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Absolutely Persuaded Series
Contributed by Glenn Pease on Apr 3, 2021 (message contributor)
Summary: Paul's claim is not that all is good, but that God is great, and He will see that nothing hinders His chosen ones from reaching the highest good, which is the redemption of His soul and its transformation into the image of Christ.
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The 8th chapter of Romans is a spiritual palace of comfort and challenge built for the children of
God. Nothing could be more optimistic than the words we find here that all works for good, and
that if God is before us who can be against us. God has given His Son who intercedes of us, and
nothing can separate from His love. We are more than conquerors. Such an optimistic view of
things seems to be more than we can believe. We wonder if the writer is some arm chair
philosopher who never got his hands dirty, and never knew what it was to suffer. It would be
easy for him to sit in his patted chair and write about life, while his servants bring him his
mid-afternoon snack.
But wait! We are talking about the wrong man. The author of this chapter is a soldier from
the battlefront. He knows what it is like to be hated, despised, beaten, stoned, shipwrecked, and
imprisoned. The Apostle Paul was not writing from a sheltered life, but from one that knew the
stress of constant combat and serious struggles. It is important to keep this in mind as we
consider his words.
Let's look first at-
I. HIS CERTAINTY. v. 28.
He says, "We know" and in verse 38, "I am persuaded." In a day when nothing seemed
certain, and governments can rise or fall overnight, and where text books change their contents
every year, we wonder if we can be certain of anything. We can never be sure if things will get
better, and we never know whether or not tragedy is waiting around the next corner. There is a
superficial optimism that tries to make things look brighter by whitewashing the dark facts, but
no one but the blind can find any comfort in this. We don't find this in Paul, for he never buries
his head in the sand saying all is well.
A news item in a Canadian paper during hunting season said, "Sam Higgins was accidentally
shot yesterday while hunting. One of the wounds is pronounced fatal, but his friends will be glad
to hear that the other wounds are not considered dangerous." They could have gone on to say
half of the shots never even hit him, but what comfort is that when the fact is he is dead? Paul is
not whitewashing the facts. He sees the reality of evil in the world. His confidence is not in the
world or self. His confidence is in God. He could say with the unknown poet,
Yet in this maddening maze of things,
And tossed by storm and flood,
To one fixed trust my spirit clings,
I know that God is good.
II. HIS CLAIM. v. 28. "All things work together for good."
Certainty Paul is not trying to say that everything in the world is good. Paul knows that the
world is evil. He has proof of that in his own body. "He had been to the whipping post so many
times that if he had gone to heaven backwards they would have recognized him by his scars."
Paul does not mean to give the impression that all that happens is God's will. He certainly knew
the Lord's Prayer that said, "Thy will be done on earth as it is in heaven." We would not need to
pray that if God's will was always perfectly done.
Most of the misery and suffering in the world is not God's will. It is not God's will that little
girls be kidnaped and murdered. It is not God's will that babies be born deformed. It is not God's
will that your appendix breaks and you have to have surgery. In a world where God's will does
not fully reign, sin curses all, and all suffer the consequences. What does Paul mean then when
he says all things work for good? First of all we need to know what he meant by good. Did he
mean that all works together for our health? No, for he just said that we groan in our bodies, and
he told in chapter 7 of the war in his body, and in another place of his thorn in the flesh.
Did he mean that works for our happiness and pleasure? No, for Paul was often in distress
and his heart was heavy with all of his cares for the churches because of their many problems. He
had few pleasures and much pain. Paul's idea of the highest good is seen in verse 29, which is to
be conformed to His image. That is the goal of our life, and to that end all things work together.
The path may be filled with pits of pain and trails of tragedy may join it, but God in His