12 Therefore do not let sin reign in your mortal bodies, so that you obey their desires. 13 No longer present your members to sin as instruments[a] of unrighteousness, but present yourselves to God as those who have been brought from death to life, and present your members to God as instruments[b] of righteousness. 14 For sin will have no dominion over you, since you are not under law but under grace. 15 What then? Should we sin because we are not under law but under grace? By no means! 16 Do you not know that, if you present yourselves to anyone as obedient slaves, you are slaves of the one whom you obey, either of sin, which leads to death, or of obedience, which leads to righteousness? 17 But thanks be to God that you who were slaves of sin have become obedient from the heart to the form of teaching to which you were entrusted 18 and that you, having been set free from sin, have become enslaved to righteousness. 19 I am speaking in human terms because of your limitations.[c] For just as you once presented your members as slaves to impurity and lawlessness, leading to even more lawlessness, so now present your members as slaves to righteousness, leading to sanctification. 20 When you were slaves of sin, you were free in regard to righteousness. 21 So what fruit did you then gain from the things of which you now are ashamed? The end of those things is death. 22 But now that you have been freed from sin and enslaved to God, the fruit you have leads to sanctification, and the end is eternal life. 23 For the wages of sin is death, but the free gift of God is eternal life in Christ Jesus our Lord. (Romans 6:12-23 NRS)
Dear Friend, may the grace and peace of the Lord Jesus be with you on this glorious day! May the Lord shine His love brightly on your day and whatever challenges you may be having. God is with you! As we pray today, please lift up Mr. Bill Reaves as he has been having some cardiac challenges. Bill underwent a heart cath yesterday and will await his next cardiologist's appointment to see what next steps are best for him. Please pray God bring healing and for Ann, Bill's wife, for her peace during this time as well..
One of the cutest memories Nellie and I have is when our two oldest daughters came in after a Vacation Bible School day and started joyfully singing, "I'm in the Lord's Army," really belting out, "Yes, Sir!" We still chuckle these many years later of that precious scene. I did not serve in the military, nor was I able to win the lottery associated with conscripted service, missing my number by 13. Yet, growing up in the mid-50s, the movies and tv shows about WWII motivated us to daily go out and fight the Nazis and Japanese; my favorite show was the Rat Patrol, jeeps with a single machine gun in the back and the cool Australian style hat with the one fold on the side. Yes, sir!
Paul opens this stretch of Romans 6 with a command that sounds almost military: "Do not let sin exercise dominion in your mortal bodies" (Romans 6:12, NRSV). The word dominion is deliberate. Sin, in Paul's mind, isn't just a list of bad choices — it's a kingdom, a rule, a regime that demands allegiance. And the whole argument of this passage rests on a claim he's just made a few verses earlier: that claim has already been broken. You have died with Christ and been raised with Him. The old regime lost its grip the moment you went under the water and came back up. So when Paul says don't let sin reign, he isn't asking you to dethrone a king who's still in power. He's telling you to stop living as though a deposed ruler still holds the keys.
This is where the language of the passage turns vivid. "No longer present your members to sin as instruments of wickedness, but present yourselves to God as those who have been brought from death to life, and present your members to God as instruments of righteousness" (Romans 6:13). Instruments — the Greek word can also mean weapons. Your hands, your voice, your time, your attention: all of it can be handed over to one master or the other. Paul's logic is startlingly physical. The same body that once served sin's purposes can be handed over, piece by piece, to serve God's purposes instead. Nothing about you is too ordinary or too compromised to be repurposed.
And here's where Pentecost quietly undergirds everything Paul is saying. He writes, "you are not under law but under grace" (Romans 6:14) — but grace isn't merely a legal pardon hovering somewhere above you. Grace arrived with a Person. The Spirit poured out at Pentecost is the down payment and the daily reality of the very freedom Paul describes here. It's one thing to be told you're no longer enslaved to sin; it's another thing to have the actual power to live that out. That power is the Holy Spirit, given to ordinary, weak, often-failing people so that obedience isn't a performance under pressure but the natural overflow of a new master living inside you. Paul will say it plainly two chapters later: the Spirit of life has set you free from the law of sin and death. Romans 6 describes the freedom; Pentecost is where that freedom takes up residence in flesh and blood — the very flesh and blood Christ Himself once wore, and which His Spirit now inhabits in us.
Paul ends with the verse that has anchored more deathbed conversations and quiet personal turning points than almost any other in the New Testament: "For the wages of sin is death, but the free gift of God is eternal life in Christ Jesus our Lord" (Romans 6:23). Wages — what you've earned, what you're owed, the cold arithmetic of a life spent serving the wrong master. Gift — what no one earns, what arrives entirely apart from merit, carried on nothing but the open hand of God, the same hand that was pierced for us and now holds out life instead. The whole passage moves from dominion to gift, from slavery to sonship, from the body as a weapon for wickedness to the body as an instrument tuned by the Spirit for righteousness. That movement isn't theoretical. It's the same movement the Spirit has been making in human lives since the rushing wind first filled that room in Jerusalem, sent by the One who promised He would not leave us as orphans.
PRAYER: Holy Spirit, take what Christ has already won and make it real in our bodies today, so that we live as people who actually believe we have changed masters. This we pray in Christ Jesus' strong name, amen.
Have a great and blessed day in the Lord! OUR CALL TO ACTION: Identify one specific way today you can hand over a part of your body or your time to God as an instrument of righteousness, rather than letting it default back to its old master.
I love you and I thank God for you! You matter to God and you matter to me!
Pastor Eradio Valverde, Jr.
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