Romans 6:3-4 – New Life, an Easter Sunday message

Read Mark 16:1-8 and Romans 6:3-4.

The apostle Paul said, “We too might walk in newness of life.” Like Jesus did. After Jesus was raised from the dead by the glory of the Father, Jesus walked in newness of life. The women at the tomb were perplexed. “Where is Jesus’ body?” “Well, He has risen. He’s not here. He’s going before you to Galilee. That’s where you will see Jesus. He already is on His way. Go and tell the disciples.”

As Jesus was going to Galilee, He was walking in newness of life.

And Paul wrote, “We too might walk in newness of life.” That’s encouraging. When I was a child in our little Kansas town, I remember standing on our front porch watching the kids of the neighborhood ride their bikes up and down the street. One of the kids had a little device on his bike that made it sound like a motorcycle. I don’t know exactly what the device was. But his bike sounded like a motorcycle, revving up and down the street. All the kids were impressed. I was impressed. “I’d like one of those – whatever it is,” I said to my mother. “Nope.” I stamped my foot. “But I want it! What that kid is doing, I want to do that!” “Nope.” You know how ruthless a mother can be – so unkind and uncaring. What came next was my own childhood meltdown. You know how children do that.

Often when we consider Jesus, we just know the answer is “nope.” “I’d like to walk on water.” “Nope.” “I’d like to raise the dead.” “Nope.” “I’d like to show compassion to strangers like Jesus did.” “Do you really? Well, nope.” Jesus in the gospels seemed to have the ability to do things we simply cannot do – though we might like to do those things.

But here, in Romans 6, Paul said we can do something Jesus did. “We too might walk in newness of life.” It’s encouraging. “To walk in newness of life? I’d like to do that.” Paul isn’t like your mother. Paul said we can do it.

“We were buried therefore with him by baptism into death, in order that, just as Christ was raised from the dead by the glory of the Father, we too might walk in newness of life.” Your baptism is the time when you begin walking in newness of life. That’s what Paul said – after you are buried in baptism, down in the water, in faith that Jesus Christ was crucified for the sins of the world. If you are baptized in faith, you are baptized into Christ’s death. And after you are buried in faith, down in the water, the pastor will pull you up. You will be raised from the dead, so to speak, just like Jesus was raised from the dead. And then you too will walk in newness of life.

And so some of you – many of you – most of you, I suppose – are walking in newness of life. You already are doing it. You’ve been baptized. You’ve been buried and raised. And here you are – brand new. Do you feel new?

“New” is the operative concept here. “We too might walk in newness of life.” It is not old life. It’s new. God wants us to know that. Faith in Jesus Christ brings new life to us.

This concept was very important to the apostle Paul. He wrote about new life a lot.

The apostle Paul told the Corinthian church, “Therefore, if anyone is in Christ, he is a new creation. The old has passed away; behold, the new has come” (2 Corinthians 5:17). It’s new – not old. The old life is gone.

The apostle Paul told the Galatians, “For neither circumcision counts for anything, nor uncircumcision, but a new creation” (Galatians 6:15). It’s new. You aren’t part of the old covenant but the new. Don’t worry about those old laws.

The apostle Paul told the Ephesians, You are “to be renewed in the spirit of your minds, and to put on the new self, created after the likeness of God in true righteousness and holiness” (Ephesians 4:23-24). It’s new. It’s not the old sinful self, full of lust and selfishness and deceit and pride. It’s the new self that looks a lot like the character of God.

The apostle Paul told the Colossians, You have “put on the new self, which is being renewed in knowledge after the image of its creator” (Colossians 3:10). It’s new. That means constant renewal in knowledge. It’s not old and stagnant.

The apostle Paul told the Romans, “But now we are released from the law, having died to that which held us captive, so that we serve in the new way of the Spirit and not in the old way of the written code” (Romans 7:6). It’s new. It is governed not by the old way of the old law but by the Holy Spirit. This “newness” was very important to the apostle Paul.

So there. Now you know I know more about the Bible than you. I am only joking, of course. Many of you are astute students of Scripture. However, I do have something over you: I attended Wednesday morning coffee time last week, and most of you didn’t. You really are missing something by not coming to coffee time. Wednesday morning coffee is a time for people to get together to talk. People want community, and you can find community at Wednesday morning coffee time.

The conversation on Wednesday morning can cover a wide range of subjects. Last week, the topic of Easter came up. One person remarked how Christians often serve ham at their Easter meals. It’s a Christian tradition. Someone observed, while sipping his coffee, that a ham on the table wouldn’t be very welcoming to any Jews who happened to come to your house for Easter lunch. Ham is a forbidden food for Jews. It’s unclean. The old covenant says so. “Wouldn’t a Jew be a little uncomfortable if you put ham on the table at your Easter lunch?”

Yes. And, I suppose, that’s the idea. It’s newness of life. The old is gone, and the new has come. The old covenant with its dead laws and regulations has been swept away by the death and resurrection of Jesus Christ. Jesus fulfilled and abolished the old law. In Christ, there’s no distinction between Jew and Gentile. And so the people of God eat ham on Easter. We eat ham to remind ourselves that we can eat ham.

It’s newness of life. We are free in Christ. Do you feel new?

You really should think about coming to the Wednesday morning coffee. Sometimes, the people there talk about gardening. They talked about gardening last week. Did you know if you take a potted tomato plant at the end of summer and place it upside down or on its side through the winter, new sprouts will grow on that old plant? Put it in your garage or shed where it can stay warm. The old plant looks dead and lifeless. But if you are patient, you’ll see the new growth, small and green, sprouting out of the old. Even in the dead of winter.

It’s newness of life. God has built reminders into His creation. Do you feel new?

This was important to the apostle Paul. He would know. Paul had been baptized (Acts 22:12-16). For a portion of Paul’s life, he hated Christ and His disciples. Paul persecuted them. He ripped them from their families and threw them in jail. Then Paul encountered Jesus on the road to Damascus. Paul was left blind by that encounter, and he had to be led into the city where he spent three days in prayer and fasting, wondering what this was all about.

And then a Christian came to find Paul. Good old Ananias. Everyone loved Ananias. Ananias came to find Paul. “Brother Saul” – that’s how Paul was known in those days – “Brother Saul, receive your sight.” And Paul did. Then Ananias told Paul that Paul would be a witness to everyone of all that he’d seen and heard. Then Ananias said, “And now why do you wait? Rise and be baptized and wash away your sins, calling on his name.”

And Paul did. And he walked in newness of life. Do you feel new?

Sometimes, we might forget we are new. We might feel old and tarnished. We might feel tired and frustrated. Sometimes, we lose sight of what we’ve been given. We lose sight of who we are. Sometimes, we are tempted to sin and fall back into the old way of life.

I think the apostle Paul is trying to tell us something important here: Don’t forget who you are. “Do you not know?” That’s what Paul said. “Do you not know that all of us who have been baptized into Christ Jesus were baptized into his death? We were buried therefore with him by baptism into death, in order that, just as Christ was raised from the dead by the glory of the Father, we too might walk in newness of life.” Paul is saying, “Remember your baptism!”

At a long ago church, I once forgot to turn on the heater in the baptistry. The water was cold. Ice cold. That was the Sunday an old businessman came to get baptized. He was a grouchy old man. But his grandchildren were in church with him that day. He wanted them to see it – to see his faith. So we went up to the baptistry. I remember him looking back at me when he stepped down into the water. He won’t forget his baptism.

Don’t forget yours. “Do you not know that all of us who have been baptized into Christ Jesus were baptized into his death? We were buried therefore with him by baptism into death, in order that, just as Christ was raised from the dead by the glory of the Father, we too might walk in newness of life.”

Romans 6:3-4 – Raised by Glory, an Easter sunrise message

The apostle Paul wanted us to know every Christian is united to Christ. Paul must have been thinking back to Easter Sunday at the same time he was thinking of the life of the Christian. Jesus died; the Christian dies. Jesus was buried; the Christian is buried. Jesus rose; the Christian rises. The Christian’s death, burial, and resurrection is “with Him” – with Christ. So every Christian is united with Christ. Paul wanted us to know this.

In Romans 6, Paul used a certain phrase you may have missed. You might call it a throw-away phrase, tucked into the back pocket of that passage, barely noticed. Paul said, “Christ was raised from the dead by the glory of the Father.” That’s a wonderful phrase – and not a throw-away phrase at all. Put it up to your ear and listen to it. “Christ was raised from the dead by the glory of the Father.” The translators of the English Standard Version gave it a bit of a rhythm. “Christ was raised from the dead by the glory of the Father.” It’s a phrase that bounces along all by itself. It doesn’t need your help. “Christ was raised from the dead by the glory of the Father.”

How was Jesus Christ raised from the dead? How was He brought to new life? By the glory of the Father. If you needed to answer a question on a test, to name the reason why Jesus Christ still lives and reigns today, you could just say what Paul said. Your professor would have to give you a passing grade. “Christ was raised from the dead by the glory of the Father.”

It means Jesus was raised from the dead by the decision and power of God. The “glory of the Father” encompasses a lot of things. The glory of the Father is Christ Himself (2 Corinthians 4:6). So we could say Jesus Christ, who is the glory of the Father, raised Himself from the dead (John 10:17). The glory of the Father also is the Holy Spirit (1 Peter 4:14). So we could accurately say the Holy Spirit raised Christ – and us – from the dead (Romans 8:11). The glory of the Father also is simply the physical manifestation of God’s power. When Lazarus was raised from the dead, Jesus told poor Martha, “Did I not tell you that if you believed you would see the glory of God?” (John 11:40).

So I think it is safe to say God raised Jesus from the dead. All three Persons of the Trinity were involved. It was a physical manifestation of God’s power. God did it.

The women were worried about the stone. Mary, the other Mary, and Salome – How would they move such a large stone from the entrance of the tomb? They were asking each other that question on the road. “Who will move it for us? Are we just going to happen upon a group of burly young men, at the crack of dawn, in the cemetery, to roll the stone out of the way?” The women could not move the stone. And they knew it.

Of course they knew it. That’s not how resurrection happens. You cannot move the stone. You cannot effect your own resurrection by your own strength, cunning, skill, or “goodness.” Jesus’ resurrection was not the product of natural phenomena or human effort. Dead men don’t rise. It is not possible in a naturalistic sense.

No, resurrection only is possible by God. Jesus once told His disciples, who were perplexed by His teaching that rich people would have a very hard time entering the kingdom of God – Jesus said, “With man, it is impossible, but not with God. For all things are possible with God” (Mark 10:27). There are some things you simply cannot do. Have you discovered this in life? It is why you must throw yourself onto the goodness and grace of God. Trust Him.

“Christ was raised from the dead by the glory of the Father.” Listen to it again and again. Memorize it. It’s a phrase that needs no help from us. But we need it. Oh, how we need it. “Christ was raised from the dead by the glory of the Father.”