God’s judgment is not just for “those people out there”—it comes home to the moral, the religious, and the respectable as well. In this episode, we walk through Romans 2:1–29 to see how Paul turns the spotlight from obvious sinners to those who trust in their ethics, their religion, or their spiritual performance, and shows that all of us stand in need of mercy.
In this week’s episode, we explore:
- Nathan’s confrontation of King David—“You are the man”—as a living picture of Paul’s argument in Romans 2
- Why judging others proves we do know there is a real moral standard—and how that same standard exposes us
- How moral, upright people confuse knowing the law with doing the law, and mistake God’s patience for his approval
- Paul’s insistence that God “will render to each one according to his works,” and what that means alongside salvation by faith
- The difference between hearing the law and doing it—and why even religious privilege (like being a Jew, or a churchgoer today) cannot save us
- Paul’s critique of religious hypocrisy: outward marks like circumcision (or baptism, church attendance, “quiet times”) without an inward change of heart
- What it means to be a “Jew inwardly,” with a heart marked by the Spirit rather than by external performance alone
- How this passage is meant to devastate our self-righteousness so that we run to Christ, not our own record, for justification
After listening, you’ll come away with a sobering but life-giving clarity: no one—pagan, moralist, or religious person—can stand before God on the basis of performance, and that includes us. You’ll be invited to stop hiding behind comparison and outward religion, to confess with honesty, “It’s me, O Lord, standing in the need of prayer,” and to rest in the grace of a Savior who exposes our hearts not to crush us, but to redeem
Series: Romans: Justification by Faith
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