Posts
-
What Does God Want for Families?
Sat Feb 11, 2012
by Richard Pratt
God Family Marriage Children Sanctification Sin -
It Is Finished, and So Is This Interview
Fri Feb 10, 2012
by Tullian Tchividjian
God Mission Worship Gospel Sanctification Justification Sin -
Why You Should Know the Journal of Biblical Counseling
Thu Feb 09, 2012
by Mike Wilkerson
Church Church Leadership Wisdom Counseling -
The #1 Command in the Bible
Thu Feb 09, 2012
by Mark Driscoll
-
Why Jesus Wants You to Lose Hope
Wed Feb 08, 2012
by Justin Holcomb
God Gospel Justification Sin
-
Interview with Eric Mason
Wed Sep 03, 2008
by Darrin Patrick
-
Interview with John Piper
Thu Sep 04, 2008
by Mark Driscoll
-
The Call to Formative Instruction
Sun Sep 28, 2008
by Tedd Tripp
-
Lecrae - Rebel Intro
Tue Sep 30, 2008
by Lecrae
-
Interview with Lecrae
Tue Sep 30, 2008
by Mark Driscoll
Archives
Promos
Life vs. Death: Zombie Culture
Grace vs. Sin Series [Part 2 of 5]: Click | View Series
What shall we say then? Are we to continue in sin that grace may abound? By no means! How can we who died to sin still live in it? (Romans 6:1-2)
Zombie Culture
Elementary school would have been drastically different for me had it not been for Michael Jackson’s Thriller. Not only was it the most groundbreaking music videos of its time, it was also what introduced me to the concept of zombies. Although numerous books and movies have incorporated zombie culture, my first understanding was that zombies were to dance. In essence, they’re the walking (or dancing) dead. Of course, this is fictitious, for the nature of being dead is that there is absolutely no life at all.
Functional Death
Paul uses the language of “functional” death in Rom. 6:1-2: “What shall we say then? Are we to continue in sin that grace may abound? By no means! How can we who died to sin still live in it?” The nature of death is its finality and hopelessness of life again. Those who are living under grace are not to return to the dead state of hopelessness. Playing on this “functional death” imagery, Paul asserts the idea of the living acting like the dead as well as the dead acting like the living.
Dead to sin vs. Dead in sin
Elsewhere, Paul addresses being dead in sin: “You were dead in the trespasses and sins” (Eph. 2:1). But in Rom. 6:1-2 he addresses being dead to sin. Formerly, apart from Christ, we were dead in our sin. But the gospel is that the dead are made alive by grace through the person and work of Christ. It is common to think that the gospel gives license to sin. The Pharisees in Paul’s day actually thought the gospel led people to sin. Paul speaks differently: not that believers are “functionally dead”—dead acting like the living—but we are truly alive in Christ (v. 8). This means we are no longer dead in sin, but dead to sin (v. 11). Paul teaches in Romans that life in Christ is deadness to sin. Just as the dead cannot act like the living, the living should not act like the dead. As Christians, we live amongst the walking dead. May we not reinforce the hopelessness of death by affirming zombie-like deadness but rather proclaim the gospel through our lives. To be continued.


