God’s Temple
Lesson 13

Lesson Thirteen

The Challenge

Text: Romans 12:1, 2

I wish to begin with an affirmation that may be contrary to what you have heard: being a Christian is extremely challenging.  The more complex the society one lives in becomes and the smaller our world becomes, the more challenging it becomes to be a Christian.  It is simple to enter God’s grace that He made abundantly available to all through Jesus Christ (Ephesians 1:5, 6).  It is extremely challenging to be what God through grace made us in Jesus Christ.

 

HHH

This commitment to become is never over as long as you physically exist.  In being the man or woman who is serious about being a Christian, the longer you live, the more you learn.  The more you learn, the better you understand.  The better you understand, the more your spiritual objectives improve.  The better your spiritual objectives become, the more your physical life changes.  The more a Christian’s physical life changes, the more like Christ he/she becomes.  The more like Christ he/she becomes, the more he/she learns and understands.  The result: this progression continues.  The objective of the person in Christ is, consciously, to be more and more like Christ.  He/she is not accidently Christian; he/she is purposely Christian.  That is who he/she wishes to be.  That is the direction of his/her life.

 

In today’s text, there is (1) the challenge of the declaration and (2) the challenge of the meaning of the declaration illustrated by the context.  Consider both.

 

 (1) The challenge of the declaration:

 

With an understanding of God’s intent in Jesus Christ, all of you in Jesus Christ are urged to transform your physical lives.  The God who brought you into being had an intent for human beings prior to their perversion through the existence of sin in human life.  Restore God’s vision of human physical existence which now is made possible by being in Jesus Christ.

 

This intent/understanding can be restored because God is merciful.  It is not restored through the brilliance of people, but through the efforts of a merciful God by His work in Jesus Christ.

 

The human awareness of the work of this merciful God in Jesus Christ results in a presentation to this merciful God of the person’s body (existence).  The person willfully becomes a living sacrifice dedicated to God’s purposes.  In his/her awareness of this merciful God, the individual allows God to determine who he/she is.

 

The whole concept of worship is changed for this person in Christ.  Worship is not about a correct geographical place to which a pilgrimage is made.  Worship is not about a system of animal sacrifices.  Worship is a seven-days-a-week commitment focused in the life the person lives.  The objective of the person in Christ is simple: every act of every day of his/her life honors God by serving God’s original objective in human existence.  God is praised through who the person is daily in his/her physical existence.

 

The material objectives of society do not define who the person is or what he/she does.  Instead, he/she learns a new way to think which results in God’s way to look at physical existence.  This transformation is not the mere changing of a few “bad habits.”  It involves a discovery of what physical life is about.  God’s will determines who a person is and what a person does.  Definitions regarding the purpose of existence change at the root level.  God defines what is good, what is well-pleasing to Him, and what is mature—not “men filled with human wisdom” nor the human societies of this physical world.

 

 (2) The declaration illustrated by the context:

 

The illustrations are taken from Romans 12:3 through Romans 15:13.  This material illustrates what it means to live a life of the living sacrifice which the person willfully gives to God.

 

a)      This person will see and use his/her life and abilities as a part of a body.

b)      He/she refuses to see life in God’s body as a competitive effort.

c)      He/she lives by love, not by vengeance.

d)      He/she is not a threat to unchristian government.

e)      He/she lives by a helping love, not by the patronage system.

f)        He/she refuses to live/act like people who do not know Christ.

g)      He/she seeks to encourage those who (1) believe in Jesus Christ, but (2) who act differently because of differing faith convictions.

h)      He/she uses Jesus Christ’s interest in people to determine how to treat people.

i)        He/she unselfishly helps the spiritually weak. 

 

This is in contrast to:

 

a)      Being the all-important one.

b)      Being the one who must be pleased in all considerations.

c)      Being one who hates enemies.

d)      Being one who was hostile to an idolatrous government.

e)      Being one who was obligated to treat someone else as he/she was directed.

f)        Being one who was controlled by unchristian values.

g)      Being one who must “control” the expressions of faith of a fellow believer.

h)      Being one who uses personal feelings to determine how others should be treated.

i)        Being one who decides the church is better off without those who are spiritually weak.

 

Do you see the challenge?  Do you grasp how being in Christ changes a person?  Being God’s temple in the determination to be a suitable habitation for God’s Spirit is a huge commitment!

 

 

For Thought and Discussion

 

1. This lesson begins with what affirmation?

 

2. How long does the commitment “to become” what God’s grace made you continue?

 

3. What two challenges are contained in today’s text?

 

4. People in Christ are urged to do what?

 

5. Why can people in Christ transform life?

 

6. Discuss how transformation changes the concept of worship.

 

7. What does NOT define who the person in Christ is or what he/she does?

 

8. Illustrate the contrast produced by transformation.


Link to Teacher's Guide Lesson 13

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David Chadwell & West-Ark Church of Christ

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