Michael Easley inContext Logo
Search
  • Podcast
  • Connect
  • About
  • Donate
  • Shop
  • Podcast
  • Connect
  • About
  • Donate
  • Shop
$0.00 0 Cart
  • Sermons

The Nature of Sin (Romans 3:9-20)

with Michael Easley
  • Sermons

The Nature of Sin (Romans 3:9-20)

with Michael Easley
Your browser does not support the audio element.
Dr. Easley teaches from Romans 3, showing that we’re all under the power of sin—and only Christ can make us right before a holy God.

The Nature of Sin (Romans 3:9-20)

Michael originally taught ‘The Nature of Sin (Romans 3:9-20)’ at Immanuel Bible Church.

Summary

In this sermon, Dr. Michael Easley unpacks the biblical doctrine of sin and humanity’s universal need for salvation. He begins by addressing how both the church and culture define “sin,” exposing the world’s denial of sin and the believer’s need to own it personally: “My sin is the problem.” Drawing on Paul’s sweeping argument, Dr. Easley shows that all people—Jew and Gentile alike—are under the power of sin. No one seeks God. No one does good. We are condemned not just by our actions but by our very nature.

Dr. Easley walks through Paul’s Old Testament citations to demonstrate sin’s pervasive reach: we sin against God, with our speech, and through our actions. Even religious privilege, like being entrusted with God’s Word, doesn’t give immunity from sin’s reign. Ultimately, he reminds us that the law exposes our sin but cannot justify us. Only a perfect Savior—Jesus Christ—can rescue us.

Takeaways

  • Everyone is a sinner—no one is righteous.
  • Sin isn’t just what we do; it’s our nature.
  • The law reveals sin but cannot save.
  • We can’t stand before God on our own merit.
  • Christ alone makes us righteous by His work.
  • Believing culture’s view of sin leads to deception.

To read the book of Romans, click here.

Click here for other Michael Easley Sermons.

Listen on your favorite podcast app

Continue Series

Psalm 71: Faith That Finishes Well

Psalm 71 shows aging as loss, but also deep faith, mentoring purpose, and joyful worship rooted in God’s lifelong faithfulness.

Read More »
Psalm 50: God Who Judges The Heart

God exposes empty religion and hypocrisy in Psalm 50, calling His people to true worship marked by gratitude and trust.

Read More »
Psalm 46: Be Still and Know

In fear and uncertainty, Psalm 46 reminds us: God is our refuge, strength, and ever-present help—so we can stop striving and trust Him.

Read More »

Topics

  • Biblical Teaching, Death and Dying, Forgiveness, Salvation, Sanctification, Submission, The Holy Spirit, Theology, Worship

References

  • Romans

Tags

  • Biblical Theology, Christianity, justification, law, Romans, salvation, sin
Search
PODCAST
  • Series
  • Episodes
  • Topics
  • Subscribe
CONNECT
  • Ask Dr. E
  • Speaking
  • Biblical Tours
  • FAQs
BLOG
ABOUT
DONATE
SHOP
  • Cart
  • Checkout

Join Our List

  • This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.

Michael Easley inContext logo
Copyright 2025 © Michael Easley inContext. All rights Reserved. Design by Luum