It is true that all have sinned
and fall short of the glory of God.
It's true that Paul has been arguing
that there is none good - no not one.
Not by nature.
When a person is saved,
Jesus makes them His workmanship.
He makes them
those who are zealous of good works.
Saved people are capable of good.
But in a lost state, man is bad.
Man is under the condemnation
and the wrath of God.
But you know what?
In these verses before us
(Romans 5:12-21)
what the apostle does is he says
man has even a more basic problem
than even his own sin.
He is condemned because of Adam's sin;
because of the sin or the trespass
or the offense of the one man,
we are under condemnation.
And we are under the sentence of death.
Brethren, I know, right away,
you start talking this way
and immediately somebody wants to say -
I mean, what do you say
when somebody says,
"You're guilty because of his sin."
Unfair.
Let me ask you this.
What do we say to this?
"You are righteous because
of that man's righteousness."
I don't hear anybody say, "unfair."
But I'll tell you this,
God deals with men
according to their head.
There are two most important men
in all the history of mankind.
It is Adam and it is Christ.
And Christ, by the way, is called
the second man and the last Adam.
You know why?
Because He is the representative
of all those in Him
and Adam is the representative
of all those in him.
And if you're in Adam, you die.
If you're in Christ, you live.
If you're in Adam, you are condemned.
If you're in Christ, you are justified.
Brethren, this is the reality.
Man at the basic level,
his greatest problem
is that he is identified with Adam.
And you've got to get out
of that family tree, folks.
You've got to get into another family.
You've got to leave that head behind
and come under a new Head.
And the way to do that is by faith
in what Jesus Christ
accomplished on that cross.
And brethren, the thing about this
is when you go back there
and you can see in your mind -
and I'll tell you this was
such a stumbling block
for the Jew -
that their Messiah went to that cross.
And it was utter foolishness
to the Greek and to the Roman.
They said what can a dead Jew do for us?
But I'll tell you, brethren,
we have to understand what happened
on that cross
there outside of
Jerusalem 2,000 years ago.
What happened on that cross -
just this week, I was looking at footage
of Indians and Chinese.
Massive countries of just lostness
throughout Asia,
looking at the vast, teeming multitudes,
faces of people.
And brethren, when you trace their lineage
and our lineage,
the lineage of the Jews, all of us,
the Chinese,
that Hindu bowing down
to his multitude of gods.
You know what? You trace our lineage back
and you know where it all goes?
We're all related.
Not very long ago, brethren,
you can trace your heritage.
You've got parents and
you've got grandparents.
And they had grandparents
and they had parents.
And you can trace them back
and ultimately we all
share the same blood.
We can all hang our heads and say,
"Adam, Adam, what have you done?"
From what Adam did,
he took a fruit.
He took the forbidden fruit.
He took the fruit from the tree
of the knowledge of good and evil
which God had told him not to eat of,
and He said, "In the day you eat thereof
you shall surely die."
And the thing we need to
understand about that
is when God was speaking,
what the apostle tells us
is when those words were spoken,
they weren't spoken
simply for Adam's sake.
That those words were spoken
representative of the entire human race.
When they were spoken to Adam,
Adam represented every one of us.
And that condemnation
promised for taking it
would go upon all of his posterity,
all of his children,
all of his grandchildren.
Brethren, if we're connected with him,
we're in trouble.
And the beauty of what Christ
went to the cross to do
is to undo what Adam did
and it applies to all of us.
That's why the writer of Romans
keeps saying over and over and over,
it's not just to the Jew,
it's to the Greek too.
There's no partiality.
Brethren, the fact is
all men have the same problem.
It's all the same everywhere.
Sometimes we think about -
I don't know if you guys
are even up on this,
but I can remember one
of the missionary trips
that I took and how they talk about
in the seminaries today,
they talk all about this syncretism.
If you don't know
what that is, that's fine,
but it's basically this idea
that you go into other cultures
and you try to work their
cultural peculiarities
into the Gospel message
and into your ministry.
And obviously, we've got
to be culturally sensitive
when we go in, but I'm
telling you, brethren,
there is no place when it
comes to the Gospel message
to try to distort any of this
or make it suitable to certain cultures
or certain societies
or certain countries.
Brethren, you know what, ultimately,
I can remember hearing
a message on missions -
again from our same
missionary out of China -
and he was saying basically man's problem
is essentially the same no
matter where you go.
They may look different.
Their eye shapes may be different.
The Chinese have a certain
eye shape or skin color.
Or you go down to Africa,
or you go wherever,
but man's problem is ultimately the same.
He's bound up with a connection
and a heritage that lies in Adam,
and he is under condemnation
and he faces the wrath of God.
That's why our Gospel -
we don't need to be ashamed of it,
and it's the same in
every country we go into
because man's need is
the same everywhere.
Man is depraved. Man is corrupt.
Man lacks the righteousness that he needs
to inherit the Kingdom of Heaven.
He doesn't have it.
He doesn't possess it.
And he in his own power can't get it.
The righteousness of God is revealed
and man needs it
because of his identity with Adam.
He's in Adam and he's in trouble.
And that is the reality
that we're seeing here.
It applies to all men.
You saw that there. All men.
One offense.
And it says condemnation came upon all.
It is not a small thing.
What Adam did in the garden
condemned all mankind.
And Christ came to rescue
those who are in Adam.
He came to rescue us out of it.
And the thing is, I know,
I know we have a problem
in our culture
identifying with how we can be responsible
for our father's sin.
But you know, in Scripture,
I don't know how Middle Easterner's think.
They obviously think different.
Some of these concepts
are more readily understandable
or conceivable to them.
Like, you know how Scripture says
"that Levi yet being in
the loins of Abraham..."
It's like, what?
We don't even think that way.
You know when it was said
Abraham gave tithes to Melchizedek.
So the writer of Hebrews reasons,
well, because Levi would
later come down line
like four generations,
it's really like saying that Levi
gave tithes to Melchizedek.
We're like what?
How can you say Levi did it
when Abraham did it
and Levi wasn't even born yet?
You see, but that's the way the
Middle Eastern mind thinks
because there's a reality there
you and I have a hard time grasping.
I have a feeling for the Jewish mindset,
they don't have near the problem
handling that reality
that because of Adam's sin,
condemnation comes upon us.
To us, that seems like injustice.
But brethren, let me remind you,
we're talking types here.
Adam is a type of Christ.
And if the universal federal headship
of Adam doesn't work,
if it falls apart,
then so too does Christ's justification
of all those who are in Him.
So, before you get too hostile
about thinking what?
I'm guilty and condemned for Adam's sin?
Just remember two things.
You have enough of your own sin
to run you deep into hell
before you get overly concerned
about the imputation of Adam's sin to you.
But the second thing is,
be grateful that God
deals with man that way.
Because since He does,
if you're in Christ,
then He deals with you
under the federal headship of Christ,
which means everything Christ deserves,
you get.
Don't complain because
everything Adam deserves,
you get, being in him.
Just get out of Adam and into Christ.
And you do that by trusting
what Christ did on that cross.
Look to Him in faith.
Don't complain. Don't argue.
Be glad.
And see in it the way of your salvation.