Pastor Notes
May 17, 2026
Romans Series · Concluding Message

Greet the Saints, Discern the Snakes

Scripture: Romans 16:16–20 Date: 05 / 17 / 2026
Romans 16:16–20, NKJV
Greet one another with a holy kiss. The churches of Christ greet you.

Now I urge you, brethren, note those who cause divisions and offenses, contrary to the doctrine which you learned, and avoid them. For those who are such do not serve our Lord Jesus Christ, but their own belly, and by smooth words and flattering speech deceive the hearts of the simple. For your obedience has become known to all. Therefore I am glad on your behalf; but I want you to be wise in what is good, and simple concerning evil. And the God of peace will crush Satan under your feet shortly.

The grace of our Lord Jesus Christ be with you. Amen.
Paul spends the first sixteen verses of Romans 16 greeting people by name. Then he pivots hard: "I urge you, note those who cause divisions." The sermon title captures this tension. The church is called to genuine love and affection for one another ("greet the saints") and simultaneous vigilance against those who fracture the body ("discern the snakes"). Both are non-negotiable. Neither cancels the other.
Context: Romans is Paul's most complete explanation of the gospel. Written to a church he did not plant and had likely never visited, the letter walks from justification through sanctification to the transformed life. By chapter 16, Paul is closing. He greets nearly thirty people by name. Then, in verses 17–20, he issues an urgent warning. The church in Rome was made up of Jewish and Gentile believers navigating life together. At points, the Jewish believers had been expelled from Rome under Emperor Claudius, returning to find a predominantly Gentile church. The soil was fertile for division. Paul's final charge is not abstract theology. It is a survival instruction for a real community.
I.

Detect the Spark: Note It Small Before It Spreads

Paul calls the church to notice division early, before it spreads, because small things left unaddressed produce catastrophic outcomes.

Romans 16:16–17

A. Unity is the baseline (v. 16)

Paul begins with "Greet one another with a holy kiss." This was a cultural expression of familial affection. The church is a family, not an institution. Unity expressed through genuine love is the normal state of the body. Division is the abnormality that must be addressed.

B. "Note those who cause divisions" (v. 17)

Paul uses urgent language. "I urge you." This is not a suggestion.

Word Study
διχοστασία

dichostasia, "divisions": Rare in the New Testament (only Romans 16:17 and Galatians 5:20). The root means "to stand apart." It describes someone who creates factions, not someone who simply disagrees. Paul classifies it as a work of the flesh. Healthy disagreement can deepen understanding. Dichostasia creates hostility, suspicion, and separate sides.

C. Offenses as stumbling blocks

The word "offenses" is skandalon, the trigger stick of a snare or trap. The divisive person sets traps that cause others to stumble. They do not just hold a wrong opinion. They create conditions where others fall.

Word Study
σκάνδαλον

skandalon, "offenses": Originally the trigger of a trap. In the New Testament, it refers to anything that causes someone to stumble or fall into sin. A divisive person is not just unpleasant. They are dangerous. They lay snares for the unsuspecting.

D. Illustration: ValuJet Flight 592 (May 11, 1996)

A missing safety cap on a small oxygen canister in the cargo hold caused a fire that brought down the plane. 110 people died. The canister was small. The cap was smaller. The result was catastrophic. Division works the same way. A small comment. A planted suspicion. Overlooked, it grows into something that destroys the entire body.

E. Scripture supports the pattern

Passage Principle
James 3:5–6 The tongue is a small member that kindles a great fire; it is set on fire by hell
Proverbs 26:20–21 Where there is no wood, the fire goes out; a contentious man kindles strife
Song of Solomon 2:15 The little foxes spoil the vines; small things destroy tender growth
Ecclesiastes 10:1 Dead flies putrefy the perfumer's ointment; a little folly outweighs wisdom

Application: Where is the spark in your life? In your relationships? In the church? Paul says to note it. Mark it. Do not look away. Put your boot on it while it is still small.

II.

Discern the Source: See Beneath Smooth Words

Deception succeeds through attractive presentation. Paul teaches the church to look beneath the surface and recognize the patterns that reveal true motives.

Romans 16:18–19

A. They do not serve Christ but their own belly (v. 18)

"Belly" (koilia) refers to appetites, desires, self-interest. The divisive person frames their agenda as concern for the truth or the good of the church. Paul strips the mask. Their motive is self. Power. Admiration. Control. They position themselves as noble advocates while serving their own interests.

B. Smooth words and flattering speech (v. 18)

Word Study
χρηστολογία

chrēstologia, "smooth words": "Fair speaking" that sounds good but is empty. The root chrēstos means useful or good. The irony is in the word itself. What sounds constructive is actually hollow. The packaging is attractive. The contents are nothing.

Word Study
εὐλογία

eulogia, "flattering speech": The same word used for "blessing" and "good word." The deceiver co-opts spiritual language and twists it into manipulation. They sound edifying. They quote scripture. But the intent is to control, not to build up.

C. They target the "simple" (v. 18)

Word Study
ἄκακος

akakos, "simple": "Without evil." Not unintelligent. Unsuspecting. The honest person who does not expect deception because they would not deceive others. Dividers avoid mature believers because mature believers recognize the pattern and stop it. They seek out the young in faith, the vulnerable, those easily manipulated.

D. Illustration: Challenger Disaster (1986)

Engineers warned NASA that the O-ring seals would fail in cold temperatures. The launch proceeded anyway. Seven astronauts died 73 seconds after liftoff. The warnings were clear. The expertise was available. Leadership ignored it. Small daily compromises compound. Systems fall gradually before they fail dramatically. The same dynamic destroys churches. Warnings are dismissed. Patterns are normalized. Then catastrophe.

E. Be wise in good, simple concerning evil (v. 19)

Paul gives a practical principle. Do not study evil to become an expert in darkness. Become intimately familiar with what is good. The bank teller principle: tellers do not study counterfeit bills. They handle real currency so often that a fake feels wrong immediately. Know Christ deeply. Know the fruit of the Spirit. Then anything that does not align stands out on contact.

F. Patterns reveal the product.

A consistent pattern prophesies the outcome. What pattern do you see in your own life? In your finances? In your relationships? Does this person repeatedly leave relational wreckage behind them? What is the fruit? Divisive people often begin with phrases like "I probably shouldn't say this, but..." or "Maybe I'm wrong, but..." Seeds are planted quietly. Others come along and water them. Division rarely enters through the front door announcing itself.

III.

Direct Your Strength: Small Steps Snowball

The same principle that makes small compromises dangerous makes small acts of obedience powerful. Paul closes with a promise of victory and a call to faithfulness.

Romans 16:19–20

A. The God of peace will crush Satan (v. 20)

Paul does not say "you will crush Satan." He says God will do it. Under your feet. Your position of rest is God's place of battle.

Word Study
συντρίβω

syntribō, "crush": To shatter completely. To break into pieces. Total destruction, not a temporary setback. God does not "handle" Satan. He crushes him. The promise is definitive and final. And it happens under the believer's feet.

B. Escape velocity: the effort to rise

A rocket requires enormous sustained force to break free from gravity. Left alone, gravity always pulls down. No effort is required to fall. Great effort is required to rise. Spiritually, the same principle holds. It is easier to drift than to pursue. Easier to criticize than to encourage. Easier to tear down than to build up. Paul calls believers to direct their energy upward, not sideways into division.

C. Small beginnings produce great outcomes

Passage Principle
Zechariah 4:10 Do not despise the day of small things
Matthew 17:20 Faith as a mustard seed moves mountains
Galatians 6:9 Do not grow weary in doing good; in due season you will reap
Philippians 3:13 Forgetting what is behind, reaching forward to what is ahead
Hebrews 2:1 Give earnest heed lest we drift away
Matthew 5:9 Blessed are the peacemakers
James 3:18 The fruit of righteousness is sown in peace by peacemakers

D. One person can stop the fire

"Where no wood is, the fire goes out" (Proverbs 26:20). One person refusing to participate in gossip stops an entire chain of damage. One person refusing offense prevents division from spreading through them. One peacemaker spares a family, a friendship, a church from wounds that may never heal. You may never know the disaster you prevented by choosing wisdom over participation.

Application: Do not underestimate small things. One prayer. One act of obedience. One conversation. One surrendered yes. The same God who warns you about division will empower you for unity. He does not ask you to win the battle. He asks you to stand while He crushes the enemy under your feet.

IV.

Closing

Paul ends Romans the way he lived: greeting saints, warning about snakes, and pointing everything to the God who wins. The closing call is simple. Protect unity. Speak truth. Plant peace. Choose obedience. Small things carry power both ways. A small compromise can spread like fire. A small act of faith can change a generation. Do not despise the day of small things. The God who crushed death in an empty tomb can handle whatever you are facing. Stand firm. The grace of our Lord Jesus Christ be with you.

Amen.

by Pastor George Reynaud

  1. Detect the Spark: Note division early, before it spreads. Small compromises produce catastrophic outcomes. Put your boot on the spark.
  2. Discern the Source: Look beneath smooth words. Deceivers serve their own appetite, target the vulnerable, and use spiritual language for selfish ends. Know the real thing so well the counterfeit is obvious.
  3. Direct Your Strength: Small obedience multiplies like small compromise does. God crushes Satan under your feet. Your job is to stand. His job is to win.
Cross-References

Romans 16:16–20: Primary text

Galatians 5:20: Dichostasia listed as a work of the flesh

2 Thessalonians 3:6: Withdraw from brothers who walk disorderly

Titus 3:10: Reject a divisive man after first and second admonition

James 3:5–6: The tongue is a fire, a world of iniquity

Proverbs 26:20–21: Where no wood, fire goes out; contentious man kindles strife

Song of Solomon 2:15: Little foxes spoil the vines

Ecclesiastes 10:1: Dead flies putrefy the perfumer's ointment

Zechariah 4:10: Who has despised the day of small things?

Matthew 17:20: Faith as a mustard seed moves mountains

Matthew 5:9: Blessed are the peacemakers

James 3:18: Fruit of righteousness sown in peace

Hebrews 2:1: Give earnest heed lest we drift away

Galatians 6:9: Do not grow weary in doing good

Philippians 3:13: Forgetting what is behind, reaching forward

English Greek Transliteration Core Meaning
divisions διχοστασία dichostasia Standing apart; active dissension causing factions
offenses σκάνδαλον skandalon Trigger stick of a trap; stumbling block
smooth words χρηστολογία chrēstologia Fair speaking; plausible speech that is hollow
flattering speech εὐλογία eulogia "Good word" twisted into manipulation
simple (v. 18) ἄκακος akakos Without evil; innocent and unsuspecting
wise (v. 19) σοφός sophos Skilled, expert; practical wisdom in action
simple (v. 19) ἀκέραιος akeraios Unmixed, pure; not blended with evil
crush συντρίβω syntribō To shatter completely; total destruction