wrath have been poured out.

Revelation 19:11 says:

Now I saw heaven opened, and behold, a white horse. And He who sat on him was called Faithful and True, and in righteousness He judges and makes war. 

For those who waited patiently, enduring the long delay, hoping for the arrival of the righteous Judge, this is the moment of fulfillment.

For years, scoffers had mocked believers, saying, “Where is your Judge? Where is His justice? He’ll never judge me. I’ll escape His wrath. He doesn’t even exist!”

But on this day, there’ll be a great reckoning.

Revelation 19:15 says

Now out of His mouth goes a sharp sword…

This sword is defined in Revelation 1:16 as Christ’s Word.

With this Word, He’ll strike the nations and rule them with a rod of iron.

He treads the winepress of the fierceness and wrath of Almighty God.

He’s the King of Kings and Lord of Lords.

This is Christ’s physical, visible return to the Earth.  It’s the time of His wrath.

What’s the purpose behind God’s wrath?

Some ask, “How is it righteous for Christ to appear from the sky and immediately pour out wrath?”  The answer is that God’s long-suffering has been demonstrated throughout history.

Up to this point, He’s proven men to be without excuse.

Thank God that right now, we’re still living in His long-suffering.

By that time, the world will have had countless opportunities to repent or turn to Him. Many will not.

How long has God’s patience endured? For how long has God encouraged people to repent and turn to Him for His salvation, yet they refused?

That’s the point of Revelation.

These in Revelation 6 that are hiding in the caves and crying out is not a metaphor or an allegory. That’s a prophecy of something that will happen.

So, Revelation talks about the righteous judgment of God and the inevitability of justice.

Revelation 20 is about the final Judgment. Even though God’s judgment according to our works should strike fear, we shouldn’t think it’s unjust. It’s perfectly righteous.  Sin has no excuse.

Some people say that God is just cruel, that He’s a bully!

But look at creation. Would a bully create beauty like that?  Bullies destroy. They take and they ruin.  But God gives.  His judgment is righteous because it removes the source of all tragedy in the world, sin.

He delays that judgment so He can save the very people who’ve committed these sins, giving them the opportunity to turn to Him.

Revelation 20:11 says:

Then I saw a great white throne and Him who sat on it, from whose face the earth and the heaven fled away. And there was found no place for them. 

This is the final judgment.

Revelation 20:12,

And I saw the dead, small and great, standing before God, and books were opened. And another book was opened, which is the Book of Life. And the dead were judged according to their works, by the things which were written in the books. 

This passage makes it clear. Judgment by works is righteous.

Yes, there is punishment for sin, and justice must be served.

But God has also provided a way of salvation, the other side of the story, which Paul has not yet reached in Romans.

Sinners can be saved by God. They can receive mercy and grace.

It’s not about God condemning people to hell for not being good enough.

No one’s good enough but God has offered salvation freely to all.

So, when God opens up His judgment, He’s looking at those who’ve rejected His mercy, and refused to receive His salvation.

These people have left themselves to be judged not by God’s mercy, but by God’s standard of works and He must judge them accordingly. There’s no alternative.

Revelation 20:13-14

 The sea gave up the dead who were in it, and Death and Hades delivered up the dead who were in them. And they were judged, each one according to his works. 

Then Death and Hades were cast into the lake of fire. This is the second death. 

After this, death itself ceases to exist, no more death, ever.

Revelation 20:15

And anyone not found written in the Book of Life was cast into the lake of fire.

Notice how this passage doesn’t say that anyone who was a sinner was cast into the lake of fire.

Why? Though we, you and I, were sinners, we were saved and sanctified.

If hell and the lake of fire is made for sinners, and all sinners go there, then no one would be saved.

People go there because of their sins, for sure, but it’s because their sins have separated them from God. That’s the core principle of the Gospel, mercy and salvation.

The Book of Life is what God’s looking at. He has all these books that apparently have people’s works recorded.

We might ask, why does God record things in books? Can’t He just remember?

It’s because He’s a righteous judge and a righteous judge doesn’t simply say, “I know what you did.” A true judge provides witnesses and documentation, and that’s exactly what those books are for.

They are not for Him; they’re for the people being judged.

The Book of Life is the key.

It’s not really what’s written in those other books that’s the deciding factor, it’s that their names are not in the Book of Life.

If we have life, the promise of eternal life, then our name is written in it.

At the final judgment, God opens the Book of Life and looks for names.

People who were alive in the body, but are dead spiritually, who died not believing the one thing that could give them life, the gospel of Salvation, are not written in the Book of Life.

Now, what happens to them?

We were born, alive, breathing and our name was written in the Book of Life.

But then we realise that if we don’t receive salvation through God’s grace, we’ll be removed from the Book of Life and end up facing judgment.

So, we accept the salvation God offers, saying, “Thank You, God, for saving me!”  We trust Him in His promise, even though we don’t even know where this Book of Life is kept.

We’ve died with Christ; we’re crucified with Him.  We’re raised with Him, so that when our body stops breathing, our name still remains in the Book of Life because we have eternal life.

That’s the meaning of the Book of Life.

That’s why Paul mentions it in Philippians 4:3, because when we’re saved, we live forever, receiving eternal life from God.

But these people here in Revelation 20:15 do not have their names written in the Book of Life.

And anyone not found written in the Book of Life was cast into the lake of fire.

Why? Because they don’t have life.

God shows them why they didn’t deserve it, because they rejected His grace.

They chose a life without Him and a life without God is no life at all, it’s eternal separation from Him.

Then Revelation 21:7 says,

He who overcomes shall inherit all things, and I will be his God and he shall be My son. 

But then a fearful warning comes in Revelation 21:8

But the cowardly, unbelieving, abominable, murderers, sexually immoral, sorcerers, idolaters, and all liars shall have their part in the lake which burns with fire and brimstone, which is the second death.: 

Many people focus on the list of sins, but they often ignore the first two words, “the fearful” and “the unbelieving.”

What does ‘the fearful’ mean?”

Fearful here means those who fear man more than God who love approval from the world more than truth from God.

Jesus warns in Matthew 10:28,

And fear not them which kill the body, but are not able to kill the soul: but rather fear him which is able to destroy both soul and body in hell.

In the tribulation, this applies to those who hear the words, “Take the mark of the Antichrist, or we’ll kill you!”

At that moment, they have a terrible choice: Reject God and live a little longer or refuse the Antichrist and lose their life—but inherit eternal life.

That’s the critical decision.

The fearful and unbelieving are listed first because judgment is ultimately about belief.

Can murderers go to heaven if they are saved by grace? Yes.

Can adulterers? Yes.

All these sinners can be saved by grace, and some of them were.

But unbelief is a different issue.

If you don’t believe what God says, that’s the problem.

Faith is not a good work, it’s simply hearing what God says and saying:

Yes, I believe that.

Understanding judgment according to works is crucial.  If we say we’re saved not by works, but justified apart from works, we need to have a good reason for that claim. It’s not righteous judgment when some wicked or evil person receives a great reward. That would be unjust and corrupt.

What makes this right is Jesus Christ and that’s what Paul explains in Romans.

So Paul’s building the case in these opening chapters of Romans that we must understand.

If we’re believers we’ll still face God’s judgment, but it won’t be the same judgment of Revelation 20-21.

It won’t determine our eternal destiny.

In 1 Corinthians 3, Paul speaks of the judgment seat of Christ, where believers’ works will be judged, not their salvation, but their works.

If someone’s works were done for the wrong reasons, those works will be burned up, but the person will still be saved, but through fire.

The works must be judged, just as everyone’s works must be judged, because God made all things, and He’s the ultimate judge of all things.

People think that doesn’t sound like grace.

However, not everything Paul writes is specifically talking about us in the dispensation of grace.

Romans 1 speaks of events from the creation of the world, while Romans 2 deals with those under the law.

Paul is speaking to unbelievers, specifically to Jews, in this context of the righteous judgment of God.

As believers, we’re not going to be there, but we only know that because we understand the full picture of Romans which hasn’t been explained yet at this point.

Romans 2:6 says:  God “WILL RENDER TO EACH ONE ACCORDING TO HIS DEEDS”: 

This happens in Revelation 20 and 21 where judgment will be according to their works and deeds.

Look at James 5 and we’ll see Paul’s teachings align with many of James’s.

Paul’s not quoting James, but he’s teaching some of the same foundational principles.

James wrote to the twelve tribes of Israel addressing their impending wrath and how they should endure through it.  He discusses God’s judgment heavily.

James doesn’t talk about Romans 3, 4, 5, or 6, meaning, he doesn’t mention the cross of Christ at all.

You would think that a conversation on faith and works—a topic central to James—would at least begin with the truth that we’re saved by grace, that Christ’s finished work is the foundation, and that works follow as evidence of faith.

However, James never talks about the cross—not once.

We could read James and be completely unaware that Christ died for our sins.

It’s as if you were reading Matthew, Mark, Luke, or John—before Christ actually gave His life.

James repeats many things that Jesus taught during His earthly ministry before His crucifixion.

This is because James is speaking to Israel.

James 5 speaks about treasuring up wrath and in a way that mirrors Romans 2.

James 5:1 says:

Come now, you rich, weep and howl for your miseries that are coming upon you! 

This reminds us of Revelation 6, where the rich men and powerful leaders were hiding in caves, fearing God’s wrath.

James continues in James 5:2-3

Your riches are corrupted, and your garments are moth-eaten.

Your gold and silver are corroded, and their corrosion will be a witness against you.

Why?

Because these individuals treasured up wealth for themselves but ignored repentance and righteousness and in so doing have heaped treasure together for the last days.

Romans 2 speaks of the impenitent treasuring up wrath for the day of wrath and James is talking about the same people.

Paul’s not talking about believers here.  He hasn’t got there yet.

We’re saved by grace, and we don’t find someone saved by grace in Romans 2.

James 5:4 says:

Indeed the wages of the laborers who mowed your fields, which you kept back by fraud, cry out; and the cries of the reapers have reached the ears of the Lord of Sabaoth.

These are examples of corrupt business practices.  Sabaoth means Lord of Armies, the Lord of War.

James continues in James 5:5-6:

You have lived on the earth in pleasure and luxury; you have fattened your hearts as in a day of slaughter. 

You have condemned, you have murdered the just; he does not resist you. 

In other words, God has let them go. He’s allowed them to continue in their evil, showing His patience and goodness.  Yet, they take it for granted and don’t repent.

James warns believers to be patient, because the Lord draws near!

If someone thinks James’ doctrine applies directly to the church today, they might also believe Jesus when He said to sell everything and give to the poor.

See how this perspective might lead Christians to interpret the Bible in a way that promotes an economic policy very different from judging people according to their works?

What does Christ do on this day of wrath? What’s the goal?

In Revelation, part of the reason why the wealthy remain in power is because they take the mark of the beast—which is the only way they can continue in business under the Antichrist’s rule.

James 5 addresses this issue, but those teachings don’t align with Paul’s doctrine in the dispensation of grace.

Romans 2 clearly states that God renders to every man according to his deeds.

That’s merit-based judgment.

Grace must be understood in the context of this righteous judgment.

What actually happened is:

  1. We needed to prove our merit through our works, but we failed miserably.
  2. God provided an alternative, His own merit through His works through Christ’s finished sacrifice.
  3. That works are still required but instead of relying on our own efforts, we trusted Him to do the works for us.

So God can righteously declare that the works necessary for salvation were provided on our behalf, so He can bless us.

That’s salvation.

It is not simply that God loves me no matter what I do and that’s why He gave me everything!

No! Salvation is based on the righteousness of Christ’s work, which was provided in place of our own failed efforts.

None of us can earn, deserve, or be worthy of salvation on our own merits.

Judgment asks, “Did you commit sin?”  If the answer is yes, then you’re guilty.  If we then say, “But I did good works!”  The judgment remains. You’re still guilty.  The good deeds don’t erase guilt.

The only condition that allows someone to earn eternal life is for them to be perfect, to be sinless and nobody is.

Even if someone lived sinlessly, that would only mean that they don’t deserve punishment for sins they never committed.  However, that still doesn’t mean they deserve eternal life.

No one can generate that life within themselves.

This misunderstanding affects how people view God’s grace.

If we fail to understand righteous judgment, we’ll fail to understand grace and we’ll corrupt God’s plan, turning salvation into something it’s not.

In Romans 2:6-11 we see that God,

who “WILL RENDER TO EACH ONE ACCORDING TO HIS DEEDS”: eternal life to those who by patient continuance in doing good seek for glory, honor, and immortality; but to those who are self-seeking and do not obey the truth, but obey unrighteousness—indignation and wrath, tribulation and anguish, on every soul of man who does evil, of the Jew first and also of the Greek; but glory, honor, and peace to everyone who works what is good, to the Jew first and also to the Greek. 

For there is no partiality with God. 

This entire passage focuses on works.

There’s nothing here about faith or grace, it’s works-based judgment.

It also touches on Jew and Gentile, placing the passage under the law program since there was no Jew before the law.

When people judge others they’re judging based on the law that God gave.

We mentioned earlier that faith is not a deed.  Faith is not something we do.

Nor does faith give the believer merit and make them excellent or worthy.

Faith comes from hearing the Word of God. Without the Word of God, there is no faith as Romans 10:17 states.

Faith is simply hearing the Word of God and recognising, that Word as true.

It’s not an action or a work that we perform.

Faith doesn’t earn salvation.  We’re wrong if we believe we get salvation in return for belief!

We get salvation because of what Christ did.

We must believe to be saved, but that belief doesn’t merit anything on its own.

Some people say they have faith without even knowing what they believe in.

What we believe in must be true in order for faith to matter.

Faith acknowledges Jesus Christ’s merit not ours.

In this passage of Romans we should understand what justice is.

Justice is simply the establishment of what’s right.

The reason there’s so much confusion about justice today is because people are confused about what’s right.

To establish justice, you must first know what’s right.

In Romans 1, we see that people refused to thank God and glorify Him and changed the truth into a lie.

So, if people think wrong is right, then justice itself is corrupted and that’s what we’re seeing more and more today.

How do we know what’s right?

We’ve spoken about conscience, but if a person’s seared their conscience, they can’t rely on it anymore.

We’ve spoken about creation, but if a person’s rejected God, they can’t learn from that either.

There’s Scripture, but if a person believes the Bible is a collection of ancient myths, they’re left with nothing.

So, where do they find right and wrong?

For many, their standard is themselves. It’s whatever I want!

But that’s not justice, that’s self-rule.

If justice is whatever a person wants, then they’re establishing their own laws. That gut feeling we have when we hear someone say they’ll do whatever they want is our conscience reacting.  Something feels wrong.

If one person does whatever they want, it might infringe on what another person has a right to do.

There has to be a universal rule, a fair system.

That’s why Romans 2:6 says God will render to every man according to his deeds.

It’s important to realise that God won’t render judgment only to sinners, or only to Gentiles, or only to the rich, He’ll render judgment to every man, according to their deeds.

That’s what makes it righteous.

Everyone will be judged by the same standard, God’s standard of righteousness.

We must see the depth of God’s judgment before we can truly appreciate His grace.

Justice in the Bible is always connected to judgment.

You can’t have justice without righteous judgment.

That’s why, when Christ comes, He’ll establish Judgment and Justice.

The Bible consistently teaches that if there isn’t enough evidence to convict a person of guilt, then they’re let go and the judgment is left in God’s hands.

God sees everything, the intents and thoughts of the heart and He alone can judge righteously.

When humans don’t have enough information to judge fairly, they must err on the side of protecting the innocent.  This is why, in a righteous legal system, the accused has the right to a defense.

Why is this necessary?

Because in biblical justice, a person is considered innocent until proven guilty, and everyone should have their day in court.

This  Jewish and Christian understanding of justice is rooted in Scripture.

Without this biblical foundation, people could say that we don’t need to prove innocence, just accuse someone, and they’re guilty and we’ve seen this happen in society.

Not long ago, you didn’t have to preach about things like this, but now you do, because people have forgotten biblical justice.

Simply accusing someone without evidence, without defense leads to injustice, ungodliness, and unrighteousness.

This is precisely why God will ask:

“Why did you make that judgment? That was a sin—it was wrong. I saw everything, even the thoughts and intents of the heart.”

There are now numerous cases where people make accusations with no proof and yet there is no justice, no accountability when those accusations are proven false.

This happens over and over again, in a society that doesn’t value biblical justice.

Confirming the truth is the foundation of biblical justice.  You can’t just assert something you must prove it.

The Bible teaches that people lie.

That’s why one of the Ten Commandments in Exodus 20:16 says:

You shall not bear false witness against your neighbor. 

Because people lie, God put a justice system in place requiring two or three witnesses before accusing someone.

If the law could change hearts, then God wouldn’t have needed both laws He would’ve just needed “Do not bear false witness.”

But because laws alone don’t change people, He added a second rule in Numbers 35 and Deuteronomy 17 and 19 that You must have two or three witnesses to convict someone.

Why?

Because even if one person claims to tell the truth, they might not be, so God built protections into His justice system.

Romans 2:6-11 speaks of justice without favouritism where Paul emphasises that God judges all people equally, regardless of status, nationality, or background.

True justice doesn’t look at a person, it looks at what they do.

Justice says if they committed a crime, let’s see the evidence.

Justice doesn’t say:

“Before looking at the crime, let’s look at the person’s background and identity first!”

But today, in our dangerous modern system, justice is so often based on who someone is, rather than what they’ve done.

But the Bible teaches No respecter of persons.

God doesn’t judge based on who someone is, He judges based on what they do.

Sometimes we hear of something wrong happening and our conscience might react with wrath, but Scripture teaches in Proverbs 14:29 and James 1:19:

Be slow to wrath.

Why?

Because justice requires evidence, and we must hear all of it to make a judgment.

This happens a lot even in the church where rumors spread, and people believe them without verifying the facts.

Just because a message came from someone you trust doesn’t mean it’s true.

The Bible teaches that truth must be confirmed, not simply passed along.

Throughout the Bible kings and judges judged according to the law, they couldn’t judge based on their personal opinion, their preference, or on false prophets who urged them to do something.

If a prophet gave a prophecy contrary to the law, then the people were to reject the prophet and follow God’s law which meant the prophet was false.

The law never changed. It remained constant.

The Principle of An Eye for an Eye appears multiple times in the Bible.

It’s meant to establish fairness; the punishment must fit the crime.

If someone steals something, they should repay the amount they stole, that’s righteous judgment.

Human justice is not perfect, which is why biblical principles guard against unjust practices.

Romans 2:6-8 says that God will render to every man according to his deeds, to those who continue in well-doing, He gives eternal life. To those who are self-seeking, and don’t obey the truth He gives indignation and wrath.

He renders judgment to every man, that’s equality.  He gives eternal life to those who do righteousness.  He pours out wrath on those who do evil.

It’s based on works and this is God’s righteous standard.  Everyone can know what to do and what not to do, it’s not a secret.

That’s why we can’t rush through Romans 2. We’ve got to understand His justice before we move forward.  It’s essential to fully appreciate grace.

Romans 2:1-6 – God is Righteous to Judge

We’re beginning Romans chapter 2 in this episode and the first thing we notice is that the first word in Romans 2:1 is the word “Therefore”.
This means that it’s a continuation of the last line of thought that precedes this and that’s of course what we discussed in the last episode in Romans 1.
To get the idea and the context of Romans 2 we should really read all of Romans 1 again, but in regard to time we’ll read Romans 2:1 as it’s supposed to be read, as a natural extension of Romans 1:32.

“Speed Slider”

Romans 2:1-6 – Transcript

We’re beginning Romans chapter 2 in this episode and the first thing we notice is that the first word in Romans 2:1 is the word “Therefore”.

This means that it’s a continuation of the last line of thought that precedes this and that’s of course what we discussed in the last episode in Romans 1.

To get the idea and the context of Romans 2 we should really read all of Romans 1 again, but in regard to time we’ll read Romans 2:1 as it’s supposed to be read, as a natural extension of Romans 1:32.

The context is that Paul’s just stated twenty five effects that are the result of Romans 1:28 which was,

And even as they did not like to retain God in their knowledge, God gave them over to a debased mind, to do those things which are not fitting;

And then we have this pretty awful list of twenty five conditions which are a result of that.

Also, just before we jump into Romans 2:1 we can’t forget what we’ve studied in the last few episodes because it’s still the same context. These are the four reasons Paul gives in Romans 1:16 through 20 as to why he’s ready to preach the gospel and do that at Rome also, as he states in Romans 1:15.

So, Romans 2:1,

Therefore you are inexcusable, O man, whoever you are who judge, for in whatever you judge another you condemn yourself; for you who judge practice the same things.

So, the “therefore,” means we need to know what that’s there for and we just finished seeing that all are without excuse before the Creator because they see creation, because they knew God—especially in the beginning.

God has revealed Himself to man clearly enough so that all are without excuse.

So there’s something here that was given to Paul to preach, and that’s why he’s ready.

God revealed Himself and His power to save in Romans 1:16,

I’m not ashamed of the gospel of Christ, for it is the power of God to salvation.

Then, in Romans 1:17 God has revealed His righteousness from faith to faith, and Paul’s talking about the gospel of salvation—the gospel of Christ,

For therein is the righteousness of God revealed from faith to faith.

Then Romans 1:18 God reveals His wrath,

For the wrath of God is revealed from Heaven against all ungodliness.

And in Romans 1:20 God revealed Himself in creation and we know that in our conscience,

For the invisible things of him from the creation of the world are clearly seen.

Gods revealed Himself from and through creation. He’s the Creator, which means He’s the Judge over the things that He’s made. So man is without excuse.

We know In our conscience that the wrath of God is revealed. Because, if we know there’s a God and we know the standard of His righteousness, we know we don’t have that righteousness.

We have to learn this lesson before diving into Chapters 2 and 3 which are talking about wrath and judgment and these are things that modern Christianity avoids believing, let alone discussing.

God will judge that there is a hell and there really is a right and wrong, and good works and bad works matter.

So they’re without excuse and that’s why Romans 2:1 says,

Therefore you are inexcusable, O man, whoever you are who judge, for in whatever you judge another you condemn yourself; for you who judge practice the same things. 

So, right here, we’re dealing with the wrath of God.

Every man has an excuse, but none are valid before God.

But people will retaliate in their guilty conscience, saying, “You mustn’t judge, don’t judge. The Bible say, ‘Don’t judge’.”

Well, yes, that’s from the Bible, in Matthew 7, but Jesus isn’t talking about not judging there. He actually talks about increasing in righteous judgment, which is what Romans 2 is going to address.

This idea that the Bible teaches not to judge because love means you don’t judge anything just isn’t correct.

What is Romans 2:1 telling us,

Therefore you are inexcusable, O man, whoever you are who judge,

Remember, that in Romans chapter 1, Paul’s talking about “them” and “they”. From the creation of the world, they changed the glory of God, and they did this and that. They, they, they. We feel comfortable because it’s about “they, them”.

But it gets more personal here where Paul changes to the personal pronoun “you”.

See “they” are without excuse, but so are we. Whether as a Christian or not, we’ll never be able to stand before God’s judgement with our own merits, our own works or with any sort of excuse. We either stand before Him with our penalty for sin fully paid for by the shed blood of Christ or condemned forever in our sin.

“Whoever you are who judge” is Jew, Gentile you and me, anybody, but we’ll see shortly that this person who judges is an unbeliever, a remorseless unbeliever. They’re rejecting God but they’re judging and that always happens with those that say, “Don’t judge.”

It’s always been there in humanity. You can’t judge me, but I can judge you. It’s always been part of the flesh.

So, there’s two segments in society.

One just doesn’t care about judging anything—they don’t care about right and wrong or about glorifying God as God or being thankful for His creation. They just don’t care.

Then there’s a segment that says, “Yes, there’s a right and wrong, and I’ll tell you where you’re wrong.” But they’re also without excuse.

They know better, don’t they?  That’s what it means to judge.

Now, we all do this. We’re guilty of it and this’s what That’s what Paul’s saying here, the hypocritical we know better, and we are better.

However Jesus says through Paul, “Therefore you are inexcusable, O man.”

In Luke 18:10-14 Jesus gives an example that Paul will follow in Romans 2

Luke 18:10 first,

Two men went up to the temple to pray, one a Pharisee and the other a tax collector. 

The Pharisees were the most fanatically religious sect of all Israel’s sects of the day. They kept the law to the letter and believed it literally.

The tax collectors were a detested class of individual, not only by the Jews, but by other nations also, on account of their employment and of the harshness, greed, and deception, with which they did their job.

Luke 18:11,

The Pharisee stood and prayed thus with himself, ‘God, I thank You that I am not like other men—extortioners, unjust, adulterers, or even as this tax collector. 

We can put the 25 sins of Romans 1 here.

‘I thank You I am not the unrighteous, the unmerciful, and the wicked—those who do evil things. I’m glad I’m not any of those people who changed the glory of God into a lie. I thank You that I’m not one of those people who seek vile affections and unnatural things between men and women. I’m glad I’m not one of those people.’

This Pharisee goes on in Luke 18:12,

I fast twice a week; I give tithes of all that I possess.

Then in Luke 18:13 we see this,

And the tax collector, standing afar off, would not so much as raise his eyes to heaven, but beat his breast, saying, ‘God, be merciful to me a sinner!’ 

Then Jesus sums up the situation in Luke 18:13,

I tell you, this man went down to his house justified rather than the other; for everyone who exalts himself will be humbled, and he who humbles himself will be exalted.”

So, the tax collector that says, “I’m a sinner, I’m unacceptable to you,” he’s the one Jesus said is closer to salvation while the religious Pharisee says, “Thank God I’m not like any of those sinners.” He’s the one that needs to hear the lesson in Romans 2:

Therefore you are inexcusable, O man, whoever you are who judge,

Now, we need to realise that neither Jesus in Luke 18 and Luke 17, or Paul in Romans 2 is talking about the gospel of the grace of God.

Paul hasn’t got there yet, and Jesus is not talking about the gospel that saves either. He’s talking about repentance to Israel, who was given a religion that could make them puffed up hypocrites. They’d do things according to the law like tithing and fasting and completely forget that it was really a heart issue.

A person can tithe and fast without a heart of faith. A person can do that and reject Jesus which many of the Pharisees did.

This is why the Romans epistle is so vital for Christianity.

Without the teaching in Romans, we don’t have Christianity we have a religion. We have a works-based system, trying to prove ourselves excusable before God and acceptable.

But Paul starts, in the very beginning, in Romans 2:

Therefore you are inexcusable, O man,

People don’t believe in God’s judgment today and it’s an unpopular subject to discuss. They don’t know that they’re without excuse so how are they going to receive the gospel by faith when they don’t see the need for it and so many don’t even believe there’s an all-powerful, all righteous Creator.

When the church glosses over sin, and judgment and the knowledge in their conscience of God’s wrath, people won’t see the need for salvation and redemption from the penalty for sin.

People today will sarcastically reject the message that all are without excuse, that no one does good, and they’ll think they’re doing it in obedience to God, because of a failure to understand His Word.

This is exactly what Paul himself was like before He met Jesus on the road to Damascus that day when he was known as Saul of Tarsus.

He was persecuting those who believed in Christ. Why? Because he’s the devil, the antichrist? Was he an evil sadist who got his kicks from torturing and locking up people?

No, he was zealous of his Father’s religion. He thought he was doing God’s service and being a good Jew, a righteous Pharisee. That’s why he persecuted and put fear into the believers in Christ.

In 1 Corinthians 2:15, Paul says,

But he who is spiritual judges all things, yet he himself is rightly judged by no one.

Now, why is that? How come he’s saying you judge all things?

Because God’s revealed spiritual truth through His Word that we can understand about invisible spiritual things. And if you know those things, you can judge more than just the natural—you can judge the spiritual. So, you judge all things.

1 Corinthians 6:1-2 says,

Dare any of you, having a matter against another, go to law before the unrighteous, and not before the saints? 

Do you not know that the saints will judge the world? And if the world will be judged by you, are you unworthy to judge the smallest matters? 

We should know these spiritual things.

This is a hard saying for some people because there’re pretty smart people who are unbelievers.

But they don’t know the gospel, they don’t know spiritual truth, and they can’t judge spiritual things.

‘Do you not know that the Saints shall judge the world?’ Paul says.

We ask on what basis will I, a saint, judge the world?

Paul’s going to talk about this in Romans 2. We can only judge according to the truth. And if we have the truth of the gospel, the truth of God, then that’s the basis on which we can judge. If people don’t have that, they can’t judge that, obviously.

“Are you unworthy to judge the smallest matters?”

By ‘smallest matters,’ he means smallest matters in the world.

But then in 1Corinthians 6:3 he says,

Do you not know that we shall judge angels? How much more, things that pertain to this life?

What does that mean?

The revelation of the mystery given to the Apostle Paul and given to the Church was something not given to angels. Angels can’t know that truth because they can’t be saved by grace. We can, and we have been, if we’ve trusted the gospel.

We have a means of judging by faith and grace that angels can never have. They could judge God’s law because they had to obey God too, but they can’t be saved by grace through faith like us. We’re able to judge things they can’t.

Philippians 1:9-10 says,

And this I pray, that your love may abound still more and more in knowledge and all discernment (the king James has that as Judgement), that you may approve the things that are excellent, that you may be sincere and without offense till the day of Christ, 

Paul says he prays that their love would abound in knowledge and in judgment.

Okay, so again, we’re seeing here that those that judge are simply people who have access to truth.

As we saw in Romans 1:18,

For the wrath of God is revealed from heaven against all ungodliness and unrighteousness of men, who suppress the truth in unrighteousness, 

See, they have the truth, but they’re not judging righteously according to it. They have the truth. They’ve heard the gospel. They’ve heard the lessons of the law, and yet they’re not judging themselves as being guilty of it. This is a problem.

Our opening verse in Romans 2 (Romans 2:1), says,

Therefore you are inexcusable, O man, whoever you are who judge, for in whatever you judge another you condemn yourself; for you who judge practice the same things. 

This is the same thing that Jesus taught in Matthew 7:1 where Jesus says,

Judge not, that you be not judged.

Oh good we say, so that means that if I just don’t judge anybody else, God won’t judge me?

Unfortunately, No, that’s not what Jesus is saying here. We need to read on.

Matthew 7:2.

For with what judgment you judge, you will be judged; and with the measure you use, it will be measured back to you.

He’s saying that the judgment that’ll be applied to us is equal the judgment that’ll be applied to every person.

So, if we’re going to stand in judgment, we’d better be sure that the same standard we’re holding someone else to is the standard we’re holding ourself to.

That’s what that means. Otherwise, don’t be a hypocrite. That’s what Jesus is saying. He’s not saying, ‘Don’t judge.’ He’s saying, ‘Don’t be a hypocritical person by judging someone else but not yourself.’

Now, what if we judge ourselves by the same standard as someone else? Is that hypocrisy? No way!

So if I hold you to the standard of God’s perfect holy law, and myself to the standard of God’s perfect holy law, the conclusion is that we’re both sinners. Is that hypocritical? No!

It’s only hypocritical if I say I’m keeping the standard of God’s holy law and you’re not.

If I say, “I’m a sinner and you’re a sinner and we’re both held to that same standard.’ You don’t remove the standard because Jesus said, ‘Don’t judge.’ No, he’s saying that judgment is equal.

Matthew 7:3

And why do you look at the speck in your brother’s eye, but do not consider the plank in your own eye? 

See, that’s the hypocrisy. We’re saying, ‘You’ve got a problem.’ But do we also have that problem? Because if we do, maybe we should see to that first before we see someone else’s problem.

It’s much easier to see someone else’s problem than our own. That’s sinful flesh. It’s easy to criticise other people but it’s hard to look in the mirror.

That’s what Jesus is saying. He’s not saying, “Forget about that. There’s no standard here”. That’s not what he’s teaching.

Matthew 7:5,

Hypocrite! First remove the plank from your own eye, and then you will see clearly to remove the speck from your brother’s eye. 

He’s got a little speck in his eye, but I’ve got a plank in mine!

Does Jesus say that we shouldn’t judge anybody, but we should be loving to everybody and never hold anyone to any standard?

No! That’s not His teaching.

He says, ‘ First remove the plank from your own eye.’ He’s not saying something impossible here. He’s not saying, ‘We know this is impossible, so just don’t worry about it.’

He says, “Remove the plank from your own eye then you’ll see clearly to remove the speck from your brother’s eye.

Once we’ve dealt with the problem that’s bigger in ourselves, then we can know how to deal with a smaller problem in someone else. That’s what Jesus is saying and that’s righteous judgment.

So, if you’re a judge in a court, you’d better know the law and you’d better not be breaking it yourself, or you don’t deserve to be on the court. That’s hypocrisy.

This is what Paul’s saying in Romans 2:1. He’s not saying there’s not going to be a judgment of anybody. He’s saying, ‘Look, you’re without excuse because the standard by which you’re judging other people is the same standard for you and you don’t look so pretty.’

He’s leaving no one with an excuse, even those who claim to be sitting on the judgment seats.

When we say, “I’m not a hypocrite like those people.” Well, we’re saying we’ve got no sins in ourselves.

We’re preaching our own self-righteousness. But if we try to hold others to a standard and we don’t hold ourselves to it, it’s hypocrisy.

We in the church shouldn’t be hypocrites.

How do we do that?

When we get saved do we you stop sinning?

Some Christians think yes, but that’s not true.

Paul himself experiences this, and we can pick up his desperation in Romans 7:14-25 which we’ve looked at a number of times,

For we know that the law is spiritual, but I am carnal, sold under sin. 

For what I am doing, I do not understand. For what I will to do, that I do not practice; but what I hate, that I do. 

If, then, I do what I will not to do, I agree with the law that it is good. 

But now, it is no longer I who do it, but sin that dwells in me. 

For I know that in me (that is, in my flesh) nothing good dwells; for to will is present with me, but how to perform what is good I do not find. 

For the good that I will to do, I do not do; but the evil I will not to do, that I practice. 

Now if I do what I will not to do, it is no longer I who do it, but sin that dwells in me. 

I find then a law, that evil is present with me, the one who wills to do good. 

For I delight in the law of God according to the inward man. 

But I see another law in my members, warring against the law of my mind, and bringing me into captivity to the law of sin which is in my members. 

O wretched man that I am! Who will deliver me from this body of death? 

I thank God—through Jesus Christ our Lord! So then, with the mind I myself serve the law of God, but with the flesh the law of sin. 

We become a Christian by God’s grace through faith. And so, becoming a Christians or being part of church, the body of Christ, doesn’t mean that there’s no sin anymore and therefore we can judge everyone else who has sin in their life.

We’re saying we’ve been saved by grace through faith from our sins by Jesus Christ. We’ve been condemned sinners, and we’ve received forgiveness and you can receive it too.

The problem is that first you’ve got to know that you’re the sinner and that it’s impossible to save yourself. Most people think they’re not sinners until they learned that they are and we’re the same.

So we can still condemn sins. So long as we include our own selves in that condemnation.

So it’s not that it’s just wrong for you and not for me—that would be hypocrisy.

Paul here in Romans 2 is talking about those that judge being inexcusable, and he himself was in their shoes.

He was slaughtering Christians, assaulting and imprisoning believing men, woman and children.

He was convinced he was doing God’s service. Then Christ appeared, and he thinks, ‘I’m done for. I’m guilty.’

Paul thought he was doing right, and he was wrong, very wrong, and Christ pointed it out to him. But he was one that was judging other people, bringing them to judgment, taking them captive, bringing them back to Jerusalem to judge and he was absolutely inexcusable for doing it.

In Acts 21:27 Paul is in Jerusalem and the Jews wanted to kill him so they stirred up the people, again because they thought they were doing God’s will. They told the people that this is the man teaches all men everywhere against the people, or the Jews, the law, and this place, the temple, and furthermore he also brought Greeks into the temple and has defiled this holy place.”

Paul is arrested by the Roman guard as a result of the uproar, but he asks the commander of the garrison if he can speak to the people. The commander agrees.

So, he’s in the courthouse of public opinion here, and there’re unbelieving Jews bringing a charge against him, and he’s starting his defense, saying in Acts 22:3,

I am indeed a Jew, born in Tarsus of Cilicia, but brought up in this city at the feet of Gamaliel, taught according to the strictness of our fathers’ law, and was zealous toward God as you all are today. 

He was doing wrong but he thought he was doing right.

When he says in Romans 2:1, Therefore you are inexcusable, you can hear him speaking from his own experience. Just like you’re zealous to judge wrong, I was zealous to judge wrong. I thought I was punishing those people for blasphemy, and I was wrong. I was doing what I was blaming them for doing. It was me who was blaspheming God by denying the Lord Jesus Christ.

Now Romans 2:2,

But we know that the judgment of God is according to truth against those who practice such things. 

We hear Paul speaking through his own experience here. He knew God was right and He was a righteous judge. Paul wasn’t somebody going off sinning because he thought sin was good or something.

He knew sin was wrong, but he thought they, the Christians were sinning. He was wrong. He says here we know there is the judgment of God and it’s certain, and God is righteous and will judge according to the truth.

Today’s Christian often thinks that if God is love, so much so that maybe he doesn’t judge at all. Maybe there’s no judge. Maybe everyone’s saved. Maybe there’s no hell. Maybe there’s no consequences of sin.

It’s this love all the time, and most people distort the meaning of it.

He’s talking here about those who know there’s something to judge, who know there’s right and wrong, who know there’s sin, who know there’s justice that needs to judge that sin. Paul says, ‘We are sure about the judgment of God.’ Every time we make a judgment about the rightness or wrongness of someone we’re declaring that there is a righteous standard by which we’re held to.

Because of that we’re sure of the judgment of God. We’re certain of it and from the creation man has been because all know that God is righteous.

Notice again Romans 1:18 that they’re holding the truth in unrighteousness. The judgment of God is against them who suppress the truth in unrighteousness.

It doesn’t say, ‘God’s judgment is against such things.’ It says, ‘Against them which commit such things.’

God’s not against people. He’s for people. He wants all people to be saved according to 1 Timothy 2:4,

who (God) desires all men to be saved and to come to the knowledge of the truth. 

But if a person’s not saved, His righteous judgment is against that person.

We’ve got to keep reminding ourselves that these passages in Romans have not yet come to the answer for judgement, God’s salvation of grace through Christ’s shed blood. If we don’t we can easily fall into condemnation and this’s why it’s so important to have the whole counsel of God as Paul says in Acts 20:27.

Romans 2:3

And do you think this, O man, you who judge those practicing such things, and doing the same, that you will escape the judgment of God? 

Paul asks two questions here of the judge.

Again, we’re talking here to unbelievers, as we’ll see in a moment. But remember this is our own thinking, before we were brought to the knowledge and guilt of our own sins and our need for the Savior, Jesus Christ.

Romans 2:4

Or do you despise the riches of His goodness, forbearance, and longsuffering, not knowing that the goodness of God leads you to repentance? 

You see the questions he’s raising here in verses 2 and 3? These aren’t the only two positions people take when they’re not saved.

They’ll think God’s not going to judge or worse, that there is no judge.

Even if He did judge they can just say, “Well, God, you didn’t say it good enough or clear enough or loud enough. I have an excuse,” or “I haven’t done things that bad, and I have more good than bad. They think they can convince God and persuade Him that they were good and righteous.

They’ll ask, “Why hasn’t God judged already? If He’s going to judge, then why doesn’t He judge this and that? If God’s such a righteous judge, why does He allow sin to continue? Why does God not judge the world now? Why doesn’t He send another flood or send a fireball to consume all the sinners?”

Because He wants all of them saved. He’s displaying His goodness in long-suffering and forbearance, bearing the offense of their sin so that they might repent and believe and be saved.

And yet they despise that forbearance by saying, “If you’re so righteous, God, why don’t you intervene?”

You see, those are the positions that people take as unbelievers: either God’s not going to judge at all, or He’s unrighteous to forbear and be long-suffering. Neither one is true or accurate.

Everyone will be judged and judged by the same standard. It doesn’t matter who you are or what you have. That’s Paul’s answer.

Repentance in the Bible is defined as a change of mind it is not defined as us stopping our sin.

It’s used like that over and over again where Christians get the gospel wrong and they say you should stop sinning before you get saved.

That’s not that when you enter the church you’ve got to stop your sin.

That’s impossible!

That’s a works based religion.

Repentance is what Romans 1 and 2 is doing.

It’s saying I’m wrong and I’m guilty and I’m in for God’s fearful judgment, so I repent by changing my mind about the wrongness of my sin and the rightness of God’s judgement.

Repentance itself doesn’t save us. It can’t because that’s just us changing our mind about what we do that’s wrong.

I now feel guilty and regret about that. So I learn the truth of God’s will. The truth of the gospel. I hate to think of how many years I didn’t know that.

Maybe I didn’t repent so I’m not saved.  No, repentance is that feeling of wrongness. Habits die hard sometimes, and repentance is not getting it right now.

It’s the changing of our mind to know what’s right and that starts

with knowing our own sin and our own failure and that God is true.

Romans 2:5-6

But in accordance with your hardness and your impenitent heart you are treasuring up for yourself wrath in the day of wrath and revelation of the righteous judgment of God, who “WILL RENDER TO EACH ONE ACCORDING TO HIS DEEDS”:

But the judgment of wrath is due to their impenitence.

Do you see that? False repentance. Is that wrath because of the deeds being done, the works?

No, it’s because of a failure to change the thinking because of a hardened heart and a failure to change the mind.

It’s simply failing to acknowledge that we’re wrong and God’s right.

Paul pictures here the hardened and unrepentant sinners treasuring up judgment for themselves, as if they were building up a fortune of gold and silver. But it’s a fortune that nobody will want in the day when God’s wrath is finally revealed at the judgment of the Great White Throne (Revelation 20:11-15)!

Because of that hardened, unrepenting heart that convinces them of their own righteousness they will need to face judgement for their deeds and works.

In that day the judgment of God will be seen to be absolutely righteous, without prejudice or injustice of any kind.

This is an unbeliever here.

That’s a heart that’s not soft enough to know its own sin and doesn’t repent and regret for what it’s done or thought.

But there’s a root cause for that and it’s back in Romans 1:21.

because, although they knew God, they did not glorify Him as God, nor were thankful, but became futile in their thoughts, and their foolish hearts were darkened. Then they profess themselves to be wise—and that’s when they become fools.

They start changing the glory of God.

So, there’s this big problem.

Yes, they did wrong—we all did wrong—but the issue is their heart. When people have done wrong and they repent toward God, God has always been merciful to save. These people are not repentant—they’re impenitent!

If believers are judged according to their works, what will be the outcome? Certainly they cannot present any good works by which they might earn or deserve salvation.

All their works before salvation were sinful and as like filthy rags as Isaiah 64:6 says,

But we are all as an unclean thing, and all our righteousnesses are as filthy rags;

But the blood of Christ has wiped out the past. Now God Himself cannot find any charge against those who’ve trusted in the gospel of salvation for which to sentence them to hell.

Once they are saved, they begin to practice good works—not necessarily good works in the world’s eyes, but good works as God sees them.

Their good works are the result of salvation, not in order receive salvation.

At the Judgment Seat of Christ, the first judgement at which only believers will be present, their works will be reviewed, and they will be rewarded for all faithful service.

We must constantly remember that this passage does not deal with believers—only with the ungodly.

Romans 1:28-32 – When God Gave Them Up

We’re going to finish Romans chapter 1 in this episode and sum up what it says.
It’s vital to understand this chapter as it sets the scene for the rest of Romans but not only that, it defines the state of mankind without God when we study the whole chapter verse by verse we overcome many fixed opinions that people have through studying only cherry picked verses in the chapter.

“Speed Slider”

Romans 1:28-32 – Transcript

We ended the last episode with Romans 1:28 but we extended the study out to include verses 28 to 32 because these verses are all in the same context.
This chapter deals with the fact that mankind is without excuse because God has revealed Himself.
In verse 16 (Romans 1:16) God was revealed through the gospel of Christ which is the power of God to salvation.
Then in verse 17 (Romans 1:17) we see that the righteousness of God is revealed from “faith to faith” through the scriptures, scripture like Habakkuk 2:4.

Then in verses 18 the wrath of God is revealed from heaven.

Then through verses 19 to 20 God’s revealed through the conscience because His invisible attributes are clearly seen, being understood by the things that are made, even His eternal power and Godhead, so that man is without excuse.

From verse 21 (Romans 1:21) we see the pitiful fall of humanity because even though they knew God they weren’t grateful to Him and wouldn’t glorify him as God. See they knew He was here, that He existed and that they couldn’t do as much as draw a single breath without Him but, they rejected Him. The natural result of that was that became futile in their thoughts, the Kings James says, “vain in their imaginations”, and their foolish hearts were darkened.

This state they’ve fallen into makes them profess to be wise, but the reality was that they became fools, Romans 1:22 says.

Then Romans 1:23 tells us that in that state of foolishness they changed the glory of the incorruptible God into an image made like corruptible man—and birds and four-footed animals and creeping things.

Then Romans 1:24-25 tells us that because they exchanged the truth of God for the lie, and worshiped and served the creature rather than the Creator the result was that God also gave them up, just as they’d given God up. That resulted in them living in uncleanness, in the lusts of their hearts, to dishonour their bodies among themselves.

Then from Romans 1:26-27 it was almost as if God’s making sure we know why this happened when again the words are “For this reason”. What reason?

Because they exchanged the truth of God for the lie, and worshiped and served the creature rather than the Creator. For this reason God gave them up to vile passions. These are the passions and affections that were the result of God’s giving them over.

For even their women exchanged the natural use for what is against nature. 

Likewise also the men, leaving the natural use of the woman, burned in their lust for one another, men with men committing what is shameful, and receiving in themselves the penalty of their error which was due. 

There’s no way to soft soap these verses. They say what they say.

For this same reason God gave people up to erotic activity with members of their own sex.

We should remember that God revealed to mankind, through the law, just what His standard is when it comes to the practice of homosexuality.

Leviticus 20:13

If a man lies with a male as he lies with a woman, both of them have committed an abomination. They shall surely be put to death. Their blood shall be upon them. 

Thank God that today we can use the law to discern God’s standard of righteousness, but Christ has redeemed us from the curse of the law, having become a curse for us (Galatians 3:13).

Both men and women turned against their natural functions and from the marriage relationship ordained by God, and instead, and because God had given them over, they burned with lust for others of the same sex.

In the last sentence of verse 27 we see this addition, “receiving in themselves the penalty of their error which was due.”

What is this referring to?

Well remember last episode we pointed out that Paul uses the pronouns “them” and “they” when categorising who these people were, or are.

They and them are the members of humanity from creation until Paul writes this letter to the Romans.

Included in that history we see the judgement of God in the destruction and complete annihilation of the cities that were riddled with homosexuality, Sodom and Gomorrah, in Genesis 19.

They certainly received quote “the penalty of their error”. Back then God judged harshly but according to His righteousness. We see this in the flood and in the destruction of these cities and many other places in the Old Testament.

When Paul’s writing this letter to the Romans he’s in Corinth. Corinth was a bustling and diverse city, known for its wealth and trade, and, because it was a major hub for commerce between Europe and Asia it had a vibrant cultural mix.

But Corinth was also home to numerous temples, and many manmade gods including;

  • Aphrodite, the goddess of love and beauty.
  • Apollo, the god of music, prophecy, and healing.
  • Poseidon, the god of the sea
  • Athena, the goddess of wisdom and warfare.
  • Hera, the queen of the gods, often associated with marriage and family

The temple dedicated to Aphrodite, the goddess of love, was infamous for its temple prostitution.

Corinth was materially very prosperous, but morally corrupt. Even in the pagan world the city was known for its moral corruption. “Corinth” came to imply to live in debauchery.

Corinth was a perfect picture of Romans 1:21,

because, although they knew God, they did not glorify Him as God, nor were thankful, but became futile in their thoughts, and their foolish hearts were darkened.

For this reason God gave them up to vile passions.

Where did those vile passions come from? Not from God!

We saw in verse 28 (Romans 1:28),

And even as they did not like to retain God in their knowledge, God gave them over to a debased (or reprobate) mind,

See how it was their mind, their thinking, that was debased.

Verse 21 reveals that they became futile in their thoughts, and their foolish hearts were darkened. Why? Because even as they did not like to retain God in their knowledge.

Retain means to have hold of, to hold as a possession of the mind.

They knew God. They knew He existed and was the creator of all things, yet they didn’t hold Him in their knowledge. They disregarded the knowledge of Him.

The mind of man is not a vacuum. It’s never empty. If it’s not filled with one thing it’s filled with another. The debased and reprobate mind was what took the place of the knowledge of God because, without the knowledge of God there, the only thing that could take its place was their own thoughts of the heart.

And, back in Genesis 6:5 we see what that was;

Then the LORD saw that the wickedness of man was great in the earth, and that every intent of the thoughts of his heart was only evil continually. 

God simply gave them up to those thoughts and their state of heart. He just let them do what they wanted to do.

Just quickly, In verse 28 the word used to describe the state of mind of these people is “debased” in the NKJV and reprobate in the KJV.

Although these words are related they’re not the same.

Debased describes someone that’s been lowered in quality, character, or value. It’s a degradation or a loss of integrity, often due to corruption or immoral behaviour.

Reprobate refers to a person who’s morally corrupt, unprincipled, or beyond hope of redemption. It also implies rejection by God.

“Reprobate” tends to label the person or their state of being, while “debased” focuses on the result of falling from a higher standard.

The outworking, the physical result of that state of mind was what’s defined in the rest of the verse,

to do those things which are not fitting; being filled with all unrighteousness, sexual immorality, wickedness, covetousness, maliciousness; full of envy, murder, strife, deceit, evil-mindedness; they are whisperers, backbiters, haters of God, violent, proud, boasters, inventors of evil things, disobedient to parents, undiscerning, untrustworthy, unloving, unforgiving, unmerciful; who, knowing the righteous judgment of God, that those who practice such things are deserving of death, not only do the same but also approve of those who practice them. 

This is humanity in freefall!

Now here’s the vital aspect of all this. When God “gave them over” to their debased, reprobate minds did He say that they were beyond redemption?

No!

This is what the whole book of Romans is about. This is the whole point of the dispensation of grace that God dispensed on the world through the apostle Paul, that mankind, for the moment, is under grace and is not condemned to death by the law that condemns these practices.

As Christians we avoid those practices but when we do fall we have a mediator between us and God, Jesus Christ who has already paid the price for those sins.

The law no longer determines our eternal state, our faith does. Our faith in the finished work by Jesus Christ on the cross, his burial and resurrection, or the gospel, is what saves us, not the law.

Likewise, our rejection of that gospel puts us right back under the law where condemnation for our works is very real.

Thank God for Romans 8:1-2;

There is therefore now no condemnation to those who are in Christ Jesus, who do not walk according to the flesh, but according to the Spirit. 

For the law of the Spirit of life in Christ Jesus has made me free from the law of sin and death. 

And thank God for the Words He spoke in John 10:10;

…I have come that they may have life, and that they may have it more abundantly. 

And thank God for John 3:17

For God sent not his Son into the world to condemn the world; but that the world through him might be saved.

Christians, the members of the Body of Christ, those saved by faith in the gospel of salvation, often forget where we came from, that we were once these people that Romans describes.

We frown on the ones carrying out the acts that Romans 1:26-32 describes without remembering that we ourselves either did or were capable of doing every act described and, in fact, we actually still are.

The body of Christ is made up of exactly the ones who practiced these things. Remember what Jesus said about breaking even one law in the sermon on the mount In Matthew 5, and James 2:10,

For whoever shall keep the whole law, and yet stumble in one point, he is guilty of all. 

1 Corinthians 6:9-11 makes this plain,

Do you not know that the unrighteous will not inherit the kingdom of God? Do not be deceived. Neither fornicators, nor idolaters, nor adulterers, nor homosexuals, nor sodomites, nor thieves, nor covetous, nor drunkards, nor revilers, nor extortioners will inherit the kingdom of God. 

And verse 11 is the kicker,

And such were some of you. But you were washed, but you were sanctified, but you were justified in the name of the Lord Jesus and by the Spirit of our God. 

Now just another quick sidebar.

“The unrighteous will not inherit the kingdom of God” does not mean the kingdom of God on earth, which belongs to Israel and the earthly nations.

This is the kingdom of God universal. God’s dominion is not limited to the jurisdiction of the earth, but includes the rest of the universe, what the Bible calls heaven.

Part of the mystery of God’s will, revealed to Paul, was how all things would be gathered together in one in Christ, and we see that in Ephesians 1:9-10,

…having made known to us the mystery of His will, according to His good pleasure which He purposed in Himself, that in the dispensation of the fullness of the times He might gather together in one all things in Christ, both which are in heaven and which are on earth—in Him. 

Ephesians 5:8-10 confirms this further,

For you were once darkness, but now you are light in the Lord. Walk as children of light (for the fruit of the Spirit is in all goodness, righteousness, and truth), finding out what is acceptable to the Lord.

That darkness spoken of here is the darkened heart and the debased mind in Romans. That’s what we were too, but now we’re light in the Lord.

It’s our duty now to find out what is acceptable to God and walk as children of light.

Now how did we become the light in the Lord?

It’s by the Glorious light of the Gospel of the grace of God that we trusted in.

Christ saved us by grace through faith. It’s not that we turned our life around or we saw the light or somehow we’ve made ourselves shiny and washed our robes or something. No! God saved us by grace and now we’re children of light and we’re to walk in that light.

What does that look like?

Simply that we keep in mind, moment by moment, who we really are now that we’ve believed. It’s doing the opposite to the folks previously described. It’s retaining, or holding on to the knowledge of God.

We’re saved, we have eternal life and an eternal home and every circumstance we face in this life is temporary and we can live through it because of our eternal hope, the blessed hope as Titus 2:13 says,

…looking for the blessed hope and glorious appearing of our great God and Savior Jesus Christ

“Looking for the blessed hope”—this is the next happening in the program of God: Christ is coming to take His church out of this world.

So, in verse 28 (Romans 1:28), we see that the effect of not retaining God in their knowledge was that God simply let mankind do what their hearts wanted to do, to act out what now filled their hearts, that were darkened, and their minds, that were debased and reprobate, because they disregarded Him, even though they Knew Him as God.

This throws a light on the subject of why God sends people to hell.

People say, “That sounds like a very hateful and evil thing to do. Why doesn’t God just show more love and kindness?”

These are questions many Christians recoil at because they’re not sure how to answer.

Well, in Romans 5:8 we see,

But God demonstrates His own love toward us, in that while we were still sinners, Christ died for us. 

He shows His love in that, from the creation of the world, He’s been long suffering, meaning patient and persevering.

He demonstrates His love in that He revealed Himself to mankind who didn’t deserve to know God—but He did anyway. He’s always done that. But mankind rejects that knowledge. They don’t want to retain God in their knowledge.

So why does God send people to hell? Well, why does a judge send people to prison? Because people transgress the laws that everyone should know? They did something that was contrary to what’s good and right. Same reason.

In God’s case mankind doesn’t even enter a plea of guilty or not guilty. Instead they question His authority. But a just and righteous judge cannot let the guilty go unpunished or He’d be corrupt and unrighteous.

So, God gave them over.

He didn’t push them down into the fiery pit. He gave them over from His gracious provision and longsuffering to their own desired destruction.

God is good. We are not. God is good for us. He’s what we need and that’s the truth of it. And doing what’s contrary to our good is what characterises sin.

Even as Christians, we realise this.

Sin is present within us. We trust the Gospel to save us from the penalty of our sin, and the power of sin to condemn us. But sin is still present in each one of us. We see that same struggle in Paul himself in Romans 7:18-25,

For I know that in me (that is, in my flesh) nothing good dwells; for to will is present with me, but how to perform what is good I do not find. 

For the good that I will to do, I do not do; but the evil I will not do, that I practice. 

Now if I do what I will not to do, it is no longer I who do it, but sin that dwells in me. 

I find then a law, that evil is present with me, the one who wills to do good. 

For I delight in the law of God according to the inward man. 

But I see another law in my members, warring against the law of my mind, and bringing me into captivity to the law of sin which is in my members. 

O wretched man that I am! Who will deliver me from this body of death? 

I thank God—through Jesus Christ our Lord! So then, with the mind I myself serve the law of God, but with the flesh the law of sin. 

So, like Paul our mind has been changed to recognise that God is good, His law is good, and we want the good now.

Just like Paul I don’t want to be in sin. I don’t want to do wrong. I want to do right. But I don’t.

Now, why in the world don’t I do good when I want to do good?

I want to be disciplined. I want to be peaceful. I want to be loving to my neighbour. I want to be joyful, and be patient, longsuffering. I want to be kind and charitable. I want this.

If we say we want this then at least we know what’s good, which means maybe we know God, because that’s the definition of what God would want.

But do we do this as Christians?

Sometimes we don’t desire that good, but in other times, we want to do good, and yet we do what’s wrong. Why?

Because sin is still present with us while we’re here in this world and we can’t escape its presence and that’s why we do what’s opposed to our good, which is defined by God. God is all good and He tells us that.

So this is where Romans 1:28 is leaving humanity at, to do those things that’re not convenient because they desire to do them and they’re going to lead to destruction because they’re not natural, the way God made us to operate in this world. It’s contrary to nature itself, it’s contrary to Him, it’s contrary to our own creation. But we desire to do them.

Romans 1:29 goes on to describe the things that are not convenient: “Being filled with all unrighteousness, fornication, and wickedness…”

He goes on to describe 25 things that people are filled with after having been given over to a debased and reprobate mind.

Now, this is not the new standard of righteousness such as here’s the laws and don’t break them. This is a description of debased humanity.

This becomes frightfully personal as we read this list of 25 things because we, recognise them in ourselves.

Thank God for His grace.

Without Christ retained in our knowledge, we’re reprobate and debased in our thinking, and we’re given over to these things. But we’ve been given salvation by God’s grace through faith in Christ Jesus.

Notice the first three words in Romans 1:29, are “Being filled with.”

It’s not that these reprobates—which is all humanity with no exception, it’s not that they do a little bit of wrong.

It’s not like they’re generally good, but we’ve all got some imperfections, some of us more than others.

Paul says, “Being filled with…” which is pretty hard to swallow. It makes our flesh jump up and say, “Wait a minute! I’m not filled with it. I mean, before I was saved, I wasn’t filled with all of this stuff.”

Yes, we were! We were totally corrupt and reprobate.

People want to convince themselves that, “I wasn’t that bad. I mean, compared to other people…”

Wait! We can’t do that. We can’t compare ourselves to other people! We compare ourselves to God’s standard of righteousness and when we do we have to admit that there’s nothing in this list we’re not capable of.

Were we thanking God and glorifying Him before we were saved?

Now, this list of sins here wasn’t why God gave them up!

In Romans 1:24, He gave them up because they didn’t retain Him in their knowledge and glorify Him as God or thank Him. It wasn’t because of these 25 things.

In the Garden of Eden, Adam sinned, bringing death into the world. And still, God provided clothes and a sacrifice for him, didn’t He? He provided protection for Cain, after he murdered his brother Able. So God’s graciously providing things, even in the midst of people’s sins.

The sins themselves—though they’re the problem for us—are not necessarily a problem for God, because God knows that Christ will die for sins, and He’s gracious to forgive sins and merciful. And yet, we have this list—a description of what sin looks like.

God can deal with the sin, but He can’t deal with us not recognising that sin in us and not acknowledging and recognising that He is God, and that He has provided the solution for us.

So when God shows His grace and mercy and reveals Himself, and we say, “I’m not listening! I don’t want it! I’m glad you saved me, and You’re not pouring wrath on me at the moment, but I’m not going to acknowledge that and be grateful for it…”

You know, not being thankful for salvation, rejecting it entirely—this is what this breeds: the lack of gratitude, the lack of glorifying God as God. It gets worse and worse. And this is the final description of it.

The bible makes it crystal clear that there’s none righteous, no, not one, There’s none that does good or seeks after God (Romans 3:10-11).  God had to run after us, we weren’t running after Him.

Through His Word and by His Spirit is how we get saved.

We must see ourselves as God sees us through Genesis 6:5 if we’re to see the need for a saviour. Genesis 6:5:

Then the LORD saw that the wickedness of man was great in the earth, and that every intent of the thoughts of his heart was only evil continually. 

That sounds pretty bad.

We say surely that can’t be like today. That’s pre-Flood! Those folk were terribly wicked, not like us today; we’re a lot better now.

But that’s what the Bible describes, even today. Reprobate and debased humanity has continued, even post-Flood.

But didn’t He kill all those depraved people in the Flood, and Noah, after that, was the most righteous, and we come from him.

No. We see the same decline as in Romans 1.

We see it in Israel. We see it in the Gentiles. We see it in every civilization, and we see it in ourselves.

It wasn’t just that, they did some bad things and made some mistakes.

It was that every imagination of the thoughts of their heart was only evil continually. Why? Because they didn’t like to retain God in their knowledge.

In this dispensation, the dispensation of grace that we live in today, God is not judging the world.

So, what’s going to happen?

Things will get worse and worse among people. They’ll cry out on the one hand saying, “God’s hateful for judging!” And, on the other hand, “Why doesn’t He judge?”

Because judgment hasn’t come on the world in this dispensation of grace, people mock God saying, “I can do what I want! Look, He doesn’t do anything!” No, because He’s offering grace today. But that will change.

So, this section of Romans 1 is proving that all are sinners, that we’re without excuse before God, that judgment is just, and that the wrath of God is revealed upon all who hold the truth in unrighteousness.

It’s not simply to condemn, it’s to show that salvation is needed, and this is the purpose of these passages. They teach the reality that natural man is wicked and reprobate and that we need God and His grace and they’re intended to lead us to that grace.

They show us the need to cry out to God, saying, “God, if I’m going to be saved, You’ve got to do it.”

First on this awful list in Romans 1:29-32 is unrighteousness. “Being filled with all unrighteousness…” It’s fitting that this is the first on the list, because this was the problem with man’s rejection God. That’s not a right thing to do and that’s what “unrighteousness” means—it’s doing something wrong.

“Righteousness,” simply means doing what’s right.

Of course, Paul says in Romans 3:10

As it is written: “THERE IS NONE RIGHTEOUS, NO, NOT ONE;

He quotes Psalm 14:3 when he says, “There’s none righteous,”

David says in Psalm 14:1-3

The fool has said in his heart, “There is no God.” They are corrupt, They have done abominable works, There is none who does good. 

The LORD looks down from heaven upon the children of men, To see if there are any who understand, who seek God. 

They have all turned aside, They have together become corrupt; There is none who does good, No, not one. 

“The fool has said in his heart, ‘There is no God.’”

The result is that they declare themselves wise, but become fools.

God didn’t find any that were good. There was Noah back there with the flood, and Noah found grace in the eyes of the Lord, but He didn’t say Noah was the only perfect man there.

No, he found grace in the eyes of the Lord. No doubt because Noah was pleading for mercy, but he wasn’t a perfect man, either.

Number two on the list is sexual immorality. The King James calls it fornication.

People don’t think fornication is a real thing anymore but who can deny the existence of sexual immorality?

Fornication or sexual immorality simply means disregarding God’s order for things and the idea of commitment to another person.

It’s a rampant sin because we’re all confronted with it, that desire for some of the acts of marriage without the spiritual or the lifetime commitment, or being in subjection to God’s order and righteousness.  In other words, we all lust. That’s sexual immorality or fornication.

1 Thessalonians 4:3 is one of those verses that’s very clear about God’s will.  For this is the will of God, your sanctification: that you should abstain from sexual immorality;

And so, if you’re wondering, “What’s God’s will for me?” Well, there’s one right here, and it’s very clear. Our sanctification.

Now, Christ is our sanctification. What’s sanctification?

1 Corinthians 1:30,

But of Him you are in Christ Jesus, who became for us wisdom from God—and righteousness and sanctification and redemption…

It’s not simply us living our best and most holy life. That’s not what it is at all. Sanctification has to do with a position. It has to do with you being set apart for God’s purpose. All humanity was set apart for God’s purpose until they rejected Him and chose their own purpose.

So we took that sidebar to see how sanctification and abstaining from sexual immorality are closely linked.

Wicked is next. What is wickedness?

Wickedness is to be crooked and corrupt. If right is what’s straight, wickedness is what’s crooked, it’s bent, it doesn’t work right.

2 Thessalonians 2:8, talks about the Lord coming back and destroying him who’s coming after the working of Satan, the antichrist.  What name is he called?

And then the lawless one (the King James calls him “That Wicked”)

will be revealed, whom the Lord will consume with the breath of His mouth and destroy with the brightness of His coming. 

Why is he called “That Wicked, The lawless one”?

He declared himself to be God, and he wasn’t. That’s an antichrist, a corrupt Christ. That’s wicked. That’s why he’s given the name, “That Wicked.” Which means the lawless one.

Covetousness is next on the list which Colossians 3:5 calls idolatry.

Once again, a lot of these sins are resulting from idolatry, which is why that’s the first commandment in Exodus 20:3-4, God speaking,

You shall have no other gods before Me. You shall not make for yourself a carved image—any likeness of anything that is in heaven above, or that is in the earth beneath, or that is in the water under the earth;

We’ve seen at length in Romans 1: “They didn’t glorify Him as God.” They changed the image of God. That’s idolatry, and that led to these sins.

Colossians 3:5 says,

Therefore put to death your members which are on the earth: fornication, uncleanness, passion, evil desire, and covetousness, which is idolatry. 

See that? That’s how you get that fornication definition as well. It’s the result of idolatry. It’s the craving, the desire to obtain something contrary to God.

Paul also uses the word “covet” in a good way

1 Corinthians 12:31 says

But earnestly desire the best gifts (the King James renders the word “covet”).

To Covet means to desire or to crave after something.

Maliciousness is next on the list.

While forgiveness is to not seek ill will towards someone, maliciousness is the opposite. Thayer’s concordance has it as meaning, among other things, wickedness that is not ashamed to break laws and a desire to injure.

Maliciousness is the idea that “I’m going to be your enemy.”

In Titus 3:2-3 we read,

to speak evil of no one, to be peaceable, gentle, showing all humility to all men. For we ourselves were also once foolish, disobedient, deceived, serving various lusts and pleasures, living in malice and envy, hateful and hating one another. 

One of the problems with reading through these lists of sins when we’re saved, is to think that we’re better now than before and better than quote, “them”. But if we don’t add, “I’m better now in Christ” then we’re wrong, because it’s only in Christ. It’s the Christ part that puts us in a better position. Otherwise, we’re still in the same flesh and in that flesh could commit these same things.

Envy is next.

Look at Proverbs 27:4

Wrath is cruel and anger a torrent, But who is able to stand before jealousy?

The King James has the word envy rather that jealousy.

Envy is jealousy on steroids.

God is jealous, and we see this many times in scripture, but God is never envious.

God’s jealous because jealousy has different definitions and usages. Jealousy is a desire for something that’s yours. And so, God is jealous over Israel when they start running away and committing fornication because, “That’s my people,” He says.

Or we’re jealous for our spouse because, “That’s my spouse,” and we don’t want anyone to hurt or take away our spouse. We’re jealous of our children. We’re protective of them and it’s a good jealousy, like God’s jealousy.

A bad jealousy is coveting what’s someone else’s. That’s a bad jealousy.

Envy probably most fits the heart of Satan now that he knows that he’s unconditionally bound for eternal destruction. Envy doesn’t care about the end. Envy says, “If I can’t have it, nobody can.”

We see envy in certain social circles that say, “Since we’re poor and not rich, nobody can be rich.” Envy, social envy, is where that comes from and it’s very dark and dangerous.

Being filled with murder is on the list.

This is where most people say, “Well, I’m not that bad. I haven’t committed murder.” But then Jesus gives the sermon on the mount and in Matthew 5:21-22 He says, “Well, if you’re angry at someone without a cause, it’s like murder. It’s like killing him in your heart.” Anger is the source of murder, of course.

Going back to Genesis chapter 9, God said, ” “Whoever sheds man’s blood, By man his blood shall be shed; For in the image of God He made man.”

Here we have capital punishment.

We justify many of our sins today because of mental health reasons. We think we can discredit and minimise God’s standard of righteousness and justify any sin by pleading the psychological and sociological teachings today.

Pride? Envy? Well, it’s just a mental illness. Your psychological profile is a little twisted.

No, it’s called sin. There are, of course, biological factors to things, but there’s also sin and even if it is biology, it’s still sin.

You say you can’t help it. You’re right, that’s exactly what the Bible says, but It doesn’t justify the action. Romans 1 says it’s because of a debased, a reprobate mind, and Romans 3 defines it in a frightful way.

Paul lists strife or debate next.

Do we stand for the truth by being argumentative, critical, quarrelsome, and always starting a verbal fight.

Maybe some humility? It is possible to make a right choice, even though sin abounds.

In Proverbs 13:10, Solomon writes,

By pride comes nothing but strife, But with the well-advised is wisdom. 

Contentions, arguments, and strife come by pride and only by pride. You can’t have two humble people fighting each other. It doesn’t work.

Deceit is next on the list, lies and deceit, and of course many books have been and still can be written about deception.

Satan is the father of lies in John 8. And we know right back in Genesis 3 he lied to Eve, and she believed and was deceived by the lie. Adam, of course, did it willingly.

Deceit is any sort of dishonesty: half-truths, white lies, omitted truths, deceptions, all which abound even more today than they have in the past just because of our technologies.

Public relations and advertising are so often built around deception. “What does it appear like? What’s the optics on this?” What does that mean? Does it appear truthful and honest.

Deceit abounds everywhere today.

Evil mindedness or malignity as the King James renders it is next.

This is hatred, anger, and a desire to destroy and to change the truth of God into a lie and preaching it as normal and true.

Whisperers are next.

This is speaking in private things that shouldn’t be spoken in private. They should either be spoken out loud or not spoken at all. So either speak up or be quiet. Whisperers are people who will talk about someone behind their back. Even if it’s true, if it were something that can be known publicly, then why not make it public?

If something’s not intended to be made public and we’re talking to people about it, it’s usually without the permission of the person who would like it to be private, or maybe it’s against that person. The reason we’re not talking to them is because we know that we’ll reap some wrath from them. We’re talking to other people to expose this thing we found, but not to that person.

In 1 Timothy 5:13, Paul talks about those who are idle, and tell tales, and go around from house to house being busybodies and gossips.

In Psalm 41:7 David says,

All who hate me whisper together against me; Against me they devise my hurt.

Proverbs 20 gives a warning:

He who goes about as a talebearer reveals secrets; Therefore do not associate with one who flatters with his lips. 

Whisperers abound in Christianity—gossip, telling secrets, spreading rumours.

If it needs to be public, then speak out. Don’t whisper about it. That’s God’s way.

Backbiters follow whisperers quite closely because, instead of just whispering things that may or may not be true, backbiters stab you in the back.

Haters of God is on the list.

This displays in any rebellion against God and his righteousness.

In Romans 8:7 Paul says that the carnal mind is enmity against God.

You can’t say you love someone without knowing who they are, what their will is, and what they desire, and participating in it.

Abusers talk like that. “I love you, even though I beat you and hit you and don’t do anything for you, never say anything nice to you. I still love you.”

That’s not how love is defined. So, we say we love God, but don’t ever do anything for him. Do we know his will? Do we say things against Him? Do we defend people over and against him? That’s hating God, and Christians do that all the time.

Violent or despiteful is next. Getting even is what this is all about. We’re not the judge to get even. There are judges God placed in society as a system of government that are supposed to seek justice, but God himself will bring justice to all.

Proud, of course, would be pretty obvious. That’s the first sin of Satan, pride and arrogance to lift himself up to be as God. As we’ve already seen in Proverbs 20, contention, strife, comes from pride.

Of course, we know pride is one of the things God hates. You know, people think, “Well, God’s a loving God. He doesn’t hate anything.” Well, there’s lots of things in the Bible God says he hates. In Proverbs 6, there are six things—seven things—that God hates and first on the list is a proud look. Pride. Romans 12:3 Paul says, “Don’t think of yourself more highly than you ought.” That’s pride.

Boasters or building yourself up over other people.

Philippians 2:3 talks about you esteeming others better than yourself. That’s a hard thing to do but it’s a grace.

Inventors of evil things.

What makes them evil?

In Jeremiah 19:5 God speaking,

…they have also built the high places of Baal, to burn their sons with fire for burnt offerings to Baal, which I did not command or speak, nor did it come into My mind…

That would be an evil invention.

Some technologies and inventions exist today for an evil end. Interestingly, the number one use of the internet today is for pornography.

It doesn’t mean these technologies and inventions are evil in themselves, it’s the evil purposes that they’re used for.

So, we have the reprobate, debased mind.

This list of 25 descriptions of sin that characterises the debased, reprobate mind that rejects God. They’re the result of professing ourselves to be wise but making ourselves fools and In Romans 1 Paul’s left no one with an excuse.

That concludes our Romans chapter 1 study.

Romans 1:25-32 – The Reprobate Mind

We’ve been discussing the condition of the world in rejecting God and His salvation and we’ve seen how they’re without excuse and Paul is setting that foundation because he’s preaching the power of God to salvation and the power of God in the gospel of Christ to the folk at Rome.

“Speed Slider”

Romans 1:25-32 – Transcript

We ended the last episode with Romans 1:25 where Paul’s describing the condition of the world as a result of them rejecting God by not glorifying Him as God or being thankful to him even though, from the beginning of the world, through creation, the invisible things of God are clearly seen.

As a result, their foolish hearts were darkened and although they professed to be wise they became fools, and they changed the glory of the incorruptible God into an image like a corruptible man and to birds and four footed beasts and creeping things.

We saw all that in Romans 1:19-25 and this is humanity in freefall.

Pauls constantly talking in the third person here, they and them, and yet we see these conditions within ourselves and the world today.

We need to understand this so that we can recognise the ditch before we fall into it, because sin still exists even for a Christian and don’t want to go down the road of degradation that man has gone down millions of times before.

In summary, instead of accepting the truth of what they knew through what God had presented to them they didn’t want God or that truth.

Instead, they changed it into a lie and worshiped the creature more than the Creator.

They used philosophy and religions of humanism which professes loving God and loving your neighbour and human flourishing above all else.

Materialism becomes a religion. What we make from matter was made by us, but of course matter was created by God.

The idea that the physical and the material and nature, Mother nature is all in all falls under serving the creature or the creation and not the Creator.

Pantheism, or the belief that God is everything was developed.

But everything was created by God and so again serving the creature not the Creator.

Every false religion Falls by this error because what they’re doing is creating a religion or creating a god that itself is a creation.

They’re worshiping what they see around them with their natural senses.

2 Timothy 3:1-9 describes the state of a God rejecting world and it’s not pleasant. It includes being lovers of pleasure more than lovers of God.

It’s not that pleasure itself is wrong though often it can be, it’s that loving it more than God makes it our god. By devoting ourselves to it we’re serving the creature more than the Creator.

In Colossians 1:15-17 we see that Jesus Christ is God and we read,

He is the image of the invisible God, the firstborn over all creation. 

For by Him all things were created that are in heaven and that are on earth, visible and invisible, whether thrones or dominions or principalities or powers. All things were created through Him and for Him. 

And He is before all things, and in Him all things consist, (or are held together by Him).

The expression firstborn over all creation has nothing to do with physical birth. It’s the same meaning as in Psalm 89:27 where God speaks of King David saying,

Also I will make him My firstborn, The highest of the kings of the earth.

And notice again verse 17, Colossians 1:17,

And He is before all things, and in Him all things consist.

That wouldn’t be true if he was the first created thing.

So we see what Paul’s saying here it’s not that the material things are bad or that nature is bad. It’s what God created.

And its not that the world and all things in it aren’t connected in some way as pantheists, but what connects every and holds everything together is God the creator of all things.

So the first step in man’s decline was to reject God and His truth even though they knew God

Romans 1: 21 says they didn’t glorify Him as God, and they weren’t grateful to Him. They rejected Him. The one consistent thing through the whole history of mankind seems to be this rejection of God by all but a small remnant.

Step two to man’s decline is to declare our own wisdom above God’s.

Then step three to man’s decline is to invent our own philosophy, our own worldview our own religion and our own object of worship, that thing we’ll devote ourselves to which is what worship means, to devote ourselves to something.

This is the summary of man’s decline from Romans 1:19-23.

All of us have done and still do these things to varying degrees when we’re ignorant of the Bible and ignorant of God’s will and we don’t know what He wants.

We think within ourselves, “I don’t know what he wants, and I don’t want to read the Bible is too hard or I’m too stupid or something.”

Then we say, “Well, then God must be speaking to me some other way, through other people’s so called prophecies or through dreams or through my circumstances and we don’t realise that we’re making that our religion.

Scripture is where we can find God’s revelation. We come to the bible, and we read.

Why? Because in my sin influenced nature I’m always capable of inventing truth and I need to know the real truth, uninfluenced by man’s distortion.

I need to determine what I need to be doing do based on what God’s saying because I’ll always go off on the wrong track on my own.

But this book will get me on and keep me on the right track. I both need and want God to get me right and keep me right. So this’s what Paul’s describing here in Romans 1:20.

We’re all without excuse because this’s what man’s done from the creation. God made us to worship or to love, adore, devote ourselves to something. That’s worship.

Reprobate, God rejecting man worships according to a religion of their own making.

Look at Psalm 106:1. How powerful this is when we look at it in the context of Romans 1, where Paul says in the beginning, from the creation, they did not thank God, they didn’t glorify Him as God.

King David starts this Psalm:

Praise the LORD! That’s, of course, Hallelujah in Hebrew.

That’s what they didn’t do from the creation. So David’s at least is on the right track.

Then he says, Oh, give thanks to the LORD, for He is good! For His mercy endures forever.

That’s good and true and right worship, understanding that the Lord’s deserving of praise and thanks and Romans 1:21 people didn’t want to do that from the beginning. The first step to decline.

Psalm 106:2

Who can utter the mighty acts of the LORD? Who can declare all His praise? Who can utter the mighty acts of the Lord? Who can show forth all his praise?

The humility of David!

Some things we can’t know because God did them by his power, and we can’t ever figure out God entirely. That’s the idea here.

Psalm 106:3-5.

Blessed are those who keep justice, And he who does righteousness at all times! 

Remember me, O LORD, with the favour You have toward Your people. Oh, visit me with Your salvation, 

That I may see the benefit of Your chosen ones, That I may rejoice in the gladness of Your nation, That I may glory with Your inheritance. 

The chosen here and the “Your nation” is, of course, the nation of Israel. They’re the elect people in the Old Testament, and even some of them died as reprobates.

“Your inheritance” is the covenants and promises given to Israel by God.

Psalm 106:6-8,

We have sinned with our fathers, We have committed iniquity, We have done wickedly. 

Our fathers in Egypt did not understand Your wonders; They did not remember the multitude of Your mercies, But rebelled by the sea—the Red Sea. 

Nevertheless He saved them for His name’s sake, That He might make His mighty power known.

Now David’s writing this Psalm here praising God, and he’s admitting sin. It’s similar to how Paul’s teaching in Romans, from the beginning, we were sinners. The “fathers” here are the fathers of Israel.

God didn’t save Israel because they were better people; He saved them because He had a purpose for them. It was for His own name. He made a promise, and He had to fulfill it. He had to keep His side of the bargain.

Psalm 106:9-12

He rebuked the Red Sea also, and it dried up; So He led them through the depths, As through the wilderness. 

He saved them from the hand of him who hated them, And redeemed them from the hand of the enemy. 

The waters covered their enemies; There was not one of them left. 

Then they believed His words; They sang His praise.

What wonders and miracles of God these people experienced. They believed God’s words after He did something to save them.

But they soon started doubting God despite that.

Psalm 106:13-20 reads,

They soon forgot His works; They did not wait for His counsel, But lusted exceedingly in the wilderness, And tested God in the desert. 

And He gave them their request, But sent leanness into their soul. 

When they envied Moses in the camp, And Aaron the saint of the LORD, The earth opened up and swallowed Dathan, And covered the faction of Abiram. 

A fire was kindled in their company; The flame burned up the wicked. 

They made a calf in Horeb, And worshiped the molten image. 

Thus they changed their glory Into the image of an ox that eats grass. 

Just as Paul writes in Romans 1.

Though they knew God and knew that He’d delivered them from Egypt, they rejected and doubted that He could save them.

There’s water in front of them and an army behind them.

What do they do?

They declare their own wisdom after they forgot that He saved them. They started pursuing after their own lust and tempted God, asking, “Why have you brought us out here?” as if He didn’t think this through.

They declared their own wisdom, invented their own religion because Moses went up the mountain. What did they do? They started worshiping a calf. “We’ve got to worship something down here, and Moses is gone. He’s abandoned us.” So they worshiped this golden calf, which was just a picture of their darkened hearts.

Romans 1 says: They changed the glory of the incorruptible God into that of a corruptible man, a four-footed beast, and all that. They changed the truth of God into a lie, right? So, there it is. They changed their glory, not God’s glory. Their glory is not the image of God anymore; it’s now the image of a golden calf.

Let’s compare gods: there’s the God, creator of the universe, full of mercy, love, justice, and holiness. Then there’s a golden calf.

They declared themselves to be wise, but they became fools. They created a whole religion there, and they didn’t do it in 5 minutes.

How did they melt the gold down? How did they collect it? Look at the organization, the priests they’d require for the mediation between this golden calf and everyone else. See, it was a whole system of thought.

Psalm 106:21-28,

They forgot God their Savior, Who had done great things in Egypt, Wondrous works in the land of Ham, Awesome things by the Red Sea. 

Therefore He said that He would destroy them, Had not Moses His chosen one stood before Him in the breach, To turn away His wrath, lest He destroy them. 

Then they despised the pleasant land; They did not believe His word, But complained in their tents, And did not heed the voice of the LORD. 

Therefore He raised His hand in an oath against them, To overthrow them in the wilderness, To overthrow their descendants among the nations, And to scatter them in the lands. 

They joined themselves also to Baal of Peor, And ate sacrifices made to the dead. 

Baal of Peor, or Baal-peor, was a god worshipped by the Moabites and Midianites. The name “Peor” refers to a mountain in Moab where this god was worshipped. Baal-peor became a symbol of apostasy and unfaithfulness to God

It’s passages like this that cause people to say you can find Jesus on every page of the Bible because you could definitely read this knowing the New Testament, and say, “Look at that, Moses is a shadow of Jesus.” And that’s for sure. It’s just that Jesus isn’t taught in Psalm 106 except by shadow.

Meanwhile, you see how reprobate man creates their own religion and worships it according to their own making. And that’s just an example of it.

Modern idolatry takes other forms such as that of philosophy.

When we are worshiping the mind and what we can know and discover through philosophy, then that becomes our God and there’s many religions like that.

Now to Romans 1:26,

For this reason God gave them up to vile passions. For even their women exchanged the natural use for what is against nature. 

Because they changed the glory of God, because they became idolaters.

It says in verse 24 (Romans 1:24):

Therefore God also gave them up to uncleanness, in the lusts of their hearts, to dishonour their bodies among themselves 

President Obama during a speech on immigration policy in Nashville on December 9, 2014, was discussing the topic of homosexuality and mentioned this passage, Romans 1:24, which he described as an obscure passage of the Bible.

He said he’d much rather follow other passages of scripture that were more loving or something.

But Romans is not an obscure passage of the Bible. Romans, as we’ve already discussed, is the very foundation of the Christian faith. Without it, we don’t have the Christian faith.

In Romans 1: 24-27, Paul is describing things that directly clash with today’s political correctness.

What he writes is not political, but people will hear this and say we’re getting political. We’re not. We’re discussing the Bible. Is what Paul’s teaching these passages right or wrong?

Well that’s obvious from the scripture, but what’s less obvious is why it’s here?

Is it just listing what’s right and wrong or is it how man fell and why men are without excuse, and how we can discern things from seeing these acts both performed and even encouraged in our society.

We just saw in Psalm 106 that God gave up on the people. Also we see Psalm 81:11 God speaking,

But My people would not heed My voice, And Israel would have none of Me. 

So I gave them over to their own stubborn heart, To walk in their own counsels. 

The king James renders it like this,

So I gave them up unto their own hearts’ lust: and they walked in their own counsels. 

Because they created their own religion, their own truth, and rejected God, He gave them over to their own darkened heart as Romans 1:21 describes.

Jesus describes the heart in Mark 7:21-23,

For from within, out of the heart of men, proceed evil thoughts, adulteries, fornications, murders, Thefts, covetousness, wickedness, deceit, lasciviousness, an evil eye, blasphemy, pride, foolishness: 

All these evil things come from within, and defile the man. 

See, what feels natural is what becomes normal in this situation.

There’s the truth of God, which they reject that, and then they change His glory into something else, something more created and natural, and they worship that. As a result what feels natural and what they desire to do, they do.

And the religious idea today, according to the world’s perspective and fallen man’s perspective, is that we should do what feels natural to us.

We soon start worshiping our own standard and religion.

And so they, God gave them up to uncleanness. He says, “Well, if that’s the religion you want to serve, go on! Do it! See how that works out for you.” He gave them up to uncleanness.

Now, he says uncleanness here. Uncleanness in Israel’s law wasn’t simply that you’re counted unclean because you’re physically unclean.

You weren’t baptised in Israel’s Old Testament religion because you were dirty in your flesh, like you had mud on you or something. In fact, you had to be cleaned of your physical dirt before you could be baptised in the temple or in the mikvah. The mikvah is a ritual bath used in Judaism for achieving ritual purity.

It wasn’t the same as a shower or bath. God wasn’t communicating to Israel about the uncleanness of their outward flesh but the uncleanness of their heart and spirit.

The uncleanness is their darkened hearts, their filthy hearts, their wrong thinking.

We see this when people reject God, their hearts get defiled.

Look at Psalm 51. This is another psalm of David and he’s writing this after Nathan rebuked him, the king of Israel, for his sin. His sin of adultery and murder for which the penalty under the law of God was death.

And yet God allowed David to live, not just because He showed favouritism, to him.

See, He had already promised David that He would give him certain mercies so that his son would sit on the throne of Israel.

Usually when a king messed up like that, like Saul, for example, who didn’t do something as bad as David did, got kicked out.

But David was given a promise of sure mercy. So when he committed adultery and murder, God kept His promise and showed him mercy so that his son could be on the throne, that son being Jesus ultimately.

David prays in his guilt and again we see his heart here. The Psalms are really a testament to David’s heart. Even when he sinned, his heart was right with God, and he wanted forgiveness. He wanted to be clean. He didn’t simply create his own religion to justify his actions.

In Psalm 51:10: David says,

Create in me a clean heart, O God, And renew a steadfast spirit within me.

Only God can do that. That’s why he’s saying it. Without God, our hearts are unclean; with God, they’re clean. Again, it’s not the physical heart we’re talking about; we’re talking about the spirit and soul.

You and I, after further revelation, know, after God’s revelation in the whole Word, how God’s accomplished this through Jesus Christ. So maybe you and I praying this prayer may be showing a little ignorance of what Christ has done. But this is the right attitude, isn’t it? “Create in me a clean heart, O God, And renew a steadfast spirit within me.”

Psalm 51:11:

Do not cast me away from Your presence, And do not take Your Holy Spirit from me.

David saw the value of God. He glorified Him as God; he knew he himself wasn’t God.

He’s asking and begging for His mercy and cleanliness in his heart to sanctify him. “And don’t leave me, please.” David’s expressing, “I don’t want to leave you; please don’t leave me.”

This is the attitude the people in Romans 1:21 should have had.

What was David thinking when he committed adultery and murder? Not about God, and His glory.

Psalm 51:12:

Restore to me the joy of Your salvation, And uphold me by Your generous Spirit. 

Here we see David asking for forgiveness. You see him in verse 11 asking, “And do not take Your Holy Spirit from me.”

The Holy Spirit today, upon belief in the gospel of God’s grace, dwells in us and seals us and doesn’t leave us when we sin.

Ephesians 4:30 says,

And do not grieve the Holy Spirit of God, by whom you were sealed for the day of redemption. 

Should we feel guilty for sin today?” Yes, because sin is bad, and we reap what we sow.

However, do we stand guilty before God? No, we stand dead before God and alive in Christ, even though we’re guilty of sin and deserving of death.

Thank God for crucifixion when Christ died for our sins, and we died in Him.

But David didn’t know any of that here. You see in the Old Testament that wasn’t how God was operating, and so he pleads with God, ” Do not cast me away from Your presence, And do not take Your Holy Spirit from me. ”

He knew sin deserved death and he was unworthy of God.

Psalm 51:15-16:

O Lord, open my lips, And my mouth shall show forth Your praise. For You do not desire sacrifice, or else I would give it; You do not delight in burnt offering.

Again, the world thinks that’s what God wants, sacrifice.

No, that’s not what He wants. He wants a right heart as David states in the next verse, Psalm 51:17,

The sacrifices of God are a broken spirit, A broken and a contrite heart—These, O God, You will not despise. 

Look at Psalm 53:1:

The fool has said in his heart, “There is no God.” They are corrupt, and have done abominable iniquity; There is none who does good. 

That’s why God gave us that conscience, that desire to worship and esteem and revere and to seek Him.

But the fool says there is no God. Why is that foolish? Because that’s what God has put in us to seek, and we’re rejecting it.

We’re rejecting the very thing we were created to seek. That means we have to replace it with something of our own invention. That’s why it’s a foolish thing.

Psalm 53:3

Every one of them has turned aside; They have together become corrupt; There is none who does good, No, not one. 

You see that? They’ve gone back. Gone back from what? Understanding, holiness, and become corrupt or filthy.

So, seeking God is seeking cleanliness and righteousness and truth, and rejecting God is desiring the filth and the dirt and the darkness.

The Bible lays that out clearly.

Of course the world doesn’t describe it that way.

To the world, pursuing Bible study and pursuing the Maker and Creator of things as going back to ignorance and going back to the Dark Ages, even though that’s not what made the Dark Ages dark.

It’s going back to a time of ignorance, and that’s far from true.

Let’s look at Proverbs 28:26:

He who trusts in his own heart is a fool, But whoever walks wisely will be delivered. 

So the fool has said in his heart, “There is no God,” or he might say, “There’s a God, and I’m going to trust my heart to lead me to Him.”

The Bible says a fool does that. Why are you trusting your heart?

Nowhere in Romans 1, when we talk about God’s revelation, does it talk about Him revealing it in your heart.

Who can know the heart?

In Jeremiah 17:9 Jeremiah asks,

“The heart is deceitful above all things, And desperately wicked; Who can know it?”

Verse 10, Jeremiah 17:10 God answers with,

I, the LORD, search the heart, I test the mind, Even to give every man according to his ways, According to the fruit of his doings. 

We can cross-reference that to Mark 7:21-23, where Jesus explains,

For from within, out of the heart of men, proceed evil thoughts, adulteries, fornications, murders, Thefts, covetousness, wickedness, deceit, lasciviousness, an evil eye, blasphemy, pride, foolishness:

All these evil things come from within, and defile the man.

Jesus, being The Lord God does know the heart of man.

We see that in other places in Jesus earthly ministry as well.

Matthew 9:4, Jesus, has just healed a man in front of the Scribes who said within themselves, “This Man blasphemes!”

Knowing their thoughts, Jesus says to them,

“Why do you think evil in your hearts?”

The heart is deceitful above all things, desperately wicked. Who can know it? “I, the Lord,” Jeremiah 17:10 says. And Jesus says, “Oh, you think evil in your hearts.” He knew their hearts too.

Then in Luke 16:15: again in Jesus’ earthly ministry and this time the Pharisees were deriding Him,

And He said to them, “You are those who justify yourselves before men, but God knows your hearts. For what is highly esteemed among men is an abomination in the sight of God. 

Again we see the road of man’s decline, rejecting God’s truth, and declaring yourself wise.

The objection the world has to Christianity when it says it was created by men is a reasonable one, except they get it wrong.

God wrote the scripture, but there’s a lot about religion and a lot about Christianity that’s made by men, and we need to question that. Jesus says, ” but God knows your hearts. For what is highly esteemed among men is an abomination in the sight of God.”

Jesus says, “God knows the heart.” Jeremiah says, “The Lord knows the heart.” And then Matthew 9, Jesus says, “I know your hearts.” That’s saying something about who He is.

But in Romans 1:24, Paul says,

“God gave them up to uncleanness through the lusts of their own hearts to dishonour their own bodies between themselves.”

This is not you dishonouring your own body. It’s between each other, bodies among bodies, if you like.

Sexual deviancy and sin have been there since the beginning. God made our bodies; He made them for good. He made marriage before sin entered, and He made man and woman to be compatible in every way before sin entered.

In Romans 1, we’re pretty far into the passage of man’s decline before we talk about this sexual deviancy among bodies.

We’ve already dealt with rejecting God, professing themselves to be wise, changing the glory of God, creating their own religion, justifying themselves and changing the truth of God into a lie.

Then God gives them up here to do what they desire to do according to their own thoughts about how things should be.

Christians get all upset and bothered about homosexuality. But the Bible declares it simply as a sin and the result of the rejection of God.

Before coming out was a thing in the late 80s and 90s and early 2000s, people had affairs in secret, because you didn’t want the shame of showing it publicly. Few have any qualms about that today.

Grace can save sinners, all sinners. There’re no degrees of sin. Salvation is free to all today and yet it’s in no way a justification for sinning.

It shows something about the state of a person’s mind if they think that sin is acceptable because of God’s grace.

Romans 6 talks about this.

And what about Ephesians 5:12,

For it is shameful even to speak of those things which are done by them in secret. 

Notice in the next verse, Ephesians 5:13, that first word is “But.”

Is it a shame to speak of these things which are done in secret? Yes.

This is Paul, by the way, saying this. He’s the one who just said we’re saved by grace, not of works, who said we’re in the body of Christ, not by what we did or didn’t do, but by Who we believe in. Ephesians 5:13,

But all things that are exposed are made manifest by the light, for whatever makes manifest is light.

For instance, when Jesus condemned the hypocrisy of the Pharisees, their practices hadn’t seemed very evil to the disciples, but when Christ threw on them the pure light of truth, that hypocrisy was exposed, or made manifest.

We’re to “reprove” or convict the sinner but this absolutely doesn’t mean that the believer is to become a reformer, a crusader for a sinless world. That’ll never happen until way in the future, after the last judgement.

It does mean that the light of God’s Word rebukes or condemns the works of darkness, sin.

Light reveals what the darkness conceals. Darkness is not driven away by preaching at it; darkness is eradicated by the presence of light and that light is God’s Word, not the individual, still sinning, Christian’s condemnation.

We mustn’t forget the powerful 2 Timothey 3:16,

All Scripture is given by inspiration of God, and is profitable for doctrine, for reproof, for correction, for instruction in righteousness, 

Too many Christians try to correct an unsaved person by saying, “You shouldn’t be doing that.” But that’s not the way to approach spiritual darkness.

We’re to show the light of God’s Word through the gospel of salvation.

We can’t tell people what to do and what not to do.

Our business is to turn on the light of the Word of God, and that which God calls right.

We’re not able to bring a person to believing and trusting in the salvation offered by Christ by lecturing him on what he’s doing wrong. We’re not to try to get an unsaved person to change their conduct; they simply can’t change their conduct.

And what if we succeeded? Let’s look at a scenario.

We say to a homosexual, “you’ve got to stop that behaviour because it’s against God’s will.”

The homosexual says, “Oh. OK. I didn’t realise that. I’ll stop.” And he does stop. Has he been saved through ceasing to continue in homosexual acts? No! Those acts are just one of the countless sins he commits every day, exactly like all of us.

The only way to salvation is hearing and believing the gospel of Christ, the gospel of salvation and that’s the only possible foundation for change. Not a single one of us are saved and in the Body of Christ because we stopped sinning. Neither are we sealed in our salvation by never sinning anymore. If we were, not a single soul would ever be saved, and Jesus Christ’s suffering and death on the cross to pay the wages for sin would have been futile and obscene.

However, as we’ve already said, It shows something about the state of a person’s mind if they think that sin is ok and acceptable because of God’s grace.

We’ve been saved from the penalty of sin and as we’ll see in Romans 3 we’re in

the body of Christ.

But we’re not past the presence of sin. Sin is still with us. The penalty of sin has paid for by Christ’s death and through our hearing and believing the gospel of salvation we’ve been saved from the power of sin to condemn us to eternal death.

But, on earth, not in our heavenly home where, as a Christian, we’ll soon be. On earth, the presence of sin will be a reality until after sin has been eradicated totally after the great white throne judgement in the future, after the first 1000 years of Christ’s eternal reign in the earthly kingdom. Then and only then will there be no presence of sin on earth.

Now to move on and complete Romans 1 we need to look at verses 25 to 32 in the light and the context of what we’ve already discussed at length in Romans 1:24.

So let’s now look at the whole remaining passage to understand the context.

Romans 1:24

Therefore.

Now let’s stop there for another moment. The “therefore” means as a result of or for that reason. So what about to see is the result of or the reason for something. The result or reason for what?

All that’s been shown before this verse, obviously.

Romans 1:20-23 and because of its importance to the entire study we’ll see it again.

For since the creation of the world His invisible attributes are clearly seen, being understood by the things that are made, even His eternal power and Godhead, so that they are without excuse, because, although they knew God, they did not glorify Him as God, nor were thankful, but became futile in their thoughts, and their foolish hearts were darkened. 

Professing to be wise, they became fools, and changed the glory of the incorruptible God into an image made like corruptible man—and birds and four-footed animals and creeping things. 

Now we have Roman 1:24-32,

Therefore God also gave them up to uncleanness, in the lusts of their hearts, to dishonour their bodies among themselves, 

Verse 25,

who exchanged the truth of God for the lie, and worshiped and served the creature rather than the Creator, who is blessed forever. Amen. 

Verse 26

For this reason God gave them up to vile passions. For even their women exchanged the natural use for what is against nature. 

Verse 27

Likewise also the men, leaving the natural use of the woman, burned in their lust for one another, men with men committing what is shameful, and receiving in themselves the penalty of their error which was due. 

Verses 28 and 29 to 31

And even as they did not like to retain God in their knowledge, God gave them over to a debased mind, to do those things which are not fitting; being filled with all unrighteousness, sexual immorality, wickedness, covetousness, maliciousness; full of envy, murder, strife, deceit, evil-mindedness; they are whisperers, backbiters, haters of God, violent, proud, boasters, inventors of evil things, disobedient to parents, undiscerning, untrustworthy, unloving, unforgiving, unmerciful;

And then verse 32

who, knowing the righteous judgment of God, that those who practice such things are deserving of death, not only do the same but also approve of those who practice them. 

So, looking at this passage, we need to ask is the passage really directed at sinfulness of homosexuality? No.

It’s describing a condition that mankind has devolved into because God gave them up to uncleanness. He simply said, “Ok, since you won’t listen and learn of me. Even though I’ve shown you Who I am and my eternal power since the creation of the world, mankind. But you’ve rejected all that I’ve shown you and look at the result! You’ve become futile in your thoughts, and your foolish hearts are darkened. So now, hey, go for it! Do what you want to do!”

This condition man has fallen into isn’t just the dishonouring of their bodies. There are twenty four other things that are also a result of God giving them over to their own lusts and none of them are pretty!

You see these verses are describing the results of God giving them over to a debased mind.

We must never forget that this is a condition of the result of man’s rejection of God.

However, and it’s a wonderful however, individual humans have a remedy for this condition.

We reverse the devolving process when the light of God’s Word is switched on within us, when hear the gospel of salvation.

That gospel is the good message that God Himself in the form of Jesus Christ came into His creation as the one and only perfect, sinless man. Sinless because He circumvented the sin line of Adam by being born of a virgin, and conceived not of the seed of man but of the seed of God. He was 100% God and 100% man.

He was crucified in that perfection and sinlessness, taking the punishment, the penalty of sin that each of us was due. But because of His sinless perfection, death could not hold him and after three days in the belly of the earth He rose from the dead proving he was God. All this was according to age old prophecy in scripture.

The good news is that mankind does not need to be in this dreadful condition that we’ve seen in these passages. It’s every person’s choice. And there’s no other way no other way. As Acts 4:12 says,

Nor is there salvation in any other, for there is no other name under heaven given among men by which we must be saved.

Romans 1:21-25 – All Are Without Exuse

The subject of this episode is  Paul elaborating why the whole world is without excuse because when they knew God, they glorified Him not as God and how since the creation of the world His invisible attributes are clearly seen, being understood by the things that are made, even His eternal power and Godhead.

“Speed Slider”

Romans 1:21-25  – Transcript

The subject of this episode is the next three or four verses as Paul elaborates why the whole world is without excuse.
Paul’s explaining this here in Romans very early, because he’s preaching to Rome, to those that are at Rome. He’s going to go there and visit, and they might say, “Well, we didn’t know any of this information, the things you say weren’t revealed; nobody knew this stuff.” But he’s saying: they all knew.

Last episode, we covered the four reasons, that Paul gives: the four statements that begin in verse 16, 17, 18, and 20, beginning with that word “for” (f-o-r).

These are the reasons that Paul gives that he is ready to preach the gospel to those that are at Rome also. In verse 15, he says, “As much as in me is.” These four statements speak to that.

They show what’s revealed to Paul that gave him the confidence to preach at Rome.

In verse 16, it is the power of God to salvation in the gospel of Christ.

The righteousness of God in verse 17 is revealed from faith to faith. And then the wrath of God is revealed from heaven in verse 18 against all ungodliness and unrighteousness of men who hold the truth in unrighteousness. And then in verse 20, the invisible things of Him from the creation of the world are clearly seen.

So, we have the invisible things of God have been revealed from the creation, and people can see those clearly.

How were those things revealed?

In verse 16, the power of God is revealed in the gospel of Christ.

In verse 17, the righteousness of God from faith to faith is revealed in the Scripture, and he quotes Habakkuk.

The wrath of God is revealed from heaven; he goes on to verse 19 to explain how it’s known in us in our conscience.

And then, in verse 20, of course, the invisible things are clearly seen by the things that are made.

The subject of this episode is the next three or four verses as Paul elaborates why the whole world is without excuse.

Paul’s explaining this here in Romans very early, because he’s preaching to Rome, to those that are at Rome. He’s going to go there and visit, and they might say, “Well, we didn’t know any of this information, the things you say weren’t revealed; nobody knew this stuff.” But he’s saying: they all knew.

The righteousness of God was spoken of in the Scriptures and in Israel and throughout the world. But then we have our own conscience, and we can’t get away from our own conscience.

Then, of course, there’s the creation itself, which leaves people without excuse, which is what Paul’s saying in verse 20. So, he’s going to explain why there’s no valid excuse before God after what He’s revealed.

In verse 21, he says, “Because here’s why they’re without excuse: because when they knew God, they glorified Him not as God.” And what we’re seeing here, when Paul’s making this argument, is that he says from the creation of the world, the invisible things of God are clearly seen, being understood by the things that are made.”

So, Paul preaching a gospel that Christ revealed to him from heaven between about 6 to 8 years after Christ was crucified and resurrected.

He’s going back before Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John, way back to Creation in the Book of Genesis.

And, if we’re of the opinion that God or the bible shouldn’t make us feel guilty, or we shouldn’t make any other person feel guilty, then we’re going to be the farthest away from the truth.

Romans 1 is going to lay down the guilt trip through human history.

So, we could feel a little comfortable in the sense that we’re here, now, and we’re talking about people that are long dead.

But we can learn from that past experience, and something might be true about us as well, because man hasn’t changed much and that’s what we’re going to learn here as well.

Romans 1:20-21,

For since the creation of the world His invisible attributes are clearly seen, being understood by the things that are made, even His eternal power and Godhead, so that they are without excuse, because, although they knew God, they did not glorify Him as God, nor were thankful, but became futile in their thoughts, and their foolish hearts were darkened. 

They were without excuse because, when they knew God, they did not glorify him as God.

See, knowing God wasn’t the issue, which is interesting, because these days that seems to be the issue. Does God exist? Can you prove God exists? I don’t know He exists. Who can I know God? This is the issue these days, but that’s a very recent thing relative to man’s history.

There were no atheists in Genesis.

If we ask the atheist about their history, they’ll say it was developed sometime later in history, much closer to here, now.

The belief in evolution also happened quite late in human history.

The thinking that’s prominent today is that people invented gods and religions, and they should all be thrown on the rubbish heap. Out of that thinking came the so called “enlightened” people who decided not to believe in God anymore.

The Bible makes the opposite case, that atheism is the severest ignorance and blindness of humanity.

Many say, “So what? Who cares about the bible? It’s just a collection of myths and fairy tales”.

But what if it’s not? What if it truly is God’s message to man?

The challenge for every person is to confirm for themselves just what the bible really is and that can be done. The question is do I want to?

Now, we know that man did create many religions, and that’s what’s caused all the problems, so we can actually agree with the criticisms that man presents against religion by reading Romans chapter one.

Romans 1:21 says,

although they knew God, they did not glorify Him as God,

The problem in Paul’s day was not whether God existed, they knew that.

The issue was their worship.”

Very early on in Genesis, we find after the fall in Genesis 4, we have Cain and Abel, the children of Adam and Eve, and the problem there is worship. How are they worshipping God?

God doesn’t respect the sacrifice and the offering of Cain. Why not? After all, he’s doing religious worship just like Abel. But it’s not what God instructed.

The issue’s always been what is true and false worship of God. It’s who you’re worshipping and how you’re worshipping.

So these people knew God, but they didn’t glorify Him as God. Well, if they knew Him as God, why wouldn’t they glorify Him as God?

God created, and they know He did, and by the way so do we if we seriously think about it, but they’re not thankful to Him. They don’t respect Him, they neglect Him. They disobey what He wants, or don’t even care what He wants.

They changed the truth about God distorting who He is. That’s the meaning of the word ungodliness, but they’re without excuse.

They didn’t glorify Him as God, nor were thankful, and as a result they became futile in their thoughts, and their foolish hearts were darkened.

Futile thoughts, or vain imaginations as the King James renders it, are not always easy to see in our own life. Sometimes they’re easier to spot in the world around us than in our own lives.

Notice this is not saying because they didn’t do good things and because they sinned a heap and because they didn’t attend weekly church. That’s not what’s being said. They didn’t glorify God as God and weren’t thankful!

They reject Him, neglected Him, ignored Him, dismissed Him and distorted Him. That was man’s choice even though God gave graciously to them.

God didn’t need anything from man, He doesn’t need our thanks but when we thank God we’re actually giving the one thing that pleases Him, Faith. We’re saying we believe in Him. We’re stating that we not only know He exists but that we’re aware that everything we are, everything we need to live and survive, comes from Him, even though we don’t see Him with our natural senses.

Hebrews 11:6 says,

But without faith it is impossible to please Him, for he who comes to God must believe that He is, and that He is a rewarder of those who diligently seek Him.

1 Thessalonians 5:18,

in everything give thanks; for this is the will of God in Christ Jesus for you.

In glorifying God as God we’re saying we know we didn’t give ourselves life or evolve from absolutely nothing. We know where it all came from.

This is what Paul’s talking about: since the creation of the world His invisible attributes are clearly seen, being understood by the things that are made, even His eternal power and Godhead.

This is the heart of the failure of humanity; to see God’s revelation of Himself and reject it.

Unsaved man’s imagination is inspired by evil, even though that evil doesn’t always show up as the popular concept of evil. It can display outwardly as a goodness or kindness but it’s most often a self-righteousness rather than the recognition of the righteousness of God and the unrighteousness of man.

People back in Genesis knew God.

Creation was clearly seen not only in the creation that you and I still live in, but they were so close to the creation.

Yet, in Genesis 6:5 we see:

Then the LORD saw that the wickedness of man was great in the earth, and that every intent of the thoughts of his heart was only evil continually. 

Evil! That thing which destroys!

Wickedness! That thing which is contrary to or distorted from the right path, the right way, the right thinking, or from God Himself. That’s characterised by sin. Sin is everything that’s contrary to God’s character, to God.

He saw that the wickedness of man was great in the earth.

That’s why, in the next two chapters in Genesis, He floods the Earth.

The flood didn’t come out of nowhere. It wasn’t a surprise or a shock. It was 100 years after Genesis 6:5.

God, as always with His judgments, gives man time to repent, to change their mind, their attitude.

Thank you Lord for this world! That’s all He wants.

It’s not that He needs our thanks and obedience. It’s that it shows the attitude of our heart and our trust in Him rather than our own thoughts and concepts.

God saw that the wickedness of man was great in the earth, and that every intent of the thoughts of his heart was only evil continually.

Their hearts weren’t filled with gratitude towards Him. They weren’t recognising God as God, glorifying Him and honouring Him.

Instead, He was someone who they probably thought was preventing them from doing what they wanted.

That’s not an uncommon view even today. God prevents me from doing what I want. That’s not true but it’s a testimony to our own wickedness, that we actually want what’s against God.

Let’s look at what’s going on in Genesis 8:21.

This is after the flood. Noah and his family walk off the ark, and they offer a sacrifice here to God.

And the LORD smelled a soothing aroma. Then the LORD said in His heart, “I will never again curse the ground for man’s sake, although the imagination of man’s heart is evil from his youth; nor will I again destroy every living thing as I have done.

So, God promised not to do that again with water. He will judge all men. We’ll all stand before God in judgment.

The issue then won’t be, “did you sin or not”. That’s a given! Romans 3:23:

for all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God, 

The issue will be, “was that sin fully paid for by your acceptance of Christ’s death for that sin.”

Most people would say, “Why would God do that, judge the world and cast most of it into hell?”

Because He has no option!

If He’s completely righteous, which He is, He must judge unrighteousness.

From Job down through David and through the ages, men questioned how a fully righteous God can redeem sinful, unrighteous man without that sin and unrighteousness being paid for and we know that the payment, the wages of sin, is death. Not the death of the body but eternally lasting, spiritual death and torment.

Romans 6:23

For the wages of sin is death…

But God had a way.

He sent Jesus Christ, sinless, perfect, God in the flesh, outside of the line of fallen Adam, to die and pay those wages Himself in substitution for us.

The rest of Romans 6:23

… but the gift of God is eternal life in Christ Jesus our Lord.

That’s His grace.

God’s the Creator and He’s the Judge and that’s vital to understanding our need for Him as our Saviour as well.

Genesis 11:6:

And the LORD said, “Indeed the people are one and they all have one language, and this is what they begin to do; now nothing that they propose to do will be withheld from them. 

And so, we see again the imaginations of man opposed to what God would have them do.

He wanted them to spread out and replenish the earth, but they wanted to build a city.

God didn’t tell them to do that. The only city God mandated man to establish was Jerusalem, which was His city, the capital of the world from where He would eventually rule His kingdom.

People would come there to Him and get blessings.

He didn’t tell anyone else to build cities. Cities became natural for people to build, but they became declarations of their own achievement and to the glory of man.

Even today, that’s the case.

Why do we not glorify God for the things that are much bigger than manmade cities, like mountains, plains, oceans, and the heavenly bodies like the sun, the moon and the stars, the things that He created.

Instead, it’s look what we can do.

So, three times in Genesis we see God testifying to man’s imagination being evil and wicked, and that’s what Paul says as well.

People say, “Well, there’s so much confusion in religion, how do you know you’re right?” I’m not right, God is.

There’s one true God, and He’s revealed Himself through creation and throughout history. All the confusion has been caused by man.

Man created his own religions, but that doesn’t mean the One true God doesn’t exist.

Look at Acts 17:22 where Paul goes to Mars Hill in Greece,

Then Paul stood in the midst of the Areopagus and said, “Men of Athens, I perceive that in all things you are very religious…

The King James calls it superstitious.

They’re believing things that aren’t based in reality and fact like manmade gods, rabbit’s feet, and angel’s wings, and cross necklaces, and things like that.

Things that people do for religious, superstitious reasons.

The Athenians had statues of their gods made out of stone and Paul says to them in Acts 17:23

for as I was passing through and considering the objects of your worship, I even found an altar with this inscription: TO THE UNKNOWN GOD. Therefore, the One whom you worship without knowing, Him I proclaim to you:

Paul’s saying here, you’re worshiping this statue of a god who’s unknown to you. He’s using this as an opportunity to preach the real God to them.

In Acts 17:24 he declares to these men,

God, who made the world and everything in it, since He is Lord of heaven and earth, does not dwell in temples made with hands. 

In the remainder of Acts 17 he tells them, simply and powerfully about Who God really is.

He doesn’t try to prove His existence; they knew that there was a Creator God back here when he’s preaching. They just didn’t know Him.

They believed there were many gods and an unknown “one God”.

In Acts 17:25 he goes on,

Nor is He worshiped with men’s hands, as though He needed anything, since He gives to all life, breath, and all things. 

Paul says here to theses Athenians God doesn’t need anything from you guys. He gives life and breath in all things.

You see, He’s not a taker he’s The Giver. So it’s a futile thought, a vain imagination that God’s demanding a bunch of stuff from us and He’s going to disrupt the way I want to live. He’s getting in the way of my natural desires and pleasures because he wants things from me and if I don’t please Him He’ll do bad things to me.

This’s a popular concept that people have of God.

Paul calls that futile thoughts, vain imaginations, something man made up because that’s what we’d do if we had so much power. In our wickedness we’d say, “All right everybody, give me some stuff”.

But God didn’t do that.

Atheists, agnostics and sceptics like to say they’re seeking after God. “We’re seeking the Lord, we’re seeking God, an unprejudiced, unbiased effort, really trying to find out who He is.” But they’re not, because they’re reserving all glorification and all gratitude until they find a God that matches their criteria, and then they’ll give that to him.

If they were really seeking God, they’d be fervently thanking Him now and glorifying Him as God now, saying, “I don’t know your name, but thank you.” But people don’t do that. They don’t seek the Lord. They don’t try to “find” Him.

If they were truly trying to find out more about God they’d be saying, “God, why are you letting us live? Our fathers sinned, and we deserve death. Thank you for the grace and mercy that lets us live.

What about Israel? No, they didn’t seek God either.

They tried to kick Moses out when he tried to save them. God almost had to drag Israel out of Egypt. Just read Exodus.

The church today says, “We’re better now, we’re seeking the Lord every Sunday.” Really?

The church is a mess, and if we’re honest with ourselves, we’re, man, it’s really an effort to try to seek God, you know, to read the scripture and pray.

We have a Bible that no one back there ever had, and we put it on the shelf next to the recipe book to gather dust. This testifies to our own state and attitude towards God.

So, in Acts 17:28-29, Paul tells these Athenians,

for in Him we live and move and have our being, as also some of your own poets have said, ‘For we are also His offspring.’ 

Therefore, since we are the offspring of God, we ought not to think that the Divine Nature is like gold or silver or stone, something shaped by art and man’s devising. 

Here, he’s saying this amidst a bunch of these statues of gods, and he’s saying we shouldn’t think of God like any of these pictures you have and these statues. God is not in this golden statue.”

This is still true today, particularly in some eastern countries. You’ll see statues of gods, Buddhas, and things like that. Just like those Athenians did.

But God’s not made of man’s devices, is what Paul says and what the scripture says.

He says in verse 30, Acts 17:30,

Truly, these times of ignorance God overlooked, but now commands all men everywhere to repent, 

Interesting, He overlooked that ignorance. Why?

Acts 17:31

because He has appointed a day on which He will judge the world in righteousness by the Man whom He has ordained. He has given assurance of this to all by raising Him from the dead.

People say, “Why hasn’t God intervened in 2000 years?”

Like, if He really was real, He’d be doing things like parting waters and flooding the Earth or sending lightning bolts and fire from heaven.

Well, He was doing that. But now, today, at this time and in this dispensation of grace that God’s dispensed to the world, we have to just believe.

So, in Acts 17 Paul’s trying to show these folk that God’s not your God. He’s the God. You didn’t make Him up, you didn’t invent Him. He’s the God who made you. You’re the creation.

Many say, “Well, Muslims and Christians, they all worship the same God.” Well, if there’s one God, then yes, that’s one God.

But when you call God something different than who the true God is, then it’s not the same one.

The world calls what happened when they threw off the ancient concept of God as being “enlightened”.

But it’s the exact opposite.

There was the truth, the singular truth that could help everyone if they believed it and did according to it, by glorifying God and being thankful for the graces He gave.

But instead, they reject Him, they’re unthankful to Him. They create a god in their own imagination to fit for their own achievements and self-righteousness and esteem. And then they pursue whatever’s in their heart, which they call freedom and enlightenment, but which God calls slavery, slavery to sin, and a darkened heart.

In Isaiah 5:20 the prophet Isaiah says,

Woe to those who call evil good, and good evil; Who put darkness for light, and light for darkness; Who put bitter for sweet, and sweet for bitter! 

This is what happens from the very beginning of creation under the guise of enlightening each other.

 

As Christians we seek truth, of course, and we seek God, but we seek God as the source of wisdom, truth, and knowledge. It’s not for us individually to attain all knowledge and then finally be one with God.

We get saved while we’re still sinners, and then we learn by faith in Jesus Christ the treasures of wisdom and knowledge because He’s the source of it. It’s not our seeking or pursuing for our enlightenment so that we become the source of knowledge and wisdom. We seek because we want to know God more and more.

Without God, we can’t seek or find real understanding, absolute truth.

The world thinks that by throwing off religion, they have access to more knowledge, by denying a spiritual reality, denying that there’s a God and His intervention in history and His divine revelations we can now know more things.

Really? So a believer today who listens to God, reads His word and consults His revelations in history, are supposed to now know less?

1 Corinthians 2:14 calls that foolish:

But the natural man does not receive the things of the Spirit of God, for they are foolishness to him; nor can he know them, because they are spiritually discerned. 

They’re foolishness because all that natural man can know is the material. However the spiritual is much bigger than the material, which is a result of the spiritual. But they shut themselves off to that. They’re foolish.

Ephesians 4:18-20:

having their understanding darkened, being alienated from the life of God, because of the ignorance that is in them, because of the blindness of their heart; who, being past feeling, have given themselves over to lewdness, to work all uncleanness with greediness. But you have not so learned Christ, 

What saves us from all of that?

It’s not us saying, “Well I’ll be better, and I’ll do better. What saves us from all that is Jesus Christ.

Once you learn of Him and what He did and the mind of Christ and the gospel of Christ, that’s what saves us from this and that’s why Paul’s writing in Romans 1 that that’s the power of God to salvation.

In Christ we’ll always have something to thank God for.

He bought us with an astronomical price, through his blood.

So we get past the selfish flesh that thinks I deserve to live this life well.

I don’t, and I definitely don’t deserve to live eternal life, but in Christ Jesus He gives me that opportunity. He gives me grace, you see.

So much to be thankful for.

People trust academics and Ph.D.’s and scientists today.

You ask the average person on the street about the proof of evolution, they have no idea what it is, but they trust the scientists. They trust the professors who largely reject God.

Through years and years of focus on a particular subject they conclude, “Well, I’m so smart that now I’m beyond the belief in God.”

But no academic, scientist, or doctor knows everything about everything, not even close, and yet they have the audacity to say, “I’m beyond this. We’re much smarter and wiser than this silly, ignorant belief in the maker of all things, which I now clearly understand.” They don’t.

Even in the smallest parts of creation still baffle scientists. Recently in scientific circles the debate has been about the conscience.

People don’t listen to the conscience, but they want to understand it.

“Where does this come from? What’s this voice in my head?” It keeps telling me I’m doing wrong.

And what do the enlightened religions tell us? There’s no such thing as right and wrong. So, all those things that you feel, those things that you think, are just remnants of our Neanderthal past.

We have a sense of right and wrong because it’s ingrained, it’s inherent in us through the conscience God gave us, and we can’t find this physiologically no matter how hard we look.

So, they can’t explain the conscience or even define what life is. Where did life come from?

What makes an organism that’s moving of its own accord alive?

They don’t know. We don’t know. Yet these are very basic issues of creation, and we claim we understand it? We don’t at all.

We’re creating mathematical formulas that are far away from explaining the source of life, but professing ourselves to be wise we’re foolish.

1 Corinthians 1:22:

For Jews request a sign, and Greeks seek after wisdom;

The Jews weren’t seeking wisdom because they thought they knew God. He spoke to Israel and sent them the prophets and gave them the oracles of God, so they weren’t seeking after that.

But the Greeks, the gentiles are seeking after wisdom.

Many people read that verse as if the Jews are ignorant religious people and the Greeks are smart intelligent people.

Well, actually, the Greeks just simply don’t know who God is. They’re seeking wisdom trying to find out who He is.

The Jews claim to know where wisdom comes from: it comes from Jehovah God, our God, the God of Israel.

They’re seeking signs of His coming, rejecting completely that he already came.

1Corinthians 1:23:

 but we preach Christ crucified, to the Jews a stumbling block and to the Greeks foolishness, 

Christ is the prophesied, but rejected messiah of Jewish religion, and the Greeks are ten steps behind, saying we’re seeking wisdom.

We preach Christ crucified, the ultimate revelation of God, Paul says. To the Jews, a stumbling block because they rejected the fulfillment of their own scriptures, and to the Greeks, foolishness.

1Corinthians 1:24,

but to those who are called, both Jews and Greeks, Christ the power of God and the wisdom of God. 

See, so they profess themselves to be wise by rejecting God, not worshiping Him correctly, saying they don’t know Him, and they become fools. If we know Jesus Christ and trust the gospel, we have the wisdom of God in Christ Jesus.

1 Corinthians 1:30-31:

But of Him you are in Christ Jesus, who became for us wisdom from God—and righteousness and sanctification and redemption— that, as it is written, “HE WHO GLORIES, LET HIM GLORY IN THE LORD.” 

 

We didn’t have to study long hours and get a Ph.D. for that.

But what does that mean, He gives you wisdom?

The Bible says strange things about wisdom, like the fear of the Lord is the beginning of wisdom.

It’s not about God making us afraid and then we cower in fear and that means we’re wise. No, it’s that when we realise that God is the maker and the judge of all things, and we don’t distort Him, but we glorify Him as God, that’s when we’re on the right track to wisdom.

As soon as we realise that God is the one that’s behind all of the wisdom in the universe and we’re not, that’s when we start to grow in wisdom.

Paul says, “I’m not ashamed. As much as in me is, I’m ready to preach the gospel in Rome. Paul’s going to show the Romans Jesus Christ.

This gospel of Christ is so different than preaching a Jewish religion. It’s not about works; it’s no longer about us living a certain lifestyle. It’s Christ, it’s the revelation of God in Christ Jesus.

In Romans 1:23, Paul continues and says,

and changed the glory of the incorruptible God into an image made like corruptible man—and birds and four-footed animals and creeping things. 

 

They changed the glory of God, the glory of the uncorruptible God, into an image like the corruptible man. So, the story is that God made man in His image, then then man made gods in their image. And that’s the biblical account of history.

The secular account of history says man did make gods in their own image, but they don’t add that God made them first, and that changes everything.

That changes man from being the enlightened one that he thinks he is to being the rebel.

The Old Testament records man from creation and the gods that he created. It records the men of faith from creation, which are few and far between, but they are there.

We find them from Adam to Abel, to Enoch, to Seth to Abraham and David. Men of faith throughout history. They were always the minority.

Which shows and testifies to the inexcusability of man, that they were all wicked. Even in Israel, you think of God’s nation, Israel, surely the majority of them are righteous? No, they were proven to be sinners too.

 

Jesus, The Son of God, came to earth.

He had 150 in the upper room. A minority is always seeking and believing the Lord and glorifying Him as God.

 

Jos 24:2-3 Joshua calls all the elders together and we read,

And Joshua said to all the people, “Thus says the LORD God of Israel: ‘Your fathers, including Terah, the father of Abraham and the father of Nahor, dwelt on the other side of the River in old times; and they served other gods. 

Then I took your father Abraham from the other side of the River, led him throughout all the land of Canaan, and multiplied his descendants and gave him Isaac. 

Joshua is here with the nation of Israel being delivered, and he says, “Your fathers including Terah, the father of Abraham, and the father of Nahor, and they served other gods.”

See that? They served other gods. “And I took your father Abraham from the other side of the flood and led him throughout all the land of Canaan and multiplied his seed and gave him Isaac.”

Abraham was called out of the people of the world even though his family served other gods, false gods. And he chose one man. There’s nothing about Abraham being righteous.

Later, he believed what God said to him and that was counted to him as righteousness. But Abraham’s father and his family, served other gods, false gods. Idolatry was rampant.

 

By the time we get to Abraham, after the flood, there’s gods, plural, that people are worshipping. It went from one God to many gods.

When He calls Abraham out, God says, “I’m the only God,” revealing Himself again, and Abraham believes Him for righteousness.

 

What was the first commandment in Israel?

Exodus 20:3

“You shall have no other gods before Me.

God was trying to protect humanity from themselves in creating other gods.

Moses went up to the mountain to get the commandments. The first one being, “No other gods, just me.” Meantime, what’s going on at the bottom of the mountain? They were creating another god.

This is what people do. We’re wicked. “God’s taking too long, I guess we’ll create our own religion.” Man does this, even today.

 

God is incorruptible. He’s perfect. He’s holy, He’s all-powerful, and He’s all-loving, and He’s wiser than me and you.

He plans the end from the beginning. So, He has a purpose in place, and that’s why He’s not doing the things we want Him to do. He’s doing what He wants to do. And He’s revealed why He’s doing that, but we don’t care enough to even read what He said. Who’s the fool? Not Him.

 

Romans 1:23, says they changed the glory of the incorruptible God into an image made like corruptible man—and birds and four-footed animals and creeping things.

That’s interesting. It describes ancient idolatry, like when they carved out pictures of eagles and worshipped them on totem poles. But idolatry still exists very clearly the same way in the world today.

 

The Egyptian gods were birds and bugs. They had many gods, and that’s why God plagued Egypt the way He did. He was attacking their gods that were bugs and birds and frogs and things.

A whole continent in India worships cows.

 

The Greek and Roman gods were glorified men: Hercules, Zeus, Jupiter. All those gods in the Greek and Roman pantheon of gods made mistakes. Read the stories. They claim it’s part of their drama, right? When they saw the other’s wife and things like that, they made errors, they killed each other and stuff.

They’re like corruptible man but with superpowers.

The oldest religion, according to secular religious professors, is the Vedic religions that were before Hinduism.

Their gods were associated with the elements of the earth: fire, water, and air, and things like that. They’ve created gods from the things that God’s made.

 

Idolatry always idolises something that God has made while it ignores God.

 

Romans 1:24-25:

Therefore God also gave them up to uncleanness, in the lusts of their hearts, to dishonour their bodies among themselves, who exchanged the truth of God for the lie, and worshiped and served the creature rather than the Creator, who is blessed forever. Amen.

 

God gave them up after they chose to ignore Him. After they chose to change His glory to fit themselves. What did He give them up to? Uncleanness through the lusts of their own hearts, to dishonour their own bodies between themselves, bodies, which God made and gave them.

He gave them up to what they wanted to do, which is going to have bad consequences.

They changed the truth of God into a lie and worshipped and served the creature more than the Creator.

This is what happened with humanity. They were exposed to the knowledge of God, but they didn’t want that God. They didn’t want to be accountable to Him or glorify Him as God or thank Him. They wanted a god they could control and manage, that they could know better. So, they created gods themselves.

 

In Genesis chapter 10, after the flood there’s a table of nations. We see later civilizations making gods out of those people from that table of nations.

 

Then we have Samson. Samson was someone empowered by God with divine strength. Later, here comes Hercules in the Greek culture, a man given power of the gods. Hercules was a distortion of the truth of Samson. False gods.

 

In Genesis chapter 10 Nimrod creates Babylon in a city called Erech. Even today, you look up the oldest city in the world—not the one that’s still existing, Damascus, but the one that they found called Uruk. It’s where the Babylonian religion was created and founded, and where they served false gods. The only city that we’ve dug up that we know existed those thousands and thousands of years ago, and they served false gods in it.

 

Meanwhile, they changed the truth of God into a lie. They worshipped the creature more than the Creator. What does that look like?

Well, if we’re worshipping our self-identity or our self-esteem, we’re the creature we’re worshipping.

We worship women, worship men, worship sex, money, power. These things are things that people pursue. What does it even mean to worship? It means to devote our life to. Worship means what we devote our life and affection and our being to. When we define it like that, it becomes less religious.”

It becomes more like what everyone’s trying to do with something.

 

All people worship something. Take the Earth, for example. It doesn’t matter whatever people do or think, or even human life itself doesn’t matter if it’s going to sacrifice the Earth. We’ve got to maintain the Earth.

That’s what we find with some of the green agendas. They’re allowing people to be thrown into poverty, ill health and even death because of the policies put in place to save the Earth, because that’s the most important thing.

 

AI is another, largely future source of worship for many.

People believe these things even though we’re in an age where we have access to information. It doesn’t mean everyone knows things. We tend to cherry pick information to satisfy or back up what we want.

Just because we have Google or Chat Gpt doesn’t mean we’re smarter and it doesn’t mean they’re going to put the human mind into a computer. It’s impossible. Our minds don’t work like computers. They really don’t. Our minds aren’t hard drives, there’s no CPU in there. Nobody but God understands how the mind works. There’s a whole neuroscience community trying to figure it out but they’re just people like you and me with the same problems and preconceptions.

 

We can’t worship these things mor life will end up being meaningless. We can end up studying our whole life and finding that we’re going on a wrong path. Many scientists and entrepreneurs have gone down that road. Science is trial and error. We should observe things; it’s a good thing. A lot of advantages have happened from our discovery of science, but, you know, there’s a lot of time wasted too. many people’s whole lives wasted. Maybe we need to at least get grounded first in what’s more important than any of that and not worship it.

To know the Creator and to know our judge and to glorify Him as God and be thankful for what He’s given us is true worship. Knowing Him is the beginning of wisdom. He’s the source of wisdom. But man, for a long. Long time, has been without excuse, and we’ll pick it up next episode when we talk about the consequences of their error in their own flesh.