Summary: Romans 12:1-2 shows us five ways God reforms our lives.

Scripture

During this fall, we are focusing our attention on the 500th anniversary of the Protestant Reformation. So far, we have examined the five key doctrines of the Reformation: sola Scriptura (Scripture alone), solus Christus (Christ alone), sola gratia (grace alone), sola fide (faith alone), and soli deo Gloria (glory to God alone). One of the major areas in which reformation took place was in the area of worship. We examined that last week. Another major area in which reformation took place was in the area of Christian living. We shall examine that today.

Paul’s letter to the Romans is a grand manifesto of the gospel, and also of the Christian life. In Paul’s letter to the Romans, Martin Luther came to understand the glorious truth that our salvation is by grace alone in Christ alone, received by faith alone, grounded in Scripture alone, and all for the glory of God alone.

Today, I would like to use Romans 12:1-2 to see how God reforms our lives. Let’s read Romans 12:1-2:

1 I appeal to you therefore, brothers, by the mercies of God, to present your bodies as a living sacrifice, holy and acceptable to God, which is your spiritual worship. 2 Do not be conformed to this world, but be transformed by the renewal of your mind, that by testing you may discern what is the will of God, what is good and acceptable and perfect. (Romans 12:1-2)

Introduction

Romans 12:1-2 are very important verses in which Paul shows how God reforms our lives. It is important to understand that the starting point for God reforming our lives is his mercy. We see that in verse 1a, “I appeal to you therefore, brothers, by the mercies of God….”

The starting point of our Christian life is God’s mercy. The basis of on which he calls us to reform of our lives is his mercy. Paul calls us to live for God, to love God, to obey God, to delight in God’s word, to delight in God’s will, to delight in God’s law, to live it out because of the mercies of God toward us.

Christian living, Paul says, is grounded on our having received mercy. Paul exhorts us to obedience to God because of what God has done for us. He says, “In light of God’s mercy, you do this: you be a living sacrifice, and live for God.”

This is vital for us to understand at the outset. The Christian life is not God saying to us, “Do this and live.” It is rather, “Because I have given you life, do this!”

God’s mercy not only has the goal of seeing us justified before him and accepted and accounted as righteous, it has the goal of making us righteous.

The Reformer, John Calvin, you may remember, if you have read his Institutes of the Christian Religion, calls this double grace. God wants us to be acquitted and declared righteous. But he also has the goal of one day having us standing perfect before him. He begins that labor now. It never ends in this life. We may wish that it did. It’s an ongoing project, it is never completed in this life, but its goal is that we would, not only on that last day be declared righteous, but that we would actually be righteous as we stand before him through the work of his mercy.

Paul wants you to understand that God’s call to obedience must be set against the backdrop of what God has already done. Paul is not saying, “Just obey well enough and God will show you his mercy.” Rather, he is saying, “God has already shown you his mercy in Jesus Christ. In light of God’s mercy, give yourself to God as a living sacrifice. Love God and obey God and love his law and live the Christian life because of his mercy to you.”

Lesson

Romans 12:1-2 shows us five ways God reforms our lives.

I. God Calls Christians to Whole-Life Sacrifice (12:1b)

First, God calls Christians to whole-life sacrifice.

Paul says in verse 1b: “I appeal to you therefore, brothers, by the mercies of God, to present your bodies as a living sacrifice, holy and acceptable to God.”

Paul urges us to present our bodies as a living sacrifice, holy and acceptable to God. He’s telling us that this call to holiness that he’s issuing here means a whole-life sacrifice. Christian living, in other words, means dying for Christ.

Now, we don’t live in a culture where people offer animal sacrifices or other types of ritual sacrifices. That doesn’t go on in our culture. We’re not familiar with it. But, the people that Paul was writing to knew very well the typical practices of sacrifice, so something of the shock of what Paul is saying would have hit home to them. They would have been used to putting something else upon an altar to sacrifice it as an offering to God. Now, suddenly Paul says, “Climb up there yourself and give yourself as a sacrifice to God.”

It would be like Paul is saying, “Here is my evangelistic campaign theme: Die for Jesus!” Now, you’re expecting something more uplifting. Something more positive, like: Here’s Life! Or, I found it! Or, Change Your World! Or, something like that. That is something that would draw somebody to an evangelistic campaign. That would be a positive, uplifting, what’s-in-it-for-me? kind of theme.

But here is Paul’s theme: Die for Jesus! Now you see why he had to start off by saying, “Therefore, I urge you, brothers, in view of God’s mercy….” Paul is calling for us to give everything for Jesus Christ. To put ourselves on the altar and to give up everything for him.

Salvation is the free gift that costs you everything. Paul is looking for whole-life sacrifice from Christians and he stresses that in the very words he uses. He says, “I appeal to you therefore, brothers, by the mercies of God, to present your bodies as a living sacrifice, holy and acceptable to God.”

Paul is not saying, “All I want is your external you. You know, you can keep the internal stuff. I want the external you. I want the body and the actions that the body can do.”

No, Paul wants the whole of your self given to God, so he uses this language of giving your bodies as a living sacrifice.

If I could be crass for just a moment with a familiar phrase. It’s almost like Paul is saying, “Don’t just give Jesus your heart. He wants more than that. He wants all of you.”

That’s a major issue for evangelicals today, because there are a lot of people want to give Jesus their hearts but they don’t give Jesus anything else. They want to live their own way, they want to act their own way, they want to have their own priorities, they want to give Jesus their hearts an hour or two a week, at most. The rest of themselves and the rest of their lives they want to keep under their own rule.

But Paul is saying, “Don’t just give Jesus your heart, He wants more than that. He wants all of you. Give Jesus all of you. Die for Jesus. Present your bodies as a living sacrifice, holy and acceptable to God.”

John Calvin understood that. He understood that in a very intense and personal way. He once wrote,

We are not our own; therefore, neither is our own reason or will to rule our acts and counsels. We are not our own; therefore, let us not make it our end to seek what may be agreeable to our carnal nature. We are not our own; therefore, as far as possible, let us forget ourselves and the things that are ours. On the other hand, we are God’s; let us, therefore, live and die to him (Rom. 14:8). We are God’s; therefore, let his wisdom and will preside over all our actions. We are God’s; to him, then, as the only legitimate end, let every part of our life be directed.

Those are beautiful words, powerful words, but you may think, “Well, that’s really nice, but he never had to do the things that I have to do.”

I want to say this about John Calvin’s Christian testimony: he lived that particular truth. He pastored the congregation of Geneva for just over 2½ years. They got tired of him and they ran him off. He went to Strasbourg and he took up a charge with a French-speaking congregation. And those people loved it. They loved him and his ministry. He was growing and fellowshipping with friends in the faith. They were having a major continental impact for the Reformation.

Then he received a letter from the Geneva congregation saying, “John Calvin, you are needed back here in Geneva.”

He wrote to his friend, and said, “When I received that letter, I would have rather died than go back to Geneva, but I am not my own. I belong to God and therefore that is where I am going.”

The apostle here is calling on us to realize that salvation is the free gift that costs us everything. Christian discipleship means giving all of ourselves to God.

II. God Calls Christians to Whole-Life Worship (12:1c)

Second, God calls Christians to whole-life worship.

Paul says in verse 1c: “I appeal to you therefore, brothers, by the mercies of God, to present your bodies as a living sacrifice, holy and acceptable to God, which is your spiritual worship.”

What’s his point? Christian living, Christian service, Christian worship is not a one- or a two-hour-a-week activity. It’s a twenty-four-hour-a-day, seven-day-a-week activity; it’s a whole-life activity. In other words, the kind of worship God wants from us is whole-life worship. It’s all-of-life worship.

Worship is not an activity confined to Sunday morning or evening. I don’t mean by saying this to downplay the importance of corporate worship at all. It’s just that God wants his worship in all of our lives, in the priorities that we choose, he wants us to worship him. In the restraint of our own sinful habits, he wants us to worship him.

I read the story of a minister who was preaching in Latvia. As he went into his house, a man burst through his door, held a knife to his head, blindfolded him, stuffed a rag into his mouth, and put him on the floor. The man thought he was going to die right there. As he was on the floor, he thought, “You know, I had this knife poking me in my spine and I thought I could die at any moment. It’s always been my practice that when I experience pain in life, to think of the pain that Christ experienced for me. So, I began meditating.”

He was on the floor for forty-five minutes experiencing this attack. And he meditated on the pain of Christ, the suffering of Christ on his behalf, the sovereignty of God, the mercies of God to him, while he was being robbed. What was he doing? He was worshipping God. There was no corporate worship service call for that hour, but he was worshipping God with his mind, with his heart, while he was being robbed.

But it is not only in those extraordinary events of life that we are to be engaged in whole-life worship. We are to worship God in every activity. We are to worship God when we eat. We are to worship God when we work. We are to worship God when we study. We are to worship God when we play. We are to worship God when we sleep. We worship God when we are conscious that we are doing every activity for the smile and approval of God.

Paul is saying, “That’s what I want from you, Christian. I want a Christian who is a 24/7 worshiper. I want you to think of worshiping and adoring God in every activity of your life.”

III. God Calls Christians to Godly Nonconformity (12:2a)

Third, God calls Christians to godly nonconformity.

Paul says in verse 2a: “Do not be conformed to this world.”

Paul is willing to give some “do nots.” You might think, “That’s not good for Paul to be negative. There are so many negatives out there.” But it’s realistic. You have to have some “do nots” in a fallen world, and here is Paul’s first “do not.”

“Do not be conformed to this world.” In other words, Paul is calling us to a godly nonconformity.

Now, this isn’t some sort of a radically subversive thing going on. This isn’t just nonconformity for the sake of nonconformity. This isn’t deciding, “Okay, everybody else in my culture has really nice china, so I’m not going to have really nice china.” That’s not what Paul is after here.

Paul is talking about a godly nonconformity. He’s talking about your life being based on divine norms not ruled by the culture around you. You’re not dominated by the mores of the society around you. You, in your living, have God’s will uppermost in your heart and mind and behavior. Not the prevailing social norms, but God’s will. Conformity to this world and to its way of thinking and behaving is the great problem of nominal Christianity.

Nominal Christianity is big, and so you run into disconnects all the time in talking to professing Christians. Like a father who was in my study one time and wanted me to perform the marriage ceremony for his daughter. She was a professing Christian but she was also living with her fiancé. The father was in tears wanting me to perform the ceremony, but he did not see that his daughter’s life was inconsistent with her profession of faith.

“Do not be conformed to this world.” That is what Paul is saying. Paul is looking for Christians whose mind is not double. It’s not dominated by the prevailing thoughts about what’s acceptable around them. It’s dominated by what God says in his word.

IV. God Calls Christians to Inside-Out Transformation (12:2b)

Fourth, God calls Christians to inside-out transformation.

Paul says in verse 2b: “Do not be conformed to this world, but be transformed by the renewal of your mind.”

The Christian life flows from a renewed inner man. It’s brought about by a recreated mind and heart under the control and influence of the word of God. Be transformed. Paul is interested in the inner life.

When I used the crass statement earlier, “Jesus doesn’t want your heart. Don’t give Jesus your heart. He wants more than that,” I didn’t mean to denigrate the importance of the inner life, because Paul goes right to that in verse 2.

Paul is always talking about the inner man. He’s always talking about the mind or the heart. He knows that true religion flows from a renewed inner life. When he speaks of the mind, he’s talking about our believing faculty, our thinking faculty, our willing faculty, and our desiring faculty, especially those things. Feelings are probably thrown in there somewhere, but they are not as important as the faculty in which we believe and think and will and desire.

He says that has to be transformed in order to live the Christian life. Well how is it transformed? Through its renewal.

And how is it renewed? Through being brought captive to the word of God.

Do you remember the story of Martin Luther standing before the religious and civil leaders at the Diet of Worms? He said, in part, “My conscience is captive to the word of God.” That’s what the apostle wants for every Christian. He wants Christians whose consciences, minds, and inner man is captive to the word of God because the Christian life flows from a renewed inner man.

We live in a world where it is increasingly common for Christians to think that their opinions about a particular matter are just as valid as God’s, or that their opinions about a particular matter including theology are just as valid as the Bible.

Mark Dever, pastor at Capitol Hill Baptist Church in Washington, DC, was teaching a theological seminar at Southern Baptist Theological Seminary in the days before it was solidly evangelical. Dr. Dever was teaching a theological seminar one day and he made an assertion from Scripture about God.

A student in the class interrupted him and said, “Excuse me, Sir, but I like to think of God as wise, but not meddling; compassionate but not overpowering; resourceful but not interrupting. That’s how I like to think about God.”

Dr. Dever responded, “Thank you Bill for telling us so much about yourself, but we’re here to learn about God from the Bible.”

Now it is sad, but you run into professing Christians like that all the time. They don’t like what the Bible says about God, so they come up with an “improved” version. That will not renew a mind. It will not produce the transformation that grounds the Christian’s life. The Bible must be the force that works in the transforming and the renewal of our deepest inner self. That inner mind must be subdued and recreated by the word of God.

V. God Calls Christians to Do the Will of God (12:2c)

And finally, God calls Christians to do the will of God.

Paul says in verse 2c: “That by testing you may discern what is the will of God, what is good and acceptable and perfect.”

Paul knows that minds which have been transformed by the renewing work of God’s Holy Spirit in accordance with the Word of God will be able to discern what they ought to do. You can’t do the will of God if you don’t know the will of God. And you can’t make a discerning choice if you don’t know the truth of God. And so, the renewed mind, according to God’s word, is a mind that is able to be discerning in a world that needs discernment.

Sin never makes things easier. It always complicates things. We live in a fallen world. That means to live as Christians in a fallen world can be a complicated thing and you need discernment, and Paul says that a transformed mind that is captive to the word of God becomes a discerning mind.

Conclusion

Therefore, having analyzed Romans 12:1-2, let us live in light of our new identity.

The Reformers came to understand the glorious truths of God’s word. John Calvin wrote in his commentary on Romans 12:1-2 that in view of the mercies of God, “we must cease to live to ourselves, in order that we may devote all the actions of our life to his service.” He understood, as did the other Reformers, that God calls us to whole-life sacrifice, whole-life worship, godly nonconformity, inside-out transformation, and doing the will of God.

May God help each one of us to take to heart the message that the Apostle Paul gives us here in Romans 12:1-2. Amen.