Romans 12: The Kind of Life That Is Pleasing to God (2): The Christian and His Sacrifice (Romans 12:1)

By Jimmy Tuten

Introduction:

A. Review the introduction in lesson 1. Stress the influence of Romans 12 for determining what is acceptable Christian conduct.

1. The basic motivation of obedience – God’s love for mankind (Jn. 3:16; Rom. 5:8; 12:1, “the mercies of God”).

2. The plea for mortal compliance – “I beseech you” (Lit. I beg you, please, a tone of gentle, affectionate persuasion).

3. By calling his readers “brethren,” he employs the appeal of love to enforce the precepts of duty.

4. Too, his language implies that compliance with his admonitions is not a matter optional and indifferent.

B. Before entering upon specific duties of the God-pleasing life, and depicting in detail the character of the Christian, the apostle exhibits in this verse the general and comprehensive principle of practical Christianity.

1. As a matter of course, the Christian must offer a sacrifice and a service.

2. The presentation of self to God is the one great act in which all specific acts of obedience are summed

up and involved.

3. Let God’s people come before him, bringing with them a living sacrifice and offering to heaven a spiritual, reasonable worship.

4. With such the Father will be well pleased.

Body:

I. What the inspired writer commands that we present:

A. “Present your bodies.” Nothing is more characteristic of N.T. Christianity than this demand, for it reveals the value and glory of the human body.

1. The Greek world in Paul’s day believed that the body was only evil, something to be despised. The position of the humanist, the evolutionist, etc. today degrades the body.

2. God reveals that the body, as well as the soul, belongs to him and that man can serve him with it as he can with his mind and spirit.

3. God reveals the value of the flesh of the Christian (1 Cor. 6:19; 3:17; 6:20). The greatest demonstration of its value, perhaps, is that Christ took upon himself this form (Phil. 2:5-11).

4. The fact that it is the body, and not the whole man that is under consideration is seen in that:

a. Body is from the Gr. word soma, meaning the physical body.

b. It is contrasted with the “mind” of verse 2. c. The word “present” is the technical term for presenting the Levitical offerings and victims (Wuest, Romans In the Greek New Testament, p. 205). “Present” means “to offer, to put at one’s disposal (cf. 6:3, “yield”).

B. “A Living Sacrifice. ” In contrast to the slain (dead) sacrifice of the O.T. which was a type of the Lord Jesus Christ (Heb. 9:1,11-12,28). However, the Lord having been slain arose from the sacrificial death. The slaughter of a lamb under the old economy could not prefigure this fact.

1. In view of this fact, God decreed that the Christian himself be presented as a living sacrifice, “dying to sin, buried with Christ in baptism, and rising to walk in newness of life (Rom. 6:1-4, jt), and thus providing a continual witness of the primary facts of the gospel. . .”(Coffman, Romans, p. 410).

2. This new sacrifice referred far more emphatically to Christ than did the ancient type (the sacrifice of the Christian looks back to the cross, while the sacrificial lamb of the O.T. looked forward to his coming).

3. Christ is truly the keynote of all Scripture and the focus of all true religion. When we present ourselves a living sacrifice we witness to the great facts of the gospel (1 Pet. 3:21). This sacrifice requires the volition and assent of the whole person who formally and faithfully continues to present himself in worship and service.

4. Our bodies are presented alive, indicative of action. Yet, some try to present a sick, weak body (1 Cor. 11:30; Eph. 5:14; 1 Thess. 5:6).

C. A “Holy” Sacrifice. Indicates the sacredness of the action in being set apart for the Lord’s use (1 Pet. 1:15). There must be purity of life, without pollution, brokenness or divided interest (Eph. 1:4; Rom. 2:2; Jas. 4:7-10). Cf. the demands of “without spot or blemish” of the sacrifices of the Law of Moses.

D. An “acceptable” sacrifice. One that is well-pleasing to God (2 Cor. 5:9).

1 . To be “acceptable” it must be authorized (Lev. 10:1; 1 Sam. 15:22; Col. 3:17). God will not accept everything we put a religious face on (Col. 2:20-23).

2. It matters little what men think of us, if God approves what we do. Our highest aim should be to please him; the fact that we do please him is our highest reward!

E. This Sacrifice Is A “Reasonable Service. “Reasonable” is that which pertains to the mind. Thayer says this is “worship which is rendered by the reason, or the soul.”

1. This “service” is in keeping with the conclusions of the highest intelligence which acknowledges that it is harmonious with all that really blesses man. “The most ardent application of discerning intelligence will always reveal the reasonableness of serving God” (Coffman, p. 412).

2. This does not mean that we do what is just or equitable, as in the purchase of land because the price is reasonable. It pertains to the Bible heart of man, i.e., obey from the heart (Rom. 6:17). This is a death blow to formalism in religion.

F. It is a sacrifice of our feelings (many allow themselves to be dominated by feelings which are inconsistent with the precepts and spirit of Christ) and affections (Matt. 22:36-40). Note the example of Christ who “pleased not himself” (Phil. 2).

II. In sacrificing ourselves we sacrifice to God a potential for greatness.

A. The sacrifice of the eyes (Lust of the eye is, replaced with a diligent study of his Word, 2 Tim. 2:15 – a vision for his work, Jn. 9:4).

B. The sacrifice of the ears (“swift to hear” the voice of instruction and not temptation, Jas. 1:19).

C. The sacrifice of the hands (“working with his hands the thing that is good,” Eph. 4:28).

D. The sacrifice of the feet (not fleeing from responsibility, Jonah 1:3; Rom. 10:15).

E. The sacrifice of the tongue (“Let no corrupt speech proceed out of your mouth,” Eph. 4:29).

F. The sacrifice of the emotions (as the works of the flesh, Gal. 5:19-21, replaced by the fruit of the Spirit, Gal. 5:22-23).

G. The sacrifice of the affections (love for all others and all else is secondary to love for Jehovah, Matt. 10:37).

Conclusion:

1. The best summary of Romans 12:1 is found in the story of the scribe who asked Jesus, “What commandment is the first of all?” (Mk. 12:28)

2. It is expressed in Mark 12:30.

3. Because we have been so richly blessed, and so generously granted the mercies of God, well should we sing with the famed Isaac Watts:

Were the whole realm of nature mine,

That were a present far too small;

Love so amazing, so divine,

Demands my soul, my life, my all.

Guardian of Truth XXXIV: 18, pp. 555-556
September 20, 1990

A Loving Tribute: Wilma Elizabeth Hobbs Adams – A Virtuous Woman (June 10, 1928 – July 28, 1990)

By J. Wiley Adams

I sit here alone with a broken heart. It is hard for me to write because Wilma, my beloved and beautiful wife, is no longer at my side. For more than 45 years she was always at my side. She died on July 28, 1990 of a pontine hemorrhage, a stroke at the base of the skull in an area which controls various body functions such as hearing, sight, blood pressure, and swallowing. Rarely is there ever any recovery from this type of stroke and, if so, the quality of life is to have no real use of oneself. How merciful that my dignified Virginian lady was spared from that which would have been worse than death for her and her family.

We were in a gospel meeting with the Thorn church of the Lord at the time she was stricken. This is near Houston, Mississippi. We were staying in the home of the Leroy Clarks. What a wonderful week it had been. Crowds were good. Singing was good. A lot of visitors from the area had come each night and some from a long distance. We had one more night to go.

The Clarks had a group of brethren into their home after services Thursday night for refreshments and association. It was so pleasant. Shortly after the guests departed Wilma had a dizzy spell, as she had been having from time to time lately. Thinking it to be an inner ear problem she took one of her pills for that problem. Her condition progressively grew worse until about 4 A.M. Friday. She told me she thought she had had a stroke. We summoned an ambulance from nearby Houston Hospital. On the way to the hospital she lost awareness and she never was conscious again. At Houston Hospital she was treated at the emergency room to no avail. On the advice of the doctor there she was sent immediately by helicopter to North Mississippi Regional Hospital at Tupelo 35 miles away.

Brother Clark took me to Tupelo while his wife and Allen Malone loaded my car and called various members of the family for me. They later came to Tupelo with my car and things. All the children were on the way soon. Allen finished the meeting in my place.

Wilma lingered until Saturday at 2:45 P.M. Three of the grandchildren (Stan and Carla’s boys) had come from Texas and were allowed in to say goodbye to “Mamaw” shortly before she expired. Then, with all our children gathered around her as I held her hand and as blood pressure dropped very low, her pulse went into a straight line on the monitor. Wilma had departed peacefully and without a struggle from this life to be with the Lord and all those saints who had gone on before. We all kissed her brow and said farewell. It was so comforting to have also at her bedside with us Tom O’Neal, Martin Adams, and Allen Malone. The Clarks kept the children in the waiting room. We all wept.

We brought her back to Warner Robins, Georgia where we have lived and labored with the Westside church for 19 years. A beautiful service was held at McCullough Funeral Home July 31st at 2 P.M. The service was conducted by Tom O’Neal, Sewell Hall, and Andy De Klerk. Beautiful congregational singing was ably led by Duane Combs and Allen Neely. It was a service of praise to God, tribute to a wonderful woman, wife, mother, and grandmother, and an appeal to the lost to get right with God.

Her body was then taken to Hopewell, Virginia, her home town and mine, for another service at Gould Funeral Home on Thursday, August 2nd at 2 P.M. This service was conducted by John Nosker, Paul Casebolt, and Weldon Warnock with Connie W. Adams conducting the grave side service. Again the singing was congregational with Allen Malone leading. The service was comforting and uplifting. We laid Wilma’s body to rest about 4 P.M. in nearby Chesterfield County at Sunset Memorial Park in the family plot. Connie’s closing remark before the final prayer was: “Sweet, sweet Wilma, we will all miss you.”

Unique to the occasion was the use of our three sons, our son-in-law, and the three older grandsons as pallbearers. Also in final tribute, a memory rose was placed on the casket by each of the grandchildren. Wilma is survived by her husband Wiley, a daughter, Paige Deason, three sons, Arthur W., Stanley W., and Keith W. Adams, and preceded in death by a baby daughter Karen Ruth. There are nine grandchildren.

Wilma will be missed by all who knew her and loved her. No gospel preacher had ever had a better, more supportive wife. Her loss is like cutting off my right arm. There are so many things I could say but I must be selective. They are in my heart forever whether or not they are written down. Many beautiful memories will sustain us in the days ahead.

It was Wilma who encouraged me to devote full-time to the preaching of the gospel. It was she who helped me more than anyone else to achieve this goal. Patiently she tended to our family and urged me on in this noble work. She was my most attentive listener as well as my most concerned critic. She always followed me in the Scriptures as I preached or taught and took notes on my sermons as though she had never heard them before. She was a wonderful example to her family and to the whole church wherever we were. She had no patience with women who complained about being the wife of a preacher. She counted it an honor to serve the Lord by helping me to preach the gospel and become an elder in the church.

Her efforts to help me in the preaching of the gospel must not be wasted. With God’s help they shall not be. I must continue on in the work of the kingdom of God. I know I will never be quite the same again. I will never get over missing her. But she would say if she could, “Wiley, preach the word. You are my preacher man.”

And so I will do this for whatever time I have left and finish my course as she did hers and keep the faith until that day, whether soon or late, when I shall be laid at her side to await the resurrection and to enter into Heaven’s gates together – together still, forever.

“Who can find a virtuous woman? For her prize is far above rubies?” (Prov. 31:10) Well, Wiley Adams did find such a woman and her name was Wilma. Goodbye, my love – for now!

Guardian of Truth XXXIV: 18, pp. 554-555
September 20, 1990

Are You A Christian?

By Michael Garrison

The word “Christian” occurs but three times in the New Testament. Its significance is “a follower of Christ,” according to Strong’s Greek Dictionary. By studying each occurrence of the term, we can learn much about being a Christian.

Acts 11:26

“And the disciples were called Christians first in Antioch.” Not just anyone was called by this name, but the disciples of Jesus the Christ were called Christians. A disciple is “a learner, i.e. pupil” (Ibid.). Jesus told those Jews who believed on him, “If you continue in my word, then are ye my disciples indeed. . . ” (Jn. 8:31). So, one is a disciple, or Christian, who continues in Christ’s word.

It is thought by some that the name Christian was given to followers of Christ by their enemies as a derogatory name. Such is not the case at all. Strong’s Dictionary says the Greek word translated “called” here means “to utter an oracle, i.e. divinely intimate.” The word is also used in Romans 7:3, “. . . if, while her husband liveth, she be married to another man, she shall be called an adulteress. . . ” Who called her an adulteress? God did! Who called the disciples “Christians”? According to the definition, God did, not the enemies of the Truth.

The above facts correspond with the prophecy in Isaiah 62:2: “And the Gentiles shall see thy righteousness, and all kings thy glory: and thou shalt be called by a new name, which the mouth of the Lord shall name.” The new name is Christian!

Acts 26:28

After hearing Paul’s defense of the faith, King Agrippa said, “Almost thou persuadest me to be a Christian.” Paul answered, “I would to God, that not only thou, but also all that hear me this day, were both almost, and altogether such as I am, except these bonds.” Paul did not think the term “Christian” to be a derogatory one, but one of honor.

When the truth is presented and people believe and obey that truth, they become just Christians. The Bible only, makes Christians only. It takes the creeds, traditions, catechisms, etc., of men to become a member of some denomination and to be called something other than a Christian. We should be content to wear the God-approved, God-given name, Christian, with no additions, subtractions, or substitutions!

1 Peter 4:16

“Yet if any man suffer as a Christian, let him not be ashamed; but let him glorify God on this behalf.” Peter tells us that followers of Christ should not “suffer as a murderer, or as a thief, or as an evil doer, or as a busybody in other men’s matters.” Such things are not according to the righteousness of Christ. In verse 14, Peter mentions being “reproached for the name of Christ. . .” which is equivalent to verse 16, “if any man suffer as a Christian.”

From the above, the student of truth can see that the term “Christian” is a term that was given by God to his faithful ones and was not a derogatory name applied by those fighting against God. Nor was the name made up by the disciples of Christ themselves.

Who Is A Christian?

In answering this question, let us ask: “Who is an American?” We realize that an alien must do certain things to become an American. It is not enough for one to just call himself an American. Neither is it enough for other people to call him an American. Rather, an alien must do certain things required by the law to become an American.

So, in answering, “Who is a Christian?” we must turn to the New Testament (the law of God, the “constitution of the kingdom” if you will) and learn what an alien must do to become a Christian. It is not enough for one to call himself one, or for others to call him a Christian. Rather, he must do what is required by the law (New Testament) to become a Christian.

The plain teaching of the Scriptures says that sinners are saved by:

Faith. John 3:16 says, “For God so loved the world, that he gave his only begotten Son, that whosoever believeth in him should not perish, but have everlasting life.” But, what is faith? According to J.H. Thayer’s lexicon, it is “used especially of the faith by which a man embraces Jesus, i.e. a conviction, full of joyful trust, that Jesus is the Messiah – the divinely appointed author of eternal salvation in the kingdom of God, conjoined with obedience to Christ” (emphasis mine, m1g). So, without obedience, there is no genuine saving faith!

Repentance. Luke 13:5 says, “. . except ye repent, ye shall likewise perish.” Vine’s Dictionary of New Testament Words says, “repent” “signifies to change one’s mind or purpose, always, in the N.T., involving a change for the better, . . . and always, except in Luke 17:3,4, of repentance from sin.”

Confession. Matthew 10:32 records, “Whosoever therefore shall confess me before men, him will I confess before my Father which is in heaven.” The word “confess” means “to declare openly by way of speaking out freely, such confession being the effect of deep conviction of facts” (Vine’s).

Baptism. Mark 16:16 teaches us, “He that believeth and is baptized shall be saved; but he that believeth not shall be damned.” I emphasized the word and because many don’t seem to see that word! Jesus gave the terms of salvation: I can only teach what he said. Mr. Vine tells us, “baptism, consist(s) of the processes of immersion, submersion and emergence.” There is no truth that baptism can be sprinkling or a pouring of water on someone. Let us believe and follow the Head of the church!

Then, once one has become a Christian, he is added by the Lord to his church. One does not go out to seek some “church” to join (see Acts 2:47, KJV)- Also, a Christian must continue to walk in the right way to remain faithful unto God. We learn from 1 John 1:6-7, “If we say that we have fellowship with him, and walk in darkness, we lie, and do not the truth: But if we walk in the light, as he is in the light, we have fellowship one with another, and the blood of Jesus Christ his Son cleanseth us from all sin.”

Mr. Vine goes into some detail with the word “walk,” but I think what he says bears learning. He says the term is used “. . . figuratively, signifying the whole round of the activities of the individual life. . . It is applied to the observance of religious ordinances, Acts 21:21; Heb. 13:9 . . . as well as moral conduct. The Christian is to walk in newness of life, Rom. 6:4, after the spirit of life, Rom. 6:4, after the spirit, 8:4; in honesty, 13:13; by faith, 2 Cor. 5:7; in good works, Eph. 2:10; in love, 5:2; in wisdom, Col. 4:5; in truth, 2 Jn. 4; after the commandments of the Lord, v. 6. And, negatively, not after the flesh, Rom. 8:4; not after the manner of men, 1 Cor. 3:3; not in craftiness, 2 Cor. 4:2; not by sight, 5:7; not in the vanity of mind, Eph. 4:17; not disorderly, 2 Thess. 3:6.”

If you are not a Christian, what hinders your obedience to the Lord? “For we must all appear before the judgment seat of Christ; that every one may receive the things done in his body, according to that he hath done, whether it be good or bad” (2 Cor. 5: 10). Why not do the good thing and obey the Lord before it is too late?

Guardian of Truth XXXIV: 17, pp. 525-526
September 6, 1990

Who Is A Child of God?

By Mike Willis

The less men know the Bible, the more blurred are their concepts of right and wrong. Living in an age of Bible ignorance, an ignorance which is spilling over into the church, we face a generation whose distinction between the children of God and children of the Devil is blurred. In John 8, Jesus spoke of the children of God and the children of the Devil and gave us several criteria to use in distinguishing the two. Here are some general truths affirmed by Jesus which enable us to distinguish between children of God and children of the Devil.

A Child of God Does Not Commit Sin Jesus answered them, Verily, verily, I say unto you, Whosoever committeth sin is the servant of sin (8:34).

The plain affirmation of this Scripture clearly shows that one cannot habitually practice sin and still be God’s child. A first century apostasy, known as Gnosticism, affirmed that sins committed by the body did not interfere with the spirit’s relationship with God. The books of 1,2,3 John were written to refute this error. There John emphasized that those who profess to know God while committing sin lie and do not the truth (cf. 1 Jn. 1:6-10).

The heresy has not died. There are still some who believe that those who habitually commit sin are children of God. The “once in grace, always in grace” doctrine affirms that children of God are not separated from the Father by their sins. The “continuous cleansing” advocates affirm that children of God can habitually practice every sin except highhanded rebellion and remain children of God. Hence, they propose to fellowship those “children of God” who use instruments of music in worship, support human institutions (colleges, orphan homes, hospitals, etc.), and use church funds to sponsor any “good” work (such as recreation, church camps, etc.).

The plain statement of this Scripture is that one can distinguish God’s children from the Devil’s children by whether or not they are committing sin. Earlier Jesus had said, “I am the light of the world: he that followeth me shall not walk in darkness, but shall have the light of life” (8:12). A person cannot “follow Jesus” and walk in darkness because Jesus did not walk in darkness.

This is not to be understood to state that a Christian never stumbles into sin. Both experience and Scripture show that they do (1 Jn. 1:6-10). When they stumble into sin, they must repent of their sins and confess them to God and man (as the occasion might require, Jas. 5:16). Rather, what this Scripture is affirming is that one cannot continue in the practice of his sin and remain in the fellowship of God. Those who departed from New Testament worship to introduce mechanical instruments of music, choirs, quartets, observance of the Lord’s supper on days other than Sunday, and similar departures must repent of these sins in order to be children of God. Those who perverted the organization of the church in the sponsoring church arrangement and be organizing national Christian conventions must repent of their sins to be children of God. The same is true of every sin: a man cannot continue in the practice of his sin and remain a child of God.

A Child of God Hears God’s Word

He that is of God heareth God’s words: ye therefore hear them not, because ye are not of God (8:47).

A person can distinguish children of God from children of the Devil by their reaction to the preaching of God’s word. The apostle John later added, “We are of God: he that knoweth God heareth us; he that is not of God heareth not us. Hereby know we the spirit of truth, and the spirit of error” (1 Jn. 4:6).

When a person closes his ear to the preaching of God ‘ s word, he is not a child of God. A child of God has a genuine love for the truth (contrast 2 Thess. 2:10-12) which causes him to search the Scriptures (Acts 17:11) and try the prophets (1 Jn. 4:1). A man who refuses to listen to God’s word is not a child of God.

A Child of God Loves Christ

Jesus said unto them, If God were your Father, ye would love me (8:42).

The man who loves God loves him whom God sent. Regardless of how religious and sincere some of our non-Christian neighbors may be, the man who does not love Jesus is not a child of God. The first century Jews who rejected Jesus as the Christ, denied the virgin birth, charged that Jesus worked miracles through the power of Beelzebub, and otherwise spurned him were not children of God. Neither are twentieth century men who do the same (whether Jews, Muslims, atheists, agnostics, or other unbelievers) children of God.

A Child of God Believes in Christ

I said therefore unto you, that ye shall die in your sins: for if ye believe not that I am he, ye shall die in your sins (8:24).

Belief in Jesus is essential for salvation from sin and being a child of God. Here are some things which one must believe about Jesus which are revealed in John 8: (a) That he was sent from the Father (8:23); (b) That he existed before Abraham (8:58); (c) That he was sinless (8:47); (d) That belief in him would free one from sin (8:21,24) and prevent spiritual death (8:41). A person who does not believe these things about Jesus is not a child of God.

A Child of God Abides in Jesus’ Word

Then said Jesus to those Jews which believed on him, If ye continue in my word,

then are ye my disciples indeed (8:31).

A person who believes in Jesus may not be a child of God. In John 8, among those who believed in Jesus (8:30) were some who did not love Christ (8:42) and who were designated as children of the Devil (8:44). These men momentarily had faith in Christ but departed from that faith, stumbling over some of the things which Jesus said about himself.

“Abiding” in Jesus’ word has several important points of emphasis. First of all, “abiding” emphasizes perseverance in obedience to Christ, doing the works of Abraham (8:39). Being a child of God requires more than a “splash in the pan.” Some people make a momentary commitment to Christ, a commitment of shallow emotionalism which does not last. They are like those believers who were compared to seed planted in rocky and thorny ground which never bring fruit to maturity (cf. Lk. 8:11-14). A child of God must endure to the end (Matt. 24:12).

Secondly, “abiding” in Jesus’ word emphasizes that Jesus has set the boundaries of divine revelation. The same Apostle John later wrote, “whosoever transgresseth and abideth not in the doctrine of Christ, hath not God. He that abideth in the doctrine of Christ, he hath both the Father and the Son” (2 Jn. 9). Those who transgress the doctrine of God, moving into unauthorized activities, are not children of God, regardless of what professions to the contrary they make.

Conclusion

Let us not allow the uncertainty of an agnostic age to cause us to blur the distinctions so clearly revealed by Christ. We can know the children of God. Those who have never obeyed the gospel plan of salvation, teach for their doctrines the commandments of men, call works of the flesh “alternative lifestyles,” and such like things are not children of God. Those who have once obeyed the gospel but have not been content to abide in the doctrine of Christ, perverting and distorting the work, worship, and organization of the New Testament church, are not children of God so long as they do the works of the Devil. These clearly revealed criteria for distinguishing the children of God from the children of the Devil must be taught to every succeeding generation.

Guardian of Truth XXXIV: 17, pp. 514, 532
September 6, 1990