Paul is presenting the person and the power of the Holy Spirit as the only way of living a godly life. A true believer lives the Christian life in the power of the Holy Spirit. The personal presence of the Holy Spirit and His gift of everlasting life to every believer make clear the everlasting security for everyone who is genuinely in a new covenant relationship with Jesus the Messiah (in Christ).
I.
The believer’s present suffering is a small thing when
compared with the certain future glory awaiting every child of God vs. 17b-18
A. Paul says, I
continually take note of the fact, I consider, I think on the truth that
present pain is nothing compared to future gain (John 16:33; Rom 5:3; 2 Cor
1:6)
B. One should focus
their mind on the future glory rather than today’s troubles
C. Suffering, not
prosperity, is the normal lot of believers who are at war with the world, the
flesh, and the devil, but suffering is temporary and is a prelude to
glorification (which is a onetime event that happens to us) [Acts 5:41, 9:16]
II.
The earth’s present creation longs for the future
glory vs. 19-23
A. All of creation
continually yearns for the revealing of the sons of God at the return of Christ
at the glorification event vs. 19
B. After the
glorification event, the curse on the earth from the fall is lessened (during
the millennium) [Isa 65:19-25] and then removed [Rev 22:3] vs. 19
C. The created
universe was subjected to struggle and natural disasters when Adam sinned, which
resulted in the creation being cursed by God vs.20
D. At the
glorification of God’s people (2nd coming of the Messiah) the creation
will be set free from bondage to decay and destruction [Murphy’s law and matter
going from order to disorder will be dialed back, cf. Deut 8:4; Rev 20:1-10]
vs. 21
E. The present
creation continually groans and greatly desires that hour of release from the
curse. (ILL. Contraction pains are gone after the baby’s delivery) vs. 22
F. The present
believers on the earth also long or thirst for that hour of glorification at
the return of Christ (1 Cor 15:45-58; 1 Thess 4:16-17). vs. 23
1. There is always
a desire in the believer to be totally free from indwelling sin, to be in
Jesus’ presence, to be reunited with a glorified body and to receive his/her full,
everlasting salvation.
2. Even with justification,
a new nature, the Bible, the Holy Spirit, the believer can still pray, “Come quickly,
Lord Jesus, come!”
3. The Holy Spirit
puts this longing in every believer (beyond Eccl 3:11, “placed eternity in
their hearts,” which is for all men) and gives us assurance that we have
received everlasting salvation (cf. Rom 8:16)
4. We have already
experienced some of the first or earlier workings of the Spirit: conviction of
sin, regeneration, conversion, adoption, beginning the process of sanctification,
spiritual gifting, and understanding of the Word (illumination). If we receive
the first, we will also receive the last.
III.
The believer victoriously awaits the future glory that
he/she will receive at the moment of glorification vs. 24-39
A. He/she continuously
waits and lives in hope, which is a future certainty. Their assurance of
glorification has moved beyond a mere belief to a full conviction—a principle
of life. Our deliverance/salvation has past, present, and future aspects to it.
Justification (past), sanctification (present), and glorification (future). I
was saved. I am being saved. I will be saved. We have not yet seen our complete
deliverance from sin (salvation), but we have seen enough to wait on God with a
sound faith and a know-so hope. vs. 24
B. He/she continuously
waits with patience and perseverance. The believer remains loyal to the Lord
and faithful to the task He has given (Great Commission) as he/she walks by
faith and trusts in the unfailing promises of God vs. 25
1. This will not be
done perfectly; remember Romans chapter 7
2. We are governed
by grace, led by the Spirit and only guided by the moral law to discern what pleases
the God we love
C. He/she
continuously awaits glorification prayerfully with the help of the Holy Spirit.
vs. 26-27
1. The Holy Spirit
continually helps us where we are weak concerning prayer and helps us when we
suffer
2. The Holy Spirit
continually intercedes for us to the Father with communication much clearer between
them than human words
3. The Holy Spirit
continually knows the matters for which we should pray. He instructs us how to
pray and what to pray for as we read the Bible
4. God the Father
searches human hearts and discovers what the mind of the Holy Spirit is about
each matter in His universe (persons have minds)
5. The Holy Spirit
continually intercedes in prayer for the saints (believers= saints/sinners
simultaneously) according to God’s will. His prayers always get a “yes” answer.
This could mean that when we pray the best way we know how in a situation, the
Holy Spirit says to the Father for us, “What he/she meant to request or should
have requested it this . . . “
D. He/she
continuously awaits glorification with certain assurance concerning his/her
past, present, and future salvation vs. 28


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