How Can We Be More Than Conquerors?

In Romans 8:35, the apostle Paul lists affliction, distress, persecution, famine, nakedness, danger, and the sword in response to a pivotal question: “Who shall separate us from the love of Christ?” At first glance, this phrasing seems unusual. We typically categorize these hardships as inanimate circumstances rather than personal entities, leading one to wonder why Paul didn’t use the word “what” instead.

This choice of language was likely intentional rather than a grammatical oversight. When we face intense trials, the experience rarely feels impersonal; instead, it often feels like a targeted, personal opposition. By using “who,” Paul acknowledges the weight of these challenges while preparing to introduce a contrast with a far greater personal power.

Ultimately, Paul establishes that no matter what forces are arrayed against you, the Power on your side is greater than any adversary. This theme is central to Romans 8:37 alignment, which assures believers of their victory. Even at the complex suffering and faith intersection, this divine presence remains an unshakable foundation.

God is stronger, and he’s not just going to defeat those things for us. He’s going to make us “more than conquerors” (Rom. 8:37). Have you ever really thought about that phrase? What does it mean to be “more than a conqueror”? I love how John Piper explains it:

“A conqueror defeats his enemy, but one who is more than a conqueror subjugates his enemy. A conqueror nullifies the purpose of his enemy; one who is more than a conqueror makes the enemy serve his own purposes. A conqueror strikes down his foe; one who is more than a conqueror makes his foe his slave.”

God not only delivers us from our suffering; he also makes our pain and suffering serve his purposes: “For our momentary light affliction is producing for us an absolutely incomparable eternal weight of glory” (2 Cor. 4:17, emphasis mine).

What Satan means for evil in our lives, God uses for good, because God uses these attacks to work in us an even greater weight of glory than we would have experienced without them.

The Who of your salvation is greater than the who of your opposition, and God transforms the opposition into the servants of his purpose.

This also explains a confusing—and downright depressing—lyric Paul quotes in the middle of the soaring rhetoric of Romans 8: “Because of you, we are being put to death all day long, we are counted as sheep to be slaughtered” (Rom. 8:36).

Whenever Bible writers quote a passage of Scripture like this, they intend for their readers to think of the entire passage. This was more common for Paul’s readers, since they would have known the Old Testament extremely well. It would be like quoting the first line of a popular song today: You don’t need to sing the whole song; just one line and everyone will fill in the rest.

That’s what Paul is doing with Romans 8:36, which is a quote from Psalm 44. And if you thought the one line was dark, try the entire psalm! Seriously, go read it.

Psalm 44 was a song of lament written at a dark time in Israel’s history, when it seemed like God had forsaken Israel because of her sin. Israel’s enemies were all around them, crushing them, and so the psalmist asks if God had taken his eyes off of them forever, essentially saying, “I know it’s our fault, God, but are you ever going to bring any good out of this?”

Romans 8 is the gospel’s answer to Psalm 44: “For I am persuaded that neither death nor life, nor angels nor rulers, nor things present nor things to come, nor powers, nor height nor depth, nor any other created thing will be able to separate us from the love of God that is in Christ Jesus our Lord” (Romans 8:38–39).

You might be living in Psalm 44 today, and you’re thinking, Pastor J.D., if you only knew what I was going through, you wouldn’t say God can turn it for good.

But If you are living in that dark, desperate, hopeless place of Psalm 44, you are precisely the person Paul is talking about here.

Your Psalm 44 is being swallowed up in Romans 8.

Do you feel like a sheep set to be slaughtered? Paul calls you more than a conqueror.

Do you feel like darkness is your only friend? Paul says that not even death itself can harm you.

God’s purpose is unchangeable, his power is unchallengeable, and his love is unconditional. There is nothing to fear.

All those things that oppose you—persecution and famine and sword, earthly and demonic powers—those may affect your situation. But they can’t touch your identity.

You are more than a conqueror. Your life is not defined by your situation. Your life is defined by who you are in Christ: the treasured child of a heavenly Father.

J.D. Greear
J.D. Greearhttp://JDGreear.com

J.D. Greear is the pastor of The Summit Church in Raleigh-Durham, North Carolina, and is currently serving as the 62nd president of the Southern Baptist Convention. He is the author of several books, including most recently Essential Christianity: The Heart of the Gospel in Ten Words (The Good Book Company).

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