
Sermon Idea: God gives peace, grace, and joyful hope to all justified by faith in Christ.
Introduction: If you were to ask me growing up if I was a Christian, I would have said yes. I had been baptized in the first grade, old enough to remember the experience and way too young to understand anything that was happening to me. My parents separated and divorced before I could form any meaningful memories of us as a family. Early on, my church exposure was sporadic, not in places where the gospel was faithfully preached. During a short season when we did attend church, I saw a terrifying drama about demons and Hell that scarred me to the point of making it difficult to sleep.
I remember telling one of my parents how scared I was, and she arranged a meeting with the pastor, who guided me in a prayer that I repeated. He assured me that the words I repeated meant I was saved. I was baptized as a first grader, but I had no understanding of sin, the good news of the gospel, repentance, faith, or the cost of discipleship. I grew up believing I was a Christian because I believed in God, lived in America, and was baptized as a young child. Despite this profession, I lived my life void of faith, and the fruit comes from it.
By God’s grace, my Dad came to saving faith in Christ at the age of 38. He was baptized at First Baptist, Metropolis, became a member, and has followed Jesus since. This meant that I attended a bible-believing, gospel-preaching church every other weekend. This was a good thing. That said, I now had four reasons I could give someone for why I was a Christian: I believed in God, lived in America, was baptized, and went to church at least every other weekend.
Outwardly, I appeared fine. I was respectful and rarely got into trouble, but I was a wreck on the inside. This was exacerbated in my freshman year of High School when the dysfunction of my family peaked and started a series of painful and traumatic events, the consequences of which lasted years.
From the age of 14 to 17, I spiraled internally. I had no peace; my life was void of happiness, not to mention joy, and I was not hopeful about anything. I would have told you I was a Christian while living far from God without any peace, joy, or hope.
I was close to rock bottom in my junior year, on the verge of making very poor decisions, when my Dad signed me up for a youth retreat in Gatlinburg, TN. It was not a youth retreat I was eager to attend. The advertisement was void of fun. This is not Student Life. It was a youth retreat centered around singing hymns and expositional preaching.
There was one sermon I remember particularly well. It was from Romans 5:1-5. The preacher began by telling of a student he met while preaching on a college campus. The student asked him, what’s so good about being a Christian anyway? What’s the big deal? The preachers then used Romans 5:1-5 to answer that question.
God gives peace, grace, and joyful hope to all justified by faith in Christ.
I sat there and thought to myself, “I have no peace, joy, or hope.” If a Christian is someone who has been made right with God through Jesus Christ, and the fruit of that is peace, joy, and hope, then I must not be a Christian.
Being a Christian could not be summed up in several activities that I do: I believe in God, I was baptized, and I attend church every other weekend. Being a Christian is about believing in what God has done in Jesus Christ and trusting God in Christ alone.
I did not say a prayer, but I was changed. I believed in the gospel of Jesus Christ, his finished work on the cross, and I had, for the first time, what Jonathan Edwards called religious affections: a zealous desire for God, His word, and his church.
It took me about six months to realize exactly what had happened to me. I understood that I did not renew my faith that weekend but had true faith for the first time. God’s grace had saved me through faith in Christ! I was eventually baptized shortly after this based on my genuine profession of faith, and I’ve been following Jesus Christ since.
I want to ask you the same question: what’s so good about being a Christian? My sermon will be different, but my hope is the same. I hope that believers in Jesus will be edified as they reflect on the glorious benefits of justification. I hope all who, like me, thought Christianity could be summed up in a few things I do will see the true gospel of grace and be drawn to Jesus Christ.
God gives peace, grace, and joyful hope to all justified by faith in Christ.
It is important to note that these three benefits result from justification by faith. Those who are justified have peace, access to grace, and joyful hope. Those who are not justified do not have peace with God, no access to grace, and are without hope.
So, what is justification by faith?
Put simply, God declares all who put their faith in Jesus Christ righteous before him. God gives the guilty a not-guilty verdict in the great courtroom of heaven. That is justification. God does this totally by grace through our faith in Jesus Christ.
How does he do that? If sinners are guilty before him, how can he declare us to be not guilty and righteous before him?
He does this in the most amazing way. When we trust in Christ, God considers Jesus’ perfect life to be our life and his sacrificial death to be our payment for sin. On the cross, Jesus dies, paying the penalty for all our sins, and through faith, we receive Jesus’ perfect obedience to our account. Christ is our righteousness!
23 for all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God, 24 and are justified by his grace as a gift, through the redemption that is in Christ Jesus, 25 whom God put forward as a propitiation by his blood, to be received by faith. (Ro 3:23–25)
21 For our sake he made him to be sin who knew no sin, so that in him we might become the righteousness of God. (2 Co 5:21)
Justification is the truth we sing about in the beautiful hymn, Before the Throne of God Above.
Because the sinless Savior died,
My sinful soul is counted free;
For God, the Just, is satisfied
To look on Him and pardon me.
To be justified is to stand before God with a righteousness that is not yours. It is to stand before God robed in the perfect righteousness of Jesus Christ.
This act of justification is God’s work alone by his grace, but he does it through our faith. Put simply, we are made right with God by placing our trust in Jesus Christ and depending on his perfect life rather than our own.
Faith, if not defined, can seem ambiguous, so what is it?
The New Testament describes faith as “…the assurance of things hoped for, the conviction of things not seen.” (Heb 11:1)
The best of the Christian tradition has taught that faith consists of three elements: knowledge, assent, and trust. To have true faith, you must know the truth of the gospel, who Jesus is, and what he has done on the cross and resurrection. You have to assent that this is true. Most of all, your faith is trust in Jesus Christ, who is at the center of this knowledge you’ve assented to.
The Bible emphasizes the importance of this last element. It is possible to have knowledge and even assent that this knowledge is true but fall short of the trust that is saving faith.
Satan and the demons are an example. They have knowledge and believe it to be true; they just hate the truth.
19 You believe that God is one; you do well. Even the demons believe—and shudder! (Jas 2:19)
As we answer the question, What’s so good about being a Christian, remember that these blessings are only true of those who are justified by faith in Christ. If Christianity to you is simply getting your life together or getting back in church, but you have not placed your faith in Christ and trusted his finished work and righteousness as your standing before God, then you are not a Christian, and these benefits are not true of you.
I pray that if they are not, God will use this sermon to make it true of you today or sometime in the future.
So, what benefits of justification make being a Christian so good? Let’s look at verse one to see that we have peace with God.
I.) We have peace with God (Rom. 5:1)
…we have peace with God through our Lord Jesus Christ. (Ro 5:1)
Before discussing the nature of this peace, we need to be very clear about two things. First, it is peace with God. Second, it is through our Lord Jesus Christ. So, there are two important truths that we can draw from this one verse.
First, no one is naturally at peace with God. There is a fracture and a hostility between God and sinners because of their sin. No one is exempt from this because all have sinned.
23 for all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God (Ro 3:23)
12 Therefore, just as sin came into the world through one man, and death through sin, and so death spread to all men because all sinned (Ro 5:12)
As a result of sin, we are not children of God naturally, but we are children of wrath. As Paul reminds us, before Christ, we “were by nature children of wrath, like the rest of mankind.” (Eph 2:3)
We deserve God’s just punishment and we are in need of peace with him.
As important as it is to recognize that peace is necessary, it is also important to recognize that peace can only be accomplished through Jesus Christ. God cannot be negotiated with. There is no loophole we can access peace apart from Christ. The God-Man is the only mediator between God and man.
5 For there is one God, and there is one mediator between God and men, the man Christ Jesus, 6 who gave himself as a ransom for all, which is the testimony given at the proper time (1 Ti 2:5–6)
19 For in him all the fullness of God was pleased to dwell, 20 and through him to reconcile to himself all things, whether on earth or in heaven, making peace by the blood of his cross. (Col 1:19–20)
What is meant then by peace with God? The peace referred to here is a spiritual peace, which ends all the hostility and enmity between God and the sinner, reconciling the sinner to God and bringing them into a new relationship marked by God’s favor and blessing.
It is crucial to see that this peace is not just negative. It is not just the absence of conflict. Many of us would settle for an absence of conflict between Russia and Ukraine or between Israel and the Palestinians.
The peace we have with God is more than the absence of conflict. It is the blessed life in Christ, where our sins are forgiven, and we commune with God as children, sons and daughters of God.
Now, it is quite possible to truly have peace with God, but not always to feel that peace in the same way. Sometimes, sin can temporarily disrupt our feelings of peace; our life circumstances may cool them for a time, but the believer who has it knows this and pursues peace all the more. So be encouraged, saint. Your awareness of your sin and spiritual dryness may impact a subject feeling of peace for a season, but your awareness of it testifies to the reality that you are at peace with God.
It is also quite possible to feel at peace but lack true peace with God through faith in Christ.
One theologian says it this way, “The unconverted and ungodly frequently have a dead and insensitive conscience. They, not being smitten by their conscience, imagine within themselves that all is well before God and that they have peace with God. How rudely they will be awakened, however, and come to the realization that they are children of wrath and never have had peace with God!
Do you have peace with God this morning? The only way to be at peace with him is through faith in Jesus Christ. Believer, rest in Christ, who is your peace. Non-Christians, come to Christ, who makes peace by the blood of his cross.
What’s so good about being a Christian? We have peace with God.
II.) We have access to grace (Rom. 5:2)
The second blessing of justification is access to grace, 2 Through him we have also obtained access by faith into this grace in which we stand (Ro 5:2)
Notice again the emphasis on all these benefits being through Jesus Christ. The justified by faith in Christ are granted access to God’s grace through Christ. This grace is where Christians stand; it’s not passing or fleeting. This is not a reference to a mere decision but to a disciple who lives and is sustained by the very grace of God.
The grace mentioned here is not saving grace but sustaining grace. It is the access to grace for our perseverance, strengthening, help, and comfort.
The word “access” is simple to understand. We can consider scenarios and locations that restrict our access. For instance, think of the Oval Office, which does not allow free access. To attempt to access the Oval Office without consent would result in imprisonment at the minimum and death at the worst.
Friends, in Christ Jesus, we have access to something far greater than the Oval Office. We have access to the very presence and grace of God.
15 For we do not have a high priest who is unable to sympathize with our weaknesses, but one who in every respect has been tempted as we are, yet without sin. 16 Let us then with confidence draw near to the throne of grace, that we may receive mercy and find grace to help in time of need. (Heb 4:15–16)
The word stand is worth reflecting on because it describes a permanent state. A Christian is someone who lives by and in the grace of God. The grace of God permeates their being, so they are Christians always and everywhere.
A few months ago, Kels and I got a date away from the kids. We went to Patti’s for a nice meal to celebrate her birthday. I was excited because these times are so rare, and they were non-existent when we lived in North Carolina. They put us in a secluded room called the Robin’s Nest. In it is a round table, with 6 or 8 chairs. First, Kels took a picture to show the kids and talked about how we could have brought them with us! Why is that? No matter where she goes, momma can never stop being momma.
A believer in the Lord Jesus Christ thinks, speaks, and acts in reference to God and his Word. They do not compartmentalize their spiritual life from the rest of their life. They are one and the same. The Christian life is to stand in a state of grace, granted access to the very throne of God!
Does this describe you? Is Christ your life or merely a supplement to your life? Do you stand in grace with access to God? All who are justified by faith
How sweet it is to know that we are not left to ourselves. We are not without God’s sustaining grace!
What’s so good about being a Christian? We have access to grace.
III.) We have joyful hope (Rom. 5:2-5)
and we rejoice in hope of the glory of God. 3 Not only that, but we rejoice in our sufferings, knowing that suffering produces endurance, 4 and endurance produces character, and character produces hope, 5 and hope does not put us to shame, because God’s love has been poured into our hearts through the Holy Spirit who has been given to us. (Ro 5:2–5)
The justified possess joyful hope for the future that fuels the present. We can rejoice in our hope because our future inheritance is to be glorified by God. One day, we will see God as he is. We will dwell with God when sin and death are a thing of the past, and we’ll live as humans were meant to live—perfected in the gracious presence of God.
What’s good about being a Christian? We don’t have to fear the future because our future is filled with hope. This hope is not a mere wish but a promised possession. It awaits us; one day, we will fully know it.
Notice though that Christian hope is future, but it’s also present, Not only that, but we rejoice in our sufferings, knowing that suffering produces endurance, 4 and endurance produces character, and character produces hope, 5 and hope does not put us to shame, (Ro 5:3-5)
Rejoice in our sufferings? What makes this good? This does not mean that we enjoy suffering; rather, we rejoice even in our suffering. That is because those justified by faith in Christ know that their suffering is not meaningless but produces endurance, character, and hope that doesn’t put us to shame.
I’m convinced that most people who are into physical fitness do not actually enjoy the physical labor of exercising. They do not enjoy the pain they put their body through. What is it that they love? They enjoy the results of the exercise. They know that the temporary pain produces stronger muscles, better mental health, etc.
The suffering we endure as believers is like a spiritual exercise that strengthens us. Just as an athlete doesn’t rejoice in putting their body through suffering, but in the results that suffering produces, believers rejoice not in their suffering, but in all that suffering produces.
2 Count it all joy, my brothers, when you meet trials of various kinds, 3 for you know that the testing of your faith produces steadfastness. 4 And let steadfastness have its full effect, that you may be perfect and complete, lacking in nothing. (Jas 1:2–4)
What’s so good about being a Christian? We have true hope that is both present and future. We will not be put to shame! God will not waste moments of our suffering, pain, and discomfort. It will all be redeemed and purposed for our good and his glory.
God gives peace, grace, and joyful hope to all justified by faith in Christ.
Give a clear gospel invitation and call for a response.