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Questions of Assurance from Romans 8
Dr. Charlie Bing
Spiritual maturity is impossible for believers who have come to doubt their
eternal salvation. Yet the lack of assurance is a common problem among
Christians and those who call themselves Christians.
Doubts can originate from many sources. Perhaps the person who doubts was
never really saved by believing in Jesus Christ alone. Or they could have been
confused about the gospel. Sometimes persistent sin or difficult trials may
cause people to doubt whether they are really Christians. Some personality
types are prone to doubt their salvation because they are oriented toward
introspection or emotional feelings. In any case, the lack of assurance is
a sad and unnecessary hindrance to growing in grace, since assurance is the
birthright of every Christian. John was able to say to his readers, “These
things I have written to you who believe in the name of the Son of God, that
you may know that you have eternal life” (1 John 5:13a).
In Romans 8 we find four questions that when asked and answered settle the
assurance issue without a doubt. It is no surprise that these questions come
in a book that mentions grace more than any other New Testament book. Up to
this point, Paul has shown that grace has justified (3:21—5:21) and sanctified
(6:1—8:17) the believer. Now he shows
how it secures the believer (8:17-39). He explains that God has predestined
all who are justified to be finally glorified, i.e. conformed to the image
of His Son, Jesus Christ (8:29-30). That in itself is a strong argument for
assurance. However, the end of Romans 8 represents the mountaintop of this
grace logic.
The four questions are themselves introduced by a rhetorical question, “What
then shall we say to these things?” (8:31a). The truth Paul has discussed
is so forceful and magnificent it demands a worthy response and conclusion.
Here are the four questions presenting his conclusion:
1. “If God
is for us, who can be against us?” (8:31b)
This introductory question throws down a challenge to all who would doubt
or challenge the sufficiency of Jesus Christ’s saving work. Of course, no
one exists who can stand against God’s final purpose and plan of glorification
for those who are His (8:28-30). Paul’s answer to this first question
includes a rhetorical question: “He who did not spare His own Son, but
delivered Him up for us all, how shall He not with Him also freely give us
all things?” (8:32). In other words, if God gave us the ultimate gift,
His Son, why would He not give us everything else necessary to guarantee our
glorification? As believers, we can be sure we are eternally saved because
no one can thwart God’s plan for us.
2. “Who shall bring a charge against God’s elect?” (8:33a)
The second question echos from a courtroom setting. No one can charge us with
sin crimes because God has justified us (8:33b). In the ultimate court, our
Judge, the most honorable high and holy God, has acquitted us and declared
us righteous before His perfect justice. If God has so pronounced this verdict,
who can resurrect the charges of wrong doing that would bring us before Him
again? There is no double jeopardy in God’s legal system! As believers,
we can be sure we are eternally saved because there is no sin that has not
already been dealt with by Jesus Christ our Lord.
3. “Who is he who condemns?” (8:34a) The third
question asks if there is anyone who can cast a verdict of “Guilty” against
us. But if we were declared “Not guilty” in our justification,
who can reverse God’s verdict? “It is Christ who died, and furthermore
is also risen, who is even at the right hand of God, who also makes intercession
for us” (8:34b). When Jesus said from the cross,
“It is finished,” He was saying that our sin debt was paid in
full by His death. He took the punishment for us. Then He arose from the dead
proving that God accepted that payment, so we are safe from future punishment.
The word “intercession” is also from the courtroom. It refers to
the work of a defense attorney or advocate. As our defense advocate, we can
count on Jesus Christ to win our case. He now lives in the presence of God,
at His right hand, pleading our case before the Father (Heb. 7:25 ). His plea
for us is based on the finished and sufficient work He did on the cross. As
believers, we can be sure we are eternally saved because our sins, past, present,
and future, remain paid for by Jesus Christ Himself.
4. “Who shall separate us from the love of Christ?” (8:35a)
Who can come between us in our relationship to God? What can interrupt His
purpose to love us from the beginning of our salvation to its final destination?
Paul’s answer is inclusive. He searches the physical universe and the
spiritual realms to find anything that has the power to come between us and
our Heavenly Father.
Hardships like “tribulation, or distress, or persecution, or famine,
or nakedness, or peril, or sword” (8:35b) tempt us to think that since
God allows these things, He must not love us. But there is no contradiction
between God’s love for us and our suffering. Even forces as powerful
and menacing as death, evil spirits, or the uncertainty of the future can not
cancel God’s love for us. And the phrase “any other created thing” (8:39)
even includes us! His conclusion is comprehensive: Absolutely nothing “shall
be able to separate us from the love of God which is in Christ Jesus our Lord” (8:39b).
With such an assurance, we who have believed should never doubt that we will
be with God forever.
Conclusion
Can anything interrupt God’s love for His children which brings them
to their final destiny of being glorified in the image of Christ? Paul answers, “No
one, no thing, no where, no way!” Our eternal salvation rests in what
Jesus has done for us and God’s ensuing faithfulness and power.
What God has promised He will do. We can rest in the assurance of this salvation
if we have received it as a gift from God through faith in Jesus Christ our
Savior. These four questions from Romans 8 keep us from looking subjectively
at our feelings or our conduct. Instead, they keep us focused objectively on
the person and work of Jesus Christ, the Anchor of our souls. |