Showing posts with label New self. Show all posts
Showing posts with label New self. Show all posts

Galatians 6 v 11 – 16 - Paul’s concluding remarks

 ‘See what large letters I have written to you with my own hand. 12 As many as wish to have a good appearance within flesh, these are compelling you to be circumcised, but only in order that they are not pursued and persecuted for the cross of Jesus the anointed one. 13 Because not even the circumcised themselves are observing law, but they desire you to be circumcised in order that they may boast within your flesh. 14 But for me, may it never happen to be boasting if not within the cross of our Lord Jesus the anointed one, by means of which the worldly arrangement has been crucified to me, and I to the worldly order and arrangement. 15 Neither circumcision nor foreskin is anything – on the contrary, a new original formation. 16 And as many as will walk within and follow this principle, on this basis, and on the basis of the God of Israel, their peace and compassion’, (Galatians 6 v 11 – 16).


Paul obviously had someone else to actually write his letters, but here he writes this last section with his own hand, as if to emphasise his concluding remarks. He once again criticises the Judaizers who have come in to cause so much trouble. He says that those insisting on male Gentile Christians being circumcised wanted to look good within the flesh. They wanted to obtain a reputation for religiousness, like the hypocrites who ‘love to pray standing in the synagogues and in the corners of the streets, so that they may be seen of men’ (Matthew 6 v 5). Appearing outwardly righteous in front of others, they wanted to be accounted in this way by them; and therefore they did all they could to be seen of them, and gain applause from them. They wanted by this means to keep in with their countrymen, the Jews, and to gain favour amongst them by seeming to win over proselytes to Covenant law.  


They were acting in this way in case they should suffer pursuit and persecution from fellow Jews for the cross. It is well known that the Jewish chief priests and elders were great persecutors of the disciples of Jesus, and began their persecution very early on. These Judaizers did not act from any true love for God. They escaped the bitterness that fellow Jews had against Christianity and the offence of the cross of the Messiah by making the Mosaic law a necessary preliminary for Christians. In fact, they were making Christian converts into Jewish proselytes. ‘Not even the circumcised themselves are observing law, but they desire you to be circumcised in order that they may boast within your flesh’. These Jews who were insisting on circumcision did not observe Covenant law themselves. Rather, they wanted to boast about how many Christians they had turned into Jewish proselytes. 


Paul concludes by saying that he does not want to boast about anything except the cross. By means of the cross ‘the worldly arrangement has been crucified to me, and I to the worldly order and arrangement’. Worldly values, methods and principles mean nothing to Paul and he regards the worldly arrangement as dying away so as to be superseded at the time of the harvest. (An event that he thought was quite imminent). 


His concluding remarks about circumcision? ‘Neither circumcision nor foreskin is anything – on the contrary, a new original formation’. What matters for Paul is being brought forth by God, or born again, and the Christian’s new formation or new self. ‘As many as will walk within and follow this principle, on this basis, and on the basis of the God of Israel, their peace and compassion’


Galatians 2 v 20 – 21 - No judicial approval for people seeking to keep the law

 ‘I have been crucified together with His Anointed, but I am alive - no longer I [ego] - but His Anointed alive within me. And at this present time, what I am living within flesh, I am living this within faith, the Son of God having loved me and having surrendered himself above and beyond me. 21 I am absolutely not setting aside the free gift of God, because if judicial approval and right wise-ness [is] by means of law, then His Anointed died without cause’, (Galatians 2 v 20 – 21).


In verse 19 Paul made the general statement that –


‘I, [ego], by means of law, died to law, in order that I live to God’


Now Paul begins explain what he means and how this relates to the error of Peter, Barnabas and the other Christian Jews who were turning back to observing Sinai Covenant law. He says, ‘I have been crucified together with His Anointed, but I am alive’. In effect he begins to talk about his ‘old humanity’ and his ‘new humanity’ or new formation. He makes a similar statement in his letter to the Romans, ‘Knowing this, that our old human appearance is crucified together with [Jesus], in order that the body of self-forfeiture and loss is rendered down to being idle and inactive. We are no longer devotedly enslaved to the self-forfeiture and loss’, (Romans 6 v 6). In being brought forth by God, what he was, his natural, earthy fleshly constitution, has been crucified together with the Messiah. His old human appearance was tied and enslaved to energies, impulses and raw passions inherent within the fabric of his flesh. But when God brought him forth his old appearance changed. He died and yet he is alive. He has been brought forth as a new form, a ‘new self’. 


He says that he is no longer ‘I’ [ego]. What does he mean? ‘I’ is the locus of self-governance – ‘I’ choose, ‘I’ desire, ‘I’ think and feel. He means that he is no longer governing and regulating his speech and behaviour based on tied enslavement to the impulses and energies inherent within his fleshly constitution. Rather, by means of the Breath of God, the Messiah is alive within him and he has been set free from enslavement to self-forfeiture, in order to serve the Lord. The Lord is governing his speech and behaviour by means of the Breath within. Paul is no longer dead within fleshly unresponsiveness and insensitivity to God, but roused up from out of the dead towards responsiveness to God and Life in His Messiah by means of the Breath. 


Paul had not physically died, he was still living within his ‘vessel of clay’ or ‘earthly tent’. He was still existing within flesh, but now he was alive to God and living within entrustment and persuasion, a bond-slave of the Messiah, the anointed one of God ‘having loved me and having surrendered himself above and beyond me’


So how does this new ‘self’ relate to the behaviour of Peter and the other Hebrew Christians who were turning back to observing the written codes of Covenant law? Paul says, ‘I am absolutely not setting aside the free gift of God’. God brought Paul forth when he was in a helpless state. Paul did not have the ability to deliver himself from divine condemnation. His deliverance, his ‘bringing forth’ and ‘making alive’ is a free gift away from God, and away from His only-begotten Son ‘having loved me and having surrendered himself above and beyond me’ – above and beyond Paul’s ability. Paul says that he is not going to set aside this free gift. He is not going to dismiss it, which is what he would do of he went back to seeking to attain and maintain divine judicial approval by means of investing his labour and energy into observing the injunctions of the written codes of Covenant law.


The bottom line is this – ‘if judicial approval and right wise-ness [is] by means of law, then His Anointed died without cause’


If the means of attaining and maintaining divine approval is by means of observing Covenant law, by labouring to put into practice its written codes,


Then, if such a thing were possible, that is what God would have put in place.


But such a task is beyond the ability of anyone. More than this, if the means of deliverance and the maintenance of cleanliness was through obedience to the written codes of Covenant law, it would mean that the Messiah had died without purpose. His death would not have been necessary, it would have been superfluous, because this other method of deliverance and maintenance of cleanliness was already in place.


Galatians 2 v 17 – 19 - Jesus – Not a servant of self-forfeiture and loss

 ‘But if seeking judicial approval and being made rightwise within His Anointed, we ourselves have been found self-forfeiters, then is His Anointed a servant of self-forfeiture and loss? May it not come into being! 18 Because if I am once more constructing these what I have torn down and demolished, I am standing myself together with being contrary, 19 because I, [ego], by means of law, died to law, in order that I live to God’, (Galatians 2 v 17 - 19).


First, Paul anticipates a potential objection. Peter, Barnabas and other Jews in Galatia had sought judicial approval within the Messiah. But they were now in error, they were ‘not walking straight towards the truth of the gospel’, (verse 14). They were turning back to the written codes of Sinai Covenant law and insisting that male Gentile Christians also had to be circumcised in agreement with that law. The objection that Paul considers is this – If Christians are in error is the Messiah a servant of self-forfeiture? In not advocating circumcision, is the Messiah serving error? 


Paul replies, ‘May it never come to happen!’. So what is the situation with Peter, Barnabas and the Jewish Christians that have ‘shrunk back’? Paul answers by supposing a situation in which it is himself who is in error. He says ‘If I am once more constructing these that I have torn down and demolished…’. In heralding the gospel, Paul has torn down and demolished requirements that exist under the written codes of the Sinai Covenant. This is something that Christian legalists also struggle with. But it is clear that Paul is not demanding that male Gentile Christians had to be circumcised, and this is contrary to what is required under Sinai Covenant law. In the same way he was not insisting that Christians had to engage in making sacrifices, nor was he directing Christians to the Ten Commandments. So he says that if he now changes course and starts to once again insist on, and construct these practices – circumcision, sacrifices and directing to the written codes of Sinai Covenant law – things that he has previously torn down, then ‘I am standing myself together with being contrary’. In other words, ‘If I do this then I am being inconsistent and I am contradicting myself’. 


But if he insists on reinstating these practices that he has previously torn down, this is more than a simple ‘change of policy’ or a ‘U turn’. It contradicts Paul’s position as a Christian. Why? ‘Because I, [ego], by means of law, died to law, in order that I live to God’. This is consistent with what Paul says in Romans 7 v 4, where he says that the Christian’s ‘old self’ is put to death by the law that reveals his self-forfeiture and loss. Christians are placed in union with the Messiah by means of the Breath, and this means that they are crucified with him, but the law is brought to completion by means of the body of the Messiah as the Lamb of God without stain or blemish. The law, by means of the body of the Messiah, is brought to completion, penetrating into those who are placed in union with him becoming free, away from the law, to stand within divine judicial approval within the Messiah. They are roused up to Life with him by means of the Breath. Because they died within the Messiah, the written codes of Covenant law are rendered idle, and they are roused up from the dead as a ‘new self’.


Principles of living a godly life [76] – The divine plan

 ‘And those whom He predetermines, these He also summons, and whom He summons, these He also judicially approves and makes rightwise. Then, whom he judicially approves and makes rightwise, these He also honours and renders praiseworthy. 31 What then will we say to these things? Forasmuch as God is above us, who is down against us? 32 Indeed, He Who is not sparing His own Son, but surrendering him for us all, how will He not also give us all things together with him?’, (Romans 8 v 30 - 32).


As we come to the end of chapter 8, Paul steps back as it were to sum up the process of divine judicial approval and rightwiseness, which has been the main theme of his letter. As in other Scripture writings, the process of deliverance from condemnation is portrayed as being entirely down from God. When individuals are in a hopeless state and unable to deliver themselves, God, knowing some beforehand, predetermines them to be jointly formed to the image of His Son. It is God Who brings them forth – they are born again – and they become a new formation as a result of the atoning sacrifice of God’s only begotten Son, given as a free gift, coupled with the work of the set apart Breath of God and His Messiah. 


The process is this. God knows some beforehand and predetermines these to be conformed to the image of His Son. How does this happen? Those He knows beforehand and predetermines to be conformed to the image of His Son He summons, calls or invites, (by means of the good news of the Messiah and the word of the cross. Those who are summoned are, by means of the Breath, enlightened and such that they are persuaded to the point of entrusting the Messiah), and thus God accounts them judicially approved and rightwise. These He also honours and renders praiseworthy. 


All of this originates from and is brought into effect by God, and this gives Christians assurance and confident expectation. Because divine approval and deliverance from condemnation is not down to their fickle and unreliable energies and labours to be godly. Indeed, they lack ability and strength to deliver themselves because of their fleshly constitution. Nor is divine approval attained or maintained by Christians seeking to work to fully observe the written codes of divine law. Divine law is good and set apart, but it reveals our self-forfeiture and loss, and the impulses of our flesh take hold of this starting point such that our self-forfeiture is seen to increase even more. Christians are not placed under the written codes of law or the Sinai Covenant, but under the free, undeserved gift of God, and the New Covenant of the blood of the Messiah. Deliverance from condemnation, and divine approval, is given to them as a free gift from God. Christians maintain Life – responsiveness to God – by walking around moment-by-moment within their breath [pneuma] which is being moved by the Breath of God [Pneuma] dwelling in their deep inner core and effectively interceding for them. Christians are bond-slaves to their Lord who pays the price necessary to buy them back - the shedding of his own lifeblood as a substitute payment to send away their self-forfeiture.


So what shall we Christians say? Well here is the conclusion – ‘Forasmuch as God is above us, who is down against us? 32 Indeed, He Who is not sparing His own Son, but surrendering him for us all, how will He not also give us all things together with him?’ The deliverance of Christians is secure and certain. Since all this is away from the free gift of God, and since God did not hold back even His only begotten Son, but surrendered him for all of us, then who can be down against us? Who can successfully rob us of our deliverance? More than this, if God has not held back His own Son, then surely He will also give us all things together with him. Christians are adopted sons in God’s household, joint-heirs, joint inheritors with the Messiah. God does not surrender His only begotten Son so as to then hold back from us the benefits that His Son has attained.


Principles of living a godly life [70] - Present hardship – Future honour [2]

 Paul says that ‘…away and separate from the attentive thinking and supposition of the original formation, the unveiling of the sons of God is welcomed away from, and out of, eager waiting in full expectation. 20 For the empty original formation has begun and is continuing to be placed under, absolutely not willingly or voluntarily, but by means of the placing under on the basis of confident expectation 21 that even the original formation itself will be set free away from the enslavement, the decay and ruin, penetrating into the freedom, the honour and glory of the children of God’, (Romans 8 v 18 - 21).


In verse 20 Paul gives the reason why ‘the unveiling of the sons of God is welcomed away from, and out of, eager waiting in full expectation’. He once again uses the Greek word ‘ktisis’, which in the previous post I said means ‘original formation’. In terms of human beings, the word refers to their original arrangement or formation that they inherit - the sensuous, earthy, fleshly human constitution with its impulses and passions that as a result of Adam’s disobedience are opposed to God because of the fall into disobedience. This original formation is now described as ‘empty’ – as transient, aimless and lacking usefulness. 


But that is by no means the end of the narrative. The context of this passage is that Paul is talking about Christians being judicially approved and made rightwise. With regard to Christians he tells us that ‘the empty original formation has begun and is continuing to be placed under’. He states this in the aorist tense – in other words this ‘placing under’ is something that has started in the past and is continuing at this present time and will continue into the future. The ‘original arrangement and formation’ – the natural human constitution of flesh and blood - is in a process of being ‘placed under’ at this present time. The Greek word is ‘hupotassó’, meaning ‘to appoint or arrange under’. I will explain ‘under what’ in the next post. 


However, the Christian’s ‘empty original formation’ that lacks usefulness – their physical body of flesh and blood - is not willingly or voluntarily ‘being arranged under’ or ‘arranging itself under’. The Christian’s physical constitution per se, their ‘original formation’, is unresponsive to God and in fact, the energies and impulses inherent within the fabric of flesh are opposed to God. So the transient, aimless original formation has begun and is continuing ‘to be unwillingly arranged under’ ‘on the basis of confident expectation’ of something. This welcoming confident expectation is ‘away and separate from the attentive thinking and supposition of the original formation’ (verse 19). It is not arising from the empty original formation itself. It is not a welcome confident expectation that is ‘naturally emerging’ from the Christian’s flesh and blood. Rather, it arises separate and away from the attentive thinking and suppositions that arise from the empty original formation of our earthy constitution. It is something distinct and separate.


So the next question is, ‘Confident expectation of what?’ Paul tells us immediately in verse 21 – ‘confident expectation that even the original formation itself will be set free away from the enslavement, the decay and ruin, penetrating into the freedom, the honour and glory of the children of God’. The Christian’s welcome confident expectation is that ‘the original formation itself will be set free away from the enslavement, the decay and ruin’. Their confident expectation is with regard to a radical and fundamental change to the original formation itself, a change that will penetrate into ‘the freedom away from the enslavement, the decay and ruin, the honour and glory of the children of God’.


As Paul says elsewhere, the original formation of flesh and blood cannot inherit or even see the Kingdom of God. Christians are already existing as a new formation having been born again, but the process is not yet complete. But Christians possess confident expectation that their original formation, their inherited, fallen, fleshly constitution, will in the future, when redemption is made complete, be set free from its enslavement to self-forfeiture, decay and ruin. The Christian’s eager, confident expectation is that their physical body will be changed‘…we will all be changed within an indivisible moment in time, within the jerk of an eye, at the final trumpet. For the trumpet will sound and the dead will be aroused without decay, not perishable, and we will be made different’, (I Corinthians 15 v 52). 


It is on the basis of this eager, welcome confident expectation that at this present time the empty original formation is being ‘placed under’, (verse 20b). ‘Because we are existing within the tent, we are groaning and weighed down on the basis that we do not wish to be stripped out of clothing, but to be clothed over so that ‘the subject to death’ be swallowed down by Life, (II Corinthians 5 v 4). There is part of the incentive or motivation for Christians ‘putting to death the actions of the body’, (verse 13). This is quite a different process from the legalist’s proposal that Christians turn to the written codes of Covenant law and try to use them as a spur towards holiness.


Principles of living a godly life [69] - Present hardship – Future honour [1]

 ‘For I consider that the suffering of this present time is not comparable to the honour and praiseworthiness about to be revealed towards us, 19 for away from the thinking of the original formation, the unveiling of the sons of God is welcomed away from eager expectation’, (Romans 8 v 18, 19). 


Paul has introduced the idea of the Christian’s liberation and standing within divine approval (verses 15 – 17a), but he says that Christians ‘are sharing suffering together [with the Messiah] in order that also they share praise and honour together’, (verse 17 b). But he goes on to say that this present suffering bears no comparison to the honour and praiseworthiness that is about to be revealed towards ‘us’, by which Paul seems to mean ‘Christians’. That would seem to be another of his general statements. He then goes on to explain this in more detail, in what actually in some ways prove to be a difficult few verses. So take a deep breath.


What is Paul saying? He is saying that ‘the suffering that we [Christians] are experiencing at this present time bear no comparison to the honour and praise about to be revealed towards us [Christians], for…’. The word ‘for’ is a conjunction, a ‘joining word’ used to express cause, explanation, inference or continuation. So we can perhaps use the word ‘because’. This then gives us ‘the suffering that we [Christians] are experiencing at this present time bear no comparison to the honour and praise about to be revealed towards us [Christians] because…’. We then come to the Greek word ‘apokaradokia’, a word made up of ‘apo’, meaning ‘away from’, which usually denotes separation or departure, and ‘dokeo’ meaning ‘attentive thought’ or ‘supposition’. This now gives us ‘the suffering that we [Christians] are experiencing at this present time bear no comparison to the honour and praise about to be revealed towards us [Christians], because away from the attentive thought and supposition of…’. The next question is, ‘Attentive thought and supposition of who?’ 


The Greek word is ‘ktisis’, usually translated as ‘creation’, such that in many translations we tend to find something like this – ‘For the earnest expectation of the creation awaits the revelation of the sons of God’. The word ‘ktisis’ means ‘original formation’, ‘what is formed’, ‘what is founded or planted’. So the issue is this – is Paul referring to the whole of ‘creation’, as in humans, animals, plants, mountains and so on, or does he mean something more restricted? The word occurs just 19 times in the New Testament in the form of a noun, 15 times in the form of a verb, and 4 times in reference to what is formed. In almost every case it is translated into English as ‘creation’, or ‘to create’ or ‘that which was created’. I translate it as ‘original formation’.  


Meyer’s New Testament Commentary points out that Christians are different from the ‘ktisis’, and even opposed to it. Since Paul is talking about the attentive thoughts and suppositions of the ‘original formation’ I suggest that he is referring to human beings as they are in their natural, earthy, sensuous human constitution within flesh and blood, their ‘death-body’. What he calls the ‘old self’ or ‘old humanity’ elsewhere.   As Meyer says, Christians are different, something that Paul has also been saying. There is a polarising difference between Christians who are brought forth as a ‘new formation’ in comparison to their old, inherited, natural original formation or ‘old self’. Paul has been saying that the old formation, as a result of Adam’s disobedience, is enslaved to and pays attention to flesh and its impulses and energies. But the new formation pays attention to the Breath. 


Paul is saying that separate and away from the thinking and suppositions of human beings existing within their original formation, ‘the unveiling of the sons of God is welcomed away from eager expectation’. The ‘unveiling of the sons of God’ would seem to refer to Christians effectively being brought forth as a free gift of God at this present time, and more especially to the completion and end result of their redemption in the future at the return of the Messiah. Separate and away from the thinking and suppositions of human beings within their original formation, this unveiling is being eagerly awaited. The Greek word is ‘apekdechomai’, meaning ‘eager waiting in full expectation’. The consistent theme across all the passages where this Greek word is used is the Christian’s hopeful and patient waiting for God’s promises to be fulfilled in the future. 


I am suggesting that verses 18b and 19 are best fully translated and amplified something like this. ‘…the suffering of this present time is not comparable to the honour and praiseworthiness about to be revealed towards us, 19 because away and separate from the attentive thinking and supposition of the original formation, the unveiling of the sons of God is welcomed away from and out of eager waiting in full expectation’. [And breathe out].


Principles of living a godly life [65] – The Christian dynamic [1]

 ‘But if you [are] within Messiah, the body indeed lacks life by means of self-forfeiture and loss, but the Breath, [Pneuma], Life by means of judicial approval and right wise-ness’, (Romans 8 v 10).


Paul now continues with his theme of flesh and Breath. His focus is now on Christians and he says ‘But if [in contrast to those not possessing the Breath] you [are] within Messiah…’. What makes Christians different? OK. [Warning: Time to take a deep breath]. Unbelievers are existing down from the impulses and energies within their flesh that are seeking to work themselves across from within and into self-forfeiting speech and behaviour. 


But if you are within the Messiah then –


The body indeed lacks life by means of self-forfeiture and loss


But


The Breath, Life by means of judicial approval and right wise-ness

  

Paul maintains the dichotomy between flesh and Breath, and the corresponding results of death and life, even when looking at Christians. Verse 10 is virtually a restatement of Romans 7 v 25 – ‘So then, indeed I am willingly serving God’s law with the mind, but flesh, fundamental principles of self-forfeiture and loss’. On being brought forth by God, Christians have not lost nor transcended their fleshly constitution. They have not suddenly become incorporeal beings who have forsaken their physical body. Christians continue to exist within their physical, fleshly body, which is metaphorically compared in Scripture to a tent – ‘I exist within this, the tent’, (II Peter 1 v 13), and ‘existing within the tent we are groaning, being weighed down’, (II Corinthians 5 v 4). 


Why are Christians being ‘weighed down’? Because ‘the body indeed lacks Life by means of self-forfeiture and loss’. The Christian’s fleshly constitution, their physical body per se remains a hopeless case. On being brought forth by God the Christian’s earthy, fleshly body is not reconstituted nor is it transcended. The Christian’s fleshly constitution does not change. The Christian’s earthy fleshly constitution is indeed death by means of its fleshly impulses and passions working out to completion within self-forfeiting behaviour in opposition to God. Its passions and energies are still actively working in opposition to God, contrary to the Christians enlightened mind. Of itself the Christian’s flesh remains unresponsive, opposed to God, and it is also subject to physical death – it is mortal. Thus Christians are groaning and weighed down. 


Why does God allow this to be the case? Paul tells us elsewhere that Christians ‘have this storehouse within earthen vessels in order that the power above and beyond exists from out of God’, (II Corinthians 4 v 7). The godly service that Christians construct is not originating and emerging down from their physical body or its inherent strength and ability. This means that there is no room for Christians to boast. Christians have their storehouse of divine gifts within their weak ‘earthen vessels’ so that what they construct is down from the power that exists from out of God by means of the Breath.  


Now ‘this is the desire and purpose of God - you set apart, pure and clean….every one of you knowing and perceiving, acquiring possession and mastery of his [or her] vessel within purity and honour’, (I Thessalonians 4 v 3a, 4). The Christian’s divine summons – their calling from God - is towards enlightened self-mastery over the impulses and energies inherent within their fleshly constitution that are working in opposition to God. But how can Christians move towards this goal if their fleshly constitution is dead and unresponsive to God? They cannot attain this mastery by means of turning to the written codes of divine law because the law is made weak and powerless by the impulses and passions of their flesh. The law makes knowledge of self-forfeiture more evident, (Romans 7 v 8 – 10; 8 v 3, 4).


Paul gives us the answer – ‘but the Breath [Pneuma] Life by means of judicial approval and right wise-ness’. The Breath is the source of Life – of sensitivity and responsiveness to God – given to Christians as a result of the free gift of judicial approval secured by God’s anointed deliverer, the Messiah, and the source of the Christian’s union with the Messiah. The Christian’s tied enslavement to their flesh is cut, such that within Christians there is a contrary movement and current, and an enlightened mind, that opposes the flesh. [And relax]. 


Principles of living a godly life [51] – Close identification with delight in the law

 ‘I closely identify with delight in the Law of God down from the man within; 23 but I perceive another law or principle within my members, waging war against the principle of my mind and taking me captive within the principle of self-forfeiture and loss existing within my members’, (Romans 7 v 22, 23). 


The Apostle Paul introduces another fundamental and vital concept, that of ‘close identification’. He uses the Greek word ‘synédomai’, from ‘sýn’, meaning ‘to closely identify with’ and ‘hēdomai’, ‘to experience delight’, hence the meaning ‘to closely identify with delight’. It occurs nowhere else in the New Testament. He closely identifies with delight ‘in the Law of God’ down from the ‘man within’ or ‘inner man’. He is referring to the ‘inside of the cup’ of the renewed man, the man brought forth by God. The general sense of the whole passage here in Romans 7 leads us to understand that Paul is referring to the rational aspect of Christians, the principle of the Christian’s enlightened mind, (verse 23), which is in opposition to the earthy, sensuous impulses of their fleshly constitution. 


Paul is talking about Christians here. Bible commentator John Gill is correct when he draws out the polarising difference between Christians and unbelievers. He says of this identification with delight in Gods Law down from the man within that ‘an unregenerate man cannot [closely identify with this delight in the Law]. He does not like its commands, they are disagreeable to his corrupt nature, and as it is a threatening, cursing, damning law it can never be delighted in by him. The moralist, the Pharisee, who obeys it externally, does not love it, nor delight in it. He obeys it not from [out of] love to its precepts, but from fear of its threats. Or from a desire for popular esteem, and low, mercenary, selfish views, in order to gain the applause of men, and favour of God. Only a regenerate man delights in the law of God, which he does as Christ fulfils it, who has answered all the demands of it’. (Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible, with slight paraphrasing of his comments on this verse).


But in verse 23, Paul describes the other process or principle that is at work within him, within his flesh, existing within his members, that he does not closely identify with and that is ‘taking him captive’. The Greek word means ‘taken by the spear’, like a prisoner of war, captured within the principle of self-forfeiture and loss. Hence his earlier statement in verse 20, ‘I [ego] am no longer fully working it out to completion, but on the contrary, the self-forfeiture sitting and dwelling within me’. He is being taken captive under duress. It is not his intention to be taken captive. It is happening but this does not mean that he is fully compliant, or happily willing to work for the enemy. In World War 2, if the Nazis captured someone, it did not mean that their captive suddenly became a Nazi – they did not suddenly identify with Nazism. That is a fairly clear illustration or image of Paul’s situation.   


‘I’ [ego] as governor/regulator/controller, stand as an intermediary between the impulses that are inherent and at work within my fleshly constitution, and what is carried across into my speech and behaviour. In other words, as a Christian ‘I’ [ego] act as an enlightened ‘regulator’ of what I allow to carry across from within. But imagine the attention of a guard at the guard post, or even the guard himself, being captured or waylaid for a moment. The guard post is then insufficiently unregulated and undesirable material gets carried across to the other side. The Apostle is not giving us freedom to say ‘It wasn’t me!’ or ‘Look what you made me do!’, which in effect is an attempt to say ‘I am not responsible’. No, the injunction of the Apostles is to maturity of understanding and to constant, vigilant watchfulness.


Principles of living a godly life [40] – Christians, ‘unbelievers’ and divine law

 ‘Because when we existed within the flesh, the passions, the self-forfeiture and loss were actively and effectively working within our limbs and members through the means of the law, penetrating towards the bringing forth of fruit, the death. 6 But now we are rendered entirely idle away from the law, having died within that holding us down tight, in order that we are serving within new, fresh breath [pneuma] and absolutely not within obsolete writing, (Romans 7 v 5, 6).


Paul is speaking to Hebrew Christians who know divine law, (verse 1), and said that the law only has authority whilst an individual is alive. When they die, the law is rendered idle. Speaking to his fellow Jewish Christians says, ‘brothers, you also were put to death, the law by means of the body of the Messiah penetrating into you becoming another, the having been aroused from out of the dead, in order that we begin and continue to bear the fruit of God’, (verse 4). I explored this in the previous two posts. 


Divine law had been given to God’s chosen ethnic group – the Jews – as part of the Sinai Covenant. They possessed it as an advantage and privilege. But now Paul is telling these Hebrew Christians that their ‘old self’ has died and that therefore divine law is rendered idle. He now begins to explain why this is the case even for Jewish Christians. In doing so, he first looks back to how these Jews existed before they became Christians.


They existed within the realm of the flesh like everyone else. They were concerned to increase their wealth, comfort and status, and they sought physical pleasures and stimulation. As Jews they were familiar with the written codes of the Sinai Covenant, but this knowledge did not increase their godliness or cleanliness. In fact, just the opposite happened. Why? What was the dynamic process that was taking place? It was this: inherent within their physical constitution, within their flesh, the energy and impetus of raw passions – deep strong emotions – penetrating towards ‘self-forfeiture and loss’, actively worked within their limbs with the result of bringing forth ‘fruit’. They carried the passions, impulses, inclinations and working energies within the fabric of their flesh across into their speech and behaviour, bringing about ‘death’ – insensitivity, unresponsiveness and the darkness of ignorance with regard to God. These disapproved-of energies and passions were defined and increased by means of divine law, resulting in divine condemnation and disapproval, and the judicial sentence of separation. That is the dynamic process that takes place when those existing within the flesh turn to the written codes and regulations of law – including divine law. Wayward passions and working energies within our physical constitution lead us to death by means of the law. ‘Law is working down settled anger’, (Romans 4 v 15a).


‘But now…’. Paul then looks at the situation of these Jews now that God has brought them forth as Christians. A radical yet subtle change has taken place as I have explained in the previous posts. This polarising change includes the death of their old human appearance, such that they ‘are rendered entirely idle away from the law’. They ‘have died within the sphere of that holding us down tight’, (verse 6a). The dynamic process that I have just described in the previous paragraph is a trap that holds its victims tight, resulting in death. But now, the ‘old self’ even of those who possess and know the written codes of Covenant law, has died. In addition, they are transferred from out of the authority of the Levitical priesthood into a new priesthood such that they are rendered entirely idle away from the written codes of Levitical law and the Sinai Covenant. 


‘Ah!’ says the Christian legalist. ‘What Paul means is that they are rendered idle from ceremonial law, but not the moral law!’ But the Apostles do not make such a distinction. When they talk of law they speak of the law as a unified whole. As Paul indicates at the end of verse 6, by ‘law’ he means ‘obsolete writing’, the written codes and injunctions set out through Moses. The Ten Commandments, written in stone. The Levitical law, the written codes of the Sinai Covenant. 


But this does not mean that Christians are therefore opposed to divine law. They are not ‘anti law’ or ‘antinomian’. It does not mean that they now have permissive licence to do what they want. Christians, including Jewish Christians, are rendered entirely idle from the law ‘in order that they are serving’. Their calling is to serve and honour God and His Messiah who has paid the price to buy them back and is now their new Lord. 


So, if Christians are called to serve and honour God day-by-day, set apart from the worldly arrangement and its values, but they are rendered idle from the obsolete written codes of divine law, then how do they do this? How do they know what to do? Paul tells us the answer in verse 6 – Christians ‘are serving within new, fresh breath [pneuma]. Uniquely for Christians, the Breath (Pneuma) that is different and set apart from the world (hagios) has been given to dwell within them. So Paul exhorts Christians to serve within the sphere of the fresh, new realm of the breath – to walk around within the realm of the Breath.


Principles of living a godly life [39] – Christians and divine law [6]

 At this present time Christians exist at a kind of mid-point, in a transitional state. They are no longer who they once were but their redemption has not yet reached its end point. Their old human appearance is dead thanks to being brought forth by God in union with the Messiah by means of the Breath, but they are not yet what they will be, indeed, it has not yet been revealed what they will be. Instead, the ‘new and fresh is coming into being’. Christians are in the middle of a transitional process. Their new formation has begun but it has not yet reached its culmination. 


So we have this situation. On being brought forth by God their old human appearance has died and a new formation has come into being. Reminding ourselves of what Paul said in the first four verses of Romans chapter 7, the fact that their old human appearance has died means that – 


The written codes of divine law have been rendered idle in terms of trying to obey these codes as a means of obtaining divine approval day-by-day or in terms of ultimate and final approval on the Day of Judgement. 


Christians are joined in union with the Messiah who has fulfilled the requirements of divine law in his body. He is the spotless Lamb of God. 


Because of this union, Christians are freed from condemnation within the sphere of the written codes of divine law. Instead the law penetrates into them becoming ‘the roused from out of the dead’. 


In II Corinthians 11 v 2 Paul says of the Corinthian Christians, ‘I have joined you to one husband, a set apart virgin to present and stand beside the Messiah’. He speaks of Jesus as their husband because they exist in union with him as their Lord and head.


The purpose of the death of the Christian’s ‘old human appearance’ and their union with the Messiah by means of the Breath, such that they penetrate into becoming ‘the aroused from out of the dead’ is that they actively ‘bear fruit for God’ in their speech and behaviour. They do not seek a life of godliness and good in order to obtain or maintain divine approval by working and expending their energy in such behaviour, but rather, out of loyal service for the honour and praise of God. Such clean speech and behaviour is the ‘fruit of the Breath’, (Galatians 5 v 22). 


Having been brought forth by God, Christians do not own themselves. I have often heard ‘outsiders’ or ‘unbelievers’ say in defence of their preferred behaviour, ‘It’s my body, or my life, I can do what I like’. This is not a Christian sentiment. Christians are bond-slaves of their Lord and Master the Messiah. They have been bought back, redeemed or purchased with a price, and placed in God’s household. By right of purchase, Christians are therefore under an obligation to behave as their Messiah directs. The Messiah purchases the taking away of the Christian’s condemnation by means of the shedding of his own lifeblood and in doing so he places upon them a new obligation to obedience. Those who are redeemed from out of slavery or captivity to self-forfeiture and condemnation are the purchased servants of him who redeemed them – as Paul goes on to say in the next verses in Romans 7. 


Principles of living a godly life [38] – Christians and divine law [5]

Paul has stated and illustrated the principle that the law only has authority whilst a man is alive. When a man dies the law is rendered idle. He then applies this statement to Christians, especially to Hebrew Christians – ‘those knowing law’, (Romans 7 v 1). ‘So then my brothers, you also were put to death, the law by means of the body of the Messiah penetrating into you becoming another, the having been aroused from out of the dead, in order that we begin and continue to bear the fruit of God’, (Romans 7 v 4).


OK Hold on to your hats and take a deep breath….


Paul says that Christians, including Jewish Christians who know the law, have been put to death and therefore the law is rendered idle. Earlier, Paul has said that Christians are ‘planted together with the Messiah so as to be coming forth the resemblance of His death…knowing this, that our old human appearance was crucified together with [the Messiah], in order that the body of self-forfeiture and loss is brought to an end. We are no longer serving self-forfeiture and loss’, (Romans 6 v 5, 6). 


What does Paul mean when he says that the Christian’s ‘old human appearance was crucified’? What is the Christian’s ‘old human appearance’? A polarising difference exists between Christians and unbelievers. The natural, inherited constitution of every individual is described in Scripture as the ‘old human appearance’, or as the ‘natural, sensuous earthy man’, or the ‘old and ancient self’. Within our ‘old human appearance’ we are earthy, sensuous individuals who rely on our sense of the tangible. Impulses within our physical flesh lead us to a condition in which we don’t take hold of and welcome the Breath of God. That which is of the Breath of God seems to be dull, absurd foolishness. We don’t have a natural ability to perceive, recognise or be persuaded to the point of obedience regarding the Messiah and or what is of the Breath, no matter how hard we may try. The theological principle is this: 


That which is of the Breath of God is discerned, distinguished, examined and apprehended only through the assistance of the Breath of God


We may understand the words and concepts in Scripture, but no matter how educated and intelligent we may be, we remain without persuasion when it comes to what is true to the facts with regard to God, His Messiah and the intangible unseen realm. We remain in, and prefer, darkness to light and thus we remain unbelievers, penetrating toward the judicial condemnation of God.


But once God brings forth those He has selected, they are described as being a ‘new formation’ - they are no longer who they once were. Having been effectively being brought forth, a fundamental change has taken place within them, which means that they are not the same as they we were before – ‘our old human appearance was crucified together with [the Messiah]’ (Romans 6 v 6). This happened to them and was completed in the past, when they were effectively brought forth. Thus Paul says here in Romans 7 v 4 – ‘my brothers, you also were put to death’, you Jews who know the law and whom God as brought forth by means of the Messiah – you also were put to death, your ‘old self’ was crucified together with the Messiah. 


The next phrase is more difficult to translate and I consider that many translations are misleading. Translators are forced to add words in English that are not present in the Greek text, in order to convey the interpretation that they consider Paul intended. But I have presented what the Greek text says – ‘the law by means of the body of the Messiah penetrating into you becoming another, the having been aroused from out of the dead’. All the word studies and lexicons fail to make mention of the word ‘law’ – ‘nomos’ – in this particular verse. It would seem that they are unable to determine the particular or specific meaning of the word ‘law’ in this verse. Translators and commentators add the English word ‘to’, thereby giving us the phrase - ‘you were put to death to the law’. But the word ‘to’ is not there in the original Greek. 


So what is Paul saying? I consider that Paul is saying that the law – the written codes of divine law – by means of the body of the Messiah penetrates into them becoming another. Christians are placed in union with the Messiah by means of the Breath. Their ‘old self’ is crucified, put to death together with him, because of their union with him. But the law is fulfilled or brought to completion by means of the body of the Messiah, the Lamb of God without stain or blemish, and therefore, Christians are roused up to Life with him, again because of their union with him. In this way they are judicially approved, and the law penetrates into them becoming ‘another’ – a ‘new self’. 


What does this mean? It means that those whom God has brought forth are ‘the having been aroused from out of the dead’. The rousing up from out of the dead has already begun. Christians are no longer ‘under the law’ because they have been crucified with the Messiah and their ‘old self’ has died and therefore the law has been rendered idle. But because of their union with the Messiah they are also ‘roused up from out of the dead’ to a position of divine approval, because the law has been fulfilled and completed by means of the body of the Messiah. The law, being fulfilled, penetrates into Christians becoming ‘the roused up from the dead’ at this present time because of their union within the Messiah. ‘If therefore then anyone [is] within the Messiah, [they are] a fresh, new, unused formation. The beginnings are coming near – look! Fresh, new, unused is caused to come into being’, (II Corinthians 5 v 17). This has happened in order that ‘we begin and continue to bear the fruit of God’.


….and breathe out and relax.

 

Principles of living a godly life [36] – Christians and divine law [3]

 Paul has said that if self-forfeiture abounds, the divine gift super-abounds. He then anticipates a couple of potential objections and I looked at the first objection in the previous two posts. He concluded that Christians ‘are absolutely not under law, but under favour’, (Romans 6 v 14). As a result of this statement Paul then anticipates the second objection. ‘What then? Are we to self-forfeit because we are not under law but under free favour?’ Once again Paul responds immediately, ‘May it never be!’, (Romans 6 v 15). Once again I want to point out that this objection is about divine approval in the Christian’s day-to-day life. The question is framed like this – 


If Christians are not under law


Then HOW SHOULD WE LIVE OUR LIVES AS CHRISTIANS?


Are we free to carry on self-forfeiting? 



This is the typical objection of the Christian legalist – IF we are not under law THEN surely we are free to carry on in self-forfeiture – we are being led to permissiveness – to lawlessness. 


Paul dismisses this objection and says, ‘May it never be!’ He then uses the illustration of slavery to make his point. ‘Don’t you appreciate that who you stand enslaving yourselves beside, penetrating into obedience, you are enslaved to whom you obey, whether self-forfeiture penetrating into death, or obedience penetrating into divine approval? But - gift of God - since you used to exist slaves of self-forfeiture, but you listened attentively to the point of obedience from out of your deep inner core, penetrating into that form of teaching given from close beside. But having been set free, away from self-forfeiture and loss, you are enslaved to divine approval’, (Romans 6 v 16 – 18). 


Paul says that he speaks in human terms because of the weakness of their flesh. Then he states it again in a slightly different and fuller way. ‘Because just as you stood beside your members enslaved to uncleanness and lawlessness penetrating into lawlessness, now, at this present time, in the same way, stand beside your members enslaved to divine approval penetrating into being set apart in the likeness of God’, (Romans 6 v 19b). The metaphorical image he presents is of a loyal servant always at a point of readiness to serve his master. Before being enlisted to serve his present master he did what he liked, when he liked. But he was enslaved to seeking pleasure, personal gain and so on, and he used his hands, feet and head to obtain and secure what he desired, penetrating into lawlessness. But now he is exhorted to have his hands, feet and head standing at attentive readiness to serve his master. That is the dynamic. The Apostle does not direct Christians to Covenant Law. He tells them to act in a way that is consistent with their calling and redemption. To be like faithful servants ready to serve their new master/owner. He exhorts them to have their hands, feet and head standing at attentive readiness to serve their Lord who has paid the price to purchase them and rescue them from condemnation.    


Paul continues to compare the Christian’s previous natural state – their old human form inherited away from their ancestors, with their new position and new formation. ‘Because when you existed slaves of self-forfeiture and loss you existed free from, or not a slave of, divine approval. Therefore what fruit did you possess at that time on the basis of that which at this present time you are ashamed of? Because the end and completion of those things is death. But now, having been liberated away from self-forfeiture and loss, and having become enslaved to God, you possess your fruit penetrating into purification in the likeness of God and the end and completion is perpetual Life. Because the payments of self-forfeiture - death, but the extended free gift of God - perpetual Life within our Lord Jesus, the Messiah’, (Romans 6 v 20 – 23). In their previous form, as they were by nature, they were not enslaved to divine approval. They were insensitive to and ignorant of God and divine law, but enslaved to the desires and the impetus of passions arising within their fleshly constitution. But what did they gain as a result? The end result of their enslavement is death –divine disapproval and loss of a share in the divine inheritance. But now, as Christians, they are free from self-forfeiture and no share or portion of the divine inheritance, and they are enslaved to God, possessing fruit that penetrates into them being purified in the likeness of God and His Messiah. They are being changed, the end result being perpetual Life within the Messiah.