032 罗马书7章14至17 基督徒的痛苦与挣扎

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032 罗马书7章14至17 基督徒的痛苦与挣扎

    • 小孩子: 我以前问一个孩子为什么犯罪?他回答因为撒旦弄我犯罪。他确实认为不是他做的,因为他心里不想犯罪。如果他不想犯罪,却又去行。那么为什么他会这样?don’t answer first
    • 罗 7:14 我们知道律法是属灵的…
    • “我们知道”:表示这件事是基督徒们都应当知道律法是属灵的
    • 律法是圣洁;诫命是圣洁、公义、良善的 (V12)
    • “律法是属灵”表示律法是属于圣灵[1] (林前2:13)
    • “属灵”表示律法源自圣洁、公义、良善的神

    • 罗 7:14 …我却是属肉体的,已经卖给罪了。
    • V14-25 保罗写“我”,因他在表述自己的经历。
    • 问:到底他是在讲几时发生的事?(有很多不同解释)[2]
    • 问:保罗是在描述他信主前,还是信主后?
    • e.g.早期教父们都有不同的解释
    • 比较有可能的,我认为有2种解释:
    • 保罗未信主前的经历
    • e.g.一些早期希腊教父,如俄利根认为不可能是指信主后的保罗[3]
    • 信主的基督徒不再属肉体了[4]
    • 罗7:5  我们从前属肉体σάρξ  sarx的时候,…
    • 罗8:9  ..你们就不属肉体σάρξ  sarx,乃属圣灵了…
    • 基督徒不可能被卖给罪
    • (6:6)不再作罪的奴仆
    • (6:14)不再罪的权势之下
    • (6:18)罪里得了释放
    • 问:如果保罗是讲信主后,不是已经被赎出来?怎么可能是卖给罪?

    • 保罗信主后的经历[5]
    • 奥古斯丁后来解释这是保罗信主后的经历(加尔文与路德也是)
    • V14b-25 保罗继续写“我”从14节开始使用现在时态present tense,来表达现在的他[6]
    • 信主前保罗认为自己按律法是无可指摘(腓3:6)(对比 罗7:18 在我肉体之中,没有良善)
    • 信主前的保罗没有与罪痛苦、与失败的经历(14-25)。[7]
    • (信主后)罗7:22 按着我里面的人来说,我是喜欢上帝的律 (对比 罗8:7 与上帝为仇)
    • 基督徒们经历到罪的挣扎、痛苦与失败

    • 问:请问你们认为保罗讲的是信主前还是信主后的他?
    • 答: 我个人认为保罗是在描述他信主后所经历的。[8]
    • 问:那么为何保罗说他属肉体[9]?他卖给罪了?

    • 罗 7:14…我却是属肉体σαρκικός [10](形容词)sarkikos(BGT[11] σάρκινος is here also parallel to σάρκικος refer 1 corin3:1 comp 1corin3:3)
    • 因为中文翻译看不见不同之处,所以必须使用原文解释
    • 保罗讲属肉体敌对神(罗8:5-9) ,使用的是 σάρξ {sarx} (名词)
    • σάρξ 也可翻译成人的身体。
    • 使用 σάρξ 表达敌对圣灵时[12] = 敌对神未信主的状态
    • σαρκικός 能翻译成 A: 地上的物(罗15:27、林前9:11) B: 意思是属肉体般的生活 fleshy(林前3:1-3、彼前2:11)、C: 人、人的肉身的意思 (林后10:4、来7:16)
    • 7:14 σαρκικός BYZ text(形容词)不是指他属肉体敌对神的状态[13] (林前3:1-3、彼前2:11) σάρκινος BNT
    • 保罗要对比:律法是属灵,但他保罗还是会犯罪
    • 按圣洁律法的完美标准,他是过属肉体般的生活(参:林前3:1-3 σαρκικός)
    • 我们的肉体[14]:全人[15](立志、情感、意志),都被罪影响[16]
    • 直到我们的身体(全人)被赎、得复活得荣耀的身体 (罗8:21-23)
    • e.g.有时我们犯罪违背神时:“我是人,有血有肉的人”!

    • V14  我们知道律法是属灵的,我却是属肉体的,已经卖给罪了[17]
    • 问:保罗为什么指他是卖给罪了?[18]
    • 问:之前不是说信主后不再是罪的奴隶吗?(罗6:17、20)
    • 问:不是已经从罪里得了释放?(罗6:18)
    • 罗 6:18 你们既从罪里得了释放,就作了义的奴仆。
    • 注:保罗不是说他得了新生命后把自己卖给罪,而是他早已经被卖了![19]
    • 问:6章讲已被释放、7章讲他已经被卖sold。如何调节?
    • 问:到底是已经被释放了?还是已经被卖?
    • 基督徒是处于这种已然、未然的情景 already and not yet
    • e.g.基督徒信主已经得永生(约壹5:13、弗2:6),但还没完全实现
    • e.g.上帝的国度已经在地上开始(太12:28、罗14:17),但还没完全降临
    • e.g.妇女怀孕第8月时,她对腹中儿子说“妈妈爱你”。她已经是妈妈却还没有完全成为妈妈。
    • e.g.清教徒 remnant of sin 残余的罪[20]存留在我们里面
    • e.g.叛军已经被浇灭,势力被瓦解了。但有一些残留的叛军躲在森林里随时突击。

    • impl 如果信徒只知道被释放了、有新生命。可能会以为自己能够完全活出神的诫命
    • 但当他努力顺服神时、必然还会失败,那时因他的误解他可能会怀疑主
    • 保罗要告诉我们信主后,我们(肉体:全人)依然是受罪的影响。
    • 诗51:3 因为我知道我的过犯;我的罪常在我面前。4  我得罪了你,唯独得罪你;我行了你眼中看为恶的事,因此,你宣判的时候,显为公义;你审判的时候,显为清正。5  看哪,我是在罪孽里生的;我母亲在罪中怀了我。
    • 问:不信主之人,会像大卫这样祷告吗?
    • 重生信主,得了新生命后,心里顺服神
    • 得了新生命后,会经历失败,看见为何我们还会违背神
    • 接下来(V23),保罗要解释我们信主之人一生所要面对的征战

    • V15 因为我所作的,我不明白;…
    • 保罗描述他自己的矛盾,愿意却不去作,恨恶倒去作。
    • 问:为什么说不明白他所作的?
    • 保罗当然知道原因:“罪活在我们里面”(V17)
    • 保罗表达了他无奈的感受。
    • e.g.有人问你不是爱主吗?为什么却违背主? 你回答:我也不明白自己为什么这样

    • V15…我所愿意的,我没有去作,我所恨恶的,我倒去作。
    • 重生后,我们恨恶违背神,但我们却去行
    • e.g. 诸般的贪心在我里头发动 (7:8)
    • e.g.我应当要爱人如己,但我却不愿意去爱那个人
    • 越是想过圣洁生活、,越是经历到保罗所经历的
    • V16 如果我所不愿意的,我倒去作,我就不得不承认律法是好【善】的。
    • 心里渴慕顺服神,但却犯罪违背神
    • 保罗说:我就不得不承认律法是好【善】的

    • V17  既是这样,那就不是我作的,而是住在我里面的罪作的。
    • e.g.我以前问一个孩子为什么犯罪?他回答因为撒旦弄我犯罪。他确实认为不是他做的,因为他心里不想犯罪。如果他不想犯罪,却又去行。那么为什么他会这样?原来“罪活在他里面”是罪造成他犯罪违背神。
    • “不是我”保罗不是在推卸责任!
    • 他要表达,他爱主却违背主,是因为罪住在他里面。
    • e.g.有时人借口拒绝信耶稣。那人信了耶稣后,还是一样
    • 问:这种误解是否是因我们没有传福音,而是传人的好行为?
    • e.g.这人以前吸毒,信主后不在吸毒了
    • e.g.以前是黑社会,信主后变好了
    • 回应:我们信耶稣因为我们是糟糕有罪的人,所以我们需要耶稣为我们上十字架。

    • 保罗绝对不是为了找借口纵容自己!!
    • 他把内心的痛苦、与挣扎记载下来教导我们
    • 圣洁的保罗,无论多么努力,都有失败的时候
    • 让我们明白为什么,有了新生命后、从罪释放后,为什么还会违背神
    • 越是爱主,越是能够体验经历保罗所说的
    • 来到第八章保罗会告诉我们靠圣灵治死身体的罪行 (罗8:13)
    • 有福:你们若是感受到保罗所说的,你么是有福的
    • 有福:这是因为你已经得到新生命。所以你会挣扎、痛苦。

总结:

    • 从罪中被释放,有新生命的基督徒,依然有罪住在我们里面
    • 重生信主后,我们会经历与罪的挣扎与痛苦


[1] “Spiritual” is derived from the Holy Spirit. “Spiritual words” (1 Cor. 2:13) are words taught of the Holy Spirit. The “Spiritual man” (1 Cor. 2:15) is the man indwelt and controlled by the Holy Spirit. “Spiritual songs” (Eph. 5:19; Col. 3:16) are songs indited by the Holy Spirit. “Spiritual understanding” (Col. 1:9) is the understanding imparted by the Holy Spirit (cf. also Rom. 1:11; 1 Cor. 3:1; 10:3, 4; 12:1; 15:44, 46; 1 Pet. 2:5). Hence the statement, “the law is Spiritual” refers to its divine origin and character. Since it is Spiritual it is possessed of those qualities which are divine—holy, just, and good.Murray, J.

[2] 7:14–25 The sudden change to the present tense in vv. 15–25, by contrast with the statements describing the past in vv. 7–13, raises the question whether Paul is now describing his present experience. A variety of interpretations exists, including the following: (a)  Paul is describing the unregenerate person or perhaps the Jew in particular from the standpoint of the gospel; (b)  Paul is describing a Christian in an unnatural and unhealthy spiritual condition, one failing to draw on the indwelling Spirit’s resources; (c)  Paul is describing the transitional experience, possibly his own, of one who has been awakened to his true spiritual need, but has not yet entered a full experience of justification by faith; (d)  Paul is describing himself and Christians generally who, although in Christ and free from the condemnation of the law, do not yet perfectly fulfill the requirements of the law. The last view is the most probable interpretation. It accounts for Paul’s shift to the present tense while his theme in vv. 7–25 (God’s holy law stimulating and exposing sin) continues, and for the presence in Paul’s self-analysis here of elements found only in persons who have been united with the risen Christ to new life in the Spirit (6:4–11; 7:6; 8:4–9). Paul is aware that God’s law is “spiritual” (v. 14). He actually delights in God’s law, desiring to fulfill it perfectly (vv. 15–23), and he is distressed that sin in him opposes that desire. He is grateful at the prospect of future deliverance from this frustration (v. 24; 8:23). He distinguishes between his “mind,” which aims at obedience, and his “flesh,” which continues to sin (v. 25). All of these observations show that Paul is describing his experience as a new man in Christ.Paul is actually describing a profound conflict that every Christian finds inherent in his life in Christ: Christ dwells in him (Gal. 2:20), yet sin also dwells in him (vv. 17, 20). Perfect conformity to God’s will is at present out of his reach. Salvation has “already” and “not yet” dimensions.It is important to remember that Paul is still discussing the role of the law. He highlights the frustrations of the present Christian experience simply to show how, for Christians as for Jews, God’s good law provokes, exposes, and condemns sin without either being tainted by it or bringing deliverance from it. Reformation Study Bible

[3] ORIGEN: Someone who is carnal and sold under sin does not know that the law is spiritual, so how can Paul say this of himself? In fact, when he says that he is carnal and sold under sin he is playing the part of a teacher of the church by taking on the role of the weak, as he said elsewhere: “I became weak to the weak, so that I might win the weak.”We are taught by the Psalms that it was the custom in Holy Scripture for holy men to take on the role of sinners and for teachers to assume the weaknesses of their pupils: “I am utterly bowed down and prostrate; all the day I go about mourning. For my loins are filled with burning, and there is no soundness in my flesh. I am utterly spent and crushed; I groan because of the tumult of my heart. Ancient Christian Comm

John Stott on Romans . John stott position is that he believes 7:14-25 Paul is describing a stage of Christian life that relies solely on oneself to live by the law and not on the Spirit.

[4] In calling himself “fleshly,” Paul may mean no more than that he is human, subject to the frailty of all human beings, whether Christian or not.But the contrast with “spiritual” points to a more negative meaning. As in 1 Cor. 3:1–3, where “fleshly” is contrasted with “spiritual,” “fleshly” means “carnal,” subject to, and under the influence of, “this world.”Since “fleshly” in 1 Cor. 3:1 is applied to Christians, it is clear that this adjective itself does not require that the egō be unregenerate. Nevertheless, we cannot overlook the fact that v. 5, which anticipates the argument of 7:7–25, describes the non-Christian state as being “in the flesh.”(footnote35 Cf. σάρξ, “flesh” in vv. 18 and 25 and “in the flesh” in Gal. 2:20. See, e.g., Nygren; Gundry, 137–39. The Gk. σάρκινος, with its -νος ending, would naturally mean “composed of flesh,” as, so it appears, in 2 Cor. 3:3 (contrasted with λίθινος, “made of stone”). (footnote 36 Note that σάρκινος is here also parallel to σάρκικος.). Moo, D. J. (his view is that this passage is for the unregenerated and not for Christians as he says “I must say again that the conflict Paul describes here is indicative of a slavery to the power of sin as a way of life (v. 14b) that is not typical, nor even possible, for the Christian.” Moo, D. J.

[5] The faithful often refuse this natural interpretation on the ground that it involves – so they argue – a gross belittling of the victory vouchsafed to the believer, and hanker after an interpretation which regards 7:14-25 and chapter 8 as escribing two successive stages, before and after conversion. Even those who see that what is depicted in 7:14-24 does not fit the pre-conversion life are liable to argue that it belongs to a stage of the Christian life which can be left behind, a stage in which the Christian is still trying to fight the battle in his own strength and to see 8:1ff as describing a subsequence deliverance. But we are convinced that it is possible to do justice to the text of Paul – and also to the facts of Christian living wherever they are to be observed – only if we resolutely hold chapters 7 and 8 together, in spite of the obvious tension between them, and see in them not two successive stages but two different aspects, two contemporaneous realities, of the Christian life , both of which continue so long as the Christian is in this mortal life. Cranfield a shorter commentary

[6] 14. This verse marks the change from the past tense so common in the previous section to the present. Morris, L.

[7] in his earlier days he was “immaculate by the standard of legal righteousness” (Phil 3:6, Moffatt), it seems quite improbable that he was at that time deeply involved in a personal struggle against sin. Mounce, R. H.

[8] (1) Paul says, “I delight in the law of God after the inward man” (7:22). It is not our concern now to determine what he means by “the inward man”. Whatever its precise import, it must refer to that which is most determinative in his personality. In his inmost being, in what is central in will and affection, he delights in the law of God. This cannot be said of the unregenerate man still under law and in the flesh. It would be totally contrary to Paul’s own teaching. “The mind of the flesh”, he says, “is enmity against God; for it is not subject to the law of God, neither indeed can it be” (8:7). The mind of the flesh is the mind of those who are “in the flesh” (8:8)…. (2) The foregoing (vs. 22) is similar to the import of verse 25: “Consequently then I myself with the mind serve the law of God”. This is service which means subjection of heart and will, something impossible for the unregenerate man. He is not subject to the law of God and he cannot be because he is “in the flesh”, he is “after the flesh,” and he has “the mind of the flesh” (8:5–8)..Murray, J.

[9] I am unspiritual is better rendered as “I am carnal”. Morris, L..

[10] σαρκικός BYZ  : 分词adjective nominative masculine singular. [BDAG] σαρκικός 1. pert. to being material or belonging to the physical realm, material, physical, human, fleshly. a. of everyday earthly things, b. of human physical being as such 2. pert. to being human at a disappointing level of behavior or characteristics, (merely) human.

[11] Even if σάρκινος, in this case, is the true reading, it must have the same sense as the more common word σαρκικός, which, for internal reasons, the majority of commentators prefer. Hodge, C.

[12] The standard key is this: whenever the word sarx is set in contrast to the word pneuma (spirit), then it refers to the sinful nature. Sproul, R. C.

[13] To be fleshly or carnal, on the other hand, means to be the opposite of what the law is. The law of God is spiritual, perfect, divine. In a sense Paul is unspiritual, imperfect. 1 Cor3:1, 3 indicates, such a carnal person can still be a Christian. Hendriksen& Kistemaker

[14] In this particular context the most satisfactory equivalent is, in some languages, “the Law is for our spirits but I am just a body” or “… I am a person with a body,” in other words, a physical being.Newman, B. M., & Nida, E. A.

[15] The mystical writers, such as Olshausen, in accordance with the theory which so many of them adopt, that man consists of three subjects or substances, body, soul, and spirit, σῶμα, φυχή and πνεῦμα, say that by σάρξ, in such connections, we are to understand das ganzeseelische Leben, the entire psychical life, which only, and not the πνεῦμα, (the spirit or higher element of our nature,) is in man the seat of sin. In angels, on the contrary, the πνεῦμα itself is the seat of sin, and they therefore are incapable of redemption. And in man, when sin invades the πνεῦμα, (spirit) then comes the sin against the Holy Ghost, and redemption becomes impossible. This is only a refined or mystical rationalism, as πνεῦμα is only another name for reason, and the conflict in man is reduced to the struggle between sense and reason, and redemption consists in giving the higher powers of our nature ascendency over the lower. According to the Scriptures, the whole of our fallen nature is the seat of sin. Hodge, C.

[16] The answer probably lies in the imagery. The believer has been set free from the enslaving power of sin, but sin uses the flesh to make a counterattack and gain a bridgehead (vv. 8, 11) once more in the life of the believer. The slavery metaphor is hyperbole designed to emphasize this control by sin. This is not the “normal” Christian life; that is found in chapter 8. Paul is establishing a “straw man,” a picture of Christians who try to live for Christ in their own strength. Dunn (1988a:389) describes it as “the [pious] saint who is most conscious of his sinfulness,” citing parallels in Qumran (1QS 11:9–10, “As for me, I belong to wicked mankind, to the company of ungodly flesh. My iniquities, rebellions, and sins, together with the perversity of my heart, belong to the company of worms and to those who walk in darkness”). So Paul is demonstrating how powerful is the malevolent force that wars against him. Osborne, G. R.

[17] He brings that out by saying that he is sold as a slave to sin. The imagery is that of a slave market. Paul regards himself as sold “under” sin,86 which is more than NIV’s sold to. It means that he is “under” sin’s control. This is a vivid way of bringing out the truth that Paul sins, though he does not want to. It does not mean that he never does the right, but is a strong expression for his inability to do the right as he would like to. Calvin brings out the paradox: “It would not be sin if it were not voluntary. We are, however, so addicted to sin, that we can do nothing of our own accord but sin.” The passive means that Paul is carried off by sin, not that he sold himself to sin, as Ahab did (1 Kings 21:20). Morris, L.

[18] Sold under sin. By this clause he shows what flesh is in itself; for man by nature is no less the slave of sin, than those bondmen, bought with money, whom their masters ill treat at their pleasure, as they do their oxen and their asses. We are so entirely controlled by the power of sin, that the whole mind, the whole heart, and all our actions are under its influence. John Calvin

[19] In the present connection we should first of all take note of the fact that Paul is not saying that he had sold or abandoned himself to sin, as had been true with respect to King Ahab (1 Kings 21:20, 25=LXX 3 Kings 20:20, 25; 2 Kings 17:17=LXX 4 Kings 17:17). Paul has not sold himself. Someone else has sold him. He, Paul, deplores this situation. It is as if we hear him utter a sigh of agony when he complains, “I am … sold as a slave to sin!” Can one who so intensely laments his remaining sinfulness be anything but a true believer? When Paul confesses,“I am carnal, sold as a slave to sin,”does he not remind us of another contrite child of God, who sighed:“Surely I have been a sinner from birth,A sinner from the time my mother conceived me”? (Ps. 51:5).Does this mean, then, that when David made this confession he was not a believer? See also Luke 18:13, 14.When Rom. 7:14 is interpreted in light of verses 22–25, it becomes clear that the one who in verse 14 deplores his sinful condition is the same person who in the chapter’s closing verses expresses his delight in the law of God, looks forward with impassioned and irresistible longing to the day of his deliverance from his present momentous inner struggle, and is filled with the blessed assurance that Victory is bound to come; in fact, that “in principle” it is here already ! Hendriksen, W., & Kistemaker, S. J.

[20] The sense in which Paul says he was carnal, is explained by saying he was sold under sin, i.e. sold so as to be under the power of sin. This, of course, is an ambiguous expression. To say that a ‘man is sold unto sin’ may mean, as in 1 Kings 21:20, and 2 Kings 17:17, that he is given up to its service. Sin is that which he has deliberately chosen for a master, and to which he is devoted. In this sense of the phrase it is equivalent to what is said of the unrenewed in the preceding chapter, that they are the δοῦλοι τῆς ἁμαρτίας, the slaves of sin. From this kind of bondage believers are redeemed, 6:22. But there is another kind of bondage. A man may be subject to a power which, of himself, he cannot effectually resist; against which he may and does struggle, and from which he earnestly desires to be free; but which, notwithstanding all his efforts, still asserts its authority. This is precisely the bondage to sin of which every believer is conscious. He feels that there is a law in his members bringing him into subjection to the law of sin; that his distrust of God, his hardness of heart, his love of the world and of self, his pride, in short his indwelling sin, is a real power from which he longs to be free, against which he struggles, but from which he cannot emancipate himself. This is the kind of bondage of which the apostle here speaks, as is plain from the following verses, as well as from the whole context and from the analogy of Scripture. Hodge, C.

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    👉 罗马书证道录音mp3 047 罗马书9章15至18 蒙了主极大的怜悯与恩待 问:小孩子。如果你真心相信耶稣是为什么? 问:上帝几时开始拣选你呢? Pic 弗 1:4 就如创立世界以前,他在基督里拣选了我们… 罗9:15-18 上文(V2)保罗大大忧愁,心里常常伤痛,因祂的同胞拒绝基督 Pic 问:上帝不是拣选以色列吗? 问:为什么以色列人拒绝主耶稣? 问:上帝应许要拯救以色列,是不是落了空? V6 当然,这不是说上帝的话落了空,因为出自以色列的,不都是以色列人 不是所有肉身的以色列人都是蒙神应许拣选的 第一证据:亚伯拉罕的孩子:以实玛利与以撒 (V7-9) 第二证据:以撒与利百加的孩子:以扫与雅各 (V10-12) 第三证据:以扫(以东国)与雅阁(以色列国) (V13) 第四证据: 上帝对摩西说的话 (V15) 罗9:15  因为他对摩西说:“我要怜悯谁,就怜悯谁;我要恩待谁,就恩待谁。”16  这样看来,既不是出于人意,也不是由于人为【不在乎那定意的,也不在乎那奔跑的】,只在于那怜悯人的上帝。 a.p.上帝拣选我们不是出于我们自己的意念,也不是靠我们的努力。 a.p.我们能够相信主耶稣是因为上帝怜悯了我们 V17 经上[1]有话对法老说:“我把你兴起来,是要借着你显出我的大能,并且使我的名传遍全地。”18  这样看来[2],他愿意怜悯谁就怜悯谁,愿意谁刚硬就使谁刚硬。 保罗V17引用 (出9:16) 第五证据:摩西对比法老 (V17-18) e.g.有如雅各对比以扫。 e.g.V17摩西蒙了怜悯、法老被刚硬 这真理令我非常敬畏上帝。加尔文也说这是令他战兢的真理dreadful doctrine  Pic 背景:上帝要拯救祂的百姓脱离埃及 (上帝预告) 上帝吩咐摩西  出 4:21 耶和华对摩西说:“你起程回到埃及去的时候,要留意我交在你手里的一切奇事,把它们行在法老面前;我却要使他的心刚硬,他就不让人民离开。 (上帝预告)未见法老王之前 出 7:3 …

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    078 罗马书 13章8至10 完全了律法

    👉 罗马书证道录音mp3 078 罗马书 13章8至10 完全了律法 罗13章8至10 上文:不欠政府“税” (V7)、不欠众人的债(8)、 唯有在爱人“要像亏欠人一样”。 罗 13:8 不要欠[1]人的债;… 问:你向人借钱过吗?你借过人钱吗? 问:基督徒可以向人借钱吗? Pic 假设:如果在可以谅解的情况下,他向你借$500 应付这月的生活费。你要借吗? 问:看他跟你的交情有多深?有些值$50?或$500?或$5000? 圣经有教导我们帮助生活困难的弟兄姐妹 (cf. 出 22:25; 诗37:26; 太5:42; 路6:35) 利 25:35 你的弟兄在你那里若渐渐贫穷,手中缺乏,你就要帮补他,使他与你同住,像外人和寄居的一样。36  不可向他取利,也不可向他多要;只要敬畏你的神,使你的弟兄与你同住。37  你借钱给他,不可向他取利;借粮给他,也不可向他多要。 虽然圣经是这样教导,不代表所有基督徒们都愿意这样做。 诗37:26 他常常慷慨借给人;他的后裔必定蒙福。 应许:他的后裔必定蒙福 问:如果人吸毒、不作工、赌钱? 难道也要借给他们? 建议:不借钱给他们去犯罪。有些犯罪的后果是他们自己必须承担的(看情况而定) Pic e.g.李国煌 成为烂赌鬼。1个月花5000元新币买万字票。 如果教会中有弟兄姐妹要向你借钱。希望你们通知牧师。他可能需要辅导、也预防他向多人借。 Pic 预备心:借钱出去时,不要指望对方偿还。 e.g.借钱的人容易忘记还钱,但借给人的却记得一清二楚 e.g.一些人分期还债,慢慢的就不还。 路 6:35…借出去,不要指望偿还;这样你们的赏赐就大了,你们也必作至高者的儿子,因为上帝自己也宽待忘恩的和恶人。 问:向基督徒借钱,原来不必还!?!?!? 诗篇37:21 恶人借贷总不偿还,义人却慷慨施舍。 e.g.借了钱,然后不还钱。以后很难继续与这些恶人做好朋友。 不要欠人的债”不是说不可以借钱,意思是要归还人所欠的债[2] Pic a.p.提醒:不要随意借银行信用卡贷款、大耳聋…

  • 011 罗马书 3章1至8 神是真实的,人都是虚谎的

    👉 罗马书证道录音mp3                       011 罗马书 3章1至8   神是真实的,人都是虚谎的 罗3:1-8 解释:什么是外邦人,犹太人 (新人来) 背景:犹太人是选民(得救),外邦人拜偶像是不得救 背景:犹太人拒绝耶稣就是圣经预言要来的基督、甚至把他钉死。 上文:犹太人以为自己是犹太人、有割礼就得救 肉身的犹太人,不就是真犹太人 外在的割礼,不就是真割礼 正真的犹太人是心受割礼的 问:心受割礼的人是谁呢? 信耶稣与爱耶稣的人 如果你信耶稣并爱他,你的心已受割礼 西2:11你们也在他里面受了不是由人手所行的割礼,而是受了基督的割礼,就是除掉你们的罪身。 生来是犹太人不就是真犹太人,外在割礼也不算割礼 问:生来是犹太人和外在割礼有益处吗? 罗3:1 这样说来,犹太人独特的地方在哪里呢【有什麽长处】?割礼又有什么益处呢?2 从各方面来说,的确很多【凡事大有好处】。… 保罗害怕误解以为完全没有任何益处 e.g.我们的角度:生来是基督徒、洗礼都不能使我们得救 问:生来是基督徒、洗礼有益处吗? 礼仪、教会、圣经不能求我们。但不可极端说没有益处。主所设立的来建立我们 问:为什么生来是犹太人与割礼,有益处? 罗3:2 从各方面来说,的确很多【凡事大有好处】。最重要的,是上帝的圣言已经托付了他们。 其实有更多益处 (上星期已讲解一些) 最重要是:上帝的圣言(圣经)已经托付了他们 pic古时,亚伯拉罕信神。神应许祂的子孙要像天上的星星一样多 pic上帝拯救亚伯拉罕的子孙(出红海)、(进迦南) 上帝启示众先知们说话,后来写成圣经。预言基督降世 拥有圣经的犹太人拒绝基督,把祂钉死在十字架 上帝并没有把圣经托付给其它民族,是托付给犹太人 犹太人自小就有上帝的话,却落到后来可悲下场(大多数拒绝基督) e.g.一个孩子生气的向他传福音的大人说,“我不是生在基督教家庭,自小就能认识耶稣。” a.p. 孩子们,你们自小有圣经、知道耶稣。 警戒:千万不要像犹太人一样最后拒绝主耶稣 e.g.孩子们,你的心需要受割礼(被换心),不然你慢慢长大看见基督徒不好时,你会离开! e.g.上帝说:人是不义、不信实。 这也包括你自己 e.g. 有一个孩子看见自己父母糟糕。他说“我不信耶稣!” e.g. 上帝没有听我的祷告,改变我的父母、改变我的家庭! e.g. 孩子心未受割礼,看不见自己是可怜虫,需要耶稣。 许多犹太人认为自己很好,所以耶稣来了指他们是罪的奴隶。他们生气拒绝祂…

  • 053 罗马书10章11至15 美丽的脚踪

    👉 罗马书证道录音mp3 053 罗马书10章11至15美丽的脚踪 问小孩子: 有那哪两种得到救恩的方式? V5靠律法得救恩、V6-10靠信心得救恩 问大人: 太7:21 “不是每一个对我说:‘主啊,主啊!’的人,都能进入天国,唯有遵行我天父旨意的人,才能进去。 问:需加遵行天父旨意才得救? 问:信心加律法与行为才得救? 问:信心加顺服、加悔改的成圣? Ans 经文是指那些假冒伪善、作恶的(V23)假先知(V15-20) Ans他们口称主啊、主啊,奉主名讲道(V22)。 Ans传假道、作恶败坏的(V16-20、23) 罗10:11-17 上文:口里认耶稣为主,心里信上帝使他从死人中复活,就必得救 罗10:11 经上说:“所有信靠他的人[1],必不致失望【羞愧】[2]。” 保罗应用  赛28:16  LXX(罗9:33 保罗重复) 主应许我们必不至於羞愧 你可能被人羞辱轻看,主再来之时,我们必不羞愧 很多人心里失望,因为他所求的是世界 等候主的人,将来主要擦干他们一切眼泪(启7:17) V12 其实并不分[3]犹太人和希腊人【希利尼人】,因为大家同有一位主;他厚待所有求告他的人,13  因为“凡求告主名的,都必得救。” 引用:珥2:32[4]  . .求告耶和华的名的,都必得救… 主耶稣就是耶和华(第二位格) 救恩是不分犹太人与外邦人 no differences or distinction 无论犹太人或希腊人,都必须相信主耶稣才能得救 上帝厚待[5]所有求告主耶稣的人 V12“厚待”指的是救恩层面 a.p.上帝不单单厚待给人救恩,祂也厚待人一切美好事物 [6] (雅1:17) 太7:11你们虽然邪恶,尚且知道把好东西给儿女,何况你们在天上的父,难道不更把好东西赐给求他的人吗? 来11:6没有信,就不能得到上帝的喜悦;因为来到上帝面前的人,必须信上帝存在,并且信他会赏赐那些寻求他的人。 要蒙主恩的条件是你须信靠祂: 问:你是否信主厚待人? 问:你是否信主赏赐寻求他的人? 问:你暂时落难时。你是否依然信上帝会恩待你? 慢慢发现我们信心小,不认为上帝会恩待爱祂的人 e.g….

  • 019 罗马书5章5至8 主的爱浇灌受苦之人

    👉 罗马书证道录音mp3                       019 罗马书5章5至8 主的爱浇灌受苦之人 罗 5:5-8 上文: 因信基督,我们被上帝赦免与算为义 主耶稣使我们与上帝和好 (罗5:1) 因基督我们,现在,进入,站在恩典中 (罗5:2) 被称义的我们也会经历患难 患难产生忍耐,忍耐产生毅力, 毅力产生盼望 (罗5:3-4) 难接受,苦难是有益处 难接受,上帝爱他(受苦时) 要明现在已经,进入,站在恩典中 we are not cursed 5:5-8 苦难中明白主爱我们 未开始讲解经文之前 问:有无可能一些受苦信徒感受的是主的离弃? 问:你是否曾感到主,丢弃了你? 问:你是否曾感到,主掩面不顾你? 问:为什么他们会友这样的经历与感受? 问:是不是因为他们没有信心? Is it because they have no faith? 诗88:13 耶和华啊!我却向你呼求,我的祷告在早晨达到你面前。14 耶和华啊!你为什么丢弃我?为什么掩面不顾我?15 我自幼受苦,几乎死亡;我受了惊吓,以致困惑不安。16 你的烈怒把我淹没,你的惊吓把我除灭。17 这些终日像水一样环绕我,一起把我围困。18 你使我挚爱的和同伴都远离我,黑暗成了我的知己。(诗篇中较消极的祷告) 我曾辅导一些,无法接受苦难对他们有益处,也觉得神丢弃了他们 谨慎:小心不要批评他们。 e.g.不要像约伯的3位好朋友。指控他,并教他要作什么 他们虽然可能埋怨神,但他们像诗人一样相信主,继续向主祷告 他们对主的埋怨,不像那些死在广野不信主的以色列人 a.p.你可以用诗篇圣经的话,问神为何离弃你,不听你的祷告 e.g.合神心意的大卫就曾经经历主好像离弃他 诗…

  • 018 罗马书 5章1至4 称义之人以患难为荣

    👉 罗马书证道录音mp3                       018 罗马书 5章1至4  称义之人以患难为荣 罗5:1-4 罗5:1 所以[1],我们既然因信称义,就借着我们的主耶稣基督与上帝和好;… 因信称义:因相信耶稣基督,上帝赦免我们的罪 、上帝把祂的义归算在我们身上 因信称义是白白的恩典,不在乎行为!(罗3:24,罗11:6) 不被神称义就是要被神定罪 (罗8:1),面对神的愤怒(罗1:18) 罗5:1 …就借着我们的主耶稣基督与上帝和好;… 主耶稣是我们 的中保 mediator (唯一的中保)[2] e.g.天主教违背圣经说马利亚是分享了耶稣的中保地位 Co-Redemptrix 中保:e.g.有时我们不小心得罪一方时,可能希望有人能帮助你与他和解 因为我们深深的得罪神,所以我们需要中保! 主耶稣也用祂的生命来为我们弥补罪孽,使到上帝与我们和解 问:你想与上帝和好吗? 问:你是否觉得奇怪,为何基督徒能与神那么亲密? 能呼叫阿爸,父 你若是不接受耶稣基督,你无法与上帝有父子的关系! V2 我们也凭着信,借着他可以进入现在所站的这恩典中,… 之前我们是与神敌对,神的忿怒是在我们身上 (罗1:18) 如今因基督我们我们站在恩典中 问:进入现在access in which we stand,站在恩典中意味着什么? 意味着我们与上帝和好! 意味着我们,被称义、被宽恕、被接纳,受怜悯、蒙恩 切记:不是因为我们自己的行为使我们站在恩典中! e.g.有时行为好,就站在恩典; 有时行为不好,就在神的审判下 V2 …并且以【欢欢喜喜】盼望得享上帝的荣耀为荣。[3] 可以翻译成【欢欢喜喜】rejoice或者为荣boast 表达我们有欢喜、得以自豪的盼望 这肯定的盼望,就是我们一定得享上帝的荣耀。 使徒保罗讲“盼望”时的意思是肯定得到,不是可能有的意思! 问:什么是得享上帝的荣耀? 盼望上帝的荣耀,往往指的是主的再来[4] 多2:13 等候那有福的盼望,就是我们伟大的上帝,救主耶稣基督荣耀的显现。…