Romans 8:37-39
by Roy A. Harrisville III
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For I am convinced that neither death, nor life, nor angels,
nor rulers, nor things present, nor things to come, nor powers, nor
height, nor depth, nor anything else in all creation, will be able
to separate us from the love of God in Christ Jesus our Lord.
We should read these words as pure gospel, good news, and comfort.
They are words of present assurance and future hope in the redemption
already achieved by the cross of Christ. Though the Apostle Paul thinks
of the future the message he relays is for the present. We are more than
conquerors now. We have already been loved by God through Christ. St.
Paul says that nothing will be able to separate us from God’s love,
which means we already have that love.
But that love triumphs at a terrible price: the death of God’s Son
(v. 34). It is won through the defeat of everything that opposes that
love: death/life, angels/rulers, present/future, powers, height/depth.
Nothing is excluded in this list since it includes “all creation.” Yet,
in the face of such
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In addition to questions found in this
study, here are some general questions that can
be used:
1. What is God saying to us through this
passage?
2. What does this passage tell us about
God?
3. How does this passage speak to us as a
community?
4. What does this passage teach us about
our neighbors and our world? |
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rebellious and seemingly overpowering forces God’s love triumphs. These
words of Paul therefore are words of comfort to the dying, the
despairing, the lost and beaten. They fall on the deaf ears of the
satisfied and complacent. But for those whose faith leads them into
suffering and persecution (see vv. 33-36) these words are salve on their
wou

nds
for they spell the promise that separation from God’s love is never a
possibility.
For Paul the supreme moment of triumph is hidden in the Lord’s cross.
It comes when we are shorn of our pride and pretense and hang naked in
vulnerable surrender; when every form of human security is jettisoned
and all we have left is humble worthlessness — a crushed and defeated
soul. No longer do we shout for our rights and freedoms, only
forgiveness. Then the cry of “Conqueror!” is heard on the lips of the
Apostle. In that moment of supreme defeat we have one word to whisper
across the cosmos: Jesus! Our defeat is his victory, is our triumph. In
that moment comes the judgment of all the vast universe ... one person
at a time. The old powers are lost to oblivion and each day a new defeat
is proclaimed and life reborn. This is why the Saint may say he is
certain and rests assured that nothing can separate us from God’s love
in Christ. For there is nothing Christ has not defeated through the
cross; even death. All the powers that would pull us from God’s embrace
— our pride, our desires, our fears and ambitions have with the
elemental spirits of the universe become captives to his mercy.
Surrender is the only response to such unconquerable love and more than
total victory the only outcome for us.
Roy A. Harrisville III is senior pastor of Our
Savior’s Lutheran Church in Menomonie, Wisconsin.
Questions on Romans 8:37-39
- In what ways have these words of Paul brought you comfort?
- What do these words of Paul tells us of God’s love?
- How does God’s love relate to power?