Romans 1 knowledge of God

Romans 1 – The Knowledge of God

Today’s sermon delivered by Pastor Tzeng was from Romans 1:17-32 entitled “The Knowledge of God.” The sermon explained our limits of coming to God and how God comes to us by grace, revealing our own self-righteousness, allows us to turn back to him.

We will be looking at Romans 1:17-32 today, it is from one of the most important chapters in the Bible and for our lives of faith. Paul gave this message to the people of Rome and it is the message we need in America, as modern Rome.

First, in Romans 1:18-23, we read how Paul proclaims the Creator God’s existence as obvious and without excuse based on the creation. It also speaks to how, as God’s creation, we are limited in the created cosmos and cannot break through by ourselves to God of heaven, eternity. Instead, God must come us instead, just as He revealed Himself to us in Jesus Christ and scripture. So we see that our relationship with Jesus and understanding Bible is not by intellect, but a transformative faith. Our intellect is limited and in our fallen nature, we will simply turn towards evil knowledge, created things, and idol worshipping of money, sex, and fame. We cannot find God in created idols, but how can we find God? It is in our invisible, intangible spirit and image of God that God comes to us most presently. That breaks our understanding of how we can know God – that is not by progressive intellectual understanding. We know God by a transcendent receiving of Him into our hearts, as we are transformed.

Next, in Romans 1:24-27, we see how depraved sin made an extreme turning away from God, so God let us go. Does that mean we are free? There is biblical, righteous, true freedom that God has given and this country of America was built on this type of holy freedom, so God blessed this nation greatly. However, there is such thing as twisted freedom that has blinded us in self-righteous justification of sin. Because I am free, does that give me the freedom to sin and leave God? Twisted freedom blinds us with an arrogance to reject the fact that I’m a sinner. We think, “Why am I a sinner? I have my right to freedom.” However, we must know that freedom to sin is not freedom, it makes us a slave to sin. We misunderstand God’s rules and commandments as restricting our freedom, but in actually those rules are what gives us true freedom. Athletes train hard with discipline in order to “free” their potential to be elite sports stars. In the same way, God’s rules, commandments, faith discipline are there to give us freedom to live by the Holy Spirit and not in sin.

Finally, in Romans 1:28-32, we see that us self-righteous blinded ones didn’t retain the knowledge of God, and this led to all kinds of depraved list of sin that Paul shows. Our loving relationship with God is absolute, it either exists or doesn’t exists. What breaks our relationship? That is sin. Therefore, all sin, whether big or little will break our relationship. It is our sin, breaking our relationship with God that puts me in a place of fiery hell, separated from God. The wrath of God is automatic when I leave God in sin. We are so foolish in our self-righteousness and we don’t even see our own self-righteousness. However, the good news is that God of loves saves us, sending his some Jesus Christ who bore the punishment of our sin. How about us? Us sinful self-righteous ones from before, need only to receive the righteousness of Jesus Christ by faith as Romans 1:17 says, there is nothing we need to do, just accept. Why is Romans so special? It speaks of the full, transcendent, eternal grace of God in every aspect of our life. It seems impossible to see our self-righteous image, but actually when we receive the full grace of God, we see our self-righteousness and it convicts us. This becomes the starting point where we can return to God.

Let’s pray we can open up our hearts to receive God’s amazing grace. Through that, let us return our hearts back in a loving relationship with Him.

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Naaman Healed of Leprosy

ermon delivered by Pastor Tzeng was from 2 Kings 5:1-27 entitled “Naaman Healed of Leprosy.” The sermon encouraged to not be stuck in their own methods, but receive continual grace and healing from God.

We will look at the story of Naaman. The totality of the Bible gives us a message of truth. Therefore, even a story in the Old Testament, can speak about our salvation in Jesus Christ. Today, we will be looking at sin, salvation, and washing our sins.

First, in 2 Kings 5:1-12, we are introduced to Naaman, a commander of the Syrian Army who suffered from gruesome disease of leprosy. Imagine being at your peak of success in the world, only to be told you have a terminal disease. In life, we can outwardly look great, powerful, and do well in front of others, but on the inside we are weak and alone. What is our problem? The fundamental problem of mankind is estrangement from God – we can even define sin like this. How can we get closer to God? We can’t do it under our own power. Naaman attempts to use the King’s worldly treasures, powers, and influence to receive healing from leprosy, but it doesn’t work. What works? It’s listening to God. Since we can’t go to God, God must come to us and we must open our hearts to Him.

Next, in 2 Kings 5:13-14, we see that after Naaman’s initial doubts about washing in the Jordan River, he listens and obeys. In life of faith, sometimes our ways seem more reasonable and we doubt the method of faith. But for the one who doubts, try actually taking your doubts to their logical conclusion and what do you get? Perhaps Naaman took his doubts to their logical conclusion and realized that all he had left was to still being stuck as a leper. Therefore, he took the leap of faith and followed God. In actuality, what God asks us to do is not that much. All we must do is wash in the Jordan River and we must wash 7 times. In faith, all we must do is receive Jesus Christ and his unconditional love. The key is that Jesus is the only way to come back to God and be healed of my sickness.

Finally, in 2 Kings 5:15-27, we see Naaman’s image after he is healed, continues to have a right heart of gratitude and an open heart. We also must realize that we continually need Jesus in our life and to continually be washed. On the other hand, Gehazi clearly wasn’t washing his sins, still keeping greed in his heart, trying to take money from Naaman, and hiding his sin. We must know that the more we try to hide sin, the more that sin will cling to us. Our hidden sin makes us a leper, estranged to God. As you grow in faith, you realize how much intellect and ability on the outside aren’t really what matters. People with great ability and reasoning are sometimes more critical with bad attitudes and you don’t want to work with them. It’s because the attitude on the inside is not right. Our attitude on the inside must have a heart of repentance, wanting to continually receive washing from Jesus.

Therefore, let us continually was our sins with the grace God has already given to us. In this way, let us be united with God and live for His glory and Kingdom.

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vineyard

The Parable of the Workers in the Vineyard

The sermon encouraged church members to not live under the pride of our own perspectives, but live according to God’s bigger picture of the Vineyard.

The Parable of the Workers in the Vineyard is a very interesting parable, while at the same time, hard to understand. It’s one thing to look at the text of the parable, but we have to look deeper into the subtext of the message Jesus is giving us.

First, in Matthew 20:1-13, we want to see the context and clarify misunderstandings. A landowner calls workers throughout the day, all offering 1 denarius. Imagine waking up at 6 AM to work hard all day at a construction site, only to get the same amount as a person starting work at 5 PM. Now we understand the complaint. On one hand, the owner gives what is promised, but on the other hand working 12 hours vs. 1 hour is quite a big difference. Now you begin to see the difference, each side has their own perspective. Today, we must deeply realize the pride and arrogance we have living by my own standards of justice and fairness. In this world, we are too individualized with everyone having their own standard of how to live. Have you ever heard that we must find our own purpose and meaning in life? Of course there is something good about that, but the bad side is that the more we individualize, the more we rely on ourselves. We find ourselves weak, without structure – we need God in our life.

Next, in Matthew 20:14-15, let’s look at God’s bigger picture, where the owner identifies the envy of the early workers. In this way, Jesus challenges whether or not our standards of justice and fairness are really pure. If we were the 5 PM guy, we wouldn’t complain, but because we are the 6 AM guy, we complain. So my true issue isn’t the standard, but it is which position I am in. When grace is given to me, I’m happy, but given to someone else, then I’m envious. How hypocritical are we? The truth is, all of us living individually for ourselves are just concerned with how much denarius I’m receiving, while the owner is concerned with the overall vineyard. God’s standard is different. It is not based on wealth, social status, power – these are inconsequential. God cares about eternal things that will last, like the vineyard which bears abundant fruits. We too must stop living basing our lives on temporary things and live for eternal things that will bear fruit.

Finally, in Matthew 20:16, Jesus says that the first will be last and the last will be first. Here we realize the profound wisdom of the Lord, telling us that we are simultaneously in the position of the last and the first. We are the last ones because we are standing on the foundation of so many that suffered before me, most of all Jesus Christ who died on the cross. And we are the first ones because there are people who are coming later than us, since history and time always move forward. Science and technology are this way, always moving forward on the foundation of the past, on their denarius, we make a bigger vineyard. Despite that, we don’t forget the past, the 1st ones, though they received the same denarius, their work is qualitatively different. God knows our hearts and the meaning of suffering is deeply embedded in the vineyard. The Bible says that Jesus is the vine and we are the branches. It means we are completely reliant on Jesus, his cross and resurrection, for the vitality of life to bear fruits. That love overflows to the ones coming after us.

This is how we can build a beautiful church, a beautiful Kingdom of God. It is not a place where we are self-serving and fighting on our own standards, but it is a place where the love of Jesus Christ overflows and the vineyard bears abundant fruits.

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expect great things

Expect and Attempt Great Things From God

The sermon exhorted the freedom we have in Jesus Christ and living boldly in the Holy Spirit for God’s Kingdom.

Here is a summary of the sermon:

Since Pentecost, we’ve been looking at Acts and we now reach the end of this great adventure in the early church. Through trials and tribulations, we see God’s unceasing will to push forward and His people who live boldly and without hindrance preaching the Kingdom of God and Lord Jesus Christ.

First in Acts 28:11-16, Paul finally reaches Rome, a place he burned with passion to preach the Gospel. This former persecutor of Christians saw through Deacon Stephen, how stuck he was in Jewish temple. But in receiving Jesus, his perspective changed to the bigger world. We are stuck in our own temples of money, career, status – stuck like this in a cycle of sin and depression. But Jesus frees us from this confinement and allowed us a new tension in love for God. What more is that we realize that we are not alone, just as Paul had visitors welcoming him to Rome from afar, the new life I live is with others at church.

Next, in Acts 28:17-29, we see Paul preaching to the Jews, the prepared ones. Some opened their hearts, while others did not, with Paul saying the Word will unceasingly be preached even to Gentiles. At church, we see the same thing happen with capable, brilliant people – stuck in their own temple not receiving the Word. But God’s work does not stop, God’s blessing finds the ones with open hearts and that is who we are. The ones with open heart, do not think of ourselves highly as “good” people, but we confess our sins and rely only on our savior Jesus Christ. The only thing we had was an open heart, that is the definition of humble. That is the Gospel and walking the truth path. Walking in truth is not dominating with power and success like the world, but the true path of the Kingdom is self-emptying and serving.

Finally, in Acts 28:30-31, we see Paul who continues forth preaching boldly and without hindrance about the Kingdom of God and Lord Jesus Christ. For the disciples, the cross of Jesus was not a failure, for the resurrection was a fundamental change and victory for this world and all of us. The Holy Spirit’s power wasn’t a fading one, but it was overflowing love producing an eternal tension in us. The cross becomes the tension, the motivation in us to live beyond what we would normally expect of ourselves. Just as Dr. Ralph D. Winter said, “Do not pray for easy lives,” we should not live for stability in this world, but live for the dynamic tension of love of cross in our life.

Another great missionary William Carey told us to expect and attempt great things from God. We should set a big frame of our life, boldly and without hindrance for Him. God won’t just bless us on a 1 to 1 basis, but will pour down His love and grace overflowing – that is the qualitative difference in living for God living for God.

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God Does Not Show Favoritism

The sermon explicated the work of the Holy Spirit which does not discriminate, despite this fallen world.

Here is a summary of the sermon:

Due to recent racial tensions in the news, there is a need for us to look at the Bible and the Holy Spirit’s work in a similar situation. Today we’ll look at Peter’s encounter with Cornelius and how this event opened up a new history, bringing the Gospel to the world.

In Acts 11:1-10, we read see Peter describing his vision of unclean foods and God telling him not to call unclean what He has made clean. Why did Peter have a visceral reaction? He had been conditioned by generations of Jewish tradition which affected how his reacted on the inside. We too are conditioned externally through our intellect and senses which we put as primary in determining our reactions. This conditioning is prejudice, or pre-judging, causing us to discriminate. Indeed, the power of the mind is dividing and discriminating. However, is an individual simply the sum of their physical body and mind? We are not robots in Science Fiction where we can transfer our brain and body to a computer. We have an unseen, incalculable, yet still ontological spirit inside of us. Where can we find God? It is the spirit which we can find immediacy and union with God through love. The Spirit unites while the mind divides. We must not be people that live by intellect primarily, but instead by the spirit. We are all created in God’s image, given a spirit and the Holy Spirit is given to us all without discrimination and unites us. God has made our spirits clean by Jesus Christ, so we need to look to the spirit we all have and put that as primary, not our intellect.

In Acts 11:11-17, we see how Peter was able to live by the Holy Spirit, teaching us how to do the same. For Peter, a confluence of events happened both physically and spiritually that led him to baptizing the gentile Cornelius. Like Peter, our default stance should be open to the Holy Spirit’s work, not cutting it off by our intellect. In fact, the Holy Spirit works in many ways including our prayers, prophecy, Word of God, our intellect, peers, senior leaders, and family members. We tend to focus on one way and stop listening. But God works in many mysterious ways that we should not cut off, but listen and have an open heart to it all. Most importantly, we must understand that God has always been working in our lives, my past experiences, the joy and hurt, He is there and has brought us to the place I am now. We believe in the good God, so let’s entrust ourselves to Him and not the world.

In Acts 11:18 and in Peter sermon in Acts 10:34, we see that God does not show favoritism to all his children. Peter didn’t stand in the way and baptized Cornelius – we too, should not stand in the way of God’s work. The fact is God’s work is unique to everyone – He puts people in a unique starting point with a unique background, guiding us all uniquely for the purposes of His Kingdom. Who are we to pre-judge or judge what God is doing in someone else’s life, we cannot stand in the way. Some people misunderstand this, asking why does God allow some people born in a rich or poor family, good or bad environments? Honestly, the answer to this is endless trying to compare people’s circumstances, there is no solution to this type of equality. Karl Marx described man in a lowly way, ascribing man as a product of their economic and sociological conditions. Therefore, he tried to create a utopia based on an equality of economic and sociological conditions, which was an utter disaster. Money and social standing is a temporary thing, it can be a blessing if used correctly, but more often than not is a curse that brings us farther from God. Man is not his money and social standing, we have been given a beautiful image of God, our spirit. That is what we have been given equally and we have been given God’s unconditional love. Therefore, we may come from different backgrounds, skin color, ethnicities, and social status. But we don’t rely on the whims of man’s freewill, but on the Providence of God that He is good and He is guiding us all uniquely and individually. How can we build the Kingdom of God? It is not on the temporary things of the world, but on the absolutes of truth of God – Gospel, serving, self-sacrifice, humbles, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, the fruits of the spirit.

In fact, we all have an equal and open opportunity to work for God’s Kingdom and no matter who we are, we can serve God. We are all missionaries because we have been given the gift of Jesus Christ and that great gift must be given to all in the world.

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The study of Holy Spirit

The Study of the Holy Spirit

The sermon explicated the pneumatology, the study of the Holy Spirit and also its work in our lives and for the Kingdom.

Here is a summary of the sermon:

Today, we will look at Pneumatology, the study of the Holy Spirit, to understand it deeply through 1 Corinthians 12:1-11. We will look at what the Bible says about the Holy Spirit, the Holy Spirit in a larger Trinitarian context, and impact of Holy Spirit in each of our lives.

First, in 1 Corinthians 12:1, Paul says we should not be uninformed, we need to look at what the Bible says. John 14 tells us the Holy Spirit is the Advocate or Greek Paraclete, like a lawyer helping us against judgment. The Biblical story of redemption is God saving us from judgment. We fell and disobeyed and despite giving us the Law, we sinned more, and in our depravity, as Romans 1 says, we still did not retain God in our hearts. But the Almighty God didn’t come in power, but came in a manger and Jesus Christ carried our sin like a little lamb on the cross and saving us from judgment. We’ve been forgiven, but we still need to wash our sins. God won’t leave us as orphans but He will continually take care of us by the Holy Spirit – that is Pneumatology, God’s profound love by the Holy Spirit, continually taking care of us.

Next, in 1 Corinthians 12:2-3, Paul ridicules mute idols. We believe in God who is alive, He is the living God who speaks to us. How? The Word became flesh and walked among us in Jesus. Islam has a hard time with this, saying God is one, putting a strict line between heaven and earth. They wonder how Christians can believe in the divinity of Jesus? It’s that God is alive among us, He came down in his full divinity and truth. While Islam and other religions claim they teach the truth, Christianity claims truth in the person of Jesus, as the Church father Justin Martyr taught us. The Word became flesh and God is still One because of unity of love. That love was shown on the cross, Jesus died, resurrected, and ascended to heaven. But will God leave us alone like orphans? No, God pours down His Holy Spirit as a gift to us, God is alive in our life. This is Trinity – God is not a dead mute idol, but this is Doctrine of the Living God among us.

Finally, in 1 Corinthians 12:4-11, this is about the gifts of the Holy Spirit including tongues. As 1 Corinthians 14 says, tongues is for our edification and a sure sign of the Holy Spirit. We should pray to receive tongues, but if you don’t receive it, it doesn’t mean you aren’t saved like Pentecostals say. Still, tongues are important because we are foolish and don’t know how to communicate with God, man’s intellect is weak. So the Holy Spirit helps pray for us when we don’t know, speaking in tongues is the Holy Spirit praying through us. In this way, we can pray in tongues a long time and unite with God. Intellect is division, but faith unites us in love with God. In our walk of faith, there is both, the side of intellect studying the Word, but there is also the spiritual side of our mystical union with God. But the primary part of faith is receiving, so the Holy Spirit helps us in the weakness of our lives. This means it also guides our lives to do God’s eternal will of the Kingdom.

Let us pray for the Holy Spirit, that the passion and fire of the Holy Spirit can overflow in us. May God’s love which poured out in the world through Jesus Christ, be revealed in us for God’s glory and Kingdom.

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The Transforming Power of the Holy Spirit

The sermon exhorted the transforming power of the Holy Spirit and its work it apostles before the Sanhedrin.

Here is a summary of the sermon:

Today is Pentecost, a historic day that the Holy Spirit came upon the disciples. But what is the Holy Spirit? Is it simply a passionate, but fading emotional power in us? Today, I wish to see the transforming power of the Holy Spirit that resurrected in Apostles as they worked for the Kingdom. We will read about Peter and John before the Sanhedrin in Acts 4:1-22

First, in v1-6, we see the depraved image of the Jewish leaders bringing the apostles before them at Sanhedrin. These were people that wanted to keep their worldly powers and were even selling the temple as a place for merchants. Jesus was put before the Sanhedrin for this very reason and all the sin of the world came on him at the cross. But death could not defeat the Lord, he resurrected on the third day Easter. We also must receive this power of resurrection. How can we? We must be born again of the Spirit and live by the Spirit for God’s Kingdom.

Next, in v7-12, we see clearly that the Apostles lived by the Holy Spirit, even as they appeared before Sanhedrin. It’s drastically different than when Peter denied Jesus at the cross. The disciples who thought he loved Jesus first, was utterly ruined, but was restored by the Lord. He realized deeply it is the love of the Lord coming to us first, we are living by that love. As Peter stood before Sanhedrin, he confessed that it by the name of Jesus. Faith is not anything we produce ourselves, but it is accepting the unconditional forgiveness, love, and grace of God. Some people think that since God loved us, we owe Him back a debt. However, faith is all about receiving God’s love and the Holy Spirit is given grace that transforms us. It is that transformation that produces in us new hope for God’s glory, it isn’t that we produce it ourselves. We see this in Peter who changed in Acts, now living receiving the power of the Holy Spirit and resurrection to live for God.

Finally, in v13-22, we see the Jewish leaders shocked by the courage of Peter and John. This is not courage or determination that we produce ourselves like some psychological effort. This is true courage shown by the Holy Spirit given and overflowing in the disciples. The Sanhedrin Jewish leaders spoke about using worldly power to control the people of God. Very often, the wisdom and powers of the world try to prevent God’s work. What is being “wise” in the world? It is trying to be more stable and comfortable, but what does that really get you? In actuality, living for the highs and the lows, the cross, and the resurrection, this is living dynamically that God wishes for us, to really live life. The power of the Holy Spirit is not a fading emotional power, it is a constantly transforming power that is continually with me in a dynamic walk in life of faith.

Peter healed the crippled beggar, but who was the one that was really healed? It was Peter himself, crippled by his own strength, but raised again by the love of Jesus Christ. That is the power of the Holy Spirit he lived by in Acts, and it is that same Spirit given to us on this Pentecost.

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If God is with us

If God Is With Us, Who Can Be Against Us?

The sermon was an expository message on the second half of Romans 8 exhorting the work of the Holy Spirit and marching boldly for God’s Kingdom.

Here is a summary of the sermon:

Next week is Pentecost, the coming of the Holy Spirit on the early church. We will look at the second half of Romans 8, which speaks to the outlook the apostles had living the life of the Holy Spirit.

First, in Romans 8:18-27, it teaches us that the Holy Spirit was the Spirit of Christ. This was how early Christians viewed the Holy Spirit, such comfort to know Jesus Christ is with us. Christ died and resurrected, this is the glory we know will be revealed in us, that all of creation is waiting for. We weren’t random creations, but all of creation is waiting for Kingdom on earth, like childbirth in pain waiting for this glory. Augustine fled God, but came back to Him when realizing the good world He created. The visible church we are building is going towards the invisible church already in heaven. Christ’s salvation isn’t merely escapism, but it is a life depending on going towards that glory.

Next, in Romans 8:28-30, Paul gives us assurance of God’s goodness. He foreknew, predestined, called, justified, and glorified us – it is these basics that are not difficult to accept. Why do so many have difficulty accepting? The era of enlightenment to existentialism now, makes our life view individual and also viewing God as an individual. In that way, God’s guidance for our life has been reduced to determinism as Hyper-Calvinism has done, or extreme Armenism which is a reliance on humanism. But this is has made faith incomprehensible, far from the Trinitarian faith the Bible teaches us. It is the God of love who has the weak and strong side. It is also Jesus Christ who paradoxical Logos coming as flesh into the world is a mystery that no dialectical reasoning can understand. To see God’s foreknowledge, predestination, calling, justification, and glory – we can only understand this in Jesus.

Finally, in Romans 8:31-39, we receive the grace that God is with us and nothing can be against us. Faith is receiving God’s ever-present love that is already there, we must simply not reject it in rebellion, but open up our hearts to it. It is by Jesus Christ and his cross that our doubts and condemnation end. For the life of the believer in hardship, just like Paul shared in 2 Corinthians 11, nothing can stop the ones marching towards the Kingdom. We must live a commitment towards the Kingdom, like a marriage, not dating, we have to have a firm convicted heart on our path.

The Lord told us to be born again of water and spirit. On Pentecost, let us receive the Holy Spirit and live newly for God’s Kingdom.

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forgiveness

The Law of Forgiveness

The sermon focused on the eternal blessing that living a life of forgiveness gives us.

Here is a summary of the sermon:

As Christians, we blessed that the Lord taught us how to pray in Lord’s Prayer, as we are weak and don’t even know what the pray for. “Forgive us our debts, as we also have forgiven our debtors” is known as the Law of Forgiveness. Today, we will look at why the Law of Forgiveness came, how Lord able open Law forgiveness, and the transcendence of the Law forgiveness and Gospel.

First, we should understand why the Law of Forgiveness came from Jesus. Interestingly, we see symmetry in the Law of Forgiveness, just like we see in the Law. The law is about evenness, eye for an eye, however, the problem came when Jews had this self-righteous anger and condemnation of the Law. When the Jews brought the woman caught in adultery, Jesus wrote twice on the ground. Although we don’t know what Jesus wrote, we do know Jesus came to fulfill the Law, meaning Jesus was more serious about the Law than the Jews were. Just as Jesus wrote twice on the ground, Jesus gave us the symmetry of the Law in the Law of Forgiveness, exhorting us that just as we have been forgiven, to forgive others.

Next, how was Jesus able to open the Law of Forgiveness? Adam’s deliberate disobedience led to a cycle of sin and death for generations. Adam and Cain started a history of self-righteously blaming others. Instead of blaming, Jesus took on the blame for us, dying on the cross and shedding his blood. With two thieves next to him on the cross, this is representative of the world which takes and blames, while Jesus is the one who bore punishment of our sins. The Law of forgiveness was opened up because Jesus forgave first.

Finally, we want to look at the transcendence of the Law of Forgiveness. The Danish Philosopher Kierkegaard spoke of the 3 stages of life: aesthetic (surface-level), ethical (moral direction), spiritual (loving relationship with God). This speaks accurately to the existential life worldview we see in people around the world. The aesthetic life lives only for surface-level material and worldly desires which is a life of chaos. The ethical life has balance and order, but it is ultimately limited since we put parameters on things. When Peter asked how many times we should forgive, Jesus said not to put a parameter on forgiveness. As Matthew 20 shows us, grace of God is on a different level and God’s grace has no limits. Therefore, we need to see the wisdom of the spiritual life, in a loving relationship with God, we open ourselves up to God’s amazing grace. The Holy Spirit is without boundary and transforms us. Living by the Law of Forgiveness and the Gospel allows us to experience this unending eternal love and blessing of God in our life.

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3 crosses

He Was Raised To Life For Us | Resurrection & Eternal Life

The sermon focused on the deep meaning of resurrection and eternal life.

Here is a summary of the sermon:

There is a need for us to understand the resurrection more deeply and why it is important in our faith. Through three verses, we can more deeply understand our sin and death, what the resurrection of Jesus means for us, and living in the faith of eternal life.

In Romans 4:25, Paul says that Jesus Christ was delivered to death for our sins and raised to life for justification. This summarizes the Gospel, telling us why we need the cross and resurrection. The cross is not simply a historical event or something philosophical, it has implications on the sin that I personally commit. Sin has punishment, sinners inevitably cannot go to heaven, this has been the situation since fall of man in Adam. Therefore, through a new seed, God sent His son Jesus to be the new Adam, who paid the price of punishment for our sin. We must know that every time we sin, we put Jesus on the cross. This is why Jesus came and also, Paul explains that he was raised to life for our justification.

1 Corinthians 15 is the chapter on resurrection, the first part testifying to the fact of resurrection, and the second part explaining our faith must at least reach the level of believing in resurrection of the dead. However, the third part is key, explaining what resurrection of Jesus means for us. Resurrection isn’t simply dying, coming back to life, then later dying again. Resurrection is following Jesus who ascended to heaven. While so many rulers were stuck in the power of death, Jesus went beyond death and this is the faith and power of resurrection we believe in.

As Galatians 2:20 explains, we are bound in Christ, this is our faith. Our loving relationship with Jesus is the connecting point to overcome the power of death. The Bible gives this deep message when Mary, the woman of love, was the first to the tomb, first to see the resurrection and even the disciple of love, John was the first disciple to see the beyond death empty tomb. As Paul explains in 1 Corinthians 15, the eternal life we believe in is not simply life on earth in a different form, it’s something completely beyond conception, this is power of resurrection Jesus gave us. Since we are bound in Christ, we can experience eternity now, it is eternity where the infinite goes beyond the finite. As the German theologian Schleiermacher explained, we have a teleological dependence on our infinite creator, not living a static life, but going towards Him.

This is why we must worship God and live for His Kingdom. The power of resurrection is that we are bound in the eternal will of God, so let us live depending on God and striving for the Great Commission in everything we do.

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