Recentered on the Word
The Why and the What of Spiritual Commitment: Overview of Romans 12-15 Can a single decision change a Christian’s life? I think it can! There is one decision that the Book of Romans urges every Christian to make. It is a decision so significant and with such potential to transform and bless that Paul devotes eleven chapters to preparing us to consider it. Romans 12:1-2 invites individual believers who have read this great treatise on the mercies of God to respond in a way that pleases God and maximizes their experience of their so great salvation. It is a commitment to God separate from the...
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In our modern minds, chapters 9-11 may seem like a sudden history lesson, interesting to some but irrelevant to the discussion. Understanding the great and glorious themes of salvation and appreciating more than ever the mercies extended to us through grace (chapters 1-8), we could quickly move straight to the practical application of those themes to our lives in chapters 12-16. Not Paul. Guided by the Holy Spirit Himself, the apostle to the Gentiles digresses into a discussion of his people, the Jews, who had, for the most part, failed to accept the salvation offered in the Gospel, even...
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Listen, and be encouraged. Salvation then includes the free gift of justification, the process of sanctification, and the future rewards for the sanctification process included in glorification. In moving from “sanctification salvation” to “glorification salvation,” we are moving from what we are to “work out” (Philippians 2:12-13) with a view to future reward (2 Corinthians 5:10) having received “justification salvation” as a grace gift apart from any works (Romans 3:24) to the actual experience of our promised deliverance from the very presence of sin forever in heaven...
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Listen, and be encouraged. Christ’s mighty work on the Cross sets His people free from the reign of sin and death (Romans 5:12-18). His mighty life provides the power to live the life they were set free to live (5:19-21). And His Holy Spirit unites them with Him through spiritual baptism (1 Corinthians 12:13). This concept of being united with Christ is developed chiefly by Paul. In Romans 6:1-10 he links union with Christ to victory over sin, teaching that believers are identified with Christ’s death, burial, and resurrection: The Spirit unites believers to Christ—dead to sin and alive...
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Listen, and be encouraged. Romans 3:21-26 is the foundational passage for the doctrine of justification. All the concepts involved in justification—the righteousness of God, faith, grace, redemption, and propitiation—are skillfully and wonderfully integrated into the most powerful paragraph in the Bible. Justification by faith has been “ground zero” to every revival in church history. Humanity’s ruin through sin and God’s remedy through faith in the justifying merit of Jesus Christ is a message that cannot be restrained. The personal implication of this powerful doctrine is...
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Listen, and be encouraged: In the first hundred years of Christianity, there was no more strategic community of believers than those living in Rome. “All roads lead to Rome” was a common phrase demonstrating that the city was the Empire's cultural, commercial, and political center. To this young church, Paul writes his most thorough treatise on Christianity. His purpose is clear—to call them to a life of commitment by giving their all to God (Romans 12:1-2). His motivation is also clear—to encourage them to make this radical but reasonable decision because they are overwhelmed by...
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Click for notes on this message and to more material and episodes. THE ETERNAL BENEFIT AND VITAL ROLE OF COMMUNITY: Spiritual maturity sets us on a path to realize our destiny, which we were made new in Christ to accomplish (Ephesians 2:8-10). It’s a winding path following a continual process best described by Paul in Philippians 3. In the maturing process, Paul describes an awareness of a value system changing dramatically because of who he now was in Christ: Those who walk in the Spirit glorify God in their liberty. Freedom from the Mosaic Law does not mean freedom from responsibility....
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Click for notes on this message and to more material and episodes. The Eternal Benefit of Spiritual Maturity: Spiritual maturity sets us on a path to realize our destiny, which we were made new in Christ to accomplish (Ephesians 2:8-10). It’s a winding path following a continual process described by Paul in Philippians 3. In Paul’s process of maturing, he describes an awareness of his value system changing dramatically because of who he now was in Christ: God has a specific destiny for your life. It is always greater than your capacities and goals.
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Results of Living by the Spirit from Galatians 5 Click for notes on this message and to more material and episodes. Those Christians who live by the Spirit display Christ’s selfless love, not by following the law but by having crucified the flesh (5:22-24). This is the true fruit of liberty—love. We have been set free to live by the Spirit to love with the type of love characterized by the eight characteristics listed (22-23). Since the law was given to constrain the flesh, there’s no need for the law when we live by the Spirit (23b). When we trusted in Christ, the power of the...
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Christ set us free to mature and love others. Click for notes on this message and to more material and episodes. Liberty leads to maturity; legalism leads to immaturity. Even one legalistic rule, regulation, or preoccupation derails the work of the Spirit in your life to make you more like Christ. What is a rule, regulation, or preoccupation that you feel you are most vulnerable to following to “become righteous” due to your home, church, or religious culture of origin? Liberty leads to unity; legalism leads to disunity. What do you feel is a non-biblical “standard of righteousness”...
info_outlineIn the final episode of season one Ed Underwood answers questions about the series and Recentered Group’s ministry.
The statistics are devastating. Church leadership is in crisis. Recentered Group is focused on changing that, one pastor at a time. By focusing on The Great Commandment and the Great Commission, we are devoted to helping churches become healthy so that discipleship can thrive.
We trust this series on Acts has encouraged you as we studied how the early church exploded from a small group of believers to a worldwide movement.
Thank you for listening to the inaugural season of Recentered on the Word. Our next season, “The Good News About Spiritual Maturity,” will begin in January 2025.