1 Corinthians 1

1Co 1:1

See Lesson, Paul the man.

See Lesson, Paul’s ecclesial letters.

See Lesson, Error in Corinth.

Central interest: The implications of the unity, in Christ, of all believers. “Did they not realize what their party loyalties in effect signified? Namely, that the unique and glorified Christ could be parcelled out among rival groups as though he were a mere thing and not the sublime being who alone had made them what they were by his sacrificial death on their account” (WFB 68).

Various refs to Num: Paul’s authority was being challenged by some in Corinth: as Moses’ authority had been challenged by Aaron, Miriam, Korah, etc, and nation as a whole (Tes 49:409-411).

How many Corinthian letters? WFB suggests 4 (pp 18-29):

  • An early letter: referred to in 1Co 5:9-11.
  • 1Co itself.
  • An intermediate letter, which Paul wrote “out of much affliction and anguish of heart” (2Co 2:4) — a drastic, severe letter lest, when he came, he would have sorrow (2Co 2:1-4).
  • 2Co itself.

CALLED TO BE AN APOSTLE: Called in Acts 26:17 (cp Rom 1:1; Gal 1:15). The 12 were called (Mar 1:7; Luk 6:13), and Paul was no less called (1Co 15:8).

BY THE WILL OF GOD: God’s will was particularly manifested in Paul’s case. His preparation was from birth. He was a microcosm of all believers, combining Hebrew, Greek and Roman in himself.

SOSTHENES: “Safe strength”, poss the same as the chief ruler of the synagogue (Act 18:17) — who later became a Christian.

1Co 1:2

CHURCH: Gr “ecclesia”. The believers are the church. “Church = building” is not a NT idea! “Ecclesia” = assembly (see Act 19:39).

CORINTH: “The ancient city of Corinth was located on the isthmus between Attica to the northeast and the Greek Peloponnesus to the south and had controlling access to two seas — the Aegean, about five miles to the east, and the Ionian on the west. Its eastern port was Cenchrea, located on the Saronic Gulf (Acts 18:18; Rom 16:1), its western harbor was at Lechaeum on the Corinthian Gulf. This proximity to the seas and its nearness to Athens, only 45 miles to the northeast, gave Corinth a position of strategic commercial importance and military defense. It lay below the steep north side of the 1,800-foot high fortress rock, the Acrocorinth with its temple of Aphrodite. Thus located, the city received shipping from Italy, Sicily, and Spain, as well as from Asia Minor, Syria, Phoenicia, and Egypt. Instead of going ’round the horn’ at Cape Malea at the south end of the Peloponnesus, ships either docked at the Isthmus and transported their cargoes by land vehicles from one sea to another, or if the ships were small, they were dragged the five miles across the isthmus. Today there is a canal running through the narrowest part of the isthmus near Corinth.

“Corinth was called ‘the bridge of the sea’. It was considered a prosperous and rich city… ‘always great and wealthy.’ At the peak of its power and influence the city probably had a free population of 200,000 in addition to half a million slaves in its navy and in its many colonies.

“During the Roman period and in its position as a political center, Corinth flourished, with vast income coming from its sea trade and from the development of its arts and industries. Its pottery and Corinthian brass (a mixture of gold, silver, and copper) were world famous.

“The celebration of the Isthmian games at the temple of Poseidon made a considerable contribution to Hellenic life. This temple was located about seven miles east of Corinth, not far from the eastern end of the isthmus. But with the games there came an emphasis on luxury and profligacy, because the sanctuary of Poseidon was given over to the worship of the Corinthian Aphrodite (probably a counterpart of the Syrian Astarte), whose temple on the Acrocorinth had more than 1,000 ‘temple prostitutes’. Many people came to Corinth on account of these priestesses, and the city grew rich. Korinthiazomai (meaning ‘to live like a Corinthian in the practice of sexual immorality’) was the expression used to describe a person of loose life.

“Paul probably came to this important but immoral city in the fall of AD 50, after having preached the gospel to the highly intellectual Athenians.

“In the Corinthian church were both Jews and Gentiles, as inferred from Paul’s reference to them in 1Co 1. This is also attested by Latin names, such as Gaius, Fortunatus, Crispus, Justus, and Achaicus (1Co 1:14; 16:17) and by the mention of the Jews, Aquila and Priscilla (Act 18:14) and of Crispus, the ruler of the synagogue (Act 18:8). Sosthenes, another synagogue ruler there (Act 18:17) — if he is the Sosthenes of 1Co 1:1 — also became a member of the congregation. But no doubt the greater part of the church was composed of native Greeks; cf Paul’s reference to the Greeks who seek after wisdom (1Co 1:20-24) and also his reference to the congregation being Gentiles (1Co 12:2)” (EBC).

CALLED TO BE HOLY: For this Jesus prayed: Joh 17:19.

HOLY: Or “saints”. Gr “hagios”, the holy ones! As God “set apart” or “sanctified” or “made holy” His people in Egypt (Exo 13:2; Lev 11:44), so NT believers were “made holy” in Christ.

All believers are “saints” through their spiritual union with Christ, a fact Paul often expressed by the phrase “in Christ Jesus” (Rom 8:1,2; Eph 2:6,10,13; 3:6) or “in Christ” (Rom 12:5; 2Co 5:17). This use of the term emphasizes not so much personal holiness, though the believer’s conduct should correspond increasingly to his standing (2Co 7:1; 2Th 5:23), but the objective “set apart” status each believer possesses because of the grace conferred upon him or her through Christ.

WITH ALL THOSE: This position was not the exclusive privilege of Corinthians, but of all “who call upon the name’, ie, all those who have faith in a divinely sent message.

EVERYWHERE: “In every place”. The letter is not addressed to all saints everywhere. But the saints in Corinth, even if meeting in different places, were called to become part of one universal body! Cp phrase in 2Co 2:14; 1Th 1:8; 1Ti 2:8.

LORD: Kyrios, used 7 times in 1Co 1:2,3,7,8,9,10,31. A reminder that we all have the same Lord!

LORD JESUS CHRIST: This name concerns a Messiah (Christ) and Savior (Jesus) who has bought us (and thus he is also Lord, 2Pe 2:1).

1Co 1:3

GRACE: Gr “charis” = the favor of God (Act 11:23; 15:11).

PEACE: The usual Jewish salutation, but here given absolutely sincerely (cp Joh 14:27).

1Co 1:7

TO BE REVEALED: “Apokalupsis”.

1Co 1:8

“Unto the end”: “I am with you unto the end”: Mat 28:20. “He loved them unto the end”: John 13:1. “Who shall confirm you unto the end”: 1Co 1:8. “The rejoicing of hope firm unto the end”: Heb 3:6. “Beginning of our confidence steadfast unto the end”: Heb 3:14. “Full assurance of hope unto the end”: Heb 6:11. “Keepeth my works unto the end”: Rev 2:26.

BLAMELESS: The testimony was confirmed (v 6), and God would confirm or establish to the end. Thus established, they could not be reproached — they were blameless or unreproveable (RV); unimpeached — one against whom no charge could be sustained (Rom 8:33).

1Co 1:9

The name of Jesus Christ is used 9 times in first 9 vv.

1Co 1:10

See Lesson, One mind. A sectarian spirit threatened to destroy their unity.

I APPEAL: An appeal and a rebuke wrapped up together!

BROTHERS: Occurs 39 times in this letter, more than in any other.

IN THE NAME: The name of Christ is an incentive to unity, for it will be fully realized in a unity (Joh 17:1).

THAT ALL OF YOU AGREE WITH ONE ANOTHER: The basis of Scriptural oneness: the unity of teaching.

DIVISIONS: Gr “schismata”, lit dissensions. The forming of cliques in the midst of the one body.

PERFECTLY UNITED: “Katartizo” = joined together, mended, made complete. Cp Mat 4:21; Mar 1:19 (sw, sig mending their nets); Gal 6:1 (sw sig restoring to unity); Heb 10:5 (sw sig Christ being prepared).

1Co 1:11

Quarreling: the root malady of all the other problems that follow.

1Co 1:12

WHAT I MEAN IS THIS: All these, a “figure” (1Co 4:6). There were sections in the ecclesia and Paul does not name the leaders, but to show the futility of it all he gives to the sections the names of the apostles and Apollos (1Co 4:6). The groups doubtless corresponded to fancied differences in the leaders named.

I FOLLOW CHRIST: In this case, poss implying “you others do not!” (ie 1Co 2:10).

1Co 1:13

As there is only one head (Christ), there can be only one body (Eph 4:4,5)!

Many times we read Paul’s question here as we do other Scriptures, without considering that it may have application to ourselves. Mankind always has a tendency to worship itself, a tendency which often manifests itself in the slavish adherence to the dictates of some other man. Even Paul acknowledged and used to good purpose this human tendency — as all good preachers must — when he encouraged these same Corinthian brethren to be imitators of him (1Co 11:1, RSV). He was in their presence, he was visible, his words and examples were forceful; and it is true that most men are like sheep looking for a shepherd. But the difference between Paul and some leaders was this: that he always kept Christ in the forefront: ‘Follow me, but only insofar as I follow Christ.’

The apostle must have realized that the tendency to believe and follow that which is visible, to follow other men more readily than an unseen Christ, would lead to serious and far-reaching consequences, and result in believers becoming estranged and the Brotherhood divided. The condition of the Corinthian ecclesia presented an opportunity for the suppression of this tendency in its beginning, and to point a warning for all time. The Corinthians were in a dangerous position: While all professed the name of Christ, a sectarian spirit had definitely risen in their midst, threatening to destroy their unity as a part of the Body of Christ:

“Some boasted in Paul, others in Apollos, others in Cephas, and others in Christ. Hence the question: ‘Is Christ divided?’ The anticipated answer is, of course, ‘NO.’ Yet there must be division. It is Christ who says so: ‘Henceforth there shall be division’ (Luk 12:51-53). ‘But did he mean among the elect of God? No. Is it right among them then? It will not happen among them, brother. The saints are of one mind. But who are they? Leave that. The judgment will decide.’ This last quotation is from the late editor RR. The present editor endorses his words absolutely, because, on the most careful study of the NT, he believes they breathe the spirit of Christ and Paul” (CCW, Xd 59:122).

The exhortations of the apostles require us to face the facts, to recognize them, and to act with wisdom. We do not hesitate to invite our unbaptized friends to face the facts of our message to them; should we not follow the same principle of guidance for ourselves? Our answer must be in the affirmative. This matter should be brought home to us in the further question: “Of what body am I a member?” Would not all unhesitatingly answer: “We belong to the Body of Christ”? This is as it should be; but are we prepared to face the fact that in so answering we commit ourselves to a condemnation of the present disrupted state of Christadelphia? Certainly we cannot in reason justify it. Christ is not divided. “Doth not even nature itself teach us” that it is not possible that members of the same physical body can be separated from one another, and the body structure still retain its form and function? As the Creator has designed both the natural body and the spiritual body (His ecclesia), their adaptation to His purpose in their respective unities must necessarily follow His design. Thus should the Brotherhood, notwithstanding the varied character of its membership — young and old, rich and poor, “liberal” and “conservative” — be one body in Christ, in which there should be no schism.

All who are agreed upon the simple first principles of the Faith, and have been truly baptized into the name of Christ, have acknowledged Christ as their “Head”. To be consistent, we should therefore confess that the present condition of Christadelphia proves false our profession. What is the matter? Who is in the wrong? Should not the whole body of believers be unitedly holding to the “head”? The “head”, “from which the whole body fitly joined together and compacted by that which every joint supplieth, according to the effectual working in the measure of every part, maketh increase of the body unto the edifying of itself in love” (Eph 4:16)? The apostle Paul in yet another place calls attention to “Christ our life” (Col 3:4). Can Christ be the “Life” of a mutilated body, whose members are not only severed but also in active opposition to one another?

” ‘Is Christ divided?’ Paul asked in amazement; that is, did they not realize what their party loyalties in effect signified? — namely, that the unique and glorified Christ could be parcelled out among rival groups as though he were a mere thing and not the sublime being who alone had made them what they were by his sacrificial death on their account! Then, to drive the point home, come two equally decisive questions, ‘Was Paul crucified for you? or were ye baptized in the name of Paul?’ ” (WFB 68).

What then is our position as the Body of Christ? Most surely, brethren, we should come together, and in all humility and brotherly love have these matters set right, before the day of opportunity passes forever, so that all who truly belong to Christ may be a united, living band, awaiting his return.

Just think how it would be — speaking of his return — if the Lord were to appear incognito in our midst at this very moment! Would he be received by all portions of the Brotherhood without question, or would there be “righteous” concern that he who is “in fellowship” with one faction cannot be “in fellowship” with another, for fear of “contamination”? Would such “contamination” be feared by the One who while yet in the flesh touched sightless lepers and naked demoniacs and foul corpses? Let us think of two brethren working side by side, both having been baptized into Christ, and yet they act as if they were strangers to one another. Circumstances have placed them in separate “fellowships”, and they find between them a great gulf not of their own making. The situation is painfully embarrassing and unpleasant. How would it be if the Lord, their Head, were to stand with them one day, his true identity hidden? He converses with them; he finds (for he knew he would find) the knowledge of the Truth, much zeal, and love, on both sides. The Master is pleased, and graciously reveals himself to them. With both joy and regret, and confusion, these two brethren stand in the presence of their Lord. ‘O fools, and slow of heart to truly believe in me… why have you been satisfied with my body divided? Did you really think I would be pleased with such a condition? Now I beseech you, before it is too late, that there be no divisions among you.’

The time to retrace our steps in now! Let us make a special effort, not just lip-service, to this ideal of unity. Let us not be ashamed when Christ does come, that he will say, “I have somewhat against thee.” Rather let us reasonably, prayerfully, conscientiously, and in humility of spirit set ourselves and our house in order, as best we can, before it is too late. Christ must not be divided among us.

1Co 1:15

SO NO ONE CAN SAY THAT YOU WERE BAPTIZED INTO MY NAME: A good reason not to baptize anyone into the “body of the Christadelphians”! Or — even more especially — into a particular “fellowship”! True baptism is INTO CHRIST, and not into some “subset” thereof!

1Co 1:16

Paul has no concern for “statistics”!

1Co 1:17

NOT… TO BAPTIZE: Lesson: There is no special virtue in the baptizer! (Jesus did not baptize: Joh 4:2.) Baptism, however, is essential: Rom 6:3-5; 1Co 12:13; Gal 3:27-29; Eph 4:5; Col 2:12. Also, note the context in 1Co 1:13-16 — where baptism is spoken of quite positively.

NOT WITH WORDS OF HUMAN WISDOM: Any attempt to square the cross with human conceptions of rightness is foredoomed to failure.

1Co 1:18

MESSAGE: “Word” (RV): discourse or proclamation.

FOOLISHNESS: To proclaim salvation through a crucified man was folly to those who were lacking in the moral ability to discern. But to others, it was God’s power, in that (1) God’s power was seen in it, and (2) it was the efficient means God employed (Rom 1:16), and (3) it was effective in them (Gal 2:20).

1Co 1:19

Isa 29:14 — see context (vv 9-14): Israel turned to their own devices, and God destroyed their wisdom.

1Co 1:21

The world did not by its wisdom arrive at knowledge of God; God chose to employ the means man regarded as foolish.

1Co 1:22

Signs // power in v 24. Wisdom // wisdom in v 24.

1Co 1:24

BUT TO THOSE WHOM GOD HAS CALLED, BOTH JEWS AND GREEKS, CHRIST THE POWER OF GOD AND THE WISDOM OF GOD: If Christ had come with worldly pomp, only the rich could have received him; if as a philosopher, only the schoolmen: but coming as he did he is available for all, whether Jew or Greek, who will humble themselves and accept God’s way which exceeds human boasting. To such, Christ is the wisdom of God and the power of God: exhibiting in himself God’s wisdom and power: and in what was accomplished also. Only God’s wisdom could find a way for forgiveness; only God could provide power to triumph over sin.

1Co 1:27

Vv 27-29: One of the fundamental messages of the Bible, and shown in practice a hundred times: (1) God saves a nation through one man, after first selling him into slavery, and casting him into prison. (2) God rescues that same nation through one little baby destined for death, but plucked out of his burial coffin on a whim by a king’s daughter. (3) God sends home 30,000 troops, and wins a great victory with 300. (4) Another army cringes in their tents at the threats of a giant warrior, who blasphemes the name of the God of Israel, but a little boy — rejecting all the armaments of a soldier — goes out to “fight” him with a shepherd’s sling… and faith. (5) A whole nation is brought to the brink of ruin, and extinction, with a huge army surrounding its capital city — and then, to top it all off, its king is smitten with a deadly disease — but God answers his prayers and the threat is wiped out in a single night. (6) Thousands of Jews die ugly, horrible deaths on Roman crosses, but one of those poor suffering “criminals” turns out to be the Saviour of the world.

In our Father’s world, a still, small whisper of wind shakes the earth; a tiny cry in a lonely manger introduces a new world order; a microscopic seed grows into a great tree; and a little stone becomes a great mountain to fill the whole earth…”so that no flesh may boast before HIM…”

1Co 1:30

REDEMPTION: “Apolutrosis” = to be bought away from. See Lesson, Redemption.

1Co 1:31

The only real status any man has is in Christ.

Romans 13

Rom 13:1

Vv 1-7: Christian obligation to the government: Forbidding the Christian from taking vengeance and allowing God to exercise this right in the last judgment [cf Rom 12:19-21] might lead one to think that God was letting evildoers have their way in this world. Not so, says Paul — for God, through governing authorities, is even now inflicting wrath on evildoers (cp Tit 3:1; 1Pe 2:13-17; Jer 27:17; 29:7; Mat 22:21; John 18:36; Acts 4:19,20; 1Ti 2:1,2).

See Lesson, Politics and voting.

SUBMIT: Here and in v 5 Paul seems to avoid using the stronger word “obey”, because the believer may find it impossible to comply with every demand of the government. A circumstance may arise in which he must choose between obeying God and obeying men (Acts 5:29). But even then he must be submissive to the extent that, if his Christian convictions do not permit his compliance, he will accept the consequences of his refusal.

AUTHORITIES: Gr “exousia”, a general term with no technical meaning: the “powers”.

AUTHORITY: Gr “archon”: those who are “first”, leaders, or rulers. Sw 2Co 10:8; 13:10); 2Th 3:9, about ecclesial authorities, which may be included here.

THE AUTHORITIES THAT EXIST HAVE BEEN ESTABLISHED BY GOD: While the Christian has his citizenship in heaven (Phi 3:20), he is not on that account excused from responsibility to acknowledge the state as possessing authority from God to govern him. God permits the developments of the state — even the tyrannical and those who have usurped the authority of other rulers: Dan 4:17; Deu 32:8; John 19:11; Rev 13:7.

ESTABLISHED: Gr “tasso” = to arrange in an orderly manner — a military term.

Rom 13:2

HE WHO REBELS AGAINST THE AUTHORITY IS REBELLING AGAINST WHAT GOD HAS INSTITUTED, AND THOSE WHO DO SO WILL BRING JUDGMENT ON THEMSELVES: Refusal to submit to one’s government is equivalent to refusing to submit to God. Those who resist God’s ordained authority can expect to suffer condemnation by the government. This is really the indirect judgment of God (cf Mat 26:52). For example, capital punishment was ordained in Gen 9:5,6, and it has not been abolished by God.

WHAT GOD HAS INSTITUTED: “With my great power and outstretched arm I made the earth and its people and the animals that are on it, and I give it to anyone I please” (Jer 27:5).

Rom 13:3

FOR RULERS HOLD NO TERROR FOR THOSE WHO DO RIGHT… THEN DO WHAT IS RIGHT: This seems to take no account of the possibility that government may be tyrannical and may reward evil and suppress good. A few years after Paul wrote these words, Nero launched a persecution against the believers at Rome; multitudes lost their lives, and not because of doing evil. Later on, other emperors would lash out against Christians in several waves of persecution stretching over more than two centuries.

One way to deal with the problem is to assume that Paul is presenting the norm, that is to say, the state as functioning in terms of fulfilling the ideal for government, which is certainly that of punishing evil and rewarding or encouraging good.

Another, and better, possibility: consider the principle of Rom 8:28, whereby God finds ways to bring good out of apparent evil, so that even in the event that the state should turn against the people of God and persecute them cruelly and unjustly (as in 1Pe 3:12-17), God will bring good out of that evil too, in the long run. Sometimes God may speak more clearly out of prison cells and graves than out of the lives of believers who live securely and at peace with their rulers!

AND HE WILL COMMEND YOU: Possibly the “he” here could refer to God — who is, after all, the ultimate ruler and authority in any case!

Rom 13:4

HE DOES NOT BEAR THE SWORD FOR NOTHING: Even ecclesial elders did similarly: ie Peter with Ananias and Sapphira in Acts 5. Or Paul: “Shall I come to you with a whip, or in love and with a gentle spirit” (1Co 4:21).

Rom 13:5

THEREFORE, IT IS NECESSARY TO SUBMIT TO THE AUTHORITIES, NOT ONLY BECAUSE OF POSSIBLE PUNISHMENT BUT ALSO BECAUSE OF CONSCIENCE: There are two reasons a Christian needs to be submissive to his government. One is that the government may punish him if he is not submissive. The other is that God may punish him. God’s punishment may be during the Christian’s lifetime or after that at the judgment seat of Christ.

“Conscience” refers to the believer’s knowledge of God’s will and purpose.

Rom 13:6

THIS IS ALSO WHY YOU PAY TAXES, FOR THE AUTHORITIES ARE GOD’S SERVANTS, WHO GIVE THEIR FULL TIME TO GOVERNING: It is the duty of the believer to pay his taxes (cp Mat 17:24; 22:21). Building on his allusion to conscience, the apostle explains the payment of taxes on this very basis. The clearer the perception of the fact that the governing authority is God’s servant, the greater appears the reasonableness of providing support by these payments. The man in authority may be unworthy, but the institution is not, since God wills it. Without financial undergirding, government cannot function.

GOD’S SERVANTS: For the third time Paul speaks of rulers as God’s servants, but this time he uses a different word, one that means workers for the people, or public ministers. But the relationship to God is added in keeping with the emphasis made in v 4. Their work is carried on under God’s scrutiny and to fulfill God’s will. These public servants give their full time to governing; therefore they have no time to earn a living by other means. This is a reminder of the truth that “the worker deserves his wages” (Luke 10:7).

Rom 13:7

GIVE EVERYONE WHAT YOU OWE HIM: Some of the reluctance to pay taxes to the Romans that was associated with political unrest in Palestine may have infected Jewish believers at Rome, accounting for Paul’s specific allusion to the subject.

TAXES: Sig tribute paid to a foreign ruler (it appears in Luke 20:22 in the incident concerning paying tribute to Caesar).

REVENUE: Pertains to indirect taxation in the form of toll or customs duties. It forms a part of the word for tax gatherer.

RESPECT: Veneration due to the highest persons in the state. Or possibly, the “fear” due to the very highest authority, God Himself.

HONOR: A somewhat lesser term of respect, due to all officials.

Rom 13:8

Vv 8-10: The obligation of love: Although Paul has previously stressed the need for love (Rom 12:9,10), he now returns to this theme, knowing that he cannot stress too much this essential ingredient of all Christian service. The connection of the present paragraph with the foregoing section is indicated by the use of the word “debt”, which has the same root as “owe” in v 7. There is a neat transition to the very highest demand on the child of God. He owes submission and honor to the civil authorities, but he owes all men much more!

LET NO DEBT REMAIN OUTSTANDING: This translation avoids the danger of giving a wrong impression, such as might be conveyed by the KJV’s “Owe no man any thing.” It is not wrong to incur debt, for Jesus said, “Do not turn away from the one who wants to borrow from you” (Mat 5:42). The NT does not forbid borrowing, only the practice of charging exorbitant interest on loans and failing to pay debts (Mat 25:27; Luke 19:23). On the other hand, to be perpetually in debt is not a good testimony for a believer, and to refuse to pay one’s debts is absolutely wrong.

EXCEPT THE CONTINUING DEBT TO LOVE ONE ANOTHER: Now comes the exception to the rule. There is a “continuing debt to love one another”, and that debt can never be marked “paid in full”! Why? Because the believer has been the recipient of the infinite and undeserved and unearned agape-love of the Father (John 3:16), and such love is too great ever to be repaid! All the believer can do is live out his life, making regular “payments” on the staggering debt, by giving love to his fellowman — even while knowing that such payments cannot even cover the “interest” on the principal owed! Paul seems at pains to emphasize that there is no point where the believer can say, “There, I’ve done enough!”

The usual emphasis is on one’s duty to love his fellow believers, but the wider reference — to the whole world — is also to be found (Gal 6:10; 1Th 3:12).

FOR HE WHO LOVES HIS FELLOWMAN HAS FULFILLED THE LAW: It is our obligation to seek the welfare of our fellow human beings (cf Rom 8:4). The Mosaic Law required the same thing (Lev 19:18, cf Mat 5:44; 22:39,40; Col 3:14), and found its perfect fulfillment in the “law” of Christ. In Christ the preeminent fruit of the Spirit is this same love (Gal 5:22,23).

Rom 13:9

Paul summarizes the “commandments” enshrined in the Ten Commandments that have to do with treatment of one’s neighbor — all of which are themselves summarized further by the Lord’s words, “Love your neighbor as yourself” (Mat 22:39,40; cp Lev 19:18). “Jesus rebuked the narrow nationalistic interpretation of the word ‘neighbor’ in the parable of the good Samaritan. The literal meaning of neighbor is ‘one who is near.’ Both the priest and the Levite found their nearness to the stricken man a source of embarrassment (Luke 10:31,32), but the Samaritan saw in that same circumstance an opportunity to help his fellowman. In the light of human need, the barrier between Jew and Samaritan dissolved. Love provides its own imperative; it feels the compulsion of need” (EBC).

Rom 13:10

LOVE DOES NO HARM TO ITS NEIGHBOR: This is an understatement, for love does positive good. But the negative form is suitable here, because it is intended to fit in with the prohibitions from the law (v 9).

LOVE IS THE FULFILLMENT OF THE LAW: By concluding with the observation that love is the fulfillment of the law, Paul returns to the same thought he began with (v 8).

What, then, is the relationship between love and “law”? In Christ the two concepts, which seem to have so little in common, come together. To love others with the love that Christ exhibited is his new commandment (John 13:34). And if this love is present, it will make possible the keeping of all his other commandments (John 14:15). Love promotes obedience, and the two together constitute “the law of Christ” (Gal 6:2).

Rom 13:11

Vv 11-14: The believer’s obligation is to live in loving and hopeful expectation of the return of his Lord — not in the excesses of sin that are all too common in the world. In short, he should love his fellowman, but not the “world” in which that fellowman lives!

AND DO THIS: “This” refers to all of Rom 12 and Rom 13.

WAKE UP FROM YOUR SLUMBER: We must not be lulled to sleep by indulgence in pleasure, nor be influenced by the suggestion that the Lord delays his coming (Mat 24:48). “So then, let us not be like others, who are asleep, but let us be alert and self-controlled” (1Th 5:6; cp 1Co 15:34).

OUR SALVATION IS NEARER NOW THAN WHEN WE FIRST BELIEVED: Salvation is the goal of our faith (1Pe 1:9): we await the Saviour from heaven (Phi 3:20). The believer should not be like a child looking for a clock to strike the hour because something is due to happen then. He is content to do his duty every day, knowing that with every passing moment the end is that much closer to realization.

Rom 13:12

THE NIGHT IS NEARLY OVER; THE DAY IS ALMOST HERE. SO LET US PUT ASIDE THE DEEDS OF DARKNESS AND PUT ON THE ARMOR OF LIGHT: The line of thought closely resembles the treatment in 1Th 5:1-11. Even as darkness is symbolic of evil and sin, the light fittingly describes those who believe in Christ. Paul pictures the believer as one who anticipates the day by rising early. His night clothes are the works of darkness, the “old man” (Eph 4:22), the deeds that belong to the old life. The garments to which he transfers, however, are unusual. They are likened to armor as in 1Th 5:8 and Eph 6:12,13 (cp 2Co 10:4) — suggesting that his walk through this world as a child of light involves a warfare with the powers of darkness. Even though the actual “day” of Christ’s coming, or the “day of salvation” (2Co 6:2), has not yet arrived, the believer belongs to that day (1Th 5:8), and his transformed life — even in this present evil world — is a living anticipation of the glory that will then be revealed (2Co 3:18; 4:4).

Rom 13:13

LET US BEHAVE DECENTLY, AS IN THE DAYTIME: It is quite plain from Paul’s statement here, and our experiences will bear this out, that the night seasons, with their seductive cover of darkness, are the times for most sins of excess. But the believer is not a child of darkness — the night finds him safe at home, in bed! Sins enough are to be found in the broad daylight; he will not go out at night looking for them!

NOT IN ORGIES AND DRUNKENNESS, NOT IN SEXUAL IMMORALITY AND DEBAUCHERY, NOT IN DISSENSION AND JEALOUSY: There may be an intended order here: Intemperance in drink or drugs weakens the natural inhibitions, and this often leads to sexual sin. Such sins, augmented by a guilty conscience, may frequently result in an attitude of contention and quarreling. The committing of sin does not bring rest to the spirit but rather dissatisfaction; this betrays itself by finding fault with others, as though they are responsible. And so every ruined life is characterized by bitterness and hate, as though something else (one’s parents, one’s friends, or the smooth-talking stranger in the bar) — but never oneself — has brought the sinner to his or her sorry end!

Rom 13:14

RATHER, CLOTHE YOURSELVES WITH THE LORD JESUS CHRIST: Paul returns to the theme of putting on the armor of light (v 12). Every believer puts on Jesus Christ when he or she is baptized (Gal 3:27; cp Eph 4:23,24).

DO NOT THINK ABOUT HOW TO GRATIFY THE DESIRES OF THE SINFUL NATURE: Still, dedicating oneself positively is not all that is necessary. There must also be a deliberate turning away from desires that indulge the flesh (cf Rom 6; 2Ti 2:22; 1Pe 2:11).

Romans 15

Rom 15:1

Vv 1-13: The unity of the strong and the weak in Christ.

WE WHO ARE STRONG: Paul now openly aligns himself with the “strong”, and at the same time suggests that they — the “strong” — are chiefly responsible for achieving the unity between the two factions.

OUGHT: This word should not be watered down as though it means the same thing as “should”. It speaks not of something recommended but of an obligation: we “owe it”; we “are bound to” (Diag).

BEAR WITH THE FAILINGS OF THE WEAK: In general, as Isa 53:11: Christ bearing the iniquities of mankind. More specifically here, the word “bear” was used earlier when the apostle enjoined the Galatian believers to “carry [bear] each other’s burdens, and in this way… fulfill the law of Christ” (Gal 6:2). Let the strong, then, bear the burden of the scrupulousness of the weaker brethren. But if they do this in a spirit of mere resignation or with the notion that this condescension marks them as superior Christians, it will fail. When the strong bear with the weak, they must do it in love — the key to fulfilling the law of Christ.

AND NOT TO PLEASE OURSELVES: The temptation to be resisted by the strong is the inclination to please themselves, to serve their own self-interest. This is the very antithesis of love. For example, if a strong brother were to indulge his liberty openly in the presence of a weak brother, this would be labeled self-pleasing, for it would do nothing for the other but grieve or irritate him.

In short, the weak need knowledge, and the strong need to develop love. Paul was not saying that the strong must determine to put up with the weak. He meant, ‘Those of us who are strong must accept as our own burden the tender scruples of the weak.’

Rom 15:2

EACH OF US SHOULD PLEASE HIS NEIGHBOR: Indeed, the refusal to live a life of self-pleasing should characterize every believer, whether strong or weak, and should extend beyond the narrow circle of like-minded people. What is called for here is not a weak or indifferent compliance with the wishes of others, but rather a determined adjustment to whatever will contribute to the spiritual good of the other person. This is like Paul’s stated personal principle of making himself all things to all men in order to win as many as possible to the Lord (1Co 9:19-23).

Paul was not saying that we should be “men-pleasers” and do whatever anyone wants us to do simply because it will please them (ct Gal 1:10,19; 1Th 2:4). The principles of the gospel must never be given up to please others, but matters of personal preference may — and ought to — be adjusted to help the weak. In effect, we should not please others rather than God, but we should please others rather than ourselves.

FOR HIS GOOD, TO BUILD HIM UP: The goal to be achieved here is the good of the other person, his “edification” (cf Rom 14:19). This leaves no room for anything like mere ingratiating, or “apple-polishing”.

Rom 15:3

FOR EVEN CHRIST DID NOT PLEASE HIMSELF: For the first time in this letter Paul holds Christ before his readers as an example. Christ was faced with the same problem that continues to confront his followers. Should they please themselves, go their own way, speak what people want to hear; or should they resolve to be guided by their commitment to do the will of God? Christ’s own affirmation is recorded for us: “I always do what pleases [God]” (John 8:29).

“I seek not to please myself but him who sent me” (John 5:30). “Your attitude should be the same as that of Christ Jesus, who being found in appearance [form, or status] as a man, humbled himself and became obedient to death — even death on a cross!” (Phi 2:5,8). “To this you were called, because Christ suffered for you, leaving you an example, that you should follow in his steps. ‘He committed no sin, and no deceit was found in his mouth.’ When they hurled their insults at him, he did not retaliate; when he suffered, he made no threats. Instead, he entrusted himself to him who judges justly” (1Pe 2:21-23).

THE INSULTS OF THOSE WHO INSULT YOU HAVE FALLEN ON ME: Cit Psa 69:9. Even in Israel, through the years, God’s servants had suffered reproach and insult when they attempted to warn their countrymen that their sin and rebellion were inviting the judgment of God. The first half of Psa 69:9 is quoted in John 2:17 in connection with the cleansing of the temple: “Zeal for your house will consume me.” To take up the cause of God fervently is to arouse the passions of sinful men.

In Christ we can see the difference between a people pleaser and a people lover. Sacrificing His own preferences for the welfare of others did not make him acceptable to everyone, but it did make him acceptable to his Father. In John 15:25 Jesus cites the same psalm (Psa 69:4), pointing out that human hatred had dogged his steps, but unjustly. Nevertheless, Jesus did not discontinue his faithful work, which was designed to help those around him. Paul wants his readers to realize that similarly they are to seek the good of others even when they are misunderstood or persecuted for doing so.

What does it really mean, to bear the griefs and sorrows of another? As exemplified in Christ, it was more, much more, than a mechanical “burden-bearing”. It was a “living sacrifice”, a way of life that denied the lusts of the flesh within himself, while at the same time loving and striving continuously for the well-being of his brethren who could not, or did not, so deny themselves. And when they failed, and failed miserably, he bore with their failures and never gave way to “righteous”, condemning anger — but only expressed sorrow and gentle rebuke. Was there ever such a man? “For even Christ pleased not himself” (Rom 15:3).

Rom 15:4

FOR EVERYTHING THAT WAS WRITTEN IN THE PAST WAS WRITTEN TO TEACH US, SO THAT THROUGH ENDURANCE AND THE ENCOURAGEMENT OF THE SCRIPTURES WE MIGHT HAVE HOPE: Paul used his reference to David’s experience as an occasion to comment on the usefulness of all OT Scripture. It provides motivation for enduring and gives encouragement as we seek to remain faithful in our commitment to do God’s will. These Scriptures give us hope because in them we see God’s approval of those who persevered faithfully in spite of opposition and frustration.

“My son, keep your father’s commands and do not forsake your mother’s teaching. Bind them upon your heart forever; fasten them around your neck. When you walk, they will guide you; when you sleep, they will watch over you; when you awake, they will speak to you. For these commands are a lamp, this teaching is a light, and the corrections of discipline are the way to life” (Pro 6:20-23).

ENDURANCE: Gr “hupomone”: an abiding, or holding up, under something. The KJV “patience” is far too passive. “Endurance” is a much better translation: it is active, and it requires strength.

ENCOURAGEMENT: Gr “paraklesis”: includes the ideas of comfort and exhortation, as well as encouragement.

” ‘A nation unfamiliar with its history is condemned to live it again.’ This well-known quotation from George Santayana is certainly true: we should study the past so that we can learn from the mistakes of those who have gone before.

“Paul tells us that, ‘Whatsoever things were written aforetime were written for our learning, that we through patience and comfort of the scriptures might have hope.’ History does repeat itself, and the lesson we want to learn from the past is to avoid the same pitfalls into which our forefathers fell. If we continue to make the same mistakes as those who have gone before, then we are not very wise, and we will have to suffer the same consequences. Some mistakes are so costly that we cannot learn from our mistakes; for example, little children need to learn not to play in the street because getting run over is too high a price to pay for this mistake.

“Our young people may question why they must study history because they think it is dry, boring and irrelevant in their lives. They couldn’t be more wrong. History is about real people who just happened to be born before we were. History is being written every day, and the things happening today will be found in tomorrow’s history books.

“The greatest history book of all is the Bible, for it was written by God about His people and tells us of His promises to them and to us. Without this book we would know nothing of Adam and Eve. We would know that sin existed but would not know why. We would know nothing of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob and therefore we would be ignorant of the promises. Paul tells us of those who are strangers from the covenants of promise, and they are if they have not read God’s history book. Other history books may help us to understand things from God’s point of view. Other history books tell us what has happened, but only the Bible tells us what has happened AND what will happen. The Bible is the only book that wrote history in advance, and it is the only book that offers hope to a perishing world. What a pity it isn’t read.

“It may be interesting to know the history of the French Revolution or the pilgrims that settled New England, but it is essential to know the history of Moses bringing God’s people out of Egypt and the promise to David of a son to sit on his throne. The one is nice to know, the other essential. It is like bodily exercise compared to spiritual things. The former profits little but the latter is ‘profitable unto all things, having promise of the life that now is, and of that which is to come.’

“If all the people who study ancient and not so ancient history would only spend the same amount of time studying God’s history it would revolutionize their lives. Not only that, but instead of dying at 70 to 90 they would have the promise of everlasting life in the history that is yet to come. If all the people who jog five miles a day or work out 2 or 3 hours at the gym would only spend the same amount of time in Bible study, they would have a mind tuned to God — which is more profitable than a well-tuned body. Bodily exercise is not to be condemned unless it crowds godly exercise out of our life. Ancient history is not to be condemned unless it crowds godly history out of our life. Many things of themselves are not evil, but whatever takes us away from God and His word is wrong. Let us not be unfamiliar with God’s history, or else we be condemned to the fate of those who lived before and died without hope” (MM).

Rom 15:5

MAY THE GOD WHO GIVES ENDURANCE AND ENCOURAGEMENT GIVE YOU A SPIRIT OF UNITY AMONG YOURSELVES: The study of the Scriptures, along with the help of God, can provide the strength to do what is right, in this as well as in all things. And to do what is right does not come easy; to endure in doing what is right requires special and continued effort. Unity among believers does not just happen; it must be made to happen by continuing effort.

Is Paul referring to the God WHO GIVES endurance and encouragement, or the God OF endurance and encouragement? Both AV and RSV favor the second of these: “May the God of steadfastness and encouragement grant you to live in such harmony with one another, in accord with Christ Jesus, that together you may with one voice glorify the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ” (vv 5,6).

AS YOU FOLLOW CHRIST: Paul continues to emphasize the role and the example of the Lord Jesus Christ in bringing about unity.

Rom 15:6

SO THAT WITH ONE HEART AND MOUTH YOU MAY GLORIFY THE GOD AND FATHER OF OUR LORD JESUS CHRIST: Though this unity will help the church in its witness to the world, Paul is more interested here in its effect on the worship of the people of God: that they might continue to glorify the God and Father whom Jesus so wonderfully glorified.

“Our Father in heaven” (Mat 6:9); “Father of glory” or “glorious Father” (Eph 1:17); “Father of compassion” (2Co 1:3); “Father of spirits” (Heb 12:9); “Father of the heavenly lights” (Jam 1:17); “a Father to you” (2Co 6:18); “the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ” (Rom 15:6).

Rom 15:7

ACCEPT ONE ANOTHER: As he moves forward to the conclusion of his treatment of the strong and the weak, Paul pauses to summarize what he has already stated. This repeats the emphasis of Rom 14:1, where the same verb occurs, but here the charge is directed to both groups rather than to the strong alone.

JUST AS CHRIST ACCEPTED US: Us, strong and weak alike, or Gentile and Jew alike.

TO BRING PRAISE TO GOD: The motivating factor, not personal pride or personal satisfaction.

Rom 15:8

CHRIST HAS BECOME A SERVANT OF THE JEWS… TO CONFIRM THE PROMISES MADE TO THE PATRIARCHS: Vv 8-10 expand the idea of Jesus Christ accepting us. V 8 deals with his acceptance of Jews. He not only accepted Jewish believers but came to serve the Jewish people, as the OT predicted, fulfilling God’s promise to the patriarchs (Mark 10:45; Mat 15:24; cf Rom 9:4,5; Gal 3:16). Consequently the typically stronger Gentile believers should not despise their sometimes weaker Jewish brethren.

CONFIRM: Make sure, establish, ratify.

Rom 15:9

Vv 9-12: In a massive effort to persuade Jewish brethren that they should receive their Gentile brethren without scruple, Paul brings together in these vv an overpowering assembly of proof-texts about the essential share which Gentiles must have in Messiah’s redemption.

THEREFORE I WILL PRAISE YOU AMONG THE GENTILES; I WILL SING HYMNS TO YOUR NAME: this quotation (from Psa 18:49) pictures David as rejoicing in God for his triumphs in the midst of the nations that have become subject to him.

Rom 15:10

REJOICE, O GENTILES, WITH HIS PEOPLE: In Deu 32:43 (following the LXX rendering) Moses saw the Gentiles praising God, along with their fellow-worshipers the Israelites. This would have encouraged Paul’s Jewish readers to accept their Gentile brethren.

Rom 15:11

Citing Psa 117:1. Whereas Paul anticipates the time when Gentiles shall be joined with his people, Psa 117 puts Gentile believers BEFORE Jews. Far from being an afterthought, then, the inclusion of Gentiles in the hope of Abraham was a primary object of God all along! So why did not Paul emphasize this even more in his argument? Would not this point have reinforced considerably his campaign of preaching to the Gentiles? Presumably he omitted this useful emphasis for tactical reasons. If the inference were to be drawn that in his gospel Jews must finally take second place to Gentiles, what a vast amount of psychological damage might result!

But it was right that Paul stress to his fellow Jews, to some extent, the necessity that the gospel be preached to Gentiles.

“There has always been a reticence among men to take the Gospel to those outside their immediate sphere. Israel had eyes only for themselves and even when in early NT times the disciples were bidden to go into all nations and to preach to all people they were loathe to do so: so much so that God had to press them into action by special miracles, as is seen in the Acts of the Apostles. Even today, when we are involved in preaching to all people, the work is not entirely free from restraints of one kind or another” (CT).

Rom 15:12

ISAIAH SAYS, “THE ROOT OF JESSE WILL SPRING UP, ONE WHO WILL ARISE TO RULE OVER THE NATIONS; THE GENTILES WILL HOPE IN HIM”: Cit Isa 11:10, continuing the point of v 11.

Rom 15:13

MAY THE GOD OF HOPE FILL YOU WILL ALL JOY AND PEACE AS YOU TRUST IN HIM: The God of hope is the God who inspires hope in and provides hope for His redeemed ones. Christians can be joyful because of what God has already done for us and is doing for us. We can also be peaceful as we realize what He is doing for us now and what He will do for us in the future (Rom 5:2; 13:11).

Peace: made (Col 1:20), preached (Eph 2:17), enjoyed (Rom 5:1), filling hearts (Rom 15:13), given (John 14:27), keeping (Phi 4:7), and ruling (Col 3:15).

The gift of the Holy Spirit did not guarantee joy and peace: cp Rom 12:6-8 with Rom 12:16-19.

Rom 15:14

Paul had been somewhat critical of the strong and the weak in the Roman ecclesia (Rom 14:1–15:13). He now balanced those comments by pointing out other strengths in the ecclesia beside the faith of his Roman brethren (Rom 1:8).

GOODNESS: Moral virtue, one of the fruits of the Spirit (Gal 5:22; Eph 5:9).

COMPLETE IN KNOWLEDGE: Fully instructed in the gospel (cp Rom 6:17).

COMPETENT TO INSTRUCT ONE ANOTHER: “Let the word of Christ dwell in you richly as you teach and admonish one another with all wisdom” (Col 3:16). “And we urge you, brothers, warn those who are idle, encourage the timid, help the weak, be patient with everyone” (1Th 5:14).

“Morally, they were ‘full of goodness,’ intellectually they were ‘complete in knowledge,’ and functionally they were ‘competent to instruct one another’ ” (Mounce).

Rom 15:15

The apostle gave his readers credit for some knowledge of what he had written in the foregoing chapters. Nevertheless they needed reminding — as do all God’s people.

Rom 15:16

Paul had a special obligation to this primarily Gentile congregation (Rom 1:13), since God had sent him to minister to Gentiles primarily. As a “priest” (cp Rev 5:10), it was his duty to bring people to God with the gospel. He regarded the Gentiles who were coming to faith and growing through his ministry as his special priestly offering to God.

SANCTIFIED BY THE HOLY SPIRIT: As esp manifested in God’s Word (John 6:63: 17:17).

Rom 15:18

I WILL NOT VENTURE TO SPEAK OF ANYTHING EXCEPT WHAT CHRIST HAS ACCOMPLISHED THROUGH ME: Although Paul might have reason to boast of his service to God (v 17), he will give all glory to Jesus Christ (cp Gal 6:13,14)!

Rom 15:19

THE POWER OF SIGNS AND MIRACLES: These served to verify the messenger of God and validate the message he brought. It was so in the ministry of Jesus (Acts 2:22) and in that of the original apostles (Acts 5:12). Paul is able to certify the same for himself (2Co 12:12).

FROM JERUSALEM ALL THE WAY AROUND TO ILLYRICUM, I HAVE FULLY PROCLAIMED THE GOSPEL OF CHRIST: Paul’s arena of ministry when he wrote this epistle stretched about 1,400 miles from Jerusalem to the Roman province of Illyricum. Illyricum lay on the east side of the Adriatic Sea opposite Italy. This is modern northern Albania and Yugoslavia. There is no record in Acts of Paul having gone there though he may have done so on the second missionary journey (Acts 17:1-9) or during the third journey (Acts 21:1,2). Paul’s claim to have “fully” preached the gospel means that he had faithfully proclaimed it in that area, not that he had personally delivered it to every individual.

Rom 15:20

TO PREACH THE GOSPEL WHERE CHRIST WAS NOT KNOWN, SO THAT I WOULD NOT BE BUILDING ON SOMEONE ELSE’S FOUNDATION: Paul expresses his desire to shoulder the responsibility for blazing a trail for the gospel no matter how great the cost to himself. He longed to preach “in the regions beyond” (2Co 10:16). This man could not be an ordinary witness for his Lord. Somewhat parallel is his insistence on preaching the gospel without charge, supporting himself by the labor of his hands (1Co 9:18). V 20 should be taken in close connection with vv 18,19 as providing a reason for the passing of so many years without a visit to Rome: Paul had been fully occupied elsewhere.

Rom 15:21

THOSE WHO WERE NOT TOLD ABOUT HIM WILL SEE, AND THOSE WHO HAVE NOT HEARD WILL UNDERSTAND: Paul felt deeply his obligation to confront all men with the good news (Rom 1:14). This is confirmed by the quotation of Isa 52:15. Isaiah was a favorite source for Paul’s quotations, esp the sections dealing with the Servant of the Lord and his mission. This very preaching effort of Paul was actually prophesied in the OT: this would be an enormous source of comfort to the apostle.

Rom 15:22

THIS IS WHY I HAVE OFTEN BEEN HINDERED FROM COMING TO YOU: Concluding this section of the letter is the observation that Paul’s delay in coming to Rome (cp Rom 1:8-13) was the result of his constant preoccupation with preaching the gospel elsewhere. Now his readers will understand why he has not come from Jerusalem, the holy city, directly to Rome, the royal city, with the message of reconciliation and life in Christ.

Rom 15:23

Vv 23,24: The apostle felt that the believers in the areas where he had preached were in a good position to carry on the proclamation of the gospel in their territories. (“No more place to work” probably means: “no more new or unbroken ground”… for surely there were plenty of other kinds of work to be done in these developing areas.) At any rate, he now believed the time was right to look to comparatively unreached fields farther to the west in Europe (cf Rom 1:11,12).

Rom 15:24

SPAIN: Which Paul would see as the “Tarshish” of Isa 66:18,19. Parts of Spain (which in the ancient world included all the Iberian peninsula) had been occupied by Rome since about 200 BC, but it was only in Paul’s lifetime that the Romans had fully organized the entire area.

Whether Paul actually reached Spain is not certain. The strongest positive evidence is found in First Clement, a late first-century writing: “He [Paul] taught righteousness to all the world, and when he had reached the limits of the West he gave his testimony before the rulers, and thus passed from the world.” Spain would fit the description, “the limits of the West.”

AND TO HAVE YOU ASSIST ME ON MY JOURNEY THERE: Not necessarily by money (cp Acts 18:3; 1Co 4:12), but more likely by their enthusiasm and encouragement (Acts 28:14,15).

Rom 15:25

Vv 25,26: The purpose of Paul’s collection of money from the Macedonian and Achaian churches was to relieve the poverty that existed among the Jewish Christians in Jerusalem. A secondary purpose was to cement relations between Gentile and Jewish believers (cf 1Co 16:1-4; 2Co 8; 9).

Rom 15:26

MACEDONIA AND ACHAIA: In the NT Macedonia refers to the northern portion of Greece, Achaia being the southern portion (Acts 19:21; Rom 15:26; 2Co 1:1; 1Th 1:7,8).

Macedonia was the land of the “Makedones”, a territory in the Balkan Peninsula, bordered on the west by Illyria, on the east by Thrace, and on the south by Thessaly. Its mountainous terrain is cut by the rivers Axios (modern Vardar) and Strymon (modern Struma), which flow into the Aegean from the north. It is covered today by northern Greece, southern Yugoslavia, and the southwestern corner of Bulgaria. The population was ethnically and linguistically mixed. Here were Philippi, Berea, and Thessalonica.

By Claudius’ direction, in AD 44 Achaia was governed by a proconsul (eg, Gallio in Acts 18:12), appointed by the Roman senate; the emperor governed his provinces through procurators. The chief cities of Achaia were Athens and Corinth the capital with its seaport Cenchrea, although Sparta to the south and Megara, Thebes, and Delphi to the north were famous from antiquity.

TO MAKE A CONTRIBUTION FOR THE POOR AMONG THE SAINTS IN JERUSALEM: The Philippians, and perhaps others in Macedonia, were especially commended in this regard (2Co 8:1-5).

CONTRIBUTION: Gr “koinonia”: fellowship or sharing (see also v 27).

Rom 15:27

The money that Paul was collecting was both a gift of love, and an obligation. He could say that the givers owed it because the gospel had come from Jerusalem and Judea to the Gentiles. Believers in Asia Minor also contributed to this fund (1Co 16:1; Acts 20:4).

SHARED: From Gr “koinonia”, literally a “fellowship” or a “sharing”.

“Partakers” / “sharers”: of root and fatness of olive tree (Rom 11:17), of spiritual things (Rom 15:27), of one bread (1Co 10:17), of sufferings and consolation (2Co 1:7), of God’s promise in Christ (Eph 3:6), of inheritance of saints (Col 1:12), of heavenly calling (Heb 3:1), of Christ (Heb 3:14), of the benefit (1Ti 6:2), of the glory (1Pe 5:1), and of the divine nature (2Pe 1:4).

“Such men sometimes think that they give all that is required of them in giving money. This has been one of the great errors of Christendom, the attempt to buy that which is “without money and without price”. It is true that the apostle Paul says something regarding spiritual and carnal things which seems to suggest reciprocity in these matters. We must not put his teaching upside down, however. He says that Gentiles who are partakers of Israel’s spiritual riches have a duty to minister in carnal matters. He certainly does not suggest that carnal wealth can buy the spiritual treasures. The two kinds of riches are on a different plane. The currency is different and there is no known rate of exchange. The wealthy man who goes to his chapel with a feeling that he can purchase anything and a readiness to give of his abundance if the service pleases him, is not likely to receive any real spiritual food. He is not in the right condition to appreciate it. Possibly husks please him best. If so he can buy what he requires” (PrPr).

Rom 15:28

AFTER I HAVE COMPLETED THIS TASK AND HAVE MADE SURE THAT THEY HAVE RECEIVED THIS FRUIT: Paul evidently anticipated the completion of this project eagerly. The money given was “fruit” in that it was part of the “harvest” of the gospel seed-sowing. Paul as “apostle to the Gentiles” evidently wanted to bring it to the Jerusalem Christians, and affirm its integrity, insuring that they understood it properly.

Rom 15:29

I WILL COME IN THE FULL MEASURE OF THE BLESSING OF CHRIST: The blessing of Jesus Christ in view was God’s blessing on Paul by allowing him to reach Rome. The apostle probably also had in mind the blessing that would come to the Romans through his ministry among them. He did not know at this time that he would arrive in chains (Acts 28:15). Yet even that could be a blessing (Phil 1:12-14)!

Rom 15:30

JOIN ME IN MY STRUGGLE BY PRAYING TO GOD FOR ME: He realized that — in view of the forces antagonistic to his ministry — energetic praying was necessary (cf v 31; Eph 6:18-20; 2Co 1:10,11).

STRUGGLE: Gr “sunagonizomai”: to struggle in company with, ie (figuratively) to be a partner (assistant) in the struggle. The root is “agon”, which suggests an athletic competition; it is an intense struggle (cp Engl “agony”): “Our praying must not be a casual experience that has no heart or earnestness. We should put as much fervor into our praying as a wrestler does into his wrestling!” (Wiersbe).

Rom 15:31

He identified two immediate prayer requests. One was safety from the opposition of hostile unbelieving Jews (cf Acts 9:29,30) and the distrust of Jewish Christians. The other was that the Jewish Christians would receive the monetary gift of their Gentile brethren. If they did not, the unity of the body would be in jeopardy.

Rom 15:32

The granting of these two requests would hopefully contribute to the realization of a third goal. This goal was Paul’s joyful arrival in Rome by God’s will (Rom 1:10) and his refreshment in the fellowship of the Roman believers.

Rom 15:33

THE GOD OF PEACE BE WITH YOU ALL: However strife-torn may be Paul’s lot in the immediate future, he wishes for his friends the blessing of the God of peace (cp John 14:27; 17:21; Rom 15:13).

Romans 14

Rom 14:1

Rom 14:1-15:13: The strong and the weak: Cp Paul’s similar advice in 1Co 8:1-11:1. His treatment in Romans is briefer and given in more general terms, though there are obvious similarities, such as the danger that by his conduct the strong will cause the weak to stumble or fall, and the corresponding danger that the weak will sit in judgment on the strong. The differences are numerous: there is no mention in Rom of idols or food offered to idols; the word “conscience” does not appear; the strong are not described as those who have knowledge. On the other hand, we read in Rom of vegetarians and of those who insist on observing a certain day in contrast to others who look on all days as being alike. Neither of these features appears in 1Co.

“From speaking of those who were too lax in the indulgence of natural appetites [Rom 13:11-14], the subject passes mainly to those who are too scrupulous. The object is not to remove these scruples, but to show those who have them and those who have them not how to live in Christian peace” (Stifler).

Vv 1-12: Brethren should refrain from judging one another.

ACCEPT: Gr “proslambano” is capable of conveying the sense of fullness of fellowship and warm wholeheartedness; this is shown by its use in Acts 18:26; 28:2.

HIM WHOSE FAITH IS WEAK: Not “weak in THE faith” (KJV), as though he understood not the first principles of the faith. But rather, weak in his own personal faith. That is, his faith is not strong enough to enable him to perceive the full liberty he has in Christ to partake. He is not troubled by questions of doctrine, but by doubt as to whether it is right for him to eat some foods (cf v 23).

WITHOUT PASSING JUDGMENT ON DISPUTABLE MATTERS: Without trying to decide between various vacillating opinions, or various questionable scruples.

“Precious though the gift of precise thinking may be, it can become unbearably tyrannical if overpressed, and we must beware of the danger of making it seem that salvation, or even fellowship itself, is a matter of competence in logic or consistency in exposition” (CMPA, Xd 109:10).

The form of the Greek verb here means “go on receiving”; the RSV is even more gracious: “Welcome him.” Here is no grudging, grumbling acceptance, but open-hearted full Christian fellowship. It is the business of the “strong” (or those who consider themselves so) to “walk the extra mile” in receiving and helping, not “judging”, the “weak” (Rom 15:1,2).

“The ecclesia is to receive those who are troubled by these conflicting thoughts and doubts, not however, to judge or condemn them for such, but to help them reach unto a full conviction of faith” (HPM, Log 34:250).

“It is easy to see why Paul so advises. As long as the weak brother with (slightly) off-beat ideas continues in the fellowship of sounder brethren there is some hope that by degrees he will achieve a more balanced point of view. Such things have been known to happen. But the necessary condition must be observed: ‘Not to doubtful disputations.’ If such a problem individual is to continue to share the blessings of the community, he must be prepared to cease all forms of propagation of the ideas he has espoused. Only on these eminently reasonable terms can his membership in the family of Christ be tolerated” (HAW, Tes 43:344).

Paul’s advice in Rom 14 is in direct contrast to the popular “first pure, then peaceable” syndrome, as misapplied by so many. Here is obviously something “impure”, in the sense of being doubtful and disputatious, pertaining to the faith, but still Paul counsels the need for peace! While the affected ecclesia is experiencing peace within and a cordial relationship with its sister-ecclesias, then the “body” will be better able to correct the minor annoyance of a doubtful opinion. But just let there be an accusatory letter, a “call to arms” in a remote area where the “problem” has not even reached, a cry for “purity at any cost”: and the situation rapidly deteriorates into a full-blown division.

Rom 14:2

ONE MAN’S FAITH ALLOWS HIM TO EAT EVERYTHING, BUT ANOTHER MAN, WHOSE FAITH IS WEAK, EATS ONLY VEGETABLES: Paul did not say why the weaker brother chose not to eat meat. This brother’s reasons were immaterial to Paul. The point is that for some reason this Christian believed that he would please God more by not eating meat than by eating it. He was wrong. God has not forbidden Christians to eat any food (1Ti 4:3,4).

Rom 14:3

THE MAN WHO EATS EVERYTHING MUST NOT LOOK DOWN ON HIM WHO DOES NOT, AND THE MAN WHO DOES NOT EAT EVERYTHING MUST NOT CONDEMN THE MAN WHO DOES, FOR GOD HAS ACCEPTED HIM: The person who eats should not view himself as superior even though he is right or look down on his extremely sensitive brother with a condescending attitude. The weaker brother should not judge the more liberal believer as unacceptable to God either, because God HAS accepted him!

Rom 14:4

WHO ARE YOU TO JUDGE SOMEONE ELSE’S SERVANT? TO HIS OWN MASTER HE STANDS OR FALLS. AND HE WILL STAND, FOR THE LORD IS ABLE TO MAKE HIM STAND: The weaker brother needs to remember to whom the stronger brother is responsible and leave his judgment to God. Paul assured the weaker brother that the stronger brother would stand approved by God because God approves his liberty. God’s grace provides both the possibility and the power for standing. The first part of this verse sounds very much like Rom 2:1,3, where Paul rebuked the self-satisfied Jew.

Rom 14:5

ONE MAN CONSIDERS ONE DAY MORE SACRED THAN ANOTHER; ANOTHER MAN CONSIDERS EVERY DAY ALIKE. EACH ONE SHOULD BE FULLY CONVINCED IN HIS OWN MIND: In this case the weaker brother does something and the stronger does not. This is the opposite of the situation that Paul pictured in the previous illustration. Again the reason the weaker brother observes the day is immaterial. The point is that he observes the day. When Paul wrote, Sabbath and Jewish feast day observances were matters of disagreement among Christians. The Jewish believers tended to observe these and the Gentile believers did not.

The observance of special days such as the Sabbath is a matter of indifference, personal preference. None may impose the keeping of days on another as a requisite to salvation: Gal 4:10,11; 5:1-4; Col 2:13-17.

Rom 14:6

In essential things, unity (Phi 1:27). In doubtful things, liberty (Rom 14:6). In all things, love (1Co 13:1,5).

HE GIVES THANKS TO GOD… AND GIVES THANKS TO GOD: “In other words, whatever stance is taken on the particular matter of eating meat sacrificed to idols, as long as it is done in faith, is acceptable to God. This is true for many matters of walk where the word of God gives us no direct command. If you can thank God for it, it indicates that you have the faith to do it. If you cannot thank God for it, it is sinful to proceed — for the Bible teaches, ‘those who have doubts are condemned if they eat, because they do not act from faith; for whatever does not proceed from faith is sin’ (Rom 14:23)” (KT).

Rom 14:7

Vv 7,8: Paul meant that no believer should live to please himself alone but should live to please the Lord. The context makes this clear (vv 6,8). The believer’s desire to please the Lord will continue beyond the grave, so Paul could also say that we do not die for ourselves. Our whole existence, both now and in the age to come, should express our commitment to please the Lord (Rom 8:38,39; cp Phi 1:20; 2Co 5:9).

Rom 14:8

In context, “live” = to enjoy, or indulge oneself (ie to eat everything: v 2; to live to oneself: v 7), and “die” = to deny oneself (to eat only vegetables: v 2; to die to oneself: v 7).

WHETHER WE… DIE, WE BELONG TO THE LORD: In the sense of Luk 20:38.

Rom 14:9

FOR THIS REASON, CHRIST DIED AND RETURNED TO LIFE SO THAT HE MIGHT BE THE LORD OF BOTH THE DEAD AND THE LIVING: Jesus Christ also lived, died, and lives again. Consequently he is Lord of both those who have died and those who are still alive. Paul’s point was that he is the Judge, and we are not.

AND RETURNED TO LIFE: Christ was raised from the dead because he was sinless (Acts 2:24); this was for our justification (Rom 4:25). Thus he obtained preeminence (Col 1:15,18) as the “Lord” (Acts 2:36), who has power over the living and the dead (1Th 5:10).

Rom 14:10

YOU, THEN, WHY DO YOU JUDGE YOUR BROTHER? OR WHY DO YOU LOOK DOWN ON YOUR BROTHER?: Both the critical weaker brother and the scorning stronger brother are guilty of the same offense, namely judging prematurely and unwarrantedly.

LOOK DOWN ON: “Despise” (Diag, Roth).

FOR WE WILL ALL STAND BEFORE GOD’S JUDGMENT SEAT: “There is no need for us to associate despondency and despair with the thought of appearing before the Judgment Seat of Christ. True, our sins and our failings are constant reminders of the possibility of our failure there. But Paul’s message to us is not intended to paralyze us with fear or to crush us under hopeless remorse; it is rather intended to influence our lives for good, to spur us to greater activity in Christ’s service; to mould our characters nearer to the pattern he has left us, that we may win success when Christ appears. Paul desires us to remember the one certainty in our lives, and remembering it, to order our lives accordingly. There is no occasion for despondency and alarm, provided we are in earnest about our standing in the day of Christ. It is true that we fail and we sin; but God ‘knows our frame, and remembers that we are dust’, and has made merciful provision for our weakness. There is no limit to God’s forgiveness if it is sought in accordance with His conditions… Are we such egotists as to imagine that our cases are so unique as to be beyond the saving grace of God?” (FWT 22,23).

GOD’S JUDGMENT SEAT: So in RSV, but AV has “of Christ”. This then is another reference to the judgment seat (Gr “bema”) of Christ (2Co 5:10; cf 1Co 3:12-15).

Rom 14:11

AS SURELY AS I LIVE… EVERY KNEE WILL BOW BEFORE ME; EVERY TONGUE WILL CONFESS TO GOD: This quotation is a combination of Isa 49:18 and Isa 45:23. In Phi 2:10,11 the same passages from Isaiah are used: it is because the Son of God has humbled himself, even unto death, that the Father will exalt him to receive all power and authority.

Thus, at his coming and the judgment, all responsible will acknowledge his lordship: Luk 14;14; 1Th 4:13-17; 1Co 4:5; 2Ti 4:8; Rev 22:12; Isa 26:19; Dan 12:2.

Rom 14:12

SO THEN, EACH OF US WILL GIVE AN ACCOUNT OF HIMSELF TO GOD: In this summary statement Paul identified the personal responsibility of every believer to give account of himself or herself to God, through Christ. We will not have to answer for our fellow believers or anyone else, but we will have to account for our own deeds: “Nothing in all creation is hidden from God’s sight Everything is uncovered and laid bare before the eyes of him to whom we must give account” (Heb 4:13).

Rom 14:13

Vv 13-23: Brethren must avoid offending one another: The strong brother is warned that his example may have a disastrous effect on the one who is weak, by leading him to do something that might damage his weak conscience.

LET US STOP PASSING JUDGMENT ON ONE ANOTHER: “Do not judge. Rather, try to understand, and make an effort to help. Most people need your patience more than your criticism. Leave the judging to God, unless absolutely necessary in faithfulness to the Truth. He has guaranteed He will take care of all the judging that is necessary, at the proper time. If someone annoys or offends us, the trouble is most likely in our own pride and vanity or small-mindedness or touchiness. Thin skin is a miserable disease. If we were large-minded enough, or less self-centered, we would feel sympathy and compassion, rather than offense. The command not to judge is a broad scriptural principle. It is not, however, to be wrongly used to undermine the specific (and equally important) command to keep Faith and Fellowship sound. When we face a required decision, then we must judge and act — very carefully and prayerfully: very gently if it means censure of others: very sorrowfully if it means separation — but always firmly and faithfully. There is a time when it is a sin, and dereliction of duty, not to ‘judge righteous judgment’. But let us cure ourselves of judging and criticizing as a habit and a hobby. This is purely of the flesh” (GVG).

INSTEAD, MAKE UP YOUR MIND…: By a neat use of language, Paul employs the same verb “judge” (Gr “krino”) in a somewhat different sense (“make up your mind”). He is calling for a determination to adopt a course of action that will not hurt another brother, a decision once for all to avoid whatever might impede his progress in the faith or cause him to fall. In other word, Paul says, ‘Do NOT judge your brother, but DO judge yourself, and your motives, and your actions!’

STUMBLING BLOCK: The Gr “proskomma” is literally something against which one may strike his foot, causing him to stumble or even fall. Sw 1Co 8:9.

OBSTACLE: The Gr “skandalon” presents a different picture, that of a trap designed to ensnare a victim. It is used of something that constitutes a temptation to sin. Sw 1Co 8:13. Jesus applied this word to Peter when that disciple sought to deter him from going to the cross (Mat 16:23). Here it could be taken as a stern warning against deliberately enticing a brother to do what for him would be sinful (cp v 23).

Rom 14:14

NO FOOD IS UNCLEAN IN ITSELF: Elsewhere Paul affirms in a similar context that everything God created is good (1Ti 4:4), an observation that rests on the record of creation (Gen 1:31). In this passage Paul seems to be referring to the words of Jesus in Mark 7:15-23, where the Master declares that one is not rendered unclean by what goes into him but rather by what comes out of him, from his inner life. Mark adds the comment that in this pronouncement Jesus declared all foods “clean.”

BUT IF ANYONE REGARDS SOMETHING AS UNCLEAN, FOR HIM IT IS UNCLEAN: But not everyone understands this issue, and if one is convinced in his heart that some foods are unclean (eg, in terms of the Mosaic food laws), for him such foods remain unclean. Until or unless he is convinced otherwise, it would violate his conscience to partake of them. Even the apostle Peter, who had been with Jesus and had heard his teaching, did not understand this point until some time after Pentecost (Acts 10:9-15). Even today there are many Christians — Seventh Day Adventists, for example — who believe that they are required to observe the dietary restrictions of the Law of Moses.

Rom 14:15

IF YOUR BROTHER IS DISTRESSED BECAUSE OF WHAT YOU EAT, YOU ARE NO LONGER ACTING IN LOVE: Even if the strong brother does not try to convince the weak to change his habits, his own practice, since it is known, can be a stumbling block to the other, causing distress. This distress may be viewed as reaction to the callous indifference of the strong brother.

DO NOT BY YOUR EATING DESTROY YOUR BROTHER: “Destroy” here is a far greater calamity than the “distress” of the earlier phrase. How might the weaker brother be “destroyed”? Perhaps by following the example of the stronger brother, despite his own weak conscience. Thereby he may find himself doing what he still believes to be wrong, and he will have started down a slippery slope — being led now to do yet other things which he regards as wrong, because it just doesn’t matter!

An analogous situation might be the “strong brother” who sees no harm, and himself is not harmed, by occasionally indulging in strong drink. But the “weaker brother”, who is a recovering alcoholic, is perhaps encouraged to do the same — to his own destruction.

Thus, a selfish insistence on liberty by the stronger one may tear down and destroy the weaker one. But love, when it is exercised, will invariably build up (1Co 8:1).

FOR WHOM CHRIST DIED: Christ laid down his life for the weak as well as the strong, but — perhaps more to the point here — he also subjugated his own WILL (“Not my will, but yours be done!”) on behalf of others. If even the Lord Jesus Christ did not “please himself”, then surely neither should we (Rom 15:3)!

Rom 14:16

DO NOT ALLOW WHAT YOU CONSIDER GOOD TO BE SPOKEN OF AS EVIL: The good thing refers to the liberty to eat meat or to do anything which is not specifically forbidden. But people could legitimately speak of it as evil if it resulted in the fall of a brother.

Rom 14:17

THE KINGDOM OF GOD IS NOT A MATTER OF EATING AND DRINKING: With keen spiritual insight, Paul lifts the entire discussion to a higher level than mere eating and drinking. His readers, all of them, are the loyal subjects of Christ’s coming kingdom. In that sphere the real concerns are not externals such as diet but the spiritual realities motivating life and shaping conduct. Surely the strong will agree that if their insistence on Christian liberty endangers the spiritual development of the ecclesia as a whole, or of individual believers, then they should be willing to forgo that liberty.

BUT OF RIGHTEOUSNESS: In this context “righteousness” (“dikaiosune”) is not justification or the imputation of righteousness through faith in the grace of God, as discussed in depth earlier in the letter, but rather the right conduct to which the believer is called in obedience to the will of God (cf Rom 6:13,16,18).

PEACE AND JOY IN THE HOLY SPIRIT: Peace (which includes reconciliation with God: Rom 5:1) and joy [all through Philippians!] are fruits of the Spirit, and manifestations of the love which is taught by God (Gal 5:22,23; cp Rom 12:9,10).

However, it must not be lost sight of that the kingdom of God IS (or rather, WILL BE) a tangible, physical, material force in the earth, which will break in pieces and consume all other kingdoms (eg, Dan 2:44).

Rom 14:18

ANYONE WHO SERVES CHRIST IN THIS WAY IS PLEASING TO GOD AND APPROVED BY MEN: Acceptance with God involves the stressing of these great principles of Christian life, rather than whether or not we engage in some permissible practice. This emphasis also wins the approval of other people since they realize what is more important, and who see these Christian principles in operation and experience its benefits.

Rom 14:19

Peace and edification are always desirable. Bitterness, strife, and division are never desirable.

PEACE: “Blessed are the peacemakers, for they will be called sons of God” (Mat 5:9).

EDIFICATION: It will be recalled that “edification” (Gr “oikodome”, to build up, as of an edifice: cp Eph 2:21; Heb 3:6; 1Pe 2:4-10) was Paul’s key word in dealing with the problems created by the manifestation of Holy Spirit gifts in Corinth (1Co 14:5,12,26). Mutual edification implies that the strong, despite their tendency to look down on the weak, may actually learn something from them. It may be that they will come to appreciate loyalty to a tender conscience and begin to search their own hearts to discover that they have cared more about maintaining their position than about loving the weaker brethren. Through the fresh manifestation of love by the strong the weak will be lifted in spirit and renewed in faith and life.

“The ecclesia was intended to be a shelter — a respite — from the chaos that is the world. The ecclesia is ordered by God’s word. Principles guide the conduct of the members to create order and peace. How destructive it is when this peace is violated such that those who seek shelter from the world find this sanctuary defiled. We can imagine finding ourselves in a violent storm. The lightning strikes all around us. The wind tosses us to and fro. The rain hits with such force as to sting. Yet, we see in the distance a refuge — a safe harbor from the storm. We fight the elements with all our being to reach this shelter, only to find a hollowed out shell of what was once a building fitly framed together. The once solid building now provides no shelter, no comfort and no peace for the weary traveler. Such is the pity of a disharmonious ecclesia to the weary traveler along life’s road.

“In ecclesial battles, history has shown that the protagonists are seldom the casualties. More times than not, those slaughtered are the babes in Christ. The Bible mentions several times the horrendous ancient practice of killing infants by smashing their young heads against a wall. We can see, in our mind’s eye, this sickening practice. A soldier takes an infant by the feet. Despite the pleading of the watching mother, he swings the child with all his force until the child’s head smashes into the nearby wall. Anyone with a shred of sanity left is sickened by the thought of such a display. Yet, how many times have brethren, enraged by some perceived slight or misspoken word, lashed out at another — destroying the peace and, in so doing, spiritually speaking, destroying a babe in the family of Christ? In modern military parlance, we speak of the deaths of innocents and non-combatants as ‘collateral damage.’ The world was horrified when Timothy McVey described those young children in the day care facility in Oklahoma City — murdered by his bomb — as ‘collateral damage’.

“We too can dismiss ecclesial casualties as collateral damage when in fact we should remember the words of Jesus: ‘It were better for him that a millstone were hanged about his neck, and he were cast into the sea, than that he should offend one of these little ones.’

“Too often we paint ecclesial strife as a necessary evil to maintain purity of doctrine or walk. Sometimes it is. Sometimes it is not. It is amazing how often, in an attempt to bring supposed order to an ecclesia, divisive and inappropriate actions are taken. We all too often forget that ‘hatred, discord, jealousy, fits of rage, selfish ambition, dissensions, factions and envy’ are all works of the flesh of which the Bible clearly states: ‘I tell you before, as I have also told you in time past, that they which do such things shall not inherit the kingdom of God.’ Our focus verse taken from Rom 14 is not about critical doctrine or walk. It is about nonessential doctrine — the eating of meat sacrificed to idols.

“There are times when decisive action needs to be taken to maintain order in an ecclesia. When the ecclesias in Crete were falling apart from the destructive doctrine of the Judaizers, Paul sent Titus to ‘set in order the things that are wanting, and ordain elders in every city.’ The decisive actions of Titus — coupled with his training of spiritually mature brethren to do the same (which Paul takes great pains to define for him in Titus 1:6-9) –were intended to fix these problems and bring peace. The whole letter of Paul to Titus is concerned with how to bring peace to a contentious ecclesia and is well worth our time in study. ‘Finally, brethren, whatsoever things are true, whatsoever things are honest, whatsoever things are just, whatsoever things are pure, whatsoever things are lovely, whatsoever things are of good report; if there be any virtue, and if there be any praise, think on these things. Those things, which ye have both learned, and received, and heard, and seen in me, do: and the God of peace shall be with you’ (Phi 4:8,9)” (KT).

Rom 14:20

DO NOT DESTROY THE WORK OF GOD FOR THE SAKE OF FOOD: The individual brother, weak though he be, is the creative work of God. We must get our priorities straight: individual preference, even if it is legitimate and permissible, should not take precedence over the needs of the weaker members of the body.

Rom 14:21

IT IS BETTER NOT TO EAT MEAT OR DRINK WINE OR TO DO ANYTHING ELSE THAT WILL CAUSE YOUR BROTHER TO FALL: The “better” (literally, noble or praiseworthy) course is to do without meat under the circumstances and to refrain from drinking wine, if partaking would be a stumbling block to anyone. Paul extends the principle to include ANYTHING that might have this effect. For the first time in the discussion wine is mentioned, suggesting that a measure of asceticism may be in view here. (The apostle may have anticipated this item by referring to drinking in v 17.) In view of his strong stand taken in connection with a similar question involving the Corinthians (1Co 8:13), his counsel here is not something new: “Therefore, if what I eat causes my brother to fall into sin, I will never eat meat again, so that I will not cause him to fall.” Paul is simply commending to others what has for some time been the rule for himself.

Rom 14:22

WHATEVER YOU BELIEVE ABOUT THESE THINGS KEEP BETWEEN YOURSELF AND GOD: The strong believer can be happy in his private enjoyment of permissible practices because he knows that he is neither violating the will of God nor the conscience of a weak brother.

Rom 14:23

BUT THE MAN WHO HAS DOUBTS IS CONDEMNED IF HE EATS, BECAUSE HIS EATING IS NOT FROM FAITH: This verse, in contrast to v 22, seems addressed particularly to the weak. The weak brother who eats something that he believes he should not eat stands condemned by his own conscience and by God (cf Gal 2:11). His action is contrary to what he believes is right.

ANYTHING THAT DOES NOT COME FROM FAITH IS SIN: “Faith” here as in vv 1,22 does not refer to the teachings of THE faith, but to what a person believes to be the will of God for himself personally. If a person does what he believes to be wrong, even though it is not wrong in itself, it becomes sin for him. He has violated what he believes to be God’s will, and his conscience is thereby weakened. His action has become, for him at least, an act of rebellion against God — making the next act of rebellion that much easier to take.

Romans 11

Rom 11:1

REJECT: Gr “apotheo”: to thrust away, to repudiate.

BY NO MEANS: Or “may it not be”, as in Rom 6:1; 9:14.

I AM A DESCENDANT OF ABRAHAM: Paul’s personal standing in Christ was in itself a witness that all Israel were not cast off.

FROM THE TRIBE OF BENJAMIN: Phi 3:5.

Rom 11:2

GOD DID NOT REJECT HIS PEOPLE, WHOM HE FOREKNEW: This echoes Psa 94:14; in that psa the psalmist was lamenting the oppression of the defenseless people of God by wicked Israelites (vv 1-5), who proudly dealt with the fellow-Jews without fear of the vengeance of God (vv 7-9). Yet would not God mete out equal judgment upon the wicked in Israel (v 10)? Of course He would, but in doing so He would not overlook the faithful remnant (vv 12-15).

WHOM HE FOREKNEW: Picking up the words of Rom 8:29,30.

ELIJAH — HOW HE APPEALED TO GOD AGAINST ISRAEL: “Appealed” is “entunchano”: to make intercession or mediate. But notice that this appeal was AGAINST, not for, Israel!

Rom 11:3

Following the lead of wicked Queen Jezebel, the nation had by and large adopted the worship of Baal, and many were persecuting the righteous, and seeking the life of Elijah. Now despondent, Elijah saw himself as the only righteous one left in Israel (1Ki 19:10). It was, of course, a gross exaggeration, born out of frustration and a too high appraisal of the prophet’s own position. To start with, there was the courageous Obadiah, who risked his own life to save 100 of the prophets of Yahweh (1Ki 18:4,12,13).

It is just possible that Paul, likewise persecuted by his own countrymen, felt a special kinship with Elijah, and this may help to account for his mention of himself in v 1.

Rom 11:4

And so Elijah was instructed about coming judgment by Hazael of Syria and Jehu (1Ki 19:17), but that a remnant would be spared by God, and through them the nation would survive. If in such a terribly dark hour as this, such a goodly company of the faithful existed, this is sufficient evidence that God does not permit His own at any time to approach the vanishing point. The sparing of the remnant is inseparably related to the choice of the remnant.

ANSWER: In the Greek, God’s “answer” is literally His “oracle” (“chrematismos”), indicating both its revelatory character and its intrinsic importance (it was given to Elijah at Horeb, the mount of God, the place where God had appeared to Moses to affirm His preservation of Israel in her affliction and His purpose to deliver her from bondage in Egypt (cf Exo 3; 1Ki 19).

Rom 11:5

SO TOO, AT THE PRESENT TIME THERE IS A REMNANT: And so, once again, there were many of Israel who had responded to the gospel of Christ Jesus despite the more general rejection: 3,000 baptized at Pentecost (Acts 2:41); and 5,000 in total shortly thereafter (Acts 4:4); and a great number of priests (Acts 6:7). And wherever the gospel was preached, a further remnant of Israel responded (eg, Acts 14:1; 17:10-12; 18:8).

CHOSEN BY GRACE: But the matter of numbers is not crucial. What is more important is the reminder that irrespective of its size, it is “chosen by grace”. This means that the character of the remnant is also not important, as though the choosing depended on the quality of its constituency. “The remnant has its origin, not in the quality of those saved, but in the saving action of God” (EBC).

Rom 11:6

AND IF BY GRACE, THEN IT IS NO LONGER BY WORKS: At first glance, it may appear that the 7,000 in the days of Elijah were saved on the basis of works, and not grace, because they were the ones who had not bowed to Baal. But this view is too narrow: surely the grace of God was extended to save them because, in faith, they refused to serve Baal. And thus their faith was made perfect in their works.

Rom 11:7

WHAT ISRAEL SOUGHT SO EARNESTLY IT DID NOT OBTAIN, BUT THE ELECT DID: Cp Rom 9:31; 10:3.

THE OTHERS WERE HARDENED: Gr “poroo”, to harden, or form a callus. Not strictly “blinded”, as in KJV. A clear reference to Isa 6:9,10 (cited Mar 8:17; John 12:40): “Be ever hearing, but never understanding; be ever seeing, but never perceiving. Make the heart of this people calloused; make their ears dull and close their eyes. Otherwise they might see with their eyes, hear with their ears, understand with their hearts, and turn and be healed.”

The rest of Israel had hardened their hearts, as had the Egyptian Pharaoh (Rom 9:17,18)!

Rom 11:8

In the first quotation, he weaves together two passages (Deu 29:4 and Isa 29:10) so as to provide illustration from two periods. In Deuteronomy, it is the testimony of the eyes that is stressed; the people have seen the wonders of the Exodus time and the miracles of the nation’s preservation in the wilderness, but from these experiences they did not derive a heart of loving trust in God. In Isaiah, the background is the faithful testimony of the prophets. Yet the people shut their ears to the voice of God through these spokesmen.

STUPOR: Gr “katanuxis”, stinging, pricking: from Isa 29:10 LXX. The idea is of numbness associated with various stings.

Rom 11:9

Vv 9-10: David’s word of imprecation follows in vv 9,10, taken from Psa 69:22,23. He suffers reproach and torment from his enemies, who are also viewed as the enemies of the Lord. Apparently their feasts are times for special outbreaks of blasphemy. David prays that the Lord will make their table their snare so as to entrap them. Then comes the prayer for the darkening of the eyes that have looked with complacency and even glee at the sufferings of the one whom God has permitted to be smitten. John 15:25 and other NT passages indicate that Psa 69 was treated as pertaining to Christ (cp Isa 69:21 and John 19:29), so that its use here makes the application to Paul’s own day the more obvious and meaningful.

“The table in the first application is put for the feast spread thereon, and indicates the prosperity and privilege which proved their undoing; in false security they were ensnared. But what essentially was Israel’s table? through Malachi, God says to Israel, ‘Ye offer polluted bread upon mine altar; and ye say, wherein have we polluted thee? In that ye say, The table of the Lord is contemptible. And if ye offer the blind for sacrifice, is it not evil? and if ye offer the lame and sick, is it not evil?’ (Mal 1:7,8). Israel had a law with a sacrificial system. This was their privilege and it should have been their guide. Instead of allowing it to guide them, they prided themselves upon their exclusiveness as a nation, and pursued ceremonial cleanness to the neglect of the weightier matters of the law. Their mind became focused on the details of the ritual and lost sight of its meaning. Their table became a snare. Requital came in a blind trust in law, and they were given up to their own desires. Their understanding was darkened, and the law became a burden they could not bear; with bowed backs and darkened eyes they staggered and fell. They crucified ‘the Lamb of God’, and God ‘cursed their blessings’ (Mal 2:2)” (CRom).

Rom 11:10

AND THEIR BACKS BE BENT FOREVER: The bending of the back, as Paul would be likely to apply it, suggests bondage to the great burden of the law (cf Acts 15:10).

Rom 11:11

DID THEY STUMBLE SO AS TO FALL BEYOND RECOVERY?: What is the result of this hardening? Is it a hopeless situation? Now that the people have eyes that do not see, are they doomed to stumble so as to fall and rise no more? “Not at all.” The stumbling is admitted; an irreparable fall is not. This is a broad hint of the future salvation of Israel that Paul goes on to affirm. Those who stumbled are “the others” of v 7, not included in the believing remnant. The language recalls the indirect reference to the Messiah in Rom 9:32,33 as the stumbling stone.

BECAUSE OF THEIR TRANSGRESSION, SALVATION HAS COME TO THE GENTILES: The lapse of Israel is not necessarily permanent, and furthermore it has served the purpose of providing Gentiles a greater opportunity to take hold of God’s salvation. “We had to speak the word of God to you first. Since you reject it and do not consider yourselves worthy of eternal life, we now turn to the Gentiles” (Acts 13:46).

TO MAKE ISRAEL ENVIOUS: And a reason for God’s offering salvation to the “no-people” was to provoke His own people Israel to jealousy and action (Acts 13:42-47). Jealousy here could take two different forms: sheer envy and anger and persecution, true. But also that envy, though it may involve bitterness, will ultimately contribute to some examining further the message being preached, and this could lead to drawing some of the nation to her Messiah. . So, even in the Gentiles being saved, Israel’s good was not forgotten. Mercy and favor to Gentiles might stir some of Israel to seek the blessings they had forsaken.

Rom 11:12

THEIR TRANSGRESSION MEANS RICHES FOR THE WORLD: The “world” = the nations.

THEIR LOSS MEANS RICHES FOR THE GENTILES: This second phrase is parallel to the first.

LOSS: The Greek term “hettema” seems to involve the idea of defeat, both here and in 1Co 6:7. It is basically a military figure. An army loses the battle because of heavy casualties.

HOW MUCH GREATER RICHES WILL THEIR FULLNESS BRING: The word “fullness” (Gr “pleroma”) refers to the conversion, meaning the full nation in contrast to the remnant. It will mark an end to the state of hardening that now characterizes the nation.

Rom 11:13

Vv 13,14: In large measure, the work of preaching to the Gentiles lay upon Paul’s shoulders (Acts 9:15,16; Gal 2:7-9). So, while Paul stood amazed at the greatness of his responsibilities to the Gentiles, he yet could not forget his own countrymen. Therefore, even if he should “magnify” his work as apostle to the Gentiles, it was in part for the purpose of provoking his own people Israel to be saved as well (v 14).

Rom 11:15

WHAT WILL THEIR ACCEPTANCE BE BUT LIFE FROM THE DEAD?: Paul aligns the receiving of Israel with the time of the resurrection of the saints. The basis of this is that both events take place at the coming of the Messiah, for the Messiah is not only Israel’s king but the “Resurrection and the Life”. The theme of new life is common to both events: the rebirth of the nation of Israel (in a spiritual as well as a national sense), and the raising of the dead — “the restitution of ALL things” (Acts 3:21).

Rom 11:16

IF THE PART OF THE DOUGH OFFERED AS FIRSTFRUITS IS HOLY, THEN THE WHOLE BATCH IS HOLY: The first sheaf harvested in the field was called the “firstfruits” and was offered to Yahweh (the “wave” offering). It symbolized the whole harvest which was thus dedicated to Yahweh. Later, when the harvest was in the barn and the grain had been crushed into flour and mixed to dough, the results of the harvest were enjoyed as Israel ate their loaves of bread. But the first loaf was not eaten; it was lifted up in offering to Yahweh (a “heave” offering). Therefore both the firstfruits and the loaf made from the grain were “holy” (Num 15:18-21). It would be ludicrous to maintain that the harvest itself was “holy”, while the bread made from it was not!

In Paul’s analogy, the “firstfruits” of the harvest were Abraham and the patriarchs; if they were sanctified by God, then their descendants might be also. Indeed, there was a direct connection between the two: “Because he loved your forefathers and chose their descendants after them, he brought you out of Egypt by his Presence and his great strength” (Deu 4:37). “Yet the LORD set his affection on your forefathers and loved them, and he chose you, their descendants, above all the nations, as it is today” (Deu 10:15). This is basic to the whole of Paul’s argument here (v 28).

IF THE ROOT IS HOLY, SO ARE THE BRANCHES: Paul has in mind the root and branches of the olive tree (v 17) — a symbol of the nation of Israel (Jer 11:16; Hos 14:6). In any plant, the root and branches are essentially one — and good trees produce good fruit (cp Mat 7:17-20; Jam 3:12; John 15:1-8).

Rom 11:17

“Partakers” / “sharers”: of root and fatness of olive tree (Rom 11:17), of spiritual things (Rom 15:27), of one bread (1Co 10:17), of sufferings and consolation (2Co 1:7), of God’s promise in Christ (Eph 3:6), of inheritance of saints (Col 1:12), of heavenly calling (Heb 3:1), of Christ (Heb 3:14), of the benefit (1Ti 6:2), of the glory (1Pe 5:1), and of the divine nature (2Pe 1:4).

SOME OF THE BRANCHES: This appears to be a substantial understatement — as a large majority of Israel had rejected the gospel, leaving only a “remnant” which accepted (v 5).

HAVE BEEN BROKEN OFF: ” When its twigs are dry, they are broken off and women come and make fires with them. For this is a people without understanding” (Isa 27:11). Later Paul cites Isa 27:9 in Rom 11:27 and Isa 27:11 in Rom 11:30-32.

AND YOU, THOUGH A WILD OLIVER SHOOT, HAVE BEEN GRAFTED IN: A place was made for Gentiles among the remaining Jewish branches. The Gentiles were like boughs taken from a wild, uncultivated olive tree and carefully grafted into the trunk of the good olive tree. This is not the normal practice in tree culture; rather, the tough wild plant is used for the stock and onto that is grafted a more specialized branch which will bear more and better fruit. Still, this figure suits the facts of the case, as Paul sees it.

Gentiles have been aliens from the commonwealth of Israel (Eph 2:11-22; cp Eph 3:16; John 4:22), but now they are attached to the hope of the promise made of God to the fathers (Acts 26:6).

Rom 11:18

DO NOT BOAST OVER THOSE BRANCHES. IF YOU DO, CONSIDER THIS: YOU DO NOT SUPPORT THE ROOT, BUT THE ROOT SUPPORTS YOU: The branches can never boast against the other fallen branches (vv 17,19), because they are being sustained by the “root” — not the other way around!

Rom 11:19

Is this an argument Paul has actually heard, or what he supposes some Gentile believers might think to themselves?

Rom 11:20

DO NOT BE ARROGANT: Christendom has in fact lorded it over the Jews for long century since Paul wrote these words!

Rom 11:21

Let Gentile Christians beware. Their predominance in the Christian community may not last! “These things happened to them as examples and were written down as warnings for us, on whom the fulfillment of the ages has come. So, if you think you are standing firm, be careful that you don’t fall!” (1Co 10:11,12).

Rom 11:22

THE KINDNESS: On the one hand there has been the issuance of undeserved kindness (Gr “chrestotes”, goodness, kindness: eg Tit 3:4; Eph 2:7) sufficient to greatly humble the recipient before the God of grace.

AND STERNNESS OF GOD: On the other hand, God’s stern judgments had fallen and would fall again upon Israel, and on this count too Gentile believers might stand in awe of God!

Rom 11:23

From warning the Gentile believers, Paul now turns to encouraging the Jews again.

Rom 11:24

HOW MUCH MORE READILY WILL THESE, THE NATURAL BRANCHES, BE GRAFTED INTO THEIR OWN OLIVE TREE!: Some of the most wonderful passages of the OT record the passion of Israel’s repentance and the very strength of these should temper any present boasting by Gentiles (Zec 12:10-14; Jer 31:1-3,9,12-14; Hos 2:14-23).

Grafting dead branches back into the living tree stock would be — naturally speaking — not only “contrary to nature”, but absolutely impossible. Of course, this is no bar at all to Paul’s suggesting that God could — and would — do such a thing, for, remember, this is the God “who gives life to the dead and calls things that are not as though they were” (Rom 4:17).

Rom 11:25

I DO NOT WANT YOU TO BE IGNORANT: A typical expression of Paul when he wishes to draw attention to a truth of special importance (Rom 1:13; 1Co 10:1; 2Co 1:8; 1Th 4:13).

THIS MYSTERY: The term “musterion” as used in the NT does not mean “enigma”, but the activity of God in the history of salvation, made known to His people by revelation.

UNTIL THE FULL NUMBER OF THE GENTILES HAS COME IN: Gr “pleroma”, signifying the full number of Gentiles to be called before the whole number of Israel be restored. “Jerusalem will be trampled on by the Gentiles UNTIL the times of the Gentiles are fulfilled” (Luk 21:24). This would be equivalent to “the fullness of Christ” (Eph 4:13).

Rom 11:26

AND SO ALL ISRAEL WILL BE SAVED: Of course, this does not mean that every living Jew will be saved when Christ comes, since Ezekiel specifically says that God will purge out the rebels in that day (Eze 20:38). But other prophets do testify that, apart from the rebels, “they shall ALL know Me!” (Jer 31:34; Eze 39:28,29).

THE DELIVERER WILL COME FROM ZION; HE WILL TURN GODLESSNESS AWAY FROM JACOB: Cit Isa 59:20,21, LXX. The same passage speaks of the vengeance which God brings upon His enemies (vv 17-19) — so that the final salvation of Israel is plainly linked to the Last Days, and the end of Gentile times! “For the LORD has a day of vengeance, a year of retribution, to uphold Zion’s cause” (Isa 34:8).

Rom 11:27

WHEN I TAKE AWAY THEIR SINS: Although this thought is implied in Isa 59:20,21, these words are actually from Isa 27:9. The context of Isa 27 has other points of contact with Rom 11, eg: “In days to come Jacob will take root, Israel will bud and blossom and fill all the world with fruit” (Isa 27:6).

Rom 11:28

ENEMIES: Not being reconciled to God through His son (see Rom 5:10; Col 1:21).

AS FAR AS ELECTION IS CONCERNED, THEY ARE LOVED ON ACCOUNT OF THE PATRIARCHS: Taken from Deu 10:12-15; 9:4-6; 7:7,8; 4:37. The great significance of these quotations to the Israel of Paul’s day was that the condition of God’s love for them, despite all that they had done (Lev 26:44; Eze 20:44), was unchanging.

Rom 11:29

IRREVOCABLE: Israel’s place in the plan of God cannot be changed: even though every individual must make his or her own choice, it is assured that the nation will be saved!

Rom 11:30

AT ONE TIME DISOBEDIENT: Referring to the long period of time stretching from the days of Noah’s flood to the first century, during which the Gentiles in their ignorance walked according to their own ways (Acts 14:16; 17:30).

HAVE NOW RECEIVED MERCY AS A RESULT OF THEIR DISOBEDIENCE: The same point as in Rom 11:11,12.

Rom 11:31

RECEIVE MERCY: A favorite expression of the apostle Paul, occurring in Rom 11:30,31; 1Co 7:25; 2Co 4:1; 1Ti 1:13,16. Also used by Christ in Mat 5:7, and by Peter in 1Pe 2:10.

This phrase has roots in Hosea: Hos 1:10; 2:1,23.

Rom 11:32

An amazingly simple description of God’s saving work during 4,000 years of history. The righteousness of God is magnified and His will is found supreme: ” It does not, therefore, depend on man’s desire or effort, but on God’s mercy” (Rom 9:16). “But the Scripture declares that the whole world is a prisoner of sin, so that what was promised, being given through faith in Jesus Christ, might be given to those who believe. Before this faith came, we were held prisoners by the law, locked up until faith should be revealed” (Gal 3:22,23).

Rom 11:33

Vv 33-36: “In view of the assurance generated by v 32, it is no wonder that Paul, despite his burden for the Israel of his day, is able to lift his heart in adoring praise to God. We are reminded of Isa 55, where the ungodly and sinful man is urged to return to the Lord and find mercy, for God’s thoughts and ways are not those of men but are infinitely higher and better. Instead of being vindictive, God is gracious. His plans defy the penetration of the human mind and His ways surpass the ability of man to trace them out. The Lord has not been obliged to lean upon another for advice (v 34). He has not had to depend on human assistance that would make Him indebted to men (v.35). He is the source, the means, and the goal of all things (v 36).

“While this exalted and moving ascription of praise has in view God’s plans and operations in the history of salvation affecting the great segments of mankind, Jew and Gentile, the closing verse applies also to the individual life that pleases God. For that life has its source in God, lives by His resources, and returns to Him when its course has been run. To God be the glory!” (EBC).

OH, THE DEPTH OF THE RICHES OF THE WISDOM AND KNOWLEDGE OF GOD!: God’s judgments are a “great deep” (Psa 36:6). His “riches” refer to His abounding grace (Rom 9:23; 10:12). Cp also Eph 3:18,19: “…How wide and long and high and deep is the love of Christ, and to know this love that surpasses knowledge — that you may be filled to the measure of all the fullness of God.”

Rom 11:34

WHO HAS KNOWN THE MIND OF THE LORD? OR WHO HAS BEEN HIS COUNSELOR?: Cit Isa 40:13. Here the prophet is not only considering the greatness of Yahweh, but esp His balance in judgment when He made the earth and the seas and the heavens. Time and space were measured, the earth weighed to be in harmony with the forces of gravity, the mountains and hills balanced with the valleys, the lakes and the seas with the clouds (Isa 40:12-15; Job 37:16). Was man there to discuss these matters with God? Wisdom was His only companion (Pro 8:22-31)!

Rom 11:35

WHO HAS EVER GIVEN TO GOD, THAT GOD SHOULD REPAY HIM?: Cit Job 41:11. God impresses Job with the greatness of His strength and the profundity of His wisdom. Not only is man incapable of offering counsel to God; he is also unable to ever make the Creator his debtor.

Rom 11:36

TO HIM BE GLORY FOREVER. AMEN: ” ‘To whom be glory for ever.’ This should be the single desire of the Christian. All other wishes must be subservient and tributary to this one. The Christian may wish for prosperity in his business, but only so far as it may help him to promote this: ‘To Him be glory for ever.’ He may desire to attain more gifts and more graces, but it should only be that: ‘To Him may be glory for ever.’ You are not acting as you ought to do when you are moved by any other motive than a single eye to your Lord’s glory. As a Christian, you are ‘of God, and through God’; then live ‘to God.’ Let nothing ever set your heart beating so mightily as love to Him. Let this ambition fire your soul; be this the foundation of every enterprise upon which you enter, and this your sustaining motive whenever your zeal would grow chill; make God your only object. Depend upon it, where self begins sorrow begins; but if God be my supreme delight and only object, ‘To me ’tis equal whether love ordain my life or death — appoint me ease or pain.’

“Let your desire for God’s glory be a growing desire. You blessed Him in your youth, do not be content with such praises as you gave Him then. Has God prospered you in business? Give Him more as He has given you more. Has God given you experience? Praise Him by stronger faith than you exercised at first. Does your knowledge grow? Then sing more sweetly. Do you enjoy happier times than you once had? Have you been restored from sickness, and has your sorrow been turned into peace and joy? Then give Him more music; put more coals and more sweet frankincense into the censer of your praise. Practically in your life give Him honor, putting the ‘Amen’ to this doxology to your great and gracious Lord, by your own individual service and increasing holiness” (CHS).

God is the source, the means and the destiny of all things. This is a beautiful summary of God’s work of salvation among men. He formed the earth and made man upon it. Through the angels and by His Spirit He has worked His will in the earth. In the time of His pleasure all the earth shall be full of His glory and “all things under Him, that God may be all in all” (Isa 45:17,18; Num 14:21; 1Co 15:28).

Romans 12

Rom 12:1

Rom 12–16: There is a distinct break in the train of thought at this point. The theological exposition, centering around the problem as to how sinful man can be put into right relationship with God, is over. But there is more to be said, because when man is made right with his Maker, he needs to know what difference this makes in his relations with his fellowmen. He needs to know what is expected of him and how to apply his new resources to all the situations confronting him. This last main section of the letter is designed to meet these needs (cf Eph 4:1). The first part (Rom 1-11) is more information for belief whereas the last part (Rom 12-16) is more exhortation for action. The first part stresses right relations with God and the last part right relations with other people.

Vv 1,2: The charge rises out of humankind’s universal condemnation by God (Rom 3:20), the justification that God has freely provided (Rom 5:1), and the assurance of acceptance that the believing sinner can have (Rom 8:1). Because of all this, it is only reasonable to present our lives to God as living sacrifices (Rom 12:1). In particular the exhortation to present ourselves to God in Rom 6:13-19 is in view.

THEREFORE: Forming a link with what went before, ie all of Rom 1-11.

I URGE YOU: The apostle begins now to “urge” his readers instead of simply instructing them. His choice of this word “urge” (Gr “parakaleo”) is discriminating, seeing that its force lies between commanding and beseeching. It possesses something of the element of authority that is more forcefully expressed by “command”, and has in it something of the element of appeal that attaches to “beseech”.

IN VIEW OF GOD’S MERCY: Mercy is that quality in God that moves Him to deliver man from his state of sin and misery and therefore underlies His saving activity in Christ. Here “mercy” is the leverage for the appeal that follows. Pagans are prone to sacrifice in order to obtain mercy, but the Bible teaches that this is the wrong way round: God’s mercy provides the basis for sacrifice as the fitting response. Or, as Paul makes plain in Eph 2:8-10, we do not do good works so as to be saved, but rather we are saved by grace, and THEN we do good works as our grateful response.

The Gr “eleos” is plural in form, but need not be translated by the plural (as does the KJV here), since this already is the common expression in Greek. If “mercy” (singular) is used, then we should think of the overflowing greatness of God’s mercy; if “mercies” (plural) is used, then we may think of the “sure mercies” (plural) of the many promises embodied in God’s covenants, as in Isa 55:3.

TO OFFER YOUR BODIES: Paul is NOT urging the dedication of the body (the “outer shell”, so to speak) as an entity distinct from the inner man. Rather, he views the body as the vehicle that implements the desires and choices of the redeemed spirit — the man himself. It is essential for making contact with the society in which the believer lives. Through the body we serve.

OFFER: A technical term for presenting a sacrifice or offering to God, as in Luk 2:22. Cp sw Rom 6:13,16,19.

LIVING SACRIFICES: Allusion to the scapegoat, the only living sacrifice under the Law (cp Lev 16:10 with Act 1:3). As Christ bore away our iniquities (Isa 53:11), so we ought to bear the infirmities of the weak (Rom 15:1). See Article, Living sacrifice, a.

LIVING: The term suggests how unusual is the “sacrifice” that believers can now offer, since OT sacrifices were dead.

Being a dead sacrifice is RELATIVELY easy: it means dying once, and that’s it. Even for Jesus, it might be said — with all due reverence — that the death on the cross was the “easy part” — terrible and painful though it was. It was easy enough to do: thousands upon thousands of Jewish men died on crosses, helped along by Roman soldiers.

The difficult part was what Jesus had done, for years and years earlier — living a perfect and blameless life. Of course, that’s what made the last act of his life meaningful to all the rest of us.

So we don’t — or shouldn’t — just offer a dead sacrifice: we don’t just throw ourselves down at the foot of the cross, or the “altar”, and say: “Take me, Lord, and kill me!” Absolute as such a sacrifice would be, it would be relatively easy compared to what we are called to do. We are called to be “living sacrifices”, every day — making mistakes, falling into sin again and again, but standing up, being forgiven, and going forward again… seeking to exemplify, in our lives every day, something of the perfect character of Jesus Christ.

The sacrifice of Abraham and Isaac is a perfect example of that: God doesn’t accept the slaying of Isaac — he gives him back his life. As if to say: “Thanks for the offer; now I know that you want to serve me; but here is how I want you to serve me… by LIVING. Now go and do it.”

But the “go and do likewise” part is… really HARD! It goes on and on, and — inevitably, and many times over — we fail. So we are taught the lesson of our own fallibility, our own weakness, our own childishness, and our pride is shredded, and we know how little we are worth! In this we learn the need for forgiveness of sins, even as we strive to be the “living sacrifice”. And still we must get up and pull ourselves together, and try again, and again, and again — and go on.

And that’s what is meant by a living sacrifice. But as one observant (and probably rueful) fellow once wrote, “The trouble with ‘living’ sacrifices is they keep climbing down off the altar!”

So we pray, “Lord, bring me back to your altar!” And we keep praying that prayer.

HOLY: Cp 1Pe 1:16; 2:5.

THIS IS YOUR SPIRITUAL ACT OF WORSHIP: Instead of “spiritual”, the AV has “reasonable”. The sacrifice we render is intelligent and deliberate, perhaps to be understood in contrast to the sacrifices of the tabernacle and temple, in which the animals had no part in determining what was to be done with them.

Rom 12:2

V 1 deals with making the commitment and v 2 with maintaining it. “The first verse calls for an explicit act; the second commands a resultant lifelong process. These verses are a call for an act of presentation and the resultant duty of transformation” (Const). Both activities are important: the single decision and the ongoing effort. The present tense in the Greek text of v 2 indicates our continuing responsibility in contrast to the aorist tense in v 1 that stresses a decisive act.

DO NOT CONFORM ANY LONGER TO THE PATTERN OF THIS WORLD: Cp 1Pe 1:14. “Don’t let the world squeeze you into its mold” (JBP). “It has a bad look when a courtier is too intimate with his king’s enemies. Even small inconsistencies are dangerous. Little thorns make great blisters, little moths destroy fine garments, and little frivolities and little rogueries will rob religion of a thousand joys. O professor, too little separated from sinners, you know not what you lose by your conformity to the world. It cuts the tendons of your strength, and makes you creep where you ought to run. Then, for your own comfort’s sake, and for the sake of your growth in grace, if you be a Christian, be a Christian, and be a marked and distinct one” (CHS).

“When you blame others, you give up your power to change” (Robert Anthony).

BE TRANSFORMED BY THE RENEWING OF YOUR MIND: The Gr is the basis for the English “metamorphosis”: to be transformed from within, into a drastically different creature. It is used of the Transformation of Jesus in Mat 17:2; Mar 9:2. Also in 2Co 3:18: “And we, who with unveiled faces all reflect the Lord’s glory, are being transformed into his likeness with ever-increasing glory, which comes from the Lord, who is the Spirit.”

“We must be able to feel, when we go to bed each night, that we have that day done our most and best: that all we have done was necessary and useful, and the most important thing to be done at the time, and that we have done it with all our heart, unto the Lord. We must not be satisfied with what we have done, but we must be reasonably satisfied that we have tried our best, and that we have noted, and learned something by, our slips and failures. We must be able to feel we are slowly overcoming, growing, deepening, becoming more naturally spiritual — that is less as duty and effort, more as pleasure and desire. We must be able to see ourselves passing some tangible milestones of progress: a steady transformation of the mind Godwards — less and less interest in passing, worldly, animal things of any kind” (GVG).

THE RENEWING OF YOUR MIND: Through the knowledge of the Word of God, imprinted upon the mind, or heart: see Col 3:10; 2Co 4:16; Rom 8:6,13. This re-programming of the mind does not take place overnight, but is a lifelong process by which our way of thinking is to resemble more and more the way God wants us to think.

TO TEST AND APPROVE: That is, to put to the test (as in a scientific experiment), and thus to judge and discern and discriminate among various modes of behavior… so as to finally arrive at the best way of life.

Rom 12:3

BY THE GRACE GIVEN ME: The grace whereby Paul, once a blasphemer and a murderer, was shown mercy and made an apostle of Jesus Christ (1Ti 1:11-16).

DO NOT THINK OF YOURSELF MORE HIGHLY THAN YOU OUGHT: Paul had had experiences with Christians, who were proud because of their spiritual gifts, in Corinth where he wrote this epistle (cf 1Co 12:14-31; 13:4; 4:12, 20).

“Get your mind off yourself! You are totally unimportant. You can become important — eternally important to God — but it will never be by thinking about yourself. It will only be forgetting yourself, and setting your mind totally on God and on others. Thinking of yourself shrinks your mind smaller and smaller until at last it shrivels and dies. Thinking about God and others expands your mind more and more until at last it bursts into glorious, eternal Life and Beauty. God’s Way is the only way. Beware of the great diabolos-deceiver: your own desires” (GVG).

IN ACCORDANCE WITH THE MEASURE OF FAITH GOD HAS GIVEN YOU: The “measuring standard” by which we should evaluate ourselves is our faith. And when our faith reveals to us that we, along with other believers, are dependent on the saving mercy of God in Christ, then we learn not to think of ourselves too highly — for we have no “works” in which we may boast before God.

Tom Brokaw was wandering through Bloomingdales’ New York store one day, shortly after earning a promotion to the co-host spot on the Today Show. Brokaw’s new position was another peak in a rapidly-rising career in television journalism after plodding faithfully up the ranks, first in Omaha, then for NBC in Los Angeles and Washington. It wouldn’t be lying to say he was feeling pretty good about himself. As he browsed through the store, he noticed a man watching him intently. The man continued to stare, and finally, when the man approached him, Brokaw prepared himself to reap the first fruits of television stardom in New York.

The man pointed at him and asked, “Tom Brokaw, right?”

“Right,” said Brokaw.

“You used to do the morning news on KMTV in Omaha, right?”

“That’s right,” said Brokaw, getting ready for the warm praises destined to follow.

“I knew it the minute I spotted you,” the fellow said. Then he paused and added, “Whatever happened to you?”

Rom 12:4

JUST AS EACH OF US HAS ONE BODY WITH MANY MEMBERS, AND THESE MEMBERS DO NOT ALL HAVE THE SAME FUNCTION: This verse and the next are a repeat of 1Co 12:12-27 in miniature. To offset the danger of individualistic thinking with its resulting danger of pride, Paul refers to the human body. Two truths are set forth in this verse: the unity of the body; the diversity of its members, with corresponding diversity in function.

Rom 12:5

EACH MEMBER BELONGS TO ALL THE OTHERS: Paul adds a third truth to go with the two in the previous verse: the mutuality of the various members. The members of the body cannot work independently. Furthermore, each member profits from what the other members contribute to the whole. Reflection on these truths reduces preoccupation with one’s own gift and makes room for appreciation of other people and the gifts they exercise.

“A man’s reaction to the needs of the body to which he has supposedly given allegiance is often a measure of the true character of the man himself. Self-seeking, opportunism and disregard for the lasting well-being of the corporate fellowship can cause untold unhappiness both to the individual and to the higher cause of the association and community spirit by which his fellows live. This is especially true of our relationship as individuals to the ecclesia and community to which we belong. Our attitude to the body is our attitude to Christ. The ecclesia is his body. If we are superior to it, we lack humility; if we are divisive within it, we deny the atonement by which we were reconciled and made one” (TMD 182).

Rom 12:6

WE HAVE DIFFERENT GIFTS: Paul is not referring to gifts in the natural realm, but to those functions made possible by a specific empowerment of the Holy Spirit granted to certain believers. These gifts do not contradict what God has bestowed in the natural order and, though they may even build on the natural gifts of individuals, they ought not to be confused with the latter.

Variety in the gifts should be understood from the standpoint of the needs of the Christian community, which are many, as well as from the desirability of giving many different believers shares in the work.

ACCORDING TO THE GRACE GIVEN US: With his eye still on the danger of pride, Paul reminds his readers that these new capacities for service are not inherent in those who exercise them but come from divine grace. Every time he goes into this subject Paul is careful to make this clear (1Co 12:6; Eph 4:7; cf 1Pe 4:10).

“Spiritual gifts are tools to build with, not toys to play with or weapons to fight with” (Wiersbe).

PROPHESYING: Not primarily a gift of predicting the future, but rather the communication of revealed truth that will both convict and build up the hearers (cp 1Co 14:3,31). This gift is prominent in the other listings of gifts (1Co 12:28; Eph 4:11), where prophets are second only to apostles in the enumeration.

IN PROPORTION TO HIS FAITH: As in v 3, one who possesses a Holy Spirit gift should use it carefully, having in mind what his “faith” teaches him: that he has no inherent self-worth, and that he is utterly dependent upon the grace of God. A prophet is not to be governed by his pride, or his emotions (1Co 14:32), or by his love of attention, or by the sound of his own voice (1Co 14:30).

Rom 12:7

The list that follows is not exhaustive but only illustrative (cf 1 Co 12:27,28).

SERVING: The KJV has “ministry”, but this is — of course — not referring to orders of “clergy” or “priesthood”! Gr “diakonia” probably refers to ministering to the material needs of other believers. The NEB translates it as “administration”, perhaps hinting that the term should be taken as referring to the supervision of the giving of aid to the needy, which was specifically the province of the “deacons”. Even so, it should be recognized that others also could engage in a variety of helpful ministries to the needs of the saints (1Co 16:15). In fact, Paul inserts in the midst of a catalog of restricted terms dealing with gifts this very broad designation, “those able to help others” (1Co 12:28).

TEACHING: In 1Co 14:6 teaching is paired with knowledge, whereas prophecy is coupled with revelation. Probably the aim in teaching was to give help in the area of Christian living rather than formal instruction in doctrine, even though it must be granted that the latter is needed as a foundation for the former.

Rom 12:8

ENCOURAGING: “Paraklesis”: to encourage, comfort, or exhort. Whereas “teaching” (v 7) appeals to the mind, “exhortation” appeals to the will.

CONTRIBUTING TO THE NEEDS OF OTHERS: “Giving” is capable of broad application within the body.

GENEROUSLY: Gr “hapiotes”, with singleness, or sincerity. The AV has “simplicity”. We should practice giving with singleness of heart and free of mixed motives (cf Acts 5). The idea is not so much giving lavishly as giving single-mindedly.

LEADERSHIP: Gr “proistemi”: to stand before, ie, in rank; to preside, to lead (sw in 1Th 5:12; 1Ti 3:4,5; 5:17). Leaders experience temptation simply to enjoy the benefits of their positions rather than really providing leadership.

SHOWING MERCY: This relates to ministering to the sick and specially to the needy. A cheerful rather than a grudging attitude is an important part of such ministry. “If you come with sympathy to sorrow, bring God’s sunlight in your face” (AS Way).

Rom 12:9

LOVE MUST BE SINCERE: Love is primary (Lev 19:18; Mat 22:39), but if it is not sincere, it is not real love but only pretense. Paul paused in his discussion of spiritual gifts to inject a chapter on love (1Co 13); it is altogether fitting, therefore, that he should follow his presentation of spiritual gifts here in Romans with the same emphasis. The whole of the believer’s conduct, in fact, should be bathed in love. If he fails to love his brother, doubt is cast on his professed love for God (1Jo 4:19-21).

HATE WHAT IS EVIL; CLING TO WHAT IS GOOD: What God seeks in the believer is not so much a single worthy act as it is a continuing quality of life. Love readily suggests purity. The two are found together in God, who is of too pure eyes to behold evil (Hab 1:13) and cannot be tempted by it (Jam 1:13). Hatred readily follows love — hatred, that is, of what is evil. The human attitude must follow the divine in this respect also, because it is the opposite of the command to love. The two belong together. To “cling to what is good” is to be wedded to it. Total commitment leaves neither time nor inclination to court evil.

SINCERE: Gr “anupokritos” = lit, without hypocrisy. Used Rom 12:9; 2Co 6:6; 1Ti 1:5; 2Ti 1:5; Jam 3:17; 1Pe 1:22. “Genuine” (RSV).

Rom 12:10

BE DEVOTED TO ONE ANOTHER IN BROTHERLY LOVE: The apostle has called for love, but lest this be construed simply as an ideal, he now puts it in a living context. Love is to be shown to people, not lavished on a principle. He uses a special term denoting brotherly love (“philadelphia”). “Devoted” is appropriate too, since it customarily denotes the family tie. Believers are members of the family of God.

HONOR ONE ANOTHER ABOVE YOURSELVES: To honor is to accord recognition and show appreciation. Presumably, this is based not on some personal attractiveness nor some supposed usefulness, but rather on a recognition of the new creation (2Co 5:17) — that is, God’s transforming work in individual believers. The perfect example of this is the Lord Jesus Christ, who “made himself nothing, taking upon himself the very status of a servant” (Phi 2:6-8).

Rom 12:11

NEVER BE LACKING IN ZEAL, BUT KEEP YOUR SPIRITUAL FERVOR, SERVING THE LORD: It is natural for Christians to slack off in our diligence in serving the Lord when we have been Christians for some time. Apollos was a model of someone who maintained fervent diligence in his service (Acts 18:25; ct the Laodiceans in Rev 3:15,16).

Rom 12:12

JOYFUL IN HOPE: Or “joyful in THE hope”: “It is because of the hope of Israel that I am bound with this chain” (Acts 28:20).

PATIENT IN AFFLICTION: If I can be sure, when the time finally comes for the Great High Priest to return from the Most Holy Place bringing the final blessing… that I’ll still be here, waiting at my post, rejoicing in the tribulations which I endure, and having learned patience… real PATIENCE… enough for a lifetime, of broken hearts and broken dreams [sounds like a country western song, doesn’t it?], of hurt feelings, of resentments, of disappointments, of bitterness, of ailments and illnesses, of the gradual and insidious decline of all my human powers, and the frustrations of coming short time and again of what I would like to be, but can’t quite be, of asking forgiveness for the 490th time for the same sins, of forgiving others for the same number of times… without throwing up my hands and walking away from the door of the temple. Out into the howling waste of a wilderness of snakes and scorpions — where there is no hope and no life and no love… the wilderness where Judas went, and Cain, and Saul, and a million others — who could not truly believe that the High Priest was coming to bring them the last great blessing. Yes, if I can only wait… long enough… then “I WILL BE saved” will turn into “I AM saved”! God give me strength enough to wait… that long. And I won’t even care whether that strength should be called the Holy Spirit or something else…

“In all our troubles and problems and disappointments, let us never for a moment forget our blessings — and our obligation of constant thanksgiving for them. This is what troubles are for: to drive us ever more deeply into the comfort of our blessings, and to make us all the more diligent to lay secure hold upon them by righteousness and loving service to God. Our blessings are always infinitely greater than our troubles ever could be. If we cannot see this, we are blind indeed. We have seen people calling themselves Christadelphians reproaching God for their ‘undeserved’ troubles. It is very easy and very natural to the flesh. But what folly! What tragedy! We are not ready for the Kingdom, or God would terminate our probation, and give us sweet sleep. We have yet labors to accomplish, and lessons to learn. Let us glory in and profit by the tribulations that are of the loving hand of God to prepare us frail, erring mortals for eternal joy” (GVG).

FAITHFUL IN PRAYER: Prayer is our great resource whenever we feel stress and strain (Phi 4:6,7). Note the same progression from hope to perseverance to prayer in Rom 8:24-27. Men should always pray and not give up hope (Luk 18:1).

Rom 12:13

SHARE WITH GOD’S PEOPLE WHO ARE IN NEED: “Therefore, as we have opportunity, let us do good to all people, especially to those who belong to the family of believers” (Gal 6:10).

PRACTICE HOSPITALITY: “Even under persecution one should not allow himself to be so preoccupied with his own troubles that he becomes insensitive to the needs of other believers. Apparently, it is temporal need that is in view. To share with others is never more meaningful than when one is hard pressed to find a sufficient supply for himself. When this sharing takes place under one’s own roof, it is labeled ‘hospitality’. The Greek term (‘philoxenos’) is more expressive than the English, for it means ‘love for strangers’. Paul’s word for ‘practice’ (‘dioko’, ‘pursue’) is strong (the sw is used in the sense of ‘persecute’ in v 14), calling for an undiminished ardor in extending this courtesy to traveling believers. The Lord had encouraged his disciples to depend on such kindness during their missions (Mat 10:11). Without it, the spread of the gospel during the days of the early church would have been greatly impeded. With it, the ‘church in the house’ became a reality (Rom 16:23; cf Rom 16:5). What sanctified this practice above all was the realization that in receiving and entertaining the traveler, those who opened their doors and their hearts were receiving and entertaining Christ (Mat 10:40; 25:40)” (EBC).

“Do not forget to entertain strangers, for by so doing some people have entertained angels without knowing it” (Heb 13:2).

Rom 12:14

BLESS THOSE WHO PERSECUTE YOU: Paul’s injunction to bless persecutors rather than curse them undoubtedly goes back to the teaching of our Lord (Mat 5:44; Luke 6:28). The teaching was clearly manifested during his trial and his suffering on the cross.

A few years later, Roman Christians were to lose their lives in great numbers at the hands of Emperor Nero. Persecution in some form or another was so common in the experience of the early church that Paul is able to assume as a matter of course that it is a factor in the lives of his readers. If such treatment is not encountered in our society, we can at least cultivate the readiness to meet it and so fulfill the injunction in spirit.

The principle of non-retaliation permeates the whole of the NT. To bless one’s persecutors involves praying for their forgiveness and for a change of outlook regarding the Christian faith. It can be done only by the grace of Christ: “Father, forgive them, for they do not know what they are doing” (Luk 23:34).

Rom 12:15

REJOICE WITH THOSE WHO REJOICE; MOURN WITH THOSE WHO MOURN: “Friendship divides sorrow and doubles joy.” See Lesson, Collyer on One body. Cp 1Co 12:26; Phi 4:13.

Rom 12:16

LIVE IN HARMONY WITH ONE ANOTHER: “Have equal regard for one another” (NEB). Feelings of superiority are neither realistic nor appropriate for those who owe all to God’s grace.

DO NOT BE PROUD: As a means to attaining this harmony, Paul stresses the necessity of rejecting the temptation to think high thoughts about oneself, as though one were a superior breed of believer, and of coming down off the perch of isolation and mingling with people “of low position” or of a humble frame of mind (the Gr has simply “the lowly”).

DO NOT BE CONCEITED: And lest one consent to do this while still retaining heady notions of his own superiority, Paul puts in a final thrust: “Don’t be conceited!” Conceit has no place in the life ruled by love (1Co 13:4).

Cited from Pro 3:7: “Do not be wise in your own eyes.”

“We could learn a lot from crayons: some are sharp, some are dull; some are pretty, some are not-so-pretty; some are bright, some are dark. Some have weird names. And every single one is different from all the rest. But they all have to learn to live in the same box” (MT).

Rom 12:17

DO NOT REPAY ANYONE EVIL FOR EVIL: “Do not resist an evil person. If someone strikes you on the right cheek, turn to him the other also. And if someone wants to sue you and take your tunic, let him have your cloak as well” (Mat 5:39,40).

BE CAREFUL TO DO WHAT IS RIGHT IN THE EYES OF EVERYBODY: Believers are constantly under the scrutiny of unbelievers as well as of fellow believers, and they must be careful that their conduct does not betray the high standards of the gospel (cf Col 4:5; 1Ti 3:7). We should not only be honest, but be seen to be honest (2Co 4:2). The verb “be careful” (“pronoeo”) is literally “to think of beforehand”, which suggests that the conduct of believers ought not to be regulated by habit, but rather that each situation that holds prospect for a witness to the world be weighed so that the action taken will not bring unfavorable reflection on the gospel.

Rom 12:18

IF IT IS POSSIBLE: By this accumulation of conditions the difficulty of the precept is admirably brought out. This qualifying clause suggests that there are instances in human relations when the strongest desire for concord will not avail. Examples: Jesus with the Pharisees in Mat 23, and Paul with Peter in Gal 2.

AS FAR AS IT DEPENDS ON YOU: If disharmony and conflict should come, let not the responsibility be laid at your feet. The believer may not be able to persuade the other party, but he can at least refuse to be the instigator of trouble.

LIVE AT PEACE WITH EVERYONE: Paul strongly advocated being a peacemaker (cf Mat 5:9), but he did not promote peace at any price — as the previous qualifying phrases explain.

Rom 12:19

DO NOT TAKE REVENGE: This peace-loving attitude may be costly, however, because some will want to take advantage of it, figuring that Christian principles will not permit the wronged party to retaliate. In such a case, what is to be done? The path of duty is clear. We are not to take vengeance.

“The person who pursues revenge should dig two graves.” “Revenge has no more quenching effect on emotions than salt water has on thirst” (Walter Weckler). Cp David in 1Sa 24-26.

BUT LEAVE ROOM FOR GOD’S WRATH, FOR IT IS WRITTEN: “IT IS MINE TO AVENGE; I WILL REPAY,” SAYS THE LORD: Trust God to take care of the situation. He will not do the wrong thing. He will not be too lenient or too severe. Here Paul quotes Deu 32:35, whose context indicates that the LORD will intervene to vindicate His people when their enemies abuse them and gloat over them. God’s action will rebuke not only the adversaries but also the false gods in which they have put their trust (Deu 32:37,38).

This passage is cited also in Luk 18:7,8; Rev 6:9-11.

Rom 12:20

There is no suggestion that the wrath of God (v 19) will be visited upon the wrongdoer immediately. On the contrary, that wrath is the last resort, for in the immediate future lies the possibility that the one who has perpetrated the wrong will have a change of heart and will be convicted of his sin and won over by the refusal of the Christian to retaliate.

‘If you want to take revenge (ie, heap coals on your enemy’s head), then… the best way to take revenge is to do good to him (Mat 5:44]… and in this way you may make him a friend rather than an enemy [cp Rom 8:37].’

Coals of fire may be a curse (Eze 10:2; Psa 120:2-4), but in certain instances (with those who recognize their sins?) they may also be a blessing (Isa 6:6,7: where Isaiah was cleansed and purified).

HEAP BURNING COALS ON HIS HEAD: Cit Pro 25:21,22. Another suggestion has been offered for this rather strange figure of speech: Heaping burning coals on his head figuratively describes doing good that results in the conviction and shame of the enemy. The expression alludes to the old custom of carrying burning coals in a pan. When one’s fire went out at home, a person would have to go to a neighbor and request hot coals that he or she would then carry home on the head. Carrying the coals involved some danger, discomfort, and uneasiness for the person carrying them. Nevertheless they were the evidence of the neighbor’s love. Likewise the person who receives good for evil feels uncomfortable because of his neighbor’s love. This guilt may convict the wrongdoer of his or her ways in a gentle manner.

Rom 12:21

DO NOT BE OVERCOME BY EVIL, BUT OVERCOME EVIL WITH GOOD: In this context, to be “overcome by evil” means to give in to the temptation to meet evil with evil, ie, to retaliate. To overcome evil with good has been illustrated in v 20. Many other illustrations could be given, such as David’s sparing the life of Saul, who was pursuing him to snuff out his life. When Saul realized that David had spared his life, he said, “You have repaid me good, whereas I have repaid you evil” (1Sa 24:17, RSV). The world’s philosophy leads men to expect retaliation when they have wronged another. To receive kindness, to see love when it seems uncalled for, can melt the hardest heart.

Romans 7

Rom 7:1

Rom 7: In this ch, the apostle is expanding upon his initial answer to the questions posed in Rom 6:1,15, as well as expanding upon his statement in Rom 6:14: “You are not under LAW, but under grace.”

While it is all very well to say that the believer has changed Masters, yet there is one thing that has not changed: the body itself is prone to sin, through an inherent weakness. How does this body stand in relation to Yahweh’s code of righteousness — His Law?

DO YOU NOT KNOW, BROTHERS: The conjunction in the Gr, at the beginning of this verse, shows the flow from Rom 6.

THE LAW HAS AUTHORITY over a man: In Rom 6:9 Paul said that “death” had the “dominion”; in Rom 6:14, that “sin” had the “dominion”; and now — finally — that “law” has such “dominion”. Such an interrelationship is also stated in 1Co 15:56: “The sting of DEATH is SIN, and the power of sin is the LAW.”

AS LONG AS HE LIVES: That is, but only as long as he lives! Contrary to a belief in a mythical and ever-burning “hell”, DEATH terminates the individual’s condemnation; it is the end (Rom 6:21)!

The law has authority over a person only for his lifetime. Since it has been established, in Rom 6, that the believer died with Christ, one can anticipate the conclusion — that whatever authority the law continues to exercise over others, for the believer that power has been abrogated. Only for him who in faith appropriates the righteousness of God in Christ is the law abolished. It remains, of course, as an entity that expresses the will of God; the life under grace does not belittle the ethical demands of the law — even if its power to condemn has been terminated.

Rom 7:2

Vv 2,3: In order to illustrate his thesis, Paul now expounds what he elsewhere terms “a great mystery” (Eph 5:32). The divine allegory of marriage is the perfect analogy, since marriage is a “type” in a “natural” sense of what God has been preparing in “spiritual” excellence from the beginning of creation: a multitudinous “bride” to join His Son Christ in an eternal union.

A MARRIED WOMAN: Lit, “hypandros” = one who in UNDER a man. Specifically, one who — like Eve — has taken a vow in the presence of God (Gen 2:23; Mat 19:6).

IS BOUND TO HER HUSBAND: “What God has joined together” (Mat 19:6).

AS LONG AS HE IS ALIVE: Thus, the operative law which binds man and woman together in marriage is operative so long as he (or they) live.

Rom 7:3

IF SHE MARRIES ANOTHER MAN WHILE HER HUSBAND IS STILL ALIVE: The Gr is, literally, “she become another man’s”. Such a position was “suffered” by Moses under the Law, “for the hardness of their hearts” (cf Deu 24:1,2; Mat 19:7,8).

SHE IS CALLED AN ADULTERESS: Called, that is, by divine decree (so “chrematisei” is use 7 of its 9 times in the NT: Mat 2:12,22; Luk 2:26; Acts 10:22; 11:26; Heb 8:5; 11:17; 12:25).

BUT IF HER HUSBAND DIES, SHE IS RELEASED FROM THAT LAW: The law of marriage binds the partners together only until the death of one or the other; cf 1Co 7:39.

Rom 7:4

YOU ALSO DIED TO THE LAW THROUGH THE BODY OF CHRIST: This happened at the time of baptism: being buried with him by baptism into death (Rom 6:3,4).

THAT YOU MIGHT BELONG TO ANOTHER: “…that we should no longer be slaves to sin — because anyone who has died has been freed from sin. Now if we died with Christ, we believe that we will also live with him” (Rom 6:6-8). Now the individual consciousness, the rational mind, which has shown the desire to destroy the lusts of the flesh (the old man) in baptism, is now free to marry the “new man” (Eph 4:24; Col 3:10).

TO HIM WHO IS RAISED FROM THE DEAD: The significance of being “raised from the dead” lies in the fact that it was Christ’s death the made the fatal blow to the power of the “old man” — the seed of the serpent, or lust. It is only through the power of Christ’s resurrection that the efficacy of his victory can pass to us by our identification with his death in baptism, for we must be raised to “a new life” (Rom 6:4). But how can we do this if Christ himself did not rise from the dead (cf 1Co 15:17; Phi 3:10)?

IN ORDER THAT WE MIGHT BEAR FRUIT TO GOD: Union with the “old man”, Lust, produced “seed” or “fruit” unto death (Jam 1:15; Rom 6:21). But in marriage with the “new man”, we have “fruit unto holiness and the end everlasting life” (Rom 6:22). It is Christ, the “husband”, who brings about the conception of “holy fruit” in us, his “bride” (Eph 5:8-11; 3:17; 5:25-27; Col 1:27; 2Co 11:2; Rev 19:7,8).

It should be recalled that in our Lord’s teaching the secret of fruit bearing is union with himself (John 15:1-8), the very truth emphasized in the passage before us. A somewhat different background for fruit bearing is predicated in Gal 5:22,23, where the fruit is attributed to the Spirit, in contrast to the output of the flesh and of the law. Since Paul speaks of the Spirit in Rom 7:6, the parallel with Gal 5 is close. The attribution of fruit to Christ in one instance and to the Spirit in another is not disturbing, because there is much common ground in their relationship to believers (cf Eph 3:16,17).

Rom 7:5

WHEN WE WERE CONTROLLED BY THE SINFUL NATURE: That is, when we were “married” to the carnal mind, or the “flesh” — for “the sinful mind is hostile to God. It does not submit to God’s law, nor can it do so” (Rom 8:4,6-9).

The KJV has “in the flesh”, but this is erroneous, since — literally — Christ was “in the flesh”, yet he did not bear fruit unto death.

“The phrase ‘controlled by our sinful nature’ is an attempt to render ‘in the flesh.’ Paul has used ‘flesh’ in several senses thus far: (1) the humanity of Jesus Christ (Rom 1:3); (2) the physical body (Rom 2:28), (3) mankind — ‘all flesh’ (Rom 3:20); and (4) moral, or possibly intellectual, weakness (Rom 6:19). Now he adds a fifth: the so-called ‘ethical’ meaning of flesh, which is the most common use of the word in his writings and denotes the old sinful nature. It is this sense of the word that pervades Rom 7; 8, together with a final use in Rom 13:14. Paul did not employ the word ‘flesh’ in this sense when exposing in his earlier chapters the universality of sin. In noting that the passions are aroused by the law, Paul is anticipating his fuller statement in vv 7-13 about the manner in which the law promotes sin” (EBC).

THE SINFUL PASSIONS: The “old man” husband, the passions of lust (cf 1Jo 2:16; Gal 5:24).

“Although a sinner may have been ‘delivered from the power of darkness’, or ignorance, and have been ‘translated into’ (Col 1:13) the hope of ‘the Kingdom of God and of his Christ’ (Rev 11:15), by faith in the divine testimony and baptism into Christ — yet, if he turn his thoughts back into his own heart, and note the impulses which work there, he will perceive a something that, if he were to yield to it, would impel him to the violation of the divine law. These impulses are styled ‘the motions of sins’ (Rom 7:5). Before he was enlightened, they ‘worked in his members’, until they were manifested in evil action, or sin; which is termed, ‘bringing forth fruit unto death’. The remote cause of these ‘motions’ is that physical principle, or quality, of the flesh, styled indwelling sin, which returns the mortal body to the dust; and that which excites the latent disposition is the law of God forbidding to do thus and so; for, ‘I had not known sin, but by the law’ ” (Elp).

AROUSED BY THE LAW: “Through (dia) the law”. It was through the presence of the divine law that “Lust” became “Sin” (see vv 7-13; Rom 5:20).

WERE AT WORK IN OUR BODIES: The Gr is “energeito” = to be energized. The faculties of the body were energized by last (cf Rom 6:13,19; Col 3:5; James 4:1).

SO THAT WE BORE FRUIT FOR DEATH: “Death” is the only FRUIT that “Lust” can produce (Jam 1:15; cp Rom 5:12; 6:21).

Rom 7:6

BUT NOW, BY DYING TO WHAT ONCE BOUND US, WE HAVE BEEN RELEASED FROM THE LAW: The Law has been “reduced to inactivity” (Vine), or “abolished” (Eph 2:15, sw). Christ by his death rendered the Law “inactive”, having discharged the curse upon him, for he was cursed under two laws (Gal 4:4): (1) by being “made of a woman”, he came under the law of condemnation in his natural body (cf Gen 3:19; John 6:63; 2Co 5:16; 1Co 15:50; Gal 5:24; Col 2:11), and (2) especially, and particularly, in his death, by being hanged upon a tree (Gal 3:13). Christ died once to the power of sin (Rom 6:10), and therefore the law had no power over him. If we die WITH Christ (Rom 6:5), then we will assume the same “victory” (1Co 15:55-57).

SO THAT WE SERVE IN THE NEW WAY OF THE SPIRIT: As serving the new master: see Rom 6:18. We have risen to “newness of life” (Rom 6:4) as a “new creation” (Gal 6:15), under the “new covenant” (Heb 9:15); we are married to a “new man” (Eph 2:15; 4:24; Col 3:10), and walking in a “new and living way” (Heb 10:20).

Paul is amplifying the thought of Eph 4:22-24: “You were taught, with regard to your former way of life, to put off your old self, which is being corrupted by its deceitful desires; to be made new in the attitude of your minds; and to put on the new self, created to be like God in true righteousness and holiness.”

AND NOT IN THE OLD WAY OF THE WRITTEN CODE: “Spirit” and “letter” are similarly contrasted in Rom 2:29 and 2Co 3:6. The “written code” here draws attention to the Mosaic ordinances (cp Heb 8:13; Col 2:14). The believer, however, is not absolved from responsibility to Yahweh’s Code of Righteousness, for a law still operates to bind him to the “New Man”, Christ. This contrast is not between a literal mode of interpreting Scripture and one that is free and unfettered. The written code, which has special reference to the law rather than to Scripture in general, has no power to give life and to produce a service acceptable to God. Only a person can beget human life, and only a divine person can impart spiritual life, which is then fostered and nurtured by the Spirit.

The word “new” has in it not so much the idea of newness in time as freshness and superiority. This is “the Law of the spirit of life in Christ Jesus” (Rom 8:2), which is contrasted to “the law of sin and death”. And the believer — far from being free from ALL law — will in fact be judged by this “new” law!

Rom 7:7

Vv 7-13: In case any reader concluded from Paul’s previous remarks on release from the dominion of law, that the Law of Moses was evil, he now shows that this was not so. Actually, the Law revealed to man the true nature of his previous “marriage” to the Lusts of the Flesh and the evil nature of “sin” which was the product of the relationship. The Law condemned certain actions and desires which were always latent. They were not sinful, however, until the Law forbade them, and showed how much the flesh ruled over men.

Paul points out that the Law was not evil (actually it was very good: v 16). However, by placing restraints upon the flesh, it revealed the flesh as prone, disposed, to sin. The verses in this section are in the past tense, and therefore had particular reference to Paul’s experience with the Law prior to his conversion to Christ.

WHAT SHALL WE SAY, THEN?: “What shall we conclude?” (cp usages, in Rom 3:5; 4:1; 6:1; 7:7; 8:31; 9:14,30).

IS THE LAW SIN?: Having seen in v 5 that the passions of sin came through the Law, the question naturally arises: ‘Is the law therefore the originator of sin?’ Is it in itself evil and sinful?

CERTAINLY NOT: Cp Rom 3:4n.

I WOULD NOT HAVE KNOWN WHAT SIN WAS: “Known” here is “ginosko” = to know by experience or effort, to become acquainted with, to learn objectively: cp John 1:48; 1Jo 5:20; Eph 5:5.

EXCEPT THROUGH THE LAW: Not “BY” the Law, as KJV; sin did not come out of the law. But Law spotlighted the sin! “The law cannot be identified with sin, because it is the law that provides awareness of sin (cf Rom 3:20). Can one say of an X-ray machine that revealed his disease that the machine is diseased because it revealed a diseased condition? That would be utterly illogical” (EBC).

FOR I WOULD NOT HAVE KNOWN WHAT COVETING REALLY WAS: “Known” here is “oida”, to know intuitively, without effort, to understand subjectively: see Rom 3:20; 4:15.

COVETING: “Lust” (Gr “epithumia”: strong desire or passion of any kind: Vine). Apart from 3 refs where proper desire is indicated (Luk 22:15; Phi 1:23; 1Th 2:17; cp Deu 14:26), it usually connotes evil desire in the NT: eg Rom 6:12; 13:14; Eph 2:3; Heb 13;5; 1Co 12:31.

IF THE LAW HAD NOT SAID: That is, REPEATEDLY said (Weym). Suggesting constant repetition of the command every time the law is read.

DO NOT COVET: Cit Exo 20;14,17; Deu 5:18,21. Here, the verb form of “epithumia”. The only prohibition in the Law which exclusively affected the emotions; an “internal” sin in the sense that it would go undetected by other men.

“To come to grips with this the apostle selects an item from the Decalogue, the very last of the Ten Commandments. Is he selecting more or less at random one of the ten for an illustration? Could he have chosen just as readily the prohibition against stealing or bearing false witness? Possibly he saw something basic here, for ‘to covet’ is more precisely ‘to desire.’ If one gives rein to wrong desire, it can lead to lying, stealing, killing, and all the other things prohibited in the commandments. The sin indicated here is not so much a craving for this or that wrong thing, but the craving itself (note that Paul does not bother to spell out the particulars of the tenth commandment, such as the possessions or wife of one’s neighbor). In analyzing sin, one must go behind the outward act to the inner man, where desire clutches at the imagination and then puts the spurs to the will” (EBC).

Rom 7:8

SIN: “In this ch we must remember the personification which is employed. Paul as it were separates the individual from the impulses which belong to him and speaks of the impulses as though they were a separate power” (CRom).

SEIZING THE OPPORTUNITY: “Taking occasion” (KJV). Gr “aphorme” = starting point. Cp Rom 13:14; Gal 5:13; 2Co 5:12; 1Ti 5:14. The word is often used as a military metaphor for “a base of operations” in war. “Sin found its rallying point in that command” (Williams). Paul continues the striking extended metaphor of warfare, the battle between the “spirit” and the “lusts” to control the “flesh” (Rom 6:13).

“In the background is the Genesis story of the temptation and the fall. Eve was faced with a commandment — a prohibition. When desire was stirred through the subtle suggestion of the serpent, a certain rebelliousness came into play that is the very heart of sin — a preference for one’s own will over the expressed will of God. The warning ‘Don’t’ to a small child may turn out to be a call for action that had not even been contemplated by the child. A sure way to lose blossoms from the garden is to post a sign that says, ‘Don’t pick the flowers’ ” (EBC).

AFFORDED BY THE COMMANDMENT: “Dia” = through the commandment. The individual precepts of the Law highlighted sin in its stark reality, and then the whole Law condemned it.

COVETOUS DESIRE: Gr “epithumia” again. Cp the three temptations of Jesus: lust of the flesh, lust of the eyes, and pride of life (1Jo 2:16; cp Luk 4:13; etc).

APART FROM LAW, SIN IS DEAD: “For where there is no consciousness of law, sin shows no sign of life.” Sin is dormant apart form law (see 1Co 15:56). The Law discloses all the evil desires and propensities of the flesh.

Rom 7:9

ONCE I WAS ALIVE APART FROM LAW: The “I” here is emphatic. When Paul was a boy he was not subject to the Law, and in relation to it he was without offence, and therefore “alive” (cp Rom 6:13). But when he became subject to the Law and its restraints at about 12 years of age, he realized there were impulses within himself which were contrary to the Law and which would produce death. “The state of unconscious morality, uninstructed but as yet uncondemned, may, compared with that state of condemnation, be regarded as a state of ‘life’ ” (Ellicott).

BUT WHEN THE COMMANDMENT CAME: That is, “came home” — to Paul’s mind and conscience.

SIN SPRANG TO LIFE: Gr “anazao” = to live again. It was no longer dormant and its presence was now recognized. The conviction was produced that he was a convicted sinner (cp Acts 2:37,38).

AND I DIED: Now he had learned that he was constantly sinning and was therefore subject to the curse of the Law, which brings death (cp 1Co 15:5,6). This “dying” is subjective in its force. He felt within himself the sentence of death, becoming bogged down in hopelessness and despair in contrast to the blithe self-confidence he had had before.

Rom 7:10

THE VERY COMMANDMENT THAT WAS INTENDED TO BRING LIFE: KJV has “which was ordained to life”. “Keep my decrees and laws, for the man who obeys them will live by them” (Lev 18:5). “If you want to enter life, obey the commandments” (Mat 19:17). “Do this and you will live” (Luk 10:28). Cp also Eze 20:11,13,21; Rom 10:5; Gal 3:12. Although it was intended for life, no one ever kept the Law (Rom 3:9,10). In addition, the Law could not give life of itself, but drew attention to the means of life, namely faith in the Everlasting Covenant, ie, the Abrahamic covenant which had been sealed with the blood of Christ (Heb 13:20; Gal 3:24).

ACTUALLY BROUGHT DEATH: Because no one could keep it perfectly (except Christ). The Israelites promised, “We will do everything the LORD has said” (Exo 19:8; 24:3). But they did not do so, and thus perished in the wilderness (1Co 10:5).

Rom 7:11

FOR SIN, SEIZING THE OPPORTUNITY…: Returning to the point of v 8…

DECEIVED ME: An obvious allusion to Gen 3:13, where the serpent completely deceived Eve (cp 2Co 11:3; 1Ti 2:14: Adam was not deceived, but Eve was thoroughly deceived). “The HEART is deceitful above all things and beyond cure. Who can understand it?” (Jer 17:9; cp Eph 4:22; Jam 1:22).

PUT ME TO DEATH: “The Law while pointing out the way of life… was destined to become death by all that sought life by it. While it demonstrated perfectly to a man what was at enmity in him against God, it could not help him one whit to vanquish it. It merely brought him consciously into its power” (BLG).

Rom 7:12

THE LAW… THE COMMANDMENT: That is, the whole “Law” as well as each individual “commandment”. (Since “commandment” is singular here, it may refer particularly to “Don’t covet” of v 7.) Cf Mar 10:9; Heb 9:19.

HOLY: Gr “hagios”: that to which reverence is due, that which is separated. Infers separation from sin and consecration to God: Exo 3:5; Mat 27:53; Luk 1:35. The law is holy because it comes from a holy God and searches out sin.

RIGHTEOUS: Gr “dikaios”: fulfilling all duties which are right and becoming. The law is righteous in view of the just requirements it lays upon men, righteous also because it forbids and condemns sin.

GOOD: Gr “agathos”: that which, being good in its character and constitution, is beneficial in its effect. Yahweh Himself is essentially good (Mat 19:17). The Law possessed all these attributes because it revealed man for what he was, as well as his basic need for redemption (Gal 3:24). The Law is also good because its principal aim is life (v 10); its goodness is reaffirmed in v 13.

Rom 7:13

DID THAT WHICH IS GOOD, THEN, BECOME DEATH TO ME?: The Law does not “kill” anyone; man is “killed” by his own sins — the Law only “spotlights” them.

BUT IN ORDER THAT SIN MIGHT BE RECOGNIZED AS SIN: Or “appear” (Gr “phaino”: to shine forth) in its true character.

IT PRODUCED DEATH IN ME: “Working” (AV) death as the final product in the process.

THROUGH WHAT WAS GOOD: KJV has “by”, but Gr is “dia” again, as earlier. “Death” does not come “out of” the Law, but “dia” (through) the Law. “How evil must that thing be which works the greatest evil through that which is the perfection of righteousness” (Haldane).

MIGHT BE UTTERLY SINFUL: “Sin is an exceedingly great sinner” (JT), showing the personification of Sin!

“This enemy within the human nature is the mind of the flesh, which is enmity against God; it is not subject to His law, neither indeed can be (Rom 8:7). The commandment of God, which is ‘holy, just and good’, being so restrictive of the propensities, which in purely animal men display themselves with uncontrolled violence, makes them appear in their true colors. These turbulent propensities the apostle styles ‘sin in the flesh’, of which it is full; hence, he also terms it ‘sinful flesh’. This is human nature; and the evil in it, made so apparent by the law of God, he personifies as ‘pre-eminently A SINNER’ (Rom 7:12,13,17,18). This is the accuser, adversary, and calumniator of God, whose stronghold is the flesh. It is the devil and satan within the human nature; so that ‘when a man is tempted, he is drawn away of his own lust and enticed’. If a man examine himself, he will perceive within him something at work, craving after things which the law of God forbids. The best of men are conscious of this enemy within them. It troubled the apostle so much, that he exclaimed, ‘0, wretched man that I am! who shall deliver me from the body of this death’ (Rom 7:24), or, this mortal body? He thanked God that the Lord Jesus Christ would do it; that is, as he had himself been delivered from it, by God raising him from the dead by His Spirit (Rom 8:11)” (Elp ch 3).

Rom 7:14

Vv 14-25: Paul having discussed his own experience while under Law, he now moves on, by an appeal to his present position (as witnessed by the change in verb tense here), to prove the holiness of the Law in the face of an uncontrollable body of flesh springing from innate sinfulness. Paul demonstrates that man cannot attain to righteousness by the exercise of his own will-power to obey Yahweh’s code of righteousness.

Two principal influences emerge in this section, and need to be clearly distinguished: (a) those innate evil impulses that are the ever-present possessions of a “carnal” or mortal body, and (b) the individual conscience in a man, which represents conscious, deliberate desire: the mentally processed ideal. In this case it is Paul’s conscious desire to serve the New Man, even though housed in a body which prompts him to evil.

THE LAW IS SPIRITUAL: “Pneumatikos” = belonging to or proceeding from the Spirit. “Things which have their origin with God, and which, therefore, are in harmony with His character” (Vine). This statement is consistent with v 12. Cp also Psa 19:7,8; Psa 119.

The Law here is not exclusively the Law of Moses, but more generally Yahweh’s Code of Righteousness (which included the LM), to which all believers down through the ages are subject and by which they must be judged (cf vv 22,25; Mat 5; 7:12; Rom 8:4; 9:30,31; 1Co 9:21; Rom 2:2,5).

BUT I AM UNSPIRITUAL: Gr “sarkinos” = “fleshly”. “Carnal” (AV). “Man is carnal, made of flesh, in which resides a principle contrary to God. It produces works which are the opposite of the fruit of the Spirit (Gal 5:19-24)” (CRom). Corrupt passions still retain a strong and withering and distressing influence upon the mind.

SOLD AS A SLAVE TO SIN: Sold, as into slavery (cp Rom 6:12,13). Sin, from the time of Adam, has purchased all flesh, and though the mind may be “transformed” (Rom 12:1,2) from the realm of King Sin, the body continues to be haunted by the impulses of its previous possessor. This is the experience of every bond-slave of the Lord Jesus Christ.

Rom 7:15

I DO NOT UNDERSTAND: Gr “ginosko” = to recognize as a result of experience. “I do not understand my own actions.” “I do not approve…” “As the slave performs his task, blindly unquestioning, not having regard to why the task is set and what the object is, but simply in response to command of the owner, so there is a surrender to sin’s service. It is a service which is not the voluntary act of a righteous man, but an act he really repudiates” (CRom).

I DO NOT DO: “Do” (Gr “prasso”) = to practice habitually, continually, and repeatedly. “I do not practice what I desire” (Diag).

BUT WHAT I HATE I DO: “Hate” (Gr “miseo”: to hate, usually implying active ill will in words or conduct: Vine). We must hate wrongdoing (Rom 7:15), iniquity (Heb 1:9), evil in general (Jude 1:23; Rev 2:6). Cp Psa 119:104,113,128,163.

“Do” = Gr “poieo”: the external act or completed action. This “differs from the preceding word ‘prasso’ in that ‘prasso’ has a conscious aim in view, while ‘poieo’ simply describes a series of acts which may be void of such conscious aim and be merely mechanical” (Vine). “Paul’s figure of slavery is cogent here, since he is forced to carry out what he does not want to do, what he really hates, whereas what he would like to do never seems to materialize” (EBC).

Rom 7:16

I AGREE THAT THE LAW IS GOOD: The failure to do what he desires to do is not to be attributed to a wrong attitude toward the law, since he concurs in the verdict that the law is praiseworthy. In fact, the Law is good because it inculcates the right kind of conduct, the things that are beneficent in their results. See v 12n.

Rom 7:17

“Paul is not, in fact, one person, but two. The ‘I’ in these verses is that part of him that is the man who aspires to the godly life of the Spirit, whilst the ‘me’ is that part of him that is the man of the flesh — which houses the evilly inclined disposition” (Spongberg).

“If the failure does not come from a wrong attitude toward the law, such as indifference or defiance, then the doing of things contrary to the law must be traced to the power of sin working within him” (EBC).

Rom 7:18

NOTHING GOOD LIVES IN ME, THAT IS, IN MY SINFUL NATURE: Or “flesh” (AV). This statement repudiates any theory in the mind of Paul’s readers concerning “inherent goodness” as being an innate possession within “flesh”; the “flesh” is radically bad!

In Victor Hugo’s story, a ship is caught in a storm. The frightened crew hears a terrible crashing sound below. Immediately the men know what it is: a cannon has broken loose and is crashing into the ship’s side with every smashing blow of the sea! Two men, at the risk of their lives, manage to fasten it down again, for they know that the unfastened cannon is more dangerous than the raging storm. Many people are like that ship — their greatest danger areas lie inside, not outside!

LIVES IN ME: Instead of “lives” in Rom 7:18, the word might better be rendered “dwells” (AV): it is “nothing good” that “dwells” in me! The invader — which is “sin in the flesh” — has managed to secure more than a foothold; he roams the place, considering it his home. In putting the matter like this, Paul has moved from a consideration of outward acts to an emphasis on the unwanted tenancy of sin. With this alien master in control, no matter how strongly a man wants to do the good, he finds himself checkmated. He cannot carry it out.

I HAVE THE DESIRE TO DO WHAT IS GOOD, BUT I CANNOT CARRY IT OUT: “The spirit is willing, but the body is weak” (Mat 26:41; cp Phi 2:13; Gal 5:17).

Rom 7:19

V 19 is a virtual repetition of v 15.

Sometimes we can find it a real struggle to walk the Christian life with all the temptations and pressures life throws at us. Sometimes it can even get depressing when we tally up our day or our week and realize how often we have failed to do what we should have done, or have done the things that we shouldn’t have done.

While there is no excuse for sinning and we must still confess our sins to God and ask for forgiveness, we can be encouraged by the fact that even Paul, whom we admire as one of the greatest men of God, struggled with exactly the same sins as we do. He said that the good that he wanted to do he did not do, and the things that he did not want to do, he did! We all have exactly the same problems — whether we are as great as Paul, or whether we consider ourselves the lowest of the low. Yet Paul, at the end of his life, despite his struggles, was 100% confident that his Lord was prepared to give him a crown of everlasting life.

Despite our struggles too, we can have the same confidence as Paul and know for sure that we will be given the kingdom. It is not an excuse for sin, but a faith and confidence in the grace and mercy of our God and his Son, Jesus Christ.

Rom 7:20

V 20 is a virtual repetition of v 17.

Rom 7:21

I FIND THIS LAW AT WORK: This “law” is a principle of operation, ie a rule or “habitually repeated fact”. “Principle” (NEB). Cf Rom 3:27; 8:2.

WHEN I WANT TO DO GOOD, EVIL IS RIGHT THERE WITH ME: The fact was that the lusts of the flesh against which he contended were proven to be stronger than his human will. “For the sinful nature desires what is contrary to the Spirit, and the Spirit what is contrary to the sinful nature. They are in conflict with each other, so that you do not do what you want” (Gal 5:17).

Rom 7:22

IN MY INNER BEING: Lit “the man within”. This qualifies the “I” above: the inward man was the real Paul: his intellectual individuality and consciousness. Cf 2Co 4:16; Eph 3:16; 1Pe 3:4.

I DELIGHT IN GOD’S LAW: Cp Psa 1:2; 119:33-35,97.

Rom 7:23

THE MEMBERS OF MY BODY: “Melos” here (see Rom 6:13; 7:5n). This is Paul’s “outward” man, in contrast to the “inner man” (v 22).

WAGING WAR: The Gr denotes — not a single battle — but a whole military campaign. This is a lasting war!

MAKING ME A PRISONER: A “prisoner of war” (cp 2Co 10:5; 2Ti 3:6; Eph 4:8). Cp v 14: “sold as a slave to Sin”.

Rom 7:24

WHAT A WRETCHED MAN I AM! WHO WILL RESCUE ME FROM THIS BODY OF DEATH?: Paul felt that he bore a loathsome, leprous nature which he called “a vile body” (or a body of humiliation: Phi 3:21). Such a nature is incurable.

This account of the pervasiveness of sin is finished most impressively by the groans of the wounded captive. Having long maintained a useless conflict against innumerable hosts and irresistible might, he is at last wounded and taken prisoner; and to render his state more miserable… “There seems to be an allusion to the ancient custom of certain tyrants who bound a dead body to a living man and obliged him to carry it about, till the contagion from the putrid mass took away his life” (Clarke).

WRETCHED: “Talaiporos”: to endure toil, pain, and hardship as from severe bodily effort.

Rom 7:25

V 25: a summary of the chapter. “My mind” is a synonym for the intellectual assent of the believer; and “the sinful nature” for the human, sin-prone flesh he bears.

“Paul was human and he knew the difficulties of life. His apostleship did not exempt him from any conflict that is the common lot of all. His early efforts to keep the law of Moses, combined with his later knowledge of God’s purpose, must have given him a fearless and honest power of introspection. While it is one Paul, he yet recognizes that he is under two influences. In Galatians he says ‘I live, yet not I, but Christ liveth in me’ [Gal 2:20]. [But] here he says, speaking of failure to do as he would have liked, ‘It is no more I, but sin that dwelleth in me.’ There is a danger of these words being used to get rid of personal responsibility. They will always remain true when every effort has been made to follow righteousness, but should only be used when that effort has been made, when the words from Galatians can also be used. To follow a way of sin and excuse it by putting the blame on ‘sin that dwelleth in me’ is as far removed as possible from Paul’s position. In fact, it would seem that those only can rightly use his words who are trying most to be followers of Paul as he was of Christ” (CRom).

Romans 8

Rom 8:1

THEREFORE: A reference back to Rom 7:25, or even perhaps to Rom 5:1,2.

NOW: That is, in this age, since Christ’s death and resurrection. In contrast to man’s condition in Adam (Rom 5:12) and under the Mosaic law (Rom 7:10,11).

NO CONDEMNATION: Signifies ‘to pronounce sentence against’, as would a judge. A point stressed again in v 34. “Sin” is condemned (v 3), so that those “in Christ” will not be condemned!

What, precisely, does Paul mean when he says there is now, for us in Christ, no condemnation? Two representative answers might be given: (a) “There is a present freedom, certainly, but not from the death inherited from Adam; for that will as assuredly send us into the grave, if the Lord delay his coming, as if we had never heard of the gospel. The freedom we have, is freedom from our sins as obstacles to a future life, and from our alienship as an obstacle to future incorporation in the glorified house of God” (RR, The Resurrection to Condemnation, p 23). (b) “We believe that in baptism there is a transition from a state of alienation in Adam to a state of citizenship in Christ, and that through it we shall ultimately be freed from the physical effects of Adam’s sin — mortality. We are not personally responsible for Adam’s personal sin, and are not therefore baptized for it in that sense; but federally we are all under Adam’s sin and are baptized to remove the condemnation which came thereby, and to place us in Christ reconciled to God… Adamic condemnation brings a physical disability inherited from Adam. We are freed from this federal condemnation and reconciled to God at baptism, but we are not freed from physical disability till the change of body” (Thomas Williams, “Adamic Condemnation”, from Selected Works, pp 450,451).

If these brethren were resurrected and brought into the same room today and asked the question, “Is there now no condemnation to those in Christ?”, they would give the same answer. Robert Roberts would say, “Yes. The real condemnation is removed by the forgiveness of sins. For those in Christ a process of deliverance is begun, which will only be finished when our bodies are glorified.”

And Thomas Williams would reply, “Yes, I agree. Our full and absolute deliverance is prospective. But we must remember that baptism removes us from a state of alienation to one of reconciliation to God. In this sense (of a renewed relationship with God) we are freed from condemnation with Adam even now.” A detailed look at the remainder of Rom 8 will give the fullest picture of “no condemnation… in Christ” in all its aspects.

WHO ARE IN CHRIST JESUS: Who are those “in Christ”? It must be stated that being “in Christ” means much more than being dependent upon Christ, or being a follower of Christ. Being “in Christ” is nothing less than a union with him. We should be in Christ as he is in us, and (awesome as it may seem) as he is in his Father (Joh 14:19,20). The profoundly beautiful symbol of the true vine and its branches abiding in one another provides an insight into the picture. It should go without saying, then, that those truly “in Christ” are only those who walk after the spirit, and not after the flesh (vv 1,4).

It must be emphasized that our ultimate salvation is not assured, but is conditional. (Proof-texts for this, such as Rom 2:6,7 and 1Co 9:27, are but two among many.) No person instructed in the first principles of Truth could ever wish to deny such a fundamental doctrine. But, having admitted this, we should still find room for this doctrine of “no condemnation”. What, after all, does it really mean?

The central theme of Paul’s letter to the Rom is justification by faith: believers are declared righteous; they are made righteous; they have righteousness imputed or reckoned to them through their faith in Christ and his redemptive work. This, then, is justification by faith. It is equally true, as James was at pains to show, that our faith is demonstrated by our works, and that therefore we are also justified by our works. Somehow, perhaps as a healthy reaction to the evangelical ‘orthodox’ doctrine of ‘faith alone’ and ‘only believe!’, we Christadelphians have come to lean quite heavily toward the ‘works’ side of the scale. In doing this we risk the danger of teaching (by unintended implication if not by word) that our salvation is in our hands alone; that what we do will guarantee us salvation, and, conversely, that God is just waiting to condemn us for one shortcoming.

This is just not so. Some have labored under a forlorn assumption, a fatalistic attitude, a mumbling, downcast pessimism best expressed by the sad admission: “I am not good enough to get into the kingdom.” It is precisely here that we must ask ourselves, Do we really believe Rom 8:1? Let us not water it down as a mere legal or prospective justification. It is much more. It is now, and it is real. And all of Rom 8 enhances the view that, for the believer, justification and righteousness and sonship are present possessions, provided the believer remains truly “in Christ”.

The KJV adds: “who walk not after the flesh, but after the spirit”. This phrase is omitted by some manuscripts. It is usually suggested that it is borrowed from v 4, where it rightly appears. Properly understood, the verse reads as well without it. If it be allowed to stand, it should be read, not as a limiting factor to the whole verse, but as a definition of “those in Christ Jesus”.

Rom 8:2

THROUGH CHRIST JESUS: The ‘place’ where Paul was liberated by the “principle of the spirit-life”.

THE LAW: Or “principle”: the Gr is “nomos” (translated “law” in the AV), which signifies system, operation, or procedure.

THE SPIRIT OF LIFE: Or “spirit-life”. The conjunction of these two words anticipates the main theme of vv 5-11.

SET ME FREE: Or “liberated”, reltd to the word in v 21. The “principle of the spirit-life”, as displayed by Christ, has liberated us from the ruling impulses of the “flesh”. While it is true that “the clogging effects of human nature hinder the full expression of the life the believer now tries to live” (CRom 81) (which is what Paul tells us in Rom 7), nevertheless in a very real sense we are free. We are free from worry; we are free from fear. Now we do not have to serve the flesh. We can choose to follow Christ. Of the effect of freedom from condemnation Paul wrote more particularly: “For the love of Christ constraineth us; because we thus judge, that if one died for all, then were all dead: and that he died for all, that they which live should not henceforth live unto themselves, but unto him which died for them, and rose again” (2Co 5:14,15). And, more succinctly: “I am crucified with Christ: nevertheless I live; yet not I, but Christ liveth in me: and the life which I now live in the flesh I live by the faith of the Son of God, who loved me, and gave himself for me” (Gal 2:20).

Those who have died with Christ in baptism have thereby been rid of the condemnation that attached to their former lives. They have become “new creatures”. Instead of bondage there is now freedom; instead of condemnation, justification. It is all part and parcel of the new life with a new Lord.

While walking through the forest one day, a man found a young eagle who had fallen out of his nest. He took it home and put it in his barnyard where it soon learned to eat and behave like the chickens. One day a naturalist passed by the farm and asked why it was that the king of all birds should be confined to live in the barnyard with the chickens. The farmer replied that since he had given it chicken feed and trained it to be a chicken, it had never learned to fly. Since it now behaved as the chickens, it was no longer an eagle.

Still it has the heart of an eagle,” replied the naturalist, “and can surely be taught to fly.” He lifted the eagle toward the sky and said, “You belong to the sky and not to the earth. Stretch forth your wings and fly.”

The eagle, however, was confused. He did not know who he was, and seeing the chickens eating their food, he jumped down to be with them again.

The naturalist took the bird to the roof of the house and urged him again, saying, “You are an eagle. Stretch forth your wings and fly.”

But the eagle was afraid of his unknown self and world and jumped down once more for the chicken food. Finally the naturalist took the eagle out of the barnyard to a high mountain. There he held the king of the birds high above him and encouraged him again, saying, “You are an eagle. You belong to the sky. Stretch forth your wings and fly.”

The eagle looked around, back towards the barnyard and up to the sky. Then the naturalist lifted him straight towards the sun and it happened that the eagle began to tremble. Slowly he stretched his wings, and with a triumphant cry, soared away into the heavens.

It may be that the eagle still remembers the chickens with nostalgia. It may even be that he occasionally revisits the barnyard. But as far as anyone knows, he has never returned to lead the life of a chicken.

Rom 8:3

WEAKENED: “Astheneo” signifies to be weak, feeble, or ill (cp Rom 5:6). This weakness is not in the law itself, but in those who endeavor to keep it (see v 26, “our weaknesses”).

THE LIKENESS OF SINFUL MAN: “Likeness” is the Greek “homoioma”: see Lesson, “Homoioma” (likeness).

The KJV has “the likeness of sinful flesh”. The NIV and AV, “the likeness of”, sb omitted as unnecessary to the sense. The word “homoioma”, was added by Paul to indicate Christ’s complete identity with our nature, but its presence in the text has been used by many to suggest only a partial and imperfect “likeness”. “Flesh of sin” is the more literal rendering of the AV’s “sinful flesh”.

TO BE A SIN OFFERING: The same as the RSV margin; this is permissible, and certainly fitting in the context. (The Greek is “peri hamartias”.)

SIN IN SINFUL MAN: Or, as NIV mg and AV, “sin in the flesh”. It was “sin” which was condemned (a reference back to the allegory of ‘King Sin’ in Rom 6:12-14,16-18). “In the flesh” describes the ‘place’ or the ‘arena’ where ‘King Sin’ was condemned by Christ.

It was necessary that Christ should challenge and defeat “Sin” in the arena where it reigned supreme, that is, in the flesh. “The crucifixion of Christ as a declaration of the righteousness of God and a condemnation of sin in the flesh, exhibited to the world the righteous treatment of sin. It was as though it was proclaimed to all the world, when the body was nailed to the cross: This is how condemned human nature should be treated according to the righteousness of God; it is fit only for destruction. The shedding of the blood was the ritual symbol of that truth; for the shedding of the blood was the taking away of the life. Such a declaration of the righteousness of God could only be made in the very nature concerned; a body under the dominion of death because of sin. It would not have been a declaration of the righteousness of God to have crucified an angel or a new man made fresh from the ground. There would have been confusion in such an operation” (RR, Blood of Christ 21).

The teaching of v 3 as to the identity of Christ’s nature with ours is matched by a parallel passage from Hebrews: “Forasmuch then as the children are partakers of flesh and blood, he also himself likewise took part of the same; that through death he might destroy him that had the power of death, that is, the devil” (Heb 2:14). The equation of “sin” in Rom 8:3 and “the devil” in Heb 2:14 is quite useful in any Scriptural exposition of the Devil and Satan.

” ‘Sin in the flesh’ is that spirit or principle of disobedience native by inheritance in all men including Christ. It is an evil principle which can never be satisfied according to law. Extending to every part of the flesh, it is the cause of all the evil we do and the disease we suffer. It has the power of death which is its wages (Rom 6:23), and became a fixture in the flesh through the first transgression. By one man’s disobedience many were made sinners (Rom 5:12). The flesh is therefore sinful flesh or flesh full of sin because it is impregnated with this evil principle as defiling as the sentence (Gen 3:19) passed in Eden, becoming a physical law of our first parents’ being, and together with the death penalty is spoken of in Rom 8:2, as the law of sin and death. In the flesh therefore dwelleth no good thing (Rom 8:17,18).

“In the beginning our first parents were free from death and the law of sin was not in their members. If the spirit or principle of disobedience, the law of sin, works in the children of disobedience (Eph 2:2) how came it there? The answer is that transgression caused its appearance and fixation in the flesh. How was this done? Through serpent suggestion accepted and acted upon becoming a law of sin, a bias or inclination to oppose law, a spirit or principle of disobedience, diabolos within, that which causes to pass over the line of law drawn by God between good and evil” (FGJ, Ber 13:226).

“The word sin is used in two principal acceptations in the Scripture. It signifies in the first place the transgression of law, and in the next it represents that physical principle of the animal nature, which is the cause of all its diseases, death and resolution into dust. It is that in the flesh which has the power of death, and it is called sin because the development or fixation of this evil in the flesh was the result of transgression. Inasmuch as this evil principle pervades every part of the flesh the animal nature is styled sinful flesh, that is flesh full of sin; so that sin in the sacred style came to stand for the substance called man. In human flesh dwells no good thing (Rom 8:17,18), and all the evil a man does is the result of this principle dwelling in him” (Elp 113). (See Lesson, Sin, how was Christ made?)

” ‘Metonymy’ is not an alternate to reality. It does not mean mere shadow and type. It is simply the extension of one term to include a related aspect of the same entity. To say something is called something ‘by metonymy’ doesn’t brush it away as a fact. The dictionary definition of ‘metonymy’ is: ‘The use of the name of one thing for that of another of which it is an attribute, or with which it is associated.’ Sin, literally and primarily, is transgression of God’s law. That is the root meaning, from which others flow. The term ‘sin’ is scripturally extended by the process called ‘metonymy’ (extending a name to include a related thing) to include the evil, corrupt, death-bringing principle in every cell and particle of human flesh — the diabolos — that causes all diseases and death and disharmony with God: and which normally (unless there is direct Divine interference, as in the unique case of Christ) will inevitably bring forth its fruits of actual transgression.

“This evil principle in the flesh is both the result of sin, and the cause of sin, and therefore the Scriptures go to the root of the matter, and give the name ‘sin’ to it (just as they call hate, ‘murder’; and lust, ‘adultery’) — and they deal with all sin as an inseparable totality.

“Actual transgression, and the evil principle that Paul calls ‘the Law of Sin in the members’, (or ‘Sin in the flesh’, or the diabolos) — are inseparable parts of the total sin constitution that Christ came to destroy and abolish. Therefore the Scriptures, which deal with roots and realities, and not mere superficial appearances, gives the same name to all: SIN.

” ‘Metonymy’ is not a magic word to change a Yes to a No, or a fact into not a fact. It is simply a description of a process, illustrated in this case by the Scriptures grouping together everything to do with sin under the name Sin.

“When you see ‘metonymy’, just remember ‘another name’ — that’s what it means — and in this case, a scriptural, God-given name. To say it is ‘metonymy’, doesn’t change the fact that God (the Supreme and All-Wise Authority) gave the name ‘SIN’ to the evil principle in all human flesh” (GVG).

“When Paul speaks of Jesus as coming ‘in the likeness of sinful flesh’ (or flesh of sin), or ‘in the likeness of men’ [Phi 2:7], he cannot be understood as meaning that Jesus’ make-up resembled these things, but was in reality different. In both cases he clearly means that, though our human nature left to itself had failed to overcome sin, when God sent His own Son born in the same human nature the victory was achieved. That the Lord’s fleshly nature was that of Adam after he fell, is seen in the fact that he offered up prayers ‘with strong crying and tears, unto him that was able to save him from death: and was heard in that he feared. Though he were a Son, yet learned he obedience by the things which he suffered.’ [Heb 5:7,8]

“There is no need to rush to the Lord’s defense as though there were any discredit to him in having been born with a nature prone to sin. This was his lot, which he accepted and overcame. Far greater was the triumph of battling against sin in a body where a fallen nature was entrenched, than would have been the case had he commenced in innocence with a human nature unspoiled by heritage from Adam. And far greater was his brotherhood in affliction, and now in mediation, with his brethren, when we acknowledge that he conquered that very nature, with all its urge to turn away from God, which we know in our own consciences so well. There is real meaning in the words ‘to put away sin by the sacrifice of himself’ [Heb 9:26] when this is acknowledged; and in the fullest possible sense he destroyed the devil through death on the cross when, after the pattern of the serpent which Moses lifted up in the wilderness [Joh 3:14; Num 21:9], he finally put away the power of sin from himself, and became the priest who can lead us in ultimate victory over the same power” (CMPA, For Whom Christ Died). [See Lesson, “Homoousios” (of the same substance).]

See Lesson, Jesus destroys the devil.

Rom 8:4

THE RIGHTEOUS REQUIREMENTS OF THE LAW: The law of Moses righteously required death as a punishment for sin. All men have sinned (Rom 3:23), and death has passed upon all men (Rom 5:12). The law of Moses, being holy and just and good (Rom 7:12), righteously required death as a punishment for sin (Rom 8:4).

IN US: Not ‘by us’, but “in us” by Christ. The requirement of death has been satisfied by Christ on our behalf, if we are truly “in Christ” (v 1). This righteous requirement was satisfied by Christ for those in him. None of us is, naturally speaking, righteous (Rom 3:10). But we all may be declared righteous through Christ’s obedience (Rom 5:19), coupled with our faith (Rom 5:1) in his blood (Rom 5:9). But still the “walk” is required (Rom 8:4), not to ‘earn’ salvation but to demonstrate our faith in Christ’s monumental work of redemption.

WHO DO NOT LIVE ACCORDING THE SINFUL NATURE BUT ACCORDING TO THE SPIRIT: But still the “walk” is required (Rom 8:4), not to ‘earn’ salvation but to demonstrate our faith in Christ’s monumental work of redemption.

Rom 8:5

Vv 5-11: The order of verses in this first part of Rom 8 is significant: first, “no condemnation” (vv 1-4), and only then the mind and life of the spirit (vv 5-11). The Scriptural order is not: “We live righteously so that we will not be condemned.” Rather it is: “We are justified. Our condemnation is removed. Therefore we must, we will, now live righteously!”

MINDS: “Phroneo” indicates the mind, with mental and moral emphasis; not mere animal instinct.

SINFUL NATURE… SPIRIT: Better, “flesh” and “spirit”, as in AV. The new way of life, the way of justification, is described as a life inclined towards the “spirit”. It has. been well said that “In these verses the apostle takes up and expands the ideas involved in the statement of v 4. By giving the words a different meaning from that of Paul, much needless difficulty has been found in them. The doctrine that the Holy Spirit is a person is responsible for much confusion. So also is the idea that ‘spirit’ refers to an immortal soul within man. Others, limiting the meaning of the word ‘spirit’ to the power of God, look for a present indwelling of that power, and with such a belief in their minds have been led to mistake the excitement of an emotional assembly for the operation of the power of God. But the context always helps us to fix the meaning of the words used. Every occurrence of the word in vv 5-11 has the same meaning. As ‘flesh’ does not describe the material body, but denotes the thoughts and ways in which flesh expresses itself, so ‘spirit’ indicates that mental and moral development which has its ultimate source in God, Who is Spirit, and Who has revealed His purpose by His power, which is also called Spirit” (CRom 86).

As v 5 makes clear, inclination of one’s life in one direction or the other does not happen miraculously or by chance. The inclination is the result of consciously setting one’s mind upon a set of principles and a course of life. So Paul elsewhere exhorts us: “If ye then be risen with Christ, seek those things which are above, where Christ sitteth on the right hand of God. Set your affection on things above, not on things on the earth” (Col 3:1,2).

Rom 8:6

THE MIND CONTROLLED BY THE SPIRIT IS LIFE AND PEACE: In v 6 Paul tells us what we must already know, indeed, what is supremely self-evident. And yet it bears repeating, often and forcefully, precisely because we can never, as we are now constituted, be fully free of the flesh’s influences: “The mind of the flesh is DEATH, but the mind of the spirit is LIFE.” The first, and simplest, way to understand this passage is to read “is” as “leads to”.

“Paul makes it very clear in these words that there are two ways of living, two kinds of character and disposition, the natural and the spiritual; and further, that one leads to death and one to life. One way takes no effort, no knowledge, no ability. It is just acting naturally, pleasing ourselves, doing what we want to do, following nature. Because men’s interests and capacities and backgrounds differ, the way of the flesh takes a wide range of courses, some far worse than others; some, in fact, very good and commendable from a natural point of view. But all come under the general heading of the will of the flesh, and all end in eternal death at last. The other way is to realize, from the Word of God, that the whole range of the way of the flesh, from worst to best, leads only to death, and to thankfully accept the life-giving way of the Spirit. This way involves setting the whole life to the task of learning and applying the instructions God has given, and constantly seeking His help in absorbing and fulfilling them; constantly examining ourselves: our hearts, our motives, our desires” (GVG, “Mortify the Deeds of the Body”, Ber 58:270).

In another sense, however, it may be said that the mind of the flesh is death, even now, and that the mind of the spirit even now is life. Paul wrote elsewhere that the woman who lives “in pleasure”, foolish, selfish, and self-seeking, is dead while she lives (1Ti 5:6). The whole world that lives at enmity with God is “dead in trespasses and sins” (Eph 2:1,5). And John says that he who loves not his brother is abiding in death (1Jo 3:14). Conversely, the words of Jesus describe those who exemplify the spirit-life: “He that heareth my word, and believeth on Him that sent me, hath everlasting life, and shall not come into condemnation; but is passed from death unto life” (Joh 5:24; cp 1Jo 5:11-13). So powerfully and certainly is our redemption pictured!

“Keep telling yourself that, over and over. It is vital! It is for your life. To be fleshly-minded takes absolutely no effort, no study, no thought. It not only just comes naturally — it comes powerfully, and almost irresistibly. To be spiritually-minded is the very opposite. It does take great effort, and study, and thought. And even that’s not enough. It takes constant prayer and constant Divine help. It will never come naturally just by being in the Truth, and ‘doing the readings’, and ‘attending the meetings’. Baptism of itself is a passport to nothing except a glorious opportunity to give ourselves joyfully to God, and be accepted by Him. To be spiritually-minded is a constant struggle, a constant self-examination and self-discipline, a constant refreshing and re-cleaning in the water of the Word and the blood of the Lamb. But it alone is ‘life and peace’, intensity of Life forevermore, and perfect peace now and forever, to the depth of the soul” (GVG).

Rom 8:7

THE SINFUL MIND IS HOSTILE TO GOD. IT DOES NOT SUBMIT TO GOD’S LAW, NOR CAN IT DO SO: The contrasting life styles of “flesh” and “spirit” are also considered by Paul in some detail in his letter to the Galatians (Gal 5:16-25). The spirit-life requires certain actions; it is a “walk” (v 16; cp Rom 8:4). The two ways of life are “contrary” to, or at “enmity” with, one another (v 17; cp Rom 8:7). The “flesh” is characterized by “works” (v 19), as it is in Romans by “wages” (Rom 6:23), such as a slave (Rom 8:15) would hope to receive. But the spirit-life is characterized by “fruit” (Gal 5:22) and a “gift” (Rom 6:23), such as sons would expect by virtue of their position (Rom 8:14-16). In these simple contrasts may be seen the diametrically opposite qualities and standards of the “flesh” and the “spirit”.

HOSTILE: “Exthra” (AV “enmity”) is used also in the LXX of Genesis 3:15 — the enmity between the seed of the woman and the seed of the serpent.

IT DOES NOT SUBMIT: Gr “hupotasso”: a military term, meaning to rank under, or to be subordinate.

Rom 8:8

THOSE CONTROLLED BY THE SINFUL NATURE: The Gr is, simply, “IN the flesh”, which is a proper rendering of vv 8,9, judged simply on the Greek words alone. But the context and meaning require that “in the flesh” means, not “having human nature”, but (as in vv 5-7) having a mind “inclined towards the flesh”. In the same way Paul writes of the time “when we were in the flesh” (Rom 7:5) as though that state had been left behind, while, of course, in the literal sense it has not… yet.

Rom 8:9

Vv 9-11: “Paul uses many phrases in this chapter synonymously to add emphasis to what he is saying. In v 9, the ‘spirit of God’ is equivalent to the ‘spirit of Christ’ in the same verse, and simply ‘Christ in you’ in the next. In Phi 2:5, the apostle declares, ‘Let this mind be in you, which was also in Christ Jesus.’ Likewise in Col 3:16, he admonishes the believers to ‘let the word of Christ dwell in you richly in all wisdom’, and in Eph 3:17 ‘that Christ may dwell in your hearts by faith’. To allow the word of Christ to dwell in us is, in effect, to receive the spirit of Christ, for in John 6:63, Jesus announced: ‘the words that I speak unto you, they are spirit, and they are life’ ” (Richard Stone, “The Spirit of Christ”, Tid 23:9:13).

To summarize vv 9-11, we are “inclined toward the spirit” if: (a) the spirit of God, (b) the spirit of Christ, (c) Christ, and (d) the spirit of Him who raised Christ from the dead… dwell in us. Other passages from Paul’s writings show that it is the Word, and the mind, of Christ and God which must dwell in us. When God’s inspired Word is allowed free rein in our minds, and our lives, then God’s “power” is there (Rom 1:16,17), a power which is unto salvation. Then God and His Son are dwelling with us, and we with them (Rom 8:9-11).

ARE CONTROLLED NOT BY THE SINFUL NATURE: Lit, “are NOT in the flesh”, but see v 8n.

Vv 9-13: If we are already dead to sin, why the exhortation?

Rom 8:10

IF CHRIST IS IN YOU… YOUR SPIRIT IS ALIVE BECAUSE OF RIGHTEOUSNESS: The believer, whose life is inclined towards God’s Spirit-Word, is both “dead” and “alive” at the same time. By baptism into Christ he has become dead to his former way of life, “dead to sin” (Rom 6:2), and dead to “the flesh with the affections and lusts” (Gal 5:24). By that same baptism, and the compelling influence it has upon the devout mind, the believer becomes truly “alive” for the first time — “alive” to righteousness, walking in “newness of life” (Rom 6:4), being himself “a new creature” (2Co 5:17). The life which he now lives in Christ is a ‘spiritual’ life, a life lived on a different plane of existence. It is lived in the presence, and recognized to be in the presence, of God.

Rom 8:11

IF THE SPIRIT… IS LIVING IN YOU… HIS SPIRIT… WHO LIVES IN YOU: “The idea of the dwelling together of God and man has a long Scriptural background; it does not arise in the New Testament, as for the first time, with a special mystical meaning understood only since Pentecost. There is, in fact, no inherent mystical meaning to the word ‘dwelling’ itself; it is used frequently in both Testaments in describing the relationship between God and His people. It is an ordinary ‘family’ word in English, and the equivalent words in Hebrew and Greek carry much the same ordinary, household meaning as does the English word. Dwelling means living in the same house or household as another; the implication in Scripture is that those who dwell together belong to the same family — even when one of the dwellers is God Himself, or His Son” (Ray Walker, “Romans: The Indwelling Spirit”, BS 7:5:148,149).

See VL, Christ’s resurrection, reality.

Rom 8:12

Vv 12-17: The Law of Moses not only condemned man, as was seen in Rom 7, it also enslaved him. The work of Christ removes the condemnation (Rom 8:1), replacing it with justification unto righteousness. And it also frees us so that, no longer slaves, we may become sons (v 15).

This section (vv 12-17) can thus be seen to follow logically from the previous one (vv 5-11). In the continuation of the parable employed by Paul in Rom 6, those who lived lives inclined toward the flesh (Rom 8:5,8) were the slaves of Sin. Sin was personified as a mighty king who exacted absolute obedience from his servants, and in the end rewarded them with death (Rom 6:16-23). But, as Paul goes on, Christ has come into the ‘slave market’, and has redeemed us, or bought us out of that market. (This is the exact significance of the Greek exagorazo, translated “redeem(ed)” in Gal 3:13; 4:5.) Now, he says, we need no longer live lives of fear and degradation (Rom 8:15). Now we have become slaves of Christ, and slaves of righteousness (Rom 6:16,18,22), which is equivalent to sonship (Rom 8:15,17).

THEREFORE: Referring back to vv 5-11. Living according to the dictates of the mind of the flesh can only be expected to earn death. Therefore there is no reason to follow such a course.

Rom 8:13

IF BY THE SPIRIT YOU PUT TO DEATH THE MISDEEDS OF THE BODY, YOU WILL LIVE: The AV has “mortify”. Christ by his sacrifice “condemned sin in the flesh” (v 3). Those in Christ imitate his work by carrying out that sentence of death against the sin in their own flesh.

“Take pleasure in being holy, pure, clean, godly. It is much more satisfying and enjoyable than being dirty, once the mind is properly enlightened and adjusted. The natural man is dirty in all his thoughts and operations; ‘dirty’ from God’s point of view, for all is of the flesh, from top to bottom — and the natural works of the flesh are all uncleanness. Man is like an untaught small child, loving mud and filth. To the human point of view, some natural works of the flesh seem more perverted than others, because natural man as a society has, from age to age, certain self-imposed and varying ‘standards’ — largely as a result of some faint residue of light from original divine instructions. Greece and Rome had lost all this, and were vile. ‘Christianity’ brought a glimmer back to society, at least on the surface, up to recent times. Today ‘standards’ of decency and morality are practically non-existent: and mankind is rapidly going back to total filth and defilement. But to God, these natural distinctions of society are minor. To Him, ALL that is natural is unclean. He calls man out of the natural filth to the wholesome joy and beauty and glory of true, clean, eternally-satisfying holiness. Those who truly try it are ceaselessly thankful for their redemption, and appalled at what they formerly approved” (GVG).

Rom 8:14

THOSE WHO ARE LED BY THE SPIRIT: This must be considered synonymous with “inclined toward the spirit” (v 5), “the mind of the spirit” (v 6), and the “indwelling” of the spirit — either of God or Christ (vv 9-11).

SONS OF GOD: Greek “huios”, sons, or daughters, with special reference to the relationship with the parent. Jesus was the Son (huios) of God (v 3). Those who are guided by His spirit are sons of God. God “gave up” His own Son, Jesus, for us all (v 32), so that we might be revealed as His sons also (v 19). This word for “son” is related to “huiothesis”, “sonship” (AV “adoption”) (vv 15,23).

Cp Luk 3:22 with Luk 4:1.

Rom 8:15

THAT MAKES YOU A SLAVE: Lit, “of slavery”. “Slavery” = “douleia”, from a root word meaning ‘to bind’. That which binds, or enslaves, a person.

SONSHIP: “Huiothesis”, from “huios” (son) and “thesis” (to place or set). The bestowal of a legal relationship, common under Roman law, as distinct from the relationship of birth. In Gal 4:5 those who are under the law are redeemed from the law to receive the gift of “sonship”. In Eph 1:5 we have been “predestinated” unto sonship (AV “adoption”). Under Roman law “huiothesis” meant the severing of all past connections, becoming a ‘new man’, having a new family, the cancellation of all debts, and the right of inheritance.

The figure of speech may be heightened as we imagine an eastern bazaar, meeting-place of the ancient world, the center of commerce, entertainment, news, opinions, and social intercourse. And, always, there is the slave-market, with its auction-block. As one approaches, the brutality, the callousness, and the fear, can be felt, and seen. Here are women destined to be slaves to the basest passions of other men, and men doomed to lifelong slavery to satisfy the greed of their fellow men. Here are wasted, broken lives, dashed hopes, families soon to be torn apart forever. The slave-market — parable of our own world.

Into this scene comes a man who is obviously apart. Striding up to one man, he speaks forcefully: “I have bought you; come, follow me!” There are no chains, no threats, no blows. Just a simple command.

The disciple follows the man through the streets and the crowds until they reach the house of his Father. The disciple is given a place far surpassing the slave quarters he had known before. And, then, he has scarcely cast himself down to rest before the man is back again. He has brought water to wash the disciple’s feet, and a new clean garment. He has brought healing oil to soothe the cruel wounds inflicted by the former master, Sin. “Now you are as I am”, he says; “you are no longer a slave. You are now a son in my Father’s house.”

A lifetime of fear and hate is washed away, miraculously, and in its place is the cry of a man set free: “And because ye are sons, God hath sent forth the Spirit of His Son into your hearts, crying, Abba, Father. Wherefore thou art no more a servant, but a son; and if a son, then an heir of God through Christ” (Gal 4:6,7).

This is the change, then, implicit in the Greek word “huiothesis”, a word very inadequately translated “adoption”. The RSV (followed here) more correctly renders it as “sonship”. “Adoption” gives the unfortunate idea, to modern minds at least, of a distinctly second-class relationship. It is a word which in no way does justice to the blessed state to which God has elevated us. In one sense there is, of course, only one “only begotten” Son. But in a broader sense we are all “begotten” by the Word of God to be His sons, and no son of God is ‘second class’. But then again, in the very fullest sense, there is only one Son of God, for we are all sons only in that we have become part of the body of Christ.

The “sonship” and inheritance delineated by Paul is based upon the Roman law. Jewish law did not permit daughters to inherit along with sons; the firstborn son received double. But under Roman law sons and daughters all inherited equally, and adopted sons and daughters were treated like the others. To this Paul alluded: “For as many of you as have been baptized into Christ have put on Christ. There is neither Jew nor Greek, there is neither bond nor free, there is neither male nor female: for ye are all one in Christ Jesus. And if ye be Christ’s, then are ye Abraham’s seed, and heirs according to the promise” (Gal 3:27-29).

John Carter has expressed himself similarly upon this contrast between slaves and sons: “At our baptism we did not enter a household as slaves to serve with fear. ‘Ye are my friends, if ye do whatsoever I command you. Henceforth I call you not servants… but I have called you friends’ (John 15:14,15). And how often God says to His children: ‘Fear not.’ As the child takes the hand of its father in the dark, and finds courage in the sound of the parent’s voice, sometimes not knowing that the parent shares the fear, so with perfect confidence the child of God may trust the Father in heaven; much more so knowing that all circumstances are subject to His control. ‘God hath not given us the spirit of fear; but of power, and of love, and of a sound mind’ (2Ti 1:7)” (CRom 90).

ABBA: Aram “father”. Esp a name by which God was addressed in prayer. Only 3 times in NT text: Mar 14:36; Rom 8:15; Gal 4:6. But this Aramaic term may lie behind numerous refs to God as Father where only the Gr “Pater” is given in the NT.

See Article, Abba, Father.

FATHER: The Greek word “Pater”, a more formal expression, signifying respect and a mature appreciation of the family relationship, such as grown offspring might most commonly use.

Abba and Pater (Rom 8:15) epitomize, respectively, affection and respect. This joint title (the two appear together as well in Mark 14:36 and Gal 4:6) expresses a fullness that neither word alone can. There is Abba, the love and trust that a little child (teknon: vv 16,17,21) feels for a father, an intimate and tender affection. And there is the Pater of an adult son or daughter (huios, huiothesis: vv 14,15,19,23,29), the intelligent apprehension of the status and dignity due to the Head of the family. The combination of Hebrew and Greek words suggests also the mixed character of the Divine family: “neither Jew nor Greek… ye are all one in Christ” (Gal 3:28) (HPM, “Our Father Who art in Heaven”, Log 23:44).

The cry of “Father” gives a sublime and vastly satisfying meaning to Rom 8:31-33: “If God be for us, who can be against us? He Who did not hold back even His own Son, but gave him up for us all, how could He fail to give us graciously, along with Christ, all things? Who will bring any charge against God’s chosen ones? Will God? God, Who pronounces us righteous?” There is assurance almost beyond expression to be found in these words, by those who are still wracked with fear. What do we have to fear? God is our Father, and He is for us! He loved us so much that He purposefully gave up His own Son in death on our behalf. Will the One Who has gone so far in love for us turn back now? Will He bring charges against us at a judgment seat, when He has already taken steps, painful, sacrificial steps on His part, to remove our condemnation (v 1), and declare us righteous (v 33)? To ask such questions is to know the answers.

The love of the Father for us as dear children is vividly portrayed by the prophet Hosea: “When Israel was a child, then I loved him, and called My son out of Egypt… I taught Ephraim also to go, taking them by their arms… I drew them with cords of a man, with bands of love… How shall I give thee up…?” (Hos 11:1,3,4,8). How, indeed, shall the Eternal Father give up His children, who cry to Him, in the name of tenderness and affection and deepest respect, “Abba, Father”?

Rom 8:16

THE SPIRIT HIMSELF: First, we may notice the more common explanation, from a Christadelphian standpoint, as fairly represented by the following: “The Spirit-Word within us develops an emotional regard for the Father (1Jo 4:19) as true sons, which will reflect in our actions the Image of Him, and therefore witness that we are sons. The Spirit-Word and its reflection in us, mutually witness to our sonship. Moffatt renders this verse: ‘It is this spirit, testifying along with our own spirit that we are the children of God’ ” (PE Pickering, Expository Notes on Romans 176).

In my opinion there is more to the verse than this, and it is not far-fetched to consider that “the Spirit itself” (AV) or “the Spirit himself” (NIV) refers to Christ. (The rendering “itself” in the AV is solely due to the neuter gender of the noun “pneuma”. So if in fact “pneuma” refers to Christ then the pronoun gender may be changed to “himself” quite legitimately.)

There are other instances of Christ being clearly referred to as “the Spirit”:

  1. When Paul wrote that “the Spirit speaketh expressly” of a latter-day apostasy (1Ti 4:1-3) he most probably had in mind Christ’s great prophecy on the Mount of Olives (esp Mat 24:4,5,10-12,24).
  2. The messages to the seven ecclesias in Asia are sent from the one described variously as holding the seven stars in his right hand (Rev 2:1), having been dead and yet now being alive (v 8), the “Son of God” (v 18). But they are also described as “what the Spirit saith unto the churches” (Rev 2:7,11,17,29, etc).
  3. Paul refers to Christ, after his resurrection and glorification, as a “quickening (ie life-giving) spirit” (1Co 15:45). The reasoning behind this suggestion, and the explanation for an apparent circumlocution, is this: From where does the Christlike “spirit” come? It is no nebulous thing, created out of the air. It is demonstrated in the life of Christ himself. His exemplary life, even viewed ‘second-hand’ by modern disciples through the pages of Scripture, has an awesome power to change their lives. However and wherever that spirit or mind of Christ is truly manifested through others, it is still Christ himself who influences us. He is, therefore, in a sort of Biblical shorthand, “the Spirit himself”.

(If this still seems difficult to accept, consider v 26n.)

TESTIFIES WITH: “Sunmarturei”: to agree, or testify, along with. The first of 4 “with” words, words of partnership and sharing, in this verse and the next — indicative of what Christ shares with his brothers and sisters.

WE ARE GOD’S CHILDREN: God’s DEAR children! “Teknon”, from a root word meaning ‘to bear’; that which is born, a baby, a dear child. This word appears also in vv 17,21. Not just a future hope, but a present reality: 1Jo 3:2; 5:1; Rom 8:1,2; Gal 3:26; 4:6.

Rom 8:17

CO-HEIRS: “Sunkleronomoi”, one of three words in this verse alone expressive of a joint relationship between Christ and the saints.

SHARE IN HIS SUFFERINGS: “Sumpascho” — all one word in the Greek.

SHARE IN HIS GLORY: “Sundoxasthomen” — again, one word in the Greek. “Doxa” signifies the honor resulting from a high opinion of another; to be correctly held in great esteem. It is used very often of God and His works. God’s glory becomes Christ’s glory and finally, in measure, our glory also.

These are but some of the ‘with’ words in Rom 8, that testify of what we are and what we do jointly with Christ. This sharing with Christ gives all the weight to Paul’s arguments and exhortations throughout this lofty chapter. It is not enough that believers suffer; they must suffer WITH Christ: there must be a conscious, intelligent understanding and imitation of him. It is not enough that the saints will one day be glorified; they must be glorified WITH (and through and because of) Christ, otherwise there is no meaning. So this expresses how “the Spirit himself” testifies along with our “spirit” (singular, because all true believers share the same spirit) that we are all (all TOGETHER, Christ and us!) God’s dear children.

Rom 8:18

Vv 18-25: The order of Paul’s presentation continues to be important. To recapitulate: First of, all, he describes the gift of God: no condemnation (vv 1-4). Therefore believers should live righteous, or “spirit”-directed, lives (vv 5-11). Again, we are no longer slaves, but now sons (vv 12-17). Therefore we are required to endure present sufferings because of frailty, and to ‘labor’ as participants in a new “birth” (vv 18-25).

The change must be followed by the challenge. Carefully, logically, Paul lays the doctrinal foundation before he makes the moral appeal. Here is what God has done for you; now, this is what you must do for God. We are God’s “sons” (v 14), and no longer “slaves” (v 15). We need not “fear” any more (v 15). Now we can come into God’s presence through Christ, to cry “Abba, Pater” (v 15). Christ himself shares with us our sonship, our inheritance, and our future glory (v 17).

SUFFERINGS: Thus linking together this and the preceding verse.

OUR PRESENT SUFFERINGS: But all this necessitates that “we share in his sufferings” (vv 17,18). This is not an ‘elective’, or an option; it is a ‘required subject’. Our exalted position now requires that we faithfully endure present sufferings in preparation for future glory. Our trials enable us to know the fellowship of Christ’s sufferings (Phi 3:10), to “complete what is lacking in Christ’s afflictions for the sake of his body, that is, the church” (Col 1:24, RSV), to comfort others who themselves are afflicted (2Co 1:3-7), and to trust in God alone rather than ourselves (2Co 1:9).

Whatever form our individual sufferings may take, they cannot be ignored. The victorious life in Christ does not rule out sufferings; rather, it necessitates them. They must be faced rationally, examined, and accepted. But no matter how severe they seem now, they are not to be compared with the future glory (Rom 8:18). Here is the key to the faithful endurance of our trials. In the same measure as our sufferings increase, our hope in the future glory must increase also. Rather than complain to God because of our trials, we must rejoice and thank Him (Rom 5:3), realizing that He is doing us a benefit. That which reminds us most firmly of our own weakness serves to draw us nearer to the only One Who is truly strong. Helpless children we may be, but we have a wise and loving and omnipotent Father: “Like as a father pitieth his children, so the Lord pitieth them that fear Him. For He knoweth our frame; He remembereth that we are dust… the mercy of the Lord is from everlasting to everlasting upon them that fear Him, and His righteousness unto children’s children; to such as keep His covenant, and to those that remember His commandments to do them” (Psa 103:13,14,17,18).

GLORY: A glory to be shared with Christ (v 17) because we are ALL God’s dear children (v 21).

REVEALED: “Apokalupto”, an uncovering, as in the drawing aside of a veil. Refers often to the return of Christ (Luk 17:30; 1Co 1:7; 2Th 1:7; 1Pe 1:7,13; 4:13).

Romans 9

Rom 9:1

Rom 9–11: This section contains “unfinished business.” Although Paul has insisted on the priority of the Jew (Rom 1:16) and has noted in part his advantages (Rom 3:1,2…), he has also been obliged to expose the Jews’ failure and guilt, despite their being the chosen people of God. Those who have been under divine training for centuries in preparation for the coming of the Messiah have failed to receive him. Has the purpose of God been frustrated? What does the future hold for this people? The problem faced here was underscored in Paul’s own ministry. He had been faithful in going to the Jew first, but in place after place he had been rebuffed by Jewish unbelief. In Rome itself his strenuous effort to win a favorable verdict for the Lord Jesus Christ was to prove largely unsuccessful (Acts 28). Was his earlier statement about the power of the gospel (Rom 1:16) too hasty, too optimistic? Or were his own labors among his people inadequate? Paul could not subscribe to either conclusion. He had to face the problem from the standpoint of God’s purposes and ways.

Jew and Gentile are distinguished in the first three chapters and are still distinguished, as the circumcised and the uncircumcised, in Rom 4. In Rom 5 to 8 the Jew/Gentile tension drops out of sight, only to be renewed in Rom 9 to 11 and brought under searching examination.

So was this former champion of Judaism now an enemy of his nation and people? By no means! Here he states his willingness to die for them if they would accept Christ. His own feelings are especially strong: “There were ties of blood and the bonds of early days, which to a man of large sympathies were productive of much distress” (CRom 99).

MY CONSCIENCE CONFIRMS IT: Gr “suneidesis” has the sense of an independent witness within, examining and passing judgment on a man’s own conduct: cp Rom 2:15: “their consciences also bearing witness, and their thoughts now accusing, now even defending them”.

IN THE HOLY SPIRIT: That is, by his knowledge of the principles of God expressed in the Word of God, that was given by the Holy Spirit. Cp Rom 8:16: “The Spirit himself [Christ?] testifies with our spirit that we are God’s children.”

Rom 9:2

Both in depth and persistence Paul’s sorrow was great. It never left him! It was there in the beginning of his enlightenment when he prayed in the Temple and pleaded that he be allowed to preach to his countrymen (Acts 22:17-21).

Rom 9:3

FOR I COULD WISH THAT I MYSELF WERE CURSED AND CUT OFF FROM CHRIST: Cp with Moses: “But now, please forgive their sin — but if not, then blot me out of the book you have written” (Exo 32:32). But, ironically (and as Paul of course knew), one HAD ALREADY been “cursed” for the sake of Israel, to deliver them from bondage: “Christ redeemed us from the curse of the law by becoming a curse for us, for it is written: ‘Cursed is everyone who is hung on a tree’ ” (Gal 3:13; cit Deu 21:23).

Notice the “could”: Paul is not praying to be cursed; he says, ‘I COULD pray!’ It was a desire, but it was a passing desire beyond practicality.

This readiness to be “cursed”, although impractical, takes on poignancy in light of the fact that Paul had in fact already suffered the loss of all things in order to gain Christ (Phi 3:8). So he would be facing a double loss.

MY BROTHERS, THOSE OF MY OWN RACE: Paul retained this nomenclature even though not referring to brethren in Christ (cp Acts 13:26,38). But more than a blood relationship is involved, because he goes on to cite the spiritual heritage of his people that he shares with those of them who have not become Christians. This use of “brothers” appears elsewhere (eg, Acts 2:29; 3:17; 22:1; 28:17).

Rom 9:4

THE PEOPLE OF ISRAEL: “Israel” — in ct to Jews — takes them back to their origins, to one father who obtained his name from God. Cp 1Ki 18:31: 12 stones for the 12 tribes: “Your name shall be Israel.” Cp Paul’s other descriptions of Israel: Phi 3:5; Acts 13:16,26.

ADOPTION: Lit, the “sonship”. No other people had God as their Father in the specific sense that Israel enjoyed: Exo 4:22; Hos 11:1; Isa 63:8,16,19; 64:8; Deu 14:1. The Gr “huiothesis” (“adoption as sons”, used also in Rom 8:15) does not occur in LXX, but the idea is certainly present, especially in Deu 14:1,2 (cf Exo 4:22; Hos 11:1). Paul uses the word, as though to say that even the status of Israel was not something necessary and inherent, but the result of an act of graciousness on the part of God.

THE DIVINE GLORY: The “splendor of the divine presence” (NEB). The “Shekinah” glory that shone in the Most Holy Place and above the mercy seat, first in the cloud and the pillar of fire by night, then in the Tabernacle and later in the Temple. The purpose of this Glory was that God might dwell among His people (Exo 25:8,22; 40:34; cp 1Ki 8:11; Deu 4:32-36).

THE COVENANTS: Or “covenant” (singular) — the covenant made at Sinai (Exo 24:8), a covenant made with the nation (cp Exo 24:11).

THE RECEIVING OF THE LAW: Which followed immediately after the covenant, in Exo 24:12.

THE TEMPLE WORSHIP: In AV, “the service of God” — ie, of the priests in Tabernacle and Temple. “Have Aaron your brother brought to you from among the Israelites, along with his sons Nadab and Abihu, Eleazar and Ithamar, so they may serve me as priests” (Exo 28:1).

AND THE PROMISES: The promises to Abraham (Gen 12:1-3; 15:18; 17:7; 22:16-18), and to David (1Sa 7:12-16). Cp Eph 2:12: the covenants of promise.

Rom 9:5

THE PATRIARCHS: God’s love for Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob became the ground of His love for Israel (Deu 7:7; 10:15). He even called Himself the “God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob” (Exo 3:16; Acts 3:13; 7:32). And because of this love, Israel not only had the privilege of first hearing the gospel (Acts 3:25,26) — “to the Jew first” before “the Gentiles” (Rom 1:16; 2:10).

AND FROM THEM IS TRACED THE HUMAN ANCESTRY OF CHRIST: “Of whom as concerning the flesh Christ came” (AV). The Messiah was the core of the promises, and indeed of everything else that went before: sonship, glory, covenant, law, etc, all found their fullest meaning in his life!

A subtle distinction is to be noted between “theirs” and “from them”. Israel cannot lay claim to Christ in the same way she can claim the patriarchs, even though he entered the human family through the Israelitish gate (cf Rom 1:3). Christ is much more than the patriarchs. In his earthly origin he belongs to the one nation, but in his heavenly origin and mission he cannot be claimed exclusively by any segment of the race — rather, he belongs to the whole world!

WHO IS GOD OVER ALL, FOREVER PRAISED: Or, as the NIV mg puts it, “who is over all. God be forever praised!” (Cp NEB: “May God, supreme above all, be blessed for ever.”) Also, there is another possibility: “An alternative wording has been favored by a few scholars, arrived at by emendation of the text… yielding the following: ‘whose is the God over all, blessed for ever.’ This would make Israel’s possession of the true God her climactic blessing, and it would be a fitting close to the paragraph” (EBC).

“Who is over all”, if that is the correct rendering, testifies that the Father had committed all power and authority to His Son (Mat 28:18; John 17:6).

On the other hand, “GOD over all”, if that is correct, testifies that Jesus is the fullest manifestation of Almighty God — the express image of the Father’s person in human flesh (cp Col 1:15; Heb 1:2; Phi 2:9). Cp ideas in Mat 23:39; Zec 14:9: the one who comes in the “name” of the LORD! Also cp Psa 45:6,7 — cited Heb 1:8,9 — where Jesus is addressed as “God”, but only because he has been “blessed” by HIS God forever (Psa 45:2 — which is the very phrase of Rom 9:5).

Rom 9:6

IT IS NOT AS THOUGH GOD’S WORD HAD FAILED: The Word of God “is quick and powerful” and will surely accomplish the end to which it is sent (Heb 4:12; Isa 55:10,11). But what is that purpose? Paul shows that God’s purpose does not call for the salvation of every single Jew.

FOR NOT ALL WHO ARE DESCENDED FROM ISRAEL ARE ISRAEL: That is, not all born of Jacob are necessarily the chosen “seed” (cp idea, Rom 2:28,29). Fleshly descent is not the key requirement that Jews imagined; they laid great weight upon their genealogical line, a fact that was often productive of bitter and vain arguments (see 1Ti 1:4; Tit 3:9).

References to a deeper sense of the name “Israel”: John 1:45-51 (an Israelite indeed is one in whom is no guile); Gal 6:16 (those only who find true peace in God); Luk 3:8; Jer 9:25,26; Isa 56:3-5,8 (sons of strangers fare better than sons of Jacob).

Rom 9:7

Cit Gen 21:12. Sarah had sought from Abraham that Hagar and her son Ishmael be cast out from Abraham’s encampment (Gen 21:10). Abraham had found it a very hard matter; he loved his son Ishmael. But Yahweh agreed with Sarah: it was through her son Isaac that the seed would be generated.

At first glance, this would appeal to the nationalistic Jew. But hidden in this argument was a “sting”: if natural descent was not nearly as important as divine selection, as in the case of Ishmael’s rejection in favor of Isaac, then in like manner the natural descent of Isaac’s children was not nearly as important as the divine selection of those who had or would develop faith — whether Jew or Gentile! In other words, the same argument that effectively dismissed Ishmael and his line could also dismiss Isaac’s line — or at least some part of it.

Rom 9:8

A true son of Abraham, and thus a true Israelite, is one with the faith and behavior of Abraham. Jesus reasoned this way to the Jews: John 8:33-40. But if natural descent conferred eternal life, then the descendants of Ishmael would be on an equal level with the Jewish people.

CHILDREN OF THE PROMISE: As was Isaac, whose birth was promised, and then miraculously granted (see v 9; Gen 17:16,17; 18:1014…).

Rom 9:9

This statement of promise was given by God to Abraham in Gen 18:10. Sarah, listening in the door of the tent, found the message too good to be true. She was past the age of bearing children and her husband Abraham was also old and stricken in age (v 11). Laughing within herself she said, “After I am worn out and my master is old, will I now have this pleasure?” (Gen 18:12). Humanly speaking the birth of a child was impossible. It could only be by the promise of God, by the involvement of God, that the true seed could be generated.

AT THE APPOINTED TIME: In Gen 18:10 it is “the time of life” but the question of time is emphasized again in Gen 18:14: “At the TIME APPOINTED…” Not only was Isaac born out of a promise but a promise to be fulfilled at a SET TIME (cp Gen 21:2). This time was first appointed in Gen 17:21 — a year after Yahweh appeared to Abraham with the covenant token of circumcision (Gen 17:1,10,11) — and probably nine months from the visitation of Gen 18.

I WILL RETURN: God was personally involved n this birth, literally so in giving strength and revitalization to this aged couple — just as He is spiritually involved in the calling of each of His sons and daughters by the Word (hence causing them to “born after the Spirit”: Gal 4:29; John 6:44,45).

“Yet why was there need for another child? What was wrong with Ishmael to fulfil the role? Abraham would have been happy with that and even submitted Ishmael to the consideration of God (Gen 17:18).

“God saw further than Abraham, and in His inscrutable judgment another child was elected and promised of Him. The true seed of Abraham would be born out of faith. God’s election and power would provide His children. And to emphasize the point, this promise of Isaac was first given on the very day of the announcement of circumcision. The normal generative means of mankind were inoperative. Any reliance upon the flesh was cut off and ‘rolled away’ (cp Jos 5:2,3,9).

“So then, Ishmael, though a natural child, was not the chosen seed of God. Therefore no other son of Abraham could assume heirship to the promises on the basis alone of his fleshly descent” (LRom 8).

Rom 9:10

The argument carries over from v 9: “So then, Ishmael, though a natural child, was not the chosen seed of God. Therefore no other son of Abraham could assume heirship to the promises on the basis alone of his fleshly descent.

“However, the Jews had a natural retort to this argument: ‘Ishmael was cast out because he was the son of a bondwoman. His fleshly descent was wrong! Isaac was chosen because he had the right mother! Can’t you see the emphasis, Paul, upon the son of the BONDWOMAN?’ (Gen 21:10,12,13).

“This evasion only brought a crushing rejoinder! In the next generation we have another two sons but this time of the SAME mother and father, and again the Divine choice is seen” (LRom 8).

ONE AND THE SAME FATHER: And — since they were twins — at the same time of conception! According to ordinary human expectation, they should stand on equal terms before God in His dealings with them.

OUR FATHER ISAAC: Here Paul is stressing his commonality with the Israelites.

Rom 9:11

YET, BEFORE THE TWINS WERE BORN: The characters of the boys were neither formed nor known to man. Yet God — who gave the power to conceive to Rebekah, who was barren — knew what manner of children He had created, and their characters and destinies as well!

OR HAD DONE ANYTHING GOOD OR BAD: Why is this phrase added, as it seems so obvious? In the previous example — although the ‘word of promise” was given before the birth of Isaac (Gen 18:10) — yet the full effect of this electing promise was not apparent until the day of his weaning. It was then that Ishmael’s disparagement of his younger brother finally secured his expulsion from the inheritance (Gen 21:10-12). Ishmael failed in behavior and thus confirmed the election of God; he ‘did evil’. But God had proclaimed the destinies of Jacob and Esau before they were born, before any behavior was known! Hence the power of God to exercise sovereignty over all His creation!

IN ORDER THAT GOD’S PURPOSE IN ELECTION MIGHT STAND: Being humans, our “logic” will always have trouble with these concepts because we cannot work on two levels at once. We are conditioned — by all our lives and all our experiences — to see and understand and make choices in a universe where our freewill is King. We see, we process in our minds, and we choose, and then we act. Free, sovereign creatures… making free choices.

But God lives in another dimension as well… maybe, we should say: several different “dimensions” where we cannot really go! We can barely understand what those dimensions mean. Maybe we DON’T understand, and the brain starts hurting trying to reconcile His absolute omniscience (or foreknowledge) and our freewill. How can we be choosing, really choosing, when God must already know how we will choose?

But the Bible, it seems to me, says we CAN! So I have to think that — even if a part of my mind rebels at the juxtaposition of two ideas which seem practically exclusive of one another — then the fault (shortcoming, weakness?) is with my own mind.

Put another way, I’d say we should be grateful that God has given us minds that can even ASK such a question, about time and eternity and the essential character and power of our Creator, while we — when all is said and done — are nothing but a fragile combination of mud and blood and brain synapses, sometimes firing and sometimes misfiring.

God has created us out of the dust, or clay, and given us a mind which can dimly comprehend the Great Other, beyond ourselves and our eyes and ears and smell and touch. In the words of Ecclesiastes, He has put “eternity” into our hearts (Ecc 3:11). But like the clam on the seashore, our little “hearts” and minds can’t really fathom the depths of the sea, although it lays there, right next to us. But what we know of the love of God tells us that what we can only vaguely grasp now will surely be explained to us more fully later, WHEN we are capable of receiving it.

At least, that’s how I “make sense” of predestination, foreknowledge, freewill, God, and man.

Rom 9:12

THE OLDER SHALL SERVE THE YOUNGER: Cit Gen 25:23. Lit, “the greater shall serve the lesser” (RV). This sense is probably taken from the preceding words: “and the one people shall be stronger than the other people.” In the context of this verse “the stronger” refers to the victor in the “struggle” (going on within Rebekah’s womb). Esau would win that context and would be the firstborn, the first from the womb (Gen 25:25). But God decrees that, despite his greater physical strength, Esau would still serve his younger and weaker brother.

“In the individual lives of Esau and Jacob this was not immediately obvious. Esau grew strong whilst Jacob was in Padan-aram and the younger paid him deference when they again met by the river Jabbok (Gen 33:3,8-15). On the other hand Jacob obtained the birthright and the blessing (Gen 25; 27). When Jacob returned from exile, it was he who entered the land of promise whilst his older brother went back to Mount Seir. Even in possessions Jacob had been greatly blessed, so that Esau marveled at the extent of his family and herds and the magnitude of the present Jacob had sent to him (Gen 33:4-11). Esau was unable to provide for Jacob in any way because Yahweh had made him self-sufficient (Gen 33:12-15). Jacob then passed on to be heir of the great wealth and possessions already enjoyed by Abraham and Isaac. The subservience of Esau, however, is more easily seen in his descendants, for Edom was long subject to the kingdom of Judah (eg, 2Sa 8:14; 1Ki 22:47; 2Ki 14:7). Jacob’s future participation in the Kingdom of God will complete his ascendancy — when any profane person, like Esau, will be thrust out (Luk 13:28; Heb 12:16)” (LRom 10).

Rom 9:13

JACOB I LOVED, BUT ESAU I HATED: Cit Mal 1:2,3. What was true for the brothers became generally true for their descendants as well — for “Two nations are in your womb, and two peoples from within you will be separated” (Gen 25:23).

In this connection, by quoting Mal 1:2,3, Paul lifts the discussion from what might appear to be a purely personal one to the plane of corporate, national life. God’s love for Jacob and hatred for Esau ought not to be construed as temperamental. Malachi is appealing to the course of history as fulfilling the purpose of God declared long before. Hatred in the ordinary sense will not fit the situation, since God bestowed many blessings on Esau and his descendants. The “hatred” is simply a way of saying that Esau was not the object of God’s electing purpose (cf the use of hate in Luke 14:26, where discipleship is stated to involve “hatred” for one’s own family and one’s own life; they are simply put out of consideration when one takes on himself the responsibility of following Christ). The value of the account of the two brothers is to make clear that in election God does not wait until individuals or nations are developed and then make a choice on the basis of character or achievement. If He did so, this would make a mockery of the concept of election, because it would locate the basis in man rather than in God and His purpose. God’s love for Jacob, then, must be coupled with election rather than explained by some worthiness found in him (cf Deu 7:6-8).

Rom 9:14

IS GOD UNJUST? NOT AT ALL!: No, of course not. “The LORD is upright… and there is no wickedness in him” (Psa 92:15; cp Deu 32:4). The thought that a major portion of Israel had been rejected was a great problem to some of the Jews. It was all well and good if God rejected Ishmael and Esau — but when the principle of their rejection was applied to many of their own, then they, the Jews, faltered at the righteousness of God.

Rom 9:15

HE SAYS TO MOSES: The one in whom Israel esp trusted (John 5:45).

I WILL HAVE MERCY ON WHOM I HAVE MERCY, AND I WILL HAVE COMPASSION ON WHOM I HAVE COMPASSION: Cit Exo 33:19. God taught Moses himself this very principle of election. This was the instance when God withdrew His presence from the nation as a whole, and confided esp in Moses himself — to whom He spoke “face to face” (Exo 33:7-11). Moses pleads with the Almighty, but is rebuffed: God Himself will decide on what terms and when Israel might be brought back into His favor.

Rom 9:16

MAN’S DESIRE: In this case (Exo 33), the man was Moses, and his desperate desire was that God once again show favor to the nation.

OR EFFORT: “Running” in KJV. That is, to be diligent, or “make haste” (as Moses does in Exo 34:8).

BUT ON GOD’S MERCY: Moses earnestly sought God’s favor for Israel, but it was forthcoming only when God’s chose!

The application, however, goes wider. All men “desire” their own pleasures, and make great “effort” in pursuit of those pleasures (cp Gal 2:2; also cp Rom 9:30; 10:3). But their ultimate satisfaction, in all things, is up to the mercy of God, and not their own desires or strivings.

Rom 9:17

FOR THE SCRIPTURE SAYS TO PHARAOH: “I RAISED YOU UP FOR THIS VERY PURPOSE, THAT I MIGHT DISPLAY MY POWER IN YOU AND THAT MY NAME MIGHT BE PROCLAIMED IN ALL THE EARTH”: Paul is citing Exo 9:16.

“The question will always arise: ‘Since God hardened Pharaoh’s heart, did Pharaoh not have any personal choice or freewill over this process?’ And the further question: ‘If God planned all along to destroy Pharaoh’s nation and army, then how could Pharaoh have EVER had a choice of his own?’ But it is possible that God COULD have worked His purpose just as well IF Pharaoh had not hardened his heart, and IF he had in fact heeded the warnings of Moses: “The most careful attention should here be directed to what is not said by Paul in this appeal to Exo 9:16. God did not say to Pharaoh that he had raised him up in order to destroy him, or to drown his army in the Red Sea, but that God had raised him up for the purpose of showing His power in Pharaoh and of having God’s name published throughout the earth. Just HOW God’s purpose would be fulfilled in Pharaoh, at the time God spoke, still remained within the circumference of Pharaoh’s free will to choose; whether by his own submission to God’s commands or by his rebellion against them, would be realized God’s purpose. If Pharaoh had submitted to God’s will, God’s name would have been magnified all over the world and His power would have been demonstrated in Pharaoh just as gloriously in that manner as it was in the manner of its actual occurrence. Pharaoh had the free choice of obeying or not obeying God; but God had purposed, either way, to use him as a demonstration of God’s power and a means of publishing the divine name all over the world; but the choice of HOW this would come about remained with Pharaoh until he was HARDENED.

“What happened to the king of Nineveh, following the preaching of Jonah, should be remembered in the connection here. Both Pharaoh and the ruler of Nineveh heard the word of God, the one by Moses, the other by Jonah. Nineveh received mercy; Egypt did not. God had a perfect right to spare one and punish the other; but it is a falsehood to allege that God’s doing so was capricious and unrelated to what was in the two monarchs or to their [respective] responses to God’s word” (Coffman).

THAT MY NAME MIGHT BE PROCLAIMED IN ALL THE EARTH: Echoed many times in the period of the plagues, leading up the exodus from Egypt: Exo 7:3,4,17; 8:10,22; 9:29,30; 10:2; 11:9; 12:12. Subsequent history reveals how effective Yahweh had been in this purpose (cp Exo 15:14; Jos 2:10; 9:9; 1Sa 4:8). The Pharaoh who confronted Moses was a remarkable man for pride and will power. Yet through those very qualities the glory of the God of Israel was the more magnified. A milder individual would never have served the purpose! Ten times this Pharaoh turned back to challenge the power of Yahweh! With each step the power of Yahweh was heightened and the news released throughout the surrounding nations as they watched the growing drama. And so the record of these great events has been the foundation of faith for many thousands, perhaps millions, in all later times.

Thus the wrath of man can indeed contribute to the praise and glory of God (Psa 76:10)!

Rom 9:18

THEREFORE GOD HAS MERCY ON WHOM HE WANTS TO HAVE MERCY: This first phrase simply repeats v 15 — but then Paul goes on to the additional point of Pharaoh’s case…

AND HE HARDENS WHOM HE WANTS TO HARDEN: How did God “harden” Pharaoh’s heart (Exo 4:21; 7:3,13; 9:12,35; 10:1,20; 14:8; etc)? “All God had to do to antagonize Pharaoh was to touch his pride and tell him what to do against his will, ie, ‘let My people go’, and enter into a competition with Pharaoh as to who was the greatest. Pharaoh could have been impressed for good, but in his position, pride and prejudice would have been just too much, and so, without any special magic, God could quite easily harden Pharaoh’s heart” (JP).

“But, perhaps the hardening was not just by means of plagues but by a plethora of circumstances directed/engineered by God’s angels which all served in the end to increase the spiritual calcification of Pharaoh’s wicked heart. Every story of Israeli production shortfall, inefficiency, provincial breakdown in the Egyptian ’empire’, every report of domestic and civil strife and unrest in Egypt together with the continual pressure to compromise which his advisors must surely have subjected him to, generated another step in the progressive hardening of his heart. The full responsibility for, and ownership of, the hardening of heart was the man Pharaoh’s, and not God’s. If the reverse were true, if God directly manipulated Pharaoh’s thoughts and feelings, his condemnation of Pharaoh would have been unjust. God manipulated circumstances, not Pharaoh. He did not CREATE his thoughts, He REVEALED them” (DevRam).

“It has many times been pointed out that the record in Exo tells us not only that God hardened Pharaoh’s heart, but that Pharaoh himself hardened his heart. Some find fault with God’s action here who yet must recognize a corresponding law in human life. It has been well said, ‘It is by an operation of a law of man’s nature as God created that, he who will not turn, at last cannot turn’ ” (CRom 105,106).

The hardening of Pharaoh’s heart can profitably be related to the principle laid down in Rom 1, that God’s method of dealing with those who reject the revelation of Himself in nature and history (and in Pharaoh’s case also in miracles) is to abandon them to still greater excess of sin and its consequences.

“Was it fair to harden a man’s heart like this? If Pharaoh had started off as a good man, then it certainly would have been very unfair. But this was not so. God never makes a good man behave badly. Pharaoh started off as a bad lot. He was already oppressing Israel cruelly before God said anything about hardening his heart.

“Also, we have here another example of Heb idiom. God sometimes says, ‘I will do such-and-such’, when He really means, ‘I have foreseen that such-and-such will happen, and I shall permit it to happen.’

“You can see that this is so from Isa 29:3; God says to Jerusalem, ‘I will camp against thee round about, and will lay siege against thee.’ But of course God Himself did not camp around Jerusalem and besiege it. The Assyrian army did. And the Assyrians were acting under their own free will. (Isa 10: 5-7 proves that.) So when God said, ‘I will camp…’, He obviously meant, ‘I will allow the enemy army to camp…’

“There is a second example of this idiom in Isa 29. V 10 says, ‘The Lord hath poured out upon you the spirit of deep sleep and (He) hath closed your eyes.’ V 13 explains what this really means. God did not blind the eyes of people who were trying to see. He never does. The literal truth, as expressed in v 13 was this: ‘This people draw near Me with their mouth, and with their lips do honor Me, but (they) have removed their heart far from Me.’ If they ‘removed their heart far from God’, this means that they willfully shut their own eyes. God realized that they had done so. That is obviously what He meant when He said that He had closed their eyes.

“In the same way, when a Hebrew read the words, ‘I will harden Pharaoh’s heart’, he would take it as a prophecy that the wicked Pharaoh would harden his own heart. This is exactly what did happen. In the Exo story it says 15 times that Pharaoh’s heart was hardened. Three times it says Pharaoh hardened his own heart. Seven times it says God did the hardening. Five times it states that Pharaoh’s heart grew harder, without saying who hardened it.

“Clearly, God did not make a good man bad. He merely took hold of a very bad man, and made use of his badness” (GT ch 20).

Rom 9:19

FOR WHO RESISTS HIS WILL?: “In Jer 18 we are told that the prophet was sent to the potter’s house, there to hear God’s words. The potter was working with the clay, and as he wrought, his work was marred. So he crushed together and then refashioned the clay. And if Israel were workable in God’s hands, He would devise good for them (vv 5-10); but Israel would not (vv 11-23). Jeremiah had then to take an earthen vessel (Jer 19), baked and fixed in shape, not now capable of being refashioned, and tell of impending disasters, breaking the vessel as an illustration of God’s intention to break them as a nation.

“God is using the clay of sin-stricken humanity, remaking it as He wills. He would do no wrong if He left the clay to perish. The soft, responsive clay is being prepared for greater things, while the hard unresponsive can only be destroyed.

“Paul puts an alternative to the statement that man cannot answer God. Either that must be admitted or God has not power over the clay. This would be absurd (Rom 9:21). It is in the power of God to make of part of the lump of humanity an honorable nation, and of another part a dishonorable one. And so with individuals. But as Israel were told by Jeremiah, God conditioned His act upon Israel’s response to Him” (CRom 106,107).

It IS possible to resist the will of God! Because, if man successfully resists the direction in which God’s intervention, or providence, is pushing him, then ultimately God’s will for him will change! Thus it may be said that it is impossible to resist God’s will WITHOUT CONSEQUENCES! And, sad for the one who resists, the consequences are not what he or she would choose! Consider Act 7:51: “You stiff-necked people, with uncircumcised hearts and ears! You are just like your fathers: You always resist the Holy Spirit!” (the Sanhedrin DID resist the will of God, that they be converted through the preaching of Stephen; and they and their nation perished as a result).

But also consider Acts 26:14: “I heard a voice saying to me in Aramaic, ‘Saul, Saul, why do you persecute me? It is hard for you to kick against the goads.’ ” (Saul of Tarsus — though he resisted for a while — finally relented and did not continue to resist the will of God, or the Lord Jesus, and so he repented and was baptized — but the choice was his.)

Rom 9:20

TALK BACK: The NT’s standard word for “answer” is “apokrinomai”. Occasionally this is intensified with another prefix, giving it a somewhat hostile flavor: “answer back”. Appropriately four out of five of its OT occurrences come in the book of Job (eg, Job 16:8; 32:12)! So here, in the middle of the exposition of Paul’s doctrine of election comes the objection “Then why does God still blame us? For who resists his will?” To this Paul’s main reply is: “But who are you, O man, to talk back to God?” Who are you, to argue against God? He is the potter, you and Pharaoh are only clay.

The quotation here is a combination, of Isa 29:16: “Shall what is formed say to him who formed it…” — and of Isa 45:9: “Why do you make me like this?”

FORMED: In Isa 29:16, Heb “yatser” — sw Gen 2:7,8 (man created of dust of earth); Job 33:6 (Elihu was formed out of the clay). The Gr is “plasso” = to form, or mold (cp Engl “plastic”). (In this context, by the way, man plainly has free will — see Isa 29:13,15: he exercises that free will to remove his heart, and to hide, from God!)

Rom 9:21

“Throughout this consideration it has been emphasized that in each context the human desire is recognized and God’s action related to man’s behavior. Clay is without thought or power to determine its course. In this respect the analogy of potter and clay has its limits. It is highly significant that in a further use of this figure, this time by the prophet Jeremiah, the express teaching of the section is that God’s action is conditional upon human behavior. In Jer 18 Jeremiah is told to go to the house of the potter, where God would give him instruction. There he saw the potter molding a vessel but, alas, he spoiled it. so he reworked the still soft clay into another shape according as he saw fit. The lesson was for Israel, ‘Behold, as the clay is in the potter’s hand, so are ye in Mine hand, O house of Israel’ (v 6). If God spoke of punishment or peace to any nation and that people reverted in their behavior then He would repent of the evil or good He thought to do to them (vv 7-10). However, Israel in Jeremiah’s day had reached the unregenerate state. ‘Behold,’ says God, ‘I frame (Heb ‘yatsar’, as in Isa 29) evil against you, and devise a device against you: return ye now every one from his evil way, and make your ways and your doings good’ (v 11). The response of the people was one of sullen and determined indifference: ‘There is no hope; but we will walk after our own devices’ (v 12)… There was nothing malleable in the nation’s attitude.

“Consequently, Jeremiah was told to take a potter’s earthen vessel, fired and fixed in shape, unto the valley of the Son of Hinnom… (Jer 19:1,2). After stating a catalogue of the sins of the nation (Jer 19:3-9), the prophet was instructed to break the earthen vessel in the sight of the people (v 10). ‘Even so will I break the people and the city, as one breaketh a potter’s vessel, that cannot be made whole again’ (v 11; cp Lam 4:2; Psa 2:9). There was opportunity, but it had been refused; like Pharaoh, they had hardened their hearts against Yahweh, and judgment would surely come upon them” (LRom 16,17).

This same lesson is given another NT application by Paul in 2Ti 2:19-21.

“Since God doth often vessels make of lowly matter for high uses meet, I throw me at his feet. There will I wait until my Maker seek for some such stuff whereon to show His skill. THEN is my time” (Xd 113:228).

Rom 9:22

Paul does not stop to wait for an answer; the question assumes there is no answer. God has put up with the proud and evil ways of wicked men for a long time; even though as Creator He might have removed them early and promptly.

GREAT PATIENCE: The goodness and forbearance of God is intended to lead man to repentance (Rom 2:4). Likewise, in the days of Noah, the long-suffering God waited for man’s repentance (1Pe 3:20). And it similar in our day: “The Lord is not slow in keeping his promise, as some understand slowness. He is patient with you, not wanting anyone to perish, but everyone to come to repentance” (2Pe 3:9).

THE OBJECTS OF HIS WRATH: The negative aspect here is intended to refer back to Pharaoh (vv 17,18), as well as — more generally — to the Jewish opposition to the truth of the gospel.

PREPARED FOR DESTRUCTION: This designates a ripeness of sinfulness that points to judgment unless there is a turning to God, yet God is not made responsible for the sinful condition. The preparation for destruction is the work of man, who allows himself to deteriorate in spite of knowledge and conscience. Even when favor was shown to him, Pharaoh “sinned yet more, and hardened his heart…” (Exo 9:33,34) — so that, eventually, it would be plain that Pharaoh had no one to blame but himself. So it may be seen, quite reasonably, that God did not prepare Pharaoh for destruction, so much as Pharaoh prepared HIMSELF for destruction!

Rom 9:23

TO MAKE THE RICHES OF HIS GLORY KNOWN TO THE OBJECTS OF HIS MERCY: Ironically, it is often the “vessels of God’s mercy” who most benefit by seeing the destruction of the “vessels of His wrath”: “This is what you are to say to the house of Jacob and what you are to tell the people of Israel: ‘You yourselves have seen what I did to Egypt, and how I carried you on eagles’ wings and brought you to myself. Now if you obey me fully and keep my covenant, then out of all nations you will be my treasured possession’ ” (Exo 19:3-5). So too would Gentile believers marvel at their calling when the Roman legions descended upon Jerusalem and destroyed the people of the Covenant in AD 70. It will always be true, that the fullness of the mercy of God will come home to the righteous only when they see the Yahweh’s vengeance upon the wicked, and know that they have been preserved therefrom.

WHOM HE PREPARED IN ADVANCE FOR GLORY: A very similar statement was made by Christ: “Come, you who are blessed by my Father; take your inheritance, the kingdom prepared for you since the creation of the world” (Mat 25:34). God has been working, through His angels and His Spirit, to bring many sons to glory; indeed, it is His preeminent work (Rom 8:28-30).

Rom 9:24

Once more, Paul emphasizes that Gentiles will share with Jews in this coming Glory.

Rom 9:25

Vv 25,26: Peter also refers to these same passages, in 1Pe 2:10).

I WILL CALL THEM ‘MY PEOPLE’ WHO ARE NOT MY PEOPLE, AND I WILL CALL HER ‘MY LOVED ONE’ WHO IS NOT MY LOVED ONE: Cit Hos 2:23. The stumbling of Israel, their removal from the Divine mercy, and their later return to favor. Also, Paul implies that if those who were “My people” could become “not My people”, and finally “My people” yet again, then there was no reason why the Gentiles — who started out as “not My people” — could not also become “My people”.

Rom 9:26

IN THE VERY PLACE WHERE IT WAS SAID TO THEM, ‘YOU ARE NOT MY PEOPLE,’ THEY WILL BE CALLED ‘SONS OF THE LIVING GOD’: Cit Hos 1:10. The argument: (1) If Israel could accept a principle of return to Divine favor for themselves, how dare they refuse God the right to grant the principle to others! (2) The very concept of ones who are “not My people” was introduced by Moses: “I will make them envious by those who are not a people; I will make them angry by a nation that has no understanding” (Deu 32:21); so Paul’s use of the “no people” passages in Hosea is justified and complemented by Moses’ words. (Note that this very verse is used by Paul, in Rom 10:19.)

Rom 9:27

Vv 27,28: Cit Isa 10:22,23. This quotation is taken from the LXX. V 28 also echoes words of Isa 28:22, a similar context which speaks of divine judgment upon Israel.

Rom 9:28

The inclusion of Isa 10:23 indicates that Paul also intends to stress the surety of impending judgment upon Israel.

Rom 9:29

DESCENDANTS: “A seed” (AV). This quotation is also taken from the LXX, whereas the Heb of Isa 1:9 speaks of a “remnant”. However, the “seed” IS or WILL BE but a “remnant”, as Isa 6;13 implies. The essential point is that only a remnant of Israel will be saved (cp Isa 7:3).

SODOM… GOMORRAH: Israel is compared to Sodom and Gomorrah. Except for a remnant Israel would be equally obliterated. Cp Eze 16:45-56. God can draw and in fact has drawn back His favor from the sons of Israel; they were never given a “free ticket” to the kingdom independent of their faith and behavior. “For not all who are descended from Israel are Israel” (v 6). Fleshly descent never gave anyone a title to divine grace and sonship, and the Bible makes this abundantly obvious.

Rom 9:30

WHAT THEN SHALL WE SAY?: Introducing Paul’s summary of the foregoing argument.

PURSUE: Gr “dioko” = to pursue, implying fervent activity: eg Acts 9:4,5; Phi 3:6,12. The Gentiles conducted their lives wholly in ignorance of God’s law, and thus, of course, with no intent to pursue “righteousness” at all.

OBTAINED: Gr “katalambano” — used in Phi 3:12 of the runner winning a race. But how can a person win a race which he never entered? and which he never intended to win?

A RIGHTEOUSNESS THAT IS BY FAITH: The prize of righteousness, a covering from sins by the righteousness of God, had been obtained by the Gentiles on the basis of FAITH. This hearkens back to the earlier conclusions of Rom 3:27-30 and Rom 4. The very attitude of faith is exclusive of a righteousness by human striving. Faith looks away from self and puts its trust in God.

Rom 9:31

A supreme irony: the one who didn’t even enter the “race” wins it; and the one who works the hardest, striving to “win”, loses altogether! It is a pitiful picture of the nation of Israel struggling intensely to perfect their religious life and coming up empty-handed. “The Gentiles, sunk in carelessness and sin, have attained the favor of God, while the Jews, to whom religion was a business, have utterly failed” (Hodge).

ATTAINED: Gr “phthano”, to come before another. Not sw v 30. The Jews could not attain this “righteousness” because they could not continue in ALL things that were written (Gal 3:10; Deu 27:26). Since no one could keep the Law perfectly, “The very commandment that was intended to bring life actually brought death. For sin, seizing the opportunity afforded by the commandment, deceived me, and through the commandment put me to death” (Rom 7:10,11). Thus the Law became “a yoke that neither we nor our fathers have been able to bear” (Acts 15:10).

Rom 9:32

THEY PURSUED IT NOT BY FAITH BUT AS IF IT WERE BY WORKS: All the time they were traveling on the wrong road! Righteousness before God could never be attained along the path of legal observance. It would leave God out of the means of salvation and conjure in man a sense of self-sufficiency.

THEY STUMBLED OVER THE “STUMBLING STONE”: Paul is continuing the analogy of runners in a race. “Many of them will stumble; they will fall and be broken, they will be snared and captured” (Isa 8:15). Spoken initially of those Jews who sought for confederacies with Gentile powers, ie Egypt, as a means of saving themselves from the Assyrians, but all to no avail.

Rom 9:33

Most of this quotation comes from Isa 28:16. The context is similar to Isa 8:14: Judah sought to hide from the great and mighty “flood” of the Assyrian army (see Isa 28:2,15,17-19). In doing this they ignored the great foundation stone, which was God Himself (see context also, wherein Hezekiah — and by type the Lord Jesus Christ — represent the chief cornerstone: cp 1Co 3:11; Psa 118:22; 1Pe 2:4-8).

Romans 5

Rom 5:1

THEREFORE: A logical deduction from Rom 4, where Paul has shown that justification came NOT from works (vv 1-8), nor ordinances (vv 9-12), nor by obedience to the Law (vv 13-17), BUT by faith (vv 18-25). Now we see the benefits of this.

THROUGH FAITH: KJV has “BY faith”. But it should read “OUT OF faith”: it is not faith in the abstract that saves us, but justification springs out of a well-grounded faith.

What saves us? Grace (Eph 2:8,9). Hope (Rom 8:24). Belief (Mar 16:15). Baptism (1Pe 3:21). Gospel, and its memory (1Co 15:1,2). Blood of Christ (1Jo 1:7). Faith (Rom 5:1). Works (Jam 2:24). Ourselves (Act 2:40). Endurance (Mat 10:22). What saved the “drowning man”? The rock, the rope, another man, himself… or ALL of them?

PEACE WITH GOD: Peace is the result of righteousness, and not — as today’s world tries to attain it — on the basis of UNrighteousness: cp Luk 2:14; John 14:27; Eph 2:14; Phi 4:6,7; Psa 85:8.

Peace: made (Col 1:20), preached (Eph 2:17), enjoyed (Rom 5:1), filling hearts (Rom 15:13), given (John 14:27), keeping (Phi 4:7), and ruling (Col 3:15).

Rom 5:2

THROUGH WHOM: “Dia” = THROUGH whom… Continues the thought of Rom 3:24.

ACCESS: Gr “prosagoge”: a bringing in or an introduction. Suggests the introduction of a subject into the presence of the sovereign, or worshiper to the object of worship. Elsewhere only in Eph 2:18; 3:12. Of ourselves, we have no right to enter the presence of God; Christ has introduced us there (1Pe 3:18). By contrast, those who entered into the presence of the monarch without express permission might expect death (Est 4:11). But, in Christ, the pure in heart will see God (Mat 5:8)!

“He came and preached peace to you who were far away and peace to those who were near. For through him we both have access to the Father by one Spirit” (Eph 2:17,18).

REJOICE: More lit, “boast” or “glory” (Gr “kauchaomai”). Used in Rom 2:17,23; 5:3,11; 12:12,15; 15:10.

IN THE HOPE: Lit, “epi”: on the basis of… hope.

THE GLORY OF GOD: In our present state we have no hope (Psa 90:10). But Christ will manifest Yahweh’s majesty in the earth and He will thus be glorified (Mic 5:4). We can do the same now (Rom 8:17,18). The “trial of our faith” is necessary now in order that we “might be found unto GLORY at the appearing of Jesus Christ” (1Pe 1:7). The Glory of Yahweh is seen in His Name (Exo 34); and we must manifest that Name (Rev 14:1).

Rom 5:3

However, peace with God (v 1) does not necessarily bring peace with man. The actual conditions of life, especially for believers in the midst of a hostile society, are not easy or pleasant, but the knowledge of acceptance with God, of grace constantly supplied, and the prospect of future glory enable believers to exult in the face of sufferings.

WE ALSO REJOICE IN OUR SUFFERINGS: See Article, “Rejoice in tribulations”.

BECAUSE WE KNOW THAT…: It is not the suffering per se in which Paul rejoices, but in the KNOWLEDGE that the suffering is but the prelude… eventually… to God’s love (v 5)!

SUFFERING PRODUCES PERSEVERANCE: “The human mind is naturally given to shallowness and folly and the infantile, characterless pursuit of pleasure and excitement. Very few ever get beyond this stunted stage. Tribulation, if we are rightly exercised by it, forces us to come face to face with the sober realities of life, and intelligently adjust our purposes and characters to them. This is the teaching of the Scripture, and the wholesome experience of any with any sense and maturity. Some run away crying, vainly seeking solace in animal emptiness, and gain nothing from their sorrows. This is tragic” (GVG).

“So God in his wisdom allows trouble to come our way for the express reason of teaching us patience. Again we can see this in the life of a little child. If the child gets everything it wants exactly when it wants it then it has no patience at all and soon becomes miserable when going out into the cruel world where mommy and daddy are not there to supply every request. Parents are wise to teach their children patience by sometimes making them wait, and no doubt from the viewpoint of the child this waiting is a form of tribulation” (MM).

SUFFERING: “Thlipsis”: pressure, compression. The purpose of tribulation in a believer’s life is explained in Rom 8:35; 12:12; Mat 13:21; John 16:33; Acts 14:22; 2Co 1:4; 7:4-7; Heb 12:8; 1Th 3:1-4. Notice the living example of Paul: 2Co 11:24-31.

PERSEVERANCE: Gr “hupomeno” = to bear, or remain, under (eg, a burden or test). See Rom 2:7; Heb 12:1; Jam 5:11; Job 23:10; 42:11.

If I can be sure, when the time finally comes for the Great High Priest to return from the Most Holy Place bringing the final blessing…. that I’ll still be here, waiting at my post, rejoicing in the tribulations which I endure, and having learned patience… real PATIENCE… enough for a lifetime, of broken hearts and broken dreams [sounds like a country western song, doesn’t it?], of hurt feelings, of resentments, of disappointments, of bitterness, of ailments and illnesses, of the gradual and insidious decline of all my human powers, and the frustrations of coming short time and again of what I would like to be, but can’t quite be, of asking forgiveness for the 490th time for the same sins, of forgiving others for the same number of times…. without throwing up my hands and walking away from the door of the temple. Out into the howling waste of a wilderness of snakes and scorpions — where there is no hope and no life and no love… the wilderness where Judas went, and Cain, and Saul, and a million others — who could not truly believe that the High Priest was coming to bring them the last great blessing. Yes, if I can only wait… long enough…. then “I WILL BE saved” will turn into “I AM saved”! God give me strength enough to wait… that long. And I won’t even care whether that strength should be called the Holy Spirit or something else…

“Our heavenly Father sends us frequent troubles to try our faith. If our faith be worth anything, it will stand the test. Gilt is afraid of fire, but gold is not [1Pe 1:7]: the paste gem dreads to be touched by the diamond, but the true jewel fears no test. It is a poor faith which can only trust God when friends are true, the body full of health, and the business profitable; but that is true faith which holds by the Lord’s faithfulness when friends are gone, when the body is sick, when spirits are depressed, and the light of our Father’s countenance is hidden. A faith which can say, in the direst trouble, ‘Though He slay me, yet will I trust in Him’ [Job 13:15], is heaven-born faith. The Lord afflicts His servants to glorify Himself, for He is greatly glorified in the graces of His people, which are His own handiwork. When ‘tribulation worketh patience; and patience, experience; and experience, hope’ [Rom 5:3,4], the Lord is honored by these growing virtues. We should never know the music of the harp if the strings were left untouched; nor enjoy the juice of the grape if it were not trodden in the winepress; nor discover the sweet perfume of cinnamon if it were not pressed and beaten; nor feel the warmth of fire if the coals were not utterly consumed. The wisdom and power of the great Workman are discovered by the trials through which His vessels of mercy are permitted to pass. Present afflictions tend also to heighten future joy. There must be shades in the picture to bring out the beauty of the lights” (CHS).

“Paul wrote: ‘We glory in tribulations also’ (Rom 5:3). is this genuinely possible? Only by attaining unto the state of mind manifested by the Apostle. He bore with tribulation because he saw the divine purpose in it. For one thing, he declared, it ‘worketh patience,’ or endurance. It is useless fretting against what we cannot alter, and therefore a courageous man will bear with it, and a faithful man will see beyond it. Once a trial has been successfully surmounted it brings ‘experience’ (Rom 5:4). The Greek word, ‘dokimen’, signifies full proof by trial. The metaphor is taken from the refining of metal, in which there is purification by fire without any deterioration or loss of worth. If in tribulation we seek God’s help, and endure the unpleasant experience moment by moment in the realization that it cannot last for ever, we will ultimately emerge from it with the knowledge that we did not rest on God’s help in vain, and that we manifested the strength to endure.

“This will lead to hope. Hope in what? In the knowledge that He who sustained us in the past will do so in the future even to the setting up of the Kingdom; and in the realization that as we emerged successfully from one trial so we can from the next, leading to a steady growth of endurance, until the time come when all such experiences will cease. Thus ‘hope maketh not ashamed’, for we shall triumph in spite of trouble, and will respond to the ‘love of God’ that will be revealed in our hearts. Let us then develop the mind of Paul in the face of trouble. Let us view it as a time of testing, in which we can manifest that faith without which ‘we cannot please God’ (Heb 11:6), and a period of opportunity in which we are able to demonstrate our unswerving loyalty to Him in face of a challenge. When we do this, we truly ‘fellowship the sufferings of Christ,’ and will reveal an attitude pleasing unto the Father. However, let us be sure that our tribulations are not the result of our own folly: ‘For what glory is it if, when ye be buffeted for your faults, ye shall take it patiently? But if, when ye do well, and suffer for it, ye take it patiently, this is acceptable with God’ (1Pe 2:20)” (HPM).

Rom 5:4

CHARACTER: KJV has “experience”. Gr “dokimen”: full proof by trial. See also Phi 2:22; 2Co 2:9. Not the act of going through the trial, but the result of having been tested and refined. See 2Co 8:2.

HOPE: The expectation that God will do in the future what He has done in the past. Therefore, as He has sustained us in the past, He can still do in preserving us to His kingdom.

Rom 5:5

Rom 5:5.

HOPE DOES NOT DISAPPOINT US: Cp Rom 4:18. Hope developed out of suffering and trials produces a frame of mind which allows one to go on confidently through life, freed from illusion and despair.

POURED OUT: “Ekcheo”: to be poured out. Poss ref to the Holy Spirit being poured upon the believers at Pentecost: notice that “disappoint” is used in the LXX of Joel 2:26,27 — which pertains to Acts 2. The verb speaks of the inexhaustible abundance of the supply, being reminiscent of the copious provision for the thirsty children of Israel in the wilderness (Num 20:8,11). This is particularly impressive in view of Paul’s identification of the rock with Christ (1Co 10:4).

HIS LOVE: Human love may bring disappointment and frustration, but the love of God does not.

BY THE HOLY SPIRIT: THROUGH the Holy Spirit, that is, through the revelation of the written word — or other “Spirit” revelation. Although Spirit gifts were literally given to some at baptism (John 7:39; Acts 10:45), not all received them (Acts 8:18-20). Here, it refers to the effect the Truth has on the believer, as a power in his life (John 6:63; Eph 6:17; 1Jo 5:6; 1Co 2:9-16).

Rom 5:6

AT JUST THE RIGHT TIME: “But WHEN THE TIME HAD FULLY COME, God sent his Son, born of a woman, born under law, to redeem those under law, that we might receive the full rights of sons.” (Gal 4:4,5). Since the argument of Romans has included the purpose of the law as bringing clear knowledge of sin (Rom 3:20) and as working wrath (Rom 4:15), the connection with Gal is fairly close. The law had operated for centuries and had served to expose the weakness and inability of man to measure up to the divine standard of righteousness. No further testing was needed. It was the right time.

POWERLESS: That is, powerless to obtain justification by works, as in Rom 3:19–4:25. The Law is unable to provide justification (Gal 4:9; Heb 7:18).

FOR: Gr “huper”: on behalf of, for the benefit of. Not the Gr “anti”, which means “instead of”. Cp Rom 8:32; 14:15.

THE UNGODLY: Omit “the”. Mankind in general, who are without hope (see Rom 4:5). “Asebes” = one who has no reverence for divine things. Does Paul have himself in mind here (Phi 3:6)?

Rom 5:7

VERY RARELY: With labor and pains, hence with difficulty, hardly. See its use in Acts 14:18; 1Pe 4:18.

A RIGHTEOUS MAN: Such a man — IF he existed! — would be in no need of a sacrifice: see Rom 3:26.

GOOD: Gr “agathos”: one who acts beneficially towards others, devoting himself to their welfare.

SOMEONE MIGHT POSSIBLY DARE TO DIE: If it would do any good!

Rom 5:8

God’s love for all mankind, regardless of merit, is “commended” (AV) to us as our example: “Love your enemies and pray for those who persecute you, that you may be sons of your Father in heaven. He causes his sun to rise on the evil and the good, and sends rain on the righteous and the unrighteous. If you love those who love you, what reward will you get? Are not even the tax collectors doing that? And if you greet only your brothers, what are you doing more than others? Do not even pagans do that? Be perfect, therefore, as your heavenly Father is perfect” (Mat 5:44-48).

SINNERS: Gr “hamartolos” — lit, one who misses the mark; a sinner.

CHRIST DIED FOR US: “For” is “huper” again: “on behalf of”.

Christ died for men who were neither “righteous” nor “good” (v 7)! “The contrast is between the tremendous worth of the life laid down and the unworthiness of those who stand to benefit from it. Back of the death of Christ for sinners is the love of God (v 8): God loved; Christ died. No attempt is made to deal with the Savior’s reaction or motivation. Paul leaves much to Christian awareness of the intimate bond between Father and Son, the whole truth about God being in Christ (2Co 5:19) and Christ being motivated by love for the lost (John 15:12,13). What he puts in the foreground is the love of God, and this Paul underscores by designating it as ‘his [God’s] own love.’ It is distinctive, unexpected, unheard of (cf John 3:16)” (EBC).

Rom 5:9

The greatest work to provide for our salvation has already been finished! Much the lesser work — the saving from the wrath of God (Rom 2:5-8) — will be easy by comparison!

BY HIS BLOOD: The blood of Christ, poured out in confirmation of the covenants made with the fathers of Israel (Gen 15; Rom 15:8). See 1Co 6:19,20; 7:22,23; 1Pe 1:18-20; 2Pe 2:1; Rev 5:9.

GOD’S WRATH: To be poured out on the Gentiles: 1Th 1:10; 5:9,10.

Rom 5:10

ENEMIES: Gr “echthros” = to hate; those who have “enmity” toward God (Rom 8:7). Note the list: “ungodly” (v 6), “sinners” (v 8), and now “enemies” (v 10). Fully explained in Col 1:21-23: “Once you were alienated from God and were enemies in your minds because of your evil behavior. But now he has reconciled you by Christ’s physical body through death to present you holy in his sight, without blemish and free from accusation — if you continue in your faith, established and firm, not moved from the hope held out in the gospel.”

HOW MUCH MORE: Paul reasons from the greater to the lesser. If God loved us when we were enemies, now that He has made provision for us at infinite cost, much more will He go on to see us through to the final goal of our salvation.

RECONCILED: Gr “katallasso”: to change or exchange, esp from enmity to friendship. For reconciliation, see 2Co 5:19; Eph 2:16; Col 1:21.

THROUGH HIS LIFE: The efficacy of Christ’s work continues because he lives. The living Christ provides: (1) his ability to intercede (Heb 7:24,25); (2) strength for his servants (Phi 4:13); (3) the light of life shed abroad (John 8:12); and (4) an elevation to sonship (John 1:12). Now “Christ in us” becomes the energizing power of our lives (Gal 2:20; Col 3:4; 2Co 4:10,11).

Rom 5:11

THROUGH WHOM WE HAVE NOW RECEIVED RECONCILIATION: Paul not only states that we have been reconciled (v 10) but that we have RECEIVED the reconciliation (v 11). He avoids saying that we have done anything to effect the reconciliation. God provided it through the death of his Son. The matter is made even clearer, if anything, in the companion statement that God has reconciled us “to himself” (2Co 5:18). The appropriate response of the saved community is exultation (vv 2,3).

Rom 5:12

ONE MAN: “Except for two nontheological references (Luke 3:38; Jude 1:14), every mention of Adam in the NT comes from the pen of Paul. In 1Ti 2:14 he makes the point that Adam, unlike Eve, was not deceived, but sinned deliberately. In 1Co 15, as in the Romans passage, he institutes a comparison between the first and the last Adam, but confines the treatment to the issue of death and resurrection, even though sin is dealt with somewhat incidentally (vv 17,56), whereas in Rom 5 both sin and death are named immediately and are woven into the texture of the argument throughout. In the earlier letter Paul makes the significant statement ‘For as in Adam all die, so in Christ all will be made alive’ (1Co 15:22) in line with Rom 5:12. Paul has already referred to the inevitable connection between sin and death in the only previous mention of death in Romans (Rom 1:32) exclusive of the death of Christ (Rom 5:10). But here in v 12 he pictures sin and death as entering the world through one man, with the result that death permeated the whole of mankind. It was the opening in the dike that led to the inundation, the poison that entered at one point and penetrated every unit of man’s corporate life” (EBC).

BECAUSE ALL SINNED: “For that all have sinned” (AV); “in which (whom) all sinned” (Diag). That is, all men were involved in Adam’s sin. They were summed up and included in him as the head and representative of the race. How then was God justified in implanting corruption in the physical body of a child before it has sinned? On two counts: (1) In His foreknowledge, God provided a natural condemnation for Adam’s posterity whom He knew would all sin (Rom 3:23). (2) All flesh possessed the inherited capacity for lust that leads to sin. This flesh — being “sinful flesh” — had itself to be condemned (Rom 8:3; Gal 5:24).

“That we could have sinned in Adam may seem strange and unnatural to the mind of Western man. Nevertheless, it is congenial to Biblical teaching on the solidarity of mankind. When Adam sinned, the race sinned because the race was in him. To put it boldly, Adam was the race. What he did, his descendants, who were still in him, did also [or, perhaps, are “reckoned” as having done!]. This principle is utilized in Heb 7:9,10, ‘One might even say that Levi, who collects the tenth, paid the tenth through Abraham, because when Melchizedek met Abraham, Levi was still in the body of his ancestor’.

“If one is still troubled by the seeming injustice of being born with a sinful nature because of what the father of the race did and being held accountable for the sins that result from that disability, he should weigh carefully the significance of reconciliation as stated by Paul: ‘…that God was reconciling the world to himself in Christ, not counting men’s sins against them’ (2Co 5:19). The sins committed, that owe their original impetus to the sin of the first man, are not reckoned against those who have committed them provided they put their trust in Christ crucified and risen. God takes their sins and gives them His righteousness. Would we not agree that this is more than a fair exchange?” (EBC).

Rom 5:13

BEFORE THE LAW WAS GIVEN, SIN WAS IN THE WORLD: This cannot be the law of Eden (Gen 2:17), since there was no sin in the world before that. It must be referring, therefore, to the Law of Moses (as in v 14).

SIN IS NOT TAKEN INTO ACCOUNT: Sin is not “reckoned, or imputed” by the SINNER! Where there is no law, the sinner does not recognize his sin.

Rom 5:14

DEATH REIGNED: “Death” is personified here as a king — very similar to Rom 6, where throughout “Sin” reigns as king!

THOSE WHO DID NOT SIN BY BREAKING A COMMANDMENT, AS DID ADAM: Or, as KJV, “them that had not sinned after the similitude of Adam’s transgression”. “Similitude” is the Greek “homoioma”: see Lesson, “Homoioma” (likeness).

Adam deliberately rejected a direct commandment from God. After Moses, Israel did the same. But from Adam to Moses, other men sinned too — even though there was no specific revelation to them. In short, death reigns upon all men, even those not responsible by specific and precise knowledge of God’s law.

ADAM, WHO WAS A PATTERN OF THE ONE TO COME: Adam was a “type”, or pattern, or mold, of the one who was to come: the second, or last, Adam (1Co 15:45). How so? ” ‘The resemblance, on account of which Adam is regarded as the type of Christ, consists in this, that Adam communicated to those whom he represented what belonged to him, and that Christ also communicated to those whom he represented what belonged to him’ (Haldane). This amounts to saying that what each did involved others” (EBC).

The contrast of the two federal heads: