Paul opens Ephesians by reminding believers who they are: “saints” set apart for God, and “faithful” because they are in Christ (vv. 1–2). Then he launches into one long, worshipful sentence that praises God for His rescue plan. The Father chose His people in Christ before the foundation of the world—not because they were worthy, but because He is gracious—so that they would be holy and blameless before Him (vv. 3–6). In love, God predestined believers for adoption, making them His true heirs, and all of it is “to the praise of his glorious grace” (vv. 5–6).
That grace shows up most clearly in Jesus: in Him we have redemption through His blood, the forgiveness of our trespasses, according to the riches of God’s grace (vv. 7–8). And God is not only saving individuals—He is revealing His “mystery,” His long-planned purpose to unite (or “sum up”) all things in Christ—things in heaven and things on earth—when the fullness of time arrives (vv. 9–10; cf. Colossians 1:20). In Christ we have obtained an inheritance, because God works all things according to the counsel of His will, and He will finish what He planned (vv. 11–12; cf. Romans 8:28–30). When the Ephesians heard the word of truth and believed, they were sealed with the promised Holy Spirit—God’s own mark of ownership and protection—and the Spirit is the down payment that guarantees the full redemption still to come (vv. 13–14; cf. 2 Corinthians 1:22).
Paul then thanks God for their faith in Christ and love for the saints, and he prays they would not just know the truths of salvation but feel their weight in the “eyes of their hearts” (vv. 15–18). He asks God to give them spiritual wisdom to grasp their hope, God’s precious inheritance in His people, and the immeasurable greatness of His power toward believers (vv. 17–19). That power is the same power that raised Jesus from the dead and seated Him above every rule and authority—far above every rival power in this age and the age to come (vv. 20–21; cf. Psalm 110:1). God has put all things under Christ’s feet and made Him head over all things for the church, which is His body—His living people who represent His reign in the world (vv. 22–23; cf. Psalm 8:6).
🌀 Reflection: Ephesians 1 trains your heart to start with worship, not worry. If God chose you in Christ, adopted you, redeemed you, and sealed you with His Spirit, what fear or shame are you still carrying like it gets the final word (vv. 4–7, 13–14)?
💬 Mission Challenge: Pray Paul’s prayer for someone in your church today: ask God to open the “eyes of their heart” to hope, inheritance, and power in Christ (vv. 17–19). Then tell them one specific gospel blessing from this chapter that is true of them “in Christ” (vv. 3, 7, 13).
We’re back in our study of Revelation called The KING is Coming, where we’re taking a verse-by-verse approach to see what the book truly reveals—Jesus Christ Himself. As always, I’m joined by Jamie Harrison, and I’m thankful for the opportunity to walk through this study together. Today, we’ll be looking at another of Jesus’s letters to the churches, this time turning to the church in Philadelphia. This week’s passage is Revelation 3:7–13:
7 “And to the angel of the church in Philadelphia write: ‘The words of the holy one, the true one, who has the key of David, who opens and no one will shut, who shuts and no one opens.8 “ ‘I know your works. Behold, I have set before you an open door, which no one is able to shut. I know that you have but little power, and yet you have kept my word and have not denied my name. 9 Behold, I will make those of the synagogue of Satan who say that they are Jews and are not, but lie—behold, I will make them come and bow down before your feet, and they will learn that I have loved you. 10 Because you have kept my word about patient endurance, I will keep you from the hour of trial that is coming on the whole world, to try those who dwell on the earth. 11 I am coming soon. Hold fast what you have, so that no one may seize your crown. 12 The one who conquers, I will make him a pillar in the temple of my God. Never shall he go out of it, and I will write on him the name of my God, and the name of the city of my God, the new Jerusalem, which comes down from my God out of heaven, and my own new name. 13 He who has an ear, let him hear what the Spirit says to the churches.’[1]
Keith Harris: Greetings, Sojourners, We’re excited to dive into this letter today. How excited are we?
Jamie Harrison: I am almost as excited as you are. Almost. Almost.
Keith: Too many cups of coffee.
Jamie: Too many cups of coffee — and that’s T-W-O, actually number three. I had one before I got here. This is not good.
Keith: Well, I’m glad you’re excited. Since you’re excited, why don’t you filter that excitement into Revelation 3 — the letter to Philadelphia.
Jamie: This letter — this letter is… it’s a little deep. It’s a little controversial. There’s one particular verse in here that’s the only one I ever hear quoted when people say Jesus is going to come back before the tribulation. It’s always this one.
But I want to say up front — Keith and I have made very clear from the get-go that these kinds of controversial things are not our focus. Our focus is: What does the Bible say about Jesus?
Keith: And we’ve said this at least once every episode. We don’t have the answers to all the popular questions. We’re not seeking to. What we try to do is what I would call good, practical, healthy Bible interpretation — where the clear things are important and the important things are clear. And that which is less clear? That’s above our pay grade. So we’re going to tell you — to the best of our ability — what the Bible says, and do what Nehemiah 8:8 says:
“They read from the book, from the Law of God, clearly, and they gave the sense, so that the people understood the reading.”
That’s what we’re going for — to point people to Jesus. And if something cannot be known, we’ll tell you that. And then we’ll move on.
Jamie: That’s right. Amen. Let’s go.
So as we get started here, remember the letters are all set up kind of in the same order, for the most part. And here we start off again with our salutation: “To the angel of the church in Philadelphia…” — referring to the pastor of said church. And then Jesus is going to jump straight in and give some attributes about Himself. And He says: “The words of the Holy One, the True One, the One who has the key of David, who opens and no one will close, and who closes and no one opens.” (CSB) So He gives quite a few things about Himself here. And just to briefly dive into each one a little bit: First off, He describes Himself as the Holy One. Please understand — this is Jesus declaring that He is God. Don’t ever be confused about that. Some people will say, “Well, Jesus never said He was God.” Well, first off — He did. And second — here’s one example. When He says He is the Holy One, He is declaring that He has full authority as a member of the Godhead. He is God — and that is exponentially important to understand. Jesus has the same authority that God the Father and God the Holy Spirit do.
Keith: Because we’re not talking about three gods. We’re talking about three persons of the One God. Because it says the Holy One, the True One, clarifying that while Jesus is a member of the Trinity — which is just a word we use to describe this multifaceted God — He is one God, and His name is Jesus.
Jamie: And so He goes from there — He says the Holy One, the True One, like Keith said. Now, the city of Philadelphia — not Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, because that didn’t exist yet.
Keith: That’s accurate.
Jamie: Coincidentally, this city was actually destroyed [once] by an earthquake — but we digress. Philadelphia was called “the Gateway to the East.” They were situated on a main route of the imperial post from Rome to the East. So it was a very important city in terms of traffic — people passing through, mail being delivered — things like that. But along this route, because there were so many travelers, there were also many, many temples to other gods.
Keith: Which was very common — not just in the Roman Empire, but especially in the Roman Empire. They wanted to keep people happy, keep people placated. And one way to do that — especially if you’re trying to gather a lot of people together — is to make it easy for them. So you think about cities today that have mosques and temples and synagogues and churches and this and that. It’s along the same vein — gather the people in, get them for your purpose. And, I mean, that’s what gathers them.
Jamie: That’s right. And so Jesus here — when He says the True One — understand: He’s not fake. He’s not man-made. He’s not a copy. He is God. He’s saying, “I’m not like all these other false gods and temples you see along the way. I am God.” Revelation 6:10 refers to Jesus as the One who is holy and true. In other words — again — He is God. So He is making an emphasis here, so that the church in Philadelphia understands: this is who is speaking.
Keith: And I think it’s 1 John 5:20 that says — specifically about Jesus —
“He is the true God, and eternal life.” (ESV)
So this is consistent — same author as Revelation, by the way. The same John who wrote Revelation also wrote 1 John. So the message is consistent: Jesus is God.
Jamie: So then the third attribute He gives here is: “The One who has the key of David, who opens and no one will close, and who closes and no one opens.” (CSB) I just want to briefly hit on this. If you look back at Isaiah 22:15–25, you’ll see kind of where this idea — the “key of David” — comes from. And the story that happens in Isaiah 22 is this: Assyria invades Judah, and the Jewish leaders — instead of calling on God to defend them — they call on Egypt to defend them. And one of those leaders was named Shebna… Shebna? Shebna? However you want to say it.
Keith: Just say it fast.
Jamie: Say it fast. Nobody knows.
Keith: Confidence. That’s the key.
Jamie: That’s right — confidence.
So Shebna used his office for personal gain, and so God removes him and puts Eliakim in his place. And gives him the keys of authority — these “keys of David.” Whoever this steward is has control over the distribution of resources. So again, Shebna uses it for personal gain. Eliakim comes in — he’s a very good man, according to the Bible. But even though he’s a good man, we’re told in the story that he will give way — that his shelf will be removed, so to speak — because he’s still just a man, and he’s not able. He’s not able to do what Jesus can.
So when he’s removed, the keys are going to be given to Jesus. Only Jesus can be trusted with our lives. He is the heir to the throne of David. So when He says, “The One who has the key of David,” that’s what He’s referring to. He is, so to speak, over the house. He is the treasurer. He’s in charge of the distribution of resources. In other words — He’s the man, okay? I think that’s the best way to say it. He has the key.
So if you ever hear anybody else say that they have the key of David — they are a liar.
Keith: And in a very real sense — an antichrist. Not the Antichrist, but an antichrist. If the Bible says this is what Jesus has — and they’re not Jesus, or Eliakim from centuries ago — then they’re lying. And they’re dangerous.
Jamie: Very, very dangerous. And I do encourage — as we go through this study — look in the Word. Don’t take our word for it. We’re big on that when we’re teaching or preaching in church. Our pastor, Big John, is always like, “Man, go back to the Word. Don’t just take my word for it — go to the Word.” So again, that was Isaiah 22:15–25 — check it out, read it for yourself.
Keith: Specifically verse 22 is where that key reference is — that Jesus is pretty much quoting word for word.
Jamie: Absolutely.
So what does Jesus do with these keys of David? Well, it tells us: “The One who has the key of David, who opens and no one will close, and who closes and no one opens.” (CSB) Well, what is He opening and closing? You can look straight to the Bible on this — because again, the Bible is going to tell us what the Bible means. And if you look in Acts 14:27, 1 Corinthians 16:9, 2 Corinthians 2:12, Colossians 4:3–4 — and there are others — but if you look at those, all of them refer to a door being opened for ministry, for the gospel to be spread. So Jesus has the authority — as a full member of the Godhead — to close and open doors. And what doors is He closing and opening? They’re doors to ministry, the spread of the gospel, for you to go and do the works you’ve been placed here to do. Paul talks about this in a couple of his letters — Keith, help me with the exact one — but he wanted to go to a particular country to the East and wasn’t allowed to go.
Keith: Yeah, and at one point in time, he was planning on going to Spain — and we know he didn’t make it there.
Jamie: That’s right. Wanted to go to Rome, but wasn’t allowed to go at that time because the Holy Spirit closed that door. And so that’s the idea we’re looking at here.
So Jesus, once again, is explaining — in three different ways — “I’m part of the Godhead, and I’ve got all authority.” And then He goes on from there and says: “I know your works. Look, I’ve placed before you an open door that no one can close, because you have but little power, yet you’ve kept My Word and have not denied My name.” (CSB) So — you have but little power. He’s opening these doors not because they have wealth, not because they’re a large congregation, not because they have some qualification like X, Y, Z — He opens the door of ministry because of their faith.
Keith: It’s a clear contrast here to [Jesus’s last] letter. If you look back at Matthew 7, Jesus says, “You said you did this in My name, and that in My name — we raised the dead, we prophesied…” And Jesus says, “But I don’t know who you are.” Here, Jesus is saying, “I do know who you are. And I’ve picked you — not because you’re strong in and of yourself — but because I’ve given you a ministry that no one is going to be able to stop.” The contrast is the strength of Jesus that He gives to those He has saved — those He has made alive. That’s what it takes for ministry. It’s not based on your gifting or your ability or your works — because the world will tell you (and a lot of times, even religion will tell you): “Do this, and you earn that.” But Jesus is saying: “You get this because I am this. I used My key. I unlocked the door. They can’t shut it.”
Jamie: That’s right. That’s a huge deal. Very much so.
So He says: “You’ve kept My Word, you’ve not denied My name. Note this: I will make those from the synagogue of Satan, who claim to be Jews and are not, but are lying — I will make them come and bow down at your feet, and they will know that I have loved you.” (CSB) So first — you’ve kept My Word and not denied My name. In other words, they’ve survived persecution. They’ve survived trials. These people are stepping out in faith. They’re doing the things the Lord told them to do. They’ve kept His Word. They’ve survived persecution. They’ve survived trials.
Keith: Which, in contrast, obviously means there are some who — because of the persecution and the trials — denied His name. They just walked away from Him. That was a common practice — not just back in ancient times, but even now. If you’re living in a country that is hostile to the gospel, they will absolutely give you the opportunity to renounce that belief — to say, “No, just kidding. Jesus isn’t my Lord. Allah is,” or “Caesar is,” or whoever. And these people — in the midst of that, having the opportunity — said: “No. Jesus. Period.”
Jamie: That’s right. Period. So with this next verse — verse 9 — talking about the synagogue of Satan, who claim to be Jews and are not, but are lying — you can jump back to Revelation 2:9–10 and you get the same kind of idea. They are Jews outwardly, but not inwardly, so to speak. In other words, they’re not who Jesus would want them to be — who God would want them to be. They’re being led by Satan to persecute these believers. Now, if you’re a Jew reading this letter back during this time, you might say, “Are you trying to say I’m part of the synagogue of Satan?” Well — if you’re doing Satan’s work, then that’s what you are.
Keith: It says what it says.
Jamie: That’s right. And He says: “I will make them come and bow down at your feet, and they will know that I have loved you.” (CSB) You can also look at Philippians 2:5–11 and Revelation 5:11–13 for similar language.
And then He says: “Because you have kept My command to endure, I will also keep you from the hour of testing that is going to come on the whole world, to test those who live on the earth.” (CSB) Then verse 11: “I am coming soon. Hold on to what you have, so that no one takes your crown.” (CSB) And here’s that verse I mentioned earlier — the one that some people quote when they say Jesus is going to come back before the tribulation. It’s this phrase: “I will keep you from the hour of testing…” Now — when you read that, you might assume that it means He’s going to remove you from the trial, that He’ll take you off the face of the earth and move you to heaven before the trial starts. So I think we have to look at that word “keep.” What does it mean? Is Jesus saying, “I’ll take you out of the Great Tribulation”?
Now, mind you — He’s just commended them. There’s no admonition in this letter, no rebuke. It’s all praise. He just told them, “Great job working through persecution. Great job working through trials.” In other words, as Christians — we’re going to go through these things. The Bible’s clear about that. So again, what does the word “keep” mean? This particular Greek word — and Keith, you can pronounce it better than I can…
Keith: I believe it’s tēreō.
Jamie: Sounds great. We’ll go with that. It means: “To cause to continue, to guard, to watch over, to protect.”
So let’s read that verse with each of those meanings plugged in. “I will also cause you to continue from the hour of testing.” “I will guard you from the hour of testing.” “I will watch over you from the hour of testing.” “I will protect you from the hour of testing.” So when you read it that way, it doesn’t sound like you’re being removed. It sounds like you’re being protected through the hour of testing.
So let’s look back at a couple of places where that same word — keep — is used. First, let’s go to John 15:20–21. This is where Jesus is speaking to His disciples. He says: “Remember the word I spoke to you: A servant is not greater than his master. If they persecuted Me, they will also persecute you. If they kept My word, they will also keep yours.” (CSB) There’s that same word — keep. Verse 21: “But they will do all these things to you on account of My name, because they don’t know the One who sent Me.” (CSB) So these two verses say that we’re going to go through persecution — it’s going to happen.
Now jump to John 17:6–19. This is where Jesus is praying for His disciples. And I think it’s important to read this whole section: “I have revealed Your name to the people You gave Me from the world. They were Yours, You gave them to Me, and they have kept Your word. Now they know that everything You have given Me is from You, because I have given them the words You gave Me. They have received them and have known for certain that I came from You. They have believed that You sent Me. I pray for them. I’m not praying for the world but for those You have given Me, because they are Yours. Everything I have is Yours, and everything You have is Mine, and I am glorified in them. I am no longer in the world, but they are in the world, and I am coming to You. Holy Father, protect them by Your name that You have given Me, so that they may be one as We are one. While I was with them, I was protecting them by Your name that You have given Me. I guarded them, and not one of them is lost except the son of destruction…” (CSB)
Keith: — referring to Judas.
Jamie: Right — “so that the Scripture may be fulfilled.” Then He says: “Now I am coming to You, and I speak these things in the world so that they may have My joy completed in them. I have given them Your word. The world hated them because they are not of the world, just as I am not of the world. I am not praying that You take them out of the world, but that You protect them from the evil one.” (CSB)
Keith: That word protect — same word again: tēreō. That’s the word we’re looking at.
Jamie: Exactly. He says: “They are not of the world, just as I am not of the world. Sanctify them by the truth; Your word is truth. As You sent Me into the world, I also have sent them into the world. I sanctify Myself for them, so that they also may be sanctified by the truth.” (CSB) Now, one of the keys to studying the Bible is knowing that the Bible is going to confirm what the Bible says. And if it doesn’t, then it’s probably one of those things that we’re not supposed to know about.
Keith: And when something is only mentioned vaguely, or only mentioned in one place — it depends on how it’s used, whether or not we can be clear about it.
Jamie: Right. So here in Revelation, Jesus says He will “keep” them from the hour of testing. And in John 17, He uses the same word — and He literally says: “I’m not praying that You take them out of the world, but that You keep them from the evil one.” In other words, while they’re going through the tribulation of the world — the persecution — He is protecting them through it, not removing them from it.
Keith: And we’ve been looking at that word keep as a verb — but the noun form of it literally means something like a warden or a guard. It’s related to how we use the phrase “keep an eye on.” And “keep an eye on” doesn’t necessarily mean you rescue someone from everything — it means you make sure they can make it through. If you’re keeping an eye on your kids, you don’t necessarily mow everything down in front of them — even if you want to.
Part of that is them learning how to navigate things, knowing you’re there. As kids grow into adulthood, they’ve got to be able to do things on their own. So, like, if I’m keeping an eye on my kids while they’re cooking, I can’t run over every time they touch the stove knob and slap their hand away. They know I’ve got them — but they’re still learning. And that’s the idea behind this word keep.
Jamie: So I think to kind of finish this out — if you’re still with us (and hopefully you didn’t click off because you disagree with what we just said) — I want to say this: Is Jesus coming back before the Tribulation? Is He coming back halfway through? Is He coming at the end? The answer is: I don’t know. I’m not Him. And He told us that no one knows — only the Father.
Keith: One thing we can definitively say is that He’s not coming back before any tribulation — because we know from the book of Acts, the church has already been going through tribulation. And I think about 1 Peter 5:8–9 — where Peter’s writing to believers who are going through trials and tribulations. He talks about their adversary, the devil, prowling around like a roaring lion, seeking to devour and destroy. And he says: “Resist him, firm in your faith, knowing that the same kinds of suffering are being experienced by your brotherhood throughout the world.” (ESV)
I hear people in the church today talk about, “Well, what are we going to do when persecution sets in?” If you’re living a godly life in the middle of a secular world, you’ve probably experienced it on some level. But all around the world today — and for the last 2,000 years — there are Christians who’ve faced the choice: “Will you renounce Christ and live, or remain faithful and die?” So we can definitively say — whether or not He comes back before the Great Tribulation — there’s already great tribulation happening in a lot of places.
Jamie: A lot of places. Here in America, we’re kind of shielded from that — or spoiled. That’s a better word.
Keith: Spoiled. Good word.
Jamie: So again — the answer is: We don’t know. Sure, I’m rooting for a pre-tribulation return…, but I also have to look at it objectively and say: If believers at the beginning of the church suffered immense persecution… We could talk all day about the torture techniques used on them. Some of it would blow your mind — might even make you puke. The early church suffered.
Keith: And I love how Shane Viner put it when we discussed this a while back. He said, “I want more than anything for the pre-trib view to be right… but it sure is good news to know that if it’s not — He’s got us.” That’s it. That’s such a beautiful sentiment. Do we want Jesus to come and rescue us beforehand? Absolutely. But we can also look at those who are suffering now around the world and say — “He’s still got them. And He’ll still have us — no matter what the world throws our way.” I’ve heard someone say, “The world’s greatest threat — death — brings the Christian’s greatest reward.”
Jamie: So Jesus goes on from there and says again: “I am coming soon. Hold on to what you have, so that no one takes your crown. The one who conquers, I will make a pillar in the temple of My God, and he will never go out again. I will write on him the name of My God, and the name of the city of My God — the New Jerusalem — which comes down out of heaven from My God, and My new name.” (CSB) So here we go — “the one who conquers.” Again, 1 John 5:4–5 tells us the one who conquers is the one who is saved. He says, “I’ll make him a pillar in the temple of My God.” Now, I think it’s interesting — in Philadelphia, they were constantly scared of earthquakes. They were constantly having to evacuate the city. And we mentioned at the beginning that it was actually destroyed by an earthquake in 17 BC. So this language would’ve hit home — when Jesus talks about a pillar. A pillar holds a building up. They had seen buildings collapse — often. So this is personal.
Keith: And ideally, the pillar stays.
Jamie: That’s right. So here Jesus says: “I’ll make you a pillar in the temple of My God.” In other words — this temple will never be destroyed. You will be there forever. And of course, we know this temple isn’t a literal building. Revelation 21:22 tells us that there is no temple in heaven — because Jesus Himself is the temple. We also know that the believers bear His name (Galatians 2:9). He says: “I’ll give you the name of My God, the name of the city of My God — the New Jerusalem — and My new name.” (CSB) Ezekiel 48:35 says the New Jerusalem means: “The LORD is there.” And that’s exactly what we have here in Revelation. The Lord is there. There’s no sun, because He is the light. There’s no temple, because He is the temple. And we will be there forever with Him. Now as far as where it says He’ll write on us His name and His new name — Some people say, “Well, what is that name?” I don’t know. Because He didn’t tell us.
Keith: And if He doesn’t tell us, we’re not supposed to know.
Jamie: That’s right. I can give you a few other verses in Revelation that mention His new name — that’s Revelation 2:17, 3:12, 19:12, and 22:4. Check those out. But again — it doesn’t say what the name is. Who knows? But I know it’s going to be pretty cool — because it comes from Him.
Keith: It’s one of those things like — have you ever tried to explain something to someone, and finally just said, “You had to be there”? Well, this is going to be one of those things. You have to be there — with Him — to know. And that’s good. Because again — we’re talking about a Savior who keeps us through persecution, who gives us perseverance. If we are His, we will be with Him forever. So we don’t have to know everything right now. We can have assurance in this: We know Him. And He knows us.
Jamie: And of course, the last verse: “Let anyone who has ears to hear listen to what the Spirit says to the churches.” (CSB) Or maybe it says, “has ears.” I don’t know. That’s horrible. There’s some guy in the world without ears right now who’s reading the transcript going, “I don’t think that’s very funny.” Yeah, I apologize to you, sir.
Keith: Most of what comes out in these podcasts starts as writing, but this — oddly enough — is meant to be heard. These conversations — while we joke — the idea here is: Don’t just hear what we said. Hear what the Spirit says to the churches. Not just these churches in Revelation — but to your church as well. If you’re saved, you should be part of a local church. And this letter is written to yours, too. Are you going to be like the churches that Jesus rebuked for their works? Or like the ones who had no works at all? Or are you going to be like this church — where Jesus says: “I know that you have little power — but I’ve given you work to do, and you’ve done it.” This letter is meant to apply to your life. Before Jesus gave any of the future stuff in Revelation, He gave these letters — to deal with the now. So… are you part of the synagogue of Satan? Are you claiming to be part of God’s people, but lying? Or are you bowing at His feet, knowing full well that He loves you — and because He loved you, you love Him? With this letter to the church at Philadelphia — dear Sojourner, this is our plea: Seek to apply this. Do you belong to God?
Has He saved you? Have you confessed Him as Lord, and believed in your heart that God raised Him from the dead? Because if you haven’t — You’ve got nothing to hold fast to. If you haven’t — There’s no amount of works, no amount of Bible reading, no obsession with prophecy that can save you. Jesus is the True One. And if He has opened the door to you — no one can shut it. That’s good news.
Alright. We have thoroughly enjoyed this. Jamie, thank you for being here.
Jamie: Oh, thank you.
Keith: We’ll see y’all next week with the last of the letters — the letter to the church in Laodicea.
Paul closes Romans with something that feels very personal: gospel relationships. He commends Phoebe, a trusted servant (and likely courier of the letter) from the church at Cenchreae, and urges the Romans to welcome her in the Lord and help her in whatever she needs, since she has been a generous supporter of many believers (vv. 1–2). Then Paul pours out a long list of greetings—Priscilla and Aquila who risked their lives for him, the house church that meets in their home, early converts like Epaenetus, hard workers like Mary, Tryphaena, Tryphosa, and Persis, and dear saints like Rufus and his mother who had cared for Paul (vv. 3–15). The sheer variety of names highlights something beautiful: the church in Rome was made up of men and women, Jews and Gentiles, and people from many social backgrounds, all united in Christ and honored for faithful service rather than status (vv. 6–13). Paul ends this section by calling the church to express genuine family affection—“greet one another with a holy kiss”—and reminds them they are connected to the wider family of churches (v. 16).
But Paul doesn’t only end with warmth—he also ends with vigilance. He warns them to watch out for people who cause divisions and create obstacles contrary to the doctrine they have been taught, and he tells them to avoid such voices (v. 17). These teachers sound appealing, but they are driven by self-interest and use smooth talk to deceive the unsuspecting (v. 18). Paul rejoices that the Romans are known for obedience, and he urges them to be wise about good and innocent about evil (v. 19). Then he gives a striking promise: the God of peace will soon crush Satan under their feet—echoing God’s ancient promise of victory over the serpent (v. 20; cf. Gen. 3:15). After greetings from Paul’s ministry companions (including Timothy) and from Tertius, the scribe who wrote as Paul dictated, Paul ends with a doxology praising God who strengthens His people through the gospel—once hidden but now revealed through Scripture to all nations to bring about the obedience of faith—so that glory belongs forever to the only wise God through Jesus Christ (vv. 21–23, 25–27; cf. 1:5).
🌀 Reflection: Romans ends by reminding us that doctrine is meant to produce devotion and durable relationships. Who has “worked hard in the Lord” around you that you’ve overlooked or taken for granted (vv. 6, 12)? And are you just as intentional to guard unity and truth as you are to enjoy community (vv. 17–19)?
💬 Mission Challenge: Encourage one faithful servant in your church this week—someone who labors quietly like so many in Romans 16 (vv. 6, 12). Then protect unity by refusing to platform gossip, flattery, or divisive voices, and instead point someone back to the gospel that strengthens God’s people (vv. 17–18, 25–27).
Paul finishes his teaching on “the strong and the weak” by making the “strong” own the responsibility: real strength doesn’t insist on its own way—it bears with the failings of the weak and aims to build others up (vv. 1–2). Christ is the model. Jesus did not please Himself; He endured reproach and suffering in order to do the Father’s will and serve others (v. 3; cf. Ps. 69:9). Paul also reminds the church why the Old Testament still matters: what was written before was written for our instruction, so that through endurance and the encouragement of the Scriptures we might have hope (v. 4; cf. 2 Tim. 3:16–17). This leads into Paul’s prayer for unity—harmony that results in one voice glorifying God (vv. 5–6)—and his central command: welcome one another as Christ has welcomed you, for the glory of God (v. 7).
Then Paul lifts their eyes to the bigger story: Jesus became a servant to the Jews to prove God’s truthfulness and confirm His promises to the patriarchs, and He also saved Gentiles so they would glorify God for mercy (vv. 8–9). Paul strings together OT texts from the Law, the Writings, and the Prophets to show this was always God’s plan: Gentiles rejoicing with God’s people, praising the Lord, and hoping in the Root of Jesse—the Messiah who rules the nations (vv. 9–12; cf. Deut. 32:43, Ps. 117:1, Isa. 11:10). Paul ends this section with a prayer that fits the whole point: that the God of hope would fill them with joy and peace in believing, so they overflow with hope by the power of the Holy Spirit (v. 13).
In the rest of the chapter, Paul explains why he wrote so boldly to a church he didn’t plant: God gave him grace to serve as Christ’s minister to the Gentiles, and he sees his gospel work like a priest presenting an offering—Gentile converts made acceptable and sanctified by the Spirit (vv. 15–16). He boasts only in what Christ has done through him—by word, deed, and the Spirit’s power—as he preached from Jerusalem to Illyricum (vv. 18–19). Paul’s ambition has been pioneer mission work, preaching where Christ hasn’t been named (vv. 20–21; cf. Isa. 52:15), which is why he has been hindered from visiting Rome (v. 22). Now he hopes to come to them on his way to Spain and be helped by them (vv. 23–24, 28–29), but first he must deliver a collection from Gentile churches to the poor saints in Jerusalem—an act meant to strengthen unity between Jewish and Gentile believers (vv. 25–27). He closes by urging them to strive with him in prayer—for protection, for the gift to be received well, and for joyful fellowship when he finally arrives (vv. 30–33).
🌀 Reflection: Where do you most feel the pull to “please yourself” instead of building others up? Romans 15 says Christian maturity looks like Jesus—willing to carry burdens, pursue unity, and treat Scripture as a steady source of endurance and hope (vv. 1–4). The church’s unity isn’t a side issue; it is meant to make God’s glory visible as we worship “with one voice” (vv. 6–7).
💬 Mission Challenge: Pray for and support gospel work beyond your normal circle. Choose one missionary, church planter, or local evangelistic effort this week: encourage them with a message, intercede specifically for their protection and fruitfulness (vv. 30–32), and if possible give toward their work as a tangible act of partnership in the mission (vv. 24, 27).
Paul turns to a real-life church problem: believers disagreeing over “disputable matters”—issues Scripture neither clearly commands nor forbids. In Rome, some Christians felt freedom to eat anything and treat all days alike, while others (with more tender consciences, often shaped by Jewish law or pagan backgrounds) avoided certain foods and still honored particular days (vv. 2, 5). Paul’s command is simple but challenging: welcome one another—not to argue and win, but to live in peace as one family (v. 1). The “strong” must not despise the “weak,” and the “weak” must not condemn the “strong,” because God has welcomed them both (v. 3). Ultimately, each believer is the Lord’s servant, and it is before Christ—not one another—that we stand or fall (v. 4).
Paul grounds this unity in the lordship of Jesus. None of us lives to ourselves, and none of us dies to ourselves—we belong to the Lord (vv. 7–8). Christ died and rose again to be Lord of the living and the dead (v. 9). That means judgmental attitudes are out of place: we will all stand before God’s judgment seat and give account of ourselves (vv. 10–12). So instead of “judging” each other, Paul says we should “judge” something else—make a careful decision to avoid putting a stumbling block in a brother’s path (v. 13).
In the second half, Paul clarifies that nothing is unclean in itself (v. 14), yet conscience matters: if someone believes an action is wrong, to do it anyway is sin for them (vv. 14, 23). Love must govern liberty. If your freedom grieves or pressures a fellow believer, you are no longer walking in love (v. 15). The kingdom of God is not about food and drink, but about righteousness, peace, and joy in the Holy Spirit (v. 17). Therefore, we pursue what makes for peace and mutual upbuilding (v. 19), willingly limiting our freedoms when needed so we don’t harm God’s work in others (vv. 20–21). Faithful maturity doesn’t flaunt freedom—it uses freedom to serve.
🌀 Reflection: Are you more passionate about being “right,” or about building up your brother or sister? Romans 14 calls us to hold convictions with humility, to honor conscience, and to measure our “freedom” by love. Real maturity looks like Jesus—strong enough to lay down rights for the good of others (vv. 15, 19).
💬 Mission Challenge: Reach out to a believer whose preferences or convictions differ from yours. Listen without mocking or correcting, and encourage them in what you share in common—Jesus is Lord, and you both belong to Him (vv. 8–9). Then choose one practical way this week to pursue peace and build them up (v. 19).
Paul continues the “gospel-shaped life” he began in Romans 12 by turning to how Christians relate to civil government. Because God is ultimately sovereign, there is no governing authority that exists apart from His permission and providence (v. 1; cf. Dan. 2:21). So believers are called to live as good citizens—submitting to lawful authority, not as people who worship the state, but as people who worship God and recognize His ordering of society (vv. 1–2). Government is meant to restrain evil and promote good, and when it functions as it should, it serves as God’s instrument to uphold justice in a fallen world (vv. 3–4). That’s why Christians should obey not only to avoid consequences, but “for the sake of conscience” (v. 5), paying what is owed and showing respect and honor where it’s due (vv. 6–7; cf. Matt. 22:21).
But Paul also makes clear that our submission has a boundary: God is the highest authority. Scripture shows moments when God’s people must refuse commands that would require disobedience to Him (Acts 5:29). Still, the ordinary posture of the Christian is humble, respectful obedience—paired with a clear conscience before the Lord (vv. 1, 5).
Then Paul returns to the heartbeat of Christian ethics: love. “Owe no one anything, except to love each other” (v. 8). Love is the debt we never finish paying, because love fulfills the law’s commands toward our neighbor—keeping us from harm, dishonor, and selfishness (vv. 9–10; cf. Lev. 19:18). And Paul ends with urgency: we live in a decisive moment of history. The “night” is fading, the “day” is approaching, and Christ’s return draws nearer—so Christians must wake up, throw off the works of darkness, and put on the Lord Jesus Christ (vv. 11–14). Holiness isn’t vague: it means refusing patterns of sin, walking in the light, and refusing to “make provision for the flesh” (vv. 13–14).
🌀 Reflection: Where are you quietly “making provision” for sin—leaving the door cracked, keeping the option open, nursing the appetite? Romans 13 reminds us that grace doesn’t make us sleepy; it wakes us up. Since the day is near, we don’t just avoid darkness—we actively put on Jesus and learn to live like people of the coming kingdom (vv. 11–14).
🎆 New Year Reflection: A new year begins with a call to wake up. Romans 13 reminds us that time matters, eternity is near, and Christ is coming. As you step into this year, don’t drift or delay—put on the Lord Jesus Christ daily. Let this be a year marked not by spiritual complacency, but by watchful hope, obedient love, and lives shaped by the light of the coming King (vv. 11–14).
💬 Mission Challenge: Pray for a governing leader (local, state, or national) by name today, asking God to give wisdom and justice—and then practice honor in one concrete way (vv. 1, 7; cf. 1 Tim. 2:1–2). Let your respect be real, and look for a chance to show that your ultimate hope is not in rulers, but in Christ the King.
After eleven chapters of gospel mercy, Paul turns to gospel living: “present your bodies as a living sacrifice” (v. 1). Because God has saved us by sheer mercy (11:30–32), the fitting response is not a one-time offering but an all-of-life worship—our whole selves, in the real world, for God’s glory (v. 1; cf. 6:13). That means resisting the pressure of “this age” and being transformed from the inside out as God renews our minds—so we can actually discern and practice what pleases Him (v. 2; cf. Eph. 4:23). Paul’s point is not “look for special signs,” but let Scripture-shaped thinking produce Scripture-shaped living (v. 2).
That renewed mind shows up immediately in humility and service. Paul tells believers not to inflate themselves, but to think with sober judgment—recognizing that every Christian is gifted by grace, and no one is the whole body (vv. 3–5; cf. 1 Cor. 12:12–27). The church is “one body in Christ,” made up of different members with different functions, which means we belong to one another and need one another (vv. 4–5). So Paul calls us to actually use our gifts—whether serving, teaching, exhorting, giving, leading, or showing mercy—and to do it in a way that fits the grace God has given (vv. 6–8).
Then Paul paints what genuine love looks like when it’s Spirit-made and gospel-rooted. Love hates evil and clings to good (v. 9), honors others rather than competing for attention (v. 10), and serves the Lord with sincere zeal (v. 11). Love rejoices in hope, stays patient in suffering, and keeps praying (v. 12). It opens hands and homes to the saints (v. 13), blesses persecutors instead of cursing them (v. 14; cf. Matt. 5:44), and enters other people’s joys and sorrows (v. 15). It refuses pride, seeks peace when possible, and won’t repay evil for evil (vv. 16–18). Instead of taking revenge, it leaves justice with God (v. 19; cf. Deut. 32:35) and does active good even to enemies—because the gospel teaches us to overcome evil with good (vv. 20–21; cf. Prov. 25:21–22).
🌀 Reflection: Where do you feel the strongest pull to “fit the pattern” of this age—your thinking, your speech, your habits, your reactions? Romans 12 reminds us that real change starts when God reshapes the mind through His Word, and it shows up in humble service and sincere love—even toward people who don’t deserve it (vv. 2, 9–10, 17–21).
🎆 New Year Reflection: As this year closes, Romans 12 reminds us that the Christian life isn’t restarted with resolutions but renewed through mercy. God doesn’t ask for a perfect plan for the year ahead—He calls for a surrendered life today. As you step into a new year, offer yourself again to the Lord, trusting Him to do the transforming work as you live, love, and serve in response to His grace (vv. 1–2).
💬 Mission Challenge: Bless one person this week in a concrete way—especially someone hard to love: pray for them, speak honor over them, serve them, or meet a need. Do it intentionally as an act of worship, asking God to use your kindness to display Jesus (vv. 1, 14, 20–21).
Paul asks the question many would be afraid to ask: Has God rejected his people Israel? His answer is immediate and emphatic—“By no means!” (v. 1). Paul points to himself as living proof that God is still saving Jews (v. 1), and he reaches back to Elijah’s day, when it seemed like faithfulness had vanished—yet God had quietly preserved a remnant for Himself (vv. 3–4). In the same way, Paul says, there is “at the present time… a remnant, chosen by grace” (v. 5). And grace and works cannot be mixed: if salvation is by grace, it cannot be earned—otherwise grace would no longer be grace (v. 6; cf. 4:4–5). Many in Israel were hardened in unbelief, just as the Scriptures foretold (vv. 7–10), but that hardening is not the end of the story.
Paul then explains that Israel’s stumbling was not so that they would fall forever. God, in His wise providence, has used Israel’s trespass to bring salvation to the Gentiles—and even this is meant to stir Israel to jealousy, so that many will turn and be saved (vv. 11–14; cf. 10:19). Using the picture of an olive tree, Paul warns Gentile believers not to become proud: they were “grafted in” by faith, while some Jewish branches were broken off because of unbelief (vv. 17–20). The root supports them, not the other way around, so arrogance has no place in the church (v. 18). Paul calls them to a humble, persevering faith that remembers both the kindness and severity of God—kindness toward those who continue in faith, severity toward unbelief (v. 22). And the door of hope remains open: God is able to graft the natural branches back in again (vv. 23–24).
Finally, Paul reveals a “mystery”: Israel’s hardening is partial and temporary, lasting “until the fullness of the Gentiles has come in” (v. 25). In God’s saving plan, “all Israel will be saved” in the way He has ordained—through the Deliverer who takes away sins (vv. 26–27). Even now, Israel may stand as “enemies” regarding the gospel, yet they are still “beloved” regarding election, because God’s gifts and calling are irrevocable (vv. 28–29). God is weaving mercy through human disobedience—first mercy to Gentiles, and mercy also to Jews—so that no one can boast, and all salvation shines as mercy alone (vv. 30–32). Paul can only end one way: worship. “Oh, the depth of the riches and wisdom and knowledge of God!” (vv. 33–36).
🌀 Reflection: Romans 11 humbles us. We didn’t get “grafted in” because we were better, smarter, or more deserving—we stand by faith, supported by grace (v. 20; cf. Eph. 2:8–9). And it gives us hope: God is never done, never surprised, and never unfaithful to His promises—even when His ways are deeper than we can trace.
💬 Mission Challenge: Pray for someone you think is “too far gone,” and then reach out with a simple act of gospel kindness—an invitation, a conversation, or a Scripture shared—trusting that the God who grafts in outsiders can also bring the hardened to faith (v. 23).
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.
Romans 9 begins with Paul’s deep anguish over Israel. Though he has just celebrated the unbreakable security believers have in Christ (8:31–39), his heart is heavy because so many of his fellow Israelites have rejected the Messiah (v. 1–3). This sorrow is intensified by Israel’s unique privileges: adoption, glory, covenants, the law, worship, promises, the patriarchs—and even the human lineage of Christ Himself, who is “God over all” (vv. 4–5). Yet Paul insists that Israel’s unbelief does not mean God’s word has failed. From the beginning, God’s promises were never based on mere physical descent but on His gracious promise and calling (vv. 6–8).
Paul shows this from Israel’s own story. God chose Isaac, not Ishmael, and Jacob, not Esau—choices made before birth and apart from works—so that God’s purpose of election would stand (vv. 9–13). Salvation has always depended on God’s merciful call, not human effort or entitlement. When this raises the question of fairness, Paul answers plainly: God is never unjust (v. 14). Mercy, by definition, is undeserved (vv. 15–16). Using Moses, Pharaoh, and the image of the potter and the clay, Paul affirms both God’s sovereignty and humanity’s responsibility without trying to reduce the mystery (vv. 17–23).
The Old Testament itself foretold what Paul’s readers were witnessing: God would call a people from the Gentiles and preserve only a remnant from Israel (vv. 24–29). The real issue, Paul concludes, is not God’s faithfulness but the way righteousness is pursued. Gentiles received righteousness by faith, while many in Israel stumbled by seeking it through works (vv. 30–32). Christ stands at the center of it all—the promised stone. To some He is a stumbling block; to those who believe, He is a sure foundation who will never put them to shame (v. 33).
🌀 Reflection: Romans 9 humbles us. Salvation is not something we earn, inherit, or control—it is a gift of mercy. Instead of arguing with God’s ways, we are invited to trust His character, grieve for the lost as Paul did, and cling to Christ as our only hope.
💬 Mission Challenge: Pray specifically for someone who has heard the gospel but continues to resist it. Ask God to soften hearts, and look for an opportunity this week to speak about Jesus—not with pride, but with compassion and humility.