Unwavering Faith” ;
Romans 1:2–5;
There are few questions that have arisen over the course of human history that have caused more controversy than, “Who is Jesus?” As you well know, there is a wide variety of opinions on this matter, but not for Paul. The gospel he preached has as much to do with who Jesus is as it does with what He did. By the second verse of this letter he’s already begun to clarify who this Person is, who his Lord is, and there’s not a hint of doubt in his tone as he writes. For him, Jesus is the promised Son of David and the divine Son of God, and he spends no time at all trying to explain how He could be both of these things at once. Maybe such unwavering faith came easily for Paul because he actually saw Jesus in His resurrected glory and heard Him say, “I am Jesus, the Nazarene, whom you are persecuting” (Acts 22:8). Or maybe his unwavering confidence came from his “out of body” experience (2nd Corinthians 12:2–4) which I assume took place when he apparently died and was resuscitated after being stoned at Lystra (Acts 14:19–20). Seeing the glories of heaven with your own “eyes” must settle many theological questions. You’d think that after an experience like that, one would be inclined to simply believe. But few of us have had experiences like his, yet God still calls us to believe and surrender our lives with unwavering trust like we see in Paul. How can that happen? How can we believe so completely without first seeing the resurrected Jesus with our own eyes?
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