In Pastor David Jang’s sermon on Romans 8, we encounter the “love that cannot be severed” — from foreknowledge and predestination to the perseverance of the saints, this message offers theological insight and deep biblical meditation on how the assurance of salvation overcomes the weight of life.
What Was Found Before the Firing Squad
In December 1849, in St. Petersburg, a
bitter winter wind swept across Semyonov Square. Fyodor Dostoevsky, a young
writer sentenced to death for participating in a revolutionary circle, stood
before a firing squad. At the very moment he was waiting for the blindfold to
be lowered over his eyes, a messenger from the Tsar came riding in. The death
sentence was commuted to exile in Siberia.
After that day, Dostoevsky became a
completely different man. Later he confessed, “In that moment, I realized that
life itself was a gift.” From then on, his novels, Crime and Punishment and The Brothers Karamazov,
would endlessly probe one question: Can a human being be saved even in the
deepest darkness? And his answer was always the same. Yes—if love was there
first.
When Pastor David Jang opens Romans
8:28–39, the passage touches precisely the same nerve as Dostoevsky’s
confession. At the threshold of death, in the very midst of suffering, there is
nevertheless something that cannot be broken. Paul declares it this way: “Who
shall separate us from the love of Christ?”
God’s Providence Fitting Together Like a Mosaic
“And we know that in all things God
works for the good of those who love him, who have been called according to his
purpose” (Rom. 8:28). When preaching on this verse, Pastor David Jang often
uses the image of a mosaic. Up close, the pieces are all different in color and
shape; but from a distance, they form one complete picture. Pieces of joy,
pieces of shame, even pieces of pain we could never understand—all of them, in
the end, find their place within God’s greater design.
On the foundation of this theology of
providence, Paul then unfolds the stages of salvation one by one:
foreknowledge, predestination, calling, justification, and glorification. These
five stages begin and are completed solely in God’s love, apart from human
effort or merit. Pastor David Jang, founder of Olivet University, firmly warns
against misunderstanding the doctrine of foreknowledge and predestination as
philosophical fatalism. The purpose of this teaching is not controversy but
comfort; not speculation but living assurance.
Paul himself was the evidence. He was a
man who had crushed the church, who called himself “the chief of sinners,” yet
on the road to Damascus he was utterly transformed by meeting the Lord. Because
his calling was given not by merit but by love, he never abandoned the way of
the gospel in the face of any suffering. The confession, “Though I was a
sinner, God knew me, predestined me, and called me,” was the power that kept
the roots of his faith from being shaken.
A Defense Bursting Forth in the Middle of the Courtroom
In Romans 8:31, Paul’s tone suddenly
becomes rhetorical and triumphant: “If God is for us, who can be against us?”
Pastor David Jang explains this sentence as an absolute guarantee of safety
given to the believer. The God who did not spare His own Son and gave Him up
for us all will certainly not withhold anything lesser. Since He has already
given the greatest gift—His only Son—He will surely give everything else as
well.
The questions that follow ring out like
a defense in a courtroom: “Who shall bring any charge against those whom God
has chosen?... Who is to condemn?” Neither external enemies nor the inner
voices that endlessly accuse us can stand against the declaration: “It is God
who justifies.” In addition, Pastor David Jang places special emphasis on
Christ’s work of intercession. Even now, at this very moment, Jesus is at the
right hand of God interceding for us. The believer’s security does not depend
on his own steadfastness, but on the living Christ who continues to intercede.
Trouble, hardship, persecution, famine,
nakedness, danger, and sword—the list Paul gives in verse 35 was a vivid
reality for the early church. And yet the gospel proclaims that there is a
grace that cannot be overcome by any of them. Pastor David Jang says that
believers today, even if they do not face outward persecution, must still cling
to this same declaration when confronted by inner anxiety and spiritual
emptiness. Though the times have changed, the power of this word has not grown
old in the least.
The Unbreakable Love: The Climactic Confession
By the time we reach Romans 8:38–39,
Paul’s language becomes a hymn: “Neither death nor life, neither angels nor
rulers, neither things present nor things to come, nor powers, nor height nor
depth, nor anything else in all creation, will be able to separate us from the
love of God in Christ Jesus our Lord.” This catalogue is cosmic in scope. Time
and space, the visible and the invisible—all of them bow before this love.
At this point, Pastor David Jang
highlights one decisive truth. Paul does not say, “Hold on to this love.” He
simply declares that God is holding on to us. Even when believers are weak and
shaken, that love remains unshaken to the end. This is the heart of the
doctrine of the perseverance of the saints. The assurance of salvation arises
not from the strength of my willpower, but from the faithfulness of God, who
will never let me go.
Dostoevsky learned before the firing
squad that life was a gift. Paul learned on the road to Damascus that love came
first. And through this word from Romans 8, Pastor David Jang proclaims the
same truth to us today: In any moment of life, no matter what darkness may
come, the love of God in Christ cannot be severed. All biblical meditation
ultimately returns to this one confession: Grace is not something I began. God
knew me first, determined first, and loved first. To stand upon that truth—that
is the one attitude the gospel asks of us, and it is the boldest place of
faith.










