Alive from the Dead! (Romans 5:20 –
6:13)
By James T. Draper, Jr.
Introduction: A young man stood with his sweetheart outside
of the church one Sunday evening as she tried to coax him inside.
Finally he agreed to go in, saying, “Well, all right,
just this once. But he’d better make it snappy.”
Robert Louis Stevenson is said to have attended church one
Sunday and returned home to write this in his diary: “I
went to church this morning and was not greatly depressed.”
A want ad appeared in a newspaper some time ago that went
something like this: “Wanted by an invalid lady: a housekeeper
and companion, must be good church woman, must have good references,
must be a cheerful Christian if possible.”
Where in the world did the idea start that Christianity is
a dull and boring thing? Wherever did the idea get loose that
to have religion—to have faith, to be a Christian—a
person has to be a bore, to be a sad, frustrated person? Where
did that come from?
In reality the most thrilling and most exciting thing in the
entire world is Christian faith. The most wonderful thing
a person can ever have and share is a living, vital faith!
No one ever accused the first Christians of being bores. They
were accused of many other things—being absurdly happy,
getting too excited, getting upset, and doing some thrilling
things. Read the Book of Acts. Read some of the words: amazed,
drunk (people knew something had happened to these people
and assumed maybe they were drunk). Scripture reports that
the whole city was in an uproar, that the world had been turned
upside down (Acts 17:6). These first-century Christians were
an upsetting, exciting, thrilling group of people! They were
enthusiastic in their faith, and they experienced some extraordinary
things.
We live in a world that is geared to nervous excitement.
Pleasant pagans pass by this church and other churches like
it in search of some sensation to satisfy their appetites
already grown full of thrills. They shrug their shoulders
and call religion “tame.” They can’t understand
how anyone could really get elation from religion. They accuse
Christians of being religious because we are afraid or timid
or because we believe that some day there will be pie in the
sky by and by. They say these are the only reasons we have
religion.
I am tired of hearing that we are believers simply because
we are weak or afraid. Nothing could be further from the truth.
I am not a Christian simply because I want to dodge hell and
someday skip by and by into heaven. I am a Christian today
because I believe that the mightiest challenge this life can
give to any person is to stand for those things for which
our Lord Jesus Christ stands. These are things that are eternal.
These are things that are abiding. These are things that make
a difference in life and change monotony into adventure and
a meaningless life into an exhilarating existence.
I don’t want anybody to think the Christian life is
no fun. Christianity and fun are not mutually exclusive. I
think the Christian life is fun, exciting, and thrilling.
Do you suppose people ever accused Lazarus of being dull
after Jesus raised him from the dead? I’m sure they
accused him of many things but never of being boring. I have
an idea that everywhere Lazarus went after Jesus called him
back from the dead, excitement followed. He had been dead
four days, but Jesus called him back into life! People had
seen him die and watched his burial, and now they saw him
walking around again. I just feel sure that excitement followed
everywhere he went because here was a man who had been dead
and was now alive.
This is exactly the description that Paul gives in Romans
6:3-4 concerning a Christian’s new life. A man was dead,
and now he’s alive. Paul coined the little phrase “alive
from the dead” in Romans 6:13. The Christian life is
a resurrected life. It is new life, not confinement and cramping
of freedom. The Christian life is not restrictions and frustrations.
The Christian life is one of truth, excitement, and genuine
fulfillment.
Three things come to mind as I think of being “alive
from the dead.” These form the core of the meaning of
the Christian faith.
Dead in Sin
Alive from what? Alive from the dead. This is how Scripture
describes the man who is separated from God—as a man
who is spiritually dead. Most people do not think of themselves
as spiritually dead. Yet the Bible tells us that spiritually,
a man separated from God is dead.
What does it mean to be dead? Though none of us has ever
been dead physically, we understand what that means. When
a person dies physically, we cease to have relationship or
fellowship with that person for a season. We no longer have
opportunities we once enjoyed and cherished. This death means
a separation, an end to this physical life. We know that this
is true of physical death. When a man is dead spiritually,
he has no fellowship with God. He has no experience with God
because spiritually his soul is dull; his soul is senseless.
What does it mean to be dead in sin? Paul gives a description
in Ephesians 2:1-7.
And you were dead in your trespasses and sins in which you
previously walked according to this worldly age, according
to the ruler of the atmospheric domain, the spirit now working
in the disobedient. We too all previously lived among them
in our fleshly desires, carrying out the inclinations of our
flesh and thoughts, and by nature we were children under wrath,
as the others were also. But God, who is abundant in mercy,
because of His great love that He had for us, made us alive
with the Messiah even though we were dead in trespasses. By
grace you are saved! He also raised us up with Him and seated
us with Him in the heavens, in Christ Jesus, so that in the
coming ages He might display the immeasurable riches of His
grace in His kindness to us in Christ Jesus.
To be dead in sin first means to be caught up in the drudgery
of this life. The man who is dead in sin has no aim, no purpose.
He has no direction to go. In life he experiences aimlessness
and frustration from not knowing what this life is all about
or what direction to take or where to place his emphasis.
Though he is physically alive, he is dead in sin. He is dead
in drudgery and tedium.
To be dead in sin also means to have only emptiness and a
formality about life. The man who is dead spiritually can
only go through the spiritual motions. Whether in a church
or not, a person who is dead spiritually—whose soul
is not alive to God—is empty.
To be dead in sin finally means to have spiritual senses
that are completely lifeless. Jesus said, “I assure
you: Anyone who hears My word and believes Him who sent Me
has eternal life and will not come under judgment, but has
passed from death to life” (John 5:24). Jesus was talking
about the spiritually dead. The hour is coming, He said, when
the dead—those dead in their sins—shall hear the
voice of the Son of God, and they who believe it shall live.
Our sins are a barrier over which, by our own efforts, our
souls cannot climb, over which our souls cannot scale, so
we are separated from God because we are spiritually dead
in sin. Life apart from God will not satisfy. Apart from God,
life is aimless and purposeless. Without Christ, man is dead
in sin.
Dead to Sin
Paul talks about being dead to sin. But a change has come.
No longer is the individual dead in sin. Instead, he has become
dead to sin. Listen to Romans 6:11: “So, you too consider
yourselves dead to sin, but alive to God in Christ Jesus.”
Being dead in sin and being dead to sin are two dramatically
different things. What does it mean when an individual becomes
dead to sin?
To be dead to sin first means that a person is no longer
controlled by the tyranny of sin. Sin can no longer dominate
(6:6b). Sin can no longer be the habit and practice of life.
Does that mean you will stop sinning? Ideally it should, but
it doesn’t work out that way practically. Here is the
difference. You may continue to sin, but as a Christian, you
cannot continue in sin. Sin will no longer be the habitual
practice of life. No longer will the believer be in bondage
under the tyranny of sin. When you are dead to sin, you are
free from the tyranny of sin.
To be dead to sin also means that a person is no longer dominated
by the pressures of this world. So much of our attitude toward
life depends on what happens to us. But when we as believers
become dead to sin, we will not be dominated by the pressures
of this world. We will not be wholly at the mercy of what
happens to us. We will not build our lives and the framework
of our efforts around the circumstances of life. We no longer
have to be dominated by the pressures of this world.
To be dead to sin finally means that a person is no longer
a slave to the fear of death. The fear of death means many
things. Sometimes people fear their own death. Sometimes a
person’s fear of death affects his entire life because
he is so afraid to die. Then many times we are not so much
afraid of our own death as we are afraid of the deaths of
those we love. Fear of the deaths of loved ones can become
an enslaving thing in our lives.
But when we are dead to sin, we are freed from the slavery
of the fear of death. The writer of Hebrews says, “Free
those who were held in slavery all their lives by the fear
of death” (2:15). What a picture that is! Deliver those
who, through all of their lifetimes, have been subject to
the bondage of the fear of death. When we are dead to sin,
we take on a new attitude toward life and death. When we are
dead to sin, we take on a new attitude toward ourselves and
others, toward the world and God. We take on a new life because
we are dead to sin. We are dead in sin, then dead to sin,
and finally alive to God.
Alive to God
Here is a man who was dead, but now he is alive (6:11). Here
is a man who had no purpose but now has an aim and a motivation
for living. He was dead in sin; now he is dead to sin. But
there is still more. He has moved from death to life, and
he is now alive to God. Now what does that mean? Why is it
important that we understand what it means to be alive to
God?
I see so many who are a part of our churches who sit on the
fringe and seem to have lost the joy of their experience with
God. The vast majority have been content simply to sit on
the fringe. They have not really experienced the life that
Jesus talks about; they have not really tasted what God wants
them to have. Oh, they know what it means to be dead, but
they have never really known what it means to be alive. They
have built a religion from negatives and are experiencing
a living death, but Jesus talks about being truly alive! Jesus
said that we can be born again. When we have a new life, things
will be changed. I believe being alive to God means three
things.
To be alive to God first means that God has transformed a
person’s life. The New Testament talks about having
passed from death to life (John 5:24, 1 John 3:14). How could
anyone pass from death to life and not experience transforming
exhilaration? Could you imagine Lazarus just sitting around
idly reading books for the rest of his life after Jesus raised
him from the dead? Though the Bible doesn’t say, you
know that’s not what happened. Lazarus probably never
had another bad day or another moment of discouragement. It
just couldn’t happen. Being raised from the dead is
something incomparable. It brings a transformation of life.
Look in the New Testament at a group of fishermen. These
fellows had very little education. They had little ambition
in life. They simply were fishermen. But one day they saw
and heard a remarkable Man named Jesus. They listened to Him;
they heard His words. They saw the sparkle in His eyes, the
look on His face. A lump grew in their throats, and hope burst
in their hearts as they began to dream of a new life, a truly
fulfilling life.
What happened to them is record. It is not theory. It is
fact; it is history. Read about their lives, about the change
that took place in these men who experienced new life. Their
lives were changed—and do you know what was happening?
They were lifted out of their dead selves and truly came to
life. In Jesus Christ they became new people. Old things passed
away, and everything became new (2 Cor. 5:17).
None of us needs to stay like we were. We can be different.
Everything can be changed. We can be transformed. Every person
needs that change, that transformation. Those who are down
and out need it; those who are up and out need it.
I think of Billy Sunday sitting in a drunken stupor with
a group of fellow ball players on the curb near a gutter one
night when he heard singing from a small church. He was interested
and stumbled into the service, where he met the Lord who changed
his life. And Billy Sunday’s ministry virtually changed
a continent for Christ.
I think of John Wesley, a fine, educated, wealthy, aristocratic
Englishman. One day, he, too, met Jesus Christ, and out of
his conversion was born the Methodist church.
I think of many people who have come to a point of transformation
in their lives. This is what it means to be alive to God.
Conversion is that time when the whole person wakes up, when
the whole person becomes alive—not just the physical
or mental or moral or spiritual part. The whole person wakes
up and begins to look toward God. Transformation takes place.
To be alive to God also means that a person is lifted into
partnership with the creative purpose of God. Look at the
first Christians again for a moment. Their lives were monotonous,
meaningless. Then they found Jesus Christ, and their lives
were lifted to greatness.
Many marveled, rejoiced, and even wept at the honor paid
to Winston Churchill by England. He was the first commoner
in the history of England to receive a royal burial. But that
was nothing compared to the honor given to these first followers
who were lifted from the doldrums of meaningless life to be
a part of the purposes of God. What a powerful thing to be
linked in partnership with God!
I have been lifted into partnership with God when I have
linked my life with Him. I can’t understand how people,
who are made in the image of God, with all the rich possibilities
of human personality can be content all of their lives to
throw an empty bucket into an empty well and grow old drawing
up nothing. It just doesn’t make sense when you could
know the joy of partnership with God. To be alive to God means
that a person has been lifted into partnership with the creative
purposes of God.
To be alive to God finally means that a person rises above
circumstances to triumph in time of trouble. When someone
mentions trouble, we listen because each of us at one time
or another has faced trouble. If you haven’t experienced
trouble, at some point down the road, trouble has a date with
you. You’re not going to avoid it. It’s going
to come and be a part of your existence. You will come face-to-face
with trouble, but you do not have to be defeated even with
that trouble. To be alive to God means you can rise above
circumstances to triumph even in trouble.
Several years ago I visited a woman who had more trouble
than any one person ever ought to have to bear. I went to
minister to her, but I went away feeling that she had ministered
to me. She said to me, “I am learning that this trouble
is not merely a burden I must learn to bear; it is an opportunity
that I must learn to use.” She had a radiance about
her. She knew what it meant to be alive to God. Most of us
try to dodge trouble. We try to escape it or run away from
it, but those who are alive to God treat trouble as an opportunity
and rise above it in order to triumph over it.
Have you ever thought about what an engineering marvel a
dam is? As dams stretch across canyons and river basins, these
concrete barricades and electric generators provide electricity
to light up American cities.
Following the path of least resistance, water flows down
mountains and hills through valleys and hollows seeking an
ever-lower spot. But man comes along with a plan, machinery,
and concrete. A dam grows taller and stronger until completion.
The water stops; the reservoir fills; and a lake is born.
But from higher ground the water continues to come. The lake
and reservoir fill to capacity, and the water continues to
push its way over the sides of the dam. From the resulting
spillway overflow, hydroelectric power lights a city.
Life is like that. A time will come in your life and mine
when some trouble will drive a dam—an obstruction—and
say, “You can’t pass.” But to be alive to
God means that in the time of ill circumstance and trouble,
something within us refuses to accept trouble as final, as
defeat. Instead, we have a continuous strength and rising
until at last the water of our experience rises over the spillway.
We rise above circumstance; we triumph over our troubles.
A changed life—that has been the story at the heart
of Christianity from its beginning. It’s the story of
being made alive to God. It’s the story of the stirring
of the spiritual self and coming alive in Jesus. And what
a glorious story it is, a story that the world needs to hear.
The world is dying and needs to hear that story.
You’ll not find anything better because herein is the
complement of the human life that is created by God and now
finds its fulfillment in God. The soul that was dead in sin
becomes dead to sin and alive to God. That transformation
is what it means to become a Christian. Salvation is not just
that we go through the mechanics of a faith and have our name
on a roll and attend church occasionally. That’s not
salvation at all.
Salvation comes as we become dead to sin and alive to God.
Salvation changes our lives. The experience of salvation links
us with the creative purposes of God and causes us to rise
above our circumstances to triumph over every experience of
life.
Have you experienced this new life personally? Do you have
that salvation? You can have it today through faith in Jesus
Christ. Through your commitment to Him, you can know what
it means to be alive from the dead.
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Scripture quotations are taken from the Holman Christian
Standard Bible © copyright 2000 by Holman Bible Publishers.
Used by permission.
James T. Draper, Jr. is president of LifeWay Christian Resources
in Nashville, Tennessee.
This sermon is from Proclaim Online, a free service from
LifeWay.com http://www.lifeway.com/lwc/mainpage/0,1701,M=200276,00.html
The message was adapted from the Spring 2003 issue of Proclaim
magazine.
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