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The Chemistry of the Cross | Part 2

February 20, 2026
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In this message from Romans 8:28, Adrian Rogers reveals the chemistry of the cross: that God can work bad situations for our good and His glory.

Guest (Male): When we say God works all things for our good, what is good? Listen to Adrian Rogers.

Adrian Rogers: Do you know what the good is that all things are working together for? Do you know what it is? Not to make you healthy, not to make you wealthy, not to make you happy, not to give you fun, but to make you like Jesus. To make you like Jesus.

The good is that we become conformed to the image of God's Son. And how wonderful that is, that you and I can be like the Lord Jesus Christ and be with the Lord Jesus Christ, be glorified with Him in eternity. Oh, what a blessing!

Guest (Male): Welcome to Love Worth Finding, featuring the dynamic teaching of pastor and author Adrian Rogers. The chemistry of the cross is that God can work bad situations for our good and His glory. This verse reiterates the certainty and completeness of this ironclad, rock-ribbed promise of God.

He works all things together for His glory and for our good. When we know this, we can appreciate the blessings we would otherwise mistake as burdens. If you have your Bible, turn to Romans chapter eight, verse 28, as Adrian Rogers shares part two of "The Chemistry of the Cross."

Adrian Rogers: Romans eight and verse 28: "And we know," K-N-O-W, "that all things work together for good to them that love God, and to them that are the called according to His purpose." What an incredible verse that is. If you go to the pharmacy and you need some medicine, that pharmacist will take bottles from his shelf sometimes, and powders and other things that may be by themselves noxious poison, but he mixes them together and makes medicine for us.

So many times, God does the same thing. He takes situations and problems and things that in themselves look like they're bad and hurtful and harmful, and then God mixes these together in the crucible of His love and the crucible of His wisdom. The result is medicine for our soul, something good and something wonderful.

This morning, when I had my oatmeal, in that oatmeal there was some salt. Salt is what? Sodium chloride. Chlorine, a deadly poison, but put together they make salt, necessary for life. So I want you to see how God takes this situation of your life, the circumstances, and God, by the chemistry of the cross, makes these things work together for your good and for His glory.

Having said that, I want you to look at our text very closely because we're just going to camp right here in Romans chapter eight and verse 28. As we think of the chemistry of the cross, the very first thing I want you to think about is the certainty of it. Do you have that? The certainty of it. How does that verse begin? Look at it.

It says, "And we know that all things work together for good. We know that all things work together for good." No ifs, ands, and buts about it. This is a promise of God. It is ironclad. It is rock-ribbed. No stutter, no stammer. You can say, "I don't care what happens. I don't care how bad it may seem. I know that I know that I know that this is going to work together for God's glory and for my good."

F.B. Meyer was a preacher of another generation, but he said something so wonderful, I copied it down. This is what he said. He said, "If any promise of God should fail, the heavens would clothe themselves with sackcloth, the sun, moon, and stars would reel from their courses, the universe would rock, and a hollow wind would moan through a ruined creation the awful message that God can lie."

But friend, He can't lie. He cannot lie. And He says that all things work together for good to those who love God. So the very first thing I want you to get in your heart and in your soul today is the certainty of it. Do you have it? Second thing: not only the certainty of it, but I want you to see the completeness of it. Look at that verse again.

"And we know that all things work together for good." Not most things, not some things, not even almost all things, but that big little word, I thank God that it is there: we know that all things—hallelujah—all things work together for good.

The Bible means it when it says that all things work together: the sweet things, the sorrowful things, the satanic things, the sinful things, the simple things, the smallest things work together for good. It's amazing how God sits at master control.

Pharaoh has decided that all the Jewish babies are going to be put to death, but God takes a little baby, puts that little baby in the bulrushes, and Pharaoh's daughter comes by and decides she wants to bathe in the Nile. Can you imagine this princess who could bathe in her marble tubs? Maybe she remembered the little swimming hole where she used to play as a kid. She decides she's going to go down to the Nile. And then the Bible says this: "And the baby wept."

Lo, the baby wept. Have you ever heard a baby cry? A baby cried, and God took the cry of a baby and brought Pharaoh's mighty kingdom crashing down. The smallest things. God, God is the sovereign God. The certainty of it, the completeness of it. Now, I want you to notice a third thing as we look at Romans 8:28. I want you to notice the cause of it.

How does this happen? "And we know that all things work together for good." Literally, some translations give it this way: "And we know that God works all things together." Put that with Ephesians chapter one, verse 11. The Bible speaks of Him "who worketh all things after the counsel of His own will."

Now, if you think that what I'm saying today about all things working together for good to those who love God, if you think that's far-fetched, do you know why you think it's far-fetched? Because you just don't believe in a big enough God. You see, we know that God is the one who is working all things. That's the cause of it. And sometimes we get our eyes off of that.

Martin Luther was the mighty reformer. Martin Luther, who led in the Protestant Reformation, was a man of great, great faith. But you know what? Martin Luther, like some of us, was given to fits of despondency and depression. One day, Martin Luther, in spite of his great faith, just got depressed. He got his eyes on the circumstances and the situation rather than on God.

He went into his room and there in his room he was brooding. There in his room he was in a state of melancholy, looking at circumstances, looking at the situation, and he wouldn't come out. His wife's name was Katherine. He called her Kathy. She tried to coax him out of the room, but he wouldn't come out.

Then you know what Kathy did? One day she put on a black dress. She put on a black hat. She put a black veil over her face. She put black gloves on and came into that room. She was dressed for a funeral. He looked at her. He said, "Kathy, who has died?"

"Oh," she said, "Martin, haven't you heard? God is dead." He said, "What did you say?" She said, "I said, God is dead!" He said, "Kathy, that's blasphemy." She said, "Yes, and it's blasphemy for you to be living like He's dead." That's right. Martin Luther said, "Oh God, forgive me. God, forgive me."

Martin Luther got up and went out and began to live like God is not dead. God is alive. And he wrote, I guess, my favorite hymn: "A mighty fortress is our God, a bulwark never failing. Our helper He, amid the flood of mortal ills prevailing. Did we in our own strength confide, our striving would be losing, were not the right man on our side, the man of God's own choosing."

That's Jesus. And we know that all things work together for good. That's the cause of it. God is the cause of it. Now I want you to notice next, not only the cause of it, but I want you to notice the condition of it. This is not a promise for everyone. This is not axiomatic for everybody. There is a condition to Romans 8:28. Listen to it.

"And we know that all things work together for good to—" What? Do you see it? Look at it. "To them that love God. To them that love God." Now, you can't put your initials by this unless you love God. Despisers of God cannot claim this promise. Haters of God cannot claim this privilege and this promise. By the way, if you don't love God, there's something wrong with you. It's well been said that somebody who does not love God is a beast with a man's head.

You know what encourages me about this condition? I'll tell you what encourages me about this condition. Others may be able to give more than I can give. Others may be able to sing or preach or serve better than I can. But there's nobody on earth who can love God more than I can, or you can, or anybody else.

I mean, the person next to you may have a lot more talent than you have. They may have a lot more resources than you have. They may have more opportunities than you have. But my friend, there is nobody who has a monopoly on love. Isn't that wonderful? I mean, listen, you want to love God? Just have at it. Anybody can love God as much as they want to love God. And that is the condition for having Romans 8:28 work in your life.

"And we know that all things work together for good to them that love God." And have you ever thought about it, that you could put Romans 8:28 in reverse? All things work together for good to those who love God, and to those who don't love God, all things work together for bad. Did you know that? Just put it in reverse.

You say, "Well, I'm living high, wide, and handsome right now." But friend, it's working not for your good, but for an evil in your life. All things work together for evil, let me put it that way, to those who don't love God. Let me show you how seemingly good things can work against you. For example, preaching can work against you.

Did you know it's dangerous to come to church? If you don't love God and you come and listen to me preach, and you have no desire to love God and don't want to know God—maybe you've come for whatever reason, I don't know—but you don't intend to love God. Did you know this sermon will do you damage? It'll do you harm.

The Bible says the gospel that we preach is a savor of life unto life or death unto death. The gospel sword is a two-edged sword. Jesus said, "When you go into a village to preach, if they hear you, wonderful." But He said, "If they won't hear you," He said, shake the dust off your feet.

And then Jesus said that dust will be used against them in the day of judgment. Somebody knocks on your door to invite you to Jesus Christ. You say, "Would you get out of here? I don't want to hear that. Listen, you folks quit pestering me." And the door is slammed. There's the dust of the soulwinner right here.

God says, "Angel, get that dust. Now, put it in the vaults up in heaven." The final judgment comes. You're there. You say, "I didn't have an opportunity to hear God. God, You can't let me die and go to hell. Oh God, You can't let this happen to me. Oh God, have mercy upon me. Oh God, I never had a chance to be saved."

God says, "Angel, get exhibit A." Angel comes out there, a little dust in the palm of his hand. You say, "What is that?" "Oh, you see that dust? That's the dust. That is a witness against you in the day of judgment." Now, preaching is good, but not if you refuse. Then it works together for bad.

Think about Jesus. Is Jesus good or Jesus bad? It all depends. If you receive Him, He's wonderful. But if you don't receive Him, He works together for bad. Did you know that? Do you know that Jesus is the door? I want to ask you a question. That piece of wood over there, is that the door or is the opening the door? How many of you believe that the opening is the door? Let me see your hands. Come on, you're scared to death. How many believe the piece of wood is the door? Let me see your hand. How many of you say, "I think you're trying to trap me and I'm not going to lift my hand."

All right. What is the door? What is the door? Is the door the opening that you come through, or is the door the piece of wood that closes the opening? Which is the door? Well, if you didn't have an opening, you couldn't have a door. Can you have a door without a shutter or closer, a piece of wood in it? I guess so, but if you went down to the hardware store and said, "I want to buy a door," they couldn't sell you an opening. They'd just sell you a piece of wood or metal or whatever it is.

What is the door? Friend, you're both right. The door is what lets you in and the door is what keeps you out. And His name is Jesus. He'll either let you in or He'll keep you out. You see, listen: to those who love Him, He's the way in. But to those who refuse Him, His righteousness and His holiness say, "You cannot come in here."

All things work together for bad to those who don't love God. And did you know that the wicked pluck death from the tree of life? And if Jesus is not your Savior, listen to me, He'll be your Judge. You're going to meet Jesus. I mean, you have a date with Deity. You will meet Jesus and you will bow the knee to Jesus. You will bow either to Him as Savior and Lord, or you will bow to Him as Judge and executioner, but you will bow the knee to Jesus Christ. "As I live, saith the Lord, every knee shall bow to Me, and every tongue shall confess to God."

Think of the resurrection of Jesus Christ. Is the resurrection of Jesus Christ good? You better believe it's good. But what about if you're not saved? Is it good? No. In Acts chapter 17, the apostle Paul, preaching on Mars Hill, said this: "God hath appointed a day in which He will judge the world in righteousness by that man whom He hath ordained, whereof He hath given assurance unto all men in that He raised Him from the dead."

Now, what does that mean? It means that the assurance of judgment is the resurrection of Jesus. Why? Well, you can't hold court if the judge is dead and you can't hold court if the defendant is dead. But what Paul is saying is this: that the same God that raised up Jesus Christ is the God that will raise you up and you'll come to judgment.

What he is saying is this, and listen very carefully: you cannot crawl up in the grave and pull the dirt over your face and hide from God. The resurrection of Jesus Christ seals your doom. I've never been able to understand why unsaved people will put on the glad rags and celebrate Easter. I'm glad they come because I can shoot them full of Jesus. I'm glad they come hoping they get saved. But if they don't intend to get saved, why should a person celebrate the day that seals his doom?

God has given assurance unto all men that there will be a judgment in that He raised Jesus from the dead. Oh, my friend, the condition of Romans 8:28 is that you love God. If you don't love God, Romans 8:28 goes into reverse for you, and all things work together for bad to those who don't love God. But to those who love God, all things work together for good.

That's the condition of it. Now let's come to the best part and the final part. I want you to notice the consequences of it. What are the consequences? What is the good? What is the good that it all works together for? You know, sometimes we trivialize this verse. We're driving down the road and we have a blowout, and we say, "Oh well, all things work together for good. I guess there's a sale on tires somewhere."

No, that's not what this verse means. That's not what this verse means. Listen. In verse 28, I'm going to tell you something profound. It's followed by verse 29. Now look in verse 29: "For—" and that word "for" is a preposition which means "unto." It moves toward something. "For, because, whom He did foreknow, He also did predestinate to be conformed to the image of His Son."

Do you know what the good is that all things are working together for? Do you know what it is? Not to make you healthy, not to make you wealthy, not to make you happy, not to give you fun, but to make you like Jesus. To make you like Jesus.

The good is that we become conformed to the image of God's Son. And how wonderful that is, that you and I can be like the Lord Jesus Christ and be with the Lord Jesus Christ, be glorified with Him in eternity. Oh, what a blessing. What a blessing.

Let me tell you something. God's not finished with you yet. God's not finished with you yet. "He who hath begun a good work in you will perform it unto the day of Jesus Christ." Now, if you're not saved and everything is going good for you right now, you're healthy, you're happy, you're wealthy, but you don't love God. And so you're sitting here and say, "I don't need His God. I don't need His Savior."

The Bible says in Judges chapter five and verse 20, "The stars in their courses fought against Sisera." Sisera didn't love God and the whole universe was against him. And God has programmed the whole universe against you. And I don't care how good things are right now, one of these days it's going to cave in for you because all things work together for bad to those who don't love God, and you're going to die and drop into hell because you don't love God.

Let me tell you about the devil. The devil always gives the best first. "The bread of deceit is sweet, but afterward a man's mouth will be filled with gravel." Let me tell you about Jesus. Jesus always saves the best for the last. Remember at the wedding feast, the man said, "I don't understand it. People generally put out the best wine first, but You've saved the best for the last." He always does.

Do you know what the consequences of loving God are? That friend, one day we'll be glorified with the Lord Jesus Christ. We'll be made like Him. This is what God is working for in my life and in your life. All things work together for good to those who love God, and that good is that you'll be like Jesus.

And when the purpling dawn of eternity is mingled with the setting sun of your life, and when all of the things that you've dreamed for and schemed for have gone, and you see Him and you're like Him, you say, "Hallelujah for Romans 8:28." And we know that all things work together for good to them that love God, who are the called according to His purpose. Amen? Father, we thank You for Your Word. In Jesus' name, amen.

Guest (Male): Amen. And if you have questions regarding your faith in Jesus today, we'd love to offer an insightful resource on our website, the "Find God's Love" page. There, you'll discover answers you may need about your faith. We have a response section as well. You can share with us how this message or others have affected your life. Simply go to lwf.org/radio and click the tab that says "Find God's Love." We can't wait to hear from you today.

Kerry Vaughn: Hi, this is Kerry Vaughn, and this program has been brought to you by Love Worth Finding, a nonprofit ministry showcasing the powerful preaching and teaching of Pastor Adrian Rogers. We operate solely through the generous gifts of individual supporters just like you.

To give a gift today, call 1-877-LOVEGOD, that's 1-877-LOVEGOD, or write to us at Love Worth Finding, Box 38-600, Memphis, Tennessee, 38183. You can also connect with us online by going to lwf.org/radio. There, we offer helpful resources inspired by the timeless teaching of Pastor Adrian Rogers.

Additionally, you can sign up for daily emails, donate to the ministry, and learn more about how to become an ambassador of the Word. Thank you so much for listening today. Be sure to join us next time for more profound truth simply stated right here on Love Worth Finding.

Guest (Male): We were so touched by this personal story from a listener who shared, "I remember watching Pastor Rogers when I'd visit my grandmother in Arkansas in the 1980s. I'm so thankful for this program and its life-changing messages. They've continued to turn my life and my wife's life around to live for the Lord."

Well, here at Love Worth Finding, we are passionate about helping believers cultivate a vibrant faith in Christ. And when you donate to the ministry this month, we'd love to send a copy of our Bible study, "The Door to the Morning." While end-times prophecy can be confusing, it can also be exhilarating. Those who follow Christ can be certain that we will watch His plans unfold. In this eight-week Bible study, Adrian Rogers reveals what the Lord says about His return in His Word. Request a copy at 1-877-LOVEGOD, and thanks for your generous support of Love Worth Finding.

This transcript is provided as a written companion to the original message and may contain inaccuracies or transcription errors. For complete context and clarity, please refer to the original audio recording. Time-sensitive references or promotional details may be outdated. This material is intended for personal use and informational purposes only.

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About Love Worth Finding

Love Worth Finding's purpose is to bring people to Christ and mature them in the faith. This happens primarily through efforts in publishing and broadcasting biblical truth.

Love Worth Finding began in 1987, as a response to several requests for tapes of messages by pastor and Bible teacher Adrian Rogers. He relates that "soon the requests began to grow to the point that we knew God was leading us into a wider ministry." As an extension of Dr. Rogers' pulpit ministry Love Worth Finding provided that role and continues today. 
Dr. Rogers stated, "I believe God wants us to proclaim the message of salvation in the power of the Holy Spirit by every means possible. That’s our commitment at Love Worth Finding." 

In response to many who are asking,has that purpose changed since the home-going of Dr. Rogers? No, God wants us to continue to proclaim the message of salvation. The messenger may be gone, but the message must continue. Millions still have not heard the precious name of Jesus or know His redeeming grace. 

So our race is not over. We must still run—until Jesus comes. If you believe in what God has called LWF to do,we invite you to help us proclaim God's truth. 

Our prayer is that you will join with us in running the race and in broadcasting the Good News that Jesus Christ is truly the greatest Love worth finding.

About Adrian Rogers

Known for his evangelistic zeal and uncompromising commitment to the Word of God, Adrian Rogers was one of the greatest preachers, respected Bible teachers, and Christian leaders of our time. For over fifty years, he consistently presented the Good News of Jesus Christ with strong conviction, compassion,and integrity.

He was a devoted family man — husband to his childhood sweetheart Joyce, father to four children, grandfather to nine, and great-grandfather to six. Of all his accomplishments, Dr. Rogers often said his greatest joy centered in his relationship to Jesus Christ, his wife and family, and the church he pastored. The recipient of many honors and awards, the trophy he treasured most was one presented to him by his children one Father’s Day in which he was proclaimed The World’s Greatest Dad.

Under his pastoral leadership, Bellevue Baptist Church in Memphis, Tennessee, grew from 9,000 members in 1972 to more than 29,000 at his retirement in 2005. And Adrian Rogers was a leader in his denomination, serving three terms as president of the Southern Baptist Convention.

God’s blessing on Dr. Rogers’ ministry became even more evident with the birth of Love Worth Finding Ministries in 1987. Dr. Rogers was the founder and Bible teacher of Love Worth Finding, an internationally syndicated television and radio ministry. The sun never sets on this ministry which is broadcast on radio, television, and the Internet. You can find LWF declaring the Gospel and changing lives in more than 150 countries around the world. In 2003, Dr. Rogers was honored to be inducted into the prestigious Hall of Fame by the National Religious Broadcasters.

Dr. Rogers was active in national leadership and personally consulted and prayed with five presidents of the United States. He visited and had the privilege of sharing the platform with President George W. Bush in the White House on the National Day of Prayer for America.

Dr. Rogers preached overseas crusades in Taiwan, South Korea, Israel, Russia, Romania, and in Central and South America.
Even though the Lord called him home in 2005, his messages of "Come To Jesus" are still reaching around the world.  In fact, every country in the world except for one has visited LWF.org.

Please join us in praying that God's messages will continue to penetrate the hearts of young and old ... and near and far!

Contact Love Worth Finding with Adrian Rogers

Mailing Address
Love Worth Finding Ministries
P.O. Box 38300
Memphis, TN 38183-0300
Telephone
(901) 382-7900