“Many years ago I discovered that when I was in need of
guidance and instruction about what to do in areas of life, I could sit down
and read Romans 12, Ephesians 4 and Colossians 3 and find specific instructions
that were specific to the point and to the issue I was dealing with,” says
Jordan.
“Romans 12 is always enough. I can’t think of an issue that
I’ve faced in my memory that I didn’t find the clear instructions about
attitudes and actions that I should take in this specific arena that I didn’t
find in Romans 12.
“Romans 12 is Paul’s gathering together of the issue of, ‘Here’s
the description of what the impact of God’s grace is designed to look like in
the lives of Believers,’ and if you wanted to have a profile of what it is that
the ministry of grace is seeking to produce in the lives of people . . . not
just in doctrinal statements but what is it supposed to look like, it’s in
Romans 12.
“Romans 12:12 (‘Rejoicing in hope; patient in tribulation;
continuing instant in prayer’) is really, in a lot of ways, one of those
encapsulized statements, right in the middle of a passage, that sort of gathers
together a description of the Christian life.
“The details of your service for Christ don’t really begin
until you come to Chapter 12. It’s the idea of, ‘Okay, let’s get busy being who
we are in the details of life.’
“Verse 12 is in the context of how we relate to other
Believers. Verse 9 says, ‘Let love be without dissimulation. Abhor that which
is evil; cleave to that which is good.’ In other words, the focus in our
relationship with others is going to be on love. Let love be the real thing. Don’t
‘diss’ somebody when it comes to love. Be genuine.
“I John 4 is very clear: ‘If God so loved us we ought to
love one another.’ Your love for others HAS to be based upon an understanding
of God’s love for you. The reason the world can never love their fellow man . .
. you see the world thinks if they can get rid of the differences between
people you can get rid of conflicts. Consequently, you have an egalitarian
society where everything’s equal. We call it ‘multi-culturalism’ and all that
kind of stuff.
“The only way you get rid of conflict is to get rid of sin. The
only way you deal with the sin issue is the Cross. The world thinks the Cross
is foolishness so they reject the only answer that’s really there.
“That’s why I’ve said to you for years that you can’t abandon
the world that you live in. If you want to have some impact and influence in
the culture you live in, go out and preach the gospel, the truth of God’s
grace, get them saved and then they’ll know and understand how to love people. Otherwise
they never will.
“Abhorring evil and cleaving to that which is good is
essential to love. Love doesn’t mean you just think everybody and everything’s
the same. Love takes divine viewpoint and says, ‘This is good and that’s evil.’
God told Israel, ‘Woe to them that call good evil and evil good.’
“You come to verse 12 and you’ve got this dominant theme now
in love just kind of echoing in your mind when you get there. That’s why it’s
essential, by the way, that you go back to verse 2 and ‘be renewed in the
spirit of your mind. Be transformed by the renewing of your mind.’
“Verse 12, under that banner of love, Paul says, ‘Rejoicing
in hope, patient in tribulation, continuing instant in prayer.’ So while I’m
serving my brother and brethren, while I’m not being slothful in business, my
attitude in it is I’m going to be rejoicing in hope, patient in tribulation and
I’m going to be instant in prayer.
“I’m going to be continually, constantly in prayer, all for
the sake of loving others, loving our enemies as we ought. This is how Christ
is designed to become visible and more real, and frankly more convincing to
those who about us. His life becomes a tangible reality.
“II Corinthians talks about that living epistle. The epistle
of Christ written in your heart and that life of Christ living out through you.
“You see, grace isn’t just a theology and what he’s saying here
is, ‘This is the way you think through . . . that renewed mind thinks through
how to deal with the issues of life.’
“Romans 5 says, ‘And not only so, but we glory in
tribulations also: knowing that tribulation worketh patience;
[4] And patience, experience; and experience, hope:
[5] And hope maketh not ashamed; because the love of God is shed abroad in our hearts by the Holy Ghost which is given unto us.’
[4] And patience, experience; and experience, hope:
[5] And hope maketh not ashamed; because the love of God is shed abroad in our hearts by the Holy Ghost which is given unto us.’
“Our joy, hope, patience--they’re not found in freedom from
trouble; they’re found in the midst of the difficulties.
“Tribulation works patience. So the tribulation has done its
work. It’s taught you that there’s no other place to go but the truth of God’s
Word. Patience is something that sustains you; keeps you there.
“Paul doesn’t just tolerate tribulation; he says God takes
this tribulation and makes it serve you. First, you’re rejoicing in hope. It’s important
to understand what the hope is. The verse is telling you your hope is based in
hope. Hope is the rock in which joy is rooted. It’s the soil out of which the
rejoicing comes. The ground of our hope and the goal of our hope are all in
Christ.”
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