Saturday in the 29th Week of Ordinary Time, October 25, 2025
Romans 8, 1-11
Now there is no condemnation for those who are in Christ Jesus. For the law of the spirit of life in Christ Jesus has freed you from the law of sin and death. For what the law, weakened by the flesh, was powerless to do, this God has done: by sending his own Son in the likeness of sinful flesh and for the sake of sin, he condemned sin in the flesh, so that the righteous decree of the law might be fulfilled in us, who live not according to the flesh but according to the spirit. For those who live according to the flesh are concerned with the things of the flesh, but those who live according to the spirit with the things of the spirit. The concern of the flesh is death, but the concern of the spirit is life and peace. For the concern of the flesh is hostility toward God; it does not submit to the law of God, nor can it; and those who are in the flesh cannot please God. But you are not in the flesh; on the contrary, you are in the spirit, if only the Spirit of God dwells in you. Whoever does not have the Spirit of Christ does not belong to him. But if Christ is in you, although the body is dead because of sin, the spirit is alive because of righteousness. If the Spirit of the one who raised Jesus from the dead dwells in you, the one who raised Christ from the dead will give life to your mortal bodies also, through his Spirit that dwells in you.
There are moments in Paul’s letters when one feels the gates of heaven opening before the reader; this is one of them. The long struggle he described in the previous chapter—between the good he willed and the evil he did—finds its resolution not in greater human effort but in the entrance of divine grace. “Now there is no condemnation for those who are in Christ Jesus.” These words are not the conclusion of a moral argument but the proclamation of a new creation. Humanity, burdened by the law and the weakness of the flesh, has been drawn into another order of existence: life in the Spirit.
Paul contrasts two laws — one of sin and death, the other of the Spirit of life. The law of Moses, good and holy though it was, could not heal the inner wound of human nature. It could prescribe but not empower. The law of the Spirit, by contrast, is not written on stone but infused into the heart. It is the divine energy of the Risen Christ, the very breath of God dwelling within the believer, accomplishing what the old law could only desire. This is the central paradox of redemption: what the law could not do, God has done, through the sending of His Son “in the likeness of sinful flesh.” The flesh in which sin reigned becomes the instrument through which sin is condemned and overcome.
To live “according to the flesh” does not mean simply to live according to the body, but to live under the tyranny of self-enclosed desire—the human condition turned inward upon itself. To live “according to the Spirit” is to be opened outward and upward, to breathe with the divine life that animates the saints. The one life contracts and withers; the other expands and quickens. The concern of the flesh is death, not merely because it ends in mortality, but because it resists communion; it cannot submit to God’s law of love. The concern of the Spirit is life and peace — life because it unites us to the source of all being, and peace because it reconciles the divided heart.
Paul then turns from teaching to personal address: “But you are not in the flesh; you are in the Spirit, if only the Spirit of God dwells in you.” This is more than exhortation—it is a declaration of identity. The Christian is one in whom the Spirit of God has taken up residence. God is not only above us, but within us; not only commanding, but transforming. The divine indwelling is not symbolic; it is the real participation of our souls in the risen life of Christ. This is why the same Spirit who raised Jesus from the dead will also give life to our mortal bodies. The Resurrection, already begun in Christ, begins mystically in every soul where grace reigns. The body remains subject to decay, yet even now it carries within it the seed of immortality.
To read this passage is to hear the heartbeat of the Gospel. Christianity is not a moral improvement project but a transference of being — a passage from the realm of death to the realm of life. “If Christ is in you,” says Paul, “the body is dead because of sin, but the spirit is alive because of righteousness.” What greater consolation could there be than this: that beneath the frailty of the flesh and the dust of our mortality, the breath of the eternal Spirit already moves?
Here, the Apostle speaks not only to the intellect but to the soul’s deepest longing. We are not condemned; we are “indwelt”. The Spirit who raised Jesus from the tomb has entered into the dark places of our own nature to quicken them with divine light. To live by that