Text: Romans 8:1–17
Context: The Triumphal Entry (Matthew 21:5)
Introduction
Today we celebrate the Triumphal Entry of Jesus into Jerusalem.
The crowds cried: “Hosanna! Blessed is He who comes in the name of the Lord!”
But the way Jesus enters is surprising: “Behold, your King is coming to you, gentle and mounted on a donkey.”
Not on a war horse. Not with military force. Not with imposed authority.
But: gentle, humble, approachable.
This is the nature of Christ’s kingship.
And this is the key to understanding Romans 8: Life in the Spirit is life under the authority of a gentle King, not a harsh master.
I. Freedom from Condemnation
(Romans 8:1–4) “There is therefore now no condemnation…”
Unlike religious leaders who burdened people, Jesus enters Jerusalem not to condemn, but to save.
The crowds expected: political freedom and external change. But Jesus came to bring: inner freedom.
Many people live under:
- guilt
- shame
- condemnation
But the King comes with grace. The King who entered Jerusalem did not come to crush you, but to free you.
II. Walking by the Spirit – the rhythm of the King
(Romans 8:5–13)
Jesus not only forgives. He teaches us how to live. Matthew 11:29: “I am gentle and lowly in heart.” The same character we see in Jerusalem.
Life in the Spirit is not:
- aggressive
- frantic
- driven by fear
It is:
- led
- shaped
- aligned with Christ
Many Christians live as if Christ were a harsh master pushing them from behind.
But Scripture shows something different: He walks ahead of us, and we learn to walk in step with Him. Life in the Spirit is not pushed from behind, but led from the front by a gentle King.
III. Identity as Children, Not Slaves
(Romans 8:14–17) “You did not receive a spirit of slavery to fall back into fear…”
Jesus does not enter Jerusalem to create fear. He creates:
- hope
- closeness
- trust
Many Christians still live under:
- fear of God
- spiritual anxiety
- insecurity
But the Spirit teaches us to cry: “Abba, Father.”
J.I. Packer: “The deepest reality of the Christian faith is that we are children of God.”
“Christ did not enter Jerusalem to create religious slaves, but to form sons and daughters.”
IV. Final Assurance
Romans 8:31–39
The King who enters Jerusalem is on His way to the cross. Why?
So that nothing:
- death
- life
- present
- future
can separate us from His love.
“The gentle King of Jerusalem is the all-powerful Savior of Romans 8.”
Conclusion
Today we see two images:
- a King on a donkey
- a Savior who removes condemnation
They do not contradict each other. They complete each other.
“If Christ had come as a harsh King, He would have crushed us. But because He came gentle, He won our hearts.”
“Life in the Spirit is life under the reign of a gentle King who does not force you, but transforms you.”