Summary
This is a biblical teaching session on Romans 5:12-21, where Mark Lanier explores the central question: “So what?” — meaning, what are the practical implications of Christ’s death and resurrection for our daily lives?
The So What QuestionLanier opens by explaining how asking “so what?” is an effective teaching and communication tool. He uses personal anecdotes (wallpapering his daughter’s nursery) to illustrate how understanding implications makes knowledge meaningful.Romans 5 as Paul’s AnswerPaul spends four chapters (5-8) addressing the implications of salvation through Christ’s cross. The section is bookended by God’s love as the foundational truth.Three Interpretive Lenses:Honor-Shame Culture: In ancient Rome, honor and shame determined social standing, economic opportunities, and political influence. Paul radically reframes this by saying we don’t boast in our achievements or ancestry, but only in the cross of Christ.Imperial Warfare Language: Sin “invaded” the world through Adam, death “reigned” as an imperial ruler, and Christ’s obedience brought a decisive victory. We’ve moved from death’s tyranny to life’s reign.Chiastic Patterns: Ancient Jewish literary structure showing cosmic reversal—Adam brought sin and death; Christ brings righteousness and eternal life. The reversal isn’t equal; Christ’s grace far exceeds what was lost.Practical Implications (Points for Home):We live in a grace-security world, not an honor-shame worldWe’re not at war with God; we have peace through ChristOur lives have cosmic significance—we’re part of God’s restoration projectThe post Session 15 – Romans; Romans 5:15-21: Mark Lanier, 09/07/25 appeared first on Biblical Literacy.