Relying on God alone

Sermon: Sunday, 29th September, 2024
Speaker: John Johnstone
Scripture: Romans 2:1 – 3:8

It can be heart-breaking when people trust in the wrong things or the wrong people. Having a false confidence in something or someone can be so dangerous. For example, those who set sail on the Titanic in 1912, trusted that they would arrive safely in New York City. Around 1500 lost their lives. Their confidence in human engineering and in the skill of the sailors was misplaced. In 1991, following the death of Robert Maxwell, it came to light that he had embezzled 460 million from employees, whose pension funds dropped by 50% as a result. You cannot trust powerful figures, and you cannot trust that you will have financial security in the future, and if you do then you will ultimately be disappointed.

When it comes to thinking about our eternal security – life after death – you need to make sure your confidence is not misplaced. Tragically, there are many people who think they have a guaranteed place in Heaven, but they are trusting in the wrong things. It is a false confidence. They trust in their own goodness, or in their religion or in their Christian heritage, or in their churchgoing, but the bottom line is this: they do not know God or trust in Jesus as their Saviour. We’ve probably all been to funerals where it is assumed that the deceased is now in Heaven, even though during their lives Jesus meant nothing to them. This is the worst form of self-deception we can have, believing that we are at peace with God, when we are not.

Paul has been going to great lengths to underline to us that when it comes to the greatest human need, which is forgiveness with God, we are all in the same boat. We have already seen that it is not just the openly immoral who fall short of God’s righteous standards, but the respectable and moral in society fall short as well. They might not commit obvious sins such as murder and adultery in their actions, but in their hearts, they commit these sins repeatedly.

This week, we complete the dark picture of humanity by looking at a final group, that of the deeply religious within God’s covenant community. Many Jewish people wrongly assumed that all was well between them and God just because they attended the synagogue or because they were circumcised. Paul presents them with the shocking truth; if you rely on your Jewish heritage for your salvation, you will be eternity lost. For us in Kirkcaldy Free Church this morning, the shocking truth is this, if you are relying on your baptism or Christian upbringing, or church membership, or keeping of the Lord’s Day in order to get into Heaven, then you too have a false confidence.

1. Relying on your Christian heritage is a deadly mistake

What were the Jews relying on for their salvation? ‘Now you, if you call yourself a Jew; if you rely on the law and boast in God; if you know his will and approve of what is superior because you are instructed by the law…’ (Romans 2:17-18) The Jews thought they were okay with God because they were the ones who possessed God’s truth by having the Bible. Of all the nations on the earth, they were the ones who had been given the ten commandments on tablets of stone. They were the chosen ones. In effect, they were saying: ‘we don’t need to worry about God’s wrath or judgement, because we have God’s law’. However, like those on the Titanic, although they thought they were safe, they were not.

This leads us to the question, what impact should the 10 commandments have had on them? If they had really understood God’s law, they would have seen how beautiful the law is, because it teaches us how to love God and love our neighbours. However, God’s law should also unsettle us and make us feel guilty, because externally and internally, we fail to keep it. God’s law is like an MRI scan which shows up all the wrong and twisted things in our hearts. The law shows us our sin. So, rather than thinking: ‘We have the law so we’re okay.’ they should have thought, ‘We’ve totally failed to keep the law God entrusted us with, and we are in desperate need of his mercy.’ The law should lead us to cry out to Jesus on prayer for forgiveness.

So, let me ask each one of us here, are you relying on your knowledge of the Christian faith to get you into Heaven? If so, then you have a false confidence. What Paul is saying is that just possessing God’s truth and laws is not enough. In fact, there is a sense in which it makes us more guilty because we have been given more light by God: ‘You, then, who teach others, do you not teach yourself? You who preach against stealing, do you steal? You who say that people should not commit adultery, do you commit adultery?’ (Romans 2:21-22) Paul is rightly accusing them of failing to practice what they preach. They might teach others God’s law, or teach their own children, but that does not cover the fact that they too are law-breakers. God sees into our hearts, seeing our lack of love for him and for our neighbours.

It is not only God who sees their hypocrisy – the Gentiles see it too: ‘God’s name is blasphemed among the Gentiles because of you.’ (Romans 2:24) What does this mean? It means the failure of the religious to love others was a massive stumbling block for Gentiles. ‘If that’s what following the Lord looks like”, they thought, “then I’m having none of it.’

The application for us today us obvious. If you fail to practice what you preach at home and at the workplace and on a work night out, and in your neighbourhood and at church, then you yourself might be a barrier which keeps people from God. If you say ‘Yes, I’m a Christian.’ but are then lazy at work, or join in in gossip, then people will see through you. Of course, we are all far from perfect, but our aim, with God’s help, is to live out the Christian faith in everyday life. The opposite is also true: ‘…let your light shine before others, that they may see your good deeds and glorify your Father in heaven.’ (Matthew 5:16) I can think of a student who was known as a Christian in his halls of residence, but who slept around. God’s name was blasphemed amongst the students because of him. God’s name was dragged through the mud. May the same not be true of us.

2. Relying on your baptism is also a deadly mistake.

As well as the law, the Jews also relied upon the fact that they were connected with God’s people on account of being circumcised. To be blunt, they thought their place in Heaven was secure because they had been circumcised. It was good that they had been circumcised! This was God’s covenant sign which spoke to them of the righteousness which comes to us by faith. However, outward circumcision is not what makes us believers. For that, we need circumcision of the heart, which is a work of God: ‘A person is not a Jew who is one only outwardly, nor is circumcision merely outward and physical. No, a person is a Jew who is one inwardly; and circumcision is circumcision of the heart, by the Spirit, not by the written code.’ (Romans 2:28-29)

The Jews had misunderstood the covenant symbol of circumcision. They relied on the sign of circumcision but ignored the key thing, what the sign pointed to, a relationship of trust with the living God. What God cares about most is your heart. Do you love Jesus, trusting in his death on the cross? Imagine a man who wears a wedding ring all the time, as a sign of his marriage vows to his wife. The truth is, he is an adulterer. Then imagine another man who doesn’t wear his ring, but has been faithful all his life and loves his wife. We all know the first man cannot claim to be right with his wife because he wears a wedding ring. That’s just the outward sign, important though it is.

Let’s get more personal. What kind of wrong things can we trust in today? What might our false confidence be? For the Jews it was their possession of the Scriptures, and it was circumcision. For some of us it might be baptism. We might think that because we were baptised as a baby, or even as an adult, that our place in Heaven is secure. But that is nonsense. Our place in Heaven is only secure if we have received Jesus as Lord and Saviour. Our confidence must not be in our baptism but in Jesus. Jesus’ perfect life and death on our behalf must be the only basis of our confidence.

You might be from a country where there are many Muslims, and you might have grown up as a Christian, and attended church regularly. Is that your passport to Heaven. No! That would be relying on our Christian heritage, instead of relying on a person – Jesus Christ. If your confidence is in the fact that you are Free Church, Catholic or that you take communion, that is a false confidence. Again, as we sang together, we must say: ‘In Christ alone my hope is found.’ He is our confidence.

Let’s recap. Paul tells the whole world, the openly immoral, the respectable in society and the deeply religious, that they all fail to live up to God’s standards. This means that we all need Jesus to rescue us from the moral debt we have built up, no matter what our background might be. Make no mistake- the deeply religious would have been shocked by this. They had taken refuge in their religion and in their ethnic identity as Jews, but Paul has torn this shelter down, telling them it is no good and that Jesus is the only one you can shelter under.

Paul knows many of the religious Jews will object. Paul knows this from experience because he used to have this false confidence himself before he met Jesus. And so, Paul begins to deal with some typical objections to the truth that we are justified through faith alone in Christ alone.

3. Phoney objections

The first objection is, if they cannot save you from judgment, what’s the point in circumcision or in having the Scriptures? Wouldn’t Jews be better off as Gentiles? Paul says ‘No!’ We could ask a similar question in 2024, if it doesn’t save you from judgment, is there an advantage in having Christian parents? Indeed, there is. It is a massive privilege to be brought up in a Christian home and to be taught: who God is and what he has done, the value of human life and what our greatest need is, and also the way we can be forgiven and have eternal life. Of course, just knowing such facts is not enough; we must experience a true hatred of sin and turn to God for forgiveness. But to have the Bible, God’s instruction manual for our lives, is a tremendous blessing, revealing to us the unmatched, loving and gracious character of God.

The next 3 objections seem more spurious. Verses 3-4 seem to ask, if God’s people are unfaithful does that mean that he is unfaithful? Well, no it does not mean that. God is the Faithful One. He is always true to his word. If God chose the Jewish people, but some of them fail to trust him, does that mean God’s plans and promises are being frustrated? No, it does not mean this.

In verses 5-6, we have a twisted objection to God’s grace. The objector is arguing that the more we sin, the more glorious God’s grace appears, so surely God should be pleased when we sin, as our sin just underlines his grace more. It’s almost like arguing that we should be so delighted in the black cloth under the diamond, because this background shows off the beauty of the diamond more. So then, how could God judge our sin if our sin helps to highlight God’s grace and forgiveness? Would God not be unjust to bring his wrath on sinners? This is a feeble argument. Paul counters it by saying that God is the Judge of all people, and of course he is competent to judge justly.

The final objection in verses 7-8 is the worst of them all. The crux of this argument is this: if our being bad makes God look good, then we will be bad so that he looks good. These arguments are twisted and irrational. But the arguments remind us just how much human beings object to being told the truth that that they have a problem with sin and cannot be righteous in God’s sight by their own efforts. Rather than humbling ourselves before God, receiving Jesus as Saviour with great joy, many are determined not to believe. They will throw up smokescreens and ask all kind of questions, some of which might be unanswerable. But our God has told us more than enough about what we must do to be saved.

Sometimes people ask good questions and are genuinely seeking answers. At other times, however, questioning God and his ways are just our stubborn way of refusing to humble ourselves before him. We can legitimately ask why there is so much suffering in the world, and where evil came from, and we can ask about other religions and about God and science. But at the end of the day, the fact remains that one day each one of us will have to stand before God and give an account of our lives. We must focus on how to be saved. We must focus on how to receive the righteousness of God that is by faith. Do you want to have a true and right and genuine hope for Heaven? It is only found in Jesus.