Click here for Romans 10 audio:
Read it. Pray it. Share it. Live it.
Paul continues with a pastoral ache for Israel: “my heart’s desire and prayer… is that they may be saved” (v. 1). Many of his fellow Jews are sincere and zealous, but their zeal is misdirected because it isn’t shaped by the truth of God’s saving plan (v. 2). Instead of submitting to God’s righteousness—His way of making sinners right through Christ—they tried to establish their own righteousness through law-keeping (v. 3; cf. Phil. 3:9). But Christ is the goal and culmination of the law, and He also marks the end of using the law as a pathway to righteousness. Right standing with God belongs to “everyone who believes” (v. 4).
Paul then contrasts the way of works with the way of faith using the Old Testament itself. Leviticus shows that law-righteousness demands doing—and doing perfectly (v. 5; cf. Gal. 3:10). But Deuteronomy shows the nearness and accessibility of God’s saving word, now fulfilled in Christ who has come down from heaven and been raised from the dead (vv. 6–8). The gospel is simple and clear: confess with your mouth that Jesus is Lord and believe in your heart that God raised Him from the dead, and you will be saved (vv. 9–10). This promise is for all people—Jew and Gentile alike—because the same Lord bestows His riches on all who call on Him (vv. 11–13).
And if people can call on the Lord and be saved, then the message must be carried to them. Paul traces the “chain” of salvation backwards—calling, believing, hearing, preaching, sending—and celebrates the beauty of those who bring good news (vv. 14–15). Yet he also grieves: hearing is necessary, but hearing alone is not enough—many in Israel did not “obey” the gospel by believing it (v. 16). Even so, Israel cannot claim ignorance; the Scriptures foretold both Gentile inclusion and Israel’s resistance (vv. 18–21). The chapter ends with a stunning picture of God’s patience: He is still holding out His hands to a disobedient people (v. 21).
🌀 Reflection:
Romans 10 presses two truths into our hearts at the same time: salvation is truly near—Christ is accessible by faith—and salvation is urgently personal—you must believe, confess, and call on Him. Zeal and sincerity aren’t enough if we refuse to submit to God’s righteousness in Jesus.
💬 Mission Challenge:
Share Romans 10:9–13 with someone this week (in a conversation, a text, or a post), and invite them to respond to Jesus—not by trying harder, but by calling on the Lord who saves.

Click here to return to the contents page for Phase 2.3 — The Savior, His Church, and the Mission.
1 Comment