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Romans 14:1-15:3

Christian Liberty #13

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In 'Christian Liberty #13,' Pastor Albert N. Martin expounds Romans 14 and 1 Corinthians 8-9, meticulously defining the 'weak' and 'strong' believer not by their overall spiritual state, but by their understanding and appropriation of Christian liberty in indifferent matters like food and days. He stresses the crucial distinction between appreciating one's blood-bought liberty in Christ and the external exercise of that liberty before others. Martin passionately argues that while believers must never yield their internal liberty, love for weak brethren and a desire to win the lost compel the strong to often forgo the public display of their freedoms, even to the point of self-denial, lest they cause a brother to stumble or destroy the work of God.

Primary Texts

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Romans 14:1-15:3 This entire section is read and forms the foundational text for defining the weak and strong, and the principles of Christian liberty.
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1 Corinthians 8:1-13 This passage is extensively referenced and quoted to provide parallel insights into the nature of weakness in faith and the impact of exercising liberty.
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1 Corinthians 9:1-23 This passage is used to demonstrate Paul's personal example of voluntarily restricting his liberties for the sake of the gospel and winning souls.

Outline 12 sections · 62 min

  1. Introduction and Review of Christian Liberty Series 0:00
  2. Prayer for Divine Tutelage and Guidance 4:42
  3. The Context of Christian Liberty: Beyond Political Freedom 6:28
  4. Crucial Background Principles for Romans 14 9:29
  5. Precise Identity of the Weak and the Strong 15:43
  6. Precise Identity of the Strong and Pastoral Observations 27:17
  7. Appreciation vs. Exercise of Christian Liberty 38:33
  8. The Strong's Responsibility to the Weak: Avoiding Stumbling Blocks 46:44
  9. Application: Avoiding Carnal Display of Liberty 52:49
  10. Exhortation to the Unconverted: Living Unto the Lord 55:43
  11. Exhortation to Believers: Grow in Grace and Love 59:18
  12. Closing Prayer 60:35

Key Quotes

“It is a liberty which in its consequences goes far beyond the political liberty of any nation in any period of human history, even the liberty procured for bound sinners by Jesus Christ.”
“And any understanding and application of Romans 14 through 15, 7 that acts as though the first 13 chapters don't exist is dead wrong. It's dead wrong.”
“Paul's decision to use the pejorative phrase, weak in faith, makes clear that his sympathies lie with the strong. We cannot avoid the impression through his pastoral, though his pastoral concerns lead him to keep it implicit, Paul would hope that growth in Christ would help those who were weak to become strong.”
“Christian liberty is an internal thing It belongs to the mind and the conscience And has a direct reference to God The use of Christian liberty is an external thing It belongs to conduct and has reference to man”
“No consideration should prevail on us for a moment To give up our liberty understood in the presence of God, purchased by Christ, that ninefold freedom that we examined some weeks ago, freedom from rules and regulations of men, freedom from all the trappings of the mosaic system as well as free from the devil and the world and sin. For a moment we must not give up our liberty, but, but, many a consideration should induce us to forego the practical assertion or display of our liberty before men.”
“Wherefore, if meat causes my brother to stumble, I will eat no flesh forevermore. Paul says, if it were necessary for me to restrict my liberty to the point where I never again tasted a succulent steak or a succulent lobster tail, I'm ready to go to my grave, a vegetarian, if I can find enough vegetables to give me the nutrients to support my life system. I'll be a vegetarian until I die.”
“Not because I've become a legalist, but because I'm a Christian free enough in Christ to make myself servant to all that I might win all.”
“You see, if this all seems kind of wacko to some of you, it's because you're spiritually wacko. You're living to yourself. You've got the wrong focus of your life. You weren't made to live for yourself.”

Applications

Believers

  • Do not destroy with your meat him for whom Christ died by asserting your liberty in a way that grieves or emboldens a weak brother to violate his conscience.
  • Do not stop exercising liberty because someone dislikes it or judges you, especially if they are Pharisees who want the world to do what they do.
  • Be willing to stop exercising liberty in the presence of a sincere brother with a weak conscience if it nudges them to act against their conscience.
  • If you are weak in faith regarding indifferent matters, do not be content with being weak; cry to God to help you grow strong.
  • If you are strong in faith regarding indifferent matters, admit if you are weak in love, zeal, or fervor for God's kingdom, and do not make your understanding of Christian liberty the benchmark of your spiritual stature.

All listeners

  • Constantly keep before us the principle of abhorring evil and cleaving to good, and making no provision for the flesh, especially under the guise of Christian liberty.
  • Never let go of the unshakable realities of justification, adoption, and union with Christ, regardless of one's position on weak or strong in indifferent matters.
  • Do not assume spiritual strength based solely on understanding Christian liberty; one may be weak in other graces.
  • Do not pigeonhole your generic spiritual state by whether you fit the 'weak' or 'strong' in Romans 14.
  • Judge this rather, that no man put a stumbling block in his brother's way or an occasion of falling. Study the consciences of your brethren.
  • While never yielding the reality of blood-bought liberty, yield up many practical expressions of that liberty for the sake of brethren and sinners.
  • Do not feel that the only way to prove belief in Christian liberty is to parade its extent indiscriminately.
  • Be sensitive to guests and pastors, doing nothing that would cast a negative reflection on the gospel or genuine love, and be willing to accommodate to their 'hang-ups' for the gospel's sake.
  • Go to the gracious Savior, Jesus Christ, to be delivered from the tyranny of living unto self and brought into the liberty of living unto Him.
  • Cry to God that the fruit of your liberty will be growth in the full-orbed graces of a mature, godly, Christ-like man or woman.

A full transcript is available on the tab. 135 paragraphs, roughly 62 minutes.

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