Sermon: Sunday, 10th November, 2024
Speaker: John Johnstone
Scripture: Romans 5:12-21
Why is it that we live in a world where no one is capable of living a life without selfishness or without hurting others? Why are human beings capable of goodness and kindness but also of terrible evil? Why is it that all people eventually die? Is this just part of the normal cycle of life, as Sir Chris Hoy has recently asserted? These are big questions. Why is the world the way it is? This section of Romans explains why things are the way they are. And like it or not, the explanation is that the actions of two men, Adam and Jesus Christ, have had dramatic repercussions for the human race. Today in 2024, we tend to think about things individualistically. We often recoil from thinking about how one person’s behaviour can shape reality for other people as well as their own. We might think this is unfair. However, it is true, nonetheless. We are not islands, but are part of families and countries and are also part of the human race. We are more interconnected than we like to think.
For example, think of a man who aged 45 inherits several million pounds from his parents in their will. This man did not work for the money – his parents did. I might think, ‘That’s not fair. I’ve never received that kind of a benefit.’ But it’s because he is in the family. Think of an opposite example. A family of six is living in relative comfort for many years. But then the father makes an unwise and risky investment using all the family’s money. He loses everything. Suddenly, the family become homeless and the parents split up and their children have to relocate to a new area far away from their friends. We could say, ‘That’s not fair on the children.’ But like it or not, the foolishness of one family member spills over into the lives of the whole family.
If a country has a wise leader who improves the economy and housing for his people, then many benefit from their representative. However, if a country has a foolish leader, who enters into an unjust war, it will be a disaster for the ordinary people in the country. In this way, human beings are bound together by the decisions of others. If the Scotland squad win we say ‘we won’ because they are our representatives. We weren’t playing on the pitch.
One of the best Biblical examples of this is the story of David and Goliath. David is fighting on behalf of the Israelites, and what happens to David will have a profound effect on the whole nation, because he is their representative. If he loses to the giant Goliath, then Israel will become the slaves of the Philistines; however, if David wins, the nation will be free. It all hinges on one man, David. If Goliath loses, then his people, the Philistines, will lose with him. The war is not being handled individualistically, but through two representatives.
1. The ruin of mankind (verses 12-14)
Our passage today explains why human beings are born with original sin, leading to wrong thoughts and actions and rebellion against God: ‘Therefore, just as sin entered the world through one man, and death through sin, and in this way death came to all people, because all sinned…’ (Romans 5:12) It is because the representative of the whole race was Adam, and he chose to disobey God by eating from the tree he was forbidden to eat from. It’s all detailed for us in Genesis chapter 3. Adam’s disobedience was a tragedy for the human race. We could even say that through his disobedience, he squandered the family fortune, bankrupting the human race.
Think of a river being polluted at the source. Adam is that source, at the head of our family tree. Just as faulty genes of disease are often passed down through the generations, so Adam’s sin is passed down to each one of us. We call this original sin.
R C Sproul: ‘Original sin refers to the result of the first sin, not the first sin itself… it is not that we are sinful because we sin, but rather that we sin because we are sinful. The activity of sin flows out of a sinful nature, a fallen nature, a heart that is out of sync with God. Man is fallen in the depths of his being, and has a basic disposition towards sin rather than towards righteousness.’
We might find this teaching of original sin unfair and offensive. However, it is true to the way things are. If people were really born neutrally, then we would surely expect some of them not to become selfish or greedy or those who hurt others. But that is not what we find. What we find is that 100% of people fail to keep their own standards far less God’s. Only Jesus lived a flawless life. And we find that 100% of people die. We find that even very young children quickly begin to display selfish tendencies, no matter how consciously their parents bring them up. The teaching of original sin might be uncomfortable and seem unfair, but it describes the way the world is in a way in which nothing else does. There is no other reasonable explanation.
Jesus teaches exactly the same thing. ‘What comes out of a person is what defiles them. For it is from within, out of a person’s heart, that evil thoughts come—sexual immorality, theft, murder, adultery, greed, malice, deceit, lewdness, envy, slander, arrogance and folly. All these evils come from inside and defile a person.’ ( (Mark 7:20-23) Jesus, of course, is right. No matter what you might do, you cannot stop these thoughts, proving that we have sinful natures. What a mixture human beings are! We are made in the image of God, with dignity and the ability to love and plan and design. And yet, as a race we can’t stop waging war on one another and exploiting one another. The world is full of injustice and poverty, even though there is enough food to go round. Why did one of the most civilised and educated countries in the world, Germany, murder six million Jews? Why the silent holocaust of the unborn? Why divorce and drugs and fraud? Because the heart of the human problem is the problem of the human heart.
Sadly, throughout the history of the human race, this behaviour has always come to the surface. We are not improving over time! Even in the days between Adam and Moses (which verses 13-14 speak about) before the Ten Commandments had been given, the wickedness of our race was obvious. There was murder and rape and cruelty on a massive scale. When the law was eventually given, that just served to highlight our twistedness and rebellion all the more. Chuck Swindoll tells the story of riding his bike across his neighbour’s grass, making a mess of the lawn, even though he knew he shouldn’t have been doing that. Eventually, a sign was put up: ‘keep of the grass – no bikes’ This was like the giving of the law. But he carried on cycling over the grass anyway, so the sign just made his misdemeanours all the more evident. That’s what happened when the law was given – the sins of humanity were highlighted.
It is a bit depressing thinking about Adam being our covenant head, or representative. My favourite illustration of this situation is to picture a rock climber scaling a mountain, with countless others clipped onto his belt. If he falls, then everyone else on his rope will also fall. What happens to him will happen to everyone else. And tragically Adam does fall. This describes the history of humanity.
But there’s also another illustration. Through faith, we are unclipped from Adam’s rope and clipped onto Jesus’ rope instead. What happens to him will now happen to us. And wonderfully, he defeats death and sin forever. He scales the mountain perfectly. His obedience becomes our obedience and his death becomes ours, and his life flows into us. This leads us to our next point.
2. The rescue of mankind (verses 15-19)
Christians are those who are clipped on to Jesus’ rope. God does not want to leave humanity in a state of sin and misery and so in love and grace he sends his Son into the world. And on the cross, our sin is imputed to him and his goodness and perfect obedience is imputed to us. We might say, ‘That’s not fair.’ But it is true. It is grace. It is God’s remedy for us. Whilst Adam’s disobedience is so destructive, Christ’s perfect obedience brings us forgiveness, peace, hope and eternal life. ‘Consequently, just as one trespass resulted in condemnation for all people, so also one righteous act resulted in justification and life for all people. For just as through the disobedience of the one man the many were made sinners, so also through the obedience of the one man the many will be made righteous.’ (Romans 5:18-19)
Adam and Christ, the second Adam, do have something in common. Both of them are representatives whose acts has enormous consequences. Adam’s plunged us down into ruin. But Christ’s obedience and death on the cross changes everything for the good. Christ is able to deal with the sin which flows from our hearts. He forgives us. He gives us his Spirit in order to change us from the inside, and bring us back into God’s presence. His grace is greater than all our sin – much greater.
Adam failed at being a representative. But Jesus succeeded in every respect. What a privilege to be clipped onto him. He is always good and righteous and kind and compassionate. He did on our behalf what we could never do and perfectly kept the law. And he gave his life for our sins. You could not wish for or imagine a better representative than Jesus.
And this shapes our new identity as Christians. We are no longer in Adam but are in Christ. Yes, we still make mistakes, sometimes serious ones, but what happens to Jesus will happen to us, as we are clipped onto him by faith. The marvellous truth for the Christian is this: there is more grace in Jesus than there is sin in your heart.
Charles Wesley wrote the hymn ‘O Jesus full of truth and grace’:
O Jesus, full of truth and grace,
more full of grace than I of sin,
yet once again I seek your face;
open your arms and take me in,
and freely my backslidings heal
and love the faithless sinner still.
You know the way to bring me back,
my fallen spirit to restore:
O for your truth and mercy’s sake forgive,
and bid me sin no more;
the ruins of my soul repair
and make my heart a house of prayer.
Friends, let’s celebrate this amazing truth today – we are no longer in Adam but are in Christ. Christ’s impact on the human race far outweighs that of Adam’s impact: ‘But where sin increased, grace increased all the more, so that, just as sin reigned in death, so also grace might reign through righteousness to bring eternal life through Jesus Christ our Lord.’ (Romans 5:20-21)
Let’s end with another fantastic thought. Because Jesus is our covenant head, our representative, our salvation it totally assured. He has already defeated death and he cannot fail. And because he cannot fail, and what happens to him will happen to us, those who trust him are assured of eternal life. We are assured of eternal life. Were it down to my own efforts to enter Heaven, I would fail miserably. But it’s not down to me. It’s down to him. We are tethered to Christ!
‘And God raised us up with Christ and seated us with him in the heavenly realms in Christ Jesus.’ (Ephesians 2:6)
So, if you haven’t trusted him yet, then do so now.