Romans: Setting the Scene
In Romans Paul is not rehearsing his gospel teaching to 21st century Anglo-Saxons or to a 16th
century Roman Catholic hierarchy. If he had been addressing either of
these he would have framed his gospel presentation differently. In
Romans he is addressing a community of Jews and Gentiles who had placed
their faith in Jesus as the promised Messiah and King, the promised
Savior of the world.
Though he is addressing believers in Jesus he is saying things about
all Jews and Gentiles as they relate to God and to one another in terms
of Jesus whom Paul claims is the revelation of God and his saving
righteousness.
Paul
is speaking to Christian Jews who are part of a nation that God had
chosen as his peculiar people, a nation to whom he made promises and a
people to whom he gave circumcision in their flesh as a constant
reminder of that covenant which he made with them in their father
Abraham. Paul is speaking to members of a nation which God chose out
from among all other nations, a nation with whom God made covenants from
which he excluded all other nations (Ephesians 2:11-12 and Leviticus
18:5) God gave that nation a constitution (the Sinai covenant) that
shaped and guided their lives under his sovereignty and it contained
within it public ceremonies that bore witness to God’s redeeming work
exclusively with Israel (Passover, Weeks and Tabernacles for example).
Paul was speaking to members of a nation to which the OT prophets
promised a coming redeemer, the Messiah—their Messiah [see Romans
9:1-5].
All this being true it shouldn’t surprise us that his message in Romans is shaped as it is.
It
is because the above is true that the gospel Paul and others preached
was difficult for many Jews to believe, especially when Gentiles were
being blessed and many pious and virtuous Jews who lived by the Torah
were excluded. Paul knew his gospel was offensive to the Jews and in
Romans he attempts to explain God’s faithfulness in working out his
purposes with both Jews and Gentiles in mind. [See Romans 15:8-9.]
Suppose
God had made a covenant with George Washington and his new national
children—the Americans—a covenant from which he excluded all other
nations. Suppose the Americans had the sign of that covenant in their
flesh and a constitution that had the will of God for their lives; a
constitution that had public ceremonies that celebrated God’s delivering
them from slavery and setting them on the road for ultimate deliverance
and blessing which he would bring to them in a coming “George
Washington”.
Suppose
that promised one came and went and nothing particular had changed.
Suppose then a little group of Americans began to say that the coming
one had risen from the dead and was now Lord of All and that he was
offering the American hope [spoken of in their constitution] to
the Chinese, the Russians, the Iranians, the Cubans, the Koreans, the
Venezuelans and all the other nations independent of the Americans and independent of the American constitution.
Suppose
that this group said that many Americans were not going to be blessed
with the blessings brought by the new “George Washington and
that those who would be blessed would be blessed independent of the
American constitution that had shaped the chosen American nation.
That’s
something like the setting in which Paul writes his Romans and it is
something like the scandalous nature of the gospel he has been preaching
and will develop in Romans.
©2004 Jim McGuiggan. All materials are free to be copied and used as long as money is not being made.
Many thanks to brother Ed Healy, for allowing me to post from his website, the abiding word.com.