It’s the universal problem: how do we TRANSMIT good desires into righteous 
character? The alcoholic hates himself because he got drunk again; the addict 
wishes he could be free again; the pornographer despises himself after he has 
indulged again; the glutton likewise. And the gossiper feels polluted after 
doing it again. “To will is present with me,” says Paul, echoing our universal 
cry of despair, “but how to perform that which is good I find not. ... The evil 
which I would not, that I do. ... When I would do good, evil is present with 
me” (Rom. 7:18, 19, 21). Peterson renders the same passage, “The power of sin 
within me keeps sabotaging my best intentions, ... I don’t have what it takes. 
I can will it but I can’t do it. ... I decide not to do bad, but then I do it 
anyway. ... Something has gone wrong deep within me. ... I’m at the end of my 
rope.” Transmission kaput.

 

That’s Romans 7. Now we go on to Romans 8, which says that Christ is the 
answer. Of course, we’ve heard that for centuries! But look again—Paul presents 
Him in a different light than Christians have seen Him for centuries: Christ is 
not simply a clever lawyer who gets you out of scrape after scrape, paying your 
fines for you, substituting His righteousness to “cover” your on-going sins 
time after time. Verses 1-4 draw back the curtain that has hid the true Christ 
from view and show Him as the Son of God who became the Son of man in the 
truest sense, taking upon Himself the same sinful nature that we all inherited 
from Adam, wrestling with our same problem but conquering it in our own sinful 
nature. God sent “His own Son in the likeness of sinful flesh, and for sin, 
condemned sin in the flesh: that the righteousness of the law might be 
fulfilled in us, who walk not after the flesh, but after the Spirit.”

 

The point? He took upon Himself a SELF as we each have a self, and He denied 
that “self.” In other words, He took upon Himself a will of His own that was in 
conflict with his Father’s will, but He totally denied His own will—all the way 
to the cross whereon He was crucified (John 5:30; 6:38; Matt. 26:39).

 

Believe the truth about Christ, and then you share with Paul, “I am crucified 
with Christ” (Gal. 2:20). Victory!




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