Ron Dunn Podcast - Reign Of Sin And Grace
Episode Date: April 1, 2020From the sermon series on Romans...
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Would you open your Bibles to the fifth chapter of the book of Romans, Romans chapter 5.
Our texts this morning are verses 12 through 21.
Romans chapter 5, the text verses 12 through 21, but we're going to read verse 12 and then
skip down to verse 17 and read through the end of the
chapter. Romans chapter 5, verses 12 and then 17 through 21. Now before we read these verses
together, I want us to bow for just a moment, each one of us praying that God will open his
word to our hearts and speak to us through it.
Our Father, we pray now that as we gather around thy book,
that the Holy Spirit would illuminate our hearts and minds,
open our eyes to see things today that we've never seen before,
to understand as we've never understood before,
but most of all to obey where we have never understood before, but most of all to obey
where we have never obeyed before.
Speak to us through thy word.
Reveal Jesus Christ to us.
For we ask it in his name.
Amen.
Amen.
Wherefore, as by one man sin entered into the world, and death by sin,
and so death passed upon all men, for that all have sinned.
For if by one man's offense or disobedience death reigned by one. Much more they which receive abundance of grace
and of the gifts of righteousness shall reign in life by one, Jesus Christ. Therefore, as by the
disobedience of one, judgment came upon all men to condemnation. Even so, by the righteousness of one, the
free gift came upon all men unto justification of life. For as by one man's disobedience
many were made sinners, so by the obedience of one shall many be made righteous. Moreover,
the law entered that the offense might abound,
but where sin abounded, grace did much more abound. That as sin hath reigned unto death,
even so might grace reign through righteousness unto eternal life by Jesus Christ our Lord. Man is a creature, and he'll always be a creature. No matter
what he does, no matter how he educates himself, no matter how he changes his environment,
he'll always be a creature. He'll never be anything more than that. He will never be anything less than that. He is locked in to
that position. Man is a creature. As a creature, this means that he must live outside himself
in order to find fulfillment. The difference between the Creator and the creature is the creator is self-sufficient
in himself.
The creature is not self-sufficient.
He must always look outside himself to find completeness.
The creature by nature is meant to have a team, to be subject to authority. He is meant by nature to be mastered, and
he is. All men are masters. There is no exception to that. Once in a while we talk about man's
free will. There is really no such thing as man's free will in the final analysis.
You think about that for a moment.
Everything you do has a because behind it.
I did this because.
I went here because.
I live this way because.
Man has the weakness of being able to be manipulated.
You can manipulate human nature. If you don't believe
this, you look at the advertising. I have a lot of real narrow ties in my closet. I wouldn't wear
one if my life depended on it, no matter how much I like them. Because why? Well, because it's just not style, you know.
I remember several years ago when wavy hair was in style for the ladies I'm talking about,
wavy hair.
Boy, if a girl was born with natural waves, they thought that was great.
Now you see all these girls with natural waves trying to get it out, trying to get it out. We're constantly being manipulated by Madison
Avenue, by advertisers, constantly being manipulated, brainwashed. Man is capable of being brainwashed.
We're subject to mores and customs. Even the hippies all look alike now. You can spot one a mile off
because they all look alike. They all look alike. As someone has said, they've conformed
to being nonconformist. So when you talk about, I'm free, I'm the master of my fate, I'm the
captain of my soul, actually you haven't
looked far enough, because everything you do, you do by suggestion from an outside influence.
Man was meant to be mastered.
The only choice that man had when we come to talk about the free will of man, the only
free choice he has is who is going to be his master.
Now in this passage, Paul,
through the inspiration of the Holy Spirit, has been talking about the different masters
that man serves. If you'll notice in verse 21, he says, that as sin hath reigned unto death,
even so might grace reign through righteousness.
Two reigns, two kingdoms,
the kingdom of sin and its subject,
and the kingdom of grace and its subject.
Every man is mastered by one of two things in the spiritual realm.
He is either mastered by sin
or he is mastered by grace.
I want to ask you this morning to which kingdom you belong. Who is your Lord? Who is your
master? To which kingdom, to which country do you belong? You either belong this morning
to the kingdom of sin or the kingdom of grace. Now, what I want us to do is to look at these
two verses. We are going to talk first of all about the reign of grace. Now what I want us to do is to look at these two verses. We're going
to talk first of all about the reign of sin, and then we're going to talk about the reign of grace.
First of all, the reign of sin. The Bible says where sin did abound. Sin is not merely around
us, he says. It is abounding. It is flourishing. And notice man's relationship to sin. Sin has reigned. Sin is king. Sin is monarch. Sin is master.
Now, it's important for us to understand this, that sin is not merely something that is present in a man's life.
It is president in his life.
Jesus said a long time ago, if a man commits a sin, he becomes the servant of that sin.
He becomes the servant of that sin.
And you may be able to confess, to convince a lot of people today that there is sin present
in their life, but few of us would be willing to admit that we are the slaves to that sin.
But the Word of God in your own experience tells you this morning that if Jesus Christ
is not Lord in your life,
then sin is Lord in your life.
And the Bible says that sin has completely mastered the lost man.
In 1 John, the Bible says this whole world lies in the wicked one.
He uses a very descriptive word there of lying in the wicked one.
He uses a word that is used of a little baby as it lies in its mother's arm.
There's nothing quite so helpless, nothing quite so helpless as a little baby lying in its mother's arm.
It is at the complete mercy of its mother.
And God says that this whole world, like a helpless infant, lieth in wickedness in
the wicked one. Sin has dominion over us. You say, well, preacher, you don't understand. I'm
not a drunkard. I'm not an alcoholic. I'm not a murderer. Sin doesn't reign in my life. Oh, yes,
but what about that bad disposition that you can't shake? What about that lusting after worldly
things, material things? What about this greed? What about the shake? What about that lusting after worldly things, material things?
What about this greed? What about the envy? What about the jealousy? What about the selfishness,
the self-will, the stubbornness, the rebellion that's in your life? God says, and it's true,
sin reigns in your life. Now, the essence of sin's reign is disobedience. The only way that sin can reign in a person's life is through disobedience.
And the essence of disobedience is self-will, what I want, my will, my stubborn will.
And when a person asserts his own will as opposed to the will of God,
then that constitutes disobedience, and that allows sin to be in control in his life. The essence of sin
is disobedience. Now, I want to say two very important things about the disobedience.
First of all, and please don't miss this, we are all sinners by consequence of Adam's
disobedience. We, everyone, are sinners by consequence of Adam's disobedience. We, everyone, are sinners by consequence of Adam's disobedience.
I heard a man say not long ago,
if you, from the time of your birth, were to live a perfect life,
never commit an act of sin, never break the law of God,
never disobey God, then you could go to heaven.
I want to say that that is absolutely
untrue. If you from the time of your birth never committed one single sin, you never violated one
law of God. You lived a perfect, immaculate human life. You still could not enter into the kingdom of heaven
because you are a sinner by nature, by consequence of Adam's disobedience.
Now notice verse 19.
For as by one man's disobedience many were made sinners.
Let's look at verse 12 again.
Wherefore, as by one man, talking about Adam,
sin entered into the world, and death by sin,
so death pass upon all men.
For that all have sinned.
Now, that last expression, for all have sinned,
literally means for all did sin.
When did they sin?
When Adam sinned.
When Adam sinned.
When Adam sinned, you sinned.
The Word of God says in verse 19 that by Adam's disobedience, you became disobedient.
You say, I don't think that's fair.
Well, actually, it doesn't make a difference what you or I think.
My opinion doesn't even make a ripple on the ocean of God's truth.
It couldn't matter less what I think.
But God says there is a oneness to the human race.
You see, we were all in Adam because he is the father of us all.
And what he did affected me.
Now, for instance, let's illustrate.
Let's suppose that my great-grandfather had died at birth.
How would that have affected me?
Well, it would have had a pretty wild effect on me. I wouldn't be here this morning.
Somebody else would be pastor of this church. Well, you say that's not fair. It doesn't make
it fair enough. There is a oneness to the human race. And what my
great-grandfather did affects me. It affects me. There is the solidarity of the human race.
And all of us were in the loins of Adam when he sinned. And the Bible says, by the offense
of one man, by the disobedience of one man, all of us
were made sinners. And you can live an immaculate life, and you can keep the law of God and be
baptized and join every church and still be lost and go to hell because you're a sinner by
consequence of Adam's disobedience. That's why Jesus says, flesh and blood cannot inherit the
kingdom of God. You must have a spiritual birth in order to live a spiritual life. Just as physical
birth is the gateway to physical life, so spiritual birth is the gateway to spiritual life.
Physical life cannot live spiritual life. Blessed blood, that which is physical, cannot inherit
that which is spiritual. You must have a spiritual birth. You must be lifted above the physical plane,
and the only way that happens is through the Lord Jesus Christ. We need to understand that all of us this
morning are sinners by consequence of Adam's disobedience. If you never did anything wrong
yourself you would still need to be saved because, Adam, you have his nature. The nature
of lostness, the nature of self, the nature of flesh, which is enmity, the
Bible says to God, and it cannot inherit the kingdom of God.
You say, Well, that still doesn't seem fair to me.
Oh, but it's fair.
Because you see, nobody has ever had to be lost and go to hell because of what Adam did.
God has always had a way of salvation.
You see, God came to us and said, all right, here's what I'll do.
Since you're a sinner by consequence,
here's what I'm going to do.
I'm going to make a provision
so that in spite of whatever happened
before you were born,
no matter what Adam did,
I'm going to make everything right.
I'll send my son, the Lord Jesus Christ,
into the world.
And if you really want to be saved,
if you really want to live with me forever,
then all you have to do is to repent of your sins, submit yourself to the Lordship of Jesus
Christ, and you'll be saved.
Now, I want to ask you this morning, have you done that?
Have you done that?
If it is unfair for God to say that we're sinners by consequence and God has made provision
for our salvation merely by obeying him and trusting Christ as Savior.
Have you done that?
So the second thing is that we're not only sinners by consequence of Adam's disobedience,
we are sinners by choice of our own disobedience.
We're sinners by choice of our own disobedience.
Have you obeyed the word of God this morning? We are sinners by choice of our own disobedience.
Have you obeyed the word of God just now?
Over in 2 Thessalonians 1 and verse 9 it says that when Jesus Christ comes again, He
is going to come in flaming fire, taking vengeance upon them that know not God and that obey
not the gospel of the Lord Jesus Christ.
Have you obeyed the gospel of the Lord Jesus Christ. Have you obeyed the gospel of the Lord Jesus Christ?
When Jesus commands you to repent of your sins, when God commands you to enthrone Jesus
Christ as Lord of your life, have you obeyed him? You see, a man does not go to hell for
what Adam did. He goes to hell for what he does. And the essence of sin is disobedience.
Now the end of sin is death.
Notice in verse 21, "'That as sin hath reigned unto death, even so might grace reign through
righteousness unto eternal life by Jesus Christ our Lord.'"
What does the reign of sin produce in a man's life?
Only one thing, death.
Let's read verse 12 again.
Wherefore, as by one man sin entered into the world, and death by sin,
so death spread to all men, because all men have sinned.
And then down in verse 14 it says,
Nevertheless, death reigned from Adam to Moses.
So when I disobey God, when I choose self-will instead of God's will,
when I choose to assert myself, when I choose to live the way I want to live
instead of submitting myself to the sovereign, to the Lord Jesus,
the result is death.
The result is death.
And I'm not talking, and the Bible is not talking here about mere physical death. It is talking about spiritual death, eternal
separation from God. Now I want to ask you something. Why in the world will a man allow
himself to be mastered by such a cruel king? Why are men so blind that they will continue
to live under such a reign? When all this kind of life, all of this self-assertion is
going to bring me in the end is eternal separation from God. I'm glad he's not my king this morning, because the Bible says, where sin did abound,
grace did much more abound.
I was telling this this past week, and I said, Lord, I just wish you would give me a supernatural
ability to really tell the folks what that means.
I just can't do it.
But I can just say that verse, that expression over and over again, where sin did abound,
grace did much more of that. Where sin reached a high water mark, grace just completely overflowed. Where sin increased
measurably, grace increased immeasurably. Now, Paul uses two different Greek words here for
abound. The first word, when it says sin did abound, it means that sin increased and kept gaining, kept gaining.
But when it comes to grace, he uses a different word that means super abound. And it says that grace far exceeds all the increase of sin. Oh, I like that. I'm glad of that. Where sin did abound,
you look at sin abounding in a man's life, it doesn't make any difference. Grace can much more abound in that man's life. Look where sin is flourishing in that person's
life. It makes no difference. Grace can much more flourish in his life if he will receive
the Lord Jesus Christ. The reign of grace, the reign of grace, and the gift of that kind
of grace is righteousness. Let's look at verse 19. Somebody said a moment ago,
that's not fair. That's not fair for God to say that I'm a sinner because of what Adam did. One
man sinned and plunged the whole world into sin and death. That's right. But notice God's always
had a way of escape. Verse 19, for as by one man's disobedience many were made sinners, now notice, so by the obedience of one,
many shall be made righteous.
By the obedience of one through Jesus Christ.
Not by my obedience, not by my righteousness,
not by my self-efforts, not by my goodness,
but by the goodness and the efforts and the righteousness and the obedience of Jesus Christ.
Now, I think that's fair.
I think that's fair.
Jesus Christ came and he said, I'll be the last Adam.
God started all over again with Jesus.
The first experiment in the human race failed miserably. And so God says,
I'm going to build a second human race. And Jesus Christ is going to be the head of this human race.
And where Adam was the head of the first human race, and he fell, and he sinned, and everybody
in him sinned. So now Jesus Christ is going to be the second head of the human race, and he's going
to be righteous, and he's going to be obedient, and everybody in him is going to share in
that obedience.
Just this morning I am a sinner by consequence of Adam's disobedience.
I stand this morning righteous, perfect, saved, redeemed in the presence of God by consequence
of the Lord Jesus Christ's obedience.
Where sin did abound, grace did much more abound.
I want to say to you this morning, there is no spiritual problem in your life, there is
no sin in your life that the grace of God cannot flood out and wash and cleanse and
make whole again.
This morning before we came to church, we turned on the television to watch, get
together with James Robles and had Bobby Mankin, interviewing Bobby Mankin. How many of you
saw that this morning? Oh, wasn't that a tremendous testimony? Bobby Mankin was mainlining a hundred
dollars' worth of dope a day. A hundred dollars' worth a day. He had taken two or three cures,
had gone through the Fort Worth Narcotic Hospital over here, and out two weeks later he was back on it again. And he wanted
into a little mission down in Houston, Texas, where James Robinson was preaching. And that
morning he gave his life to Jesus Christ. And he said, I didn't have to take any cure
after that. I didn't have to go to any hospital after that. He said, that day, that very moment when I turned my life over to the Lord Jesus Christ,
he healed me and cured me.
Amen.
That's the only answer.
That's the only answer.
Where sin did abound, grace did much more abound.
Where sin did abound, grace did much more abound.
Oh, I thank God for that. where sin did abound, grace did much more abound.
Oh, I thank God for that.
Old John Newton was born in 1725.
His mother died when he was at the age of seven.
He was a wild young fellow.
Became a seaman, joined the British Navy.
He was so rebellious, such an angry young man,
he deserted from the British Navy and decided he would go to Africa. And in his memoirs he said, I went to Africa so I could get my fill of sin.
John Newton had the reputation of being able to curse two hours straight without repeating himself.
Oh, he was a blasphemer. And he enjoyed it. It was his trade.
It was his talent, his ability.
And over in Africa, he fell in with a Portuguese slave trader,
began to trade in slaves, ship the slaves back and forth.
Well, one day he fell into the hands of the blacks,
and they kept him captive for several months.
They would throw food on the ground and he would have to get on the ground and pick up
the food off the ground with his mouth.
If his hands touched that food, one of the black men would whip him with a lash.
During those months that he was in that captivity, his body became emaciated and diseased.
So finally he planned to escape, and he did.
He swam out and he was about to drown, and a ship came by.
And I'll show you God's grace.
And they saw John Newton there, and they took him on board, found out he was an excellent
seaman, and they made him first mate.
One day when the captain wasn't aware and wasn't watching, John Newton got drunk and
got the whole crew drunk.
The captain was so mad he hit John Newton in the face, threw him overboard, and John
Newton was so drunk he would have drowned except one of the seamen.
Threw a boat hook through his thigh and made such a wound there that to the end of his
days he could always put his fist in that scar.
But they pulled him back on board.
About four weeks later they were sailing off the coast of Scotland, and a great violent
storm came up.
John Newton feared for his life.
He had faced death more times than once, but the ship was foundering and he knew that this
was it.
There on the deck, you see, his mother had been a Christian and before she died she
had taught him a few little scriptures.
And there on that reeling deck of that ship, John Newton cried out to God for mercy and
God saved him.
One day John Newton wrote these words, "'Amazing grace, how sweet the sound that saved a wretch like me. I once was lost,
but now am found, was blind, but now I see. Where sin did abound, grace did much more
abound. That's the kingdom I want. That's the kingdom I want to live under, the reign of grace,
the reign of grace that gives to me the gift of righteousness. And the goal of this reign of
grace is eternal life, eternal life, never-ending life, glorious life, life on a new plane, life on
a new dimension. Listen, you'll miss the blessing if you think eternal life is just heaven. Oh, no, sir.
Eternal life is God's life right now.
That means that when this person
escapes from the kingdom of sin
and places himself under the lordship of grace
to the Lord Jesus Christ,
God not only gives him the gift of righteousness
through the obedience of Jesus,
but the goal of that is eternal life.
And right now in the sweet here and now, we're not talking about the sweet by and by.
We're talking about the sweet here and now, right here and now.
God gives to me his own life.
I have eternal life right now.
That means life on a new plane, life on a new dimension.
That's what Bobby Mankin has as he sat there this morning,
and I watched the tears streaming down from his eyes on television.
He said, Praise the Lord. Praise the Lord.
For Jesus delivered me. That's eternal life.
Life on a new plane, life on a new dimension, a new kind of life.
Not how long you live, but it's how you live.
Not the sweet by and by, but the sweet here and now.
That's the kind of king I want.
That's the kingdom to which I want to belong.
And it comes through the Lord Jesus Christ.
God sees every person here this morning, either in Adam or in Christ.
You may not like it.
That doesn't alter it one bit.
It's God's gain.
He writes the rules.
He makes the law. God says, I see everyone here this morning, either in Adam or in Jesus Christ.
If I see you in Adam, I see you as a sinner by consequence.
I see you as a sinner by choice.
If I see you in Adam, I see the sentence of death upon you, not only physical death, but
separation from God forever and ever in a devil's hell.
If I see you in Jesus Christ, I see you righteous.
I see your sins forgiven.
I see your record wiped clean.
I see abundant life, yours now, if I see you in Christ. That God sees every man this morning, every woman, every boy and girl, either in Adam or in Christ.
Where does he see you?
Where does he see you?
Have you ever made yet that marvelous trip from the kingdom of sin over to the kingdom of grace?
You can make it this morning just by giving your life
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