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J.C. Philpot

Romans 6:11

Romans 6:11
J.C. Philpot September, 25 2016 3 min read
660 Articles 41 Sermons 54 Books
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September, 25 2016
J.C. Philpot
J.C. Philpot 3 min read
660 articles 41 sermons 54 books
What does the Bible say about victory over sin?

The Bible teaches that victory over sin comes through our union with Christ and faith in His sufficiency.

Scripture reveals that true victory over sin is not achieved through our own legalistic efforts or resolutions but through a living union with the Lord Jesus Christ. Romans 6:11 states, 'Count yourselves dead to sin but alive to God in Christ Jesus,' highlighting the believer's identity in Christ. When we partake of His suffering and grace, the power of sin is effectively subdued. This is illustrated in the transformation of Saul, who, upon encountering Christ, moved from a life of persecution to one of prayer and obedience. Therefore, spiritual victory is rooted in understanding and believing in the sufficiency of Christ’s sacrifice and righteousness, which empowers believers to live in holiness.

Romans 6:11, Colossians 3:3

How do we know grace defeats sin?

Grace defeats sin by freeing us from its dominion and empowering us to live righteously.

The concept of grace in the believer's life is critical for understanding sin's defeat. Romans 6:14 asserts that 'sin shall not have dominion over you; for you are not under the law, but under grace.' This signifies that grace, unlike the law, which exposes and condemns sin, provides the believer with a means of overcoming sin through forgiveness and enabling strength. When believers fully accept and trust in Christ's grace, they experience a transformative power that leads to holy living. This grace doesn’t lead to licentiousness but rather to deeper obedience and submission to God's will, as the believer grows in their relationship with Christ.

Romans 6:14, Titus 2:11-12

Why is union with Christ important for Christians?

Union with Christ is essential as it is through Him that believers receive strength and victory over sin.

The believer's union with Christ is foundational to understanding their identity and victory over sin. Through this union, Christians are not only identified with Christ's death but also with His resurrection, as indicated in Romans 6. This means that believers are spiritually dead to sin and alive to God, creating a transformed life characterized by victory. J.C. Philpot emphasizes that it is through the believer's participation in Christ's sufferings and sorrows that true strength is obtained. Recognizing this relationship motivates the Christian to live out their faith actively, relying on Christ's power rather than their own limitations.

Romans 6:4, Ephesians 2:5-6

"In the same way, count yourselves dead to sin but alive to God in Christ Jesus."

— Romans 6:11

How many poor souls are struggling against the power of sin, and yet never get any victory over it! How many are daily led captive by the lusts of the flesh, the love of the world, and the pride of life, and never get any victory over them! How many fight and grapple with tears, vows, and strong resolutions against the besetting sins of temper, levity, or covetousness, who are still entangled and overcome by them again and again! Now, why is this? Because they know not the secret of spiritual strength against, and spiritual victory over them.

It is only by virtue of a living union with the Lord Jesus Christ, drinking into his sufferings and death, and receiving out of his fullness, that we can gain any victory over the world, sin, death, or hell. Let me bring this down a little to your own experience. Say your soul has been, on one particular occasion, very sweetly favored; a melting sense of the Savior's precious love and blood has come into your heart, and you could then believe, with a faith of God's own giving, that he was eternally yours; and through this faith, as an open channel of divine communication, his merits and mediation, blood, righteousness, and dying love came sweetly streaming into your soul.

What was the effect? To lead you to sin, to presumption, to licentiousness? No, just the contrary. To a holy obedience in heart, lip, and life. Sin is never really or effectually subdued in any other way. Saul struck down at the gates of Damascus, and turned from persecution to praying, is a scriptural instance of the death of sin by the power of Christ. It is not, then, by legal strivings and earnest resolutions, vows, and tears, which are but monkery at best, (a milder form of the hair shirt, the bleeding scourge, and the damp cloister,) the vain struggle of religious flesh to subdue sinful flesh, that can overcome sin; but it is by a believing acquaintance with, and a spiritual entrance into the sufferings and sorrows of the Son of God, having a living faith in him, and receiving out of his fullness supplies of grace and strength--strength made perfect in our weakness.

In this sense the Apostle says to the Colossians, "For you are dead;" not merely by the law having condemned and slain you, as to all legal hopes, but by virtue of a participation in the death of the Lord Jesus Christ, by virtue of a living union with the suffering Son of God. "Sin shall not have dominion over you; for you are not under the law," where sin reigns with increased dominion, "but under grace," which subdues sin by pardoning it. If you read Romans 6 with an enlightened eye, you will see how the Apostle traces out the death of the believer unto the power and prevalence of sin, by virtue of a spiritual baptism into the death and resurrection of the Lord Jesus.

From Through Baca's Vale by J.C. Philpot.
J.C. Philpot
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