Romans Introduction

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A quick note in addition to last weeks sermon...
Bre Hill our executive leadership team leader who is completing her studies to become a licensed counselor shared with me the effects of marijuana use and the developing brain.
It causes a thinning of the prefrontal cortex in the brain. the part of the brain responsible for judgment, reasoning and complex thinking.
“In the early onset group, we found that how many times an individual uses and the amount of marijuana used strongly relates to the degree to which brain development does not follow the normal pruning pattern. The effects observed were above and beyond effects related to alcohol use and age. These findings are in line with the current literature that suggest that cannabis use during adolescence can have long-term consequences,” said Filbey.
https://centerforbrainhealth.org/article/starting-age-of-marijuana-use-may-have-long-term-effects-on-brain-developme
The result is that students using marijuana it is damaging their brains. I don’t think any of us in our right mind would willingly damage our child’s brain for the rest of their life.
In no circumstance would any adult who says they love their children want to harm a child’s brain. It still remains that their are some adults in our community who are ok with this.
The feedback I got from last week was that you are not ok with this either so may we keep fighting back on behalf of the future of our children.
(Pray for our community and our children)
This week we launch a series on the book of Romans. My intent with this study is to go through the book of Romans. I plan to take breaks along the way from the study and run some sermon series in the middle.
Some background to the this letter

The fourth-century Latin Father who is called Ambrosiaster says in the preface to his commentary on this letter that the Romans ‘had embraced the faith of Christ, albeit according to the Jewish rite, without seeing any sign of mighty works or any of the apostles’. It was evidently members of the Christian rank and file who first carried the gospel to Rome and planted it there—probably in the Jewish community of the capital.

In the time of Claudius (AD 41–54) we have the record of another mass-expulsion of Jews from Rome. This expulsion is briefly referred to in Acts 18:2, where Paul, on his arrival in Corinth (probably in the late summer of AD 50), is said to have met ‘a Jew named Aquila, … lately come from Italy with his wife Priscilla, because Claudius had commanded all the Jews to leave Rome’.

Claudius ‘expelled the Jews from Rome because they were constantly rioting at the instigation of Chrestus (impulsore Chresto)’. This Chrestus may conceivably have been a Jewish agitator in Rome at the time; but the way in which Suetonius introduces his name makes it much more likely that the rioting was a sequel to the introduction of Christianity into the Jewish community of the capital.

The effects of the expulsion order, however, were short-lived. Before long the Jewish community was flourishing in Rome once more, and so was the Christian community. Less than three years after the death of Claudius Paul can write to the Christians of Rome and speak of their faith as a matter of universal knowledge.

The expulsion edict would have lapsed with Claudius’s death (AD 54), if not indeed earlier. But in AD 57 the Christians in Rome included not only Jewish but Gentile believers. Some of the latter may have stayed on in the city after the expulsion of their Jewish brethren; if so, their numbers were greatly augmented by the time Jewish Christians were able to return. Paul indeed has to remind the Gentile Christians that, even if they are now in the majority, the base of the community is Jewish, and that they must not despise their Jewish brethren just because they outnumber them (Rom. 11:18).

(Bible Project Video)
This morning we look at the introduction to the letter in the first 7 verses.
As I was thinking about the opening of this letter, this question came to mind.
Have you ever experienced a life changing event? Specifically a life changing event that was positive.
(food pic) In honor of mothers day I started thinking about my mom and life changing events that I got to experience with her.
Every Sunday we would be in church. We went to Sunday school and church. Church would get over about 12:00. We would then head home. My mom would start the process of preparing Sunday dinner. She made the best homemade fried chicken. My mom didn’t just make fried chicken, but she would have all the sides and fixins to go with it. She would have rolls, corn, green beans, pea salad, carrots, mashed potatoes and gravy and the dishes would just keep going.
I try to do that for my family sometimes and I don’t know how she did it. She got it all done at the same time and it was hot when she placed it on the table.
Now the problem was we got out of church at 12. This all started after we got out.
Come 2:00 or 2:30 and lunch is not done guess what happens to the rest of the family. They get cranky. I have an older brother and older sister. Usually by the time dinner was about ready we were all throwing down. My dad would be in the middle of it.
We would leave church and then between church and lunch we would do everything the preacher had just told us not to do.
I will never forget the time I asked my older sister for a roll and she was hangry so she picked it up and chucked it at me. We had a guest at the house that day it almost took his nose straight off.
The life changing event would take place as soon as we would start eating and get a little food in our bellies all the anger would turn to laughter.
Lunch was a life changing event and it would alter our Sunday afternoons. We would sometimes stay at the table for hours just laughing and talking.
Paul writes of life change here in Romans.
Romans 1:1 HCSB
1 Paul, a slave of Christ Jesus, called as an apostle and singled out for God’s good news —
Paul starts by listing his credentials to his readers.
Paul’s credential is that of a slave of Christ Jesus
In the Roman empire there was 60 million slaves and this word would be very familiar to them. A slave was looked on as a piece of property, not a person.
Paul had enslaved himself to Christ. He was Christ servant and lived to obey Christ will.
Apostle: one who is sent by authority with a commission.
Warren W. Wiersbe, The Bible Exposition Commentary, vol. 1 (Wheaton, IL: Victor Books, 1996), 514.
One of the requirements to be an apostle was that of seeing the risen Christ.
Paul saw Christ on the road to Damascus as he was heading out to arrest those who were following Jesus.
Acts 9:1 HCSB
1 Meanwhile, Saul was still breathing threats and murder against the disciples of the Lord. He went to the high priest
Romans 1:1 HCSB
1 Paul, a slave of Christ Jesus, called as an apostle and singled out for God’s good news —
Good News:
N.T. Wright
Paul for Everyone, Romans Part 1: Chapters 1–8 Good News about the New King (Romans 1:1–7)

The ‘good news’ is not, first and foremost, about something that can happen to us. What happens to us through the ‘gospel’ is indeed dramatic and exciting: God’s good news will catch us up and transform our lives and our hopes like nothing else. But the ‘good news’ which Paul announces is primarily good news about something that has happened, events through which the world is now a different place. It is about what God has done in Jesus, the Messiah, Israel’s true king, the world’s true Lord.

Romans 1:1–2 HCSB
1 Paul, a slave of Christ Jesus, called as an apostle and singled out for God’s good news — 2 which He promised long ago through His prophets in the Holy Scriptures—
Roots in the Old Testament.
Romans 1:3 HCSB
3 concerning His Son, Jesus Christ our Lord, who was a descendant of David according to the flesh
Paul is writing this to the greatest city of the world at the time, the home of the most powerful man in the world, the Caesar, whose official titles included ‘son of god,’ whose birthday was hailed as ‘good news’, and who claimed the allegiance, the loyalty, of the greatest empire the world had ever seen!
Concerning His Son
You see the trinity here in Romans and Paul did not have a book on the trinity to go off of. He speaks of who Jesus is. He is God’s Son. This is to say that in Jesus God himself was embodied. He is the Son of God.
He is Jesus Christ our Lord.
He comes form the royal house of David
What happens to Caesar when Christ is described in this way?
He quickly fades away.
Romans 1:4 HCSB
4 and who has been declared to be the powerful Son of God by the resurrection from the dead according to the Spirit of holiness.
Jesus is the Davidic King spoken of in the Old Testament
Psalm 2:6–8 HCSB
6 “I have consecrated My King on Zion, My holy mountain.” 7 I will declare the Lord’s decree: He said to Me, “You are My Son; today I have become Your Father. 8 Ask of Me, and I will make the nations Your inheritance and the ends of the earth Your possession.
Jesus is the living presence of God himself as the Son of God.
Romans 1:4 HCSB
4 and who has been declared to be the powerful Son of God by the resurrection from the dead according to the Spirit of holiness.
The resurrection says very loudly and very clearly that Jesus really was God’s Son. That he was raised up according to the Spirit.
His death and resurrection shares the truth that Jesus is the messiah and Jesus’s death was exactly how God intended it to be.
Romans 1:5–6 HCSB
5 We have received grace and apostleship through Him to bring about the obedience of faith among all the nations, on behalf of His name, 6 including yourselves who also belong to Jesus Christ by calling:
Obedience of faith: When you believe the Gospel you are caught up in obedience. That is you are completely loyal to God.
God gives the nations his inheritance.
Romans 1:7 HCSB
7 To all who are in Rome, loved by God, called as saints. Grace to you and peace from God our Father and the Lord Jesus Christ.
Paul for Everyone, Romans Part 1: Chapters 1–8 Good News about the New King (Romans 1:1–7)

The gospel isn’t like an advertisement for a product we might or might not want to buy, depending on how we felt at the time. It is more like a command from an authority we would be foolish to resist.

On May 24, 1738, a discouraged missionary went “very unwillingly” to a religious meeting in London. There a miracle took place. “About a quarter before nine,” he wrote in his journal, “I felt my heart strangely warmed. I felt I did trust in Christ, Christ alone, for salvation; and an assurance was given me that He had taken away my sins, even mine, and saved me from the law of sin and death.”
That missionary was John Wesley. The message he heard that evening was the preface to Martin Luther’s commentary on Romans. Just a few months before, John Wesley had written in his journal: “I went to America to convert the Indians; but Oh! who shall convert me?” That evening in Aldersgate Street, his question was answered. And the result was the great Wesleyan Revival that swept England and transformed the nation.
Warren W. Wiersbe, The Bible Exposition Commentary, vol. 1 (Wheaton, IL: Victor Books, 1996), 514.
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