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Discussion Notes
Romans 1:18-2:1
Pointing the Finger
The wrath of God is revealed from heaven
against all ungodliness and injustice of those who, by their
injustice, suppress the truth. For what can be know about
God is plain to them, because God has shown it to them. Ever
since the creation of the world his invisible nature, (that
is, his eternal power and divinity) has been clearly perceived
in the things that have been made. So they are without excuse.
For though they knew God, they did not honour him as God or
give thanks to him, but they became futile in their thinking,
and their senseless minds became darkened. Claiming to be
wise, they became fools, and exchanged the glory of the immortal
God for images resembling birds or animals or reptiles.
Therefore, God gave them up in the lusts
of their hearts to impurity, to the degrading of their bodies
among themselves, because they exchanged the truth about God
for a lie, and worshipped and served creatures rather than
the creator – who is blessed for ever! Amen!
For this reason, God gave them up to degrading
passions. Their women exchanged natural intercourse for unnatural,
and in the same way also, men, giving up natural intercourse
with women, were consumed with passion for one another. Men,
committing shameless acts with men, and receiving in their
own bodies the due penalty for their error.
And since they did not see fit to acknowledge
God, God gave them up to a debased mind and things that should
not be done. They were filled with every kind of injustice,
evil, covetousness, malice. Full of envy, murder, strife,
deceit, craftiness, they are gossips, slanderers, God-haters,
insolent, haughty, boastful, inventors of evil, rebellious
toward parents, foolish, faithless, heartless, ruthless. They
know God’s decrees that those who do such things deserve
to die – yet they not only do them but even applaud
others who practise them.
Therefore, you have no excuse, whoever you
are, when you judge others; for in passing judgement upon
another you condemn yourself, because you – the judge
– are doing the very same things.
Study notes
“Tell me the good old story…
About who’s not going to glory”
In the first instance, this passage is addressed
primarily to a community, not a group of individuals. Both
Paul and Jesus warn us against passing judgement upon others
– because the communities they addressed were prone
to do just this. Communities that feel insecure or threatened
in some way will very often tighten their boundaries, and
increase their disdain for the world beyond their community.
We see this in individuals, in families as and in nations.
A communal heterophobia – a fear of those who are not
like you or do not belong to your community – can easily
sink invisible but strong roots, deep into the communal psyche.
Those addressed by Jesus and Paul both had good reason to
feel threatened, so this ‘communal heterophobia’
could easily have taken hold of the worshipping community
– manifesting itself in pointing the finger at others.
So Paul employs here a rhetorical device
once used by the prophet Amos. In 8th century BC Israel, the
nation, was threatened from beyond – and those beyond
its borders were hated by the Jews. And so Amos opens his
prophecy with an approval-winning denunciation of Israel’s
neighbours. However, at the end of his rant against the injustice
of ‘abroad’, he turns his guns upon Israel –
saying that they had been worse than anyone and should have
known better than anyone because God had revealed himself
to them. This is precisely what Paul does in these verses.
He produces a checklist of human wickedness that nasty non-Christians
are guilty of, a list that many a sound Christian might rather
enjoy hearing – and at the end of the list – Paul
turns his guns upon those who would have enjoyed hearing about
the guilt of others.
From this insight, we might hear more fully
the logic of what Paul is saying. The word generally translated
as ‘wickedness’ is, in reality much more specific.
It is the counter-word to the theme of Romans. The word is
‘in-justice’ / ‘un-righteousness’.
Remembering that these words come immediately
after statements about the justice / righteousness of God
himself, and those who claim to be his people, a deliberate
contrast is being set up. This is all a part of accounting
for why the world does not acknowledge Jesus Christ as Lord
and Saviour – that is, Jesus as the divinely appointed
King who has authority over all other kings, to bring justice
to the world. (See last week’s notes) Why is the world
in a mess and why is God not fixing it, if he is so righteous?
Paul follows the belief that there is sufficient
evidence in the created order to point towards a divine goodness
from beyond the immediate – and displacing worship of
a righteous God with idol-worship leads to some very specific
sins. So Paul takes up the theme of homosexuality –
possibly because it was seen by many as a social norm and
many others as a social evil. Nevertheless, addressing human
sexuality is at once deeply personal, deeply political –
and easily labelled. This last point is of crucial importance
for someone dealing in godly rhetoric.
Paul describes a world in which homosexuality
has become ‘natural’ (and therefore no individuals
are singled out for criticism), claiming that the presence
of such practices in the natural world are as a result of
human sin. (This is not to say that these practices render
individuals ‘sinful’ because you do not choose
your sexuality!) One sometimes has the impression that if
Paul had any idea that homosexuality would become such a contentious
issue that he might have just picked another ‘sin’
to make the same point! The important point for Paul is the
question of who is responsible for these practices entering
into the world? And the answer is simply: those who condemn
these practices! Those who have perpetuated and maintained
injustice in the wider world are the very people who are responsible
for whatever social problems they might enjoy complaining
about.
Homo-sexuality is often condemned because
it is thought to imply a hetero-phobia (fear of the other).
Homos is the Greek word for the ‘same’; Heteros
is the opposite – the word for ‘other’.
But here, Paul points out that those who point the finger
of judgement at homosexuals thereby embody the very ‘hetero-phobia’
they condemn in those alleged ‘hetero-phobes’.
In other words – finger pointers are spiritually homosexual!
Many of those therefore, who first heard
Paul’s letter – would have been confronted with
the thought that the world is un-just because of me.
Discussion
Questions
1. How easy is it, when you fall out
with people, to surround yourself with people who simply agree
with you or who you know will take your side? Can you think
of times when you have done this because it is easier than
facing up to the painful experience of confronting what you
know to be the truth? (If you would rather talk about your
enemy’s hetero-phobia than your own, what does that
tell you?!) How might this be a form of ‘suppressing
the truth by injustice’ (v18)?
2. Are there ways of ‘judging others’ that enable
you to convince yourself and/or others that you are not, in
fact, doing this?
3. Is it possible to love the sinner but hate the sin?
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