Lilac City Church Sermons
G.K. Chesterton said it like this: "The poet only asks to get his head into the heavens. It is the logician who seeks to get the heavens into his head. And it is his head that splits." The poet stands at the ocean and lets it be the ocean. The logician shows up with a mason jar. When it comes to God's sovereignty, most of us reach for the jar. Paul wants us to reach for worship. In this second sermon of the Romans 9–11 series, Pastor Brolin walks through Romans 9:14–29 to confront us with one of Paul's most weighty teachings — and one of his most comforting. The answer to the tension doesn't live in the middle. It lives at the extremes: God's full sovereignty and our full responsibility, both at once. Three movements shape the passage: * God's choice is mercy (vv. 14–18) — Is God unjust to choose? Paul slams the door with mē genoito — "May it never be." Mercy withholds what we deserve. Grace gives us what we don't. Pharaoh's hardened heart didn't catch God off guard — God used it to herald His name across the earth. God's choice to show mercy is not about your effort or your desire. It rests on God alone. * Know your place in God's choice (vv. 19–23) — When we don't like God's choices, we step into the judge's seat and take the moral high ground. Paul will not have it. "Who are you, a human being, to talk back to God?" The clay doesn't question the potter. And notice Paul's careful grammar — when Scripture talks about mercy, it shouts (God prepared the vessels of mercy). When it talks about judgment, it whispers (vessels of wrath are simply "prepared for destruction"). This is the old theologians' word antinomy — two truths held at full strength without collapsing either one. * God's choice is expansive, not exclusive (vv. 24–29) — For 23 verses Paul says them. Then he says us. He reaches into Hosea — a promise made to unfaithful Israel — and applies it to Gentiles who were never in the covenant. He reaches into Isaiah and reminds us that even Israel survives only by mercy. Without a remnant, we would all be Sodom. We would all be ash. The shocking thing about Romans 9 isn't that God hardens. The shocking thing is that God includes. In a playground game called Mercy, you had to extract mercy from someone who was hurting you — beg loud enough, hurt bad enough. In the gospel, mercy isn't extracted. It's already been chosen. You are not on your knees before a God who is reluctantly waiting for you to beg loud enough. You are on your knees before a God whose very name is mercy. And His choice — long before you ever cried out — was you.
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