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Romans 14:1-4

Christian Liberty #17

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In "Christian Liberty #17," Pastor Albert N. Martin continues his series on Christian liberty by expounding Romans 14:1-4, 14, 22-23, focusing on apostolic counsels to the weak in faith. He defines the weak as those who do not fully grasp their liberty in Christ, leading to a conscience that forbids what God has not forbidden. Martin provides five specific counsels: humbly acknowledge weakness, do not usurp God's role as judge, trust God to uphold the strong, do not violate conscience by imitating the strong, and diligently pursue spiritual growth to move from weakness to strength. The sermon aims to foster unity and prevent both loveless insensitivity from the strong and pharisaic tyranny from the weak.

Primary Texts

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Romans 14:1-4 These verses introduce the weak in faith and the strong, and the initial command to receive the weak without quarreling over disputable matters.
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Romans 14:14 This verse is central to understanding the nature of Christian liberty, declaring that nothing is unclean in itself, but becomes so to the one who considers it unclean.
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Romans 14:22-23 These verses provide a crucial warning against acting against one's conscience, establishing that actions not done out of faith are sin for the individual.

Outline 8 sections · 64 min

  1. Introduction and Review of Christian Liberty Doctrine 0:00
  2. Transition to Apostolic Counsels for the Weak 17:05
  3. Counsel 1: Humbly Acknowledge Your Identity as Weak 19:38
  4. Counsel 2: Do Not Usurp God's Role as Welcoming Host, Lord, and Judge 30:57
  5. Counsel 3: Do Not Doubt God's Ability to Uphold the Strong 36:55
  6. Counsel 4: Do Not Violate Conscience by Imitating the Strong 42:51
  7. Counsel 5: Diligently Pursue Spiritual Growth to Become Strong 53:15
  8. Conclusion: Avoiding Extremes and Pursuing Unity 59:32

Key Quotes

“nothing, nothing is more important in life than knowing how to live so as to please the God who has saved us.”
“his conscience forbids him to do things that God has not forbidden him. His conscience condemns him for things God does not condemn him. That is the weak man in this context.”
“Every single square inch of your life if you're a Christian is Jesus' land. Every square inch of it.”
“Because the weak in faith often think they are the strong and the more spiritual.”
“It is presumptuous when a weak brother sets himself up as if he were the one who's really strong. Yes, if he were the real master in the Lord's house.”
“Don't you think that Christ, who's done that for him, can make him stand? Without your silly rules? Without all of your restrictions being imposed upon him?”
“he that doubts is condemned if he eats for he does not eat out of faith and whatsoever is not out of faith is sin.”
“However, it is just as true that no church will be a healthy, unified monument of gospel grace if it capitulates to the tyranny of the weak.”

Applications

Believers

  • Live every facet of life unto the Lord, recognizing that every square inch of a Christian's life is Jesus' land.
  • Humbly acknowledge and embrace your present identity as weak in faith, as defined by God's Word.
  • Do not expect the church to conform to your weakness.
  • Do not seek to negate or usurp God's position and action as welcoming host, exclusive Lord, and supreme judge in His house, the church.
  • Do not doubt God's ability or commitment to cause the strong to stand in the midst of their Christ-centered use of Christian liberty.
  • Do not follow the example of the strong in their legitimate use of their liberty until you are persuaded by the word of God in your conscience that it is indeed your liberty to do the same.
  • Graciously request alternatives (e.g., veggies) if your conscience forbids certain foods, rather than violating your conscience.
  • Diligently pursue the spiritual disciplines that will cause you to progress from the category of the weak into the category of the strong.
  • Do not start a 'click of the society of the weak' to criticize the strong, but open your heart to them and ask questions to grow.
  • Avoid loveless insensitivity in the presence of the weak.
  • Do not capitulate to the tyranny of the weak.

Parents & families

  • Live so as to please the God who has saved us, not to earn favor, but because we have received it.

All listeners

  • Use God-appointed means (preaching, prayer, fellowship) with a view to becoming strong, not content with weakness.
  • Have a passion to please God in everything, even down to how you tie your shoes.

A full transcript is available on the tab. 133 paragraphs, roughly 64 minutes.

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