The 12×12 Rule!

Your SOP As A Christian

UNSHAKEABLE: Adopt the 12×12 Rule as your SOP—the standard operating procedure for your Christian life. It comes out of Romans 12:12, “Be joyful in hope, patient in affliction, faithful in prayer.” When you come to a sticky challenge, are overcome by a sense of helplessness, are left scratching your head in bewilderment, or find yourself up against an insurmountable wall, invoke the 12×12 rule. Memorize it—it’s pretty easy; it’s just ten words. Meditate on it until you absorb it into your core. Pray it back to God until the Holy Spirit brings it to life in your way of thinking. And then just do it. Invoke it early and often as you do life.

Being joyful in hope, patient in affliction, and faithful in prayer should be the Standard Operating Procedure of your life as a Christ-follower. —Ray Noah

Unshakeable Living // Romans 12:12

Be joyful in hope, patient in affliction, faithful in prayer.

Romans 12:9-21 is kind of a checklist for Christ-like behavior. Depending on how you count them, you will find no less than nineteen commands that the Christian is to carry out; practical ways, if you will, that we can truly live as “living sacrifices, holy and pleasing to God.” (Rom 12:1)

The Message version’s rendering of verse 1 calls us to take our “everyday, ordinary life — our sleeping, eating, going-to-work, and walking-around life—and place it before God as an offering.” With God’s help, by rejecting the world’s way of thinking and acting, by the complete transformation of our entire way of viewing, doing, and approaching life, and with our 24/7 dedication to the aforementioned, this checklist pretty well covers what should be the outward produce of that inner renovation we have experienced in Christ.

There is one item on this checklist that is a particular favorite of mine: Romans 12:12. A few years ago, an elder in the church where I served as lead pastor brought that particular verse to my attention. It became the motto of our elder board — and I affectionately named it the 12×12 rule: Be joyful in hope, patient in affliction, faithful in prayer. In our elder’s meetings, when we would come to a sticky challenge, were overcome by a sense of helplessness, left scratching our head in bewilderment, or found ourselves up against an insurmountable wall, we’d just invoke the 12×12 rule.

The 12×12 rule became such a standard response as well as a call to action for my leadership team that one year during the Christmas season the elders gave me a gift that would be a constant reminder to invoke this rule in my life and leadership. It was a beautiful Mont Blanc pen — with the words, “Romans 12:12” inscribed on it. I have never received a more unforgettable and beneficial gift!

The 12×12 rule pretty well sums up what it means to be Christian, doesn’t it? I would like to challenge you to adopt the 12×12 rule as your own. Memorize it—it’s pretty easy; it’s just ten words. Meditate on it until you absorb it into your core. Pray it back to God until the Holy Spirit brings it to life in your way of thinking. And then just do it. Invoke it early and often as you do life.

The 12×12 rule. I like that: Be joyful in hope, patient in affliction, and faithful in prayer.

Get Rooted: Meditate on Romans 12:12, “Be joyful in hope, patient in affliction, faithful in prayer.” Ask the Holy Spirit to remind you continually of this calling so that it becomes your SOP, your standard operating procedure for life!

Sober Up!

Don’t Act Big, Don’t Act Small, Just Act Medium

UNSHAKEABLE: If at all possible, it is best not to think of yourself at all. That is what the Biblical writers had in mind when they spoke of the virtue of humility, which is not so much thinking less of yourself (both quantitatively as well as qualitatively), but the freedom from thinking about yourself altogether. However, if you must think of yourself, Paul says to do so with “sober judgment.” (Rom 12:3) And if you do that with the measure of faith you’ve been given, then rather than having either a too high or a too low estimation of yourself, you will have an accurate picture of what you are: a living sacrifice, holy and pleasing to God. (Romans 12:1)

Forget about yourself! Practice being absent minded when it comes to you. Get you out of your thoughts and replace them with plans for offering yourself as a living sacrifice to God. —Ray Noah

Unshakeable Living // Romans 12:3

Do not think of yourself more highly than you ought, but rather think of yourself with sober judgment, in accordance with the measure of faith God has given you.

If at all possible, it is best not to think of yourself at all. That is what the Biblical writers had in mind when they spoke of the virtue of humility, which is not so much thinking less of yourself (both quantitatively as well as qualitatively), but the freedom from thinking about yourself altogether.

However, if you must think of yourself, Paul says to do so with “sober judgment.” (Rom 12:3) And if you do that with the measure of faith you’ve been given, then rather than having either a too high or a too low estimation of yourself, you will have an accurate picture of what you are: a living sacrifice, holy and pleasing to God. (Rom 12:1)

Think about that — a living sacrifice. An Old Testament sacrifice had to die in order to offer pleasing worship to God, but when Jesus came along, he became to final sacrifice called upon to die. Old Testament sacrifices are no longer required by God; New Covenant sacrifices are now what bring pleasing worship to God, and those offerings are called upon to live.

Of course, as a living sacrifice, we must first die to ourselves — our flesh, our own selfish desires, and our false estimation of who we are and what we should be. But our real call is to live — to live in view of God’s mercy (Rom 12:1), to live for him and through him and to him his glory (Rom11:36), and to live to fulfill the purpose for which he has gifted us (Rom 12:4-8). And that great purpose for which you have been gifted is specifically spelled out in this section of verses: it is to live and serve and function and contribute to the family of God in which you have now been placed:

Just as our bodies have many parts and each part has a special function, so it is with Christ’s body. We are many parts of one body, and we all belong to each other. (Rom 12:4-5)

Yes, you have been called to die to yourself — which is a daily (and difficult) exercise in self-mortification. But your highest calling is now to live unto God — to live as a living sacrifice. Do you see yourself as a living sacrifice? That is truly what “sober judgment” will produce. If that is not fundamentally how you see your role in life, then you need to sober up!

Let me give you a challenge this week: Forget about yourself! Practice being absent-minded when it comes to you. Get you out of your thoughts and replace them with plans for offering yourself as a living sacrifice, holy and pleasing to God.

Sober up and crawl back up on the altar of sacrifice—and for Christ’s sake, stay there!

Get Rooted: This week’s challenge: Forget about yourself! Practice being absent-minded when it comes to you. Get you out of your thoughts and replace them with plans for offering yourself as a living sacrifice, holy and pleasing to God by using the gifts he has given you to serve in his family.

The Key To Everything

Think Early, Think Often, Think Christianly

UNSHAKEABLE: Herein lies an important truth about the human mind: What we do — our behavior — and what is done to us — our circumstances — do not produce what we think. Rather, what we think produces our behavior in any given set of circumstances. That is, “right thinking” enables and encourages “right living” — godliness, a Christ-like response to life, an eternal perspective, an attitude of abundance, a Biblical worldview, etc. That’s why Paul calls us to “let God change us into new people by changing the way we think.” (Rom 12:2) Right thinking is THE key to everything!

Right thinking is the key to everything — godly living, significance and satisfaction, relational wholeness, the abundant life, spiritual growth, unbridled joy — everything! —Ray Noah

Unshakeable Living // Romans 12:2

Don’t copy the behavior and customs of this world, but let God change you into a new person by changing the way you think.

We have a calling as Christians to right thinking. Right thinking is the key to everything — to godly living, to significance and satisfaction, to relational wholeness, to the abundant life, to spiritual growth, to unbridled joy — everything!

Paul writes that we are to let God change us by changing the way we think. In Philippians 4:8, he describes the kind of thinking that will lead to the changed life:

Finally, brothers, whatever is true, whatever is noble, whatever is right, whatever is pure, whatever is lovely, whatever is admirable—if anything is excellent or praiseworthy—think about such things.

When Paul says to “think about such things,” he intentionally chose the Greek term is logizomai, which means to compute, to calculate—to think deliberately, proactively, and strategically. It speaks of an exercise in mental reflection that affects one’s conduct. It is the word from which we get our word for logic.

In other words, as those who have been redeemed through God’s mercy by the precious blood of Jesus Christ, thinking this way is only logical. When Paul tells us in Romans 12:1-2 to present our bodies as living sacrifices — sacrifices that remain in the holiness imputed to us by Christ’s own sacrificial death — he says this is primarily possible through the transformation of our thinking, i.e., “right thinking.” Interestingly, when Paul says this is our “reasonable (rational, intelligent) service and spiritual worship” (Amplified Bible), he uses that same Greek root word for logical, logikos, i.e., “right thinking.”

Now herein lies an important truth about the human mind: What we do — our behavior — and what is done to us — our circumstances — do not produce what we think. Rather, what we think produces our behavior in any given set of circumstances. That is, “right thinking” enables and encourages “right living” — godliness, a Christ-like response to life, an eternal perspective, an attitude of abundance, a Biblical worldview, etc.

Psychiatrist William Glasser, the father of reality therapy, discovered in his study of how the brain works that humans aren’t controlled by external factors, but by internal desires. Furthermore, our desires are predetermined by our thinking. So, he concludes that the mind is the command center determining conduct. Therefore, the critical issue for man is how he thinks.

Glasser had only discovered what the Bible had already said long ago — that we are the product of our thinking. Proverbs 23:7 says, “As a man thinks within himself, so he is.” That’s why Proverbs 4:23 also says, “Above all else, guard your heart (the heart In Hebrew thought was the center of thinking) for it is the wellspring of life.”

If you want to improve your experience of life, deliberately and strategically change your thinking. Now when Paul says, “think about,” he doesn’t mean to leave it up to whatever pops into your brain. He is saying to intentionally and rigidly allow only certain things into your mind. He is referring to the practice or the spiritual discipline of setting godly virtues and Biblical values as the gatekeeper of your mind.

He is not suggesting silly mind games or positive thinking, mere optimism, or some type of self-hypnosis, he is calling us to think deeply, rationally, and habitually about the things of God. He is calling us to think first, think early, think often, think deeply, think always. Think first, act second, feel third! Then your feelings will be managed by your thinking and your actions will be sound.

God created us with a mind, and he commands us to think. Isaiah 1:18 says, “Come now, let us reason together.” And the primary path for our reasoning is God’s Word. When God gave us his revelation, he didn’t give us a movie, or a series of music videos, and not even an eBook book with background organ music. He gave us the written Word, which by nature calls us and causes us to think.

In his book, “Your Mind Matters, John Stott wrote, “Sin has more dangerous effects on our feeling than our thinking, because our opinions are more easily checked and regulated by revealed truth than are experiences.” Right thinking is the key to Godly character.

D. Martyn Lloyd-Jones pointed out that our worry and anxiety are “a failure to think” that God is close and in control, and that he cares about us. Most people assume worry comes from thinking too much. But in reality, we get anxious for not thinking enough in the right direction. Right thinking is thinking rightly about God’s purposes, promises, and plans. Right thinking is thinking reasonably about God’s revealed truth. Right thinking is the key to Spirit-controlled emotions.

A.W. Tozer wrote in his book, Knowledge of the Holy, “What comes into our minds when we think about God is the most important thing about us.” Right thinking is the key to your experience of God.

Thinking rightly is the catalyst for a great life. So, watch your input; it becomes thought. Watch your thoughts; they become attitudes. Watch your attitudes; they become actions. Watch your actions; they become habits. Watch your habits; they become character. Watch your character; it becomes your destiny.

Now go think rightly. It is the key to everything!

Get Rooted: Stop at the very first word of Romans 12: “Therefore.” Whenever you come to a “therefore” in your Bible reading, you ought to ask yourself, “what is it there for?” What Paul goes on to say in these first two verses comprises what is arguably the most important duty of all true Christ-followers: The offering of our everyday lives to God as our only and reasonable act of worship. “Therefore” …what is the basis of this call to Christian duty? (Hint: Go back to Romans 11:36.)

Trusting The God We Don’t Fully Know

Too Deep, Always Kind, Without Mistakes

UNSHAKEABLE: There is a whole lot more to God that we don’t understand than what we do understand! The truth is, when you delve into some of the deep and mysterious truths of God in scripture, it can get a little intimidating, if not downright scary, and for sure, unsettling. But here is a rule of thumb when you get to the mysterious, confusing, unsettling things you are reading and you are a little overwhelmed: You can always trust God! He is good, all the time — and you can take that to the bank! And although he is too deep to always explain himself to us, we can be assured that he is too kind to ever be cruel and too wise to ever make a mistake.

God is too deep to always explain himself to us, but even when we don’t understand him, we can be assured that he is too kind to ever be cruel and too wise to ever make a mistake. —Ray Noah

Unshakeable Living // Romans 11:33

Oh, the depth of the riches of the wisdom and knowledge of God! How unsearchable his judgments, and his paths beyond tracing out.

There is a lot in Romans 11 that, quite frankly, is impossible to get your brain around! For instance:

  • how God hardened Israel’s heart (Rom 11:7-10)
  • election and the full number of the Gentiles (Rom 11:7,25,28)
  • how God uses the misfortunes of some to create blessings for others (Rom 11:12,30-31)
  • how God is using his kindness to the Gentiles to create jealousy in the Jews (Rom 11:11)
  • how God has bound all men over to disobedience so he can show mercy to them all (Rom 11:32)

Huh? Give you a headache? Yeah — me, too! I can understand, after all those mind-teasing theologies, why Paul exclaims,

No one can explain the things God decides or understand his ways. (Rom 11:33, NCV)

Yes, there is a whole lot more to God that we don’t understand than what we do understand! So if you ever run into someone who thinks and talks like they have God all figured out, you are probably listening to a spiritual egghead! The truth is, when you delve into some of these deep and mysterious truths, it can get a little intimidating, if not downright scary and unsettling. But here is a rule of thumb when you get to stuff like this and you are a little overwhelmed:

You can always trust God!

God is good, all the time — you can take that to the bank! And although he is too deep to always explain himself to us, we can be assured that he is too kind to ever be cruel and too wise to ever make a mistake.

I like how the Message translates these verses on the mysterious ways of God—I think they not only shed some needed light on this matter, but they graciously provide us with a whole lot of comfort as well:

Have you ever come on anything quite like this extravagant generosity of God, this deep, deep wisdom? It’s way over our heads. We’ll never figure it out. Is there anyone around who can explain God? Anyone smart enough to tell him what to do? Anyone who has done him such a huge favor that God has to ask his advice? Everything comes from him; Everything happens through him; Everything ends up in him. Always glory! Always praise! Yes. Yes. Yes.

Having trouble figuring God out? I get you! But here is what I am committed to; what I am staking my whole eternity on: Everything ends up in him…always glory…always praise!

I would encourage you to go with that, too!

Get Rooted: There are several things in this chapter (as well as throughout Romans) that might leave you scratching your head. For hundreds of years, theologians and laymen alike have debated “election” versus “free will” with no clear resolution to the debate. Likewise, certain statements are made by the Bible’s human authors that seem to run against the grain of what we know to be true about God, such as the one in Romans 11:32, “For God has bound all men over to disobedience so that he may have mercy on them all.” Do you think there are some things in Scripture that we should just chalk up to Romans 11:33? Perhaps you should commit yourself today and from here on to that probability.

A God Created In Our Image

Holy or Happy—What Will It Be?

UNSHAKEABLE: The kind of God we want may not be the kind of God we need. In truth, we need a God who is kind when we need kindness, and stern when we need sternness. As a child of the Loving Father who disciplines out of love, and as a disciple who is committed to the way of Jesus, perhaps today is a good day to recommit to both the kindness AND the sternness of God.

I want a God who is more committed to my holiness than my happiness, because I will never truly be happy, not in this life or the life to come, until I get the holiness thing right. —Ray Noah

Unshakeable Living // Romans 11:22

Consider therefore the kindness and sternness of God.

American culture isn’t too thrilled with this verse! We don’t want a God who is stern; we want a God who is only kind — all the time. We want a God who is more like an easygoing grandfather than a strong father. We want nurture not discipline. We prefer love without truth if the truth is going to hurt. We want a God who makes us feel good and who will guarantee our comfort and success.

This kinder, gentler theology has even invaded the church. A lot of people now go to church not to be engaged by truth, but to get a certain feeling—the warm fuzzies. That’s why a lot of people evaluate their church experience or even they choose their church based on if it will make them feel good.

I suppose what we really want is a God created in our image!

I don’t know about you, but I don’t want to follow a God like that. I want a God who will give me a dose of tough love when I need it. I want a God who knows what is right for me because I certainly don’t always know what is right for me. I want a God who is my loving Father, which means that he will sometimes discipline me out of love. I want a God who is more committed to my holiness than my happiness, because I will never truly be happy, not in this life or the life to come, until I get the holiness thing right.

The writer of Hebrews talked about this when he wrote,

Endure hardship as discipline; God is treating you as sons. For what son is not disciplined by his father? If you are not disciplined (and everyone undergoes discipline), then you are illegitimate children and not true sons. Moreover, we have all had human fathers who disciplined us and we respected them for it. How much more should we submit to the Father of our spirits and live! Our fathers disciplined us for a little while as they thought best; but God disciplines us for our good, that we may share in his holiness. No discipline seems pleasant at the time, but painful. Later on, however, it produces a harvest of righteousness and peace for those who have been trained by it. (Heb 12:7-11)

That’s the God I want, and need. I want a God who is kind when I need kindness, and stern when I need sternness.

A God who will give me both is a God who really loves me!

Get Rooted: The kind of God we want may not be the kind of God we need. In truth, we need a God who is kind when we need kindness, and stern when we need sternness. As a child of the Loving Father who disciplines out of love, and as a disciple who is committed to the way of Jesus, perhaps today is a good day to recommit to both the kindness and the sternness of God.

You Are Not The Only One

Satan’s Weapon of Choice: Isolation

UNSHAKEABLE: Isolation is one of the chief tools of the Enemy to discourage God’s people. And if he can cause discouragement by tricking them into thinking they are all alone, he can more easily defeat them. Too many of God’s people live defeated lives precisely because “the roaring lion” has isolated them from the herd where they are more easily devoured by discouragement, doubt, and depression. Don’t let Satan use the “solitary confinement” method on you!

Don’t let Satan use the “solitary confinement” method on you. Stay connected to God by staying connect to God’s people! —Ray Noah

Unshakeable Living // Romans 11:4

I have reserved for myself seven thousand who have not bowed the knee to Baal.

Isolation is one of the chief tools of the Enemy to discourage God’s people. And if he can cause discouragement by tricking them into thinking they are all alone, he can more easily defeat them. Too many of God’s people live defeated lives precisely because “the roaring lion” has isolated them from the herd where they are more easily devoured by discouragement, doubt, and depression. (1 Peter 5:8; cf., Elijah’s bout with depression in 1 Kings 19)

I know, only in hindsight, unfortunately, that Satan has occasionally used that age-old method on me—and with some success. You’d think after a few times of the old lion isolating me from the herd, I’d wise up to his ways. But time after time, he comes at me with the same strategy, and before I know it, I’m feeling like the Old Testament prophet, Elijah (Rom 11:3, cf. 1 Kings 19:10,14),

Lord, they have killed your prophets and torn down your altars; I am the only one left, and they are trying to kill me.

He’s probably used the “solitary confinement” method on you, too—and all the while, you were totally unaware. You thought you were the only one who was standing for truth in that hostile environment. You were convinced you were the only believer at your work. You were sure you were the only one in the group who didn’t drink, do drugs, or treat sex as casually as a handshake. You thought that no one else struggled with that shameful sin like you did. You believed no one else could relate to your devastating failure—a broken marriage, a child who walked away from God, getting fired from your job, making what turned out to be a foolish investment, giving in yet again to that addictive behavior.

Well guess what? You’re not alone. Whether you are standing for your faith or struggling with sin or dealing with a devastation, you are in good company. We are all fellow strugglers. But here’s the deal: We are also overcomers. And there are a lot of us; God has made sure to keep plenty of us in reserve: “I have reserved for myself…” (Rom 11:4)

Think of that: Thousands of us, all flawed and in many cases feeble, but “more than conquerors.” In fact, that is our primary identity—more than strugglers, and we are more than conquerors. (Romans 8:37) And at the end of the day, we will overcome the Enemy by the word of our testimony and by the blood of the Lamb! (Revelation 12:11)

So be encouraged and refuse to let the devil lead you into a box canyon of isolation. Share your struggles with a trusted friend. Stay connected with a small group. Don’t lose the vital link between your faith and Christian fellowship. And just remember, “those who are with us are more than those who are with them.” (2 Kings 6:16)

You don’t have to stand alone any longer. Jesus did that for you when he hung on the cross all by himself. Because of his isolation, you are now an inseparable part of God’s family, and you are inseparable from God’s love. (Romans 8:35, 38-39)

So hang in there—you are more than a conqueror! So am I!

Get Rooted: Are you connected? That is, do you have a group of Christians—it doesn’t have to be large; perhaps as small as three or four or as large as ten to fifteen—with whom you are doing life? Do you have a rhythm of regular get-togethers with them for fellowship, encouragement, discussion of God’s truth, accountability, and prayer? If not, begin to seek out a small group opportunity. If that is difficult for you, talk to your spiritual leaders about it and enlist their help.

Friend, this is absolutely critical to living an unshakeable life in uncertain times.

A Longhorn Sermon Or A Word From God?

Preach Away — Both With Your Life And Your Words

UNSHAKEABLE: We live in a culture where far too many churches have downplayed the preaching of the Word. People don’t like to be preached at, so preaching is reduced to “sharing,” messages are more like motivational pep talks, and the preacher becomes a self-improvement guru. In truth, what passes as a message in many churches amounts to nothing more than a “longhorn” sermon — a point here, a point there, and a lot of bull in between. But the preaching of the Word must never lose its primacy in the local church’s ministry. Why? Preaching is the primary vehicle for the development of disciples and for the formation of faith necessary for spiritual seekers to find Christ. The Word of God must be taught clearly, thoroughly, accurately, interestingly, relevantly, passionately, and consistently, or the church has failed in its mission.

God’s Word must be taught clearly, thoroughly, accurately, interestingly, relevantly, passionately, and consistently, or the church has failed in its mission. —Ray Noah

Unshakeable Living // Romans 10:14-15

How, then, can they call on the one they have not believed in? And how can they believe in the one of whom they have not heard? And how can they hear without someone preaching to them? And how can they preach unless they are sent? As it is written, “How beautiful are the feet of those who bring good news.

Okay, this may sound a little self-serving since I am one, but I just want to echo what Paul is saying: Up with preachers! The Christian message requires them! The building of faith requires them! The evangelization of the world requires them!

You go, preacher!

Did you notice that the Gospel formula, if you will, goes something like this: Salvation requires belief; belief requires the communicated Word; the communicated Word requires a preacher; and the preacher requires a divine call? Therefore, in the Christian equation, preaching must be kept preeminent! It is the God-ordained tool for building faith:

Faith comes by hearing, and hearing by the Word of God. (Rom 10:17)

We live in a culture where far too many churches have downplayed the preaching of the Word. People don’t like to be preached at, so preaching is reduced to “sharing,” messages are more like motivational pep talks, and the preacher becomes a self-improvement guru. In truth, what passes as a message in many churches amounts to nothing more than a “longhorn” sermon — a point here, a point there, and a lot of bull in between.

Not only is the sermon reduced to a lesser role but in the place of preaching, music, drama, and cool media presentations have taken preeminence. Don’t get me wrong — I love good music, and I believe churches ought to have the best fine arts approach to worship and evangelism possible. Too many churches turn off spiritual seekers because the song selection is out-of-date, the style belongs in the dark ages, and the skill of the musicians would be better served as an implement of torture in the hands of CIA agents at Gitmo. As it relates to the drama ministry, the adage that “no drama is better than bad drama” has been ignored. There needs to be a commitment to excellence befitting the King of Kings regarding the worship arts of a church. And I thank God that I belong to a fellowship with that kind of commitment.

But the preaching of God’s Word must never lose its primacy in the local church’s ministry. Churches must be committed to it and must demand the same kind of skill that I’ve just suggested of the church’s fine arts. Why? Because preaching is the primary vehicle for the development of disciples and for the formation of faith necessary for spiritual seekers to find Christ. The Word of God must be taught clearly, thoroughly, accurately, interestingly, relevantly, passionately, and consistently, or the church has failed in its mission.

Richard Baxter, the Puritan preacher, once remarked, “I preach as never sure to preach again, and as a dying man to dying men.” Your preacher must be fully aware that when he or she preaches, eternity literally hangs in the balance. I would recommend that you copy that down on a 5 x 7 card and tape it to the pulpit in full view so that when your pastor steps behind “the sacred desk,” he or she is reminded of their role and senses your supportive expectation that they are carrying out the central activity of the gathered community of faith: the preaching of the Word of God!

Oh, one more thing. Your preacher may be the one assigned to declare God’s truth to your congregation from the pulpit, but you, too, have been called to preach the Good News. You are a preacher, and the world God has placed you in is your parish.

So preach away — both with your life and your words.

Get Rooted: Re-read Romans 10:1-21. Memorize Romans 10:9-10, “If you confess with your mouth that Jesus is Lord and believe in your heart that God raised him from the dead, you will be saved. For it is by believing in your heart that you are made right with God, and it is by confessing with your mouth that you are saved.” For Your Consideration: Read these verses, as well as the immediate context (Romans 10:5:13) from several different translations (I would recommend the NIV, The Message, and the New Living Translation). Why are these verses such a centerpiece of the Christian message? How does your own view of salvation line up with what Paul has written? Do you think your Christian friends have a good grasp on what it takes to be saved, and if not, how can you engage them in a spiritual conversation about this matter?