Table Talk: ROMANS Part 2: WEEK 6
ROMANS: Part 2: THE GREAT Assurance
The Great Assurance of Romans 5–8 traces the lived reality of the gospel once we have been made right with God. These chapters move from justification into assurance, showing what God’s grace actually produces in us and for us. Paul begins by grounding us in peace with God, hope that holds even in suffering, and love proven at the cross. He then sets Christ against Adam, declaring that grace not only overcomes sin but overwhelms it with new life. From there, Paul invites us into a transformed identity—united with Christ in His death and resurrection, freed from sin’s mastery, and called to live as people made alive to God. He names the honest struggle believers experience with sin and the limits of the Law, pressing us toward our deep need for rescue beyond ourselves. The movement culminates in Romans 8, where assurance reaches its peak as Paul declares a life completely redefined, free from condemnation, animated by the Spirit, rooted in our adoption as God’s children, sustained by hope in the midst of suffering, and secured by a love so strong that nothing in all creation can ever separate us from it. Together, Romans 5–8 proclaim not only that we are saved by grace, but that we are securely held, continually renewed, and forever loved in Christ.
Spiritual Practice: GRATITUDE
Gratitude is a simple yet powerful way to open our hearts to God’s presence and faithfulness. In Scripture, giving thanks is not only a response to blessings, but a practice that shapes us—helping us notice God’s grace in both joy and difficulty. When we intentionally name what we are thankful for, we train our hearts to trust that God is at work, drawing us closer to Him and to one another. Adele Calhoun writes, “Thanksgiving is possible not because everything goes perfectly but because God is present. The Spirit of God is within us—nearer to us than our own breath. It is a discipline to choose to stitch our days together with the thread of gratitude. But the decision to do so is guaranteed to stitch us closer to God” (Spiritual Disciplines Handbook).
Gratitude Practice (Can be done individually or as a household/group):
Choose a consistent time (such as before bed, at a certain meal, or during a devotional time). Begin with a short prayer, inviting God to help you see His gifts clearly.
Name one or two things you are grateful for today—big or small. (You could also choose to write these in “Gratitude Journal.”) Allow your response to flow naturally: a quick prayer, a laugh, a “thank You, Jesus,” or even a short song.
Close by thanking God for His faithfulness and asking the Holy Spirit to help you carry gratitude into tomorrow
Prayer
Gracious God, we thank You for the gift of peace with You through Jesus Christ, for a hope that holds us steady in suffering, and for a love that will never let us go. Today we receive again what You have already given—freedom from condemnation, new life in Christ, and the presence of Your Spirit at work within us. We confess that we often rely on our own strength and grow weary in the struggle, yet we are grateful that our rescue does not depend on us but on Your grace. Help us live as Your beloved children, attentive to Your Spirit, thankful in all circumstances, and confident that nothing in all creation can separate us from Your love in Christ Jesus.
In Jesus’ name, Amen.
From the Book of Common Prayer
SERMON SUMMARY Paul gives voice to the lived experience of moral conflict, describing the tension between the desire to do what is good and the persistent power of sin. This passage refuses easy answers or shallow optimism, naming the frustration and helplessness that arise when human willpower proves insufficient. The struggle drives Paul not toward despair, but toward a cry for rescue, pointing beyond self effort to the deliverance that comes through Jesus Christ our Lord.
Passage: Romans 7:14-25
Conversation Starters
Kids
Paul talks about wanting to do the right thing but sometimes doing the wrong thing instead. Have you ever felt that way? What was that like? When you mess up even though you knew better, who can you talk to for help and forgiveness?
Students/Adults
Paul describes an inner battle between what he wants to do and what he actually does. Where do you see that same struggle in your own life?
This passage shows that everyone struggles to follow God’s ways. How does it help to know you’re not alone?
Paul is honest about his weakness and temptation to sin rather than hiding it. How does that honesty shape the way we approach confession, accountability, and/or community?

