The Battle With Sin
November 10, 2019
Commentary
Having explained what the Law does, Paul now explains what the Law cannot do. The Law cannot set you free (v. 14). Paul doesn’t understand why he acts the way he does (vv. 15-20). What he doesn’t want to do he ends up doing and what he wants to do he ends up not doing. The Law cannot deliver us from the old nature. While the inward man may delight in the Law of God (Psalms 119:35) the old nature delights in breaking the Law of God. It is not surprising that the believer under Law becomes tired and discouraged and eventually gives up! What can be more discouraging than trying to live a good life, only to discover that the best you can do is still not good enough?
Paul sees two spiritual laws at work (vv. 21-24). The one is what can be called the law of God. This law is holy, just, and good. It demands absolute perfection as a standard of behavior because perfection is God’s minimum requirement which is consistent with His own holiness. Then there is an opposite law, which Paul refers to as the law of sin. When Adam fell in the garden, he placed the whole human race under this law. Anyone who ignores this law will ultimately wander hopelessly astray from the truth. Yet most of the universities and schools of our day teach every law known to science, except the law of sin. Yet the fact remains that the law of sin is what really explains why people do what they do.
The “law in my members” is the sin deep within us. It refers to everything with us that is more loyal to our old way of selfish living than to God. This inward struggle was as real to Paul as it is for us. We can learn from Paul what to do about it. Whenever Paul felt lost, he would go back to the beginnings of his spiritual life, remembering that he had already been freed by Jesus Christ. It is the law of sin that causes the eyes to look involuntarily with lust, the tongue to wag with gossip, and the ears to strain to hear that which is improper and impure. With the conflicting potentialities, purposes, and principles of these two laws the believer can sometimes almost be pulled apart. The only way of escape is “through Jesus Christ our Lord” (v. 25).
Application
If I depend on the energy of the flesh I cannot serve God, please God, or do any good thing. But if I yield to the Holy Spirit then I will have the power needed to obey His will.
Romans 7:14– 25 (NET)
14 For we know that the law is spiritual—but I am unspiritual, sold into slavery to sin. 15 For I don’t understand what I am doing. For I do not do what I want—instead, I do what I hate. 16 But if I do what I don’t want, I agree that the law is good. 17 But now it is no longer me doing it, but sin that lives in me. 18 For I know that nothing good lives in me, that is, in my flesh. For I want to do the good, but I cannot do it. 19 For I do not do the good I want, but I do the very evil I do not want! 20 Now if I do what I do not want, it is no longer me doing it but sin that lives in me.
21 So, I find the law that when I want to do good, evil is present with me. 22 For I delight in the law of God in my inner being. 23 But I see a different law in my members waging war against the law of my mind and making me captive to the law of sin that is in my members. 24 Wretched man that I am! Who will rescue me from this body of death? 25 Thanks be to God through Jesus Christ our Lord! So then, I myself serve the law of God with my mind, but with my flesh I serve the law of sin.
Illustration: Who’s Driving The Car
A man is driving with his wife at his side and his mother-in-law in the back seat. The women just won’t leave him alone. His mother-in-law says, “You’re driving too fast!” His wife says, “Stay more to the left.” After ten mixed orders, the man turns to his wife and asks, “Who’s driving this car – you or your mother?” (Eric Snyder – Sermon Central)