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Treasury of Sermons -
Good Friday & Easter
Walking In Newness of Life
By Rev Charles Seet
(Preached at Life BPC, Easter Sunrise Service, 16 April 2006)
Text: Romans 6:1-23
On this Easter morning we remember the
glorious resurrection of Jesus Christ. And as we gather here so early
this Sunday, we can just imagine ourselves coming with the women to the
garden tomb where the body of Jesus had been laid two days before. We
can feel the anguish and perplexity they felt when they found the
tomb already opened and the body, missing. Then they heard
the angels saying to them “Why seek ye the living among the dead?
He is not here, but is risen.” (Luke 24:5,6) What wonderful news
this was to them. The joy of hearing this news was only surpassed by the
joy of actually seeing, hearing and touching the resurrected Christ
Himself when He appeared to them shortly.
Dearly beloved, you and I have every
reason to rejoice because of the resurrection of Christ. It means
that we are justified, since the one sacrifice He made has been
fully accepted by God the Father. It means that He has conquered
death. Death is swallowed up in victory. It means that we will one
day be standing before God with incorruptible resurrected bodies
like His.
The resurrection is the central tenet
of Christianity. Everything we believe in stands or falls with it. Even
the Apostle Paul said in 1 Corinthians 15, that if Jesus had not
been raised from the dead, then our faith is empty, we are still in
our sins, those who have died believing in Him are all perished. So
important is Christ’s resurrection in the whole of history that many
scholars have debated over it. Volumes of books have been written about
it. But till today, no one has ever been able to successfully disprove
the resurrection of Christ.
And the most compelling evidence of the
resurrection of Christ are the countless lives that have been
transformed as a result of it. The glorious power of Christ’s
resurrection alone can transform the lives of people, where other
means and methods have failed. Neither education, nor rehabilitation,
nor imprisonment have ever successfully and permanently changed the
lives of people. But the resurrection power of Christ has seen great
success. And we can still see it working in the lives of people
today.
Dearly beloved, you and I are also being
transformed by the same resurrection power. But this
transformation does not come passively. We are actively involved
in the whole process of change. We are responsible to live out
all that the resurrection of Christ has accomplished for us. Only then
do we experience the power of the resurrection working in us and
changing us from within. What we are going to do now is to consider
how we should live our lives, in view of the fact that Jesus Christ
is resurrected from the grave.
Let us turn our Bibles to
the passage in Romans 6:4– “Therefore we are buried with him by
baptism into death: that like as Christ was raised up from the dead by
the glory of the Father, even so we also should walk in newness of
life.” This verse gives us a majestic picture of our salvation –
the picture of the glorious events of Christ’s death and resurrection.
The word ‘baptism’ here does not refer to water baptism but to our
spiritual baptism, which took place at the time we were saved.
According to the apostle Paul, when we were saved, we became spiritually
identified with Christ in His death, His burial and His resurrection. It
was then that we died to our old life of sin, and we were spiritually
resurrected to the new life we now have in Christ. This must cause us
now to walk in newness of life, to actually live out in our daily
living, the results of our salvation from sin. Now what does it mean, to
walk in newness of life? I would like to suggest that it means four
things:
Firstly, to walk in
newness of life means to live a Resurrected life. In verse 4 the
phrase “newness of life” is actually connected to the idea of Christ’s
resurrected body: “like as Christ was raised up from the dead . . .
we also should walk in newness of life.” The resurrection of Christ
was not the same as the earlier miraculous resurrections of people like
Lazarus and the son of the Widow of Nain. In these earlier
resurrections, those who came back to life had the same corruptible
bodies they had before they died. But the resurrected body of Jesus was
new, different, and superior in quality compared to his former
pre-resurrection body. It was free from all the aches, pains and
physical ailments of the former body. It was created for life in heaven,
not on earth.
In the same way
therefore, our life after salvation should be new, different and
superior in quality to our former life. It should be free from all the
sinful and corrupt habits of the former life. It lives for heavenly
things and not for earthly things any more. This is what we mean by the
Resurrected life. As 2 Corinthians 5:17 says, “…if any man be in
Christ, he is a new creature: old things are passed away; behold all
things are become new.”
Dearly beloved, is your
life different now from what it was before you were saved? Do you still
love the things that you loved before? If you are walking in newness of
life, your values in life will be different. You will be more concerned
with the things of God than the things of the world, and with things
that are eternal, rather than with things that are temporal, and with
things that are above, rather than with things that are on the earth.
Let us now go on to see
the second thing that is meant by the term “newness of life”: v. 6,7 –
“Knowing this, that our old man is crucified with Him, that the body of
sin might be destroyed, that henceforth we should not serve sin. For he
that is dead is freed from sin.” This verse shows how our
identification with Christ breaks the power of sin in our lives. To walk
in newness of life therefore means to live a Released life. The
picture Paul uses is that of slaves who are liberated from their
bondage. A slave is a person who is owned by another, without any rights
at all. Like any other form of personal property, he was to be used and
disposed of in whatever way the owner may wish.
Before Christ saved us,
we were all slaves to sin. Sin dominated our thoughts and actions like a
hard and cruel taskmaster and we were helplessly under its control. We
served sin and suffered all the unpleasant effects that came with it:
hatred, bitterness, deceit, strife, jealousy, rebellion, pride and lust.
But all that has now changed. Through the death and resurrection of our
Lord Jesus Christ, we are liberated, delivered and set free from its
power. Although sin may still be present in our lives, its power over us
is broken. We do not have to serve sin anymore. To walk in newness of
life therefore means that we are to live a life that is released from
the power of sin. Only those who are truly saved will be able to do
this.
Those who are not saved,
cannot succeed to live a released life, no matter how hard they may try,
because they are still under the power of sin. Perhaps there may even be
someone right here who is like that. Examine yourselves and ask this
question: Do I still find myself helplessly under the power of sin? Is
my life still controlled by sin and I can’t seem to walk in newness of
life no matter how hard I have tried? If your answer to both of these
questions is “yes” then perhaps you have not yet been saved. Then you
must not delay any longer to come to Jesus Christ and ask Him to come
into your life. Please make sure of your salvation before this day ends.
Let us now go on to look
at the third thing that newness of life means: v.11 – “Likewise
reckon ye also yourselves to be dead indeed unto sin, but alive unto God
through Jesus Christ our Lord.” We who are saved are now alive to
God. That adds a meaning to the concept of newness of life: it is a
Revived life. We were formerly spiritually dead, lifeless and
alienated from the life of God. But now, through Jesus Christ, we are
made alive to God. We now have a new principle of life that energises us
and gives us the special ability to relate to God and to respond to God.
We all know that things
that are dead have no ability to hear and respond. You may shout at
them, scream at them, pinch them, shake them and still not get the
slightest response from them. Jesus once said this to the spiritually
dead Pharisees: “Why do ye not understand My speech? Even because ye
cannot hear My word. . . He that is of God heareth God’s words: ye
therefore hear them not, because ye are not of God.” (John 8:43,47)
Those who are not alive to God have no ability to listen to God’s Word,
even though there may be nothing wrong with their ears. God’s Word has
no effect on their lives. They will often find it quite meaningless and
hard to understand.
But a person who is alive
to God listens to Him when He speaks through His Word. He is ready to do
His bidding. He takes God’s Word seriously. Isaiah 66:2 tells us “but
to this man will I look, even to him that is poor and of a contrite
spirit, and trembleth at My word”. He trembles at God’s Word, and is
moved and convicted by it. And then he responds to that Word with
prayer, trust and obedience. He is not just a hearer of the Word, but
also a doer of the Word. He is like the good ground in the parable of
the sower of Matthew 13 who “heareth the word and understandeth it
and also beareth fruit, and bringeth forth some an hundredfold, some
sixty and some thirty.” (v.23)
Dearly beloved, the
question we have to ask this time is: Am I alive to God? Do I listen to
Him when He speaks to me through His Word? Do I respond to Him readily?
Or am I more like a dead person who does not seem to listen or respond
at all? Let us not live as if we are dead, but alive to God, if we are
to walk in newness of life.
Now we go on to look at
our fourth and final meaning of Newness of life. In Romans 6:13 Paul
says, “Neither yield ye your members as instruments of
unrighteousness unto sin: but yield yourselves unto God, as those that
are alive from the dead, and your members as instruments of
righteousness unto God.”
To walk in newness of
life is not only to live a Resurrected life, a Released life and a
Revived life. It also that we should have a Righteous life. We
are to be instruments of righteousness which God can use to do His
righteous works in this world. A life that is yielded to the Lord
becomes a powerful tool in His hands. I am sure we all know how
important good tools and instruments are to us, for anything we do. With
the right utensils a good cook or chef can prepare a good-tasting
nutritious meal in a very short time. With the right tools a good
carpenter can shape and join pieces of wood into useful furniture items.
With the right instruments a skilled engineer can design the strongest
bridges and the tallest buildings in the world. And with a good musical
instrument, a musician can produce beautiful melodies that move people
to tears.
And when we yield our
lives as instruments or tools of righteousness to God, we are really
placing them in the hands of the master builder, the master craftsman,
the most excellent and skilled performer, who can use them and bring out
from them their fullest potential to produce great and glorious works of
righteousness in this world. God can use our transformed lives to bring
people to commit their lives to Jesus Christ. God can also use our lives
as tools to build up and shape the lives of other believers and to build
up the church, the body of Christ. Knowing now what wonderful works God
can do with our life, let us not hesitate to yield ourselves fully to
Him as instruments of righteousness!
Now besides being
instruments of righteousness, the apostle Paul goes on to say that we
are to be servants of righteousness. Look at vv.18,19 –“Being then
made free from sin, ye became the servants of righteousness. I speak
after the manner of men because of the infirmity of your flesh: for as
ye have yielded your members servants to uncleanness and to iniquity
unto iniquity; even so now yield your members servants to righteousness
unto holiness.”
It is interesting to note
that the word “servants” in these verses is actually the same as the
word that was used earlier to describe our bondage to sin. V.18 can be
translated “Being then made free from sin, ye became enslaved to
righteousness.” And someone may then say, “what then is the use
of being liberated from our slavery to sin, if in the end we still
become slaves – slaves to righteousness?”
Well, the answer is found
in the immense difference between the two kinds of slaveries. And that
is literally the difference between life and death. Let us read vv.20-22
“For when ye were the servants [slaves] of sin, ye were free from
righteousness. What fruit had ye then in those things whereof ye are
now ashamed? for the end of those things is death. But now being made
free from sin, and become servants [slaves] to God, ye have your fruit
unto holiness, and the end everlasting life.”
The slavery of sin ends
in death. Sin is the cruel slave driver that works all its slaves to
death. But the slavery of righteousness is a good slavery because it
leads to everlasting life. In ancient times when slavery was practiced,
there were sometimes good masters who treated their slaves well and
rewarded them with gifts. Some gave their slaves freedom after they had
served them faithfully for a number of years. Some even grew to love
their faithful and loyal slaves so much that they regarded them as part
of the family, and graciously adopted them as their own sons, making
them heirs of their estate.
Abraham had a very
faithful and trusted slave called Eliezer of Damascus, and before he had
any children, Abraham actually planned to make Eliezer the legal heir to
his whole estate (Genesis 15:2-4). Our status now as slaves of
righteousness is quite similar to that. Let us read Romans 8:15-17–
“For ye have not received the spirit of bondage [slavery] again to fear;
but ye have received the Spirit of adoption, whereby we cry, Abba,
Father. The Spirit itself beareth witness with our spirit, that we are
the children of God: And if children, then heirs: heirs of God, and
joint-heirs with Christ; if so be that we suffer with Him, that we may
be also glorified together.”
What all of this means,
dearly beloved, is that we must be good and loyal slaves of
righteousness, serving the Lord faithfully because He is the most
gracious and benevolent Master who has adopted us into his own family,
treating us as His own children and He has bestowed upon us the gift of
eternal life. And this wonderful Lord and Master whom we must now serve
most willingly, and obediently has also assured us that we will one day
be freed from our service, to enter into His glorious rest!
We now have the full, complete understanding of
what it means to walk in newness of life: It means living a Resurrected
life, a Released life, a Revived life, and a Righteous life. And this is
the life we must all endeavour to live, since we have become
identified with Jesus Christ in His death, in His burial and in His
Resurrection. May the Lord help us. |