Romans 15, Christian Love, and the Authority of Scripture

Romans 15 calls Christians to patience and humility toward one another, but it also reminds us that the Scriptures remain the teacher of the Church. Christian love does not mean reshaping God’s Word to fit the spirit of the age; it means submitting ourselves together to the truth that was given for our instruction and our hope.

Called to Belong: The Gospel That Claims Us (Romans 1:6–7)

Before Paul teaches, he embraces. These verses remind us that the gospel does not merely invite us to believe—it calls us to belong. We are not our own. We are loved, called, claimed, and blessed, all by grace.

Obedience, Authority, and the Limits of Law

In a time when good is increasingly called evil and evil is called good, Christians often struggle to know how faithfulness and obedience fit together. Drawing on Micah 6 and Romans 13, this article explores the biblical distinction between honouring authority and obeying unrighteous laws, offering clarity for believers seeking to live faithfully without rebellion in confusing times.

A Living Hope

Peter’s doxology rises from a life remade by the risen Christ. Because Jesus lives, our hope is living; because our inheritance is kept, our lives are kept. Trials reveal, not destroy, the gold of faith, and the Spirit grants a joy words cannot carry. What prophets longed to see and angels watch with wonder is now preached in power — a salvation to taste now and behold in fullness on the last day.

“Elect Exiles”: Grace at the Threshold

Peter’s greeting is a Trinitarian doorway into the whole letter: a people foreknown by the Father, sanctified by the Spirit, and cleansed by the blood of Jesus — not replacing Israel but revealing the mystery long hidden within her story. Exiles in the world, we are nevertheless carried by an eternal purpose and blessed with grace and peace that do not run dry.

Under a New Jurisdiction: Reading Romans 6–8 Without Contradiction

Many stumble over what appear to be contradictions in Romans 6–8, but Paul is not confused. In Christ we are acquitted from sin’s penalty, still battle its power, and await freedom from its presence. Even holiness itself is Christ’s gift, for in Him we are already holy in God’s sight.

The Apostle’s Heart: Prayer, Longing, and Trust (Romans 1:9–10)

Paul prayed constantly to visit the believers in Rome, but the answer was long delayed—and came wrapped in chains. How do we pray like that? And what does faithfulness look like when the answer doesn’t come?

Faith That Speaks: Paul’s Thanksgiving for the Church in Rome (Romans 1:8)

Paul begins not with instruction, but with gratitude. He gives thanks through Jesus Christ for a church whose faith is known—not for its status, but for its steadfast trust. This is the mark of a Church alive in the gospel.

Called to Belong: The Gospel That Claims Us (Romans 1:6–7)

Before Paul teaches, he embraces. These verses remind us that the gospel does not merely invite us to believe—it calls us to belong. We are not our own. We are loved, called, claimed, and blessed, all by grace.

The Weight of a Greeting: Romans 1:1–5 and the Gospel of Glory

We often rush past Romans 1:1–5 as mere introduction, but it contains the heartbeat of the gospel—Christ at the centre, the Spirit as the power, and God’s glory as the goal. This same Spirit, promised in Zechariah 4, remains the source of all true ministry.