The Christian's Struggle
An increasing number of people today assume Christianity is supposed to make life easier. “If I follow Jesus,” they think, “shouldn’t I become a better person pretty quickly? Shouldn’t my bad habits fade? Shouldn’t the inner battles start to die down?”
But Romans 7 tells us something shockingly different—and incredibly freeing.
The Christian life isn’t a glide path toward perfection. It’s a lifelong war—and that’s good news.
Romans 6, 7, and 8 belong together. They form Paul’s great explanation of sanctification—how God grows His people in holiness.
- Romans 6: Sin’s dominion is broken.
- Romans 7: Sin’s presence remains.
- Romans 8: The Spirit guarantees final victory.
Romans 7 sits right in the middle because it describes where Christians actually live day-to-day.
Paul Isn’t Talking About His Past—He’s Talking About His Present
Some argue Paul is describing his life before he became a Christian. But the passage doesn’t read that way. Paul delights in the law. He hates his sin. He longs to obey. He grieves his failures.
Unbelievers don’t talk like that. Only Christians do.
Paul is describing the normal Christian life—the tension between what we long to be and what we still are.
“I do not understand my own actions. For I do not do what I want, but I do the very thing I hate.”
—Romans 7:15
If you’ve ever wondered, “Why do I still struggle with this?” or “Shouldn’t I be further along by now?”—Romans 7 is written for you.
Why the Law Can’t Save You—or Fix You
Paul makes the point clearly:
- The law reveals sin.
- The law even provokes sin.
- The law cannot remove sin.
The problem isn’t the law; the problem is the sin in us. Trying to obey in our own strength doesn’t sanctify us—it often exposes us.
This is why Christianity can never be reduced to “try harder.” The flesh can’t defeat the flesh.
The Inner Struggle Is Not a Sign of Death—It’s a Sign of Life
Paul describes the war within him:
“I delight in the law of God in my inner being… but I see in my members another law waging war.”
—Romans 7:22–23
If you feel that war, it means something profoundly encouraging:
Dead hearts don’t fight. Living hearts do.
Your grief over sin is evidence that the Spirit of God is at work in you.
You Can’t Fight This War Alone
Romans 7 also destroys the myth that Christians can thrive in isolation. The church is God’s design for supporting weak, struggling, real believers. The Christian who tries to battle sin without community is like a wounded animal wandering away from the herd—making themselves an easy target.
At Central Presbyterian, we want you to know:
You don’t have to lie about your sin.
You don’t have to pretend you’re fine.
And you don’t have to fight alone.
We’re here—your pastors, your elders, your brothers and sisters in Christ.
The Most Important Move: Look Up, Not In
Romans 7 ends with one of the greatest gospel sentences in Scripture:
“Wretched man that I am! Who will deliver me from this body of death?
Thanks be to God through Jesus Christ our Lord!”
—Romans 7:24–25
Paul doesn’t tell us to look harder at ourselves.
He tells us to look upward—to Christ.
Your ultimate deliverance isn’t in your willpower, discipline, or spiritual resolve. It’s in a Person. A Savior. A Deliverer. And the very next chapter opens with the declaration every weary Christian needs to hear:
“There is therefore now no condemnation for those who are in Christ Jesus.”
—Romans 8:1
That’s the good news Romans 7 prepares us to hear.
If you’re struggling—you’re not failing. You’re fighting.
And Christ fights for you.
He doesn’t abandon you.
He doesn’t condemn you.
He finishes what He starts.
If you’re walking through the tensions of Romans 7, come walk with us. Central Presbyterian is a community of people who wrestle honestly, repent humbly, and cling to Jesus confidently.
You’re not meant to face the war alone.
And you don’t have to.
If you'd like to listen to the sermon on Romans 7 from last Sunday night, you can click here.
https://www.sermonaudio.com/sermons/121125118164689










