Follow Him: A Come, Follow Me Podcast - Romans 1-6 Part 1 • Dr. Adam Miller • Aug 7 - Aug 13
Episode Date: August 2, 2023How does the experience of being a sinner affect the experience of being saved by Jesus? Dr. Adam Miller discusses why faith is crucial to our experience of redemption.00:00 Part 1–Dr. Adam Miller01...:50 Introduction of Dr. Adam Miller03:22 Background to the Letter to the Romans04:23 Dr. Miller’s training as it relates to the New Testament07:26 How to approach this book09:05 Dating the book and additional study helps12:57 The Sermon on the Mount aids in studying this letter13:32 First Key is God doesn’t hate his enemies14:42 Love is a law, not a reward16:25 Earning Heaven or the opportunity of Heaven18:13 What does Paul mean by grace?21:29 Our motivations23:07 The Law is Love24:13 Romans 1:18-2027:40 Romans 1:2530:09 Creator and Created/Creature33:09 Misunderstanding love and trials34:56 Romans 1:3136:30 Prayer softens 37:13 Romans 540:56 Christ died for the ungodly43:05 Commandment to love perfectly not be perfectly loveable47:56 Fruit of salvation50:22 Romans 3 Falling short of the glory of God53:11 Giving Himself as a mercy seat54:40 Justification and reconciliation57:25 End of Part 1–Dr. Adam MillerPlease rate and review the podcast!Show Notes (English, French, Spanish, Portuguese): https://followhim.coYouTube: https://youtu.be/ENOI-USIf50Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/followhimpodcastInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/followhimpodcastSpotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/15G9TTz8yLp0dQyEcBQ8BYThanks to the follow HIM team:Shannon Sorensen: Cofounder, Executive Producer, SponsorDavid & Verla Sorensen: SponsorsDr. Hank Smith: Co-hostJohn Bytheway: Co-hostDavid Perry: ProducerKyle Nelson: Marketing, SponsorLisa Spice: Client Relations, Editor, Show NotesJamie Neilson: Social Media, Graphic DesignAnnabelle Sorensen: Creative Project ManagerWill Stoughton: Video EditorKrystal Roberts: Translation Team, English & French Transcripts, WebsiteAriel Cuadra: Spanish Transcripts"Let Zion in Her Beauty Rise" by Marshall McDonaldhttps://www.marshallmcdonaldmusic.com
Transcript
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Hello, my friends. Welcome to another episode of Follow Him. My name is Hank Smith. I'm your host. I'm here with the amazing John. By the way, welcome John. Thank you. It's good to be back.
Yeah. John, we are in the book of Romans today. I know you have some experience in the book of Romans. Of course, what are you looking forward to learning from Paul. I was talking with my wife about this last night and I said just a family
prayer. I'm like, somebody book a Romans anything. I'm not ashamed of the gospel of Christ. That's
what they all remembered. But there's a lot of amazing teachings in here about how grace and
works. I mean, all these things. There's some wonderful stuff in soy. I'm so glad we're going to
talk about this today because I want to feel more understanding about justification, sanctification, grace, works, merits, Christ, all of this.
So really looking forward to it.
John, we have an expert joining us this week.
He's been with us before, Dr. Adam Miller.
Adam, what do our listeners have to look forward to it in these opening chapters of Romans?
There's a lot to look forward to. I think Paul offers to us in
these opening chapters of Romans, one of the best explanations of the gospel of Jesus Christ in
all the scripture. Wow. I've noticed with my friends who aren't members of our church, but who are
devout Christians, the book of Romans is slightly important to them, talking with them about religion, the Book of Romans frequently
comes up. I was thinking last night as I was preparing that perhaps it would be difficult for this
little church. We don't think of Christianity as a little church today, but this little group of
Christians in a huge world of the center of the Roman Empire and what that would be like for them.
I'm looking forward to this as well. John, why don't you introduce to our listeners, Dr. Miller.
Maybe they didn't hear our awesome episode last year.
Yeah, and I'm sure they'll be excited
that we have Dr. Miller back again.
I'm just going to read from the back flap
of his book, Original Grace,
which is one of the things that we'll be talking about today
in the title of this book.
But Dr. Adam Es. Miller is a professor of
philosophy at Colin College in McKinney, Texas, yearned a bachelor's in
comparative literature from Brigham Young University and an MA in PhD in
philosophy from Villanova University, the author of more than ten books,
including letters to a young Mormon, an early resurrection, and Mormon a
brief theological introduction, served his mission in Al an early resurrection, and Mormon, a brief theological introduction,
served his mission in Albuquerque, New Mexico. He and his wife, Gwen, have three children, and
as we were talking before Hank, we had Dr. Miller, one we did, the book of Job, and it was an amazing
paradigm shifting episode that was so helpful and so beautiful. And I just I just love the beautiful
way he expresses himself, no pressure at him, but
Ed, so I'm really looking forward to this thing.
John, I specifically remember Dr. Miller saying something that that shifted my point of view
and I've taught it differently ever since is the commandments aren't to avoid suffering.
But commandments are what you do in your suffering to keep you close to God.
To me, that was a life changing moment.
And maybe our listeners are like, well, I knew that, but I sure didn't.
I was excited about that. Adam, welcome. Thank you for being here.
I'm so glad to be back with you. It's a real pleasure.
I hope everyone will go back and listen to that episode on Job after they finish this episode, of course.
I'm going to read the opening paragraph to the Come Follow Me manual, and then Adam, let's turn it over to you
and give us maybe some background on Romans and where we're going to go.
This is what the manual says. This is by the time Paul wrote his epistle to the Roman church members
who were a diverse group of Jews and Gentiles. the Church of Jesus Christ had grown far beyond a small
band of believers from Galilee. About 20 years after the Savior's resurrection, there were congregations of Christians almost everywhere the Apostles could reasonably travel,
including Rome, the capital of a powerful empire. Still, compared to the vastness of the Roman Empire, the Church was small, and often the object of persecution.
In such conditions, some might feel ashamed of the Gospel of Christ, church was small, and often the object of persecution. In such conditions,
some might feel ashamed of the gospel of Christ, but of course not Paul. He knew and testified
the true power, the power of God into salvation is found in the gospel of Jesus Christ. So with that
introduction, Adam, what do you want to do? How do you want to get started? Let's start with a
couple of confessions, I think. Okay. Set the table here. Confession number one, I'm not a new testament scholar.
That's important. Neither are John or I. I don't know if we can test that John. Maybe we've proven it.
Once the confessions get started, it's hard to stop. Yeah, it's hard to stop back. Confession number
two is the far from being a New Testament scholar. I'm a philosopher, right, which in some ways may be the opposite.
I did write my dissertation and my first scholarly book in part about Romans, Paul's Epistle
to the Romans, but I wrote about how those epistles were being used in contemporary French philosophy.
So again, that's a very different, that's a very different cup of tea that the New Testament
scholarship. So again, that's a very different, that's a very different cup of tea that the New Testament scholarship
grace, though, is my primary academic specialty and I've even written and published a short era phrase of Paul's letter to the Romans called grace is not God's backup plan that's meant to
make Paul a little more accessible for us here in the 21st century. So I'm not as a philosopher, I'm not primarily
interested in Paul as a historical figure. Right? Rather, I'm much more interested in the really
powerful description that Paul gives us of the experience. Number one of what it's like to be a
sinner and then of the experience of what it's like to be saved of what it's like to be redeemed.
of the experience of what it's like to be saved, of what it's like to be redeemed. And on a personal note, I mean, though I've spent decades now with Paul as a scholar,
his epistles in this epistle in particular have changed into my life.
I owe them a deep, deep debt for helping me to become a better acquainted with God
and experience a deeper sort of conversion. I'm grateful to Paul.
I feel a great deal of affection for him. I haven't seen the research on this, but I have a
an inkling that members of the church in general, to me included, aren't as familiar with the
epistles of Paul as perhaps we are with the Book of Mormon, with the Gospels. I personally don't
know them as well. John, I don't know if you'd agree, but I don't with the Gospels. I personally don't know them as well.
John, I don't know if you'd agree, but I don't want to say we should.
I'm not in charge.
But I think it would be helpful for us to have a grasp on these epistles, especially
Romans, because it's so important.
I think a lot of us, when we start Paul in so many of our books and manuals, we have that
statement from Peter.
Paul's hard to understand.
So maybe we shy away from it, but
anything that's hard to understand brings also its rewards when you get closer to understanding.
It's like Isaiah when you do have a moment of illumination, you're like, oh, and then you begin to
love it. Like you said, Adam, you love Romans now and and feel a debt of gratitude for this text.
love Romans now and feel a debt of gratitude for this text.
Pretty much. All right, Adam, is that all the confessions
or do you need to confess some more?
Because we're here, we're here if you need to.
Those are all the confessions for now.
We'll see.
Okay, I'll go.
We'll see if there's more coming.
If I'm doing my confessions,
you'd ask if you want them in alphabetical order
or a chronological order. Should we jump into chapter one?
Is there some background that we need to understand of why Paul is writing to these people?
Does he know them?
Has he met them?
I think it's useful to remember that when we read to this point in the New Testament,
we're kind of shifting gears from stories and narratives as presented in the Gospels
and then in the book of Acts to collections of
epistles, right, to letters that are written to specific people, specific times and places
with specific problems. And those letters, I think, are of deeply general interest to
all of us, but their specific contexts will always matter there too. Let's note about Paul that Paul, in general, as Joseph Smith said
of himself, is kind of a rough stone rolling. Paul has lots of sharp edges, but sometimes they're
helpful and sometimes are not. We don't have to think that Paul is right about everything to
all agree that Paul is an apostle, and that Paul is a powerful witness of Jesus Christ.
Now, I've often wondered, Adam, Paul doesn't realize he's writing scripture. I don't think he
thinks millions of people in the future, billions of people in the future are going to be reading
these letters. I don't even think he's just, I intended them for the people in Rome. That's how
it's my intent about him. That's a great point. He did not intend for me and you to read them. He certainly did not intend for me to write a dissertation about them in the
context of contemporary French philosophy. But that being said, wouldn't we say, though, that Romans
has, haven't we already said, kind of a really clear repetition of the gospel, kind of the doctrine of
Christ? Yeah, I think that's true. And this I think, especially of all the gospel, kind of the doctrine of Christ. Yeah, I think that's true.
And this I think especially of all the letters, because of all Paul's letters, this one
is the least specific.
He composes this letter sometime between 55 and 57 AD.
He composes this letter probably as the last of the letters that we have, even though
it comes here first in the presentation in the New Testament, because the letters are
ordered by length, not by chronology.
I mean, it comes first here, even though it was written last because it's the longest.
And this letter is an unusual one, because unlike the others, Paul is writing here to a
group of saints in Rome that he's never met.
The other letters that we have are letters that Paul wrote to people that he knew, addressing
very specific problems that they had. And even individuals, right? Yeah, but this letter he's
writing to a saint's in Rome, to the church in Rome as a kind of introduction, as an introductory
letter, meant to both introduce himself and introduce his understanding of the gospel.
So he intends it more as a kind of explanation to be written, but to be read by a broad audience
than any of the other letters.
And in that sense, it's maybe even more valuable to you and I.
Great.
Two other notes in general.
Romans is beautiful, powerful, and unusual. Paul is talking
about the same thing as everybody else. All the other apostles, he's talking about Christ and
resurrection and redemption and he's preaching the gospel, but he doesn't always talk about it in
the same way or use the same vocabulary as the other apostles. In some sense, all here is attempting,
or at least he's contributing to the creation of a kind of Christian vocabulary, trying to
talk about what the gospel is and reach people who especially didn't grow up in the Jewish
faith, and so it's kind of a work in progress. And that's part of what I think makes it a
little bit difficult, is the way that his approach in vocabulary or so unique and personal to him.
The one other thing to note, I think, has to do with the way that, in my opinion, the Book of Romans suffers more in the King James version than any other book of Scripture.
I think it suffers even more than Isaiah, when you attempt
to read it in the King James translation. The King James translation is beautiful, but it is
really pretty tortured. And the King James English itself is old enough that I think it's fair
to say it hardly qualifies as English as you and I know it. That's a pretty significant hurdle
all by itself, just an understanding Paul. And I would strongly recommend that people seek out any number of contemporary translations
of Paul's epistle and just get a feel for what it's like to read Paul in English, which
I think is very hopeful, super duper hopeful, and then go back and worry about the King James.
If I remember right, Adam, last year you said you used an app called Blue Letter Bible,
is that right?
Yeah, I do often use that.
There's a lot of great ones, a lot of great free translations.
You can consult multiple translations here and that'll make the work a whole lot easier,
I think.
Here's what I have.
I found this at Deseret Industries.
It's a contemporary English translation.
I think it's called the living, the living Bible,
but it has all sorts of little helps on the side. Sometimes when I go to Bible Hub,
I like the good news translation because it's so simple. I know I'm probably missing some things,
but at least I understand the chapter. Then I go back and read through the King James and say,
oh, I get this now. I can help quite a bit. Let me offer a kind of, what I take to be a kind of interpretive key
for reading Romans. And then we can dive in and look at some specific passages and see how that
plays out. My preferred guide to reading the book of Romans is Jesus, especially the sermon on the
map. I find myself increasingly convinced by this wild theory
that Jesus' own explanations of the gospel are the very best. And that is very best explanations
come in the sermon on the Mount. There are three keys I want to borrow from the sermon on the Mount,
I think, is the key to
Essential backdrop to making sense of what Paul is doing in his letter to the Romans
The first key is that in the sermon on the Mount Jesus explains that God does not hate his enemies
In fact God loves his enemies God doesn't just love friends. He loves his enemies
Two in the sermon on the Mount Jesus notes that we are also commanded, like God, to love our enemies. And that in fact, this is the very essence of the law
as a whole. And three, Jesus argues quite sharply that loving our enemies doesn't destroy the law,
it's the only thing that can fulfill the law. He acknowledges to his listeners that it may feel like he's destroying the law when he
tells them that they have to not love just friends, but also their enemies, but that really
it's not the case, that this is the key to fulfilling it, that this is what the law
itself commands.
And then I think is the key to understanding everything that Paul is going to say about what sin is, about what grace is, and about why faith is crucial to our experience of
redemption.
If we were going to print up some t-shirts to go with this podcast, you guys do as you
please.
I'll leave that up to you.
Follow him clothing line.
Yeah.
On the front of the t-shirt here for understanding the book of Romans, I would want it to say,
Jesus was right. And on the back, I would want it to say, love is a law, not a reward. Then I think we might kind of
mantra for understanding what Paul is dealing in the book of Romans that love is always a commandment and never a reward. We'll compact it that again and again.
That was, I love that idea, Adam. Love is a law, not a reward. Okay, what's next?
I think in lots of ways that's the heart of the gospel. The idea that love is always a commandment
and never a reward, especially as Jesus describes it in the sermon on the map. And this, I think,
is also at the heart of Paul's own description of what it means to be a sinner. Because Paul's description of what it means to be a
sinner is that as a sinner we get the whole thing backwards. Rather than obeying God's command
to love even our enemies, what we do as sinners is we try to use God's law to earn or deserve God's
love as a kind of reward. We turn it around, we get it upside down, we get it inside
out, we get the whole thing backwards. We try to use God's law to be loved rather than to love.
And then I think is a good description in general of what it's like to be a sinner. A sinner is
somebody who lives their life backwards in this way, looking for love, but trying to do it in this upside-down
way where you want to be loved rather than doing the work of love. So you try to use the law
here then as a way to earn or deserve love and be in charge of it, be in control of it,
because you're the one who's earning or deserving it. You don't have to depend on
on somebody else. I've told my students before before something that can be confusing to them. I think it's similar to
what you're saying here. I told them, I don't keep the commandments so I can earn my way into heaven.
I keep the commandments because I want to want heaven when the opportunity is presented to me.
When Jesus says, all right, it's open to you.
Do you want it?
I made the way and do I desire that.
The model you're saying I'm going to earn something.
I'm going to earn God's reward from God.
Can be motivating but also incredibly discouraging
and also frustrating and also exclusive. You can start saying,
I'm one of those that's earning. They're not one of those that's earning.
That makes sense to me because I'm a sinner and that's how sinners think. That's how I think.
I think in this backwards way about myself, about other people, I think in this backwards way,
also in particular about God. As if God were waiting me to do something to prove that I deserved to be loved by him,
instead of waiting for me to join him in the work of loving others.
I think we've been treated by other humans in that. I've got to earn this approval type of way.
And sometimes we take some of humans worst attributes
and apply those to God, which like you said is exactly backwards. We have to think in
a whole new way about God is not using the worst attributes that humans have with each
other. Sometimes we've got to earn or merit approval or love or we feel that way anyway.
And then we apply that to God. We apply it to God, which we're never told to do.
He's telling us all the time the way He loves, but easy to do that.
Yeah, it's a little hard to get our heads around, which is why we can read the sermon on
the Mount where we can read Paul's letter to the Romans here and just not see what they're
doing or saying because it's so counterintuitive.
It runs so against the grain, right, of our expectation is this natural man and women
is sinners because we tend to look at the whole thing upside down.
And backwards, if you're anything like me, then you may have spent the better part of your life
trying to obey a commandment that God never gave. There is no commandment given in any
scripture by any prophet, from any pulpit, in any age, to make myself into someone who is perfectly
lovable. There is no such commandment. There is always and only and forever the unconditional
commandment to love. Even my enemies, even when my enemy is myself,
in the same way that God does.
And at the end of the day,
a lot of what's at stake in redemption
is just about my learning to stop trying
to keep a commandment that God never gave
and learning to start trying to keep the commandment
that God actually did,
give, so that I can understand him
and join him in that work.
This, I think, is what Paul means by grace
at the end of the day is that grace is the revelation that love always was a law and it never
was a reward in the first place. That's excellent. Yeah. Always chasing after something that I already have
if I just stopped for a second and saw what what the Lord is trying to teach me.
Yeah, and I think it fits nicely with the description you gave a couple minutes ago, Hank, of how the law really isn't about trying to earn your way into heaven,
but that obeying the law, that's the thing that you're looking for. But the law isn't a means
to some other end. I don't obey the law to get love. Obeying the law is the work
of loving. And by loving, I've found the thing that I'm looking for. But I can't do it
if I'm trying to be loved. That's not the right project. I have to engage in it as the
work of loving others. And then I find it. And how discouraging that is to think God
will only love me if I behave a certain way. You
might think, Oh, that's an excellent way to think it will make my behavior stay in line.
But really, there's a fear there of, I won't be loved. I'll do something wrong. I'll break
the law. And then not only have I broken the law, but now I've lost the love, let's
have you load to carry. Yeah, and this I think is one of the ways in which Paul is among the most accessible of
the writers in our scriptures, because nobody speaks more clearly or more personally than
Paul does about how painful and despairing it is to live in this way that treats love
backwards, that treats the law as a way that treats love backwards.
The treats the law is a way of earning love
and how that that inevitably leads into a kind of trap
where we both condemn others and condemn ourselves
and cut ourselves off from the very thing
that we wanted in the first place.
Well, John, we're like 20 minutes in
and I am loving this.
Yeah, this is great.
This new way of thinking.
Well, it's the gospel, I think, where I'm trying. Yeah.
I think so too. So I think the big picture structure of what Paul is saying and the epistle to the
Romans is essentially this, that as sinners, what we do is that we suppress or hide the truth about God and his law. By taking the whole thing backwards,
especially taking a backwards out of fear, as Hank pointed out, that's kind of our motivation for
doing it. We're afraid. By taking the whole thing backwards, we suppress or hide the truth about God,
and that what God is doing through Christ's atonement, through his death and resurrection, is that Christ,
the God is displaying the truth about himself and about his law, that he both loves his enemies
and is willing to sacrifice everything to save his enemies, and that only that kind of
love as law, rather than reward, only that kind of love, which is also what Paul calls grace,
can save us, especially
given what it means to be a sinner in the first place.
So that I think is the rough shape of his argument in general.
As sinners, we hide the truth, and God through Christ's atonement reveals the truth about
himself and his law.
We could give one other image, maybe to describe how this works.
If you think about God's law as a tool,
or think about God's law like a telescope,
what we do is centers is that we turn the telescope
around backwards.
And instead of looking through the right direction,
we look through it in the direction
that makes everything look small.
Instead of the direction that makes everything look small instead of the direction that makes everything look big.
Yeah, farther away.
If the law is love, what we end up doing is sinners is that we use the law backwards
in a way that makes love look very small and far away.
It's the same law, but we use it in such a way that it makes everything look small and
far away instead and makes God look very far away.
It makes love look impossible.
And what Jesus does when he comes to save us
is that Jesus comes and he says,
look, you lovable idiots.
You've got the whole thing backwards, right?
And he takes the telescope from us
and he shows us how to use it.
And he shows us how to love and sacrifice.
And he hands it back to us and he says,
now this is how you use it.
And then when you look through it in the right direction,
all of a sudden everything looks big and sharp and clear. is how you use it. And then when you look through it in the right direction, all the sudden,
everything looks big and sharp and clear, and you can see God's love everywhere and in everything.
It's maybe a nice little quasi-parable to describe what's at stake here for Paul and his treatment
of the gospel and the law. I like that. You're not seeing it wrong. You're just seeing it backwards.
You've got the law. The law is backwards. Yeah, you've got the law.
The law is right.
Yeah, you've got the right pieces.
But you're doing the wrong thing with it.
That's great.
Let's try to take a look at some particular passages then here in Romans.
Let's start in Romans chapter one.
I'm just going to use here for our listeners to give them a taste.
I'm going to use the NET, the new English translation of the Bible
because it's a kind of simple, baseline, accessible,
I think trustworthy translation of the Greek.
The NET tends to be my default,
but people can choose whatever they please
so long as it's like readable English.
It's the main thing to start.
And then worry about the details later.
So I'm just gonna give you,
I'm gonna give you citations from the NETA,
and if there are particular things
that we wanna talk about or note in the King James,
we can do that too.
So this is Romans chapter one, verses 18 through 20.
And I'm gonna tack on verse 25 here.
These verses go like this,
and you'll see right away, I think, why?
Why, as a philosopher, these verses might stand out to me, especially.
OK.
So they go like this.
Romans 118.
For the wrath of God is revealed from heaven
against all ungodliness and unrighteousness of people
who suppress the truth by their unrighteousness of people, who suppress the truth by their unrighteousness.
Because what can be known about God is plain to them, because God has made it plain to them.
For since the creation of the world, his invisible attributes,
his eternal power and divine nature, they've been clearly seen,
because they're understood through what has been made.
And then, verse 25,
they exchanged the truth of God for a lie and worshiped and served the creation rather than the
creator who is blessed forever. Amen. So that I think Paul, this is the first thing that Paul has to
say, right? And here in Romans one, this is kind of the frame that he gives us for understanding the rest of the epistle is the sinners, the people who are on righteous. These are the ones he says, who suppress
the truth by their unrighteousness? The King James here says, hold the truth in unrighteousness,
but I think that means like, hold down, because the Greek here is pretty clear. It's kind of hiding
or suppression of the truth is the sense that's at stake.
And then he goes on to say that there's something about God that's obvious, something about
God that's kind of hidden in plain sight, something about his nature, something about his eternal
power, something about his attributes that we have been suppressing and hiding from ourselves.
We've exchanged the truth about God for a lie, he says.
Suppressing the truth is that from ourselves?
Because it sounds like, oh, I'm suppressing the truth from other people, but I'm kind
of deceiving myself.
Yeah, I think that's right.
And I think that's the top all describes it here too, right?
We're not only deceiving ourselves about other people, but we're deceiving ourselves
about ourselves.
Because I think, again, as you indicated earlier, a lot of our motivation here is that we're
afraid.
A lot of the motivation at the root of every kind of sinfulness is fear, that we're not
going to get what we want, that things aren't going to be in control, or whatever.
And that fear leads us to hide something that should be obvious
about God and about ourselves from ourselves. So we exchange the truth about God for a lie.
And we take what should have been obvious and we turn it upside down and everything that
should have been big and clear now looks small and far away.
Verse 25, Adam, you just quoted that, who changed the truth of God into a lie, and worshiped and served the creature more than the creator.
Can you give that to me in simpler terms?
In the verse, it kind of sounds like they knew
what they were doing.
They changed the truth of God into a lie, like on purpose.
But if I'm suppressing the truth from myself,
this could be, I changed the truth of God into a lie,
and I didn't even realize I did it. Yeah, there's both, I think, a dimension of self-deception here, but also a clear
dimension of culpability nonetheless. We're doing something that's harming ourselves
and other people. And there's a sense in which we don't quite see how we're doing it
or why, even though we still bear responsibility for having done it.
That's what I was wondering. Yeah. If you had to tell me, sorry, to push you on this,
if you had to tell me what the truth was and what the lie is, what would you say in this context.
That's what I want to address in the next verse that we look at. I think the truth has to do with
the nature of God in particular, and it has to do with whether or not God treats love as a law or as a reward.
So I've switched it to, it's a reward, the truth is it's a law.
I've reversed those two, like we've been talking about.
Yeah, I think that's right.
What happens here, Paul says, right, they exchange the truth of God for a lie, they served
the creation or the creature rather than the creator.
We make the law about us and whether we are loved rather than
about God and joining him in the work of love.
It's that kind of shift in the purpose of the law and what we
use the law for.
That's at stake in the lie that we're telling ourselves.
And one, it sounds like to me, from what you've talked about here, that one leads to like
a wonderful outcome and the other leads to discouragement, fear, and excluding other
people.
Exactly, and Paul will spell this out, I think, in great detail.
I had been trying to figure out what the creature meant, And I thought who changed the truth of God into a lie
and worshiped and served. And my first thought was the creature was this lie they created
small sea creature, the lie about God they created more than the real creators. That
another way to look at it, maybe they served this creation that they made more than the creator.
I like that. I think Paul mostly has in mind by the word creature here just created things.
Right, the things by creature creatures kind of King James language for the things that God created.
There's the creator and then there are the things that are created and the things that are created are the creatures.
Quote unquote, right, that sounds a little funny to us 400 years later. and then there are the things that are created, and the things that are created are the creatures.
Quote unquote, right, that sounds a little funny to us
400 years later.
But part of what's at stake here, right,
and that difference between the creator and the creature
is just also, again, the question of grace.
Because what's at stake in creation is the gift of life
and to acknowledge God as creator is to acknowledge
that we are gifts
to ourselves from God, that we are in charge, we are in control, God is, and that our lives
are themselves a gift, a kind of original expression of God's own love.
And to deny the creator is to deny the gift that he gave to us as his creation.
Yeah, I guess when I saw verse 23, I thought, is he talking about idolatry?
They changed the glory of an uncorruptible God into an image made like to
creptable man birds, four foot of bees, creeping things.
Yes, so idolatry is the primary manifestation of this reversal.
Instead of worshiping God, we end up worshiping some
reflection of ourselves in the things that we want through the things that we make.
We make the law about whether or not we are loved, rather than making the law about whether we
love others. I'm going to go worship this idol or whatever it is so I can have its love. So
this God that I'm worshiping will love me. Give me value.
Yeah, that's the very notion of idolatry then where my relationship with the God is about me getting what I want.
That's what makes it an idol. Whereas if my relationship to God is about doing my obedience is about me getting what I want, again, that's about whether or not I'm loved rather than whether or not I'd love.
I really like this idea of God inviting us to become part of his work of love rather than do do do works, works, works and tell you feel like you've earned your value.
You can now feel valuable because of what you've done. Yeah, where I think the kind of operative assumption here for Paul is that
not only is it impossible for us to do that because we're not good enough,
it's impossible for us to do that because that's not what love even is.
It isn't even the kind of thing that you can get. Love is the thing that you join or do or share
or make, but it's not even the kind of thing that you could passively receive
as a reward. It's not even the kind of thing that you could deserve. And if you think that it is
the kind of thing that you can deserve and spend your life trying to deserve it, you'll never find
it because that's not even what it is. Climb the ladder only to realize it's leaning against the wrong
wall. Yeah, exactly. We're then our lives trying to answer the wrong question.
And then wonder why we can't get the right answer. Yeah, and it comes in when difficult things happen, when trials hit, when something hard comes, you're, what did I do? What did I do to make
you so angry at me that you allowed this thing to happen. That's our common way of thinking about it.
Yeah, and Paul, Paul again, I think is really good about this too. If I think that God's
law is all about deserving love, then when good things happen, I'll own them,
then claim them, and take credit for them, and say that I deserve them, which will ruin them,
right, instead of treating them as a gift. But when also the flip side is when bad things happen, which also happens all
the time, when bad things happen, all assume it's because I deserve that too. If a good
thing's happen, I think I'll deserve it, and that ruins them. If bad things happen, again,
like Joe, right, then back to Joe here, I'll think that I deserved that as well, and both
are a kind of trap that prevent me from responding to whatever comes
With the love that God commands if a friend comes I'm commanded to love them if an enemy comes I'm commanded to love them
That's the work not the reward. I like that. It's funny
I'm looking at this list like really whoa type sins verse 29
looking at this list, like really, whoa, type sins, verse 29, fornication, wickedness, covetousness, maliciousness,
full of envy, murder, debate, deceit, malignity,
whispers, backbaders, haters of God,
despite full prow, boasters,
inventors of evil things, then disobedient to parents.
I don't want to speak with you, I don't want to speak with you.
I get to read that to the kids.
See this one, this means it's your turn to unload the dishwasher.
Just because it appears in a list doesn't mean they're all equal to each other, I suppose,
but it just sounded kind of made me smile when I saw it.
That is funny.
And then Adam, it fits right with what you're saying, verse 31, without understanding
its backwards.
Yeah.
One of the predictable effects of using the law in this backwards way is that you
end up creating little groups of insiders versus outsiders. And one of the main things
that you need to do to create your group of insiders is you have to applaud one another
for what you're doing to make sure that everybody feels like they're being recognized and
they really are great and they really have earned it and they really do deserve it. That's how you form the group.
And you keep each other in the group. Self-congratulation society.
That's a real danger, right? I mean, it's easy for church itself to develop into self-congratulation
society, though that's the kind of constant temptation to watch out for. Yeah, and that's where we can be very hurtful to those who choose a different path or go in different direction.
We can, and when someone leaves the group, you see it as a threat to yourself and so you lash out.
Yeah, yeah.
The Ramyumpum group was kind of a self.
Would you call it mutual congratulation society?
Yeah, you use the law to create the enemy.
The enemy is not the people like us.
Those guys over there.
Yeah, those guys over there who aren't doing what we think they're supposed to be doing.
And then we use the law as an excuse not to love them,
rather than obeying the law as a command to love them.
Isn't that what Alma does? He turns it says these are our brethren.
Yeah, in his prayer, it's a wonderful little moment because when he starts his prayer in
Alma 31, he's like, how can we behold such gross wickedness? And then at the end of the
prayer, he says, behold, O Lord, their souls are precious
and many of them are our brethren.
And it seems like there's a softening during the prayer,
which maybe was a revelatory experience for him.
Like I like the way that prayer seems to soften.
It reminds me of the parable of the Pharisee
and the publicant.
Right, here's this Pharisee.
I'm so grateful that I'm not as other men are.
He feels like he's earned his reward. He's earned God's love.
Exactly. In which case he's cut himself off from it. Let's take a look at Romans 5 for a second.
Let's get ahead a little bit. Okay. If in Romans 1, what Paul does is defines in as a suppression of the truth about God, about
his nature, about his power, about his character, even about his law, then I think it's in Romans
5 where we get the clearest connection to both the sermon on the Mount and to Paul's description
then of what the truth is about God.
What is it about God that we've been suppressing?
What is it that we've been hiding from ourselves? What are we afraid of?
If we look at Romans 5 and pick up in verse 6,
while we were still helpless,
at the right time God died for the ungodly.
For rarely will anyone die for a righteous person, though for a good person perhaps someone
might possibly dare to die. But God demonstrates His own love for us in that while we were sinners,
Christ died for us. For if while we were enemies, we were reconciled to God through the death of His
Son, how much more since we have been reconciled will we be saved by His life?
How much more since we have been reconciled will we be saved by his life?
So this I think maybe Paul's clearest description here of God's character and attributes, that what characterizes God is the fact that he loves his enemies.
He doesn't hate his enemies, he loves them and he demonstrates this love for them
by sacrificing himself and his son.
He gives what we need before we deserved it while we were still his enemies.
This is both the expression of his grace and his own and an expression of his own willingness
to abide by that imperative to love, friend, and enemy.
This I think this is the truth about God and this above all is what Christ's
atonement demonstrates, God's own character in this way.
In the King James version of Romans 5-11, not only so, but we also joy in God through our
Lord Jesus Christ by whom we now have received the atonement. I didn't know this, but one
of the commentaries I was reading says, this
is the only use of Atonement in a new testament of the King James version of the Bible. I
just thought, wow. Good. Yeah. It's used a lot more in the Book of Mormon, but that's
an interesting point. It's a good clue to something we're often not very sensitive to. It's a good clue to the way that we've inherited 2,000 years worth of assumptions from the
broader Christian tradition about what the Atonement is and about how it works, where in the context
of Scripture itself, especially the New Testament, there's very little explanation that lines up neatly
with that larger 2000 year long tradition. And the vocabulary itself is a work in progress
in the New Testament, as the apostles and church leaders are attempting to work out
powerful and effective ways of describing what Jesus did to a great variety of audiences.
And the fact that the word at home in itself
is only used one time in the King James New Testament
is an astonishing and remarkable fact, isn't it?
Yeah.
Our religious world centers on that,
almost on that word.
And yet, it only appears once.
Yeah, it's interesting, right, to ask,
what words are they using?
If that's not the word that they use,
what words are they using, right?
What words are Paul using? What words are the Gospels using? If that's not the word that they use, what words are they using? What words are Paul using? What words are the gospels using? To clearly describe this same thing, to
talk about what Jesus did if they're not using that word. That's a good question to ask
ourselves. In verse 7, Paul talks about human beings will rarely die for someone else, but
Christ died for the ungodly. Can you clarify that to me? And then can I ask
a question too, which is, is Paul saying the fact that Christ performed this great service
was a vote of confidence to what that we would eventually get it and understand and join the work?
Because if he didn't think we would ever get it, right?
He'd be like, you know, I don't know if I, if I die for someone who is probably never going to figure it out.
I think what we get here is another nice clear contrast between those two different ways of
using God's law. The way that normal people work, Paul says, the way that most of us work most of the time,
is that maybe we'd be willing to die for a friend.
If it's a really, really good friend, maybe we'd do it.
But even then, maybe not.
Maybe not.
That's because we love our friends.
And if we love our friends,
the more that we love them, the better they are.
To us, the more likely we might be willing to do that.
But even in those cases, it's still, he says unlikely.
You're still not going to be likely to die for a friend, even a friend.
And then he contrasts that with the way that God works.
God doesn't weigh in the balance, whether or not you're a friend or an enemy,
in terms of whether or not he's willing to die for you.
In fact, God goes out of his way to do it for all of us who have positioned ourselves
as his enemies by suppressing the truth about him, by worshipping the creature rather than
the creator.
So God does exactly the opposite.
God doesn't weigh in the balance, whether or not I'm going to respond the right way, or
whether or not I'm doing what he wants. I mean, I think he hopes he trusts that his love for us can help save us.
But I think it's clear here that he would do it, even if it didn't save us, because that's who he is.
That's how he works. That's what he does. God loves friend and enemy, regardless of whether or not the outcome is what he hoped for. That kind of goes back to the Sermon on the Mount. He, he, since his reign on the
evil and on the good, on the Justin, on the unjust. I think a lot of times when we
look at B there for perfect, if we, if we look at the context in Matthew, not as
much in third Nephi, but in Matthew, it sounds like it's, it's his perfectly loving nature. It's talking about exactly.
Matthew five, forty eight is not a commandment to make ourselves perfectly lovable.
Matthew five, forty eight is a commandment to join him in the work of loving perfectly.
And to the degree that I'm trying to do the first, then I am trying to keep a commandment
he never gave.
And I will fail at keeping the commandment he actually did give
If you look at
46 and 47 before you get to Matthew 5 48 it's
For if you love them which love you what reward have you do not even the publicans the same if you salute your brother and only word to you more than others
Even the publicans do that be there there for perfect, even as your father,
which is in heaven, and then you go,
oh, it's, he loves all of us.
He sends his reign on the evil and on the good.
I mean, that's how I've always seen that
as it's more about being perfectly loving than, yeah.
That's the only kind of perfection at stake,
the perfection that comes from joining him
in the work of love.
God will never, ever use his law to decide whether or not we deserve love, because love is not a reward.
It is a law.
I remember it a meeting years and years ago, Stephen Robinson from BYU was teaching and he said,
we earn things, don't we?
So he had us look up earn in the top of the guide.
It's not there.
And he said, oh, I must have just, I must have gave the wrong word. So he said, deserve. Let's look up, deserve in the top of a guide, it's not there." And then he said, oh, I must have just, I must have gave the wrong word.
So he said, deserve, let's look up,
deserve in the top of a guide, it's not there.
And then he said, you know what,
here's a better word, merit.
That's the word, we merit things.
So we looked up merit and it's there,
but it's only, we're saved by the merits of Christ.
We're, you know, we rely on the merits of Christ.
There's nothing about earned
deserve or merit about us trying to earn God's love.
You may have heard me talk about this before Hank, but I had a long flight from Newark
to Salt Lake City next to an evangelical minister. It caused me to come home and I went through every reference to merits in the index of the topical guide.
And it was wonderful. For me, it was, I'm smack in my head that I didn't have those ready.
But we rely wholly and solely upon the merits of Christ. And I think the history that we come from,
which is kind of fun to use that word, is like merit badges. If I earn
enough of these, I will get my eagle. But I have to merit that reward. When you use that
scriptural context of merits, we can't merit anything of ourselves.
Lehigh says, didn't that minister say you believe in the gospel of something? Is that the
guy who said? Yeah, he said, you believe in the Jesus of the gaps.
And the way my brain works is I thought,
well, I don't really know where Jesus shopped,
but I don't think it was the gap.
And then he explained that idea of you,
you think you do this much and Jesus makes up the gap.
And that's when I heard, oh, second Nephihi 25, he thinks, after all we can do,
here's all this, he's going to do this, which resulted in a great discussion and a great
thing for me to go through those merit verses.
It helped me tremendously to do what Stephen Robinson did, to go through every reference
to merits and see that we really can't merit anything,
but we rely on Christ who and his merits. This is a good point in general, I think, for trying to read Paul's pistols, is when we think of Paul's pistols, one of the first things that comes to mind
for many of us is just these kind of traditional debates that we have with our Protestant friends about Grace versus works.
So, for me, I find those debates to be very frustrating because they tend to assume, as
a matter of course, the debates do, whichever side you take, they tend to assume that love
is a kind of reward that you have to earn.
The debate then is about how you earn it. Do you earn it all by yourself with your own
works? Or do you earn it in partnership with Jesus? Or do you earn it just by Jesus? And that's
a kind of spectrum of grace versus works debates. When, for my part, those debates seem to meet
the entire point of what Paul is saying, which is that love cannot be deserved. It is a law, not a reward,
and you join it, or you don't. And the invitation to join is the reward itself. The work is the
blessing. Yeah, the end of the means are the end here. I sometimes feel like we look at things
like there are formula for salvation when really there are more of a fruit of salvation. The
feelings of love and charity for others are kind of a fruit of coming to Christ,
not a formula for coming to Christ.
Did I say that right?
That's good.
I think getting the law backwards,
I think means treating the law as a means
to some other end.
Whereas treating the law as God does
is to treat the law as an end in itself.
And treating the law as an end in itself,
that's what you call grace. Grace is the law as an end in itself. And treating the Law as an end in itself, that's what you call grace.
Grace is the Law as an end in itself.
When King Benjamin says,
you will not have mind to injure one another,
but to live peaceably.
He's not saying do this so that you can be saved.
He's saying after you're saved,
you will not have a mind to injure one another.
You will live, it's a fruit of coming to Christ.
He wasn't giving a lecture on being kind. He was giving a fruit of coming to Christ. He wasn't giving a lecture on being kind.
He was giving a lecture on coming to Christ.
And these things come after that.
They flow from that.
Yeah, he's describing what happens when you look through the right end of the telescope.
Everything looks different.
The whole world looks different.
Everybody looks like an occasion to love, not an occasion to judge.
And you're right, it's all too common. I'm feeling going, and how many times
have I got the telescope backwards? Well, that's the way so many reward systems in
the world work. Like I said, merit badges, I got to merit this many so that I can
get this reward. And so it doesn't work theologically the way we're talking
right now though. So Adam, as Paul is writing to these people,
what's his hope with all this?
Is he saying, look, here's who I am,
and here's how the gospel works?
Is this him trying to clarify something
that they maybe had questions about?
It's hard to tell.
My sense is that he means it as both an introduction
of himself to the church in Rome,
to the Saints in Rome, but also as an introduction of his understanding of the gospel
to the church at Rome. And that these two things are kind of part and parcel for Paul.
He is the gospel, the gospel is him. He's died in Christ and Christ is in him and to be introduced to him is
inevitably in Paul's mind to simultaneously be introduced to Christ.
And I think he's he's trying to prepare the way for him to come and see them and put them in a position to understand
what he'll teach when he arrives and why they might welcome him.
Okay. Yeah. Where do you want to go next?
might welcome him. Okay, yeah. Where do you want to go next? Let's take a look at some very famous verses in Romans chapter 3 then. So on the one hand, we started off with a couple of
verses in Romans chapter 1 where Paul describes sin as the business of suppressing the truth about
God. And then we looked, I think, at a very clear passage in Romans 5, where Paul
describes the truth about God. Though you and I wouldn't hardly die for a friend, God is willing
to die for even his enemies. And that's how God works. That's the truth about him. And it's also
the truth about his law in general, because this law commands us to love, not just friends, but
but enemies. This is what he's inviting us to join.
Let me get these verses in
in Romans chapter three,
picking up around verse 23,
in Romans 3, 23,
we're gonna go through 26.
Paul famously says,
right, for all have sinned
and fall short of the glory of God.
But, this is one of the most important
buts, maybe in all the scripture,
but they are justified freely by his grace
through the redemption that is in Christ's Jesus.
And then we get this,
God publicly displayed him at his death
as the mercy seat accessible through faith.
This was to demonstrate his righteousness at his death as the mercy seat accessible through faith.
This was to demonstrate his righteousness,
because God in his four barons had passed over the sins previously committed.
Now, this is something that Paul does repeatedly and throughout Romans and in these verses in particular,
where when Paul describes the work that Christ's atonement accomplishes,
he likes to describe Christ's atonement
as a kind of revelation. What the atonement does, as he says in verse 25, is that the atonement
publicly displays God's true nature. It publicly displays how he's willing to sacrifice himself
and present his death at the mercy seat, as a mercy seat, even.
That's then accessible through faith.
And this again, as he says in verse 25,
was to demonstrate his righteousness,
to show what it means to be righteous,
to show how you go about fulfilling the law.
This is what the Atonement demonstrates.
Because if the law commands us to love even our enemies,
then this is God showing us how you do that.
How do you love your enemies?
You sacrifice yourself.
You give yourself up. You allow yourself to be crucified on their behalf. You die for them.
That's what it looks like to fulfill the law. And in this way the atonement saves us from sin as a suppression of the truth
by displaying, he
says, the truth, publicly displaying and demonstrating the truth about God.
Can you clarify, he gives himself up as a mercy seat, not giving himself up, so we can go
to the mercy seat, but he himself is the place we go to.
Am I asking that correctly?
Yeah, the image here seems to be that God displays Christ at his death as the mercy seat that's
accessible through faith, right? The mercy seat, of course, referring here to the Ark of the Covenant,
to that space on top of the Ark of the Covenant between the angels' wings that are stretched across
the top of the Ark where God is God's inthroend. The presence of God is
enthroned there on that mercy seat. You're still using that NET translation? Yeah, that was the NET.
Yeah. Verse 25 in King James says, whom God hath set forth, set forth displayed publicly,
to be a propitiation through faith in his blood. It's not a word I use every day.
Yeah.
The footnote on the word propitiation says,
Greek, mercy, seed, so that's great.
Yeah.
Glad you pointed that out.
And again, the purpose there is to declare God's righteousness.
So God is demonstrating here,
I think what the law is and how it gets fulfilled.
Because the law commands us to love our enemies
and this is what it looks like when you love your enemies,
the atonement.
It's probably also worth reflecting here
for a moment on Paul's use of the word,
especially in the King James of justification.
Paul talks about righteousness and justification
and people being justified.
And it's a kind of bewildering array of terms here,
I think, in King James English.
Be bewildering array of terms.
For what I think in the Greek is actually a pretty straight
forward idea.
I agree.
I'd be bewildered.
The nice thing about Paul's own language is that in the original, those are all variations
on the same word. Every time Paul says righteousness or talks about the righteousness of God or
about justice or justification or justifying, I agree. Those are all just the variations
on the very same word that just means essentially to make things right.
Reconciliation. Reconciliation is nice. Yeah. But I also just like the simplicity of God's
putting things right with the emphasis on right here. Justifying things in the sense of
like when you've got a word document, things are left justified or right justified or center
justified what they're lined up with in that sense, you're setting them right in the sense that you're you're lining them up
properly. And this is what God does. God's the purpose of God's law is to set things right,
to set things right in relationship to the law, to set things right in relationship to him,
and to set us right in relationship to each other. And the
only right relationship is love. When we've been justified, when we've been made
right, this means that we are now in proper relationship to God and his law.
We're not doing it backwards anymore. But what was out of joint has been put back
in place.
Please join us for part 2 of this podcast.