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1 Therefore, since we are justified by faith, we have peace with God through our Lord Jesus Christ, 2 through whom we have obtained access to this grace in which we stand; and we boast in our hope of sharing the glory of God. 3 And not only that, but we also boast in our sufferings, knowing that suffering produces endurance, 4 and endurance produces character, and character produces hope, 5 and hope does not disappoint us, because God's love has been poured into our hearts through the Holy Spirit that has been given to us. 6 For while we were still weak, at the right time Christ died for the ungodly. 7 Indeed, rarely will anyone die for a righteous person—though perhaps for a good person someone might actually dare to die. 8 But God proves his love for us in that while we still were sinners Christ died for us. 9 Much more surely then, now that we have been justified by his blood, will we be saved through him from the wrath of God. 10 For if while we were enemies, we were reconciled to God through the death of his Son, much more surely, having been reconciled, will we be saved by his life. 11 But more than that, we even boast in God through our Lord Jesus Christ, through whom we have now received reconciliation. (Romans 5:1-11 NRS)
"It wasn't anything I did, for He knows the life I led. It was because of the wrong choices and hateful decisions I made that I ended up right next to Him, and I truly deserved it! It was a miracle I could even hear Him speak for the crowd was so loud in their jeers and mocking, and it didn't help that our partner there joined in and he with a request that if He wanted, He could get us off that cross; I felt at that moment that though I truly deserved to die I also believed He did not and I also believed He was the Messiah, so I got out the words that said, 'Jesus, remember me, when You come into Your kingdom.' And here I am, in the Kingdom. I don't know a thing about church doctrine or creeds or confessions; all I know is that I said for Him to remember me, and He did."
This, dear friends, is justification by faith which brings us peace with God through our Lord Jesus Christ as the Apostle Paul wrote in that first verse. He was another one who understood that our salvation comes through faith alone; not works. And here we will discover more of what Jesus shared with Paul about this reality.
Opening: The Verse at the Center of Everything
Romans 5 is one of those passages where Paul builds an argument the way a master builder lays a foundation — course by course, each layer resting on the one beneath it, until the structure rises to a height that takes your breath away. And at the very center of this passage, holding up everything on either side of it, is a single verse that connects Pentecost to the deepest experience of the Christian life.
“Hope does not disappoint us, because God’s love has been poured into our hearts through the Holy Spirit that has been given to us.”
Poured into our hearts. The same word — the same outpouring — that describes the Spirit at Pentecost. The rushing wind and the tongues of flame were not a private event for the upper room. They were the visible, dramatic announcement of something that was about to happen personally and intimately in every believer who would ever call on the name of the Lord. The love of God, poured out like water, poured out like fire, into the interior of a human life.
This is where Pentecost lives. Not only in church history. In your heart.
Peace, Access, and the Ground We Stand On
Paul opens with the result of justification by faith: peace with God through our Lord Jesus Christ. Not the peace of resolved circumstances or calmed emotions, but the peace of a relationship restored — the hostility between a holy God and a sinful humanity ended, the enmity gone, the distance collapsed.
And then he adds something that should stop us: “through whom we have obtained access to this grace in which we stand.” Access. The word carries the sense of being introduced into the presence of royalty — brought before someone before whom you could not simply walk in uninvited, granted an audience you could not have arranged for yourself. Through Christ, we have been brought into the very presence of God and given a place to stand there. Not as visitors. Not on probation. In grace.
This is the ground beneath every Christian’s feet. Not our performance. Not our consistency. Not our feelings about our own spiritual health on any given morning. Grace. We stand in grace, which means that what holds us there is not our grip on God but his grip on us — the same grip that held through the cross, through the resurrection, through Pentecost, and through every difficult season his people have ever walked through.
From this ground — peace with God, access through Christ, standing in grace — Paul builds his argument toward the hardest part: what we do with suffering.
The Long Road Through Suffering to Hope
Paul’s claim that we boast in our sufferings is one of the most challenging sentences in the New Testament. Not endure our sufferings. Not accept them stoically. Boast in them.
He is not celebrating pain for its own sake. He is tracing a chain of transformation that runs through suffering rather than around it: suffering produces endurance, endurance produces character, character produces hope. The chain is not automatic or painless. It requires something from us at every link — the decision to endure rather than collapse, the willingness to let difficulty do its forming work rather than fighting it off or numbing it out, the patience to wait for the hope that lies at the end of the chain.
But here is what makes the chain hold. Here is the Pentecost center of the whole passage: “and hope does not disappoint us, because God’s love has been poured into our hearts through the Holy Spirit that has been given to us.”
The hope does not fail — not because we are strong enough to hold onto it, but because the love that is its foundation has been poured into us by the Spirit. The Spirit is not a distant resource we can access in emergencies. He has been poured into our hearts. He is an interior presence, a permanent indwelling, the love of God made personal and immediate and real in the deepest part of who we are.
When Paul says God’s love has been poured into our hearts, the verb is in the perfect tense in Greek — which means it describes an action completed in the past with effects that continue into the present. At Pentecost, the Spirit was poured out. At your conversion, the Spirit was poured in. And the pouring has never stopped. The love of God is not being rationed. It is not running out. It has been poured, and it abides, and it is the reason that the hope at the end of the suffering chain does not collapse under the weight of what we have been carrying.
While We Were Still Sinners
Paul then offers the proof of the love he has just described, and it is a proof that goes all the way to the bone.
“But God proves his love for us in that while we were still sinners Christ died for us.”
Not when we had cleaned ourselves up. Not when we had demonstrated sufficient remorse or spiritual readiness. While we were still sinners. While we were, as Paul says just a few verses earlier, weak and ungodly — not merely imperfect but actively contrary to the purposes of God. The timing of the cross is the measure of the love behind it.
We would understand a love that waited for the beloved to become more loveable. We would understand a love that required some minimum threshold of worthiness before it gave itself away. What we cannot fully comprehend — what Paul himself seems to reach for without quite being able to hold — is a love that moves toward the enemy, the sinner, the ungodly, and gives itself away before there is any reason to do so except the love itself.
This is the love that has been poured into our hearts by the Spirit. Not a smaller version of it. Not a diluted form for daily use. The same love that sent the Son to the cross has been poured — lavishly, without reservation, into the interior of your life by the Holy Spirit given to you.
On Pentecost Sunday, that is the truth we are celebrating. Not an event in history, though it began in history. A present, personal, interior reality — the love of God, poured out and abiding, the hope that does not disappoint, the peace in which we stand.
For Reflection
Romans 5 gives us three things to carry from this Pentecost Sunday into the week ahead.
The ground to stand on: peace with God, access through Christ, grace as the floor beneath our feet — not performance, not consistency, not feelings. If you wake tomorrow with no sense of God’s presence, the ground has not moved. You are still standing in grace.
The chain to trust: suffering is not outside the purposes of God. The Spirit who has been poured into your heart is at work in the hard places, producing endurance and character and a hope that will not collapse. You do not have to manufacture your way through the suffering chain. You have to stay in it, trusting the one who walks through it with you.
The love to receive: God proved what his love is made of while you were still a sinner. Nothing you have done since, and nothing you will do, changes the quality of that love or diminishes the fullness of the Spirit poured into your heart. Receive it. Live from it. Let it be the answer you give when the world asks why your hope still holds.
PRAYER: Spirit of God, poured out at Pentecost and poured into our hearts, make the love of God so real and so present in us that our hope holds firm through every suffering, and we boast in nothing but the grace in which we stand. Amen.
Have a great and blessed day in the Lord! OUR CALL TO ACTION: Identify one place in your life where hope has been fading under the weight of suffering or disappointment, and this week deliberately receive the love of God poured into your heart by the Spirit — returning to it in prayer each day as the ground that does not shift.
I love you and I thank God for you! You matter to God, and you matter to me! Hope does not disappoint us because God's love has been poured out into our hearts!
Pastor Eradio Valverde, Jr.






