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I want to frame up our time with a quote from Martin Luther before we read the text and before we preach or before we pray for the preaching of God's word. And the reason why I want to do this is because this was a quote that I came across while preparing and while studying for preaching. And it really just stuck with me the whole time and it really has resonated with me. And I think it's a clear sort of encompassing statement about what Martin Luther is expounding upon in our text, the concept that we are going to deal with in our text, Martin Luther expounds upon it in this way. And so I think it's going to be helpful for us to think about. So I'll read it and then we can talk about it.
But Martin Luther says this, "A Christian is a most free Lord of all, subject to none. A Christian is a most dutiful servant of all, subject to all." Now this is a statement that kind of deals with a paradoxical concept that we are going to be wrestling with in our text. The idea is that we as Christians are free. We are free. Scripture teaches that we are co-heirs, that we are rulers with Christ. And so we even have authority, real practical authority in the world around us, and that we are not subject to one another. We'll get to what that means in a little bit, but just hang on to that. But at the same time, scripture is clear that we are to love one another, to serve one another and to put each other before ourselves.
And so how do we live in freedom and authority as rulers, as lords, lowercase L, in this world, while still being a dutiful servant and being subject to all? That is the concept that we are going to be wrestling with today. And I'll read the text, I'm going to read the whole thing. It's a long text, but the reason why I'm reading it is because Paul is making one logical argument that I want us to sit on and think about. What is Paul saying here? And I just really want the word to penetrate our hearts and our minds and let us just sit and dwell on that. So I will read it and then we can pray over the preaching of our God's word.
So Romans 14, starting in verse one, it says this, "As for the one who is weak in faith, welcome him, but not to quarrel over opinions. One person believes he may eat anything, while the weak person eats only vegetables. Let not the one who eats despise the one who abstains, and let not the one who abstains pass judgment on the one who eats, for God has welcomed him. Who are you to pass judgment on the servant of another? It is before his own master that he stands or falls. And he will be upheld, and the Lord is able to make him stand. One person esteems one day as better than another, while another esteems all days alike."
"Each one should be fully convinced in his own mind. The one who observes the day, observes it in honor of the Lord. The one who eats, eats in honor of the Lord since he gives thanks to God. While the one who abstains, abstains in honor of the Lord and gives thanks to God. For none of us lives to himself and none of us dies to himself. For if we live, we live to the Lord. And if we die, we die to the Lord. So then whether we live or whether we die, we are the Lord's. For to this end, Christ died and lived again, that He might be Lord both of the dead and of the living. Why do you pass judgment on your brother? Or you, why do you despise your brother? For we will all stand before the judgment seat of God, for it is written, 'As I live,' says the Lord, 'every knee shall bow to me and every tongue shall confess to God.'"
"So then each of us will give an account of himself to God. Therefore, let us not pass judgment on one another any longer, but rather decide never to put a stumbling block or hindrance in the way of a brother. I know and am persuaded in the Lord Jesus that nothing is unclean in itself, but it is unclean for anyone who thinks it unclean. For if your brother is grieved by what you eat, you are no longer walking in love. By what you eat, do not destroy the one for whom Christ died. So do not let what you regard as good be spoken of as evil, for the kingdom of God is not a matter of eating and drinking but of righteousness and peace and joy in the Holy Spirit. Whoever thus serves Christ is acceptable to God and approved by men, so then let us pursue what makes for peace and for mutual upbuilding."
"Do not, for the sake of food, destroy the work of God. Everything is indeed clean, but it is wrong for anyone to make another stumble by what he eats. It is good not to eat meat or drink wine or do anything that causes your brother to stumble. The faith that you have keep between yourself and God. Blessed is the one who has no reason to pass judgment on himself for what he approves. But whoever has doubts is condemned if he eats, because the eating is not from faith. For whatever does not proceed from faith is sin." Let's pray over the preaching of God's word.
Heavenly Father, Lord, we thank You, we praise You that You are Lord of all, that You are in control always and of everything. We thank You and we praise You. Lord, we also thank You and praise You that we have an ability to join You in that freedom, that You have blessed us with that opportunity. We thank You. Help us to live in that freedom. Lord, we thank You that You did not count that freedom as something to be hold onto, that You willingly gave it up to save us, to sacrifice for us, to serve us. Help us to have hearts that desire to do the same. Grow our ability, our willingness to serve and to submit to one another in the freedom that You have blessed us with. Lord, challenge us, grow us. Use Your word, use Your scripture to strengthen Your church now. In Jesus' name. Amen.
Alrighty, we will be spending our time in four points today. Normally we like the three-point sermon, I like the three-point sermon, but we're doing four. The last one is really short so it's really like three-and-a-half, but we're going with four. But the points that we will be spending our time in are that you are free to serve the master. You are free to give thanks to the Lord. You are free to be subject to all, and you are free by faith. So we'll start with you are free to serve the master. This is coming in verses one through four. I'll break it up a little bit, but verses one and two say this, "As for the one who is weak in faith, welcome him, but not to quarrel over opinions. One person believes he may eat anything, while the weak person eats only vegetables."
So Paul hates vegetarians of... No, that's not what he is talking about. There's a lot of contextualization going on that we need to understand what is happening here. But the first thing I want to point out is the word opinions. It's not a word that we talk a lot about from the pulpit, but did you know, dear Christian, you are free to have opinions? Wow, what a novel concept. You are allowed to think. You are allowed to have opinions. That's great, but you're not free to quarrel over them. It's interesting. It implies that as Christians we will have opinions that are inherently contradictory to other people in the same body of Christ. If you look around this room, we're going to have different opinions on the same subject matter. The Bible says that's okay.
You are allowed to have differences of opinion, but what's not okay is to allow those differences to cause division, as to quarrel over them. We'll get into what the quarreling exactly means in a little bit, but I just wanted to start with that and point out like yeah, we can say it's okay to have opinions. It's okay to disagree, but we still need to live in unity and love with one another. The next thing I want to point out is the context of the eating whatever, and the weaker one only eats vegetables. So this has a lot to do with the history and the context of the day. But specifically, the church in Rome was living in a city where people offered sacrifices to pagan Gods, and that sacrifice was a meat offering that then after the sacrifice they would take the meat and they would just sell it in the market.
And so the question that the Christians in this early church were dealing with, is it okay to eat meat that is offered to idols? Is it okay to eat meat if you don't know that it had been offered to idols or not? What should we do? And Paul goes into greater detail in his stance on that in 1 Corinthians. Feel free to check that out, but I'll just summarize it real quickly. What Paul's point is saying is we know there is one true God. Yahweh is the only God. And so any other God, lowercase G, that these sacrifices are made to, they're not real. So really what it is it's a barbecue. So Paul says, "I can eat it." There's nothing sinful, there's nothing unclean about eating it because in faith, Paul knows he's still praising the one true God who provided food. Makes sense, seems good.
There was another group of dedicated Christians who loved the Lord that said, "I cannot eat meat dedicated to an idol. Less to anyone dare think I'm possibly worshiping that idol. I don't want to cause any confusion. I don't want to worship an idol I'm not going to eat the meat offer to them." But sometimes it's hard to know what meat at the market is offered to an idol and which is not. So they refrained completely from eating meat. They said, "We will not eat meat at all to make sure that we do not eat meat sacrificed to idols." Wow, what conviction. What strength to and dedication to the Lord to say, "I will not do anything that possibly can go against the Lord." Whoa, faithful Christians are disagreeing. Faithful Christians have a difference of opinion. And that's okay.
And Paul is saying, "Welcome each other." And what's really interesting here is we're at church, I'm preaching, so we take this primarily at church, but primarily what he's talking about is at the home. He's talking about, well, let's just thought experiment practically. Let's say there's a group of us here that love meat. No one knows who's in that group. Let's say that there's a group of people here who don't eat just vegetarian, for whatever reasons. And then you come to church and you know who eats meat and who doesn't. What do you think's going to happen? Naturally, most people will probably separate, hang out with their friends, "Oh, I'm not a meat eater. I'll sit with the other people who don't eat meat." "Oh, I'm a meat eater. I'll sit with the people who eat meat." And then what do we do after service? Oh, let's go get lunch. Oh the meat eaters go get barbecue. The vegetarians go, I don't even know, I'm sorry, I'm a meat eater. I don't even know where you go.
And the result is division. The result is division in the church over something that doesn't matter, over something that is an opinion. And what Paul is saying, have the people over your house and enjoy a meal together that you disagree with. I'm sticking with the meat and vegetable example because that's what Paul uses, but think about it yourself. Think about what opinions we disagree with one another within the church. Actively invite and welcome into your home people you know that you disagree with, and genuinely welcome them. It says don't quarrel, don't have them over to have a debate about the opinions. That's not helpful. Don't bring them over to try and persuade them or if you don't know, I'm having people over to find out who's on my side of this opinion so we could figure it out. Like that's not helpful, it's not helpful.
Paul says to welcome them, and it gets a little bit stronger in language as he goes. In verse three it says, "Let not the one who eats despise the one who abstains. And let not the one who abstains pass judgment on the one who eats, for God has welcomed him. Who are you to pass judgment on the servant of another? It is before his own master that he stands or falls, and he will be upheld for the Lord is able to make him stand." The word for quarreling, it actually has to do with making a judgment over. And it's like when you are arguing with someone like oh, I'm right, they're wrong. I'm better than them. They're just weaker. They don't understand as much as I do. You're coming from a place that's not loving. And Paul recognizes that and he says, "Don't despise the one who eats. Don't despise the one who abstains. Don't hate them. Don't make a judgment over them."
Why? Because you are not their master. And this is an important thing to know that we are given authority and we are given rule in this world, but we are not masters of one another. I am not your master. Praise God. You are not my master. Praise God. I have the freedom to live not concerned about you mastering yourself over me and you have the freedom to live without concern of me mastering over you. Why? Because we have one master and that master is the Lord Jesus Christ. Now we still have to serve Him, right? This doesn't mean we have freedom to sin or freedom to do whatever we feel like. It's freedom to live in submission to our master. Freedom to serve our master. That's why it says before his own master, he will either stand or fall. Sometimes we make mistakes. Sometimes our opinions are wrong and we will fall. And that's okay because we are not the ones who ultimately decide our standing before our master, the master decides that.
And the Lord, it says, is able to make us stand. He is the one who upholds us. And so we can trust in Him. We can live in freedom to serve Him knowing He will uphold us. And that's something that we should be joyful about. We should be thankful for, that we are not masters of one another, but we do have a good master who will cause us to stand and we can serve Him. So then we should give thanks to Him. This is point number two. We are free to give thanks to the Lord. This is in verses five through 12. It says in verse five, "One person esteems one day as better than another. While another esteems all day as alike. Each one should be fully convinced in his own mind. The one who observes the day, observes it in honor of the Lord. The one who eats, eats in honor of the Lord since he gives thanks to God. While the one who abstains, abstains in honor of the Lord and gives thanks to God."
I'll stop there for now, but the first thing I want to point out is Paul brings in another contextual disagreement that the church was having when he says one esteems one day and one esteems all day is alike. And most often this is used to talk about things like what day do we worship God on. Like we're here on Sunday, we worship on Sundays. That's what we do. But actually it's a lot more nuanced than a lot more specific of what's going on. There's a group of people in the early church that believed God told us specific days are holidays, or specific days are sabbaths to worship Him, to remember Him, to do different things. So those days are inherently more holy than the rest because God had ordained them for the worship of Him at specific times. Okay, all days are holy, but those days are like extra holy. You could see that argument.
Other people, and Paul falls into this camp, say the Lord made all days, all days are holy. We can worship God however we want on those days, whatever we are called to remember in those holidays, we can worship every single day. Every day is a holy day to serve the Lord. Praise God. That makes sense, too. People disagree again. But the idea is the esteeming has to do with holiness, and the emphasis is the esteeming of the days and not on the differences. The point is, do we actually think about days as ordained by God to serve Him? To love and serve and worship Him and specifically honor Him, right? It says if you abstain, if you partake, whatever your view on the days are, if you do it in honor of the Lord, then it's good. Then it's good. And this takes intentional, proactive thought, right? This is not just passive like, oh I go to church every Sunday. That's just because that's what I do.
It's like, no, today is a day to honor the Lord. Praise God. And then when we go home and wake up tomorrow, still a day to worship and praise God. Praise God. And how do we honor Him in our eating, in our not eating, in our following of certain days or whatever? Says by giving thanks. Says that they honor Him by giving thanks. This is very applicable. We're just coming out of the Thanksgiving season, headed into the Christmas season, thinking a lot about thankfulness and things like that. We, as Christians, are called to proactively thank God for everything always, all the time. And this is the following statement where He gets into a totality statement. This is what He's saying in verse seven, "For none of us lives to himself and none of us dies to himself. For if we live, we live to the Lord. And if we die, we die to the Lord. So then whether we live or whether we die, we are the Lord's. For to this end, Christ died and lived again that He might be Lord, both of the dead and of the living."
What's in the realm outside of the dead and of the living? Nothing. That's what there is. Either it is dead or it's alive, physically, spiritually, whatever category you want, alive and dead are the categories. And Paul's point here is everything, the good, the bad, the scary, the hard, the things that bring life, the things that lead to death, all of it is under God's sovereign control. Nothing is out of his hands. And so that gives us the ability to thank Him always, to thank Him when things are hard. To thank Him when things aren't going the way we want them to. He is master of all. He is the one in control. We can praise Him, we can thank Him. That doesn't mean it's easy. There will be seasons when it's hard to do. But as Christians, we are called to do this and we are free to do it, right?
That's something that's important to think about. The freedom, the ability to recognize with one another yet may be hard. But even in the difficult seasons, we have the freedom, allow each other to praise God even when things are hard. Allow each other to give thanks to Him even when things are difficult. So we are free to give thanks to God. Whoa, we're free to do whatever we want in submission to the master, our Lord. And we are free to thank Him for it. That doesn't mean there's no accountability, right? And this is where it continues in verse 10, "Why do you pass judgment on your brother. Or you, why do you despise your brother? For we will all stand before the judgment seat of God. For it is written, as I live, says the Lord, every knee shall bow to me, and every tongue shall confess to me, to confess to God. So then each of us will give an account of himself to God."
We have the freedom to not judge one another because not only are we not their masters, we're not their judge. God is their judge. God is my judge. God is your judge. God is everyone's judge. And so we have the freedom when we see things wrong, when we disagree over opinions, we have the freedom to not pass judgment on one another and say, you know what? It's in the Lord's hands. This goes back to Romans 12 at the very end where he says, the Lord says, "Vengeance is mine and it's not for us." And so we have the freedom to not worry and be obsessed with and condemn each other because we know that God is in control and that He is a good and perfect judge. But we ourselves will stand before God and give an account for everything we have said and done. And that should cause us to faithfully serve Him, right? We have the freedom. We have freedom, great. But we do have to give account to God for what we do with that freedom.
And then Paul's going to tell us what we should do with that freedom, what we are called to do in that freedom. This picks up in verse 13, "Therefore let us not pass judgment on one another any longer, but rather decide never to put a stumbling block or hindrance in the way of a brother. I know and I am persuaded in the Lord Jesus that nothing is unclean in itself, but it is unclean for anyone who thinks it unclean. For if your brother is grieved by what you eat, you are no longer walking in love. By what you eat, do not destroy the one for whom Christ died. So do not let what you regard as good be spoken of as evil." We'll pause there for a second, but I like to tell people my favorite verse in text that I preach because I think it's helpful.
But my favorite verse is verse 13. That's my favorite verse. Let us not pass judgment on one another any longer. Well, it's saying that we have been passing judgment on one another and we need to stop doing that. And Paul is writing that to the church in Rome, but I know that it's applicable to every church, but it is applicable to our church here. We need to commit to not passing judgment on one another anymore. Then it says rather decide, and this is really why it's my favorite verse. The word decide is the same word that has been used throughout this text for pass judgment. So what does Paul mean by pass judgment? What does he mean by decide here? What is he talking about?
Passing judgment is a legal thing. It's a legal term of making a decision of guilty, not guilty or making a sentencing, a final, complete, total statement on what to do or what you are. And so Paul is saying do not make a condemnation, a guilty, not guilty statement on other people. That's not your job. Stop doing that. Do instead make a legal decree over your own life, place a law over yourself that you will never, never, ever put a stumbling block in the way of a brother or sister. How many of us are perfect at that? None of us. We aren't perfect at this and there's grace and there's forgiveness and repentance when we fail at this. But do we even have this mentality? Is this something that we are even thinking about?
Because it's not like, oh, remove stumbling blocks when you can. It's, do not put them there. That means is we're putting them there, and we need to proactively stop ourselves from doing it. Do we have the mentality that I love somebody else so much that I will not do anything at all that causes them to stumble? Even eating meat. You see, this is where the gospel makes clear of this balance of the paradox because Jesus is the Lord and ruler are one master. And so he has the most freedom of all. He is free to do whatever He wants. But He knew that we needed help. He knew that we were not all right. And He said rather than just letting them figure it out and I'm free to do whatever I want, I'm not going to let them bother me. He said no.
Jesus Christ came down to earth. He gave up His freedom, submitted Himself to us to serve us, to die on the cross, save us from our sins so that way we can join the family of God, when we've put our faith and trust in Him. When we say, Lord Jesus, you are truly Lord of my life. You are in control. You are the one I need to submit everything to. And so do we love each other like Christ love the church? Do we say, "Yes, I may have freedom to have whatever opinions I want"? Sure, true. Do you say, "But I'm not willing to let them become a stumbling block for anyone else"? And it's very strong language. He says never. Don't dare put a stumbling block. And this is really important because it continues and says, "Do not destroy the one for whom Christ died."
Christ died for them. They are valuable to our master so they should be valuable to us, so we shouldn't do things that destroy them. And the word destroy isn't about salvation, but it is about physical breaking and hurt and pain and anguish. Do we recognize that's the severity of our actions at times? I think we can all agree experientially the times that we are hurt the most, the times that we feel destroyed are when we're hurt by the people we care about the most. Because it's not painful to be hurt by someone you don't care about. Like whatever, I don't care about you. But when you really truly care for someone, it is painful when they hurt you. And we, as a church, aren't primarily just a group of people that meet on Sundays. We are called the Body of Christ. We are called the family of Christ. We are relationally brothers and sisters.
And so when we hurt one another, it hurts. It really has power to hurt. And so we need to proactively fight against that. We need to actively seek love, seek peace, seek the ability to help one another rather than hurting one another even when our opinions are right. This is important. What I find really interesting about this text is that Paul is talking about opinions. Well, making an argument for which opinion is right and which opinion is wrong. If you noticed, he started the first time he talked about it in the beginning, he said this, "One person believes he... The weak person eats only vegetables."
So in the decision, should we refrain from eating all meat to serve the Lord or should we eat meat and freedom to serve The Lord? Calls the ones who refrain, weak. He's making a statement about who's right and who's wrong. He continues, "The one who eats, eats in honor of the Lord. The one who abstains, abstains in honor of the Lord." But it's okay. If they eat, they eat. If they don't, they don't. It's okay. Then here he says, "I know and I am persuaded in the Lord that nothing is unclean in itself." Then Paul is saying, Paul's convinced I know that there is nothing unclean about it. We should all eat meat. And then later we'll get to it in a second, he says even more strongly, "Everything is indeed clean."
So Paul in this text is trying to show people what is true, what is right. But that's not the point. That's not what he's focusing on. He actually focuses on the unity. Nowhere does he tell the people who are refraining from eating vegetables, you're wrong, stop doing it. Start eating meat. No. And actually he corrects the people who eat meat and challenge them and says, "Let them do it. They're following their conscience, they're following the Lord. They're seeking to serve the Lord and doing it. Let them do it." We live in a city that prizes intelligence, that prizes knowing information and knowing the most and being right and all this stuff.
Dear Christians, that's not your goal in life. That's not the purpose. And ultimately it doesn't matter as much as everything else that we are called to. What is the purpose? What is the goal? This is verse 17, and it says it very clearly, "For the kingdom of God is not a matter of eating and drinking, but of righteousness and peace and joy in the Holy Spirit." What is our purpose? We are to pursue righteousness. That does mean there are things that are right and wrong. We should not use freedom to do whatever we want. We submit to the Lord, we follow Him. If you remember, I know it's been a long time since we started Romans, but if you remember way back to week one, Bastion talked about how the purpose of this letter is to encourage the church to faithful obedience to the Lord. It's the idea of encouraging people to faithful. You could say righteousness.
So we as Christians, we do pursue righteousness. We do pursue living lives according to God's word and doing what is right. But then we pursue peace, we pursue unity, we pursue that at the cost of our own freedoms. Talking a lot about opinions more than I like to talk about from the pulpit because I think it shouldn't be about opinions, and that's kind of Paul's point. But we have opinions, we disagree. But if I allow my opinion to get in the way of anyone else's faith, it's better that I don't have an opinion at all. It's better that I don't because that's not the point. The point is peace. The point is righteousness. The point is peace are what we're doing, what we're saying bringing about unity within the church. And joy. We can't forget about joy, too. Again, even when things are hard, even when you disagree, we still are called to righteousness, peace, and joy.
So this is why I love singing songs of worship to the Lord here on Sundays, because for me music brings joy. I mentioned that the first service when I was a baby, I was a very cute baby, you'll have to take my word for it. But my parents said I was a joyful baby. I was a happy baby. And then from then until I got married, I was never once in my life called joyful. Now that I am married, I have been called joyful, and praise God, and I'm very thankful for my wife. But the point of that is I was actually in sin all those years of my life, because I wasn't following the Lord. I wasn't pursuing joy as I am called to. And joy is important. And sometimes you don't feel like being joyful. I get it. And that's why the church body is so important. That's why we need each other.
I love to come to church on days when I don't feel like coming to church. You know what I mean? On days when you feel like it's the hardest, on days where you don't feel the joy and you show up at church and you see other people worshiping and praising God, it's a little bit easier to be joyful. It puts things in perspective, it's helpful to remind ourselves we're here to praise God. I can praise Him no matter what because He again is in control of all things. We are called to do this for the mutual upbuilding of the church. This is how the church strengthens, this is how the church grows. So when we are in seasons where we feel that the church is hurting and needs strengthening, this is the most important time to focus on this. Pursue righteousness, pursue peace, and pursue joy.
I don't think I clarified when I switched to 0.3, but I switched to 0.3. We were subject to all. I hope you picked up on that. Going to transition to 0.4 because a lot of this gets confusing, like practically speaking, how do we do this? And 0.4 clarifies a lot of this for us. You are free to live by faith. This is verses 20 to 23. It says, "Do not, for the sake of food, destroy the work of God. Everything is indeed clean, but it is wrong for anyone to make another stumble by what he eats. It is good not to eat meat or drink wine or do anything that causes your brother to stumble. The faith that you have, keep between yourself and God. Blessed is the one who has no reason to pass judgment on himself, for what he approves. But whoever has doubts is condemned if he eats because the eating is not from faith. For whatever does not proceed from faith is sin."
Do not let what we do destroy the work of God. Again, we said but do not let it destroy the one for whom God loved. But God is working in those situations, and the people are people that God is building and shaping and growing and so do not let our opinions destroy them. And I have to clarify this in verse... Sorry, I'm trying out of context that didn't go well. In verse 22 it says, "The faith that you have, keep between yourself and God." I want to clarify what this means. This is not talking about saving faith in the gospel, saving faith that Jesus died to save me from my sins. And He is Lord of all. No, nowhere else in scripture doesn't talk about that. Actually everywhere else in scripture it's like please tell everybody. Go tell the nations, proclaim it to everyone, we should not keep our faith and our love of the Lord Jesus Christ between us and God. No. We need to tell people about it. That is a command in scripture.
Contextually what this is talking about goes back to verse one. Those who are weak in faith, quarreling over opinions. We can have faith that we are doing, living faithfully even in our opinions, but we need to keep that between ourselves and God sometimes. Now if you have good strong relationships with people and friends and brothers, like it's not saying never talk about it. Like, you can, that's all right. But the point is it for encouragement? Is it a building or is it going to bring about harm? Again, we can have opinions, but if it's going to cause somebody else to stumble, it's better to just keep it between me and God. It's better to just for you to keep it between you and God because the point is unity. And so think about how many things we do a day, how many decisions we make, how do we faithfully follow God in everything while serving Him, while submitting to all?
Like what if there's an option to do something that might bring peace, but another one that would bring more joy, what do I do? Paul gives us more freedom. The freedom to live by faith, to trust in the Lord. That's what he's saying at the end here. If you eat when you don't have faith, you are condemned. Why? Because the point is about doing things in faith by trusting God. When we make decisions, do we seek after God's will? Do we pray? Do we read scriptures? Do we consult brothers and sisters in Christ and go from there? And once we make a decision, if we have been faithfully following the Lord, Paul says have the freedom to do it. Don't constantly be second guessing yourself. Don't constantly be having to go, oh, did I do the right thing or not? Live in freedom for the Lord.
And if you make a mistake, repent. Because you will make mistakes, because we are all fallible people. But ultimately the motivation for everything we do, the decisions we make needs to come from a position of I have faith that the Lord is in control of all things. I am seeking after Him. I am doing the best I can to follow Him. And so I'm going to proceed in this life from there. I want to close by reading two things that I find helpful, and it's things that you've already heard. I'm going to read again the quote from Martin Luther to summarize what I've been saying. And then I'm going to read the verse that I think Paul used that summarized most what he said, which is verse 17. And I'm just going to read them in conjunction to one another because I think thinking about them together has really helped me understand this idea.
So Martin Luther says, "A Christian is a most free Lord of all, subject to none. A Christian is the most dutiful servant of all, subject to all." Verse 17, "For the kingdom of God is not a matter of eating and drinking, but of righteousness, peace, and joy in the Holy Spirit." Let's pray. Heavenly Father, Lord, we do thank You for all of the freedom that You have blessed us with, that we can be free from judgment from one another, that we can be free from Your wrath because of the work of Your son, Jesus Christ. That we can be free to live in this world following You. We thank you, we praise You for that. Lord, we also thank You for the opportunity You have blessed us with to serve and submit to one another. We thank You that we are able to proclaim the gospel to those who see us by our submission to one another.
We thank You that you did not count your freedom as something to be hold onto, but gave it up for us. Lord, You are good. Lord, help grow in our hearts, the ability to view others more significant than ourselves, to view others as primary in us as secondary, to strengthen our faith in You so that we can be better at serving those around us. Bring unity to your church. Help us to pursue righteousness, peace, and joy. In Jesus' name. Amen.