Transformed By A New Master

| by | Scripture: Romans 6:15-23 | Series:

Not only is the believer transformed by a new Joy and a new Union, but also a new Master. Whereas Sin was a hard taskmaster paying only bondage, misery, and death, God is a loving and kind Master granting holiness and everlasting life!

Transformed By A New Master

Romans 6:15-23

This morning I want you to use your imagination a little bit. We are going to be transported back in time 170 years to the year 1842 to the city of Mobile, Alabama where you live on a large cotton plantation. You are the slave of Mr. Johnson. You have always been a slave. In fact you were born a slave. Your parents before you were slaves, and their parents were also slaves. You are 24 years old. Life for you is extremely wearisome. You rise daily at 5:00 a.m. to begin picking cotton at sun up. Your work is hard, and it you don’t come in from the fields until the sun goes down. Your master, Mr. Johnson, owns you. You are his personal property, and must do anything and everything he tells you to do. But one day as you are out in the fields picking cotton, you notice a handsome buggy pull up in front of the plantation. A well-dressed man gets out and begins to talk to Mr. Johnson on the front porch. After a long time, one of the servants calls you to come in from the fields because Mr. Johnson needs to see you right away. When you run up to your master, he tells you that his visitor, a Mr. Gregory, has purchased you to become his slave. He paid hard cash and plenty of it to buy you for himself. He has had his eye on you for a good while, and he determined that he wanted you for himself. And so, before you can blink twice, you find yourself in his buggy, riding off to Mr. Gregory’s plantation to work for him. You have been transferred from the ownership of Mr. Johnson to Mr. Gregory. You are now his property, and must obey his commands implicitly.

Something very similar has happened to you if you are a Christian. You were born into this world as a slave to sin. When you were saved, God bought you and made you His slave. You were transferred from the dominion of Sin to the dominion of Grace. You see, all people are slaves to someone or something. Either you are a slave to Sin, or you are a slave to God. This  reminds me of Bob Dylan’s song “You Gotta Serve Somebody that he recorded in 1979.”  The chorus says, “It may be the Devil, or it may be the Lord, but you gotta serve somebody.”  That is so very true. Everybody has a master, whether they realize it or not. Either you are a slave of Sin or you are a slave of God.  Paul speaks of slaves of sin in vs.16,17,20. He speaks of slaves to impurity and lawlessness in vs.19.  Then, on the other hand, Paul speaks of slaves of obedience in vs.16, slaves of righteousness in vs.18,19, and slaves of God in vs.22.

Last Sunday we saw that we died to sin and rose to a newness of life when Jesus died and rose. Because of our vital spiritual union with Christ we have inherited His history. His death is our death and His resurrection is our resurrection. Sanctification begins when we know this, consider this, and act on this. The key words we discovered last week are “know”, “consider” and “present.” Actually, 6:15-23 is a continuation of Paul’s exhortation to present the members of our body to God that he gave in 6:13. Notice how he continues to speak about us presenting our members in 6:16 and 6:19.

Paul’s conclusion to the last section is found in verse 14, “For sin shall not be master over you, for you are not under law, but under grace.” Now, that is not a command or an exhortation. That is a promise! You need to believe this promise. If you are in Christ, sin shall not be master over you! Why? Because you are not under law. You are no longer seeking to find acceptance with God based on law-keeping. Instead, you are under grace. God’s favor rests upon you because of Christ’s law-keeping, not yours! The ground of your justification is Christ’s perfect righteousness, not your own righteousness. You are “under” the reign of grace, and 5:2 says that you “stand” in this grace.

This morning we are going to look at the third way God transforms us through the Gospel.  Not only does He transform us through a new joy, and a new union, but also through a new master.

Now, notice that Paul follows a particular pattern in the way he argues through chapters 6 and 7.

1) He introduces an objection

2) He answers the objection with “May it never be!”

3) He gives a short answer to the objection in the following verse

4) He develops and explains this short answer in the remaining verses

Paul follows this pattern in 6:1; 6:15; 7:7; 7:13.  By observing this pattern, you may find it very helpful in interpreting a very difficult passage in Romans 7:13-25, but I’ll leave that for another time!

In 6:15 Paul brings up a 2nd objection: “What then? Shall we sin because we are not under law but under grace?” Paul preached a gospel of free grace, which proclaims that sinners can be justified apart from obeying God’s law, based only on Jesus’ perfect obedience and righteousness. When Paul preached that free gospel, certain people said, “O.K., if my standing with God has nothing to do with my obedience to God’s law, then I think I’ll just go ahead and keep on sinning! I’ll enjoy God’s grace and I’ll also enjoy my sinning.” Now, how does Paul answer that question? “May it never be!” Paul recoils in horror at the very thought of it.

Now, notice how the 2 questions from 6:1 and 6:15 compare with each other:

6:1 “What shall we say then? Are we to continue in sin that grace might increase?”

6:15 “What then? Shall we sin because we are not under law but under grace?”

The first question is basically, “Shall we continue in sin in order that grace might increase?  The 2nd question is, “Shall we sin because grace has increased?”  The first question is about continuing in sin. It suggests a habitual continuous lifestyle. The 2nd question is about occasional acts of sin. Because of our union to Christ we can’t go on living like we did before we were saved. But can we go ahead and sin occasionally and get away with it. The first question is “Shall we continue in sin?” The 2nd question is “Shall we continue to sin?”

Perhaps you are thinking that since you became a Christian your life has changed. You’re not living the same sinful life you used to live. You’re not abusing drugs and alcohol, you’re not involved in sexual immorality, and not using God’s name as a curse word any more. Well, isn’t that good enough? No. Not only is God calling us to forsake sin as a habitual way of life, He is also calling us to forsake occasional acts of sin. He’s calling every believer to a life of personal holiness. He’s not content that we have given up our major sins. He wants us to seek a life of holiness in every area of our lives. Listen to the short answer to the question given in vs.16, “Do you not know that when you present yourselves to someone as slaves for obedience, you are slaves of the one whom you obey, either of sin resulting in death, or of obedience resulting in righteousness?” Here Paul gives the short, condensed, propositional statement. Then in verses 17-23 Paul unpacks that proposition and helps us to fully understand it.

So the answer to the 1st question was, “No, you can’t continue to live in sin like you did before you were saved, because through union with Christ, you died to sin.”  The answer to the 2nd question was, “No, you can’t agree to go ahead and sin occasionally because you are no longer slaves of sin; now you are slaves of God.

This morning, in order to understand Paul’s teaching on personal holiness, let’s look first at our old master – Sin, and then look at our new master – God.

1. Our Old Master:   SIN!

When Did Our Old Slavery Begin?  Another way of asking that question is, “When was I united to Adam?” If I can answer that question I’ll know when my slavery to sin began, because through my union with Adam sin reigned over my life, bringing forth death. I was united to Adam at birth. To be more specific I was united to Adam at the moment of conception. As soon as I began to exist as a member of Adam’s race, I came under the dominion of sin. Does the Bible actually teach this anywhere?

Look at Psalm 51:5, “Behold, I was brought forth in iniquity, and in sin my mother conceived me.” Now some believe that this verse is teaching that David was conceived as a result of his mother’s sexual immorality. However, that would make no sense. David is not interested in exposing his parent’s sins. He is confessing and bewailing his own sins. He was guilty of adultery and murder. These sins were primarily against God (vs.4). Then in 51:5 David says that those individual sins were the product of a corrupt nature. The spring and fountain of all his acts is his own depraved nature. Since his very conception he inherited a sinful nature. Let me paraphrase David in Psalm 51:5, “When I was born, I was in iniquity, when my mother conceived me I was in sin.” So, to answer our question, our slavery to sin began at the moment of conception. A tiny little infant is not innocent. That sweet little child is a sinner! If infants were innocent there is no reason they should ever die, for the wages of sin is death. But infants die because they are not innocent, but are conceived and born in original sin.

Psalm 58:3 says, “The wicked are estranged from the womb; these who speak lies go astray from birth.” Again David emphasizes our estrangement from the womb and birth. In Ephesians 2:3 Paul says, “we were by nature children of wrath, even as the rest.” What does Paul mean “by nature”? He means by physical birth. All people coming into this world are at birth under the wrath of God. The Bible does not teach that people are born innocent. I remember my friend Howard getting a card in the mail congratulating him as the father of a new, sweet, innocent little baby. Howard told me, “They should have said, Congratulations, you are the father of a new little sinner!”

From the moment of our conception we are slaves to sin, born under the dominating power of sin and corruption.

What Did Our Old Slavery Result In? 6:19 says, “For just as you presented your members as slaves to impurity and to lawlessness, resulting in further lawlessness.”  This passage teaches that slavery to sin caused us to go deeper and deeper into sin. Because we were slaves of sin we presented our members as slaves to impurity and lawlessness. What was the result? Even further lawlessness. When you go about breaking God’s law what will it lead to? Greater and more serious law-breaking. You may begin by just smoking a little weed now and then. Over time your innocent pot smoking results in a desire for more powerful highs and so you “graduate” from pot  to LSD or cocaine. The more drugs you take, and the longer you take them, the greater your bondage will be to them in your life, until eventually you may become hopelessly addicted living in terribly misery. The same principle holds true for those who end up addicted to alcohol or pornography. A little impurity and lawlessness, if indulged, will lead to further and greater impurity and lawlessness.

It’s so true that one sin leads to another. Shoplifting may lead to lying. Lust may lead to fornication or adultery. Anger may lead to physical violence. Drug abuse may lead to stealing.  In fact, once we give in to impurity and lawlessness, our lives can become just a vicious circle, spiraling downward more and more. Sin produces more sin, which produces more sin. We are born slaves to sin, and the more we participate in sin, the more serious and crippling our sins become. Unless God supernaturally breaks in to our lives to stop this vicious cycle, our sin will kill us.

How Does The Old Slavery End?  Paul answers this question 3 times in 6:16,21,23. Every time he says the result or outcome is death.  Notice how he puts it in verse 21, “Therefore what benefit were you then deriving from the things of which you are now ashamed? For the outcome of those things is death.”  What real benefit do people derive from their sin? At best, it is a little momentary pleasure. But what else comes along with it?  Guilt, condemnation, broken relationships, divorce, broken families, hangovers, drug addiction, alcoholism, poverty, and sexually transmitted diseases for starters. And then when sin has brought all of that misery into your life, what is the outcome?  Death! And Paul is not just talking about physical death.  How do I know? Look at 6:23, “For the wages of sin is death, but the free gift of God is eternal life in Christ Jesus our Lord.”  In that verse Paul is contrasting the result of sin and the result of grace. The result of grace is eternal life. Therefore, the result of sin must be eternal death. So, what is eternal death? Physical death is the separation of the spirit from the body.  Eternal death is the separation of the soul from God’s loving presence in hell.

Now, let’s sum up what we have seen about our old slavery to sin.  It began at the moment of conception. It resulted in more and more impurity and lawlessness, misery and bondage. Then it ultimately ends in physical death and everlasting death in hell. So, do you still want to serve sin? Let me ask any of you who are still not saved. Do you really want to go on serving sin? Sin is a hard master, and pays really lousy wages! No, I know in your better moments, you know that you don’t want to serve sin any more. However, you are a slave to it, and can’t free yourself from sin’s tyranny and reign in your life. What then can be done? That leads us to consider our new master.

2.  Our New Master: GOD!

When Did Our New Slavery Begin?  Verse 17-18 gives us a hint, “But thanks be to God that though you were slaves of sin, you became obedient from the heart to that form of teaching to which you were committed, and having been freed from sin, you became slaves of righteousness.”  You say, “It was when I became obedient from the heart to the gospel.” That is very true, and it would be a correct answer. But let me take it a step further. Was there anything that caused you to become obedient from the heart to the teaching of the gospel?  Notice that Paul is thanking God that they became obedient from the heart to his teaching. Why is Paul thanking God? It must be because God had something to do with them obeying the gospel, right? Whenever you find Paul writing “thanks be to God” it is always because God has done something wonderful that we should thank Him for! We find it 5 other times in Paul’s writings. So, what has God done that we should thank Him for that has caused people to obey the gospel from their heart? Well, the answer comes to us in verse 18. We were freed from sin, and enslaved to righteousness. In the original, both verbs are passive. God did these things for us. He freed us from sin and enslaved us to righteousness. That’s why we should thank Him for the fact that we have obeyed the gospel from the heart. We obeyed the gospel as a result of God freeing us from sin and enslaving us to righteousness.

Remember from last week that sin’s dominion over our lives was broken when we were united to Christ. The Spirit baptized us into Christ and His body at the moment of our New Birth. So the answer to the question, “When did our new slavery begin?” is “at the moment of our new birth.”  Paul says it a little differently in Colossians 1:13, “For He delivered us from the domain of darkness, and transferred us to the kingdom of His beloved Son.” Notice that this is something God did all by Himself. Notice also that He delivered us from the “domain of darkness.” That’s just another way of saying that He delivered us from the dominion of sin. That is exactly what Paul told us here in Romans 6:18 – “we were freed from sin.”

So, let’s put all this together. You became a slave of sin at birth. You became a slave of God at your New Birth. At the moment of regeneration you were united to Christ in His death and resurrection, which freed you from sin and enslaved you to righteousness, transferring you out of the domain of darkness and into the kingdom of God’s Son. As a result of all of that, you became obedient from the heart to the Biblical teaching concerning the gospel. So, what does it mean to become obedient from the heart to the gospel?  It means that you repented of sin from your heart, and you trusted in Christ from your heart.

What Does Our New Slavery Result In?  Paul gives us the same answer twice, in verse 19 and 22. Our new slavery to God results in our sanctification! Now, let’s talk a little bit about sanctification. What is it? The word literally means “to be set apart” or “to be holy.” Paul is speaking about our progressive sanctification in this passage. Progressive sanctification is the work of the Spirit in the life of the believer so that he progressively sets himself apart from sin to God. It begins the moment he is born again, and continues the rest of his life. Notice I called it “progressive” sanctification. I do not believe the Bible teaches the doctrine of Perfectionism. Some Christians teach that the believer can come to the point in his life where he doesn’t sin any more. Yes, it is blessedly true that we can make progress in holiness, and put to death the sinful deeds of the body. But I do not believe we will ever get to the point in our Christian lives where we will eradicate all sin until we are glorified.

Notice how Paul speaks of our sanctification in verse 19. There he compares and contrasts it with the result of slavery to sin. Slavery to sin leads to more and more impurity and lawlessness. It leads to greater bondage. It leads to greater misery. So, what does slavery to God lead to?  It leads to less and less sin in our lives. It leads to greater freedom from sin. It leads to greater blessing and joy and life.

Notice how Paul speaks of sanctification in verse 22, “But now having been freed from sin and enslaved to God, you derive your benefit, resulting in sanctification.”  In verse 21 Paul said that there was no benefit from being enslaved to sin. Now he says there is great benefit from being enslaved to God. Sanctification, according to the Bible, is a tremendous benefit to us. Do you think of your sanctification as something that benefits you? Instead of dragging you down, your sanctification lifts you up. Instead of bringing you into misery, sickness, guilt, depression, broken families, divorce, and death, sanctification brings you into joy, happiness, health, peace of conscience, healthy relationships and families, and finally eternal life! Let me just ask all of you who at one time were slaves of sin. Is your life now better or worse that you have been saved? Do you have more or less joy? Would you trade what you have as a Christian for what you used to have as a lost sinner?  I know you wouldn’t!

How Will Our New Slavery End?  Paul tells us in verse 22 and 23, that the final outcome of our slavery to God is eternal life. Eternal life is something that you receive the moment you are saved. “God has given us eternal life, and this life is in His Son. He who has the Son has the life; he who does not have the Son of God does not have the life” (1Jn.5:11-12). The moment you have Jesus, you have eternal life. Why? Because eternal life is simply the life of Jesus. It is the life that Jesus has always possessed. When you were united to Jesus, you received His life coursing through your soul. So, eternal life begins at the moment we receive Jesus by faith, but eternal life never ends. That is what we would expect from eternal life, right? If it ended, it wasn’t eternal.

So, what will heaven be like? I don’t know all of what it will be like, but I do know that it will be sharing in this life that I have in common with Jesus. When a man receives the very life of God, He enjoys and delights in God. He loves to worship God, exalt God, meditate upon God and please God. That is what heaven will be about. Friends if you don’t enjoy God, delight in God, love worshiping Him, exalting Him, meditating upon Him, and pleasing Him, you won’t want to go to heaven – because that’s what we’re going to be doing there! You see our sanctification is preparing us for heaven by weaning us from worldly delights and enjoyments, and giving us a greater longing for heavenly enjoyments.

Application:

Sinner: What does this text say to you? It says that sin is your Master. The result of serving sin will be more and more impurity and lawlessness, bringing more and more bondage to you, and more and more misery. Then, at the end of your life you will receive death – physical and then eternal death in the lake of fire. These are your wages. You have been working for Mr. Sin for a long, long time. You’ll finally get your paycheck. He’ll pay you back with Hell. That is what you have earned, and that is what you have worked for. Sounds like awful wages to me! Would you like to be freed from Mr. Sin, and become the willing slave of God? If so, you need to do what the Roman Christians did. They obeyed from the heart the form of teaching that was delivered to them. So what is that form of teaching? It’s the gospel that Paul has taught in Romans 1-5. We are unrighteous, without excuse, under the wrath of God, headed toward judgment. But God has provided a righteousness by which we may find acceptance with Him. He lived a perfect life for you, and then died bearing God’s wrath against you. If you will come as a humble, broken sinner, trusting in Jesus Christ, God will pronounce you righteous in His sight. The only way for you to be freed from sin’s dominion is to embrace the gospel with your whole heart. Repent of your sin from your heart! Believe in your heart that Christ died for sins and rose from the dead. If you will do this you will find that the Spirit has united you to Christ, and that you have been freed from sin and enslaved to God! 

Saint: Is God your master? If so, rejoice! You have a good, kind, loving Master who has your best interests at heart! So, what does this text have to say to you? 

 

1) Give Thanks To God!  6:17. Yes, you obeyed the gospel from the heart, but only because God did something truly glorious for you. He freed you from sin and enslaved you to righteousness. He transferred you from the kingdom of darkness to the kingdom of Jesus Christ. Praise Him! Worship Him! You would never have obeyed the gospel if it were not for His grace in your life!

 

2) Present Your Members To God!  6:19.  Present yourself and your members to Him for obedience. The word “present” carries the meaning “to yield, or to offer, or to dedicate.” Yield the members of your body to God to be His instruments of righteousness. This is the only way for you to experience the blessing of sanctification as you continue to obey Him day by day. What sin are you struggling with right now? What member of your body is involved in that sin? By an act of your will, dedicate that member to God today and every day. If it is internet porn, dedicate your eyes to God for His service. If it is filthy language, dedicate your lips. If it is listening to sinful lyrics on your Mp3 player, dedicate your ears. If it is wasting your time playing video games, dedicate your hands. If it is hanging out with friends where you will end up smoking weed, dedicate your feet. Do you think that God commands you to turn from that sin because He wants to make your life miserable?! Of course not. He has your best interests at heart. He proved it by sending His Son to die in your place. You can trust Him when it comes to your sanctification. Yield to Him, and look forward to the eternal life you will share with Him.   

Are you a slave? Yes you are! But, who is your master?

 

 

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