Saturday, March 29, 2014

Romans 8:28-39: Love Conquers All

Love Conquers All
(Romans 8:28-39)

Introduction (vs. 28-30)

What is heaven like? (wait for response)

Why would God mess up his heaven with us? (love)

So what’s he going to do about it? Can he do anything about it?

And we know that in all things God works for the good of those who love him, who have been called according to his purpose.

The genius of God is his ability to take the worst situations and repurpose them for good. He does do it. He is doing it. For those who love him.

For those God foreknew he also predestined to be conformed to the image of his Son, that he might be the firstborn among many brothers and sisters. And those he predestined, he also called; those he called, he also justified; those he justified, he also glorified.

Before you and I were born, before the Earth began, before we were even able to love Him, God was planning to love us. That’s what “predestined” refers to—God’s unchanging plan to love you and me.  God wants to be in a loving relationship with us.

God’s love leads to his desire to be close to him. He works for the good of those “who have been called.” “…those he predestined, he also called.” God wants us to be close to him, so he calls.

But now we come to that problem again: If heaven were populated with us, the way we are now, it would not be heaven. We would drag heaven down. Do you honestly think that progress has or ever will fundamentally change the problems we have, human to human? Do you think that putting us in a perfect place, with no wants or worries, would eliminate hatred, hurt, jealously, selfishness? Wait, that’s been tried before, in a place called Eden.

Nonetheless, God’s love will not be blocked. God’s plan is not primarily about getting us to heaven—God’s plan is about making us fit for heaven so that we don’t ruin it. Look at what it says: “…he also predestined us to be conformed to the image of his Son, that he might be the firstborn among many brothers and sisters.” He doesn't just want to be your God. He wants to be your family. By every means at His disposal, he is changing you to be like your kuya (elder brother) Jesus. God wants us to be like Jesus. Heaven is the family reunion. Almighty God is using every resource He has to bring you into His family. God wants us to be family to him.  And here’s the crazy part: God made you part of His family before you acted like someone who should be a part of his family, with the full confidence that you will grow up to be just like Jesus. 

Looking around this room and looking the mirror, God’s view seems just a bit naive. I mean, just look at us. You know at the wedding, when the pastor or priest asks “if anyone knows of any reason why this man and this woman should not be joined in holy matrimony, speak now or forever hold you peace.”? When you say God loves you and you love God, someone is bound to raise their hand and say, “Excuse me, I have a few objections.” What are those objections?
  • Opposition. You are not strong enough.
  • Accusation. You are not good enough. 
  • Labels. You are hopeless. 
  • Separation. You are too weak.

The Opposition Says: You Are Not Strong Enough (vs. 31, 32)

If God is for us, who can be against us? He who did not spare his own Son, but gave him up for us all—how will he not also, along with him, graciously give us all things?

God loves us. God calls us. We make the first step. Then there’s the backlash. Then there’s the fallout. We have built up a lifetime of habits that reinforce the cycle of trying, hope and then disappointment. Our friends, our neighbors, our colleagues, our communities have built up a comfortable relationship with those habits.   Those habits, those patterns, those friends, those supports threaten to fall away. Fear speaks to us and says: you won’t make it.

When we start to move in response to God’s call on us, we find that the pattern of our life fights against us. This is the opposition.

God’s love says: You are weak, but I am strong enough for both of us.

The Accusation Says: You Are Not Good Enough. (vs.33)

Be honest:  have you ever seen your kids do something embarrassing, and turned to your spouse and said: “Anak mo iyan.” (that’s your kid!) Or have you ever seen your parents do something embarassing and turned to your siblings and said, “Kamaganak ba namin?” (are we related to them?)

As God changes us, making us like his son Jesus, there are failures. Not just mistakes. Failures. Not just set backs. Failures. Then there rises up the accuser say: if you were really the son or daughter of God, like you claim, you would never act like that, or think that or fail like that. Do you think Jesus would approve? Paul writes:

Who will bring any charge against those whom God has chosen? It is God who justifies.

There was a story about Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, the author of the Sherlock Holmes novels, in the Washington Post many years ago.

"I heard Dr. Conan Doyle tell a good story during a trip I made to London last winter," said George D. Aldrich at the Arlington last night. "He said that at a dinner party he had attended the guests began discussing the daily discoveries made to the detriment of people occupying high stations in life and enjoying the confidence of the business world. Dr. Doyle said that it had always been his opinion that there was a skeleton in the closet of every man who had reached the age of forty. This led to a lot of discussion, some of the guests resenting the idea that there was no one who had not in his past something that were better concealed. As a result of the controversy, Dr. Doyle said, it was suggested that his views as to family skeletons be put to the test. The diners selected a man of their acquaintance whom all knew only as an upright Christian gentleman, whose word was accepted as quickly as his bond and who stood with the highest in every respect. 'We wrote a telegram saying 'All is discovered; flee at once" to this pillar of society,' said Dr. Doyle, 'and sent it. He disappeared the next day and has never been heard from since.'"[1]

God does not accept any accusation against us, because he has already changed our status from guilty to acquitted. There is no secret that will be uncovered and no accusation so shocking that it will change God’s mind because he knows it but has chosen to not hold it against us.
God’s love says: You are good enough, because I say so. Nothing will ever make me love you more. Nothing will ever make me love you less. You are family

The Labels Say: You Are Hopeless (vs. 34)

You will always be like that. The gavel comes down…bang! You don’t have to wear an orange jumpsuit. You now wear a label, whether official or unofficial, and it changes the way people treat you.  That label defines who you are.
Perhaps you struggled with finances, your spending was out of control, and then, too soon, the debt is compounding with interest and penalties and you have no hope. Creditors are calling you. No one lends you money. You are labeled a bad investment. That’s what you expect people to see.
Perhaps your relationship just gets worse and worse. You said things. He said things. Angry words. Mean words. Hurtful words. Now every conversation seem to push the same buttons and ends in a fight. You are labeled a failed marriage. That’s what you expect people to see.

It doesn’t take a judge to give you a label. We carry around a whole jury box in our heads, filled with voices who tell us: You are a _____ (you fill in the blank). Talagang ganiyan ka. Maybe it’s your parents. Maybe it is those teachers. Maybe it was those kids at school. They have pronounced judgment. Addict. Alcoholic. Liar. Betrayer. Mean. Failure. Loser.  And very often they are right. If you had a journal from where you listed out your struggles, would the entries today be similar to those 10 years ago? We can feel hopeless.

But Paul writes a different story:

Who then is the one who condemns? No one. Christ Jesus who died—more than that, who was raised to life—is at the right hand of God and is also interceding for us.

The voices around us tell us: you will always be like this.  What you are is what you will always be. You can’t escape your situation in life and you can’t escape your own bad habits.  That is what the world promises. Paul notes that Jesus died. Like everyone else. But then something strange happened. They went to the grave of Jesus on the third day and there was no dead body, because he broke the pattern of death and established a new precedent—he was raised to life. He pioneered something new.

You are not stuck with the label. That’s what Paul says: “Who then is the one who condemns?” Who judges, who assigns labels? Jesus has a new label for those who trust him—not a label of failure or disappointment or misfortune—no, the title he has given you is: son or daughter of the Most High God.

Now live like it. Are you struggling to make a name for yourself? Or are you rejoicing in the name Jesus has given us?

Those other failures? Yes, they are things you did, but they are not who you are, because Jesus is interceding for us.  

        So now there is no condemnation for those who belong to Christ Jesus. - Romans 8:1

--Forgiveness Interlude--
How can he do this? Sure, he wasn’t condemned because he was the perfect man. But he wasn’t just the perfect man, he is also the perfect God. This is important, because we are condemned to feel the results of the curse—death and failure—because we have offended God—hurt him. But God forgave our sin when Jesus took the pain upon himself. How?

When one person forgives another, it does not mean that there is no hurt and pain. It does not mean that it goes away or is forgotten. Rather, when one person forgives another, they take—carry--the hurt on themselves instead of requiring that the one who hurt them pay the penalty. Jesus’s suffering on the cross was the visible and tangible effect of God forgiving us. To forgive us, he took the pain on himself rather than requiring we pay ourselves.
--Forgiveness Interlude--

God’s love says: You are not hopeless, because you are who I say you are.

The Separation Says: You Are Too Weak (vs. 35-37)

Can I still have a meaningful life for God, with all of the bad things that have happened? We have wasted so much time with problems, so much energy with sickness and paying the rent, that there seems that there is nothing left for a relationship with God.

Who shall separate us from the love of Christ? Shall trouble or hardship or persecution or famine or nakedness or danger or sword? As it is written: “For your sake we face death all day long; we are considered as sheep to be slaughtered.” No, in all these things we are more than conquerors through him who loved us.

Rick Hoyt Illustration
When Rick Hoyt was born, the umbilical cord wrapped around his neck, cutting off oxygen to his brain.  He also had celebral palsy, meaning he can't control most of his movements.  The doctors told his parents to put him in an institution, because he would never walk, never write, never talk --they said he'd pretty much be "a vegetable" all his life.
His parents refused.  As he grew a bit older, they thought they detected intelligence in his eyes.  They sent him to public school.  When he was 11, they took him to Tufts University and asked some engineers there if there was a way to help him communicate.  The engineers didn't want to waste their time, so they asked for proof of his intelligence.  Dick said, "Tell him a joke," They did, and he laughed!  They built him a machine that let him type by tapping a stick with his head.
When Rick was in high school, a classmate of his was paralyzed in an accident.  The family couldn't afford the medical bills, so the school organized a 5-mile race to raise money.  Rick typed out "Dad, I want to do that."  At the time, his father, Dick was in pretty bad shape.  He pushed Rick in his wheelchair for the 5 miles, but he was sore for the next two weeks.  But at the end of the race, Rick typed out "Dad, when we were running, it felt like I wasn't disabled anymore!"
That sentence changed their lives.  Dick decided he was going to give Rick that feeling as much as he could.  He started training to get into shape.  In 1979, he felt he was ready to try pushing Rick in the Boston Marathon. "No way," said a race official.  But eventually, years later, Dick was in such good shape that they made the runner's qualifying time (even pushing a wheelchair)!

After that, someone suggested they do a triathlon:  swim 2 miles, bike 112 miles, and then run a 26-mile marathon!

As of January 2014, they'd competed in 70 marathons (best time 2:40:47), 247 triathlons, and numerous other races, including running across the country. [2]

The truth is that many things separate us from the love of Christ. But nothing separates the love of Christ from us.

Conclusion: God’s Love Wins, If You Let It (vs. 38-39)

When I proposed to Helen in the Philippines in early 1989, I had been doing my research. The little that I’d learned about Filipino culture taught me that if I was going to profess my love to her, and she was to accept that, that this was not a dating relationship, but rather the start of a relationship that naturally culminated in marriage. At the same time, the little that Helen had learned about American culture, mostly from a few American missionaries and American movies, was that professions of love were thrown around like water balloons, fat, gushy and easily broken. In fact, while I was calling in “being engaged” she insisted in calling it her “experiment.”

So we plotted a course forward together, because we loved each other, but I was returning to the U.S. only four months later. Because we were both trying to finish are studies, we knew that it would be a long time before we could see each other again. So we wrote to each other daily, and my heart always jumped when I saw the air-mail envelope with the Philippines stamps show up in my mail box. And we could afford to talk on the phone once a month. But that was no substitute for being together.

There were those who said this wasn’t a good idea. The mission agency had a policy against short-term workers getting in relationships. Helen had to defend her choice to those to whom she had told that her “beauty was not for foreigners.” I had to explain to my parents that I’d gotten engaged to someone I’d met overseas. We had to convince my pastor that our marriage would really be a good idea. Helen had to convince a U.S. embassy worker that her coming her was not some sort of marriage fraud.

You can imagine that Helen was somewhat perturbed when I reported to her that the one other girl who I had ever dated (Heather) called me shortly after my return and asked me if I wanted to go out. I hope you told her “No” she said later. Later, when I mentioned another girl, Angela who was a class mate in debate class and who had the extreme misfortune to be dating another guy whose name was Tim, Helen wrote me in no uncertain terms to never speak with her again.
There was this assumption (rightly so) that my relationship with Helen would preclude certain types of relationships with other women. And she was very insistent. 

Then there was this assumption that she would do likewise and one day, come to me. Because that’s what love does. Love acts as one even when separated. Love compels us to find a way to be together. Nearly two years later, she arrived on American soil and in my home church, we were married. We were no longer two separate people, we one.

God’s plan has always been that we should be with him, that his family should be united together. He has made the arrangements, he has spent everything, and he has worked out every detail. He is acting as though it is a fact.

Look at what Paul said:

For I am convinced that neither death nor life, neither angels nor demons, neither the present nor the future, nor any powers, neither height nor depth, nor anything else in all creation, will be able to separate us from the love of God that is in Christ Jesus our Lord.

This love of God has to very practical implications:

  1. We can be courageous because we are children of God. Our status is not failure. Our status is beloved of God. So many times we react out of fear. Fear of being hurt. Fear of failing. Fear of missed opportunity. No! The courageous child of God runs forward because know that the outcome is in the hands of a Father who loves them.
  2. We communicate our love to God by how we help people in need. When we were apart, Helen and I were desperate for letters or phone calls or once in a long while, a special treat was a package. How we treasured those? If you are truly part of this family relationship with God, how do you communicate like that? God seems so far away. Yes, you can pray. That’s like those letters and phone calls. But do you want to send him a love gift? Jesus told us: ‘I tell you the truth, when you did it to one of the least of these my brothers and sisters, you were doing it to me!’’ Helping those who are weary, hurting and helpless-is a special package that Jesus receives with joy.
There was a period during our writing back and forth to each other where I noticed that Helen had started to say, “if we get married.” And I said, “What do you mean ‘If’? You should say ‘When we get married.’” But she wasn’t sure. Too many worries, too many doubts. It was when I sent her the money for her to buy her wedding dress that she moved from ‘if’ to ‘when’

Jesus has paid. God has said, it is not ‘if we are together’ God’s love will bring us all together, it is ‘when we are together’




[1] www.teamhoyt.com, retrieved on March 1, 2014
[2] About Team Hoyt, teamhoyt.com, http://www.teamhoyt.com/about/index.html (accessed June 6, 2010)
[3] Men Met in the Hotel Lobbies, The Washington Post, 16 June 1901, p. 18, as cited on http://message.snopes.com/showthread.php?t=19954 retrieved on March 1, 2014