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Xchange - Discussion Notes

Romans Study 5 : Romans 7.21-25
Emotional Intelligence

So when I want to do what is good, I find a law at work that determines that right then, evil is close at hand. Now I delight in the law of God with every ounce of my being, but I feel in my bones another law, waging war with the law of my mind. It imprisons me in the law of sin that runs right down to my bones. I am a detestable man. Who will rescue me from this body of death? Thank God through Jesus Christ our Lord.

So then, the real me (an heir of Israel), with my mind, am a slave to God’s law, but with my flesh I am a slave to the law of sin.

Paul is a Jew of Jews, immersed in Torah – the Jewish law. It was not merely a book that was taken with utmost seriousness, so much as a lens for interpreting all that happened in the world, with the intention of seeing oneself and the world through God’s eyes.

This short paragraph summarises all that Paul has so far been arguing about the monstrous gravity of human sin that sucks all humanity into a fatal black hole of unity with Adam. What power did the law have? It is as fallen as those it sought to guide!

But surely, it is God’s law, and so cannot be fallen. There is an important point to make here about biblical interpretation: that we only interpret any text by ‘actualising’ it, making it real in our daily life. Our lives are the enacted interpretation of the texts that we truly honour, be they the Bible, or some Ideology, or the quiet dictates of today’s Empire. Whilst God’s law is good in itself, it is still nevertheless external to who I really am. (Hence Jeremiah longing for the day when God would ‘write his law on our hearts). So there is this good law which is external to us, which we seek to measure up to; then there is the bad side of Torah, that all it seems to achieve is highlight how sinful we really are.

The two different aspects of law that Paul is talking about, are not two different laws, but two different dimensions of God’s good law. Perhaps a modern day example is to listen to Christians with powerful testimonies, being saved from crime or witchcraft or war. And genuine and exciting and liberating as such testimonies are, the effect that they often have upon Christians can also be extremely negative: ‘I could never have that kind of testimony’, or ‘I could never be that good as a Christian’. It can leave us feeling that our own, unremarkable conversion stories are second rate. So the dramatic testimony is good, but actually it is also bad – it leaves me realising how poor my Christian life is.

The Law as Paul describes it, has this dual characteristic. As something ‘out there’ to measure up to – it is good and I try to embrace it. But, in my inmost being, as I try to live according to this law, as I try to ‘internalise’ it, sin takes over and this great law becomes ‘sin’ once it is part of my life.

So Paul is left with this awful moral struggle. He is desperate to be this great channel of Grace that the law requires and inspires and encourages us to be, - but when it comes to it, he – even as a good Jew – is united with Adam in sin, and the negative side of the law condemns him. In the end, Paul is left simply recognising that he needs to be saved.

One of the greatest philosophers of the 20th century, who also happened to be an atheist and a Nazi, had argued much the same – that we need and long to be agents of grace – but we are helplessly fallen. At the end of his life, Martin Heidegger threw his hands up in despair and claimed, ‘only a God can save us’.

Ethically, ‘biological determinism’ – which says that we are shaped entirely by our physical needs and therefore destined to be selfish – claims the same thing as Paul is saying at this point. That we have the capacity only for utter self-centredness. There is no escape.

Recognition of this reality is a necessary part of emotional intelligence. Instead of whitewashing our human plight and our personal experiences with up-beat moods or a positive attitude – the emotional intelligence of Paul and of the philosophers – requires us to face up to the horror of our actual plight in the world.

But Paul then moves to talk about our liberation. What the philosophers and moralists lack is grace – Jesus Christ reaches into our world to save us from this inescapable cycle of sin that leads to death. There is no shortcut to this insight for Paul, just as there is no short cut to resurrection that short-circuits death. Paul has outlined the sheer negativity of our actual plight before any good news of any worth can be seen to have any real effect. But Paul closes this section, not with a note of hopeless despair but of sheer gratitude.

Discussion Questions:

1. How might we today idolise the bible, in order to protect ourselves from a genuine encounter with the God who addresses us through Scripture?

2. In what ways might we shy away from facing up to the depths of human evil, or our own sin, or of the dark situation that faces the church or the world? Can we think of examples of premature attempts to be positive that have prevented us from getting to the heart of a situation?

3. Do you ever find yourself in a purely negative world, sharing the despair of the philosopher, or the gloomy outlook of the ‘determinists’: that is, simply experiencing all the ravages of sin without a genuine encounter of salvation here and now? Should we always expect such an experience ‘here and now’?


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