God is letting us know we matter to him (Rom. 1:18-32)

In this brief look at Romans, we’ve already seen Paul’s delight in and focus on God’s good news. God is showing us his righteousness. And he’s revealing it by declaring that those who trust him are also right—in his eyes. Given our constant desire to be ‘right’, it’s hard to imagine any news that could be better—but more about this later.

In the mean-time, there’s something else to say. Paul doesn’t forget his theme. He returns to it, in almost identical words, as soon as he can[i]. But he knows that we need to discover something else first.

Another revelation is happening at the same time. It’s God’s wrath. Our Creator is not content to let us go our own way. He’s not happy with us. And he wants us to know that we matter to him.

Now it may seem to be contradictory for God to reveal that he has a gift for us, but at the same time, to reveal that we are in trouble. But then, it makes perfect sense. You can’t give anyone something they don’t want. And they won’t want it if they think they already have it. And they may be offended if you offer them what they think they have.

So, if it’s good that God is revealing his righteousness, it’s also good that he is revealing his wrath. We need to know what we need.

Paul talks about Gentiles first—people who haven’t grown up knowing about God’s revelations in the Bible. Then he speaks to Jews who, for ages, have had the benefit of hearing what God has to say. 

So, to the first group—to the world in general, here’s what Paul says[ii].

First, God is always revealing himself—to everyone. This is not offered as a proof. It’s a personal communication.

Everything we can see, including ourselves, is evidence—a never ending supply of it—that God is real and present and engaged. So, if we say he isn’t real, it’s because we’re choosing not to know him.

Second, those who reject God must elevate something else to take his place. We can’t exist without someone or something to look up to. So, we worship what is made, or something we make—anything but God himself. And something we can attempt to control.

Third, because we are disconnected from what is real, our thinking and affections become—over time—pointless and dark. God gives us up to the results of our choices [iii].

Paul lists a number of things that would have been clearly visible in the first century Roman world. He mentions impurity, passion and sexual license. Community life is rife with everything that makes it hard to live together—envy, deceit, malice, slander and boasting, for example.

Here’s where we need to read what Paul says carefully. What is provoking God to wrath is not, first of all, what people are doing but what they are believing. They’re living as though he doesn’t exist. Their behaviour is a consequence. It’s what God has given them up to—to awaken them to where their choice leads.

They think they have dismissed God, but what they are doing is happening because God has given them over to their own choices.

And of course, what Paul says about the first century world is happening in our communities as well. The evidence for God is abundant. And so is the evidence of what happens when we dismiss him as irrelevant.

Disbelief in the true God is a majority position in much or our world. So is the idea that we should be free to follow our own passions. And so is the belief that prosperity and happiness follow when we remove restraints.

But the generations that are abandoning faith in God in our communities are not growing richer, stronger or happier. And if we can see that this is happening, we are watching God revealing his wrath.

And, interestingly, if we choose to live without God, we have to congratulate each other for choosing our own life-style. Everyone has an inbuilt need to be acknowledged as right. So, because we don’t know the righteousness of God, we have to create an approval of our own. Only this can explain the constant stream of ‘virtue signaling’ that we are hearing.

We’ve come to the end of this first section. But next, there’s a section, three times as long, to show that we are all in the same predicament. Paul talks to those who believe in God.

For Paul’s first century world, this is Jews. For us, it is ourselves who go to churches, read Bibles and say prayers. I hope you stay with this! Paul will show that God’s wrath, rather than being ‘revealed’, is being ‘stored up’[iv].

If we don’t understand ourselves or our predicament, we may not understand the message God wants us to understand—that real righteousness always comes to us as a gift.

I hope you are encouraged by all this. God is not content to stand by and see what happens. He’s revealing himself—to everybody.


[i] Rom. 1:17; 3:21

[ii] Rom. 1:18-32

[iii] Vv. 24, 26, 28

[iv] Rom. 2:5

God is everyone’s Judge (Romans 2:1—3:20)

We’re taking a quick overview of Paul’s letter to the Romans. Here’s the third in the series—looking at Romans 2:1—3:20.

Paul has shown us that those who reject any knowledge of God, are under his wrath.

But Paul now speaks to people who do believe in God—in his case, Jews. They also need a Saviour.  They have the same problem as those who don’t believe in God. In this case, God’s wrath may not be immediately evident, but it is being ‘stored up’ against them[i].

Paul loves these fellow Jews[ii]. And when he finally gets to Rome, he wastes no time in going to speak to them[iii]. He writes this letter to prepare the way for his visit. Many Jews at this time imagine they are living under God’s blessing, but, in fact, if they don’t know Jesus Christ as Saviour, they are living under the threat of God’s wrath.

We may be asking ourselves if we really need to be concerned with a problem that belongs in the first century. Perhaps we should skip this section and go straight to chapter 3 verse 21 where Paul picks up his theme again.

But this is to misunderstand out situation. Paul spends three times as long to show that Jews need a new righteousness as he does in making the same point about Gentiles. Believers in God take more persuading than pagans!

Jews are the people who have been given God’s revelation—the law[iv]. They know ‘the riches of God’s kindness’[v]. They have been circumcised, the sign that they belong to God by covenant[vi]. They are very different to Gentiles because they have the benefit of God’s word. And, because of the restraining effect of what they know, they are not being given up to their sins in the same way that Gentiles are—not yet.

But Paul is saying that Jews do the same things as Gentiles—a point that Gentiles have been noticing[vii]. So, Jews will be judged, just as Gentiles are being judged[viii].

If people say they believe in God, their faith is meant to be something real, not a performance. But, in fact, these first century Jews are ‘under sin’[ix]. They have become slaves of what they do—as Jesus has already taught[x]. They have put to one side his call for them to respond to God’s kindness and live as his people. They feel free to live as they please.

In the midst of all this, these Jews are proud of their faith and their heritage. They boast about belonging to God and boast about having God’s law[xi]. Here’s the problem. They are proud. They are the centre of their own religion. They are trying to produce a righteousness of their own. God knows this is impossible and is offering a better way, but the Jews are too concentrated on themselves to give up what they see as their right.

They are like the Gentiles they look down on, and so, are subject to the same wrath. The wrath may not yet be evident, but it is being ‘stored up’[xii]. This is no idle threat. The judgement that is going to fall on Jerusalem has already been enough to bring Jesus to tears as he looked over the city[xiii].

So, what about us? Are there similarities between us and the Jews of Paul’s time? Do we have God’s revelation—the gospel? Have we been baptized and recognised as a member of God’s people? Do we know God is kind and forgiving? Do we know how to be good and to keep ourselves out of trouble?

This may look good, but if this is all we have, it is not a righteousness made in heaven. Our faith is meant to be an inward work of God, produced by the Holy Spirit[xiv]. It is meant to be life-changing. Is this what God has done in our lives? I hope it is.

But then, if we are, in fact, living to please our idols, secretly immoral or harbouring hatred against our neighbors, ought we not to fear God’s wrath?

Jesus, in his Sermon on the Mount, does the same as Paul does here. He shows that his fellow Jews are far from keeping God’s commands and are in danger of hell fire[xv].

In the same way that Gentiles can see through the hypocrisy of Jews in the first century[xvi], our neighbours and family can see through our hypocrisy. They know when we love the same things that they love and fear the same things that they fear.

And, in the same way that unbelievers resist what they know about God, it can also be true that we who are identified as God’s people, in fact, live with ‘no fear of God before our eyes’[xvii].

Paul is not trying to be nasty. He’s not merely trying to get our attention with accusations. He’s telling us the sober truth. Everyone has a problem with sin. Everyone. So, everyone has a problem with God’s wrath[xviii].

We may not be feeling this uncertainty, but if we are not sharing with Paul in the relief and joy of God’s gift of righteousness, it can only mean that we are trying to process our moral uncertainty without the benefit of his gift.

We live in a deeply moralistic society. Our tendency is to believe that the good we do should be noticed and rewarded. This can affect us so that we get huffy if our good works are not noticed or appreciated. Why this insecurity? It’s because we are still relying on a righteousness we perform rather than a righteousness God gives.

We need to bring this insecurity out into the open. God is angry with acts of sin, and with sinners who do these things. Believing that we are keeping ahead of our bad deeds with our good deeds is not covering our wound.

It’s not just our sin that’s giving us problems. It’s not just our conscience.  It’s what God plans to do about our sin that makes us uneasy.

Paul has pulled the cover off the problem we have so that we can appreciate why the gospel is so necessary and so good. We are being offered a righteousness we can never produce. But it is only useful if we cease boasting about ourselves and come to God in humility and thankful faith.

David is a good example of where we need to be as those who believe in God. He commits a nasty sin. He knows he has no excuse for what he has done. He’s in trouble. But he knows that God is gracious and may be approached for mercy.

So, David asks God to forgive him. But here’s why he confesses his sin. ‘…so that you may be justified in your words and blameless in your judgement’[xix]. He’s saying that God is right to be angry with him.

Everything we do matters to God. That’s why sin is serious. And that’s why there needs to be righteousness that God gives. Apart from that we won’t be able to ‘stand in the judgement’[xx].

What follows now in this letter of Romans is how God equips us to stand in his presence, humbled, justified, and unashamed.


[i] Rom. 2:5

[ii] Rom. 9:1-3

[iii] Acts 28:16-17

[iv] Rom. 3:2

[v] Rom. 2:4; Exod. 34:6

[vi] Rom. 2:25

[vii] Rom. 2:1, 21-24

[viii] Rom. 2:5-11

[ix] Rom. 3:9

[x] John 8:33-37

[xi] Rom. 2:17, 23

[xii] Rom. 2:5

[xiii] Luke 19:41-44

[xiv] Rom. 2:28-29

[xv] Matt. 5:21-26

[xvi] Rom. 2:24

[xvii] Rom. 3:18

[xviii] Rom. 3:9, 19

[xix] Psa. 51:4; quoted by Paul in his argument in Rom. 3:4

[xx] Psa. 1:5