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Romans 8

Mitchell's Commentary on Selected New Testament BooksMitchell Commentary

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Verses 1-39

Now we come to the crowning chapter of the book of Romans, a chapter where the Spirit of God is so evident and so available for God’s people.

A wee summary.

We’ve seen in our past lessons that our relation to the old life has been annulled by the death of Christ. In chapter 6, our relation to sin as a mas­ter was broken.

In chapter 7, the death of Christ severed our re­lation to the law. Christ did a perfect work at the cross. When He died, we were identified with Him so that now a risen Christ in glory, not the law, is the rule of our life.

In chapter 7, you remember, the personal “I” was very prominent; the Spirit wasn’t even men­tioned. Chapter 8 is just the opposite. The Spirit of God is prominent, and the “I” is left out.

In chapter 6, we had sanctification because of our union with Christ. In chapter 8, we have sanc­tification because of the indwelling Spirit. Instead of experiencing the weakness and defeat of chapter 7, we now have life and power and victory by the indwelling Spirit.

You know, it is one thing to possess the Spirit of God—to have Him indwelling you and me as be­lievers—but it is an entirely different thing for us to use the vast resources God has given us. In fact, I would say a great many Christians are igno­rant of what they have. Hence, they’re in bondage; they’re full of fear; they don’t experience the peace of God that passes understanding.

So it’s a wonderful thing when we come to this eighth chapter of Romans and discover the marvel of what God has for us. We are in Christ Jesus. We have a new life experience in the power of the Spirit.

As we follow through, we are going to find the wonderful joy of what we have through the cross (chapters 3-5), what we have through union with Him (chapters 5-7) and now what we have through the Spirit’s indwelling us.

You will notice that the chapter starts with “no condemnation” and ends with “no separation.” I tell you, there is life and liberty and assurance as we read this blessed chapter.

Let me first give you a telescopic view of Romans 8:1-39.

We are in a new position. We are in Christ.

We have a new deliverance, having been eman­cipated once for all forever from the law of sin and death.

We have a new place to live—in the Spirit.

We have a new relationship. We are the sons of God.

We have a new hope. We are going to be trans­formed and made just like Him.

We have a new provision. We have two Advo­cates, one in heaven and one on earth.

And then we have the very blueprint of God’s purpose and plan for His people.

The chapter ends, as I said, with “no separa­tion.” No power on earth or hell or even heaven can destroy this wonderful union and relationship we have with our wonderful God.

It’s an amazing chapter, and I trust you will read it over and over and over again. In fact, it would not hurt you or me to sit down and just memorize this wonderful eighth chapter of Romans.

Now, let’s read about the first thing Paul is pre­senting—we have a new position in Christ:

Romans 8:1. There is therefore now no condemnation for those who to are in Christ Jesus.

The King James version adds “who walk not af­ter the flesh, but after the Spirit.” It repeats these words in verse 4. In the Greek text, if I might be a little technical here, these words occur only in the fourth verse. Freedom is not limited to the few who “walk not after the flesh, but after the Spirit.” It is for any and every believer in Christ Jesus—strong ones, weak ones, spiritual ones, carnal ones. It’s for every real child of God. There is no condemna­tion, and the ground of this is two-fold.

The first ground is that there is no condem­nation because of what Jesus Christ did on the cross. For example, in John 5:24, Jesus said, “He who hears My word, and believes Him who sent Me, has eternal life, and does not come into judg­ment, but has passed out of death into life.” Now we have that in Romans 3:21 through Romans 4:25. The question of judgment is past. Right­eousness has become our portion. We have been redeemed, forgiven and pardoned.

As we had in Romans 3:24, “Being justified (de­clared righteous) as a gift by His grace through the redemption which is in Christ Jesus,” we have it also in Ephesians 1:7 where we have “the forgive­ness of our trespasses, according to the riches of His grace.” It is repeated again in Colossians 1:14 and in Hebrews 9:12 which says that He “obtained (He purchased) eternal redemption” for us.

Every one of our sins is put away and cleansed by what Jesus Christ did at the cross. The Apostle John wrote that the blood of Jesus Christ, God’s Son, cleanses us from all sin. And, when John the Baptist introduced Jesus Christ to the people of Israel and to the world, he said, “Be­hold the Lamb of God, who takes away the sin of the world.” Hebrews 9:26 declares that He ap­peared “once at the consummation (at the end of the age) . . . to put away sin by the sacrifice of Himself.”

He was made sin for us, He “who knew no sin (2 Corinthians 5:21), that we might become the righteousness of God in Him.” And one could mul­tiply the Scriptures. The very evidence of our sin has been destroyed, and we stand before God in all the beauty and preciousness of Christ.

I’m going to be very bold and say this: Just as it is impossible for the Lord Jesus Christ ever again to come into judgment with respect to sin—Christ risen from the dead is through with the sin ques­tion once for all forever—so it is impossible for the believer to come under the judgment of God. The sin question is settled. We have been united to Christ. We are in Him, and He is in us. What is true of Him is true of us in this regard. You have it in Hebrews 10:12, “But He, having offered one sacrifice for sins for all time, sat down at the right hand of God.” This is why His death on the cross is called the “finished work.” He finished the job, a perfect job; and you and I are in Christ forever.

Now, the second ground is that our union in Christ makes us free.

In chapter 6, He has delivered us from the power of sin. In chapter 8, He declares that He has deliv­ered us from the judgment of sin. I like that verse in 1 John 4:17 where John writes that we “have confidence in the day of judgment; because as He is, so also are we in this world.”

You know, I can’t help but tell you this. The first time I saw that verse, 1 John 4:17, it struck me so forcibly. I had been a Christian only a few weeks, possibly two or three months. I was living in Cal­gary, Alberta, Canada, and I used to go down and study the Word with a dear man who was a bar­ber, a wonderful Christian barber—a bald-headed barber, by the way. His name was Spencer. And at 6 o’clock at night, he would pull the shade down on his shop and only those in the shop could be taken care of.

Well, I was up in my room reading the Bible; and I came across this verse, we “have confidence in the day of judgment; because as He (Jesus Christ) is, so also are we in this world.”

I jumped up and ran down to the barber shop three or four blocks away and knocked on the door. It was past 6 o’clock. He peeked behind the shade, saw who it was, opened the door and let me in. He was standing by a fellow, and he was about to shave him.

And I said, “Listen to this,” and I quoted this verse.

He kept on stropping his razor—enough to say, “Well, what of it?”

And I said, “Man, don’t you see it?”

And he said, “Oh, yes, I’ve known that for a long time.”

“Do you mean to tell me that you’ve known this for a long time and you didn’t tell me?”

He kind of laughed and said, “Son, there are so many things in the Word of God that you’ve never seen; but as you grow in the grace of God, you’ll come to see them.”

He pricked my bubble, to be frank with you. I sneaked out of the shop and went back to my room.

I don’t think he was wise in dealing with me like that because I was a babe in Christ and didn’t know very much. Instead of encouraging me, he discouraged me. Please don’t discourage young be­lievers. If they come to you full of joy because of some truth you’ve known for 40 years more or less, you just nod your head and say, “That’s won­derful! Isn’t that wonderful? My, that’s wonderful.”

Why? Because “as He is, so also are we in this world.”

So we have, in this first verse of Romans 8:1-39, a new position in Christ where there cannot be any condemnation. There wouldn’t be any peace or joy if there was condemnation.

“Do you mean to tell me, Mr. Mitchell, that you are going to go into the presence of God without any fear of condemnation?”

That’s correct.

“Do you mean that you will not come into judgment with respect to sin?”

That’s correct. Jesus Christ bore all my sin. As we have in chapter 6, “The wages of sin is death.” Christ paid those wages; we go free.

I wish in some way I could put this so simply that this truth would just grip your heart because of what Christ did at the cross and because of your union with Him. God never sees you in any other place than in Christ. Didn’t the Lord say in John 14:20 that in that day, when the Spirit of God indwells you, you will know “that I am in My Father, and you in Me, and I in you”? We are in Christ; and, being in Christ, it is impossible that we would ever come under condemnation.

Now, having said this, we come to verses 2 to 4; and here we have the second thing Paul is presenting—we have a new deliverance. We are no longer under the power of sin and the bondage of death, but we are under a new principle of operation.

Notice that there are two laws in these verses:

Romans 8:2. For the law of the Spirit of life in Christ Jesus has set you free (has emancipated you) from the law of sin and of death.

Romans 8:3. For what the Law could not do, weak as it was through the flesh, God did: sending His own Son in the likeness of sinful flesh, and as an offering for sin, He condemned sin in the flesh,

Romans 8:4. In order that the requirement of the Law might be ful­filled in us, who do not walk according to the flesh, but ac­cording to the Spirit.

Oh, what a wonderful, wonderful thing—no con­demnation, never to come into judgment and to be eternally free from the law of sin and from the law of death. Don’t you revel in this wonderful fact?

Christ did such a perfect work for you and for me that we come into His presence with no condemnation. No one is going to be able to pro­duce any evidence in the presence of God that you and I were ever sinners. No wonder we sing that song, “Hallelujah! What a Saviour!”

What a wonderful thing to be saved, to know that you are saved and that you can come into the presence of God at any time and have fellowship with Him.

Now, why don’t you do that today? Read Romans chapter 8, come into the presence of the Lord and discuss the matter with Him.

Discuss the chapter with Him. Pour out your heart to Him. He just loves to have you come into His presence and to have you talk to Him face to face. This is why He made you the way you are. He gave you the power to communicate with Him. Why don’t you do it? Enjoy the Lord. Don’t endure some “religion.” Enjoy the Lord Himself. Enjoy your salvation in Christ Jesus. The Lord wonder­fully, richly, marvelously bless you as you do this.

And I tell you again, my friend, it is a won­derful thing to realize that we have been deliv­ered. The one law—the law of the Spirit of life— has delivered us from the other law—the law of sin and death. The law of the Spirit of life in Christ Jesus has emancipated us from the law of sin (which you find in chapter 6) and the law of death (which you find in Romans 7:13 where he says the Mosaic law makes sin utterly sinful). The law is the power of sin as you have in 1 Corinthians 15:56. The law is the ministry of death as you have in 2 Corinthians 3:7.

But we are free now to serve God. We are free now to live for Him, free now to live a new life for Him which we didn’t have under the law. The law demanded, but “the Law could not do, weak as it was through the flesh.” Again, I repeat it: The law is holy, just and good.

Paul said, “I would not have known about covet­ing if the Law had not said, “YOU SHALL NOT COVET” . . . and this commandment, which was to result in life, proved to result in death for me.” (Romans 7:7; Romans 7:10). All the law can do is to slay, to kill, to condemn, to curse. It can’t do anything else.

You see, the law of the Spirit of life in Christ Jesus has set me free from the law of sin and the law of death. The Mosaic law never supplied anyone with power to perform what it demanded. It did not produce holiness in a life. It demanded holiness. So how can one be emancipated?

God, “sending His own Son in the likeness of sinful flesh and as an offering for sin,” condemned sin in the flesh. What for? “That the requirement of the Law might be fulfilled in us”—not by you or through you but “in you”—“who do not walk ac­cording to the flesh but according to the Spirit.” What the law could not do, God’s Son, Jesus Christ, did.

God sent His Son into this world where sin reigned, where death reigned. What for? In or­der to deliver you and me from the law of sin and death. I want you to mark that. Why did He come? Because man was totally hopeless, totally helpless, void of righteousness.

And the law says you must die. But He appeared once in the end of the age to put away sin (He­brews 9:26). The sinless One was made sin for you and me.

He became a man that “through death He might render powerless him who had the power of death, that is, the devil; and might deliver those who through fear of death were subject to slavery all their lives” (Hebrews 2:14-15).

I like to quote 2 Corinthians 5:21 like the old lady who had been delivered out of a life of bond­age to alcoholism. This dear woman didn’t know much about schools; but, believe me, she knew the Lord.

And I remember her testimony: “Jesus Christ, who knew no sin, was made sin for me who knew no righteousness that I, who knew no righteousness, might be made the right­eousness of God in Him.” This is what you have in Romans 8:3.

He made provision not only to put away our sin but to destroy the power of sin so you and I could go free—in order that (Romans 8:4) the very righteous requirement of the Law “might be fulfilled in us, who do not walk according to the flesh, but ac­cording to the Spirit.” Our Lord released us from the bondage, penalty and guilt of sin. He judged sin in its stronghold. He bought us and set us free. Sin has no more right to the Christian. It comes as a trespasser.

And what is the result? The very righteous re­quirement of the law is fulfilled in us.

Friend, God did something the Law could not do. He made possible a holy life for those who walk in the Spirit. What the law demanded and couldn’t empower, the Spirit of God does in the be­liever. All that the law demanded is met in Christ for the believer. The believer in chapter 7 tried in his own power to please God and couldn’t do it.

Then we come to chapter 8; and, in the power of the blessed Spirit of God who indwells us, each one of us can live the life that is pleasing to God.

Now, the third thing we have is a new place:

Romans 8:5. For those who are according to the flesh set their minds on the things of the flesh, but those who are according to the Spirit, the things of the Spirit.

Romans 8:6. For the mind set on the flesh is death, but the mind set on the Spirit is life and peace,

Romans 8:7. Because the mind set on the flesh is hostile toward God; for it does not subject itself to the law of God, for it is not even able to do so;

Romans 8:8. And those who are in the flesh cannot please God.

Romans 8:9. However you are not in the flesh but in the Spirit, if in­deed the Spirit of God dwells in you. But if anyone does not have the Spirit of Christ, he does not belong to Him.

In these verses, we have a contrast between living after the flesh and living after the Spirit. I believe we have two classes of people here. In chapter 7 we had two natures, the new nature that longs for God and the old nature that yearns for the lusts of the flesh. Here we have the mind of the flesh and the mind of the Spirit.

The mind of the flesh speaks of death, enmity, a life dominated by the flesh, the things the unre­generate nature prefers instead of God’s will. In 1 Corinthians 2:14, the natural man, the man of the flesh, “does not accept the things of the Spirit of God; for they are foolishness to him, and he can­not understand them, because they are spiritually appraised.”

In contrast to this, you have the mind of the Spirit, a life dominated by the Spirit and full of life and peace (Romans 8:6).

Now the unsaved, according to the Book of Jude, are sensual, not having the Spirit. The flesh is a life of doom, and death is the fruitage of the flesh. You can’t separate these two. But the Spirit means life and peace.

And then Paul goes on to say in Romans 8:7-8 that the mind of the flesh is in enmity against God. It is hostile; it is not subject to the law of God and is not even able to be. So then those who are in the flesh cannot please God. It is a moral im­possibility for the flesh to please God. He has no confidence in anybody’s flesh, neither yours nor mine.

You remember the first three verses of Ephe­sians 2:1-3 —may I restate the wording?—“You having been made alive who were dead in trespasses and sins: wherein you walked in times past in the lust of the flesh, in the lust of the mind. You were con­trolled by the prince of the power of the air, the spirit that now works in the children of disobedi­ence. We all had our manner of life in the lust of the flesh and the lust of the mind. We were by na­ture children of wrath like the rest.”

What can we do? We are incapable of submit­ting ourselves to God. Hence nothing but sovereign mercy can redeem us. That’s why Jesus said to Nicodemus in John 3:1-36, “That which is born of the flesh is (can be nothing else than) flesh; and that which is born of the Spirit is spirit.” You can’t, my friend, so maneuver, so fix up the flesh that it is pleasing to God.

Now look at verse 9. “You are not in the flesh.” Now I’m not saying that. The Book says it. “You are not in the flesh but in the Spirit, if indeed the Spirit of God dwells in you. But if anyone does not have the Spirit of Christ, he does not belong to Him.”

By the way, will you notice the verse? You have the “Holy Spirit;” you have the “Spirit of God;” you have the “Spirit of Christ,” and they are synony­mous.

There are some who tell us that a person can be saved and not have the Holy Spirit. This is false doctrine. You cannot be saved and not have the Spirit of God. This verse says, “If anyone does not have the Spirit of Christ, he does not belong to Him.” The Spirit of God dwells in you. The Spirit of Christ dwells in you. The Holy Spirit dwells in you. These are used synonymously. The whole Godhead is not only for His people but in His people.

Again, I come back to John 14:20 when our Lord speaks of this marvelous, wonderful, glorious un­ion between the Father and the Son and the believer. Some people who have accepted the Saviour have agonized and done all kinds of things in or­der to be indwelt by the Holy Spirit. They have been told to wait, to tarry until they receive the Him.

My friend, the moment you accept the Saviour, your body becomes the sanctuary of God, the tem­ple of the Holy Spirit. The Spirit of Christ dwells in you. As Paul could say, “It is no longer I who live, but Christ lives in me” (Galatians 2:20).

Take all those passages in the New Testament about Christ living in His people, God being in His people, the Spirit of God being in His peo­ple. The Lord Jesus is at the right hand of His Fa­ther. That’s where His resurrected body is, and He is in us in the power and blessed presence of the Holy Spirit. And if we do not have the Spirit of God, the Spirit of Christ and the Holy Spirit, we do not belong to Him. Now I didn’t say that. That’s what the Book says. “If anyone does not have the Spirit of Christ, he does not belong to Him.”

“And if Christ be in you,” the 10th verse says, if Christ is in you (may I restate the wording?), “the body is under the sentence of death because of sin.” That’s the present experience of Christians.

We are in bodies that are under the sentence of death. If our Lord Jesus tarries, your body and my body will die. We will leave these bodies. Death re­quires the separation. When we leave this body, we say the body is dead. Because of what? Because the body is not yet redeemed.

The body still has its lusts and desires, and sin is in it. That’s why, when we talk about chap­ter 6, sin is no longer the master in the believer. Sin should no longer control your body; but the Spirit of God, which indwells you, should.

This is the appeal of Paul in 1 Corinthians 6:1-20. This is the appeal to you. If you have in you some things that are displeasing to the Lord, breaking your fellowship, affecting your testimony, then, my friend, come to the Lord and confess your sins. The Spirit of God who indwells you will enable you to live the kind of Christian life that will glorify God. He is not going to force Himself. The Spirit of God indwells you. The question is, will you yield yourself to the blessed Spirit of God who does in­dwell you?

You are in the Spirit if indeed the Spirit of God dwells in you. If any man have not the Spirit of God, he does not belong to Him (verse 9). This is the believer’s position. “If by the Spirit you live,” let me paraphrase Galatians 5:25, “then by the Spirit walk.” This is our responsibility—to walk in the Spirit.

In our present experience, the body is under the sentence of death because of sin. But the Spirit is life because of righteousness. This is righteousness imputed, righteousness that in­dwells. And, as I yield myself to the Spirit of God, then the righteousness of God is manifested in my life.

This leads, of course, to verse 11 where we have the hope that God has given to us. And, wherever Christ is, there must be life.

There must be eternal life.

Jesus said in John 14:19, “Because I live, you shall live also.”

In Him is life. Wherever Christ is, there is life, eternal life, resurrection life, satisfying life, in­dwelling life by the Spirit of God. That’s where we live.

“But, Mr. Mitchell, I fail God.”

That doesn’t alter the fact. This is where you live. You live in the Spirit. Now the exhortation is to walk in the Spirit as you have it in Galatians 5:16; Galatians 5:25, “If by the Spirit you live, then by the Spirit walk.”

Now we come down to Romans 8:10-11:

Romans 8:10. And if Christ is in you, though the body is dead be­cause of sin, yet the Spirit is alive because of righteousness.

Will you please notice this.

Romans 8:11. But if the Spirit of him who raised Jesus from the dead dwells in you, He who raised Christ Jesus from the dead will also give life to your mortal bodies through His Spirit who indwells you.

Now, let me say again, the body is under the sentence of death because of sin.

But Paul is bringing us another contrast. The Spirit is life because of righteousness—His right­eousness—for, where Christ is, there must be life. “I am the resurrection and the life.” “I am the way, the truth and the life.” “Because I live, you shall live also.” We are in the sphere where the Spirit dominates. That’s where we live; so, hence, we have life.

Now the body is not yet redeemed. I needn’t pro­pound that. The body is dead because of sin. We all know that. We know that the body dies. We know that the body sins; the body lusts. The body does things we don’t want to do. We try to live for God; and, behold, the body does something else. This is true. But, as we are going to see in Romans 8:12-13, we owe the flesh nothing. All it gives us is trouble.

Now Romans 8:11 says, “If the Spirit of Him who raised Jesus from the dead dwells in you,” and we just had that in Romans 8:9, then “He who raised Christ Jesus from the dead will also give life to your mortal bodies through His Spirit who in­dwells you.” Here is the hope that God has given to us. The body is yet to be made alive.

Now, remember, in Romans 8:10 the body is under the sentence of death because of sin. But there is a time coming when our bodies are going to be transformed, and they are going to be freed from death.

And you and I, we Christians, have already in us the Spirit that is going to quicken, to trans­form our bodies. We already have in us not only the power of resurrection but the power that is go­ing to change our bodies. Verse 10 says we are under the sentence of death because of sin. But we have in us the Spirit of God, the Spirit of resur­rection. We have the hope that one of these days our bodies are going to be made alive. In other words, our bodies are going to be freed from the sentence of death. And this will be in God’s own time.

Allow me again to quote those wonderful pas­sages. In 1 Thessalonians 4:13-17, Paul tells the church that we do not sorrow “as do the rest who have no hope. For if we believe that Jesus died and rose again, even so God will bring with Him those who have fallen asleep in Jesus. For this we say to you by the word of the Lord, that we who are alive, and remain until the coming of the Lord, shall not precede (go ahead of) those who have fallen asleep.”

Now, listen. “For the Lord Himself shall descend from heaven with a shout, with the voice of the archangel, and with the trumpet of God; and the dead in Christ shall rise first.” That’s those who are dead—Christians who have died. Their bodies have been buried and gone back to dust. The power of God is going to raise them from the dead and glorify them. But it doesn’t stop there.

He goes on to say that we who remain, we who are on this earth and are still under the sentence of death, are going to be freed from that sentence of death; and the body is going to be emancipated and made immortal and be caught up to meet the Lord in the air. So the dead saints are raised and glorified and the living saints are changed and glorified and caught up together to meet the Lord in the air and to be forever “with the Lord.”

Allow me to quote again from 1 Corinthians 15:51: “Behold, I tell you a mystery.” He has just been speaking before this about different kinds of bodies. There are bodies celestial and bodies ter­restrial. Now, when you come to 1 Corinthians 15:51, we read, “Behold, I tell you a mystery; we shall not all sleep, but we shall all be changed, in a moment, in the twinkling of an eye, at the last trumpet: for the trumpet will sound, and the dead will be raised imperishable, and we shall be changed.”

This mortal, we who are alive, this mortal shall put on immortality.

This corruptible, those who are in the graves, shall put on incorruption. We are all going to be changed. In fact, in Romans 8:29, we read we are going to be just like God’s Son; 1 John 3:2 says we are going to be just like the Lord Jesus. Oh, what a transformation!

“Do you mean to tell me, sir, that you already have in you the power that can change your body from mortal to immortal?”

That’s right. Read Romans 8:11 again. “If the Spirit of Him who raised Jesus from the dead dwells in you, He who raised Christ Jesus from the dead will also give life to your mortal bodies through His Spirit who indwells you.”

Now I must say this. If we already have in us the power of resurrection, the power of transforma­tion, cannot that same Spirit who indwells us con­trol us now?

Can He not give us daily deliverance from the lusts of the flesh, the pride of life, the weak­ness of the body?

This is life in the Spirit. And you and I are the ones who must yield ourselves. It is up to us to yield ourselves to the Spirit of God who indwells us so that He will control these very bodies which are under the sentence of death.

Now let me go down to the next two verses, two verses that have been a trouble to a lot of Chris­tians.

Romans 8:12. So then, brethren, we are under obligation, not to the flesh, to live according to the flesh—

Romans 8:13. For if you are living according to the flesh, you must die (you are about to die); but if by the Spirit you are putting to death the deeds of the body, you will live.

We owe the flesh absolutely nothing. The way of the flesh is the way of death. The body is under the sentence of death because of sin. The body has lusts and sin in it, but we owe the flesh nothing. Remember that.

God has saved us. God has justified us. He pro­nounced us righteous. He has freed us from the law of sin and death. He has freed us from Adam’s race which is under death. He has freed us from the tyrant of sin as a master. He has freed us from the law with its bondage. My, what we owe to God!

Yet God does not take up what we owe Him but rather the fact that we owe the flesh absolutely nothing. All the flesh does for you is give you trou­ble. “They that are in the flesh cannot please God” (verse 8). God has no confidence in anybody’s flesh. And I am repeating this. He has no confi­dence in your flesh, my flesh or anybody else’s flesh.

The flesh is incurably bad, but God came and justified us and forgave us and put us in Christ. He indwells us by His Spirit. He has given us His Spirit already in resurrection and glorification. He has given us the power that is going to transform us. Now, why don’t we yield ourselves to the Spirit of God so that He can control our bodies? He can give us the deliverance.

He gets the victory. We enjoy the deliverance. Hence we owe the flesh nothing. All the flesh can do is to produce death. It is incurably bad; and, until God changes it, it will never be changed. You can fix it up. You can color it up. You can paint it and do anything you want to with it, but it is still f-l-e-s-h. The man out of Christ, the man of the flesh who is dominated by the flesh, has nothing to show but sin and rebellion against God. But the believer has in Him the Spirit of God that is going to change these bodies. We have in us the Spirit that raised Christ from the dead.

Paul prayed in Ephesians 1:1-23 that we might know “what is the surpassing greatness of His power to­ward us who believe. These are in accordance with the working of the strength of His might which He brought about in Christ, when He raised Him from the dead, and seated Him at His right hand.” And in Philippians 3:10-11, he says, “That I may know Him, and the power of His resurrection and the fellowship of His sufferings, being conformed to His death; in order that I may attain to the res­urrection from the dead.”

What do you mean, Paul?

“I want to experience my identification with Christ, not only in His death, not only in His suf­ferings but also in His resurrection life and power.”

And I say, very bluntly, you and I have no ex­cuse. I don’t know what the sin is in your life, Christian friend; but there is deliverance for you by the Spirit of God who indwells you. The trouble with us folk is that we try to get deliverance on our own terms. We struggle, we set our wills, we set our chin that we are going to get the victory. And, instead, we are defeated and defeated and de­feated. He wants us to trust the Spirit of God.

Our body is under the sentence of death, but we have in us the very Spirit that raised Christ from the dead, the very Spirit that is going to take this body and transform it from a body under the sen­tence of death to an eternal, incorruptible, glorified body. And, if you and I already have this power, there is nothing left but to yield ourselves to the Spirit of God and let Him do it.

Let Him do it.

My, how we have struggled and strained and prayed and fasted. What for? To get deliver­ance. And we didn’t get deliverance until, in our absolute helplessness, we threw ourselves on God for deliverance; and He got the victory and gave us the deliverance.

Allow me to quote from Colossians 3:1-4: “If then you have been raised up with Christ, keep seeking the things above, where Christ is, seated at the right hand of God. Set your mind on the things above, not on the things that are on earth. For you have died and your life is hidden with Christ in God.” That’s what we have been having in Romans 8:1-39. “When Christ, who is our life, is revealed, then you will be revealed with Him in glory.”

We are joined to the eternal Son of God. We have the hope of a body that is going to be changed, a body that is going to be fashioned like His glorious body.

Wouldn’t you like that to happen now? Wouldn’t you like to have your body transformed and changed now?

You say, “Yes, I would.”

All right, if you believe that, take the second half of Romans 8:13. Hold your body under the sen­tence of death. “If by the Spirit you are putting to death the deeds of the body, you will live.” Mortify the deeds of the body. The body wants to do things that do not glorify God.

If you want to do things that dishonor Him and that hinder the work of the gospel in others’ lives, throw yourself upon God. Let God the Spirit who lives in you live out His life in and through you.

This is what He wants.

I say, my friend, a holy life without a controlled body is a contradiction. We owe the flesh nothing.

Now God doesn’t say, “You owe Me something.” It is so obvious we owe everything to God— justification, sanctification, glorification. We owe the whole business to God. He doesn’t remind us of that. All He wants is for you and me to exalt His Son in your life and my life. We owe the flesh noth­ing. We owe everything to God. Then let’s live for God today.

Now, it’s remarkable to take the context and see how the Spirit of God brings us into the position of the new relationship we have as members of the family of God.

Romans 8:14. For all who are being led by the Spirit of God, these are sons of God.

Romans 8:15. For you have not received a spirit of slavery leading to fear again, but you have received a spirit of adoption as sons by which we cry out, “Abba! Father!”

The old race had nothing to give us. It proved to be incurably bad. So what is God going to do? He is going to bring in something entirely new. You remember in John’s Gospel, chapter 1, verses 10 and 11, we read: “The world was made through Him, and the world did not know Him. He came to His own, and those who were His own did not receive Him.”

See, the old race had proved itself incurably bad. God must bring in a new race of people. Then you have John 1:12, “But as many as received Him, to them He gave the right to become children of God, even to those who believe in His name, who were born not of blood, nor of the will of the flesh, nor of the will of man, but of God.”

Is there any need for a new race? Why, of course. We just found in Romans 8:1-39, verses 7 and 8, that “the mind set on the flesh is hostile toward God; for it does not subject itself to the law of God, for it is not even able to do so; and those who are in the flesh cannot please God.”

You see, sin has ruined everything. It caused Sa­tan to fall. You remember, his root sin was pride. Five times in Isaiah 14:13-14 Satan said to God, “I will.” “I will ascend. . . . I will raise my throne above the stars of God. . . . I will sit on the mount of assembly. . . . I will ascend. . . . I will make my­self like the Most High.”

In Genesis 3:1-24, you see in Adam and Eve the same thing, pride.

Satan said to Eve, “Why, God knows that in the day you eat from it your eyes will be opened, and you will be like God, knowing good and evil.” And this has followed right on down through the his­tory of man. The world killed God’s prophets, de­spised His Word, crucified His Son. What can He do?

My friend, listen. God is bringing into being a new race of people. He is not dealing with nations as such. He is dealing with individuals. In fact, I would say to you, when God begins to deal with the nations, I don’t want to be on the earth. Reve­lation 5-19 records the judgments of God upon the world, upon the nations. In fact, as Isaiah 26:9 de­clares, “For when the earth experiences Thy judg­ments, the inhabitants of the world learn right­eousness.” They will not learn it any other way. They despised His grace. They spurned His love. What else can God do?

So I read here in Romans 8:14, “For all who are being led by the Spirit of God, these are sons of God.” Now I think maybe a word of warning here will be in order. There are some people who make a dis­tinction between being a child of God and being a son of God. They teach that, when you believe the Lord Jesus Christ is your Saviour, receive Him into your own heart and life and put your trust in Him as your Saviour and Lord, you become a child of God. And then as you are led by the Spirit, you become a son of God. That’s contrary to Scripture.

When John is writing about the family of God, he always calls us children. He is not dealing with our standing so much. He is dealing with the question of life and relationship and fellowship. In John’s Gospel, he tells us how to receive life. In the Epistle of John, he tells us how to enjoy that life. He always addresses us as children.

Now I recognize that in the King James Version the word is “sons.” But the word really is teckna, which means “children,” because John is dealing with relationship, fellowship and life.

Now the Apostle Paul, who was the apostle of faith, talks about our position and our standing before God. We not only stand before Him as His sons in Ephesians 1:5, but He also determined that we should be adopted into His family as sons in Galatians 4:5. This is what you have here. “As many as are led by the Spirit of God, they are the sons of God.” In other words, the moment we ac­cept the Saviour, my friend, the Spirit of God is in­volved in this.

How did you receive Jesus Christ as your Sav­iour? You say you heard the Word of God? That’s right. But remember the Spirit of God was the One who made it real to you. He was the One who opened your eyes to your need of a Saviour. It was by the Spirit of God through the Word of God that you became a child of God. And, not only so, but you became a new creature in Christ. That’s 2 Corinthians 5:17.

Or you take Galatians 6:15 where being a Jew or a Gentile profits nothing, but a new creation does. Or you take 2 Peter 1:4 where Peter says that ac­cording to these many wonderful promises which God has given to us we have become “partakers of the divine nature.”

In other words, the moment you and I accepted the Saviour, we were led into the family of God, forgiven our sins and declared righteous.

Not only has He put us into a new family, having a new Head, but He has delivered us from the master sin in chapter 6 and delivered us from the bondage of the law in chapter 7.

So now where are we? We are in a new race of people. We are born by the Spirit of God into this new family where everyone has eternal life and where death does not even cast a shadow.

As you walk today, as you go to work, as you work in the office, as you are with your family, think of the dignity of it all. We are children of One who is God. “For all who are being led by the Spirit of God, these are sons of God.” We stand be­fore God adopted into His family, not only as chil­dren but as sons. What a wonderful thing, I say. We are members of an entirely new race.

In Galatians 3:26, we have, “For you are all sons of God through faith in Christ Jesus.” We are par­takers of the divine nature, adopted, placed in the family of God as His sons. Hence we can say, in Romans 8:15, “For you have not received a spirit of slavery (which we had under the law) leading to fear again, but you have received a spirit of adop­tion as sons, by which we cry out, ‘Abba, Father!’”

You know, this is an amazing word, “Abba, Father.” Did you ever think of it? We need no longer be in fear of being slaves to sin, slaves to the flesh; we are able to say in the presence of God, “Abba, Father.” If you would go to the Near East today, whether it be Israel or the Arab world, you will notice that the children call their father, “Abba,” “Daddy.” Here is a sweet relationship. Oh, the wonder of it. He is “Abba.” He is my father.

And, by the way, the very moment I say I’m His son, I’m His child, then I must be subject to His discipline. As Hebrews 12:6 says, “For those whom the Lord loves He disciplines, and He scourges every son whom He receives.” Is it not a wonderful thing today that God can take men and women like you and me and transform us into the children of God and put us into a race of people, into a family where death never comes? Everyone in the family has eternal life.

We talk too glibly about being the children of God. That’s why I love to put it, “We are the chil­dren of One who is God.” May you live today like that. I’m the child of One who is God. That being so, how shall I conduct my life?

Don’t you think it would be a wonderful thing if today you could just lift up your heart to the eter­nal God and say, “Abba, Father,” and if you could then pour out your heart to Him just like a child would pour out its heart to its mother or daddy? “You have loved me with an everlasting love. You are sufficient for my need. You have a tremendous interest in me. I am the object of Your love.”

Why don’t you come today and spend some time in the presence of your Father?

Oh, the wonderful intimacy of relationship be­tween the Father and His people. And I find in verse 16 that the Spirit of God Himself bears wit­ness to this relationship. Listen to it.

Romans 8:16. The Spirit Himself bears witness with our spirit that we are children of God.

Here is a mutual thing. The Spirit of God and the believer have been joined together in mutual love, in mutual life. You remember, Romans 5:5 says, “The love of God has been poured out within our hearts through the Holy Spirit who was given to us.” In 1 John 3:1, we have, “See how great a love the Father has bestowed upon us, that we should be called children of God; and such we are. For this reason the world does not know us, be­cause it did not know Him.” And we manifest our sonship by our obedience to His Word.

He left us, you and me, down here to reveal God to men even though they reject our testi­mony. The Apostle Paul could say to the Corin­thian church in 2 Corinthians 2:15-16 that we are unto God “a fragrance of Christ to God among those who are being saved and among those who are perishing; to the one an aroma from death to death, to the other an aroma from life to life. And who is adequate for these things?”

And he goes on to say our adequacy is of God.

In Romans 8:17, not only are we brought into the family of God, but because of this relationship we have an inheritance we share with Him. For I read:

Romans 8:17 a. And if children, heirs also, heirs of God, and fellow-heirs with Christ . . .

Let me just stop here for a moment. I am re­minded of 1 Peter, chapter 1, verse 4, where it says that we have an inheritance which is “imper­ishable and undefiled and will not fade away, re­served in heaven for you, who are protected by the power of God through faith for a salvation ready to be revealed in the last time.” You see, God guards the inheritance and keeps us for it. We are joint heirs with Jesus Christ.

You know, I question if our minds are able to comprehend the wealth of this truth. You remem­ber in Hebrews 1:2 God speaks to us “in His Son, whom He appointed heir of all things.” Jesus Christ is the heir of all things on earth and in heaven. The whole universe belongs to Him.

You take Colossians 1:16, “For in Him all things were created, both in the heavens and on earth, visible and invisible.” It makes no difference. All things were created by Him and for Him and with­out Him nothing was made, and by Him all things are held together.

And I am a joint heir with Jesus Christ!

Oh, Christian friend, how rich we are! The riches of God, the riches of glory, as well as the riches of grace are for His people. I tell you, when you say, “I’m a child of God,” I wonder if you realize for a moment what that means. It means you have come into a position far beyond angelic beings. You’ve come into a relationship that no other cre­ated intelligence has that I know of. We are the children of God. He made us in His image. He has redeemed us. He has bought us back to Himself, given to us life eternal and then said, “You are my children. You are my sons. You are my heirs. You are my joint heirs with the Son of God.” Oh, the wonder of this!

Too many of us Christians, with all the wealth we have in Christ, are just living like paupers. Oh, that we might live in the good of this marvelous relationship. We are the sons of God here on earth.

We may not be recognized by the world, but one of these days we shall be recognized by all created intelligences in heaven and earth. God is going to put you and me on display. He is going to say to the myriads of angels—angelic beings, principali­ties and powers—as well as the nations on earth, “These are my sons; these are my children.”

Ah, I tell you, He is not ashamed to call us brethren. God is not ashamed to be called our God. So here in verse 17, we have an inheritance in Christ:

Romans 8:17 b. If indeed we suffer with Him in order that we may also be glorified with Him.

Now, I remember a preacher one time telling me that you are not a joint heir with Christ unless you suffer with Him.

I want you to mark this. Inheritance is not based on suffering. Inheritance is based on rela­tionship. It’s true in the human family. It’s true in God’s family. We are joint heirs with Christ be­cause we are His children. We are joint heirs with Christ because of relationship.

It is suffering and glory that go together. Go to 2 Timothy 2:12, “If we endure, we shall also reign with Him.” Relationship and inheritance go to­gether. Suffering and glory go together.

Now there is a certain sense in which all the people of God are going to be glorified together with Christ. For example, Colossians 3:4 says, “When Christ, who is our life, is revealed, then you also will be revealed with Him in glory.” That’s true of all believers. You have it in John 17:22; John 17:24, “The glory which Thou hast given me I have given to them. . . . Father, I desire that they also, whom Thou hast given Me, be with Me where I am (that’s eternal glory), in order that they may behold My glory (His moral glory),” the glory which He had with the Father before the foundation of the world.

Whenever he speaks of the sufferings of God’s people, Paul always brings in the glory. He wants to encourage us to remember that—even though we suffer for the Saviour—God takes thought of everything.

Oh, I’m so glad He sees everything, aren’t you? He’s the only one who understands us, and He is the one who is sufficient for us.

You see, Paul was looking at the sufferings he was going through in the light of eternal glory. If you and I were to look at our circumstances in light of the present, we would get discouraged. But Paul could see the glory in contrast to what he was going through.

For example, take 2 Corinthians 11:1-33; 2 Corinthians 12:1-21 where he speaks of the sufferings he went through: “Five times I received from the Jews thirty-nine lashes.” Five times he was beaten within an inch of his life. He had been jailed. He had been stoned; and he tells about all the perse­cution he went through, running from one city to the other. His life was, as he said in 1 Corinthians 15:31, lived in daily anticipation of suffering and martyrdom. What made him do that?

Because his eyes were on the glory. That’s why he could say,

Romans 8:18. For I consider that the sufferings of this present time are not worthy to be compared with the glory that is to be revealed to us.

You see, the end of Romans 8:17 opens the door for our hope which we have in Romans 8:18-25. We have no hope in the flesh. It’s in­curably bad. Therefore, we live in the Spirit and walk by the Spirit so that His character and His love and His compassion will be revealed through us. Now this may bring us suffering and opposi­tion of one sort or another. In the first century it meant martyrdom. It meant death.

Oh, listen, friend. Inheritance is determined by our relationship to the Lord because we are the children of God; and, being His children, we have an inheritance “imperishable and undefiled and (one that) will not fade away, reserved in heaven for you”—for us. And God is reserving—us—for the inheritance. And so, in view of this, in view of the glory, we can say, “I consider that the sufferings of this present time are not worthy to be compared with the glory that is to be revealed to us.”

I tell you, my friend, it’s a wonderful thing to be a Christian, to be a child of God. We have a guarantee not only of an inheritance but of the glory we shall be having in Christ Jesus. My, who would turn down such a Saviour? Who would be indifferent to such a Lord?

And I just plead with you, child of God, to live that way today—to live as the child of one who is God.

Romans 8:18 also marks the beginning of a new divi­sion in chapter 8. I call it, “Our New Hope.”

We had a new relationship; now we have a new hope. As His sons, we are to be revealed in His glory. In chapter 7, we were groaning in bondage.

Now, in chapter 8, we are delivered from the bond­age; but we are still in an unredeemed body.

That’s why, when you come to 2 Corinthians 5:1-2, you have that wonderful, wonderful prom­ise: “For we know that if the earthly tent which is our house is torn down, we have a building from God, a house not made with hands, eternal in the heavens. For indeed in this house we groan, long­ing to be clothed with our dwelling from heaven.” You have that here in Romans 8:1-39, verses 18 to 25— the new hope—because whatever you go through today is not to be compared with the glory God has in store for you.

The Apostle wrote that our light afflictions are just for a moment (2 Corinthians 4:17).

May I change the wording just a wee bit?

“Put your afflictions to work—these light af­flictions that are working to produce for us an eternal weight of glory far beyond anything we could ever dream of.” Why? Because we do not look at the things that are seen but at the things that are not seen. We don’t judge life in the light of the present 24 hours. We judge it in the light of eternity.

As I have said before so often, when God gets through with us, we are going to be just like His Son. You know, I’m not surprised that the Thessa­lonian Church went through so much persecution. Those people were waiting for the Son from heaven (1 Thessalonians 1:10). And in 2 Thessalonians 1:10, the Lord is going to come to be admired with all His saints. Just think of it! We are living in evil days, but Galatians 1:4 says Christ has delivered us “out of this present evil age.” And 2 Timothy 3:1 says, “In the last days difficult times will come,” evil days, dark days, days of opposition to the Gospel. But our Lord, I am reminded, suffered. He went to the cross, as Hebrews 2:9-10 says, to bring “many sons to glory.”

The people of the world, one of these days, are going to be greatly astonished when they see the manifestation of the people of God. You see, the world has spurned the real Christians. They look down on us; we are kind of odd. They may call you “deacon.” They may call you names.

In times past, I’ve had preachers say to me, “Well, Mitchell, are you still preaching the old Gos­pel?”

I say, “Yes.”

“Man, don’t you realize that we’ve gone beyond that?”

“No,” I say, “I haven’t realized that.”

“Why, don’t you know that we’re in an enlight­ened age? We’re living in an age of post-Christianity.”

“No,” I say. “No. Man is just the same. He’s incurably bad and needs a Saviour.”

All the philosophies of men can’t redeem any­body from sin, death and the grave. Thank God for a message where the Gospel concerns a Person, Jesus Christ, who gave Himself to redeem us out of all iniquity, to purify unto Himself a people for His possession who are going to be glorified with all the glory of God.

I say, my friend, what a prospect!

God is going to say, “These are my heirs; this is my family.” No wonder the angels of Hebrews chapter 1 are going to be servants to minister to you and me who are in Christ Jesus.

Don’t hang your head down, my friend, be­cause you are a Christian. Put your head up. You are a child of One who is God. And the very sufferings of this present time are not even worth talking about when you think of the glory that shall be revealed in you and me in that day.

Now let’s talk more about our new hope.

Did you ever stop to think that this hope not only deals with the believer, but it also deals with all creation? In fact, in Romans 8:19-22, we see where there is hope for creation. Let’s read these verses:

Romans 8:19. For the anxious longing of the creation waits eagerly for the revealing of the sons of God.

Romans 8:20. For the creation was subjected to futility, not of its own will, but because of Him who subjected it, in hope

Romans 8:21. That the creation itself also will be set free from its slavery to corruption into the freedom of the glory of the children of God.

Romans 8:22. For we know that the whole creation groans and suf­fers the pains of childbirth together until now.

Now, here you have the hope of creation. The creation and the creature are eagerly waiting for the unveiling of the sons of God.

You see, all creation is waiting for the day when you and I who believe in the Lord Jesus Christ shall be manifested before that creation. There is nothing of that now. But just you wait. Just you wait! We have not yet seen what God intends crea­tion to be. But He has a plan, He has a purpose, and He has a hope for creation.

Remember that the creature went down with man. When man sinned, he not only dragged the human family into bondage, but he also dragged the creature with him. Look at Romans 8:20-22. The whole creation today is groaning and suffering “the pains of childbirth together until now.” It’s waiting to enjoy the freedom of the glory of the children of God. Did you ever stop to think of this?

Someone has said that the whole creation is in the minor key.

You know, some years ago, when they began to deal with microphones, I’m informed, they put a steel rod with a microphone at the end of it down as far into the earth as it would go. All they heard was groaning.

To me, this old earth and all creation is groan­ing, groaning because of man’s sin. It’s after sin came into the universe, first of all through Luci­fer—through Satan, the devil—then through Adam and Eve to the family on earth, that we find groan­ing in the minor key, trouble and sorrow. Not only are men and women experiencing the fruitage of sin, but the very earth upon which we walk is suf­fering from it.

You remember Genesis 3:17, when God said, “Cursed is the ground because of you.” What did it give forth? Weeds, weeds, and more weeds. We use all kinds of insecticides to keep down bugs, to keep down disease and what have you. The curse of sin is not only on man, the human race, but it is on the very earth on which we walk.

My friend, you can’t account for it in any other way. God said—and I don’t care what men say— God said, “Cursed is the ground because of you.”

You know, many years ago up in the prairies of Western Canada, you could go to some of those expanses where a plow had never been put and you would find hardly any weeds. But let a man homestead, put his plow in, turn over the sod and put in an early crop, and by fall he had many weeds. The curse just follows man.

You get on a plane and you fly over our forests, and everywhere you see the curse of man. Every­thing he touches, he ruins. Thank God, a day is coming when the very ground is going to be deliv­ered from the curse. And a day is coming when the animal creation is going to be freed from the curse.

And not only they, but we, too.

Romans 8:23. And not only this, but also we ourselves, having the first fruits of the Spirit, even we ourselves groan within our­selves, waiting eagerly for our adoption as sons, the redemption of our body.

Romans 8:24 a. For in hope we have been saved. . . .

In Romans 8:23-25, we believers have hope. The animal creation has hope. The ground has hope. We are waiting for the completion of re­demption. We enjoy the liberty of grace now, but all heaven is waiting and all earth is waiting. What for? For our complete redemption. Oh, how much hinges upon God’s purpose in the Church.

Did you ever think of it? How much of God’s purpose is dependent upon the Church? All heaven waits. All earth waits. The creature waits. The whole universe waits. What for? For the mani­festation of the children of God. They are waiting for the full redemption of the believer. I tell you, my friends, it is an amazing thing. It’s true.

We are not known now as the children of God, as the sons of God. But I tell you, we will be when we get our glorified bodies. Someone has called that “an immortal prospect” for our bodies. Can you think of it?

Listen, Christian friend. Did you ever stop to think of the tremendous place you have as a Christian in relation to God? In relation to the universe? In relation to the animal creation? In re­lation to the earth? We don’t know God’s plan or what He had in mind for the earth when He made it. We don’t know the prospect He had for the animal creation when He made it. Man came and ruined the whole picture. So when the body of the child of God is redeemed, that is the hour for which all creation waits. And, I tell you, it’s going to be a wonderful, wonderful day when you and I stand before the throne of God and are recognized by all created intelligences in heaven, earth and hell.

“These are the sons of God,” they’ll say. “These are the heirs of God.”

We are just waiting today. What for? For that day to take place when the dead in Christ shall be raised and when we together with them shall be reunited and caught up to meet the Lord in the air.

What a prospect! What a hope!

Now, the earth has hope, the creature has hope, the believer has hope. But the unbeliever has no hope. Just think about this for a moment. The only place in God’s universe where there is no hope is among unbelievers here on earth. In fact, I would say, the only place where there is any ques­tion mark about who Jesus is is in the human family; for, you remember, the angels knew who Jesus was.

They said to the shepherds (Luke 2:11), “Today in the city of David there has been born for you a Saviour, who is Christ the Lord.” In fact, the angel Gabriel told Mary that He would reign from the throne of His father David, and of His kingdom there would be no end. And there is no question in the minds of the demons of the underworld who Jesus is because, when our Lord walked the earth, the demons said, “We know who You are —Jesus, the Son of God.” Or as one said, “Jesus, the Son of El-Elyon, the Most High God.”

Where is the place of unbelief? In the human family. You know, this just about breaks a per­son’s heart when you think of it. The only place in God’s universe where there is any question mark as to who Jesus of Nazareth is is in the human family. So, who has hope?

Well, first of all, the earth on which we walk has hope. It says here in verses 22-23, “The whole creation groans and suffers the pains of childbirth together until now . . . waiting.” Waiting, for what? Verse 19, “For the revealing of the sons of God” when the creation is going to be set free.

Remember Isaiah 11:1-16; Isaiah 59:1-21 both speak of the fact that the earth is going to be delivered from its bondage. There will be no more thorns and briars. The desert will blossom like a rose. You take Amos chapter 9—the last chapter, verses 11-13—when the sower shall overtake the reaper and the ground will give forth its increase. The ground will be delivered from the curse. And, if you want to follow it through, you will find it also in Isaiah 35:1-10, in Ezekiel 34:1-31, in Psalms 67:6, in Revelation 21:1-27; Revelation 22:1-21 where you have the new heavens and the new earth, in 2 Peter and in Isaiah 51:6. I am quoting these Scriptures to you because this is where you find hope for the earth upon which you and I walk.

The desert is going to blossom like a rose. The curse is going to be removed, and the earth is going to give forth its increase. We have never seen the earth give forth its full increase. Today in our country by our scientific research, we have been able to put things into the ground to get large crops. We haven’t begun yet to see what God will do when the curse is removed from the earth.

And then the creature has hope.

“Do you mean the animal creation has hope?” you ask.

Of course it does. In Isaiah 11:6-9 and Isaiah 65:25, the lion shall lie down with the lamb; the bear shall lie down with the kid; and a baby, a child, shall play with a viper. There shall be noth­ing to hurt or to mar in all the holy mount of God. The Book of Joel (and Joel, you remember, is the book of the Day of the Lord), chapter 2, tells you what God is going to do in the millennial kingdom. In that period of time, the animal creation, as well as the earth is going to be removed from the curse. It is going to give forth its increase. So we find that the earth has hope and the creature has hope.

And the believer in Christ has hope.

I tell you, this is what Paul says here in Romans 8:23: “We ourselves groan within ourselves, waiting eagerly for our adoption as sons, the redemption of our body. For in hope we have been saved.”

The believer has hope. You remember, Ephe­sians 4:30 says that we are sealed by the Spirit of God for the day of redemption. And that is the day when our bodies will be redeemed from the curse and bondage of sin.

In Romans 13:11, I read, “It is already the hour for you to awaken from sleep; for now salvation is nearer to us than when we believed.”

“Why, I thought we were already saved,” you say.

Yes, we were saved when we believed in Christ. The Lord saved us and we are being saved and we are yet to be saved. The time is still coming when our very bodies will be delivered from this question of sin and death. And in 1 Peter 1:5, Peter says, “We are protected by the power of God through faith” unto a salvation (yet) to be revealed in the last time.

You find the same thing in 1 Thessalonians 5:23-24: “Now may the God of peace Himself sanc­tify you entirely; and may your spirit and soul and body be preserved complete, without blame at the coming of our Lord Jesus Christ. Faithful is He who calls you, and He also will bring it to pass.”

Or you take Philippians 3:20-21, where Paul writes “For our citizenship is in heaven, from which also we eagerly wait for a Saviour, the Lord Jesus Christ; who will transform the body of our humble state into conformity with the body of His glory, by the exertion of the power that He has even to subject all things to Himself.”

In Romans 8:29, God has determined that we should be “conformed to the image of His Son.” And you have the same thing, of course, in 1 John 3:2-3 that says when we see Him, “we shall be like Him, because we shall see Him just as He is. And every one who has this hope fixed on Him purifies himself, just as He is pure.”

In 1 Thessalonians 4:13-17, allow me to quote again just the last two verses of that, “For the Lord Himself will descend from heaven with a shout, with the voice of the archangel, and with the trumpet of God; and the dead in Christ shall rise first. Then we who are alive and remain shall be caught up together with them in the clouds to meet the Lord in the air, and thus we shall always be with the Lord.”

In 1 Corinthians 15:51-53, we have, “Behold, I tell you a mystery; we shall not all sleep, but we shall all be changed, in a moment, in the twinkling of an eye, at the last trumpet; for the trumpet will sound, and the dead will be raised imperishable, and we shall be changed. For this perishable must put on the imperishable, and this mortal must put on immortality.”

You see, our inheritance is eternal, our re­demption is eternal, our life is eternal, and our family is eternal. Everything that God gives to us, my friend, is eternal. Why, we belong to an eternal family if we have taken Jesus Christ as our Sav­iour. We had that over here in Romans 8:14-17. We are now the children of God, and we partake of that which our Father has. I say it is a wonderful thing. It is a wonderful thing!

Now, notice in Romans 8:24:

Romans 8:24. For in hope we have been saved, but hope that is seen is not hope; for why does one also hope for what he sees?

Romans 8:25. But if we hope for what we do not see, with persever­ance we wait eagerly for it.

You see, when we receive that which we hope for, we no longer have hope. And, when we receive our new bodies, we no longer have hope.

Listen, friend, if I were to ask you, are you saved by hope, I think many of you would say, “No, we are saved by grace.” Some of you will say, “We are saved by faith.”

Well, that’s true; but we are also saved by hope. We are saved by grace as we have it in Ephesians 2:8-9, “For by grace you have been saved through faith; and that not of yourselves, it is the gift of God; not as a result of works, that no one should boast.” The base of our salvation is His grace.

And we are saved by faith. That is how we re­ceive our salvation. Take Romans 5:1, for example:

“Therefore having been justified (or declared right­eous) by faith, we have peace with God.” But we are also saved by hope, and this is the completion of our salvation. This takes in the body.

So, let me repeat it. We are saved by grace; that’s the foundation of it. We are saved by faith; that’s how we receive it. And we are saved by hope; that’s the completion of it. As Philippians 1:6 says, “He who began a good work in you will perfect it until the day of Christ Jesus.” So, you see, we are saved by hope.

You know, I feel like quoting chapter 11 of the Book of Romans.

Do you remember that 33rd verse Romans 11:33?

“Oh, the depth of the riches both of the wisdom and knowledge of God! How unsearchable are His judgments and unfathomable his ways!” And then Paul goes on, “For who has known the mind of the Lord, or who became His counselor? Or who has first given to Him, that it might be paid back to him again? For from Him and through Him and to Him are all things.”

We are saved by grace! Saved by faith! Saved by hope! God starts salvation, continues it and completes it. We’ve been saved from the penalty and guilt of sin. We’re being daily saved from the power of sin. And we are yet to be saved from the presence of sin.

Oh, do you know of anybody who has a hope like that? Just Christians. Just Christians. The phi­losophies of men give you no hope. How wonder­ful, how wonderful that God has given us a mes­sage, a gospel which brings us real deep-down hope.

As Peter could say in 1 Peter 1:3, “Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, who ac­cording to his great mercy has caused us to be born again to a living hope through the res­urrection of Jesus Christ from the dead.”

I tell you, it’s a wonderful thing when you think of the future glory of the saints. Indeed, it’s wonderful that all creation is waiting for the time of our manifestation. The whole of creation is wrapped up in our hope.

“But, Mr. Mitchell, what if I fail? Will I lose my hope?”

Oh, no. The Spirit of God steps into the picture and helps our infirmities. He doesn’t remove our infirmities, mind you. He helps our infirmities. He takes hold of us. We don’t even know how to pray, but He does; and He stirs up the desire and wak­ens us and encourages us to come before the throne of grace.

Now, the sixth thing we have is a new provision or new knowledge in Romans 8:26-30.

Romans 8:26. And in the same way the Spirit also helps our weak­ness; for we do not know how to pray as we should, but the Spirit Himself intercedes for us with groanings too deep for words;

Romans 8:27. And he who searches the hearts knows what the mind of the Spirit is, because He intercedes for the saints accord­ing to the will of God.

Romans 8:28. And we know that God causes all things to work to­gether for good to those who love God, to those who are called according to His purpose.

We don’t even know how to pray as we ought. You know, that always staggers me. How many Christians today know how to pray? And I speak to myself as well as to you. We all know something about praying. We’ve all heard sermons and Bible readings and exhortations on prayer, but how many of us pray? Sometime, if you have the oppor­tunity, get that little book by E. M. Bounds, Power Through Prayer. It will stir your heart to pray. The Spirit of God will stir you up. We don’t even know how to pray as we ought.

“But, Mr. Mitchell,” you say, “when I get down to pray, I fall asleep.”

Well, I can appreciate that. Sometimes, I do the same thing. We get tired, and we start to pray when we’re tired out. And the only comfort I have is that the Lord understands me; He knows my frailty. He is touched with the feeling of my infirmi­ties. He knows all about it.

Dear old Peter was a good sleeper. Remem­ber? He slept on the Mount of Transfiguration in the Lord’s glory, and he slept in jail when he was going to have his head chopped off the next day. Peter was a good sleeper.

Now, I’m not rationalizing my sleeping when I say that. But, you know, the Lord understands. He knows about the frailty of our bodies. But please don’t hold back because of that. Get down and pray; and, if you can’t pray, let the Spirit of God pray through you. Read your Bible and let the Lord talk to you, and you will soon be praying.

The Spirit of God pleads; He intercedes for us. You remember Ephesians 6:18, “With all prayer and petition pray at all times in the Spirit, and with this in view, be on the alert with all persever­ance and petition for all the saints.” And in Judges 1:20 we are told to pray in the Holy Spirit. You see, the Spirit of God is in us taking care of God’s in­terests down here. And Jesus Christ, our Advocate in heaven, is pleading our cause before the Father and taking care of our interests up there. He never gets tired of praying for us.

God has a tremendous interest in every be­liever, even the weakest believer. Do you think He will leave us alone and let the world take its venom out on us? Oh, no! Do you think God is going to trust us to ourselves to keep ourselves? He couldn’t do it. What does He do?

The Spirit of God comes to indwell us and to take care of His interests. We don’t know how to pray, but the Spirit of God makes intercession for you and me with groanings that can’t be uttered.

But mark something else in Romans 8:27. The Lord Jesus also is praying for us. He is making inter­cession for us according to the will of God. See, I have a great interest in heaven; and my Saviour is taking care of my interests up there. He is taking care of your interests up there. I tell you, God is leaving nothing to chance. He is leaving nothing, my friend, to you and me to work out. Hebrews 9:24 says He now appears “in the presence of God for us.”

In 1 John 2:1-2, we read, “My little children, I am writing these things to you that you may not sin. And if anyone sins, we have an Advocate with the Father, Jesus Christ the righteous; and He Himself is the propitiation for our sins; and not for ours only, but also for those of the whole world.”

Now notice Romans 8:27. “And he who searches the hearts knows what the mind of the Spirit is.” The Lord Jesus Christ doesn’t search our hearts to find fault with us, but He searches our hearts to know the mind of the Spirit. Are you and I willing to have Him come down and search our hearts? You remember, the Psalms 139:2, says He knows our thoughts from afar; and, if I run to the farthest end of the earth, I’ll find Him there waiting for me. He searches the hearts. Hebrews 4:12 tells us that He uses the Word of God to search our hearts, and Revelation 2:23 confirms that He does indeed search our hearts.

And I’ll tell you one thing. He is praying for you, and He is praying for me. Did you ever notice, in John 17:9, He says, “I do not ask on behalf of the world, but of those whom Thou hast given Me (out of the world)”? In other words, “They were Yours, and You gave them to Me.” And He says in John 17:20, “I do not ask in behalf of these alone, but for those also who believe in Me through their word.” You find it in Hebrews 7:25, “Hence, also, He is able to save forever those who draw near to God through Him, since He always lives to make intercession for them.”

I say, what a wonderful thing! The Spirit of God in you and me is praying for us, representing God to us, taking care of God’s interests in us; and He seals us unto the day of redemption. He’ll never leave us.

Did you hear what I said? The Spirit of God will never leave you. And Jesus said in John 14:16 that the Spirit, too, is going to abide with you forever. And then to have Him pleading our cause up there—oh, I tell you, we have a wonder­ful Saviour! Oh, the wonderful, wonderful provi­sion God has made for us. He never leaves us for a minute, and He guarantees that we shall stand in the Father’s presence just like Himself.

Look at this chapter—Romans 8:1-39. We are in Christ Jesus. We have a new deliverance. We have been delivered from the law of sin and death.

We are living in a new place—in the Holy Spirit and we have a new future.

Our bodies are going to be redeemed in verses 10 and 11. We have a new relationship as the children of God, the sons of God, the heirs of God, having an inheritance in Him. And then we have a new hope. He guarantees our very body is going to be redeemed because the salvation we have is a complete salvation—spirit, soul, and body. And I repeat what I said before that God will never be satisfied with you and me until we stand in His presence, conformed to the image of His Son.

Now, it’s no use my reveling in the fact that I am a child of one who is God if I do not seek to please Him here on earth and if I do not seek to come into His presence to spend time with Him and read the Word of God and know what His purpose is for the Church and for you and me individually.

Oh, listen, Christian friend. You are in God’s hand. You are in His family. You are His child, His heir. And don’t revel in that without realizing that in His family you come under the discipline of God as Hebrews 12:1-29 says. And, sometimes, the disci­pline is hard; but it always produces something. We are tested and tried, of course, not to be de­stroyed but to be purified so we will be to the praise of the glory of His grace.

I can say (my translation) and you ought to say with the Psalmist (139), “Whom do we have in heaven but Thee? Who is there on earth beside Thee? Though I take the wings of the morning and go to the farthest ends of the earth, You are still there waiting for me.” No wonder David said, “This is too wonderful for me.” It is beyond all human comprehension.

My friend, listen. This salvation we have starts in God, is continued by God and is going to be completed by God.

We have the Spirit of God in us, the interceding Saviour on the throne, and God Himself for us. Then all things must work together for good to those who love the Lord, to those who are the called according to His purpose.

Oh, listen, Christian friend, why don’t you revel in these things in Christ? Enjoy the One who gave so much for you and me.

Now let’s go down to Romans 8:28 which contains the second thing in this new division. It’s a good thing to know that “God causes all things to work together for good,” and there are a lot of things in the New Testament we should know. For example, Paul says in 2 Timothy 1:12, “I know whom I have believed and I am convinced that He is able to guard what I have entrusted to Him un­til that day.” John says in 1 John 5:20, we “know Him who is true, and we are in Him who is true, in His Son Jesus Christ.”

What a verse Romans 8:28 is!

But, you know, if I may be allowed to say this, oftentimes I think Christians quote that verse a little too glibly. We have the attitude, “Oh, well, Ro­mans 8:28 is still in the Book.” Well, of course it is. But let’s remember that it is a tremendous thing. “God has caused all things to work together for good!” We’ve seen our sonship, our future glory, His care for us. And now we know that the very million details that come into our life—the heartaches, the sorrows, the joys—work together for our good because we love God.

You remember that Ephesians 2:10 says, “We are His workmanship, created in Christ Jesus for good works, which God prepared beforehand, that we should walk in them.” We are His craftsman­ship.

“Do you mean to tell me, Sir, that every little detail of my life—He knows all about it?”

Of course He does. Doesn’t Job 14:16 say that He numbers our steps?

Afterward, he says that He bottles our tears. He counts the hairs of our head. He knows all about you and about me. There is not a detail of our lives that He doesn’t know about. And every part of our experience is working together for God’s glory— and for ours. I want you to think about that.

You know, I like hot biscuits. Don’t you? I remember years ago in Texas they would give us hot biscuits with honey for breakfast.

Now, I wouldn’t want to take a spoonful of flour and put it in my mouth. And I certainly wouldn’t want to take a spoonful of salt or some yeast or some baking soda—whatever you use to make your biscuits. I wouldn’t want to put any one of them individually in my mouth, and you wouldn’t want to either. But you put them together and cook them a wee bit and you get good, hot, lus­cious biscuits.

Now, friend, don’t take one little detail of your life and begin to get discouraged. The Lord knows how much is good for you.

Listen, if you grant to me that the Lord never leaves you nor forsakes you and you grant to me that He loves you right through to the end with an everlasting love, then grant that He knows every detail and that He is right there with you. He knows how much you can stand, and He is work­ing it all out for your good and for His glory.

You know, I like that little word of Anne Ross Cousin’s when she wrote,

I’ll bless the hand that guided,
I’ll bless the heart that planned,
When throned where glory dwelleth,
In Immanuel’s land.

Or another song:

He holds the key of all unknown,
And I am glad;
If other hands should hold the key or
If you entrusted it to me,
I might be sad.

Isn’t that true? I may not understand everything that comes into my life, and you may not. I know one thing— that everything that comes into our life, God works out for our good and for His glory.

Now I’m not excusing any frailty or disobedi­ence or failure on your part or mine. What I’m saying is that God in His wonderful grace and love takes the very things that are discouraging to us and uses them for His own glory and for our good. You see, He has us on His heart; and, when we murmur against circumstances, the chances are we are murmuring against God.

In fact, I have heard Christians blame God for certain things. Don’t blame God. God can take the most outlandish things, the finest detail or the greatest sorrow and suffering, and make that work together for your good and for His glory. You see, we are His workmanship.

Now, I repeat it. I do not say we will always understand why we go through certain things. I know one thing. He never stops loving you. He can use every detail of your life for your good and for His glory.

Now, for whom is this? The verse (Romans 8:28) goes on, “To those who are called according to His pur­pose.” And who are the ones who are called ac­cording to His purpose? Why, of course, those who love God, those who are trusting the Saviour. This is a fact. It is not an experience only. Ephesians 1:11 says, He “works all things after the counsel of His will.” And in 1 Corinthians 1:27-29, He takes the weak things and the base things of life to con­found the things that are mighty, that no flesh should boast in His presence.

You know, our hindsight is often pretty good. We look back over our life. We see certain experi­ences, and I think down the years we are going to thank the Lord for them. We didn’t enjoy what we went through very much. But we’ll see that it was through those things that He brought eternal glory to Himself and blessed His people.

Now, many of us often read into Romans 8:29-30 what was not the intention of the Spirit of God. For I read:

Romans 8:29. For whom he foreknew, He also predestined to become conformed to the image of His Son, that He might be the first-born among many brethren.

Romans 8:30. And whom He predestined, these He also called; and whom he called, these He also justified; and whom he justi­fied, these He also glorified.

Romans 8:31. What then shall we say to these things?

Here we have God’s blueprint.

You know, when you are going to build a house, you don’t just go out and build a house. You call an architect. You buy plans or you draw plans yourself. Certainly a person is not going to build a house without some idea of what he is going to build.

Now God has an eternal purpose that He is working out. We who are Christians and who love the Lord are a distinct part of that purpose; and we see here the blueprint of just what God is going to do with us, with the Church of Christ, with those who love Him. You will notice He does not reveal His purpose until He has a people redeemed and justified and united to Himself, a people who love Him, a people who are in His family and who have been guaranteed a new body, a people who are in the care of the Spirit of God. And, having this people, He now begins to open His heart and reveal His sovereign purpose to us.

You know, I think a lot of people are really dis­turbed about this question of the sovereignty of God; and it is very easy to become an extremist one way or the other.

Someone says, “Dr. Mitchell, are you a Calvin­ist? Or are you an Arminian?”

I say, I’m Pauline. I believe what the Bible says. It’s so easy for one to become lopsided. One can become an ultra-Calvinist or one can go to the place where he is at the other extreme where peo­ple believe they are saved by works and that they can be saved today and lost tomorrow. Now, re­member, God has a purpose. God is not doing things frivolously.

Oh, listen, my Christian friend, we have a God who is sovereign; and these words of sovereignty like “foreknowledge,” “predestination,” “choice” or “election” always have something attached to them.

For example, Ephesians 1:4 says, “He chose us in Him before the foundation of the world, that we should be holy and blameless.” It does not say we were chosen to go to heaven or that He chose some to be saved and some not to be saved. You don’t find that in Scripture. What He does say is we are chosen to be holy and without blame.

So I say all these Scriptures must be taken in their context, and we must notice what is attached to these words.

Now I believe in the sovereignty of God, but I also believe that man has a tremendous responsi­bility. What is he going to do with God’s Son whom He sent into the human race? God holds man re­sponsible. God has revealed Himself. Man doesn’t have any excuse.

Even the pagan, the man who has never heard of Jesus Christ, has no excuse because there is no place where the voice of creation is not heard. I don’t care where you are in the world. If people have never heard of the Saviour, have never seen a Bible, they are still responsible to worship the God who created them.

And, today, in so-called Christian countries that have the Word of God, that have a church on nearly every corner where the Word of God is pro­claimed, people do know the name of the Lord Je­sus. They are responsible then to do something about God’s Son.

But what I’m trying to get to your heart is this, that God is not doing things by happen­stance. He doesn’t do things on the spur of the moment. Way back, God purposed that certain things would take place.

Let me read here, for example, two portions of the Book of Isaiah. In Isaiah 14:1-32—I’m reading from Isaiah 14:24-27—“The Lord of hosts has sworn saying, ‘Surely, just as I have intended so it has happened, and just as I have planned so it will stand. . . . For the Lord of hosts has planned, and who can frustrate it? And as for His stretched-out hand, who can turn it back?’”

God is sovereign. He does what He wants to do, and none can change His purpose or hinder Him in the completion of that purpose.

Let me read from Isaiah 46:9-10: “Remember the former things long past, for I am God, and there is no other; I am God, and there is no one like Me, declaring the end from the beginning and from an­cient times things which have not been done, Say­ing, ‘My purpose will be established, and I will ac­complish all My good pleasure.’”

Romans 8:11, “Truly I have spoken; truly I will bring it to pass. I have planned it, surely I will do it.”

That’s the kind of God we have, a God who is righteous and yet who is love. When He purposes a thing, He carries it through. He never starts to do something He doesn’t finish.

Now you don’t have to look very far to see where men start things and don’t finish them. I think we are all guilty of that, more or less. We start a pro­ject and somebody else has to finish it for us.

God never starts a work He doesn’t finish. For example, the moment you accept the Lord Jesus Christ as your own personal Saviour, you find that God has already started a work in you to bring you to Himself and that He will not be through with you until you are conformed to the image of His Son. You are going to stand before God holy and without blame.

But, on the other hand, it may be that He elected you to a place of suffering. This is what Pe­ter talks about in his first epistle.

We are “chosen according to the foreknowledge of God.” What for? To be saved? No. For suffering. The whole epistle deals with suffering. In the first epistle, the suffering is from the outside world. In the second epistle of Peter, the suffering is from false teachers. And God has planned from way back that His people will know something of suf­fering because this is part of His purpose in form­ing you and me to be like His Son.

So you have here in Romans 8:29-30 the ex­tent of His purpose. Remember, these are facts, not necessarily experience. Allow me to take these two verses together. Here you have the length of God’s purpose. Ephesians 1:4 says that we were chosen in Christ before the foundation of the world to be holy and blameless. In Ephesians 2:7 of the same epistle, Paul writes, “That in the ages to come He might show the surpassing riches of his grace in kindness toward us in Christ Jesus.” Here you have an eternal picture of the purpose of God for you and me. He chose us in Christ to be holy and without blame.

When? Before the foundation of the world.

Why? That in the ages to come, He is going to display, He is going to put on exhibition, if you please, you and me to show forth the exceeding riches of His grace in His kindness toward us in Christ Jesus.

Then Paul goes on to say that we are His workmanship. We are His craftsmanship. And don’t you think that when God starts a job He is going to finish it? Now there might be some things through which you and I may have to go.

When Solomon built the temple, there was no sound of hammers or saws. All the noise was out in the quarry. Here we are on the face of the earth, and God has quarried us out. We have to be shaped and ground and polished; and, when God gets through with us, we are going to be right in the place He has for us in eternity.

And I want to tell you, my friend, God doesn’t say very much about eternity for His people. But what He has intimated is beyond all human com­prehension. In fact, I question very much if any of us today—if we were ushered into the presence of God the way we are, apart from what we are in Christ—I question if we could stand it for one sec­ond. So God begins to prepare us. He begins to loosen our feet from this old world.

That’s why, having been a pastor for a great many years, I have oftentimes rejoiced in the privi­lege of being with some of God’s dear saints when they are leaving this world.

They tell me, “Dear Brother Mitchell, please don’t pray for me to stay here. I just want to go Home.”

You see, God’s purpose for them on earth is fin­ished; and God has taken out of their hearts any desire for things down here. They’ve got a little glimpse of the glory, and they can hardly wait to get Home.

You say, “Brother Mitchell, I’ve never had that feeling.”

No, you are not ready for it yet. But I’ll tell you one thing. When God has you ready for what He wants to do with you, don’t worry. You will be ea­ger to get there.

I don’t know when God wants to call me Home, but I know He numbers my steps and He bottles my tears and my times are in His hands. He is on the job day and night. He never leaves us. He never forsakes us. He has made us the object of His love and affection. He is working out His divine plan and purpose.

Now some people God takes Home early. Some go through a great deal of suffering. God can’t trust everybody with suffering or sorrow or tests or trials. Some Christians break under it so God doesn’t give it to them. Some of these dear saints, some of the sweetest saints, are suffering saints.

Sometimes, you know, I wonder if God can’t trust me with it. I know so little about suffering. Oh, I’ve had some things in life. Yes, but when I think of what some of God’s people go through and their cheerfulness, their fortitude, their peace of heart and mind, I tell you it’s an amazing thing.

You see, God is the One who is working it out. God is working out a purpose and none can say to Him, “What doest Thou?” God has a purpose in your life and my life. That is what I’m trying to get to your heart. So we can say in Romans 8:28, “God causes all things to work together for good.” Every­thing! The blessings and the trials and the tests and the sorrows and the joys, all the details that come into your life, everything works together for good.

You know, the Lord must love detail. Did you hear what I said?

The Lord must love these little wee things we call insignificant. They are not insignificant to Him. The very hairs of our head are numbered. I wouldn’t start to try to count yours or mine. I’ll tell you one thing. He knows every detail of our lives.

By the way, I’m very glad for that. I’m very glad for that. You and I may not know very much, but I know one thing. We are in the hands of the omnipotent, sovereign God. And there is no power in heaven, earth or hell that can change His purpose for you or for me.

What He wants you and me to do is to appreci­ate that and to walk with Him.

Allow me to go back to that verse in Ephesians 2:10: “We are his workmanship (his craftsman­ship), created in Christ Jesus for good works, which God prepared beforehand, that we should walk in them.” This is God’s desire. This is God’s purpose. And sometimes He has to hedge us in to get us to do the thing He wants us to do.

My, how stubborn we are. How we want our own way. How willful we can get, and we just go along wanting what we want. And so the Lord, in His wonderful love for us—that blessed, unchang­ing love—puts things into our lives. He hedges us in. Sometimes the things He hedges us in with are not very nice. But He does it because He loves you, because He is working out a purpose.

And don’t forget, Romans 8:29 says He predes­tined us to be conformed to the image of His Son. Just think of it! Just think of it! My friend, go look in the looking glass. Thank God for His grace and say, “All right, that’s the way I look now; but just wait until God gets through with me.”

The eternal Sovereign God has purposed that I’m going to be just like Jesus Christ, His wonderful Son.

Doesn’t that thrill your heart?

Friend, today you have disappointments. You have failures, weaknesses, tests. You wish you were living someplace else. You wish you had a different job. You wish you lived in a different neighborhood. You wish this and you wish that.

Ah, listen. The Lord has put you right where you are because He is working out something in your life and in somebody else’s life and because He uses all of us one way or another. In His own good time—and, by the way, He is always on time—He works things out after the counsel of His own will.

I like these verses here in Romans 8:1-39. “Whom He foreknew, He also predestined to be conformed to the image of His Son, that He (the Lord Jesus) might be the first-born among many brethren; and whom He predestined, these He also called; and whom He called, these He also justified; and whom He justified, these He also glorified.”

God already sees you and me as glorified.

When I look at God’s people, I say, “Well, that hasn’t taken place yet!” That’s true in our experi­ence. It has not taken place yet. But I’m just as sure as God is on the throne, just as sure as God is sovereign, the Lord of lords and King of kings, the El Shaddai, the Almighty God, the One who holds on His girdle the keys of death and of hell, that He is going to work it all out. And when He gets through with you and me, we are going to be just like His Son, Jesus Christ. Isn’t that a won­derful prospect?

Now you live in the joy of that instead of growling over your tests and trials. Say, “Praise the Lord, He is using this to make me just like the Lord Jesus.”

Now, predestination always looks ahead to what we shall be like. For example, in Ephesians 1:5, “He predestined us to adoption as sons.” We are not only in the family of God as children but as sons. God determines that what He has planned will be worked out in every one of His children. And what is His purpose which He has deter­mined? That we shall be just like His Son.

Now we have spoken of this before, but I would like to refresh your memory with some Scriptures. In 1 John 3:1-24, the second verse, we have, “Beloved, now are we children of God, and it has not ap­peared as yet what we shall be. We know that, when He appears, we shall be like Him, because we shall see Him just as He is.”

In Philippians 3:20-21, the Apostle Paul says, “Our citizenship is in heaven, from which also we eagerly wait for a Saviour, the Lord Jesus Christ; who will transform the body of our humble state (this body of our humiliation) into conformity with the body of His glory, by the exertion of the power that He has even to subject all things to Himself.”

And you have it in Romans 8:29—He determined that we should be “conformed to the image of his Son.” This is the purpose of God.

The Psalmist caught a glimpse of it in the 17th Psalm, the last verse, verse 15, when he said, “I will be satisfied with thy likeness when I awake.” And Job caught a little glimpse of it, when he said in Job 19:25, “I know that my Redeemer lives, and at the last He will take His stand on the earth. Even after my skin is flayed, yet without my flesh I shall see God; whom I myself shall behold, and whom my eyes shall see and not another (not a stranger).” I like that verse, you know. When we stand in the presence of God, we are not going to be strangers.

Did you ever go into a city or to some part of the country where you didn’t know anybody, and you walked among the thousands of people on the street? You went up to your room in the hotel, and you were alone. It’s an awful feeling. Or you’ve gone to some foreign country where you can’t communicate with anyone. It’s a terrible feeling when you are not known.

But it’s a wonderful thing to come into the presence of God in eternal glory and be known. He will know me and I will know Him. I shall see God by my side, Job says; and, when I see Him, behold He is not a stranger. God has determined that we shall be conformed to the image of His Son.

Do you know He is already on that job? He is do­ing that work now. This work of transformation has already started. He not only took us out of the kingdom of darkness and put us into the kingdom of His Son, but 2 Corinthians 3:18 says, “We all, with unveiled face beholding as in a mirror the glory of the Lord, are being transformed (as a pre­sent thing) into the same image from glory to glory, just as from the Lord, the Spirit.”

Think of it. Revel in it. Even the tests and trials and disappointments and sorrows of life are part of God’s program in changing you and me, in forming us, in fitting us so that when He gets through with us, this workmanship of His, we are going to stand in His presence like the Lord Jesus Christ Himself.

Now, I say that reverently; but I am sure of 1 Co­rinthians 2:9, “Things which eye has not seen and ear has not heard, and which have not entered the heart of man, all that God has prepared for those who love Him.” Don’t stop there. “For to us God revealed them through the Spirit; for the Spirit searches all things, even the depths of God.”

Oh, that our hunger for God may be increased, our eyes may be opened, our hearts may be opened to see, to receive, to revel in and to rejoice in a God who is faithful and who will do exactly what He says.

He has determined that we shall be conformed to the image of His Son that He might be the first­born among many brethren, the first one in this new company of people, the first one in this group called the Church. He didn’t call us to go to heaven. He called us to be like His Son. He didn’t predestine us to go to heaven. He predestined us to be conformed to the image of His Son. And it’s going to be a permanent likeness.

No wonder the Lord Jesus, who looked and spoke in the light of eternity, could say to the women after the resurrection, “Go to My brethren, and say to them, ‘I ascend to My Father and your Father, and My God and your God’” (John 20:17).

By the way, please allow me to say this. Don’t ever call Him “Brother Jesus.” You know, I have met people who call Him “Brother Jesus;” and they take it from these two portions of Scripture, John 20:1-31 and Hebrews 2:11, where it says, “He is not ashamed to call us brethren.” But, when you men­tion His name, please don’t say “Brother Jesus.” You call Him “Lord Jesus.” Do you hear me? He may in grace call us His brethren, but we don’t presume to call Him that. After all, He is God!

I rejoice, I revel in this relationship with the Sav­iour. We have been joined to the eternal Son of God. We are members of an eternal family where everyone is going to stand before God absolutely perfect and complete and just like the Son of God. This is God’s determination. This is God’s purpose and program for everyone who receives His Son. Think of it! We are cleared of every charge, de­clared righteous, given the blessed hope and, God says, glorified.

This is His purpose for His people. And, as far as God is concerned, it is a finished transaction. We manifest our faith in what He has done and what He is doing and what He is going to do by our obe­dience and by our love for Him.

Friend, you know no man, no created intelli­gence could have worked out such a thing as this. I look over the thousands of God’s people and think of what God has done and what He is doing, and then I remember that the whole universe is waiting for the day when every Christian is going to stand in the presence of God conformed to the image of His Son. The very creation is waiting for that day. The creatures are waiting for that day.

Why do they wait? Let me repeat it just once more. They wait because, when the children of God are manifested before all created intelligences, that will be the time when the earth will be deliv­ered from its curse. That will be the time when the animal creation will be delivered from its bondage. That will be the time when righteousness will reign and our Saviour will be glorified in and through His people.

I tell you again, my friends, no man could have conceived of such a thing. And is it not a wonder­ful thing for you and me to depend upon the faith­fulness of God and to declare that what God has purposed is going to take place? As he has pur­posed, says Isaiah 14:24, so shall it stand. “Just as I have intended so it has happened, and just as I have planned so it will stand.”

God saw you when you were in your mother’s womb. He knows your thoughts afar off. He never leaves you. He never forsakes you. He makes you the object of His love and affection and says, “Lis­ten, Mitchell (or whatever your name is), when I get through with you, you will be just like my pre­cious Son, the Lord Jesus Christ.”

No wonder we have in Romans 8:14, “For all who are being led by the Spirit of God, these are sons of God.” Read Ephesians 1:5 with this. He determined that we should be His sons, adopted into His family as His sons, and not only as His sons, but as heirs, heirs of God and joint heirs with Christ. This One owns the whole universe— this is His inheritance—and you and I are going to share it with Him.

But the marvelous thing, my friend, is not only the inheritance. The marvelous thing is not only that we are going to be just like the Lord Jesus Christ.

But to me the marvelous thing is that God is going to have a people right on through eter­nity with whom He can have unbroken, won­derful fellowship—so that through you and through me and through the Church through eternity, He is going to fulfill His purposes for all creation, for the whole universe.

My, what a privilege that you and I should be­come the children of God!

Now, certain questions are raised as we sum it all up in verses 31 to 39:

Romans 8:31. What then shall we say to these things? If God is for us, who is against us?

Romans 8:32. He who did not spare His own Son, but delivered Him up for us all, how will He not also with Him freely give us all things?

From verse 31 to the end of the chapter through verse 39, we have four questions and answers. We can go no farther. This transcends everything in human language. These four ques­tions and answers come after all Paul has revealed to us. He takes man in chapters 1, 2 and 3 and proves him absolutely unrighteous with none do­ing good.

Then he reveals to us the wonderful provision of God who takes sinners who receive His Son, for­gives their sins and pronounces them righteous, who brings them right to Himself, who frees them from the bondage of death, from the mastery of sin, from the bondage of the law, who puts them in His Son Christ Jesus, who indwells them by His Spirit, who calls them to be His sons and heirs and gives them the hope of a new body trans­formed like the body of His Son. Then He provides two Advocates, one in heaven and one on earth— the Lord in heaven, taking care of our interests there and the Spirit of God in us, taking care of His interests here.

You see, God leaves nothing to chance. He does not trust the flesh to do anything.

Then we have God’s blueprint. And the blue­print reveals to us not only that we are redeemed and pronounced righteous, having eternal life and the Spirit of God, but also His purpose that we shall be conformed to the image of His Son. He glorifies us, as John 17:22 says, “The glory which Thou hast given Me I have given to them.” So far as God is concerned, we are already glorified.

Now these are the facts. They are true, and the eternal Sovereign God declares that they are true. We can look forward with real expectancy to our experiencing what He has purposed.

I tell you, it’s a wonderful thing to be a Chris­tian. It’s a wonderful thing to belong to the Sav­iour.

Now, we are not only bound for heaven—that’s a mere item—but we are going to be conformed to the image of Jesus Christ and to be numbered among those with whom God is going to have eter­nal, unbroken fellowship through the countless ages of eternity. And we are going to display the grace of God and the wisdom of God to the whole universe.

Now, what are you going to say to these things? What can you say except “Amen, so let it be!”

What more can He do?

God is for us in all that He is. The Spirit of God helpeth our infirmities. He carries out a perfect salvation, from condemnation to glorification.

Who does it? God does it. The opposition doesn’t even count.

Who can be against us? Well, who can? God is for us and who will oppose or destroy the purpose of God?

Can hell?

Why, Jesus in Matthew 16:18 said, “The gates of Hades shall not overpower it.” Or you take Revela­tion 1:18. Our Lord holds the keys, the authority of death and of hell. Where is the opposition? It doesn’t even count. Romans 8:31: “What then shall we say to these things? If God is for us, who is against us?” Having given to us His Son, what else can He give us? He can’t withhold anything from us. He gives us—everything.

Let’s look further at verses 32 and 33: “He who did not spare His own Son, but delivered Him up for us all, how will He not also with Him freely give us all things? Who will bring a charge against God’s elect?”

You know, I don’t think the human mind can really get hold of this.

You remember in 2 Peter 2:4 we read that “God did not spare angels when they sinned.” Now I can understand that. And God spared not the old world. I can understand that because the thoughts and the imaginations of the heart of man are evil continually. “And He condemned the cities of Sodom and Gomorrah” (2 Peter 2:6). I can under­stand that because of their gross immorality. I can understand all those things. But how do you ac­count for God’s not sparing His own Son?

I tell you, my friend, He didn’t send an angel. He didn’t send an archangel. He didn’t send some good man. He sent His only begotten Son, who took my place. “He spared not His own Son.” In other words, the judgment of God that should have fallen on you and me fell on Him. And, when God the Son took your place and my place on the cross of Calvary, all the law of God could do was to curse Him.

I am not surprised in Matthew and Mark that the Lord Jesus cried out, “My God, my God, why hast thou forsaken me?” Did you ever think of it? God spared not His own Son. I’ll even go further. God gave up His Son at frightful cost. What for? To redeem you and me.

To redeem you and me!

No wonder Paul could say in 1 Corinthians 3:1-23, the end of the chapter, “All things belong to you.” Why? “Because you belong to Christ; and Christ belongs to God.”

Now that’s the first question—what shall we say to these things? This is the purpose and pro­gram of God, my friend. What can you say but “Amen!”

And when God spared not His Son, He went to the nth degree; He could go no farther. He gave heaven’s best.

Oh, listen, Christian friend, why don’t we Chris­tians fall in love with God’s Son? Why don’t we love Him more? We take so much for granted. We talk so glibly about Romans 8:28. We talk so glibly about being Christians and about going to heaven. What about your daily experience in magnifying Christ among men?

Will you please, today, sometime today, meditate on this? God loved you so much that He spared not His only begotten Son. All the judgment, all the wrath of God that should have fallen on you and me fell upon Him; and no human mind can begin to explain or to express what the Son of God went through when He went to the cross. No won­der in the Garden of Gethsemane (Luke 22:42) He cried out, “Father, if Thou art willing, remove this cup from Me.” No wonder He said (John 12:27), “Now my soul has become troubled; and what shall I say, ‘Father, save Me from this hour’? But for this purpose I came to this hour.’”

Did you ever think of it?

And when Peter chopped the fellow’s ear off, Je­sus said (John 18:11), “Put the sword into the sheath; the cup which the Father has given Me, shall I not drink it?”

Oh, listen, Christian friends. Stop sometime to­day and take a few minutes. Just meditate on the price God paid to redeem you and to redeem me.

You see, the problem with us is we see things in the light of the next 24 hours. We see things only in the light of human history. The Lord Jesus spoke in light of eternity. As Revelation 13:8 says, He was “the Lamb slain” from the foundation of the world. God spared not His Son. Why? That you and I might be delivered from sin and bondage, covered with the righteousness of Christ and fitted for the eternal presence of God. This is what Paul means in Philippians 3:8, when he says, “I count all things to be loss,” everything to be loss—the good things and the bad things—everything loss. What for? Just to know Him and to be found in Him.

Let me tell you, I wish I could put into words just what I feel about it. I’m talking to you now. I just don’t find the words to express this amazing truth.

“He who did not spare His own Son, but deliv­ered Him up for us all, how will He not also with Him freely give us all things?” (Romans 8:32).

When you have the Lord Jesus Christ, you have everything.

Every once in a while, someone tells me that I should have this experience or that experi­ence or some other experience. Now, as wonder­ful as those experiences may be, may I tell you, my friend, I have Jesus Christ; and you can’t add any­thing to the Lord Jesus Christ.

I have everything in Him. And, thank God, the day is coming when through eternity I’ll continu­ally be experiencing what I have in Him.

These are eternal things. And what shall we say to these things? What can you say but “Amen! If God be for us, who can be against us?”

There is not a created intelligence in the whole universe who can thwart the purpose of God in His Son and in His people. And “whom He justified, these He also glorified.” There is not a created in­telligence in the universe who is going to prevent any believer, the weakest as well as the strongest, from being glorified with all the glory of the eternal God. My, what a salvation is this! What a Saviour is this!

Friend, I cannot understand those that turn their back on such a Saviour and who reject such a love as His. God spared not His own Son in order to redeem you and me from sin and death and hell. If that were all, that would be wonderful. But He has made it possible that we shall be like His Son and be fitted to enjoy eternal, unbroken fellowship with God through eternity.

Oh, my friend, what shall we say to these things? If God spared not His Son but delivered Him up for us all, how shall He not with Him also freely give us all things?

We come to the second question:

33. Who will bring a charge against God’s elect? God is the one who justifies.

When God has pronounced us righteous, what are you going to say? Who can charge anything to any of God’s people when God says they are right­eous?

My friend, to charge us is to impeach the Judge; and He has cleared us of every charge. The evi­dence of all our sins has been destroyed. He has pronounced us righteous, and whoever brings a charge against us has to reckon with God. I say again, the opposition counts for nothing.

You say, “Mr. Mitchell, this is beyond me.”

I confess to you, it is beyond me. Oh, that it would get hold of your heart and life and your mind. Who can lay any thing to the charge? Who would dare stand before God and charge His peo­ple with anything when God has destroyed all the evidence of our sins? He has put them all away. He has cleared us of every charge. He has pro­nounced us righteous. And, if you charge the be­liever, then you must reckon with God.

I ask you again, are you going to impeach the Judge? And I tell you again, this salvation we have is an amazing thing. If God be for us, who can be against us? We are in the majority. If God has jus­tified us, who can charge us with anything?

There is only one answer to this, which leads us to the third question:

Romans 8:34 a. Who is the one who condemns?

Who can? No angel can. No man can. No demon can. Satan can’t. Nobody—nobody in the universe can come before God and condemn us when God has pronounced us righteous. This, too, is an amazing thing, isn’t it? I say this is an amazing thing!

But the thing that breaks my heart—in fact, there are two things that break my heart. First of all, Christians seem to have so little realization of this wonderful, wonderful truth. Christians seem to have so little knowledge of the wonderful salvation we have in Christ, of the wonderful Sav­iour we have and of all that God has done for us. I repeat, all that God is, all that God has—is for His people.

Who will condemn us? Who can lay any charge against us? I say, this is what burdens my heart— so many of God’s people know so little about their relationship with the Saviour, about this union with the living God and what it means.

And the other thing that breaks my heart is that there are so many wonderful, wonderful peo­ple who have spurned the Saviour. Possibly I bet­ter put it this way—they are just totally indifferent to Him, coldly indifferent. It isn’t that they oppose the Gospel. They are just indifferent to it.

Like one man said, “Dr. Mitchell, I don’t need Jesus Christ. I have all that I need. I don’t need Jesus Christ.”

But, listen, they’ve got to stand before God; and He is either their Saviour or their Judge. Each one must decide what he is going to do with God’s pre­cious Son. He “did not spare His own Son, but de­livered Him up for us all.”

Oh, why won’t these accept God’s precious Son? He has said, “Come unto me . . . and I will give you rest. . . . The one who comes to Me, I will certainly not cast out” (Matthew 11:28; John 6:37). But as many as receive Him, to them He gives the right to become the children of God (John 1:12). Oh, why won’t they bow their head and receive Him as their own Saviour?

Christian friend, why don’t you fall in love with your Saviour? Oh, what that would mean to Him and what it would mean to you! God grant that our vision of Christ may be enlarged and that our love for Him shall grow in intensity so that we will fall, really fall in love with Him.

Grant it today, Lord.

Now, let us more fully develop the third question here in verse 34:

Romans 8:34. Who is the one who condemns? Christ Jesus is He who died, yes, rather who was raised, who is at the right hand of God, who also intercedes for us.

There are four tremendous things in this verse. I would like to be brief (whether or not I am is something else).

Who is the one who condemns? Nobody can. Sa­tan can’t. Man cannot. Angels cannot. Why? Be­cause Paul says here it is Christ who died and who is risen again, who is at the right hand of God and who also intercedes for us. I say we have four re­markable things in this verse.

First of all, Christ died. That means that the sin question was settled, and we have been pro­nounced righteous before God. That is Romans chapters 3 and 4.

The second thing, He “was raised” from the dead and this brings us to chapters 5 through 8. Christ is risen; He is no longer in the tomb. We have been identified with the Risen Christ. We are not joined to the Christ who walked the earth. It was when He took our place on the cross and bore our sins and died our death that we were joined to the One who came forth in resurrection. We be­came new creatures. We received a new life. We are joined to the Risen Christ where death doesn’t even have any place at all.

When Christ rose from the dead, He had already defeated Satan and put away sin and defeated death and the grave. And, when you and I took the Lord Jesus Christ as our Saviour, we were not only declared righteous (having our sin question settled), but we were identified with this risen, glo­rious Saviour. You find this in Romans chapters 5, 6 and 7. Through the death and resurrection of Christ, our relation to the old Adam has been sev­ered. Our relation to sin as a master was severed. Our relation to the law and its bondage was sev­ered. When you come to chapter 8, we are in only one place—in Christ Jesus.

What a marvelous thing!

And then we have the third thing: “Who is at the right hand of God.” And that’s representation. In Hebrews 9:24, I read, He now appears “in the presence of God for us.” Do you need any help in the court of God? Our Lord and Saviour is there.

The One to whom you have been joined is there. He represents us.

Can you find any fault with the Lord Jesus? No. Can angels find any fault with Him? No. Can Sa­tan find any fault with Him? No. Men? No. Where are we? In Jesus Christ. He is our representative.

And, if anyone were to charge us or condemn us before God, all the Father needs to say is, “Do you find any fault with my Son?”

No.

“These are in My Son.”

What a wonderful thing it is to be in Christ, saved, righteous, fitted, glorified in Him. Now these are facts. It may not be your present experience, but it is a fact. We are dealing with God’s facts, facts that hold up for even the weakest child of God.

And the fourth thing we have in this verse is One “who also intercedes for us.” He is not only representing us, but He is our High Priest who is interceding for us in our frailty. You see, we are still down here in weakness. That’s why, in He­brews 2:17, He was “made like His brethren in all things, that He might become a merciful and faith­ful high priest in things pertaining to God.”

I suggest for your study the whole 17th chap­ter of John’s Gospel where our Lord is praying for His own. I suggest 1 John 2:1-2 the first two verses, where we have an Advocate with the Father, Jesus Christ the righteous. And then I would take Hebrews 7:25, “Hence, also, He is able to save forever those who draw near to God through Him, since He always lives to make inter­cession for them.”

He is our Intercessor. He is our Advocate. He is our Mediator. He is the One who is praying for us.

You know, again I come back to Job who was crying for somebody to plead his cause, somebody who could put his hand on God and put his hand on him, someone who could represent him before the eternal God. You may be one of God’s weakest children; but, if you mean business and you have taken Him as your own personal Saviour, my friend, you have in the presence of God One who not only prays for you because of your weakness and advocates your case when you fail, but you have One who pleads your cause, One who repre­sents you.

Ah, I tell you, God has left nothing to chance, has He?

You know, this gets beyond me. Look at this verse. We have justification, identification, representation and intercession here. What more can God do for you and me?

Well, He is not through yet.

In verses 35 to 39, we pick up the fourth great question. The first question was “What then shall we say to these things?” —that is, say to God’s purpose and program for His people from verse 28 to verse 30.

You ought to say “Amen” to that.

The second question was “Who will bring a charge against God’s elect?” When God has pro­nounced us righteous, nobody can.

The third—“Who is the one who condemns?” Who can condemn us when Christ has justified us and joined us to Himself? Who can condemn us when He represents us and intercedes for us?

Nobody.

Which leads me to the last little question:

Romans 8:35. Who shall separate us from the love of Christ? Shall tribulation, or distress, or persecution, or famine, or na­kedness, or peril, or sword?

Romans 8:36. Just as it is written, “FOR THY SAKE WE ARE BEING PUT TO DEATH ALL DAY LONG; WE WERE CONSIDERED AS SHEEP TO BE SLAUGHTERED.”

Romans 8:37. But in all these things we overwhelmingly conquer through Him who loved us.

Romans 8:38. For I am convinced that neither death, nor life, nor an­gels, nor principalities, nor things present, nor things to come, nor powers,

Romans 8:39. Nor height, nor depth, nor any other created thing, shall be able to separate us from the love of God, which is in Christ Jesus our Lord.

Notice, nothing is left out. In verses 35 and 36, he is talking about our experiences.

Shall tribulation separate us?

No.

Or distress?

No.

Or persecution?

No.

Or famine?

No.

Or nakedness?

No.

Or peril or sword?

No.

“For thy sake we are killed all the day long.”

We are facing martyrdom, says Paul. “In all these things we overwhelmingly conquer through Him who loved us.” No circumstance on earth can separate us from the love of Christ, the love of God which is in Christ Jesus our Lord. My, nothing in God’s universe can separate us from Him. Nothing affects His love for us or toward us.

Now, sometimes, it may be that you and I are under a cloud. That may be true. But the sun still shines above the clouds. And nothing, noth­ing, nothing in this whole wide universe can sepa­rate us from the One who loves us with an ever­lasting love.

Don’t you remember that verse? John 13:1, “Having loved His own who were in the world, He loved them to the end”—clean through to the end. And even though some circumstances seem to in­dicate that God has forgotten us, He hasn’t. It’s not true. There is nothing in God’s universe that can separate us from Him.

In fact, Paul says, “We were considered as sheep to be slaughtered” and we are those who “over­whelmingly conquer.” Sheep for slaughter and yet conquerors? Yes, He cannot be conquered. The Son of God cannot be conquered. And where are we? In the Son of God. He has guaranteed victory.

I love that verse in Philippians 4:13. Do you know what it is? “I can do all things through Him who strengthens me.” And Philippians 1:6, “He who began a good work in you will perfect it until the day of Christ Jesus.” And Judges 1:24, “Now to Him who is able to keep you from stumbling, and to make you stand in the presence of His glory blameless with great joy.”

“I know whom I have believed and I am con­vinced that He is able to guard what I have en­trusted to Him until that day. . . . Now may the God of peace Himself sanctify you entirely; and may your spirit and soul and body be preserved complete, without blame at the coming of our Lord Jesus Christ. Faithful is He who calls you, and He also will bring it to pass.” I’m quoting 2 Timothy 1:12 and 1 Thessalonians 5:23-24.

Oh, do you see the impossibility of separa­tion? the unutterable conviction? Think of every conceivable adversary in the universe, and not one of them can separate you from the love of God which is in Christ Jesus our Lord.

Listen to it:

“I am convinced that neither death . . .” Aren’t you glad? Death doesn’t separate you from Him. Death may separate you from your loved ones— from them, but not from Him. You go right into the presence of the Lord.

I am persuaded that nothing in life, “nor angels (who excel in strength), nor principalities, nor things present, nor things to come, nor powers, nor height, nor depth, nor any other created thing . . .” Nothing in all God’s universe can separate us.

I’m telling you, He loves us in death. He loves us in life with all its successes, with all its failures, with all its tests, with all its sorrows, with all its circumstances. He loves you in life, and He loves you in death. He loves you in spite of all the oppo­sition or dangers or demons or powers in heaven and hell.

Things present, things future, things known, things unknown, things above, things beneath— you name it, my friend—there is not a thing, not a created intelligence in the universe that can sepa­rate you from the love of God which is in Christ Jesus our Lord.

God gave us His Son, and He gave Him to us in love. Now nothing, nothing can separate us from the love of God which is in Christ Jesus our Lord.

Listen, can I do something? Will you allow me to run ahead to chapter 12 for a moment? After what I’ve said in these last three or four chapters on the wonderful, wonderful program of God for His people, let me “urge you therefore, brethren, by the mercies of God (by all these things), to pre­sent your bodies (give your body as a present to God) a living and holy sacrifice, acceptable to God, which is your spiritual service of worship. And do not be conformed to this world (don’t be fashioned according to this world), but be transformed (transfigured) by the renewing of your mind, that you may prove what the will of God is, that which is good and acceptable and perfect.”

Don’t you think after all I have said in these first eight chapters of Romans there is only one logical thing for you and me to do? God in His purpose has determined that we are going to be glorified together with His Son; and there is no experience on earth, there is no created intelligence in heaven, earth or hell that can separate you from the love of God in Christ Jesus.

There is only one logical thing for you and me to do and that is to turn our lives over to Him and to turn our bodies over to Him that He might be glorified in and through us here on earth.

Is that asking too much? God gave heaven’s best. He spared not His own Son but delivered Him up for us all. And with Him He has given us everything. Can’t we give ourselves now over to Him so that He might be all in all in our lives, in all that we are and all that we do?

Won’t you bow your head, Christian friend, with me today and give yourself over to God and tell Him, “Father, in all my weakness, I am going to give myself over to You.”

You say that means dedication. That’s exactly what it means.

You dedicate yourself, and He will consecrate you and set you apart that you might be to the glory of His Son.

Father, we pray today that You will take these amazing lessons in the Book of Romans and make them to be a living reality in the heart and life of everyone who has been reading this.

Oh, that those of us who are Christians might give our bodies and all that we have and are to Thee, the Living God, and to our wonderful Saviour.

And, Father, should there be an unsaved one who has read this far, may he or she come into this won­derful, wonderful place of accepting Jesus Christ as Saviour and being numbered among those who shall stand in Your presence, conformed to the image of our Lord Jesus Christ.

Grant this . . . for His Name’s sake.

Amen.

Bibliographical Information
Mitchell, John G. D.D. "Commentary on Romans 8". "Mitchell's Commentary on Selected New Testament Books". https://www.studylight.org/commentaries/eng/jgm/romans-8.html.
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