Romans 8:28-39 · More Than Conquerors
Will My Ship Sink or Float?
Romans 8:28-39
Sermon
by Robert G. Tuttle
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For the key verse in this Scripture reading, like best the King James Version: "And we know that all things work together for good to them that love God." No! Not everything that happens in life is good (much of it is very bad). But when you add all the happenings of life together and look at the whole of life, for the person who has faith in God, for the person who loves God and shares the love of God, that life is good. The whole of life, its ups and downs, are good when we see them interrelated in a life under the guidance of God.

Who would say that the life of Paul (with all its imprisonment, shipwreck, beatings and final execution) was not good, very good? Who would say that the life of Jesus, even with the denial and the cross, was not good? Then why should not the totality of my life, with its joys and sorrows, its victories and defeats, also in its completion be good, very good. Loving God, trusting God, obeying God brings magnificence even to my little life.

Once a man in my church, as he was dying, whispered to me: "Tell them, when you hold my funeral service, ‘I’ve had enough clouds in my life to make a beautiful sunset.’ "

The classic illustration of this truth was given by Dr. Ralph Sockman, long-time pastor of Christ Church in New York City. Dr. Sockman pictured a great battleship afloat on the high seas. He then pointed out that if you took it apart and threw it into the ocean - its plates of armour, its guns, its engines, its anchor chains - very little of it would float. It would sink immediately to the bottom. The parts will not float by themselves, but build them together into a great ship, and with majesty it will ride out the worst storms that the raging ocean can hurl upon it.

So it is with life. So many of the incidents of life are not in themselves good - they won’t float alone. Build these incidents of life together into a complete life, by the grace of God, and such a life will ride out triumphantly all the storms that life can hurl upon it. It’s true, "All things work together for good to those that love God." Or in the NEB, "In everything ... (the Spirit) cooperates for good with those who love God." Have you tried it?

The Scripture continues, "For God knew his own before ever they were, and also ordained that they should be shaped to the likeness of his son, that he might be the eldest among a large family of brothers (and sisters); and it is there, so fore-ordained, whom he has also called. And those whom he called he justified, and to those whom he justified he has also given his splendor."

This is powerful truth. But the question is, "Am I included in all this?" Answer: "Yes, if I am committed to Christ."

Of course, God knows who are going to give their lives to Christ. He has ordained that all who accept the call of Christ shall be shaped by the Spirit into the likeness of Christ. This is so that Christians may be the brothers and sisters of Christ, serving him, being loved by him, empowered by him, sharing his love in the world of day by day living. These are those called to his purpose and who are accepting the goals of the kingdom. He forgives them, he justifies them, he accepts them into the "splendor" of the God-inspired life. The totality of such a life turns out to be good, wonderously good. This is all the act of God. We get in on it when we are truly committed to Christ. He is eternally committed to those of us who are committed to him.

But we live in a faithless age. The people of our nation, the people of our world do not think this way. This being true, collapse is visible everywhere.

Listen to Max Born in his autobiography, Physics in My Generation. First, he accepted the prevailing belief that science was replacing faith in saving humankind. However, he discovers the fallacy in this stance and turns back to faith as the true center of life:

In 1921 I believed ... that science produced an objective knowledge of the world, which is governed by deterministic laws. The scientific method seemed to me superior to other more subjective ways of forming a picture of the world - philosophy, poetry and religion; and I even thought the unambigious language of science to be a step toward a better understanding between human beings.

(By the 1950s, however) I believed none of these things The border between object and subject has been blurred, deterministic laws had been replaced by statistical ones ... I now regard my former beliefs in the superiority of science over other forms of human thought and behavior as self-deception due to youthful enthusiasm.1

Since many prominent scientists are beginning to find their own way home to God, why can’t the rest of us turn from an empty path and find ourselves at home again in God who is like Christ and who is the center of reality? It is only then that "all things work together for good."

I believe, with George Bernard Shaw, "that if spiritual power could be harnassed to material power, man would be transformed into a higher order of being." But this marriage of the spiritual and the material would have to have the proper alignment. If the spiritual served only to promote the material, this would be a prostitution of the spiritual. If, however, the material were brought to serve under the direction of the spiritual, then our essential needs could be met. Then all things could work together for good!

It is said of a character in the recent novel, Morgan’s Passing, by Anne Tyler, "You could say he was a man who had gone to pieces, or maybe he’d always been in pieces; maybe he’d arrived unassembled." The description continues, "parts of his life, too, lay separate from other parts."2 It’s easy to see that this man is in a bad fix. But sadly it is the picture of too many people that we know. There is no integrating center, some power or presence, that pulls his parts together and creates him as an individual. This is the integrating power of faith in those who love God. There is a divine reason for all things working together

The love of God keeps us in obedience to God, so that our character is no longer shaped by things that we cherished in the days of our uncommitment. St. Augustine tells of a friend who was addicted to the lust and violence of the Roman games. With great effort he had broken the addiction. But some of his former friends subtly tricked him into going. While there he was so violently tempted that he ventured to open just one eye, and he was hooked again. For things to work together for good, it requires a clean break with evil. And that we find difficult in a world so saturated with evil.

The New Testament suggests that we be "stripped for action." In our day it is necessary to discover a new Christian selectivity. Why? If we do not, I and my family, like so many other families, will find that we have been hooked by "a fraudulent ecstacy" and have fallen into paths of destruction. For this reason I decide that I am not going to dwell on certain magazines, books, or movies (that are obviously damaging to clean living). I am going to help my children choose a similar selectivity for their own committed reasons. Why? Because these things that are aimed at low life and thought pollute our emotions, erode our thinking, and change the course of our actions.

The temptations of Rome were similar to the temptations our families have to face today. In his intense moral struggle the young St. Augustine cried out, "Will I never cease setting my heart on shadows and following a lie?" When we are giving in to destructive influences, things do not work together for good.

The conversion of St. Augustine came in a strange way. He felt compelled to rush into his room where he had left his New Testament open at the book of Romans. He snatched it up and read: "Not in revelling and drunkenness, not in lust and wantonness, not in quarrels and rivalries, rather arm, arm yourself with the Lord Jesus Christ." He surrendered, and you know the rest of the story.

Let’s get something straight, "God is not mocked." "The Master does return; judgment does come; an account is rendered." Perhaps, "Judgment is the sudden revealing of a long slow process." (Up or down). What is our nation doing day by day through the years? What is my family doing day by day through the years? What am I doing day by day through the years? Surely good and bad will be mixed in the process. But what is the commitment? What is the dedication? What is our faith? Do we really love God and our neighbor? If we do, things will work together for good.

There is the story about a young lady hobbling around on crutches at a Ski Lodge. Someone asked, "What happened?"

She answered, "I didn’t realize the laws of gravity were so strict."

But they are strict. God’s laws are strict. And they are for our good. God even helps us to handle these laws creatively. The secret is being disciplined in love, by the grace of God.

How does it go - this battle between good and evil in our life? Are we winning or losing? Are we making progress or falling back? We can win, you know, by the grace of God. C. S. Lewis suggests that "We are haunted by the idea of a sort of behavior that we ought to practice." That is the pull of God. Righteousness is fulfilled spiritual behavior, by the grace of Christ, released within you.

God seems, in all these ups and downs of life, to deal with us in strange ways. At times he appears to be indifferent. God doesn’t do it all for us. He knows better. Time and again God says to us, "You work it out." Then when we have done all we could, he speaks, he appears, he pulls us through. We learn both from the struggle and from the loving help of God that pulls us through.

At times God speaks, but we are too busy to listen. We do not want to hear what he says. It is contrary to our plans. Sometimes we hear the voice of God, and tomorrow we wonder if we imagined it. Obey it as we hear it and we will know. God has spoken to me unmistakably maybe five times in my life. He has whispered a thousand times. We need to be getting accustomed to the whispering of God. How are we going to fit into the next life if we do not learn the language in this life? The more we are at home with the voice of God, the more completely things work out for good.

For some of us, we find ourselves at home with listening and seeing. For some of us we hear the word clearly spoken only in crisis moments. "He loves each of us," said St. Augustine, "as if there were but one of us to love." We can’t even get lost from God in the crowded conditions of today. If you doubt it, read once more the story of Jesus and the sick woman. She touched Jesus in a thronging crowd. Immediately Jesus asked, "Who touched me?" The disciples answered, "There are hundreds of people around you, Lord, and you ask, ‘Who touched me?’ " Jesus insisted that someone in great need touched him. He paused, until the woman came forward, and she was healed.

We cannot hold to the excuse that we are too busy to be sensitive to God’s presence. An English pastor spoke to his membership class on this problem.

"Don’t tell me that you have no time to say your prayers. Pray as you shine your shoes. While you rub the right one say, ‘Glory be to God the Father and to the Son and to the Holy Spirit!’ And as you brush the left say, ‘As it was in the beginning, is now and ever shall be, world without end,’ and you will be ready for the day." This simple awareness of God makes the difference.

Look at what faith will do in impossible circumstances. St. Augustine was fifty-six years old and living in Carthage (A.D. 410) when he was told that Rome had been destroyed.

To him the whole known world had collapsed, but he responded, "Don’t lose heart, brothers." Augustine, in a vision, had reached out and touched the Eternal. He was not surprised that temporary evil powers had passed away.

"You are surprised," he continued with words of hope to his followers, "you are surprised that the world is losing its grip ... Don’t hold on to the old world; don’t refuse to regain your youth in Christ who says to you, ‘The world is passing away; the world is losing its grip, the world is short of breath. Don’t fear, thy youth shall be renewed as an eagle.’ "

We need to remember this, as we tremble before the contemporary world crisis. We need also to remember where our hope lies. "It is not that you cannot bring together your wounded lives, but that you reject him, him that would heal you."

For the next seventeen years Augustine "turned to the deeper question of the relation between earthly cities like Rome ... rising and falling like everything in time, and the Heavenly City or the City of God, which is everlasting." His book, The City of God, rising out of dark crisis, was directly or indirectly to influence the thought of Christians through the succeeding fifteen centuries.

The City of God is not susceptible to the ravages of time because it exists beyond the dark jungle of the human will. Malcolm Muggeridge, in The Third Testament, makes it clear that God has a man, a man like St. Augustine, for each crucial moment in history, a person through whom God picks up the pieces and marches on with a renewed humanity, renewed by a rebirth of faith.3

The picture continues in the mind of Augustine: "The Heavenly City outshines Rome ... There, instead of victory, is truth; instead of high rank, holiness, instead of enforced peace, caring; instead of (faltering) life, eternity."

In Christ, in grace, "we have a window in the walls of time which looks out onto this Heavenly City." This is the way of life that is good, and abides. "The life of this city is utterly and entirely a life of fellowship." Thus, history and eternity work together for good to those who love God.

There is only one thing that is going to be fulfilled in life and that is the kingdom of God. The rest will perish. Miss that and we have missed everything. "Godless living collapses in the day of testing."

We are called to be God’s agents of redemption for this technological age. The spirit of life and love and faith has not changed just because we have uncovered some of the long hidden secrets of the subnuclear world.

In this let us move from Rome to the contemporary situation, where you and I rise and fall. In a community where I was serving there was a young father. He was not a Christian; he had little openness to Christ. He had a wife and a little baby. He had no steady job, which left his family with a very small income. There was no firm foundation for this family.

The constant questions were: Where will it come out? Will I be adequate to care for them? What does life mean, anyway? What does my life mean? What is this world all about? How will we ever make it? What will we have if we do make it?

These must have been the right questions. At least he knew he needed help. In his fear and lostness he really opened up to God. God opened up to him. He saw God in control. He saw life in relation to God’s purposes. He saw that there was meaning in the universe and a steady hand. He saw where he and his family fitted into a symphony of life bigger than theirs, but including theirs. Courage and purpose took the place of fear and confusion. In his new faith, even all these things began to work together for good. Could this happen to us? Why not?

If the devil is that "long dark shadow" that stretches across the world, then Christ is "the Lasar Beam of Light" that penetrates that shadow and drives away the darkness. By faith we can share in "the very being of God"; we can be indwelt by the very Spirit of God.

A story told in the Readers Digest brings us to a good conclusion. A mother was taking three healthy, rambunctious children to the pediatrician for shots. As they waited a little girl came out of the doctor’s office on crutches; she was paralyzed, unable to walk. In spite of this she was happy and laughing. Soon the mother came out of the office into the waiting room with her little son, who had a withered hand, a hand that he could not use. The waiting mother watched as this little happy family left the waiting room with arms around each other, helping.

As the waiting mother now entered the doctor’s office, she said to the doctor, "O, what a pity! That woman has two children and both of them are paralyzed."

The doctor responded, "Wait a minute. Don’t be sorry for her. She’s one of the happiest women I know. Let me tell you about her. She and her husband met while visiting a mental hospital, where each had a parent. They fell in love and were married. They wanted children. But they were afraid of the insanity that was on each side of the family. They came to me and asked, ‘Can you help us find a child to adopt? We don’t want you to find us a beautiful, healthy child. Please find us a handicapped child, because we know what it means, and we want to give such a child a chance.’ "

"I found them Meg," the doctor said. "They found Peter on their own. They came back to me today to see if I could find another handicapped child for them. That’s one of the happiest families I have ever known."

Such a strange story. But it illustrates the perennial truth of today’s Scripture: "All things (even difficult things) work together for good to those that love God." The parts of a battleship might not float, but the great ship built into one integrated unit will ride out the worst of storms.

Do you dare by faith to risk it?

CSS Publishing Co., Inc., My Burden Is Light, by Robert G. Tuttle