Pastor David Jang (Olivet University): “Ruin and Misery Are in Their Paths”


Following Pastor David Jang’s exposition of Romans 3:9–20, we deeply meditate on total depravity, the limits of the Law, salvation by the grace of Jesus Christ, and the path of repentance.


The message Pastor David Jang (Olivet University) proclaims while holding fast to Romans 3:9–20 quietly dismantles self-assurance dressed in religious language and forces us to face the bedrock of the human condition. Paul breaks down the boundaries of the community with the declaration: “both Jews and Greeks are all under sin.” No matter how different one’s lineage, culture, religious tradition, or moral training may be, there is no exception to the reality of living under the dominion of sin. Pastor David Jang returns this point not as a mere doctrinal conclusion, but as a question of conscience the church today must ask itself: “Are we any better?” Paul’s counter-question kicks away the ladder of self-justification believers often cling to, revealing that the starting point of salvation is not “how well I have done,” but acknowledging “how thoroughly I am broken.” This acknowledgment is not despair for despair’s sake, but a recovery of spiritual sight that enables grace to be recognized as grace.

In Romans 1 and 2, Paul exposes two different faces: the licentiousness of the Gentiles and the hypocrisy of the Jews. Then in chapter 3 he binds them together and “stops every mouth.” The phrase “stop every mouth” is as sharp as a theological blade that ends the debate. The moment we believe we can argue our case before God, faith easily turns into self-defense. But Paul’s argument leaves no room for human claims of innocence. Following Paul’s flow, Pastor David Jang urges us not to forget that even the saved—though already declared righteous—still fight the remnants of sin in the “already” and “not yet.” Paul’s cry at the end of Romans 7—“Wretched man that I am!”—testifies that the journey of sanctification is not optimistic self-improvement, but spiritual warfare in which we daily admit our powerlessness and seek Christ’s strength. Therefore, treating sin lightly is not maturity; it is a dangerous complacency that numbs the soul’s sensitivity.

Paul’s method of stringing together Old Testament quotations aligns with his purpose: to testify that human sin is not a personal accident but a universal human condition. When Psalm 14 and 53 lament, “There is none righteous, not even one,” Ecclesiastes 7:20 declares, “Surely there is not a righteous man on earth who does good and never sins,” and the prophets’ incisive indictments are threaded like pearls into a single line, sin is revealed not as a stigma placed on a particular group but as an existential disease running through every human being. Pastor David Jang explains that we must not consume this list as moralistic condemnation; rather, we should see it as “the collapse of relationship” that arises from humanity’s fundamental refusal to keep God at the center. The core of sin is not merely breaking rules, but an inward rebellion that severs the inseparable relationship with God and enthrones the self as lord. Romans 1:28—“they did not see fit to acknowledge God”—exposes that sin is tied less to a lack of knowledge and more deeply to a warped will.

That warped will first moves in the layers of thought and desire, and soon spills into language. “Their throat is an open grave” shows that the tongue is not only a tool for communication but a channel that discharges the soul’s condition. This is why Pastor David Jang draws in James 3 to emphasize the danger of the tongue. The warning that a small member can become a spark that sets an entire life on fire is even clearer in today’s digital language environment. A word once spoken, a single comment posted, a rumor casually forwarded can collapse relationships and burn down a community’s trust. When Paul says, “The poison of asps is under their lips,” he is not only pointing to profanity or slander; he is exposing a chain of sin in which a heart that does not fear God ultimately flows into speech that destroys others. Pastor David Jang says that for a believer’s words to become a channel of the gospel, the master of the heart must first change. What is needed is not a technique for controlling the tongue, but a reorientation of the heart that moves the tongue.

Heart and speech eventually determine the direction of one’s steps. “Their feet are swift to shed blood; in their paths are ruin and misery” is not mere exaggeration but a compressed diagnosis of the trajectory of life apart from God. Here “path” is not a route stumbled upon by accident; it is the direction a life takes as repeated choices accumulate. Pastor David Jang points out the irony that human beings often hesitate to do good yet move with astonishing speed toward what bends toward sin. That irony goes beyond psychology and demonstrates the truth that humans cannot save themselves. If we look seriously at the “path,” we realize sin is not an isolated incident but the outcome produced by a worldview without God. In the end, ruin is not an external storm; it is the destination where an inner order that has excluded God reaches completion.

At this point, Pastor David Jang stresses the weight of the phrase: “There is no fear of God before their eyes.” Fear here is not terror but reverence, and reverence is the posture of placing God’s reality at the center of life. Where reverence disappears, both the pride of those who have the Law and the license of those who do not can grow together. Paul’s binding of all humanity under sin is not rhetoric aimed at attacking a religious group, but preparatory work for the gospel—so that no one can claim self-righteousness. “So that every mouth may be stopped, and the whole world may be held accountable to God” declares plainly that humans possess no internal resources by which to rescue themselves before God. Techniques for hiding sin keep advancing, but the power to remove sin does not belong to humans.

Thus, even as Paul deals with the Law, he draws a firm line against misunderstanding the Law as a tool of salvation. The Law is God’s gift, but it is more like a scalpel. A scalpel can expose and cut out disease, but it cannot create life by itself. “Through the law comes knowledge of sin” means the Law can identify the illness, but it cannot provide the ultimate power to heal. Pastor David Jang, without belittling the Law’s value, warns that the hand that clings to the Law can easily mutate into a hand that clings to self-righteousness. Rules may correct a person to a certain degree, but they cannot remake a heart that has departed from God. The paradox Paul experienced in Romans 7—“the more I know, the more sin comes alive”—shows that strengthening legal codes is not identical to transforming the soul.

When we face the reality of sin and the limits of the Law this directly, the sentences of the gospel begin to sound not like abstract comfort but like urgent news of life. When Paul proclaims in Romans 3:21, “But now the righteousness of God has been manifested apart from the law,” he ends the myth of self-salvation humanity has clung to for ages and reveals a different way God has prepared. Pastor David Jang repeatedly calls grace a free gift because if we do not see the depth of sin, we will also cheapen the depth of grace. Grace is not built on minimizing sin. Rather, the more sin is seen as sin, the more Christ’s cross approaches us not as a mere religious symbol but as God’s power that changes reality.

Pastor David Jang explains salvation within the redemptive flow of justification, sanctification, and glorification, and says the spiritual posture believers need is not “the pose of a completed person,” but “the humility of one who washes daily.” The phrase “we must wash the garments of sin” is not language meant to cultivate excessive self-loathing; it is a practical metaphor: since salvation is the restoration of relationship, we must daily remove the stains of sin that blur that relationship. The blessing of Revelation 22:14—“Blessed are those who wash their robes”—is not a prize for flawless people, but a promise set on the path of those who live clinging to Christ’s blood through repentance and faith. Pastor David Jang warns that a mood of “We were saved once, so let’s stop talking about sin” can dull spiritual sensitivity and cause grace to be mistaken for license. Grace is not a permit to treat sin as trivial; it is the birth of a new heart that comes to hate sin.

The story of Noah in Genesis vividly reflects this tension. The record that Noah—saved through the flood judgment—later became drunk on wine and exposed his naked shame shows that an experience of salvation is not proof that human nature has been completely erased. Even after salvation, humans remain weak, and complacency can lead again to disgrace. Pastor David Jang reads from Ham’s attitude of mocking Noah that sin is not only outward behavior but can appear as inner pride and scorn. The moment we build our own righteousness by looking at another’s weakness, we unknowingly sit down in the judge’s seat. But the gospel does not make people into judges; it makes them into people of forgiveness and covering. Paul’s sentences that accuse humanity under sin are, in the end, an introduction meant to invite sinners into salvation; in that sense, Noah’s episode testifies how much life after salvation still contains the ongoing necessity of repentance.

In addition, the prophecy in Jacob’s blessing to Judah—“washing his garments in wine”—connects naturally to Pastor David Jang’s emphasis on a theology of “holy washing.” When wine expands into an image of blood, New Testament readers are drawn to the blood of Christ. This connection is not an arbitrary manipulation of symbols, but can be understood within the atonement context the whole Bible consistently proclaims. Because sin is a deep contamination that cannot be handled merely as a list of behaviors, that contamination cannot be washed away by human water but only by God’s shedding of blood—here the heart of the gospel is revealed. Pastor David Jang says believers must repent daily like people washing garments, holding themselves up to Scripture and the Holy Spirit; and he interprets this practice not as self-hatred but as a response of love. Those who have been loved fear betraying love, guard against losing love, and desire to return again to the place of love.

The parable of the prodigal son in Luke translates the warning “in their paths are ruin and misery” in the most human way. The son who left his father’s house believing he had gained freedom ultimately smells the stench of the pigsty at the end of the path he chose. Freedom was not found in severing relationship, and life was not in the display of independence but in the abundance enjoyed within the father’s embrace. Pastor David Jang connects the prodigal’s story to Romans’ doctrine of sin because sin does not always drag a person instantly into hell; rather, it first desolates the heart, drains relationships, and slowly gnaws away at one’s dignity until ruin is complete. Yet the prodigal story also shows the gospel’s reversal. The way back is not opened by human qualification. When the father runs, kisses, and declares the lost son a son again, grace surpasses conditions and creates a new relationship.

By contrast, the parable of the rich man and Lazarus exposes how cruelly sin can numb a human being. The rich man, amid the abundance of feasting, could not see the suffering at his gate; after death he begs for a single drop of water while his tongue burns in thirst. Pastor David Jang rereads the symbolism of the tongue in this scene. A life that consumed the world with the tongue, evaluated people with the tongue, and justified desire with the tongue comes to face the truth of its life through the suffering of the tongue—showing that this parable asks about the soul’s direction beyond mere “speech ethics.” James 3’s warning that “the tongue is a fire” intersects with the rich man’s depiction of torment, reminding us that language is not only psychological habit but is connected to spiritual reality. Pastor David Jang says a believer’s tongue must be transformed from curses and malice into comfort, truth, and the good news of the gospel. The change of the tongue proves a change of heart, and the change of heart is revealed as the restoration of fearing God—that is, reverence.

Here, “ruin and misery” does not mean only visible failure or economic hardship. Pastor David Jang emphasizes spiritual ruin—fundamental suffering that comes from separation from God. Modern people often understand “pain” primarily as an emotional issue, but in biblical language pain often points to a condition in which the foundation of existence is shaken. A soul that has left God tries to manufacture meaning on its own, but the capacity to produce meaning inevitably crashes into the limits of finite desire and time. So people attempt to cover emptiness with greater achievement and stronger stimulation, yet at the end of that path what remains is often deeper exhaustion and harder loneliness. Paul describes that path as “ruin and misery” because while sin can dress life in glamorous packaging, it ultimately pulls humans in the direction of separation from life.

As a scene that illuminates this theme more clearly, we might recall Rembrandt’s famous painting The Return of the Prodigal Son. In the painting, the son collapses before his father in rags, with torn shoes and wounded feet, and the father embraces the son’s shoulders with aged hands. Against a dark background, what shines most brightly is not the son’s dignity, but the father’s embrace. This work shows that repentance is not the abandonment of self-worth, but the act of receiving again the reality of love. Pastor David Jang’s exhortation to “wash the garments of sin” can be understood as the practice of returning toward that father’s embrace. The reason the human path tilts toward ruin is not that the father’s embrace is closed, but that the son has been away. The gospel does not describe that departure only as condemnation; it rewrites it as the possibility of return—and at the center of that possibility stands the cross of Christ.

When Paul declares, in speaking of the Law, that “by works of the law no human being will be justified,” he does not ridicule human effort as worthless. Rather, he precisely defines its limits. Human moral will can be beneficial for maintaining society, but it cannot remove the root of sin before God. Pastor David Jang cautions against using “reason” or “ethics” as grounds for salvation, without underestimating their proper role. The moment faith is reduced to ethics, the gospel becomes not the proclamation of new life but a program of self-management. But the salvation Paul proclaims is an event in which “the righteousness of God” is imputed by faith—and it is established not by a list of human achievements but by the merit of Christ’s cross. This logic of grace removes boasting and produces gratitude and humility.

That gratitude does not lead to escapism but becomes power for transforming reality. Pastor David Jang emphasizes that believers who have been saved do not live on an isolated spiritual island cut off from the world; rather, they must walk in the very center of the world with deeper responsibility. His exhortation—to let the tongue carry the joyful news of the gospel, to let the feet move toward places of service, and to lift the eyes to God-given vision—shows that Romans 3’s doctrine of sin should not end as cold human criticism, but must lead into a new ethic of life. The truth that indicts humanity under sin carries the purpose of establishing humanity under grace. The reason believers daily acknowledge their sin is not to remain in self-deprecation, but because that acknowledgment makes them put down stones of condemnation and extend the gospel’s hand to the weak.

Ultimately, the most important question Romans 3:9–20 leaves us is: “What path am I standing on?” Paul describes the path as the total corruption of the whole person. When the heart rejects God, the tongue pours out poison, and the feet run toward violence and greed, the end of that path is ruin and misery. But that same Paul immediately presents the gospel path by which one can turn back. Pastor David Jang reads this transition as the rhythm of the gospel: the deeper the diagnosis of sin, the clearer the grace of healing; the more vivid human powerlessness becomes, the more real Christ’s power becomes. Therefore, faith should not be the declaration “I’m fine,” but the prayer, “Lord, have mercy on me.”

To today’s reader, this message may sound unfamiliar. In an age that prizes self-esteem and self-actualization, the language of “total depravity” can seem harsh and pessimistic. Yet what Pastor David Jang means by total depravity is not the denial of human value, but the diagnosis that self-salvation is impossible. It is not meant to make people worthless, but to guide them back to true worth. Human value does not come from the ability to save oneself; it comes from the fact that God loved that person. Sin cannot be explained only as ignorance that does not know that love; it also appears as rebellion of the will that refuses that love. Therefore, repentance is not merely emotional regret, but the decision to change masters—an actual turn to place God in the heart again.

Pastor David Jang’s repeated phrase “we must wash daily” ultimately asks how the gospel operates in daily life. When religious habits inside the church become the whole of faith, people unconsciously stockpile legalistic comparison and self-righteousness. But the gospel pulls a person out of the warehouse of self-merit and leads them to the spring of grace. At that spring, believers do not hide sin in shame; they bring it into the light, are washed, and receive strength to walk again. This repetition is not monotonous compulsion but the rhythm of love that keeps relationship fresh. A life of washing the garments of sin is, in other words, a life of becoming honest before God, humble before others, and not losing hope before the world.

In the end, the declaration of Romans 3:9–20 is not exposure meant to destroy humanity, but truth meant to bring humanity to life. “None is righteous, not even one” is not the end; rather, on the rubble of self-righteousness that sentence ends, “the righteousness of God apart from the law” is established. What Pastor David Jang’s preaching consistently aims at is a balance that holds together both the sobering realism that sin’s path truly leads to ruin and the gospel’s possibility that one can turn back from that path. As the father runs out when the prodigal returns, God approaches sinners first. Yet that approach is not a pardon that says sin is not sin; it is an invitation of atoning blood that washes sin and makes new. Therefore, even today believers rehearse Paul’s question: “Are we any better?” When we bow our heads before that question, Christ’s grace finally settles not above our heads as an idea, but in the center of our hearts as reality. And that grace renews the tongue, changes the steps, and lifts the eyes to see God.

Then the phrase “in their paths are ruin and misery” is no longer a vague curse, but a signpost set up so that the path can be reversed. What Pastor David Jang helps us grasp through Romans 3 is the gospel’s dynamism: awareness of sin must connect immediately to the experience of grace. When Adam and Eve in Genesis 3 fell to the temptation of the tree of the knowledge of good and evil—“you can judge without God”—humanity tried to become its own master, but gained instead a life of fear and hiding. The Tower of Babel expanded that hiding in another form. They said they were building a tower to reach God, but in reality it was an attempt to make a name without God. Such repetition shows that the “pattern of sin” is not only personal; it also repeats in civilization and culture. Thus, the doctrine of sin in Romans 3 is not a moral handbook for one era, but a mirror that reveals the common end any age reaches when human beings choose a self-centered path.

Modern life may look more refined and safe on the outside, yet in the secret places of the heart the temptation “to not keep God at the center” still operates with sophisticated precision. The more performance and image are deified, the more people learn techniques to hide sin and languages to excuse it. As a result, relationships grow weary, communities fracture easily, and hearts often become empty. When Pastor David Jang tells us to examine our “tongue” and our “steps,” he is not merely advising us to add more pious habits; he is inviting us to change direction. When we honestly reflect—whether our tongue gives life, whether our steps do not ignore the vulnerable, whether our eyes linger only at the display window of desire, and above all whether our heart is open toward God—believers see themselves not under legalistic self-accusation but in the light of grace.

In that light, repentance is not demolition but restoration. When the prodigal confessed, “I have sinned against my father,” he did not throw away his dignity; he grasped again the source of the dignity he had lost. The way to avoid the cold-hearted numbness warned about in the parable of the rich man and Lazarus also begins here. What makes a person fail to see Lazarus at the gate is not wealth itself, but a heart from which the fear of God has disappeared. Therefore, those who cling to grace bear witness to the gospel through small practices today: apologizing first in wounded relationships, not passing by someone’s lack, slowing the speed of speech, putting down the knife of judgment, and honestly examining desire before the Word. None of this ends with one decision; it repeats like washing garments day by day. In that repetition, the blood of Christ Pastor David Jang emphasizes is experienced not as magic that erases the past, but as power that renews the present direction. Thus the life of one who walks the way of grace becomes a pilgrimage uphill—falling yet rising again to return to the Father’s embrace—leading to peace and hope. This is the gospel conclusion Pastor David Jang draws up from Romans 3:9–20. Even today, we hold fast to grace to the end and walk the path of repentance together in courageous faith.


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작성 2026.01.24 10:56 수정 2026.01.24 10:56

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