Principles of living a godly life [41] – Human nature and divine law [1]

 ‘What then? Will we say ‘The Law of self-forfeiture and loss’? May it not be caused to happen! However, I would absolutely not know self-forfeiture and loss if not by means of Law, for also I would absolutely not know covetousness if the Law had not said, ‘You will not covet’,’ (Romans 7 v 7). 


In verse 5 Paul said that ‘when we existed within the flesh, the passions, the self-forfeiture, actively and effectively worked within our limbs and members through the means of the law, penetrating towards the bringing forth of fruit, the death’. Paul also says elsewhere that ‘law entered close beside in order that the falling away became greater in number, (Galatians 5 v 20). Law increases the amount of transgressions and the wayward raw passions and energies inherent in the fabric of our fleshly constitution are working in our limbs by means of the law. In other words, divine law is not leading ‘outsiders’ or unbelievers to live a life of set apart cleanliness at all. But when Christians are brought forth by God they are rendered idle with regard to serving God within the sphere of the law.


So Paul immediately anticipates another objection from those who know the law. He frames the objection in terms of a rhetorical question. ‘What then? Will we say ‘the Law of self-forfeiture and loss’?’ Will we say that the Law is at fault? Is Law failing in the purpose of producing cleanliness? Is the Law creating self-forfeiture and loss in us? He answers immediately. ‘May it not be caused to happen!’ 


To illustrate his point he quotes the beginning of the tenth Commandment, ‘You will not covet’, (Exodus 20 v 17; Deuteronomy 5 v 21). The word ‘covet’ means ‘to have focused passion’, ‘to yearn for’, ‘to greatly desire to do or have something’, ‘to long for’, ‘to desire very much’, or ‘to lust after’. Mosaic or Sinai Covenant Law takes an enormous step forward in advance of many other ancient codes, because most of them stopped short at actual action or behaviour. Just a few went on to speech, but few if any laws addressed an individual’s thoughts or passions. But divine law says, ‘You will not covet’, you will not hold on to the thought and passionate desire for something. Coveting proceeds from our heart or deep inner core, (Proverbs 6 v 25), and when it carries across into our behaviour it brings forth self-forfeiture and loss, the thought and desire is brought to completion in the act. 


Paul says ‘in the absence of divine law I would not know that if I covet then I self-forfeit incurring loss. Covenant Law is the means by which I know that I am self-forfeiting. Until the law revealed it, I had no knowledge or consciousness of divine disapproval, self-forfeiture and loss with regard to coveting.’ Without doubt there were those who desired their ‘neighbour’s wife, or his manservant, or his maidservant, but before the giving of Covenant Law this would not be readily perceived as a divinely disapproved-of desire for that which was forbidden. Because no written code existed to reveal that God disapproved of such passionate desire. The Apostle did not know covetousness as something that was disapproved-of by God until he was confronted with the law opposing it. The desire might have existed within him, but he would not have known that God disapproved of it to the point of his self-forfeiture and loss. The written codes of divine law place boundaries on his desires, as well as his speech and behaviour, teaching him what God judicially approves of and what He disapproves of. Divine law teaches where lawful indulgence ends, and where self-forfeiture and loss begins.


It is not Divine Law itself that is missing the mark, nor is it failing. So what is the dynamic process that happens? Paul is about to tell us.


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 [37] – Christians and divine law [4]

 Moving into chapter seven of Romans we come to one of those chapter divisions that were introduced centuries after the original letter was written. Useful as they are for providing quick reference points, they can also sometimes mislead us by creating artificial divisions within the flow of the text. There is such a case here - chapter seven does not begin a new theme. Paul continues to outline his answer to an objection by some Christians concerning the Christian’s relationship to divine law, a section that began in chapter 6 v 14, 15. Paul concluded that Christians are absolutely not under law, but under favour’ and as a result of this statement he then anticipated an objection. ‘What then? Are we to self-forfeit because we are not under law but under free favour?’ In other words the theme of this section began with the objection by legalists that if Christians are not under law then they are led into permissive licence in their speech and behaviour. 


We saw the initial response of Paul to this objection in the previous post – ‘May it never be!’, (Romans 6 v 15), and he continues to explain his response throughout chapter seven and beyond. Thus, here in verse 1 of chapter 7 he once again mentions the theme of law. ‘Or are you ignorant brothers – because I am speaking to those knowing law – that the law has authority over the man on the basis of how long a time he lives?’. He is particularly speaking to Hebrew Christians who are familiar with Sinai Covenant Law or Levitical Law. 


He then gives an illustration of the principle ‘that the law has authority over the man on the basis of how long a time he lives’. The illustration is drawn from marriage. ‘Because the woman married to a husband is tied to the living husband by law. But if the husband dies she is inactive down away from the law and the man. Therefore then, if she happens to another man, the husband being alive, she will legally be an adulteress, but if the husband dies, if happening to another man and being accused an adulteress, she is delivered from the law’, (Romans 7 v 2, 3). In other words if a woman is married to a man, law ties her to her husband – but only while her husband is alive. If her husband dies, the law tying her to her husband is rendered idle and she is no longer tied to this man. This means that if she has an intimate relationship with another man whilst her husband is alive, then she is legally categorised as an adulteress. But if she has an intimate relationship with another man after her husband has died, the law tying her to her husband has been rendered idle, so she is free from any legal accusation of being an adulteress. The law has authority only whilst her husband is alive.


Paul then applies this principle to Christians – including Hebrew Christians who, before they became Christians, had been placed under the Sinai Covenant and its written codes of divine law.