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Romans 14:13-23

Christian Liberty #18

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In "Christian Liberty #18," Pastor Albert N. Martin expounds Romans 14:13-23, focusing on apostolic directives to the strong believer regarding Christian liberty. He establishes love as the foundational principle for exercising liberty, arguing that strong believers must not cause spiritual harm to weaker brethren through careless indulgence of their freedoms. Martin vividly illustrates how thoughtless actions can lead to stumbling, grief, and even the 'destruction' of a weaker brother, ultimately constituting a sin against Christ. The sermon calls strong believers to a self-denying, love-motivated life, more restricted than even the weak, for the well-being of others.

Primary Texts

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Romans 14:13-23 This is the primary text expounded, providing the apostolic directives to the strong regarding Christian liberty and their relationship to the weak.

Outline 7 sections · 62 min

  1. Introduction and Review of Christian Liberty Series 0:00
  2. Transition to Apostolic Directives to the Strong 8:49
  3. The Foundation for Directives to the Strong: Love 11:16
  4. Directive #1: Do Not Cause Spiritual Harm to Weaker Brethren 26:54
  5. Illustration: The Roman Potluck Supper 43:05
  6. The Alternative: Love-Motivated Self-Denial 51:54
  7. Application to the Strong and Call to Unbelievers 54:49

Key Quotes

“So you will not find in our Constitution a footnote touching such things as lipstick to wear or not to wear, movies to see or not to see, mixed bathing to engage or no, no, no, there must be no forced conformity on matters which the Word of God does not explicitly address.”
“If we fail to see, understand, and internalize this foundational issue, the four specific directives will inevitably become a form of Pharisaic checklist morality.”
“And it is the rule and the standard of love that is the foundation of the four specific directives to the strong.”
“Love is that God-like spirit-imparted grace that moves us to will and to seek the good of its object even at great personal cost.”
“If I love the expression and the manifestation and the exercise of my liberties more than the well being of my weaker brethren I do not love them and my Bible says he that loves not knows not God for God is love 1 John 4 and verse 8”
“You mean there's a possibility if I do this in this way in these circumstances if I go here if I watch this if I drink this if I eat this if I say this I may destroy blood bought property”
“You say pastor that's bondage that's bondage oh no my friend that's liberty I'm so free in Christ from the commitment to please my taste buds and my throat and my personal likes and dislikes that I can say no to them for your well being that's freedom”
“The Christian the strong Christian walking in love the strong Christian will in many instances live a far more restricted self-denying life than the weak brother whose conscience is bound in specific points of reservation about his liberty because a far more powerful motive to close strict careful walking before God and men is love than a little set of man-made rules or the barnacles on the hull of a conscience not yet freed into its full liberty in Christ”

Applications

Believers

  • Do not knowingly, carelessly, willfully, or indifferently inflict ill upon a weaker brother, as love never works ill to its object.
  • Examine whether you love the expression of your liberties more than the well-being of your weaker brethren, as this indicates a lack of love for God.
  • Do not exercise your liberty in any way that causes spiritual harm to your weaker brethren; distinguish between holding your conviction and exercising it.
  • Weaker brothers should not judge the strong or use their grief to demand conformity from others; this is the 'tyranny of the weak'.
  • Before exercising a legitimate Christian liberty, consider the possibility of destroying 'blood bought property' (a weaker brother) for the sake of personal preference.
  • Do not be ready to 'overthrow the work of God' (a weaker brother) for the sake of personal indulgence like food, drink, or entertainment.
  • If we are unwilling to deny ourselves for the sake of a weaker brother's conscience, we are sinning against Christ.
  • At fellowship meals, proactively acknowledge the presence of weaker brethren and commit to doing or saying nothing that would cause stumbling, falling, or grief.
  • Recognize that you are your weak brother's keeper and that while no one should rob you of your blood-bought liberty, many things may constrain its exercise in specific situations.
  • As strong Christians walking in love, be prepared to live a more restricted, self-denying life than even the weak, motivated by love rather than rules.

All listeners

  • Consider getting the tapes or CDs or online material if your interest in Christian liberty has been piqued.
  • Rightly judge ourselves to be the strong with respect to the issue of Christian liberty, if our consciences are free where God has not bound them.
  • Do not label total abstainers or those with dietary preferences as 'weak brethren' unless their conscience binds them to it as sin.
  • If you are not a Christian, come to Christ to be freed from self-indulgence and empowered to live for God's glory and the good of others.
  • Confess sins of careless, insensitive, thoughtless exercise of liberties, seek forgiveness from God and from weaker brethren, and pray for a spirit of love that delights to serve and yield to others.

A full transcript is available on the tab. 63 paragraphs, roughly 62 minutes.

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