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Octavius Winslow

Romans 6:9

Romans 6:9
Octavius Winslow August, 5 2016 3 min read
709 Articles 90 Sermons 35 Books
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August, 5 2016
Octavius Winslow
Octavius Winslow 3 min read
709 articles 90 sermons 35 books
What does the Bible say about the resurrection of Christ?

The Bible affirms that Christ's resurrection signifies His victory over death and sin, demonstrating that death has no more dominion over Him (Romans 6:9).

The resurrection of Christ is pivotal in Christian theology, representing the ultimate victory over death and sin. As stated in Romans 6:9, Christ being raised from the dead signifies that death has no more dominion over Him. This victory was not just for Christ but was achieved on behalf of His chosen people. The resurrection not only confirms the cancellation of sin through His death but also brings a new hope to believers, affirming that the grave could not hold Him and that He reigns victorious over all spiritual adversaries. Thus, believers are encouraged to live according to this victory, embodying the triumph already secured by Christ through their spiritual fights against sin.

Romans 6:9

How do we know Christ's victory over sin is true?

Christ's victory over sin is confirmed by His resurrection, which defeated both death and Satan (Romans 6:9).

The truth of Christ’s victory over sin is evident through His resurrection, a historical and transformative event that served as the consummation of His redemptive work. Romans 6:9 proclaims that after His resurrection, death no longer held dominion over Him, illustrating that sin's power has been broken. This resurrection not only validates the atonement and the forgiveness of sins but also serves as a foundation for the believer’s hope in eternal life. The resurrection is God's decisive declaration, proving that the forces of hell, sin, and death have been vanquished, which assures believers that they, too, share in this victory as children of God.

Romans 6:9

Why is the resurrection important for Christians?

The resurrection is crucial for Christians because it signifies victory over sin and death and secures eternal life for believers (Romans 6:9).

The resurrection of Christ is of utmost importance for Christians as it encapsulates the core of the Gospel—the defeat of death and the promise of eternal life. Romans 6:9 highlights that following His resurrection, death has no power over Jesus, which means it likewise has no power over those who are united with Him in faith. This event not only validates Jesus’ claims to be the Son of God but also ensures that His followers can live in the light of His victory. Furthermore, the resurrection assures believers that they will also be resurrected and transformed, providing hope amid life’s trials and empowering them to engage in spiritual battles with the knowledge that they are fighting from a position of victory.

Romans 6:9

“Knowing that Christ being raised from the dead dies no more; death has no more dominion over him.”

— Romans 6:9

The resurrection of Christ was the consummation of His glorious victory. Until this moment, the Redeemer had all the appearance of one vanquished in the great fight. He was left slain upon the battle-field. Indeed it would appear that He had really endured a momentary defeat. He was now under the dominion of death; and as death was the consequence and penalty of sin, so long as He was subject to its power, He still lay beneath the sins of His people. Cancelled although they were by the blood He had just shed, the great evidence of their remission did not and could not transpire until the resurrection had passed. What gloom now enshrouded the church of God! The Sun of Righteousness was setting in darkness and in blood; and with it was descending into the tomb, the hopes of patriarchs and prophets, of seers and apostles. The "king of terrors" had laid low his illustrious victim; and the cold earth had closed upon His sacred body, mangled and lifeless. Oh, what a victory did hell and sin, death and the grave, now seem to have achieved! But the "triumphing of the wicked is short." In three days the tomb, at the mighty fiat of Jehovah, unveiled its bosom, and yielded back its Creator and Lord. The Sun of Righteousness ascended again in cloudless glory and peerless majesty, to set no more forever. The church of God, now "begotten again unto a lively hope by the resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead," arose from the dust, and put on her beautiful garments. Now was the scene changed. His enemies, no longer wearing even the semblance of victory, were overthrown and vanquished. Hell was disappointed, and its gates forever closed against the redeemed. Sin was thrown to an infinite distance, and "death had no more dominion over him, God having loosed its pains, because it was not possible that He should be holden of it." He rose a mighty and an illustrious Conqueror. And all this conquest, let it not be forgotten, was achieved in behalf of a chosen and a beloved people. It was our battle that He fought, it was our victory that He won. Therefore, called though we are to "wrestle against principalities and against powers," and exhorted though we are to "take unto us the whole armor of God," we are yet confronted with enemies already vanquished. It would seem as though we were summoned, not so much to go out upon the field of battle, as upon the field of conquest; not so much to combat with the foe, as to gather up the spoils of victory. For what is every successful conflict with our spiritual adversaries—what is every corruption mortified—what is every temptation resisted—what is every sin overcome—but a showing forth the great victory already won by the Captain of our salvation? Every triumph of the Holy Spirit in the heart of a regenerate man is a display of the triumph of Him who, in hanging on the cross, and in rising from the grave, "spoiled principalities and powers, and made a show of them openly, triumphing over them in it."

From Evening Thoughts by Octavius Winslow.
Octavius Winslow
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