What contaminates a person the most? We might think of some terrible diseases that we need to be careful of. We all remember just a few years ago when we were all extra careful to not become infected with covid. There are some contaminants that people will even dress up in biohazard suits in order to keep themselves safe from contamination. It is wise to keep oneself safe from such danger. And of course we shouldn’t ignore just the regular, everyday germs and dirt. However there is one contaminant that many people tend to forget that is actually more dangerous to everyone. It has the power to bring death to all it touches, and that is sin. It can sometimes bring physical death, and unless protected by the Blood of Jesus, it will always bring spiritual death. Let’s look at what the Apostle Paul teaches in his letter to the Romans today.
As we open our Scripture we need to know that every person serves a master. It doesn’t matter what station one has in life, from the most powerful leader in the world down to a homeless person on the street, we all serve a master. The question is not whether you serve, but whom. Paul used the metaphor of slavery, not to endorse the institution, but because it clearly showed absolute ownership and obedience. In the spiritual realm there are only two masters: sin, which will lead to death, or obedience to God, which leads to righteousness and life.
Paul begins this portion of Scripture by teaching us that we are the slave to whomever we obey in life (vs. 16). If we choose to obey and follow sin in our life, then we are sin’s slave. Obedience to sin will lead to death, not just physical death, but ultimately spiritual death and separation from God. Obedience to God and His Word will lead to righteousness and ultimately eternal life. Whomever we obey reveals our spiritual master.
The Apostle then reminds the believers in Rome that they were once the slaves of sin, but since the day that they decided to obey God’s Word, they were delivered from that bondage (vs. 17). This is written in the past tense, as that was their old identity. But now they have obeyed God from the heart, and are no longer under the slavery to sin. They have been set free, just like when a slave is set free (vs 18). When they gave their heart to Jesus, He brought them out of the bondage of sin, and they now belong to Him. Biblical freedom does not mean autonomy. We are not now free to live any way that we want. It is liberation from the wrong master and joyful submission to the right one. We are now the servants of righteousness.
Paul continues to use the slavery metaphor to help us understand the seriousness of whom we are obeying. Before we were saved we yielded ourselves to uncleanness and lawlessness, in other words, all manner of sinful behavior (vs. 19). Sin has a snowball effect - one sin will lead to another, and then more and more. However, once we became a believer, we gave ourselves to Jesus, and we should yield ourselves to righteousness.
Curiosity often leads us to the edge of danger. Sin is like that, too. We are drawn to the edge, lose our balance, and fall in, destroying family, reputation, and career. We think that we can flirt with temptation, but few ever win. We know an action is wrong, and yet we toy with it. We are drawn into deeper and darker perversions. As a slave to sin, one doesn’t obey or follow Jesus and His righteousness (vs. 20). What kind of fruit does a slave of sin have? They only have shame and things that lead to death (vs. 21).
Once we give ourselves to the Lord Jesus, we are set free from our slavery to sin. Our “ownership” has now changed (vs. 22). We do not belong any more to Satan’s kingdom of darkness. We are now servants of God, and as we yield ourselves to Him, we will bring forth holy fruit which will end with everlasting life. This is the exact opposite of the life of a slave to sin.
As Paul closes this segment of Scripture, we see that sin pays a salary. People enter into all sorts of various sins, thinking that it will bring happiness, money, fame, and pleasure. However, that is not the salary it pays. As Paul says, the wages of sin is death (vs. 23). Often enough it is physical death in this life, and always it is spiritual death in the next. As we finish this verse, though, we see that God gives us a gift, and that is eternal life. It is a gift. We cannot earn it, and we don’t deserve it. It is a gift that God gives us when we accept the Lord Jesus as our personal Savior.
As we close, we see that there is no neutrality in the Christian life. Everyone serves a master. The unbeliever serves sin, but the Christian serves God. Who are you obeying? Your daily choices reveal your allegiance. When one chooses to follow Jesus, their salvation should produce a new pattern of obedience to Him. We aren’t perfect, but we should be heading in a new direction, with a new heart that leads to new desires and new fruit. God has freed us from sin’s power and dominion over us, and we should yield ourselves to righteousness. Remember, sin always leads to death, every time. Every path of sin ends in destruction. However God gives us a gift of eternal life. Sin pays wages, but God gives gifts.