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Romans 1  6 7 The Called of Christ and the Loved of God II
*Part Two*
*Romans 1:1-7 (ESV) * 
Paul, a servant of Christ Jesus, called to be an apostle, set apart for the gospel of God,  2which he promised beforehand through his prophets in the holy Scriptures,  3concerning his Son, who was descended from David according to the flesh 
4and was declared to be the Son of God in power according to the Spirit of holiness by his resurrection from the dead, Jesus Christ our Lord,  5through whom we have received grace and apostleship to bring about the obedience of faith for the sake of his name among all the nations,  6including you who are called to belong to Jesus Christ,
7To all those in Rome who are loved by God and called to be saints:
Grace to you and peace from God our Father and the Lord Jesus Christ.
*"The Called of Jesus Christ"*
Last week we focused on the phrase in verse 6, "the called of Jesus Christ."
The Christians in Rome, and the Christians in Poetry are "the called of Jesus Christ."
I argued that this means Christians are called /by God/ to belong to Jesus Christ (Romans 8:30; 1 Corinthians 1:9); and that this call of God is not just an invitation, but is the kind of call that creates what it commands.
I closed the message with a reference to 2 Corinthians 4:4-6 where Paul says that the reason people do not see the truth of Christ in the gospel is that "/the god of this world [Satan] has blinded the minds of the unbelieving so that they might not see the light of the gospel of the glory of Christ, who is the image of God"/.
In other words, human unbelief and demonic blinding conspire to make the gospel look like a stumbling block or like foolishness (1 Corinthians 1:23).
So how is it that anyone comes to faith?
Paul said that two things were necessary.
In 2 Corinthians 4:5 he says, "We preach . . .
Christ Jesus as Lord, and ourselves as your bond-servants for Jesus' sake."
The first thing needed is the preaching of Christ from a servant life.
Christ must be preached and shown.
No one can believe apart from the gospel.
We must tell the gospel to people and show it to people.
But Paul knows from painful experience, and so do many of you, that people whom we love hear the gospel and see our servant hood, but do not believe so as to be saved.
Which is why Paul went on, in 2 Corinthians 4:6, to mention the second thing necessary for someone to come to faith.
Not only must the gospel be preached from a servant life, but God himself must supernaturally give divine, spiritual light or sight to the heart.
"For God, who said, 'Light shall shine out of darkness,' is the One who has shone in our hearts to give the Light of the knowledge of the glory of God in the face of Christ."
This is what Paul means by the call of God (1 Corinthians 1:23-24).
Just as God in the beginning of creation brought about light by a simple word of call: /"Light shall shine out of darkness,"/ so now, in the unbelieving and demonically-blinded heart, God issues an omnipotent, light-giving call.
And the effect of the call is that we no longer see the gospel as a stumbling block or as foolishness, but now we see /"the Light of the knowledge of the glory of God in the face of Christ."/
In other words, what once looked stupid or boring or meaningless or irrelevant or weird now looks beautiful and precious and desirable, so that we freely reach out and embrace it.
In other words, when Paul says in Romans 1:7 that Christians are /"the called of Jesus Christ,"/ he means that God has spoken to our hearts so powerfully that we have been wakened from the sleep of unbelief, and our blind eyes have been opened to see Christ for who he really is, and our hardness of heart has been taken away, and we have been raised from spiritual death – just as Christ raised Lazarus by simply calling him – /"Lazarus, come forth"/ (John 11:43).
And the result of all of this is that now we see the greatness of Jesus in the gospel and we trust him and love him and value knowing him above all things.
And so we are /"the called of Jesus Christ."/
We live among the gentiles (as verse 6 says), but we belong to Jesus – and not the way a person belongs to the Democratic or Republican Party or Lions Club or the Rotary, but we belong to Jesus by an omnipotent call of God that creates what it commands.
*The Call Comes from God's Love for You*
Now today I want to deepen and sweeten the experience of your call by showing you two things: that your call comes from the love of God which he has specifically for you; and that it ushers you into a realm of God's love that no one knows but those who receive it.
The reason I choose to stress this is simply because the next crucial word in our text is "loved of God." Verse 7: ". . . to all who are /loved of God/ in Rome, called as saints: Grace to you and peace from God our Father and the Lord Jesus Christ."
"To all who are loved of God in Rome."
They are "the called of Jesus Christ" and the "loved of God."> O, that we know our self this way, Christians!
We are "the called of Jesus Christ," and we are "the loved of God."
*God's Love for the World*
Now, what does this mean?
I want to enlarge our vision of the love of God.
I don't want to shrink it.
I want to enlarge it.
For many people, the only way they have every conceived of the love of God is that he loves the world, and therefore he loves everyone in the same way.
And indeed he /does/ love the world.
Jesus said in Matthew 5:44-45, "Love your enemies . . .
so that you may be sons of your Father who is in heaven; for /He causes His sun to rise on the evil and the good, and sends rain on the righteous and the unrighteous/."
In other words, God's love is as broad and as general as the rising sun and the falling rain.
And John 3:16 says, "For God so loved /the world/ that he gave his one and only Son, that whoever believes in him shall not perish but have eternal life."
In other words, we may offer eternal life to every person on this planet who will put his faith in Jesus, the Son of God.
And it was the love of God that sent his Son so that offer could be made to the world.
So in at least these two ways God's love is broad and general: he sustains the unbelieving world with sunshine and rain, and he offers eternal life, at the cost of his Son, to any and all who will believe.
*(God's Love for His Called Ones)*
But is that all that Paul means in Romans 1:7 when he writes, " . . . to all who are loved of God in Rome"?
Doesn't this sound like he is saying, "Among all the people who live in Rome, I am writing to the ones loved by God"?
In other words, doesn't it sound like he is saying that those who are called by God to belong to Jesus Christ are loved by God in a special way, not that they are loved because everybody else in Rome is also loved by God?
If I write a letter to my wife and say, "I write you, my beloved, be strong and be encouraged by the grace of God," would anybody really say, the reason he calls her "loved" is because he loves every woman the way a Christian should, and, since his wife is a woman, she too is loved by Pastor Greg, because he loves all women?
No. Nobody would say that.
Rather, if I write, "To my beloved wife," everybody would assume there is a special love that I have for her.
I don't think Paul wants us to miss this in Romans 1:7.
I *don't* think he wants us, Christians, to say, "God calls me 'loved' because he loves everybody the same, and, since I am part of everybody, I am also loved."
That's not what verse 7 means.
Paul says, I write "to all who are loved of God in Rome."
But he does not mean everybody in Rome.
He is writing to those who are "the called of Jesus Christ."
So the love that he has in mind here must be different from the love that God has for everybody in Rome – just like I would have in mind a different love when I say, "to my beloved wife."
I don't mean that there is no love in my heart for other people.
I mean I have a special love for her.
I have a covenant love for her.
I chose her to be my wife.
( I let her think…) And I made a covenant with her.
And we sealed it with sacred vows.
And God sealed it in heaven (Matthew 19:6).
And now the love between her and I is utterly different from the love I have for any other woman.
Even though there are others I would die for.
I said, I want to enlarge your vision of the love of God.
I don't want to shrink it.
In other words, if I can persuade you that God loves "the called of Jesus Christ" with a special covenant love, I don't want you to conclude that he is less loving than he would be if he only loved the world in general and equally, but made no covenant with his bride the church.
I want to argue from the Scripture that God holds out love to the whole world, but that he chooses his wife, "the called of Jesus Christ," and loves her (you, Christian!) with a special, precious, covenant love.
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*Why, because God's Love Puts the Fear of God in the Heart*
Now I think that is implied in the very wording of verse 7, /To all those in Rome who are loved by God.” / But you may not see it so clearly here.
So let me give the bigger Biblical picture very briefly.
In the Old Testament, God promised that someday he would make what he called a "new covenant" with his people (Jeremiah 31:31), an everlasting covenant.
And the wonder of this covenant is that in it the love of God does not just offer safety to people, but promises to keep them safe from destruction.
So, for example, in Jeremiah 32:40
God promises, /I will make with them an everlasting covenant that I will not turn away from doing good to them.
And I will put the fear of me in their hearts, that they may not turn from me."/ Do you see what kind of love this is?
This is more than the general love of invitation and offer.
This is a love that /"puts the fear of God in the heart"/ (similar to 2 Corinthians 4:6).
This is the kind of love that works powerfully /"so that [we] will not turn from God."/
This is not a general love for all.
It is a special love that puts the fear of God in our hearts and keeps us from turning away.
This is the new covenant.
Now when Jesus comes into the world, he comes to die and purchase the privileges of this new covenant for us with his blood.
So in Luke 22:20, Jesus says, at the Last Supper, "This cup which is poured out for you is the /new covenant in My blood/."
So the blood of Jesus, in a very special way, was poured out to secure the promises of Jeremiah 32:40 – that God will put the fear of him in our hearts and keep us from turning away from him.
This is a very special and precious love.
This is what you should feed on daily.
>>This is sweet and this is strong.
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