Bible 107 | Return to Syllabus |
1. Paul's Own -- his priestly ministry of preparing the Gentiles to be an acceptable offering to God (15:16) 2. To present an exposition of justification by faith 3. To ask the Roman church for missionary support (15:24) 4. To promote unity among the Christians at Rome. a. Chapters 1-11 lay a logical foundation b. Emphasis of hortatory superstructure 1) different members have different gifts (12:3-8) 2) the debt of love (13:8-10) 3) subject of the longest section (14:1-15:13) c. written very boldly (15:15) d. final appeal -- take note of those who create dissensions and snares (16:17)
I. Epistolary Beginning A. From (1:1-6) B. To (1:7a) C. Greeting (1:7b) D. Prayer (1:8-15) II. Body of Letter A. Thesis (1:16-17) B. Expository Foundation (1:18-11:36) C. Hortatory Superstructure (12:1-15:13) III. Conclusion A. Reason for writing (15:14-21) B. Paul's plans (15:22-33) C. Commendation of Phoebe (16:1-2) D. Greetings 1. To those at Rome (16:3-16) 2. Final appeal (16:17-20) 3. From those with Paul (16:21-23) E. Doxology (16:25-27)
POINT 1: People cannot be justified by their own righteousness. A. God gave up to sin those wicked men who do not honor Him (1:18-32) B. God will judge all men on the same basis (2:1-16) C. The Jews break the law too (2:17-3:8) D. Summary -- None is righteous (3:9-20, esp. 3:10) POINT 2: We are made right with God through faith in Jesus A. Statement of point (3:21-26) B. Ramifications -- exclusion of boasting and justification by works of law (3:27-31) C. Proof -- faith reckoned as righteousness 1. example of Abraham (4:1-5) 2. example of David (4:6-8) 3. not dependent on circumcision (4:9-12) 4. not dependent on law (4:13-15) 5. the faith of Abraham (4:16-25) note: justified by faith is literally declared righteous out of faith; faith reckoned as righteousness is literally faith reckoned into righteousness D. Results 1. peace, joy, etc. (5:1-5) 2. reconciliation by Christ (5:6-11) E. Summary -- death through sin; life through Christ (5:12-21) POINT 3: This does not mean that we continue in sin. A. Statement of Problem (6:1) B. Answer 1. we have died to sin (6:2-14) note: "under law" means "trying to be saved by keeping the law"; cf. I Cor. 9:21 "'within' the law of Christ" 2. we are slaves of God, not of sin (6:15-23) 3. we are married to Christ, not to law (7:1-5) 4. the self leads to sin and death (7:7-25) note: I, me, myself, my -- 25 times 1st person verb -- 26 times (20 not modified by "I") thus 45 references to self 5. the Spirit sets me free from the law of sin and death (8:1-30) 6. nothing can separate us from God's love (8:31-39) note: we are super-conquering (8:37) POINT 4: The fact that Israel has rejected Christ does not mean that justification is not by faith. A. Introduction -- Paul's concern for Israel (9:1-5) B. Not all descended from Israel are chosen (9:6-29) C. Israel was stubborn, pursuing righteousness through works (9:30-10:21) D. Some Israelites (the chosen remnant) have obtained salvation (11:1-10) E. Israel can and will still be saved (11:11-32) F. Doxology (11:33-36)
A. Living Sacrifice (12:1-2) B. Different Gifts (12:3-8) C. Various Exhortation (12:9-21) D. The Governing Authorities (13:1-7) E. The Debt of Love (13:8-10) F. Living for the Coming Daytime (13:11-14) G. Christian Unity (14:1-15:13) 1. Don't despise or judge your brother (14:1-12) 2. Don't cause your brother to stumble (14:13-23) 3. Follow Christ's example (15:1-13)