Book Segment
Freedom from the Law
The relationship between law, sin, and the Christian, including the struggle with remaining sin
"Baptism into Christ's death and resurrection creates a new identity — we are no longer slaves to sin. 'Count yourselves "
Romans 6:11
Background
Romans 6-8 addresses sanctification — living out what justification declares. The famous 'shall we sin that grace may increase?' objection (6:1) is answered by the 'death to sin, alive to God' principle — baptism into Christ's death and resurrection creates a new identity. Chapter 7's 'I do not do what I want but do what I hate' is the most debated passage in Romans — is it pre-Christian, Christian, or Paul's mature experience? Chapter 8 is the climax: no condemnation in Christ, the Spirit's work in the believer, the creation's groaning, and the golden chain of Romans 8:29-30 — predestination through glorification.
Story Plot
Dead to Sin, Alive to God (Romans 6)
Romans 6:11Baptism into Christ's death and resurrection creates a new identity — we are no longer slaves to sin. 'Count yourselves dead to sin but alive to God in Christ Jesus.'
The Struggle of Romans 7
Romans 7:24The wretched man 'who will rescue me from this body of death?' — whether pre-Christian or post-conversion, this passage validates the experience of ongoing moral struggle.
No Condemnation in Christ (Romans 8:1)
Romans 8:1'Therefore, there is now no condemnation for those who are in Christ Jesus' — the golden opening of the NT's most triumphant chapter.
Characters
The Spirit-Indwelt Believer
The New Creation
Romans 8 paints the portrait of the believer in the Spirit — not in debt to the flesh, led by the Spirit, assured of adoption, and groaning toward final glory.
Theological Themes
The Spirit-Led Life
Romans 8 presents the Holy Spirit as the agent of sanctification — leading, adopting, assuring, helping, and ultimately bringing the believer into final glory.
Those who are led by the Spirit of God are the children of God (Romans 8:14).
Life Lessons
Identity (who we are in Christ) is the foundation of sanctification — 'count yourselves dead to sin' is a matter of understanding, not feeling.
Romans 7's wretched man passage validates that ongoing moral struggle is not evidence of gracelessness — even Paul experienced the gap between aspiration and performance.
No condemnation (8:1) is not conditional on performance — it is the permanent legal status of those who are in Christ Jesus.
The Spirit's intercession through wordless groans assures us that our prayer is supported even when we can find no adequate words.
Modern Applications
Romans 8's 'no condemnation' is the most important pastoral text for guilt-burdened Christians — the courtroom of condemnation is permanently closed.
The golden chain of Romans 8:29-30 (foreknown, predestined, called, justified, glorified) is the foundation of Calvinist soteriology and the comfort of perseverance.
Romans 7's identification with ongoing struggle has been used in recovery contexts — the recognition that willpower alone cannot solve the problem is Paul's point.
Romans 8:28 ('all things work together for good') is the most used comfort verse in Christian care — its context (suffering + Spirit + groaning + hope) matters enormously.
A Prayer for Reflection
Heavenly Father, as we reflect on Freedom from the Law in Romans, open our hearts to receive the truth You have embedded in these chapters. Help us to see not merely historical events but Your living word speaking to our present reality. Where we are confused, bring clarity; where we are discouraged, bring hope; where we are proud, bring humility. May the lessons of Freedom from the Law take root in us and bear fruit in how we love You and serve others. In Jesus' name, Amen.