By Charles R Erdman
II. DOCTRINAL INSTRUCTIONS. Chs.
1:18 to 11:36
A. JUSTIFICATION BY FAITH. Chs.
I:18 to 5:21
1. The Universal Need of
Righteousness. Chs. 1:18 to 3:20
When Paul has stated the great
theme of his epistle to be the
righteousness which the gospel
reveals, and which God provides
for believers in Christ, he
naturally begins his discussion
by showing how universally and
desperately such righteousness
is needed by the human race. He
first dwells upon the need of
the Gentile nations and then of
the Jews, and thus concludes
that all men have sinned and are
under the condemnation of God.
Or, as logically arranged, the
contents of this section, chs.
1:18 to 3:20, have been stated
as follows: Whosoever sins incurs the
judgment of God from which he
can be delivered only by the
righteousness of God, ch.
2:1-16. But the heathen,
although taught by nature and
conscience, ch. 1:18-32, and the
Jews, although possessing the
Mosaic Law, chs. 2:17 to 3:8,
have sinned by falling short of,
or contradicting, their
respective standards of
righteousness. Therefore, as the
Old Testament had already
proclaimed, the whole world is
under the judgment of God and
accordingly needs his
righteousness, ch. 3:9-20.
a. The Guilt of the Gentile
World. Ch. 1:18-32
18 For the wrath of God is
revealed from heaven against all
ungodliness and unrighteousness
of men, who hinder the truth in
unrighteousness; 19 because that
which is known of God is
manifest in them; for God
manifested it unto them. 20 For
the invisible things of him
since the creation of the world
are clearly seen, being
perceived through the things
that are made, even his
everlasting power and divinity;
that they may be without
excuse: 21 because that, knowing
God, they glorified him not as
God, neither gave thanks; but
became vain in their reasonings,
and their senseless heart was
darkened. 22 Professing
themselves to be wise, they became fools, 23
and changed the glory of the
incorruptible God for the
likeness of an image of corruptible man, and of birds, and
four-footed beasts, and creeping
things.
24 Wherefore God gave them up in
the lusts of their hearts unto
uncleanness, that their bodies
should be dishonored among
themselves:25 for that they
exchanged the truth of God for a
lie, and worshipped and served
the creature rather than the
Creator, who is blessed for
ever. Amen.
26 For this cause God gave them
up unto vile passions: for their
women changed the natural use
into that which is against
nature: 27 and likewise also the
men, leaving the natural use of
the woman, burned in their lust
one toward another, men with men
working unseemliness, and
receiving in themselves that
recompense of their error which
was due. 28 And even as they
refused to have God in their
knowledge, God gave them up unto
a reprobate mind, to do those
things which are not fitting; 29
being filled with all
unrighteousness, wickedness,
covetousness, maliciousness;
full of envy, murder, strife,
deceit, malignity; whisperers,
30 backbiters, hateful to God,
insolent, haughty, boastful,
inventors of evil things,
disobedient to parents, 31
without understanding,
covenant-breakers, without
natural affection, unmerciful: 32
who, knowing the ordinance of
God, that they that practise
such things are worthy of death,
not only do the same, but also consent with them that
practise them.
This dark and painful picture of
the pagan world is only the more
distressing when we remember
that it is painted / in even
more revolting detail by the
classical writers of the Roman
world. It is a picture of the
degradation into which mankind ever sinks when turning from the
truth of God and no longer
restrained by his grace. It was given as the reason why
Paul gloried in the gospel and
desired to have it proclaimed in
Rome. It should arouse all
Christian readers to-day to
hasten the preaching of this
gospel as the only hope of the
human race. The entire paragraph, vs. 18-32 is summarized
in verse 18, which states (1) that the truth
as to God has been manifest to men, vs. 19, 20; (2) that by
them it has been hindered or
repelled, vs. 21-23; and (3)
that consequently the wrath of
God has been revealed as r sting
upon the, vs.24-32. "The wrath of God" is a phrase
which easily may be
misunderstood. It must not be
associated with any ideas of
human passion or frailty or
revenge. It must not make us
unmindful of the universal love
of God. It is in fact the
reverse side of his love. It is
the attitude against sin which
a holy God must take as he sees
how sin wounds and tortures and
destroys the creatures who are
the special objects of his care.
God loves the sinner but he
hates and punishes sin.
His wrath "is revealed," not in
the gospel alone or by any
supernatural act but
by what history shows of the
degradation which results sin,
and the universal con
v1ctiorroi'the race that sin is
inevitably punished by pain and
misery and death. This
revelation is "from heaven," the
dwelling place and throne of
God; by which is meant that this
inseparable relation between sin
and punishment is a divine
arrangement. It operates as a
natural law, but it is in
accordance with a divinely
established order. This condemnation of God is
revealed -., against all un
godliness and unrighteousness of
men"; that is, against all
impiety, or all failures in the
religious sphere, and against
all injustice, or all failures
in the moral sphere. This distinction is kept up through the
remainder of the chapter, where
the apostle pictures first the
impiety and then the immorality
of the heathen world. Both these forms of guilt are
due to the fact that men are
refusing to live in accordance
with the light given them. They
sinfully" hinder the truth";
they repress it, they hold it
down or hold it back, so that it
is not allowed to produce its
natural effect upon moral
conduct. This truth is none
other than the truth concerning
God, and so concerning right and
duty. 1. The truth has been manifested
both in the light of conscience
and by the witness of external
nature, vs. 19, 20. "That which
is known of God," without the
revelation in Christ, is
revealed in the hearts and minds
of men. This revelation is
imparted by God himself, and it
is mentally discerned by
reflecting upon his works. These
display his "everlasting power
and divinity." Probably the
first impression which nature
gives is that of power; it speaks to a
thoughtful mind of a First
Cause, of an unseen Creator,
whose power is limitless; yet it
also speaks of his "divinity,"
that is, of his other
perfections, his wisdom and his
goodness. The very world itself
is described by the word
"cosmos," which means "order,"
and which argues for design on
the part of the Maker. Then,
too, as a closer know1edge of
the world points back the mind
to vistas of uncounted ages, one
naturally concludes that the
creative Power is "ever
lasting," eternal; and the
attributes thus revealed in
nature all testify that this
eternal Power is a divine
Person. Thus arguing from "cause
and effect," from "design," from
"order" and from "being," man
finds in external nature that
real knowledge of God which the
voice of conscience confirms.
Possibly Christians do not
always appreciate natural
religion as fully as they
should. It gives such a true
revelation of God that men have
no excuse for either impiety or
injustice. In fact, its very
design is" that they may be
without excuse." This startling
statement, how ever, must be
interpreted to mean merely that
in case man fell into error as
to belief or conduct, the fault
would be wholly his own.
(2) As a matter of fact, this
truth has been hindered and
repelled and corrupted and lost,
vs. 21-23. Paul here states the
important and practical
principle that religious· knowledge unless acted upon never can
be retained. He traces the steps
by which the heathen world
descended from a knowledge of
the true God to the most
degraded and ignorant idolatry;
(and it is possible even to-day
for men to move in the same
direction.) First, there was indifference to
God. Knowing h1m, they neither
praised him for his perfections
nor thanked him for his
goodness: "They glorified him not
as God, neither gave thanks." Then, they
became vain in their
reasonings," for nothing can be more ridiculous than
the religious speculations of
irreligious men. Those who
refuse to worship God; and who
do not love to obey him are
often the authors of theories
and mistaken beliefs as popular
as they are "empty" and absurd. Then, they totally
forgot God. "Their senseless
heart was darkened." The whole
inner being, deprived of a
knowledge of truth and holiness
and right, became wholly
corrupted. The next state which
resulted
was that of intellectual pride coexisting with spiritual
and moral folly. "Professing themselves
to be vise, they became fools." V. 22.
Such, in view of their spiritual
impotence and their inability to
keep men from moral corruption,
is the divine estimate of the
proudest philosophers of Greece
and of Rome, and of all the
boasted wisdom of the Euphrates
and the Nile. Even to-day the
blindest infidelity is
coincident with the most
insufferable conceit. The modern
wise man worships himself.
The folly of the ancient world
manifested itself in gross forms
of idolatry. This was the last
stage in 1·eligious
degeneracy: "They . . . changed
the glory of the incorruptible
God for the likeness of an image
of corruptible man, and of
birds, and four-footed beasts,
and creeping things." The
odiousness of idolatry is not
only in its resultant immorality
but in that it caricatures and
slanders God. It does not stop
in likening him to a man. but it figures him as a bird,
a beast, or a reptile, and
teaches men to offer divine worship to
the most foul and repulsive
forms. Such is Paul's startling review
of the religious history of the
race. Beginning with the worship
of the living and true God,
mankind gradually descended
to idolatry and fetishism. The
development has not been
upward, but downward. Paganism
has no saving power in itself.
The only hope for the world lies
in the gospel of Christ. 3. Finally, Paul shows how "the
wrath of God " has been
revealed, vs. 24-32. It has
been manifested in his abandonment of the heathen to
the consequences of their guilt. They willfully turned
from him, and became worshippers of idols, and he
therefore allowed them to suffer
the inevitable result of an ever
deepening moral degradation. In this degeneration, Paul notes
three stages, each one marked by
the statement, "God gave them
up." Vs. 24, 26, 28. First of all, he "gave them up
unto uncleanness." They were allowed to be swept by
the strong currents of their
impure desires down into the
abyss of immorality and vice;
and this because they chose to
worship "the creature rather
than the Creator," the
ever-blessed God. Vs. 24, 25. Thus Paul intimates that
morality depends upon religion, and cannot endure long
without the sanctions of religion. Nor can anyone
to-day neglect the worship of God without falling into the
peril of evil thoughts and
impure desires. Secondly, "God gave them up unto
vile passions." They became the
victims of the most abnormal
lusts and the most degrading
vices. Vs. 26, 27. All of the
abominations to which Paul
refers are said to be fully
corroborated by the heathen
writers of his day. Their very
statements emphasize the truths
that sin brings its own
punishment in the form of more
shameful sins and that the
yielding to wrong desire always
results in bondage to passions
even more perverse and "vile." Lastly, Paul declares, "God gave
them up unto a repro bate mind,"
a mind in which the distinctions
between right and wrong are
confused or lost, a mind which
the disapproval of God cannot
fail to rest. Such an inner
disposition cannot fail to
express itself in "things which
arc not fitting," which cannot
be thought to be suitable or
right. Of these Paul gives some
twenty-one examples, and reaches
the climax of his terrible
indictment in the statement that
those guilty of these crimes
commit them with the full
knowledge of the penalty of
death which they deserve, and, worst of all, they rejoice in
others, and encourage others,
who practice the same sins. This willful impurity, springing
from defiant impiety, forms
together with it a more
melancholy and vivid and
detailed picture of the
universal depravity of the
heathen world than Paul
furnishes in any other portion
of his epistles. Is it not true that the elements
of this picture are re S
produced in all quarters of the
world to-day? Was there not
need, and is there not need, of
that righteousness which God graciously provides for all
through the Saviour, Jesus
Christ his Son?
b. The Principles of Divine
Judgment. Ch. 2:1-16
1 Wherefore thou art without
excuse, O man, whosoever thou art
that judgest: for wherein thou
judgest another, thou condemnest
thyself; for thou that judgest
dost practise the same things. 2
And we know that the judgment of
God is according to truth
against them that practise such
things. 3 And reckonest thou
this, O man, who judgest them
that practise such things; and
doest the same, that thou shalt
escape the judgment of God? 4 Or
despisest thou the riches of his
goodness and forbearance and
longsuffering, not knowing that
the goodness of God leadeth thee
to repent ance? 5 but after thy
hardness and impenitent heart
treasurest up for thyself wrath
in the day of wrath and
revelation of the righteous
judgment of God; 6 who will
render to every man according to
his works: 7 to them that by
patience in well-doing seek for
glory and honor and
incorruption, eternal life: I but
unto them that are factious, and
obey not the truth, but obey
unrighteousness, shall be wrath
and indignation, 9 tribulation
and anguish, upon every soul of
man that worketh evil, of the
Jew first, and also of the
Greek; 10 but glory and honor
and peace to every man that
worketh good, to the Jew first,
and also to the Greek: 11 for
there is no respect of persons
with God. 12 For as many as have
sinned without the law shall
also perish without the law: and
as many as have sinned under the
law shall be judged by the law;
13 for not the hearers of the
law are just before God, but the
doers of the law shall be
justified; 14 (for when Gentiles
that have not the law do by
nature the things of the law1
these, not having the law, are
the law unto themselves; 15 m that they show the work of
the law written in their hearts, their conscience bearing
witness therewith, and their
thoughts one with another
accusing or else excusing them);
16 in the day when God shall
judge the secrets of men,
according to my gospel, by Jesus
Christ.
A large part of the religion of
some men seems to consist in
their readiness to find fault
with others. Such was the case
of the Jew whom Paul here
describes. In the midst of the
flood of Gentile pollution and
iniquities, which Paul has
pictured in the preceding
chapter, he sees one who, like a judge, from the heights
of his tribunal, sends a stern
look over the corrupt mass,
condemning the evil which
pervades it and applauding the
wrath of God which punishes it.
The man is not named, however,
until Paul proceeds, vs. 17-29,
to set forth the guilt and
condemnation of the Jew.
Meanwhile Paul sets forth the
fact of divine judgment and its
two great principles. Ch.
2:1-16. 1. The fact of divine judgment
is here stated in view of the
sins of the heathen world and of
the condemnation of them by the
Jew. "And we know that the
judgment of God is according to
truth against them that practise
such things." This is really a
statement of the fundamental
fact underlying the opening
chapters of the epistle. Chs.
1:18 to 3:20. Whosoever sins
incurs the condemnation of God,
he here declares; but the
Gentiles have sinned, ch. 1:18-
32, and the Jews have sinned,
chs. 2:17 to 3:8; therefore the
whole world is guilty and in
need of the righteousness which
God provides, ch. 3:9-20. To the fact of the inevitable
punishment of sin, con science
is a witness. This is what Paul
means as he ad dresses the one
who is criticizing the Gentile
world. "Wherefore thou art
without excuse, 0 man, whosoever
thou art that judgest: for
wherein thou judgest another,
thou condemnest thyself; for
thou that judgest dost practise
the same things." Ch. 2:1. The
criticism of others shows that
one has a conscience, but if he
has a conscience by which he
condemns his fellow men, he
should be guided by that
conscience himself. The
deceitfulness of the human heart
is strikingly exhibited in the
different judgments which men
place on themselves and others,
condemning in others what they
excuse in themselves. Not infrequently the most censorious are
the most guilty. Men commonly
observe in others the faults
which exist in them selves. So, too, those who are most
censorious of others seem to
imagine that they will be judged
by some other rule and thus
escape the condemnation of God.
At least, Paul so intimated m
reference to the Jew: "And we
know that the judgment of God is
according to 1.ruth against them
that practise such things. And
reckonest thou this, O man, who judgest them that practise
such things, and doest the same,
that thou shalt escape the
judgment of God?" Vs. 2, 3. The
Jew seems to have supposed that
he occupied a privileged
position. He imagined that in
some way he could escape the
judgment. which was coming upon
the Gentile, whereas in reality,
this judgment would be" according to truth," that is, in
accordance with guilt, with
facts, and with desert. Then, again, the Jew was falsely
interpreting the very mercy of
God. He was despising it as
merely good-natured indifference
to sin: "Or despisest thou the
riches of his goodness and
forbearance and longsuffering,
not knowing that the goodness of
God leadeth thee to repentance?" V. 4. Towards the Jews, God had
shown peculiar goodness and
patience and forbearance. They
had misunderstood his purpose,
which was to incline them to
forsake their sins; instead, by
their hardness and impenitence
of heart, they had treasured up
for themselves "wrath in the day
of wrath and revelation of the
righteous judgment of God."
V. 5. There is to be such a day of
retribution and punishment, a
day when God's opposition to
disobedience and sin must be
manifested against sinners. This
fact the universal conscience of
mankind attests. 2. The principles of such
judgment, however, will be
absolutely just: (a) Each man
will be judged according to his
deeds, vs. 6-11, and (b) each
man will be judged ac cording to
his light, vs. 12-16. Thus God, as Paul continues to
affirm, (a) "will render to
every man according to his
works." The final awards of God
are to be not according to a
man's profession; the Jew
thought that he might escape
because he had Abraham as his
father. Nor are these awards to
be according to man's relations
in life; the Jew thought that he
was secure because he belonged
to the chosen race and was thus
an heir of the Kingdom. God is
to award to every man ac cording
to his conduct; for, as Paul
asserts in his climax, "there is
no respect of persons with God,"
v. 11. The intervening
verses are an impressive
enlargement and application of
this principle, that judgment
will be according to conduct. To those whose rule
in life is to persevere in doing
good, whose object in life is to
obtain hereafter a glorious,
honored, imperishable existence,
God will give "eternal life," a
reward which does not mean
merely an endless continuance
of existence, a kind of
existence, life in its fullness,
a life of Blessedness-, a life
of glory.
On the other hand, to those
who belong to the class of
selfish intriguers, whose motive
is not "the truth" but
immorality, there will be God's
anger in its tranquil, judicial
form of "wrath," and in its
outward self-manifestation of
"indignation." · Then, in reverse order, Paul
emphatically repeats his
statements as to God's judging
men according to their works.
There will be outward calamity
and inward anguish upon every
soul belonging to a man who
brings evil to pass, "of the Jew
first, and also of the Greek";
but there will be radiance of
glory, honor, and eternal repose
to every man who works at what
is good, "to the Jew first, and
also to the Greek." Of course it is needless here to
raise the question as to whether
this passage teaches salvation
by works instead of by faith.
The words must be read in
connection with the chapters of
the epistle of which they are a
part. Suffice it to say that one
who does so "seek for glory and
honor and incorruption" will
naturally accept the way which
God provides through Jesus
Christ, and only through faith
will any man be able to attain
that righteousness which God
requires. This, however, is a
thought aside from Paul's
immediate argument. His emphatic
statement here is to the effect
that the regular judgment of God
will be according to the conduct
and the deeds of men. (b) The judgment of God will be
also according to the light
which each one severally has
enjoyed. Vs. 12-16. This is a
further proof of the justice of
God, v. 11, for, as the ground
of judgment is to be "works," so
the rule of judgment is to be
light: "For as many as have
sinned without the law shall
also perish without the law: and
as many as have sinned under the
law shall be judged by the law,"
v. 12. That is, the heathen who
have sinned without the
advantage of the Mosaic Law will
perish also by the sentence of God, as being
unfaithful to the light of
nature but without any reference
to the Mosaic Law; and the Jews,
who have sinned in the midst of
a system of revealed law, will
be judged by this law as if it
were the author of their
condemnation. Thus sin is the cause of death
not election or pre destination,
not lack of knowledge or
ignorance of Christ, but
voluntary, willful sin,
disobedience to law, unfaithfulness to light, will occasion"
death." The word "perish" finds
its contrasts in such statements
as "salvation," ch. 1:16; "shall
live," ch. 1:17; "eternal life,"
ch. 2:7; "glory," ch. 2:10. It
is further contrasted with the
word "judged" in the same verse.
The heathen shall perish as the
natural consequence of their
moral corruption. The Jews, and
all who have enjoyed a clear and
positive revelation of the will
of God, will be subjected to a
detailed inquiry such as arises
from applying the particular
articles of a code. The Jews,
therefore, instead of occupying
a privileged position because of
their familiarity with the
Mosaic Law will be held actually
more accountable: For not the hearers of the law are
just before God, but the doers
of the law shall be justified.
V. 13. Paul here is not stating the way
and power by which a man can
obey law and can be just before
God. He is simply declaring that
God is impartial and will judge
every man according to his works
and his light; but it is the
very de sign of Paul to show
that on these principles no
flesh can be justified, ch.
3:20. This question, however,
arises: If only "doers of the
law" are "justified," how can
the rule apply to Gentiles who
have never heard the law? The
answer is that the general rule
does apply in principle to
Gentiles, for their moral
instincts and their consciences
are to them what the revealed
law of Sinai is for the Jews.
That they have some standards of
right and wrong written, not on
tab lets of stone, but on their
hearts, is evidenced by their
actions, by their recognition of
the voice of conscience, and by
their expressions of moral
judgments. Vs. 14, 15. It is evident, then, that in
spite of his severe arraignment
of the heathen world in the
preceding chapter, Paul recognized certain
indestructible moral elements as
still remaining. Something good
could be found in the nature of
even the most degraded heathen.
Some law is still written on
their hearts. This is a great
source of encouragement as one
seeks to find an entrance into
their hearts for the gospel of
Christ. None is wholly
indifferent to kind ness and
love.) It should further be noticed
that Paul indicates here that
conscience is universal and
inflatable. Of course it cannot
tell a man what is right and wrong,
but it never fails to indicate
to him whether his purpose was
consciously right or wrong. That
is to say, conscience may need
enlightenment but it never fails
to approve or rebuke what is
right or wrong in moral
intention. However, for its
enlightenment it needs both
the revealed law of God and his
glorious gospel of grace.
While recognizing that the
heathen perform many deeds which
accord with the requirements of
law, Paul declares that they so
habitually transgress this law
that, judging by its
requirements, they will stand
condemned "in the day when God
shall judge the secrets of men."
V. 16. It is further declared
that all which has been said as
to the certainty and the
principles of divine judgment is
"ac cording to" the gospel which
Paul has preached. They are
essential parts of it. The good
news of salvation is incomplete
unless it warns men of the
"wrath to come" and points out
to men the need as well as the
way of salvation. Last of all, Paul declares that
this divine judgment is to be
administered by Jesus Christ. He
is "to be the Judge of the
living and the dead." Yet the
burden of this very epistle is
to show how he can secure pardon
and purity and peace and eternal
blessedness for all, whether
Jews or Gentiles, who put their
trust in him.
c. The Guilt of the Jew. Chs.
2:17 to 3:8
17 But if thou hearest the name
of a Jew, and restest upon the
law, and gloriest in God, 18 and
knowest his will, and approvest
the things that are excellent,
being instructed out of the law,
19 and art confident that thou
thyself art a guide of the blind, a light of
them that are in darkness, 20 a
corrector of the foolish, a
teacher of babes, having in the
law the form of knowledge and of
the truth; 21 thou therefore
that teachest another, teachest
thou not thyself? thou that
preachest a man should not
steal, dost thou steal? 22 thou that sayest a man should
not commit adultery, dost thou
commit adultery? "thou that
abhorrest idols, dost thou rob
temples? 23 thou who gloriest in
the law, through thy
transgression of the law
dishonorest thou God? 24 For the
name of God is blasphemed among
the Gentiles be cause of you,
even as it is written. 25 For
circumcision indeed profiteth,
if thou be a doer of the law: but
if thou be a transgressor of the
law, thy circumcision is become
uncircumcision. 26 If therefore
the uncircumcision keep the
ordinances of the law, shall not
his uncircumcision be reckoned
for circumcision? 27 and shall
not the uncircumcision which is
by nature, if it fulfil the law,
judge thee, who with the letter
and circumcision art a transgressor of the law? 28 For he is not
a Jew who is one outwardly;
neither is that circumcision
which is outward in the flesh:29
but he is a Jew who is one
inwardly; and circumcision is
that of the heart, in the spirit
not in the letter; whose praise
is not of men, but of God.
1 What advantage then hath the
Jew? or what is the profit of
circumcision? 2 Much every
way:first of all, that they were
intrusted with the oracles of
God. 3 For what if some were
without faith? shall their want
of faith make of none effect the
faithfulness of God? 4 God
forbid:yea, let God be found
true, but every man a liar; as
it is written,
That thou mightest be justified
in thy words,
And mightest prevail when thou
comest into judgment. 5 But if
our unrighteousness commendeth
the righteousness of God, what
shall we say? Is God unrighteous
who visiteth with wrath? (I
speak after the manner of men.)
6 God forbid: for then how shall
God judge the world? 7 But if
the truth of God through my lie
abounded unto his glory, why am
I also still judged as a sinner?
I and why not (as we are slanderously reported, and as some
affirm that we say), Let us do
evil, that good may come? whose
condemnation is just.
It is surprising to see how
seldom men realize the rather
obvious truth that
great opportunities are inseparable from great obligations. This is
true of those who enjoy special
privileges of power or of wealth
or of knowledge. One of the most
striking instances is in the
case of the teachers who boast infallible
accuracy in their interpretation of Christian truth and
yet show no more Christian love
and honesty and helpfulness than
the very men they denounce as
heretical and false. This was exactly the case of the
Jews whom Paul is here
describing. They were actually
less sinful and de graded than
the Gentiles yet, judged by
their conduct, and in view of
their superior moral
enlighte11ment and religious
privileges, they were relatively
no better; they were equally
guilty in the sight of the law,
and just as truly in need of the
righteousness which God demands,
which can be found only by faith
in Christ. 1. The superior position and
responsibility of the Jew, vs.
17-20, are set forth, first, in
terms defining his unique
relation to Cod. The very name
of "Jew," which he boasted,
indicated that he belonged to
the chosen race, the covenant
people of God. The law upon
which he relied as a guarantee
of his salvation, the whole
Mosaic system, and the Jews'
entire civil and religious
polity, were gifts from the hand
of God. This very God in whom
they placed a false confidence,
supposing themselves the
exclusive objects of his love
even w!-,en disobeying his law,
is indeed the living and true
God. They did possess a peculiar
knowledge of his will, although
they regarded this knowledge as
itself so precious as to make
correspond ing obedience
relatively unimportant. They
claimed a unique ability to
detect the most delicate shades
of moral distinction, being
"instructed out of the law,"
trained by oral instruction in
the whole content of the
Scriptures which are indeed the
very Word of God. The superior position of the Jew
is set forth, in the second
place, by four current and
highly colored titles defining
the Jew's relation to the
heathen, which, in view of the
Jew's moral failure, Paul
mentions with a slight touch of
ridicule: "Thou thyself art a
guide of the blind, a light of
them that are in darkness, a
corrector of the foolish, a
teacher of babes, having in the
law the form [the exact outline,
the precise formula] of
knowledge and of the truth." All these advantages of the Jew
were real, and all these by easy comparison can be
applied to Christians. They,
too, have a unique relation to
God as a people chosen for "his
own possession"; they, too, are
expected to be the moral guides
and the religious leaders of the
world; and if they fail to show
superior virtue and
unselfishness and purity and
love, their guilt is
correspondingly greater. 2. The guilt of the Jew, vs.
21-24, is set forth in striking
contrast with his advantages
which Paul has just enumerated.
He is charged with theft and
adultery and sacrilege, and with
other transgressions of the very
law in which he gloried, by
which transgression God was
dishonored, and, as a result,
his name was," blasphemed among
the Gentiles." The last words
are quoted from the Old
Testament prophets, not so much
as a fulfilled prophecy as a
fitting descriptive phrase. In
ancient days the Gei1tiles
beheld the misery of Israel and
blasphemed God as one who was
not able to protect his own
people and worshipers; in the
time of Paul, the Gentiles were
blaspheming the name of God as
One who could not keep from sin
his chosen people, the
custodians of his law and the
special objects of his grace. So to-day reproach is often
brought upon the name of Christ
by the inconsistencies of
Christians. They are not worse
than other men; they are usually
much better, but in comparison
with their high claims and in
view of their exalted
privileges, their conduct is
often unworthy of their Lord.
When, for instance, the world
remembers the loving spirit of
the Master and beholds the
bitterness and un kindness of
his followers, it often utters
with irony the once beautiful
phrase of Tertullian: "See how
these Christians love one
another." 3. In the third place, to
establish the guilt of the Jew,
Paul answers certain objections
that the Jew is supposed to make
to the charge that he, as truly
as the Gentile, is under the
condemnation of God. Chs. 2:25
to 3:8. One objection is that
circumcision is of no profit or
avail if those thus sealed as
the people of God are none the
less under his disapproval and
wrath. To this Paul replies that
a mere outward seal or sign has
no validity unless it is
accompanied by the faith and
obedience which the sign is supposed to signify. There
were, indeed, real blessings
belonging to the people of God,
but these were conditional upon
obedience to his law. True
"circumcision" was the putting
away from the heart of all evil
desires and thoughts. Those were
God's true people, whether Jews
or Gentiles, who put their trust
in him and obeyed his holy
will: "For he is not a Jew who is
one outwardly; . . . but he is
a Jew who is one inwardly." Nor have these words of Paul
lost their meaning for the
Christian Church. Its
sacraments have
deep significance when they are
accompanied by faith and love,
and when they express a real
spiritual relation to God; but
if these are absent, then Church
membership or sacraments or
ritual observances become
meaningless and empty forms. The
true Christian is not a man who
has merely submitted to certain
rites, but one who . has adopted
these rites because he believes
were established by his Lord and
desires thus to express his love
and devotion to him, seeking for
praise "not of men, but of God,"
ch. 2:25-29. To Paul's charge of guilt
against the Jew, another objection is supposed to be
raised: Paul has proved too much;
if the Jew, in spite of his
possession of the law, in spite
of his being sealed as a member
of a chosen race, is under "the
wrath of God," and is as truly
under condemnation as the
Gentile, then the Jew has no
advantage over the Gentile, a
suggestion as abhorrent to the
Jew as it was contrary to his
sacred Scriptures. "What
advantage then hath the Jew? or
what is the profit of
circumcision?" Ch. 3:1. "Much
every way," replies the apostle,
"first of all, that they were
intrusted with the oracles of
God," v. 2. This trust was indeed a
treasure; it did place the Jew
in a position of privilege, not
only because it gave to him a
matchless revelation of God's
will, but because it contained
God's promises of a coming
Saviour and God's assurances
that Israel should some day be a
source of blessing to the whole
world. The rejection of the
Messiah, the unbelief of some Jews, could not "make of none
effect the faithfulness of God."
Rather, his punishment of those
who refused to believe, and his
future fulfillment of his promises of blessing, would
bring into fuller light his
justice and his grace. David appreciated this
principle. When he had fallen
into sin, and had turned to God
in penitence, he felt that his
very sin was designed .to bring
into stronger relief the justice
of God. Speaking of that justice
as though it could be brought to
trial, he declares its absolute
and complete acquittal:
"That thou mightest be justified
in thy words,
And mightest prevail when thou
comest into judgment." V. 4.
To this conclusion an objection
is at once supposed: If the
unbelief and sin of the Jew has
been the occasion for the clearer revelation of the justice
of God, has it not been for real
service to God, and can God,
will God, punish one who has
thus really conferred a favor
upon God? To this objection Paul makes
two, solemn answers, First, on this ground there
could be no judgment, for at
last; every man could say that
his sin had been the occasion of
revealing the justice of God in
punishing sin. Secondly, if
the good which God brings out of
evil justifies the evil, then
all might act on the false
principle of doing evil that
good might come. However, Paul
at once repudiates this
principle as odious, as he turns
from the denial of a future
judgment as absurd. Vs. 5-8. Here Paul has brought his
readers into the sphere of great
mysteries, but he states clearly
certain supremely important
truths.
(a) God does give to some men
peculiar advantages and
privileges; but he requires of
them proportionate faithful ness
and service. Christians do
have advantages over pagans; the
possession of the Bible and the
gospel and the means of grace
are great privileges; but judged
by their conduct, in view of
such advantages, Christians can
make no claim of righteousness
or of merit; their only hope is
in the redemption that is in Jesus
Christ our Lord.
(b) The promises of God to
Israel are certain to he
fulfilled, in spite of partial
blindness and temporary unbelief. As Paul shows more
perfectly in the ninth, tenth,
and eleventh chapters of the
epistle, a converted Israel is yet to be a source of blessing
to all the nations of the world.
(c) A coming judgment, when
rewards and penalties will be
determined according to conduct
and opportunity, is so certain
that Paul docs not even pause to
debate its reality. He at once
dismisses a statement which
calls in question this undoubted
fact.
(d) In spite of the truth that
God can bring good out of evil,
this result never relieves of
guilt the one by whom the evil
has been done. The end never
justifies the means. If an act,
out of which some good comes, is
not to be regarded as bad and
is not to be punished, then any
crime might be encouraged for
the sake of a good result, and
all real distinction between
right and wrong would be obliterated. Even Paul's statement of
free grace was so" slanderously
reported" as to indicate that it
encouraged men to sin in order
that grace might abound; but
here, as ever, Paul repudiated
the charge. Of one who would
say, "Let us do evil, that good
may come," Paul declares that
his "condemnation is just."
d. The Whole World Condemned.
Ch. 3:9-20
9 What then? are we better than
they? No, in no wise: for we
before laid to the charge both
of Jews and Greeks, that they
are all under sin; 10 as it is
written,
There is none righteous, no, not
one;
11. There is none that
understandeth, There is none
that seeketh after God;
12. They have all turned aside,
they are together become unprofitable;
There is none that doeth good,
no, not so much as one:
13 Their
throat is an open sepulchre;
With their tongues they have
used deceit: The poison of asps
is under their lips:
14 Whose mouth is full of
cursing and bitterness:
15 Their
feet are swift to shed blood;
16 Destruction and misery are in
their ways;
17 And the way of
peace have they not known:
18
There is no fear of God before
their eyes.
19 Now we know that what things
soever the law saith, it
speaketh to them that are under
the law; that every mouth may be
stopped, and all the world may
be brought under the judgment of
God:20 because by the works of
the law shall no flesh be justified in his
sight; for through the law
cometh the knowledge of sin.
Here Paul reaches the first
great conclusion of his epistle.
The Gentile has sinned against
the. light of nature and
conscience, the Jew in defiance
of revealed law; there fore the
whole world is under
condemnation. This conclusion
is so stated as to form likewise
a climax to the charge against
the Jew which Paul has just been
making: for it is phrased in
quotations found in the Jewish
Scriptures, ·from which Paul
assumes that there can be no appeal. The paragraph falls into three
parts. The first states the
conclusion that all are under
sin. V. 9. The second enumerates
the grounds of this Judgment.
Vs. 10-18. The third pronounces
the sentence of universal
condemnation. Vs. 19, 20. . "What then?" asks the apostle,
in view of peculiar privileges,
"are we better than they?" Are
we morally superior? Are we more
acceptable to God? "No, in no
wise: for we before laid to the
charge both of Jews and Greeks,
that they are all under sin." The Jew may have had certain
outward advantages, but morally,
as Paul now definitely affirms,
Jews and Greeks are on the same
level; all are under the guilt
and power of sin. It is true
that however men may differ
among themselves as to
individual character, as to out
ward circumstances, social or
religious, when they appear at
the bar of God, all are on
equality, all are sinners, and
as such, are deserving of
punishment. The Scripture proof that all men
are under sin and therefore are
in need of the righteousness of
God, is presented in a picture
Paul forms by grouping together
pencil strokes made by the hands
of various psalmists and
prophets. It is an appalling
picture of the human heart and
of human weakness and sin, all
the more terrible be cause true
of even the most privileged
people of God. These quotations show first the
character of sinful men, vs.
10-12, then their conduct in
speech and action, vs. 15-17,
and lastly the cause or source
of their sin, namely, that
"there is no fear of God before
their eyes," v. 18. First, then, as lo the general
state of mankind as under sin,
Paul insists negatively that II
there is none righteous, no, not
one." This total lack of
righteousness is traced to the
fact of an entire absence of
moral intelligence: "there is
none that understandeth." With
no real knowledge oi God and of
related duties it is impossible
for one to be righteous. Then,
further, "there· is none that
seeketh after God." That is,
there is no right affection, no
desire or de termination to
worship God or to obey his will. As a result, viewed in its
positive aspects, there is a
general apostasy from truth and
virtue: "they have all turned
aside"; the demoralization and
degradation are complete:11 they
are together become
unprofitable," that is to say,
corrupt, useless, worthless. As a practical result, there is
a total absence of goodness. It
is so universal as to admit of
not a solitary exception: "there
is none that doeth good, no, not
so much as one." The evil conduct of men is
defined in the matter both of
speech and of action. Paul
mentions the throat, the tongue,
the lips, the mouth. He declares
"their throat is an open
sepulchre"; that is, their
throat threatens destruction.
It is death to some one whenever
the mouth is opened. "With their
tongues they have used deceit";
that is, habitually and
continually by flattering and
smooth speaking they deceive and
betray. "The poison of asps is
under their lips"; that is, the
falsehood and calumny which evil
lips give out is like the poison
of an adder. "Whose mouth is
full of cursing and bitterness." This last expression, indicating
violent speech, forms a fit
introduction to Paul's mention
of conduct which is
characterized by murder and
oppression and fierce discord.
"Their feet are swift to shed
blood; The source of all this iniquity
is traced by the apostle to the
absence of all true piety, to
the lack of reverence and
respect for God: "There is no
fear of God before their eyes." In pronouncing the sentence of
God upon such sinners, Paul
answers first an imaginary
objection made by the Jew to the
contents of the last paragraph.
He is supposed to say that the
foregoing descriptions may apply
to the heathen, but they cannot
refer to Israel. Paul at once
shows the absurdity of such a
suggestion: "Now we know that
what things soever the law saith,
it speaketh to them that are
under the law." That is, as Paul
insists, the per sons to whom
most obviously the Old Testament
Scriptures must apply are the
very persons for whom and by
whom these Scriptures were
written. They had a twofold
design: First, to silence any who
.might endeavor to declare
their innocence; and secondly,
that the whole human race should
be placed in a position of owing
to God the penalty of
transgression, "that every mouth
may be stopped, and all the
world may be brought under the
judgment of God." This is
"because by the works of the law
shall no flesh be justified in
his sight." Such in its essence is the
great conclusion toward which
Paul has been moving through all
the previous chapters. He wishes
to show the universal need of a
righteousness which God alone
can provide, and to do so he
shows that law in itself is not
a means whereby a man can be
made just. The law has a
different function: "through the
law cometh the knowledge of
sin." This is its true function.
It was never designed to save men
or to deliver them from the
power of evil. Its purpose has
ever been to reveal the actual
sinfulness of men. It may have
other purposes; it does indeed
fulfill other offices; but it is
utterly powerless to meet the
needs of a lost world, or to
deliver men from the slavery and
the guilt of sin. Whether this
law is contained in the
Scriptures or whether it is
written on the hearts of men,
"by the works of the law shall
no flesh be justified."
2. The Divine Method and
Provision. Ch. 3:21-31
21 But now apart from the law a
righteousness of God hath been
manifested, being witnessed by
the law and the prophets;
22 even the righteousness of God
through faith in Jesus Christ
unto all them that believe; for
there is no distinction; 23 for
all have sinned, and fall short
of the glory of God; 24 being justified freely by his
grace through the redemption
that is in Christ Jesus:25 whom
God set forth to be a propitiation, through faith, in his
blood, to show his righteousness
because of the passing over of
the sins done aforetime, in the
forbearance of God; 26 for the
showing, I say, of his
righteousness at this present season: that he might himself be
just, and the justifier of him
that hath faith in Jesus. 27
Where then is the glorying? It
is excluded. By what man ner of
law? of works? Nay: but by a law
of faith. 28 We reckon therefore
that a man is justified by faith
apart from the works of the law.
29 Or is God the God of Jews
only? is he not the God of
Gentiles also? Yea, of Gentiles
also:30 if so be that God is
one, and he shall justify the
circumcision by faith, and the
uncircumcision through faith.
31 Do we then make the law of
none effect through faith? God
forbid: nay, we establish the
law.
How can a man be right with God?
How can one who is guilty of sin
be forgiven, pardoned, declared
righteous, and regarded as
though his sins had never been
committed? No more important
question possibly could be
asked, and in all the Bible
probably there is no more
complete and satisfying answer
than in these words of Paul. He
has recorded here the very
essence of the gospel which he
desired to preach at Rome, the
very sum and substance of the
good news which this epistle
sets forth. One who wishes to
know the very heart of the
Christian message need ponder
only these words; and one who
reads them in the light of the
Old Testament and the New can not fail to be moved by their
unique expression of the grace of God in Christ Jesus. Paul has been insisting that the
whole world is in need of
righteousness and is under the
condemnation of God; here he
declares that through the
atoning work of Christ a
righteousness has been provided,
and is offered freely to all on
the ground of faith alone. This
righteousness is "manifest" in
the gospel. It is "apart from
the law"; it is not secured by
obeying the law: it is offered to
those by whom the law has been
broken; it is nothing which can
be merited, earned, or deserved.
However, it is in perfect
accordance with the law, it is
"witnessed by the law and the
prophets," as Paul demonstrates
clearly in the next chapter of this epistle. It is
provided by God himself, for the
"righteousness of God," v. 22,
here denotes not the attribute
of divine' justice but the
righteousness which God offers
to man. It is received by faith. In
fact, faith is its
distinguishing feature; it is
not a righteousness by works,
but a righteous ness "through
faith in Jesus Christ," and it
is "unto all them that believe."
Faith. however, is not a ground
of merit; but merely the
instrument by which this
righteousness is received. This
righteousness of God is of
universal application, as it is
needed by all, "for all have
sinned, and fall short of the
glory of God." Paul does not
mean that all have sinned
equally, but all, without
exception, have failed to attain
the "glory," the praise, the
approbation of God, and are
therefore under his
condemnation. All such, however,
if they put their trust in
Christ are "declared to be
just," for here the word
"justified," v. 24, does not
mean" made righteous," but
declared righteous. Paul is here
describing "justification";
sanctification will of course
follow. Faith is certain to
issue in a life of holiness.
However, at once, before such a
life has been lived, one who
accepts Christ as a Saviour is
declared to be righteous. This is due to no merit on the
part of man. The source of this
"justification" is the unmerited
favor of God. Men are "justified
freely by his grace." However, this gracious
justifying act on the part of
God is not due to any
indifference to sin, nor to his
failure to observe moral distinctions. God has made it
possible at infinite cost. It is
"through the redemption that is
in Christ Jesus." This
redemption, this deliverance
from the guilt and power and
penalty of sin was accomplished
by the atoning death of Christ,
"whom God set forth to be a
propitiation, through faith, in
his blood." This propitiatory
death of Christ, however, was
not intended to induce God to
love sinners: "God so loved the
world, that he gave his only
begotten Son." In this
propitiatory sacrifice God
revealed his own attitude toward
sin and made it possible for
him to forgive sinners. The mystery of atonement Paul
does not attempt to solve. He does not explain just
how the death of Christ
constitutes him a
"propitiation." The fact,
however, is at the very heart of
the Christian gospel, and Paul
does make it clear that the
supreme element in propitiation
is the vindicating of divine
righteousness: "To show his
righteousness because of the passing over of the sins
done afore time, in the
forbearance of God." V. 25. Here
the phrase, "righteousness of
God," denotes his attribute of
justice. It was necessary for
him to show his unchanging
attitude towards sin. During
past generations God appeared to
deal lightly with transgressors;
he seemed almost indifferent to
their guilt. Occasionally he
gave some signal manifestation
of divine displeasure and
inflicted some startling
penalty, but he was long-suffering
and gracious and allowed men
living in sin to attain old age;
even whole nations were
permitted to continue for long
periods openly violating his
sacred laws. However, in the
death of his own Son, God made
it evident once and for all that
he is not indifferent to sin.
The cross is the vindication of
his righteousness. However, it
is much more. It is the means of
salvation for man; for it is in
view of the cross that God now,
"at this present season," can
"himself be just, and the
justifier of him that hath faith
in Jesus." One who accepts the
crucified Saviour as his Lord
really submits to the divine
sentence upon sin; he becomes
right with God. He is declared
to be just; and God who thus
justifies sinners is shown to be
just. There are mysteries involved,
but there is no doubt that as one gazes upon the cross
of Christ, he feels the burden
of guilt roll away, and he finds
peace with God and power for a
new and higher life. Paul has completed his superb
statement of the great principle
of justification by faith;
however, as the chapter closes,
vs. 27-31, he adds certain
inferences by which the
principle is commend and
established. First, boasting is excluded.
"A law," or divine ordinance,
or spiritual institution,
whereby a man rests for his
salvation wholly upon the merits
and work of Christ, must make it
impossible for such a man to
glory or to boast in the
presence of God. Therefore, Paul
concludes, "a man is justified by faith
apart from the works of the
law"; his justification is
entirely aside from any
obedience to the law; it is by
faith alone. As Paul elsewhere
shows, faith will result in
obedience, and justification
will issue in holy living, but
the truth that justification is
by faith alone is the very heart
of. Christianity. It is rightly
regarded as "the article of a
standing or falling Church." Secondly,
by this "law" of justification,
God is presented in his true character.
If some men are saved by a law
of works and some by a law of
faith, then there must be two
Gods, an idea absolutely
abhorrent to the Jew. However,
since there is but one God, "the
God of Jews," who is "the God of
Gentiles also," therefore, there
can be but one way of salvation,
and the only possible method of
justification must be by faith
in Christ. Last ,of all, Paul raises the
imaginary objection that justification by faith makes
"the law of none effect." It is
said to obliterate all moral
distinctions, to regard law as
useless and worthless, to annul
the divine ordinances recorded
in the Ol<;l Testament
Scriptures. On the contrary,
Paul states, by declaring this
doctrine "we establish the law."
He demonstrates this claim in
various parts of the epistle,
and first of all in the chapter
which immediately follows.
3. The Proof from Scripture. Ch.
4
1 What then shall we say that
Abraham, our forefather, hath
found according to the flesh? 2
For if Abraham was justified by
works, he hath whereof to glory;
but not toward God. 3 For what
saith the scripture? And Abraham
believed God, and it was
reckoned unto him for
righteousness. 4 Now to him that
worketh, the reward is not
reckoned as of grace, but as of
debt. 5 But to him that worketh
not, but believeth on him that
justifieth the ungodly, his
faith is reckoned for
righteousness. 6 Even as David
also pronounceth blessing upon
the man, unto whom God reckoneth
righteousness apart from works,
7 saying,
Blessed are they whose
iniquities are forgiven, And
whose sins are covered.
8. Blessed is the man to whom
the Lord will not reckon sin.
9. Is this blessing then
pronounced upon the
circumcision, or upon the
uncircumcision also? for we say,
To Abraham his faith was reckoned for
righteousness. 10 How then was
it reckoned? when he was in
circumcision, or in
uncircumcision? Not in
circumcision, but in
uncircumcision:11 and he
received the sign of
circumcision, a seal of the
righteousness of the faith which
he had while he was in
uncircumcision: that he might be
the father of all them that
believe, though they be in
uncircumcision, that
righteousness might be reckoned
unto them; 12 and the father of
circumcision to them who not
only are of the circumcision,
but who also walk in the steps
of that faith of our father
Abraham which he bad in
uncircumcision. 13 For not
through the law was the promise
to Abraham or to his seed that
he should be heir of the world,
but through the righteousness of
faith. 14 For if they that are
of the law are heirs, faith is
made void, and the promise is
made of none effect:15 for the
law worketh wrath; but where
there is no law, neither is
there transgression. 16 For this
cause it is of faith, that
it
may be according to grace; to-
the end that the promise may be
sure to all the seed; not to
that only which is of the law,
but to that also which is of the
faith of Abraham, who is the
father of us all 17 (as it is
written, A father of many
nations have I made thee) before
him whom he believed, even God,
who giveth life to the dead, and
calleth the things that are not,
as though they were. 18 Who in
hope believed against hope, to
the end that he might become a
father of many nations,
according to that which had been
spoken, So shall thy seed be. 19
And without being weakened in
faith he considered his own body
now as good as dead (he being
about a hundred years old), and
the deadness of Sarah's womb; 20
yet, looking unto the promise of
God, he wavered not through
unbelief, but waxed strong
through faith, giving glory to
God, 21 and being fully assured
that what he had promised, he
was able also to perform. 22
Wherefore also it was reckoned
unto him for righteousness.
23 Now it was not written for
his sake alone, that it was reckoned unto him; 24 but for
our sake also, unto whom it
shall be reckoned, who believe
on him that raised Jesus our
Lord from the dead, 25 who was
delivered up for our trespasses, and was raised for our
justification.
When Paul has clearly defined
the doctrine of justification
by faith, he naturally turns for
the confirmation of its truth to
the Old Testament. He still has
in mind the Jew who is supposed
to feel that this doctrine sets
aside the inspired Scriptures.
In these Scriptures, on the contrary, Paul finds the most
unanswerable evidence that his
teaching is true. He selects the
crucial case of Abraham, the
father of the Jewish race, the
most impressive and important
figure who appears upon the
stage of human history between
Adam and Christ. a. The case of Abraham is
decisive, at least to the mind
of the Jew, because he towered
above all other men in his moral
grandeur, and if anyone was
accepted of God, it must have
been he, for he was known as the
"friend of God." If he was not
justified by works, no man could
he; if he was justified by
faith, there can be no other way
of justification for any man.
Vs. 1-8. "What then shall we say
that Abraham, our forefather,
hath found according to the
flesh?" The last clause refers
to the human nature which he
shared with all men. The
question then is, what did
Abraham attain thr01.1gh his own
natural efforts? How was he
justified? Was it on the ground
of his illustrious acts? These
gave him a place of honor among
men, but: did they secure his
justification and thus give him
a ground of boasting before God?
"What saith the scripture? And
Abraham believed God, and it was
reckoned unto him far righteousness. " Nothing is said
here about works; it is his
faith, his trust and confidence
in God, which is "reckoned,"
imputed, accounted unto him as
righteousness. Abraham,
therefore, did not earn
righteousness; he received it
as a free gift. A laborer who
works for pay can claim his
wages a debt that is due; but
such was not the case with the
old patriarch; and such is never
the case when a man is justified
by God. It is to one who has no
confidence in his own works, but
trusts in a God who justifies
freely, and actually docs
pronounce righteous an ungodly
man-it is to such a one that
"faith is reckoned for
righteousness." V. 5. To this great truth David
likewise testifies in the
Thirty- second Psalm when he
says:
"Blessed are they whose
iniquities are forgiven, The psalmist thus pronounces
happy, not one who has kept the
law, not one who is being
rewarded for his good "'works,"
but one who has broken the law
and who, as he has turned toward
God in penitence and truth; has
been forgiven and declared to be
just. Nothing could be more
clear, nothing more startling,
yet nothing more comforting,
than the truth that when we are
conscious of our sins and turn
to God in the name of Christ,
trusting in his redeeming
grace, we are pardoned and
justified and can know the joy
of salvation. b. That justification is
possible for all Paul next declares when he shows how it is
as independent of religious
ceremonies or of special
privileges as it is of boasted
deeds of the law. Justification
is by faith alone, although the
experience inevitably results in
holy living; so too, faith
naturally is expressed in
religious rites; but before
these, and aside from these, God
justifies those who believe in
Jesus. Vs. 9-11. This is what Paul means by
asking whether justification was
granted to those alone who had
received the sacra mental seal
of circumcision, or to all who
trusted in God and accepted his
promises of grace. That
righteousness was independent,
and preceded any such external
rite, was evident from the case
of Abraham, for he was justified
before he received this seal. Paul takes us back to that night
when the aged patriarch, standing childless and
alone under the Syrian sky,
received from the Lord the
promise that his seed should
become as the stars of the sky
in multitude. Then it was, we
are told, that he "believed God,
and it was reckoned unto him for
righteousness." It was years
after that Abraham received
circumcision as a seal of the
covenant promise of God.
Justification, then, preceded
and was quite independent of
circumcision, yet the latter
became "a seal of the
righteousness of the faith which
he had while he was in
uncircumcision," v. 11. Therefore, Abraham became, in
the spiritual realm, "the father
of all them that believe,"
whether Jews or Gentiles, and
his own experience became a
proof that men are justified
independently of all ceremonies
and rites. The latter may be
regarded as seals by which covenants are confirmed; they may
be signs and symbols of benefits
conferred, but in themselves
they are powerless, and their
efficacy is dependent upon the
faith of the recipient and the
grace of God the Giver. The real
descend ants of Abraham,
therefore are not those literal
Israelites who are lineal
descendants of Abraham, nor yet
are they those who imitate his
acceptance of ceremonial rites,
but those who emulate and share
his faith. To them as to him,
faith is "reckoned" "for
righteousness." c. This righteousness is
independent of law and is received by faith alone; in the
case of Abraham, faith evidently was the acceptance of a
promise and not obedience to
law. It was, however, vital and
unquestioning, and it accepted
as certain what reason might
have ridiculed or denied. Vs.
13-22. The promise to Abraham, in its
ultimate scope, was "that he
should be heir of the world."
The fulfillment of this promise
was to be realized through
Christ and his followers. In a t
rue. sense they yet are to
"inherit the earth." Yet for
Abraham this hope was not
conditioned upon the fulfillment
of law, but upon a righteousness
which resulted from faith. V.
13. "Faith" and "promise" belong to
a different domain from that of
"law." The latter would exclude
the former, and make them of no
effect. The real effect of law
is to bring condemnation. Where
"there is no law," there may be
fault and sin, but not
"transgression"; that is, no
actual breach of law, which is
to say that "law," instead of
bringing blessing, has no power
but that of increasing guilt and
of making men liable to the
"wrath of God." Vs. 14, 15. For this reason it was the plan
of God to condition his great
blessings not upon obedience to
law but upon faith, for faith as
exercised by man implies "grace"
on the part of God; and such a
system made the fulfillment of
the promise possible, not only
to those who had the Mosaic law,
but to all persons who, by their
faith in God, are true children
of Abraham. Thus, as Christian
believers, we can claim that
Abraham is "the father of us
all," and can share in all the blessedness promised
to him when Cod called him "a
father of many nations." Vs. 16,
17. Possibly this reasoning of Paul
seems somewhat difficult to
follow; hut its great essential
teaching is clear and is full of
comfort for every reader, for it
gives assurance that, through
faith alone, may be received all
the blessed promises of God, for
eternity as well as for time. The faith of Abraham was
extraordinary in the extreme. It
was, however, centered upon God,
"who giveth life to the dead,
and calleth the things that are
not, as though they were." V.
17. In such a God he evidently
trusted, for when he received
the promise he was as good as
dead and his heart no longer
cherished the hope of an heir.
Yet, contrary to all human
probability that the promise
could be fulfilled, and fully
conscious of all the apparent
impassibilities involved, he
praised God for the miracle
which was to be performed,
"being fully assured that what
he had promised he was able also
to perform." It was through such
faith that Abraham became "a
father of many nations"; it was
such faith that God graciously
"reckoned unto him for
righteousness," v. 22. Such faith, indeed, was
extraordinary, but its essence
was quite plain. It consisted in
taking God at his word, in
believing that what he said was
true, in trusting that what God
promised he would bring to pass.
Nor does our faith differ from
this in kind. God does not
expect us to believe what is
irrational, but he promises
blessings that we cannot
explain, which will be granted
by methods we cannot understand.
We are conscious of unworthiness
and fault, but he promises to
pardon, cleanse, relieve; we
come with simple faith in the
power of Christ and find forgive
ness, peace, and rest. He
promises us resurrection and
endless glory and by faith we
die with hopes reaching be yond
the grave. d. It is indeed in the sphere of
death and resurrection that the
thoughts revolve all through
these paragraphs, and
particularly as we reach the
great application of the story
with which the chapter closes,
vs. 23-25. All this narrative,
Paul declares, "was not written
for his sake alone," simply to
record that Abraham was
justified by faith, "but for our sake also,"
to assure us that we, too,
receive a similar acceptance if
we have a like faith. The
promise to Abraham was
practically that of life from
the dead. As Christians we trust
the same God who also "raised
Jesus our Lord from the dead"
and conditions our pardon and
acceptance and righteousness
upon our faith in him "who was
delivered up for our trespasses,
and was raised for our
justification." The death and
resurrection of Christ are
inseparably united as the ground
of our salvation; yet they can
be distinguished in their pur
pose and effect. Looking at them
separately it is possible that
Paul here means that Christ died
to atone for our sins and rose
again with a view to securing
our justification. As, however,
the word "for" should probably
be interpreted in the same
sense in both clauses, the more
exact meaning may be that Christ
who was surrendered to death
because of the offenses we had
committed, was raised to life
because of the acquittal he had
secured for us. What ever the
exact translation may be, it is
clear that the resurrection was
"the crown and seal to the
atonement wrought by his death,"
and that it envokes the faith
which makes his atoning work
effectual for believers. In any
case, the inspiring truth is
taught that our justification is
secured by the death and
resurrection of our Lord, and-if
this is its ground, then surely
in such a plan of salvation
there can be no place for pride
or self-reliance or human merit,
but only for humble, confident,
grateful faith. As the whole
chapter has therefore shown, the
Old Testament Scriptures agree
with the New in assuring us that
faith alone is the way by which
men can be justified in the
sight of God.
4. The Blessed Results. Ch.
5:1-11
1 Being therefore justified by
faith, we have peace with God
through our Lord Jesus
Christ; 2 through whom also we
have had our access by faith
into this grace wherein we
stand; and we rejoice in hope of
the glory of God. 3 And not only
so, but we also rejoice in our
tribulations: knowing that
tribulation worketh stedfastness;
4 and stedfastness, approvedness; and approvedness,
hope: 5 and hope putteth not to
shame; because the love of God
hath been shed abroad in our hearts through the
Holy Spirit which was given unto
us. 6 For while we were yet
weak, in due season Christ died
for the ungodly. 7 For scarcely
for a righteous man will one
die for peradventure for the
good man some one would even
dare to die. 8 But God
commendeth his own love toward
us, in that, while we were yet
sinners, Christ died for us. 9
Much more then, being now
justified by his blood, shall we
be saved from the wrath of God
through him. 10 For if, while we
were enemies, we were reconciled
to God through the death of his
Son, much more, being reconciled, shall we be saved by
his life; 11 and not only so,
but we also rejoice in God
through our Lord Jesus Christ,
through whom we have now
received the reconciliation.
Paul has already exhibited the
need, the exact nature, and the
Scripture proof of the
doctrine of "justification' 'by
faith." He now presents some of
its blessed consequences. It is true that practically the
whole remaining portion of the
epistle unfolds the new life of
holiness and happiness which
issues from justification. Here,
however, the stress is laid upon
the acceptance with God which
the justified enjoy, and upon
their certainty of sharing his
eternal glory. · In fact this
certainty of salvation is the
essential burden of this
passage, vs. 1-11. The questions
might naturally arise as to
whether the trials and tribulations incident to the life of a
Christian may not cause faith to
fail, and whether believers may
not be swept away from their
position of acceptance with God.
Paul here gives the assurance
that justification by faith is
permanent and is sure to issue
in blessedness which is eternal. a. First of all, then, is the
assurance that "being there fore
justified by faith, we have
peace with God through our Lord
Jesus Christ." When Paul speaks
here of "peace with God," his
phrase is not equivalent to
"peace from God," or to "the
peace of God." The latter may
denote the peace which God
himself enjoys, or the peace
which he inspires in the hearts
of his children. But "peace with
God" denotes a relation to him.
It indicates pardon and
acceptance and is contrasted
with enmity or wrath. It
signifies the position of those
who once were under condemnation but now are enjoying
the full measure of divine
forgiveness and favor. It is a
relation with God which results from the atoning work of
Christ, and in consequence of
this relation a peace which is
not born of earth enters the
souls of the justified, a peace
which God supplies, a peace in
some measure like to that which
the "God of peace" himself
enjoys. b. It is through Christ also
that "we have had our access by faith into this grace
wherein we stand." As our peace
with God is grounded on the
atoning death of Christ, so it
is by the power of the living
Christ that we are brought into
the atmosphere and position of
conscious peace and acceptance
with God. "This grace wherein we
stand" is more fully described
in the eighth chapter of this
same epistle; and there it is
pictured as the position of sons
who live in fellowship with God,
who are not merely forgiven
enemies or pardoned sinners, but
children who have received "the
spirit of adoption" whereby they
cry "Abba, Father." It is Christ
who has given us such "access"
to God, such an "introduction"
as persons of note are given
into the presence chamber of a
king. Only those who are
cons9-ious of being justified
can really enjoy that true
fellowship with God which is
made possible by Jesus Christ
our Lord. c. It is, however, not peace
with Christ, nor the position of sons, but the prospect of
glory which forms the chief
element of that blessedness of
justified souls here set
forth: "we rejoice in hope of the
glory of God," v. 2. As Paul
argues more fully in the eighth
chapter of the epistle, "if
children, then heirs; heirs of
God, and joint-heirs with
Christ; if so be that we suffer
with him, that we may be also
glorified with him." To share
such heavenly splendor, to
behold the King in his beauty,
to be like him when we sec him
as he is, all this is the
inspiring hope of those who have
been justified by faith in
Christ. Nor is this hope
dimmed-it rather is
brightened-by the distress and
trials which now encompass us.
The secret lies in the purpose
and results of these very
persecutions and trials, so that
"we also rejoice in our
tribulations," knowing that
these tribulations result in
steadfastness, in approved ness,
or tried integrity, and this in
turn issues in a stronger and
dearer hope. Thus the very
tribulations become a ground and a source of strength
for that confident expectation
of glory which belongs to the
justified. And this "hope putteth not to
shame," it does not deceive, it
does not mock us, it is not
disappointed, and for two
reasons. First, "because the
love of God hath been shed
abroad in our hearts through the
Holy Spirit which was given unto
us." This is the first mention
in the letter of the Spirit; in
the eighth chapter are found
some of the most significant
statements in reference to his-
work which the Bible contains.
This first mention reminds us
that his power and influence
make us conscious and certain of
the love which God has toward
us. There is, however, a ground of
hope outside ourselves, and this
is found in a historic fact, in
that supreme fact, namely, the
atoning death of Christ: "For
while we were yet weak, in due
season Christ died for the
ungodly," v. 6. Sin is here
called weakness. As sinners we
are pictured as suffering from
moral infirmity and as in need
of healing and of strength. It
was for us that Christ died "in
due season," or, as Paul says
elsewhere, "When the fulness of
the time came," to meet the
great crisis which sin had
produced. Here Paul states that "Christ
died for the ungodly." We had expected him to say that
he died for us, but the
substitution of this word brings
out all the more clearly the
thought of the great love of God
in sending his son to die for
the undeserving. This is
emphasized in the verses which
follow, where, in contrast with
the love of man for man, we have
the demonstration of the love of
God toward us. Paul intimates
that while it might be possible
that one would not die for a
righteous man, yet for a" good
man," a loving, a deserving man,
"some one would even dare to
die." This possible
manifestation of human love,
however, is far surpassed by the
love of God who "commendeth his
own love toward us, in that,
while we were yet sinners,
Christ died for us." The argument which Paul advances
is this: If God so loved us while
we were yet sinners, "much more
then, being now justified by his
blood, shall we be saved from
the wrath of God through him."
If God has done so much for his enemies, what will
he not do for his friends? "For
if, while we were enemies, we
were reconciled to God through
the death of his Son, much more,
being reconciled, shall we be
saved by his life." It is
evident that our eternal
salvation is secure and certain.
The God who made possible for us
justification through the death
of his Son, will undoubtedly
grant us eternal blessedness as
we share now in the life of the
risen Christ. No wonder, then, that Paul
closes the paragraph with the
assurance that we who are
justified have triumphant joy in
God through our Lord Jesus
Christ, through whom we have now
received reconciliation. Such
peace with God, such access to a
loving Father, such unclouded
hope of glory, are the sure and
inevitable blessings of all who
are justified by faith.
5. The Universal Application.
Ch. 5:12-21
12 Therefore, as through one man
sin entered into the world, and
death through sin; and so death
passed unto all men, for that
all sinned:-13 for until the law
sin was in the world; but sin is
not imputed when there is no
law. 14 Nevertheless death
reigned from Adam until Moses,
even over them that had not
sinned after the likeness of
Adam's transgression, who is a
figure of him that was to come.
15 But not as the trespass, so
also is the free gift. For if by
the trespass of the one the many
died, much more did the grace of
God, and the gift by the grace
of the one man, Jesus Christ,
abound unto the many. 16 And not
as through one that sinned, so
is the gift: for the judgment
came of one unto condemnation,
but the free gift came of many
trespasses unto justification.
17 For if, by the trespass of
the one, death reigned through
the one; much more shall they
that receive the abundance of
grace and of the gift of
righteousness reign in life
through the one, even Jesus
Christ. 18 So then as through
one trespass the judgment came
unto all men to condemnation;
even so through one act of
righteousness the free gift came
unto all men to justification of
life. 19 For as through the one
man's disobedience the many were
made sinners, even so through
the obedience of the one shall
the many be made righteous. 20
And the law came in besides,
that the trespass might' abound;
but where sin abounded, grace
did abound more exceedingly: 21
that, as sin reigned in death, even so might grace
reign through righteousness unto
eternal life through Jesus
Christ our Lord.
The analogy drawn by Paul
between Adam and Christ is
judged to be one of the most
difficult and complex pas sages
of the epistle. By some readers
it is regarded as a parenthesis
or break in the argument. By
others, how ever, probably more
correctly, it is looked upon as
a climax to the discussion of
the doctrine of justification by
faith and as an introduction to
the treatment of the doctrine of
sanctification, or of the life
of holiness in which
justification issues.
It does, indeed, confirm the
doctrine of justification by
faith by showing that the same
principles of divine government
are involved in justifying
those who are united to Christ
by faith as in condemning those
who share the nature and sin of
Adam. On the other hand,
by advancing from the truth of
justification by faith in Christ
to that of vital union with
Christ, the ground is laid for
the teaching which follows as to
the sanctification and final
glory of believers. Chs. 6 to 8.
Possibly the most important
relation which this famous
analogy sustains to the
foregoing argument is in showing
the wide application of
justification; as the Paragraph
immediately preceding reveals
its permanence, vs. 1-11.
this paragraph declares its universality, vs. 12-21. The
sum
of the message is simply this:
the sin of Adam brought sin and
death to all mankind, so the
redeeming work of Christ brings
righteousness and life to all
who are united to him by a
living faith. The analogy involves not only
such a comparison, vs. 12, 18,
19, but also certain contrasts,
vs. 15, 16, 17. The comparison
begins with a statement of the
universal reign of sin and death
due to the sin of
Adam: "Therefore, as through one
man sin entered into the world,
and death through sin; and so
death passed unto all men, for
that all sinned." The specific
sin to which Paul here refers is
un questionably that act of
disobedience on the part of Adam
commonly designated as "the
fall;" and believed to be, as
here intimated, the source of
all human sinfulness and misery and death. By the last
term, Paul evidently meant
physical death, although it
indicates all the misery and
distress of which the death of
the body is the symbol, including ultimately that
separation from God which is the
final penalty of sin. The
penalty, Paul declares, has been
visited on the whole human race
in virtue of the fact" that all
sinned.'' This last statement is
commonly interpreted to mean
that the guilt of Adam has been
imputed to his descendants. It
more probably refers to the
actual guilt which men incur
because of that tendency to evil
which they inherit, which is
believed to be a result of
the disobedience of Adam. It
is probably to be interpreted as
a simple statement of the
universal prevalence of sin, and
of death which is its penalty,
in order that Paul may com pare
with it the wide influence of
the saving work of Christ.
Before completing this
comparison, Paul pauses to
demonstrate the fact that sin is
universal. He does so by stating
that "until the law sin was in
.the world." This sin, however,
was not in the nature of actual
disobedience to a command as in
the case of Adam, or of his
descendants who received the law
of Moses. Nevertheless, between
Adam and Moses there was real
sin; because death reigned like
a cruel tyrant, all were subject
to his power. There must,
therefore, have been
disobedience to law, not the law
of Moses but the law written on
the human heart. Tl1is universal
sin could be traced as an effect
"of Adam's transgression, who is
a figure of him that was to
come." This universal result of
Adam's sin is about to be
compared with the salvation
accomplished by Christ, but Paul
first pauses to mention three
contrasts between the work of
the first and the last Adam.
There is a contrast in
quality: the one is all of
sin, the other of bounty and of
grace. "But not as the trespass,
so also is the free gift. For if
by the trespass of the one the
many died, much more did the
grace of God, and the gift by
the grace of the one man, Jesus Christ, abound unto the
many." So, too, there is a contrast in
the quantity or the mode of
working. In the case of Adam,
the sentence pronounced was due
to the act of a single man and
had as its result a sweeping
verdict of condemnation; but in
the case of Christ, his work had its rise in
many faults and its result in a
declaration of pardon and
righteousness: "And not a through
one that sinned, so is the
gift: for the judgment came of
one unto condemnation, but the
free gift came of many
trespasses unto justification." There
was a third contrast: there was a difference
in the whole character and
consequence of the work of Adam
and of Christ. Through the fault
of one man, death, through that
sole agency, began to reign as a
cruel tyrant. On the other hand,
those who receive the gift of
righteous ness shall reign in
life through the power of
Christ, "For if, by the trespass
of the one, death reigned
through the one; much more shall
they that receive the abundance
of grace and of the gift of
righteousness reign in life
through the one, even Jesus
Christ."
When at last Paul comes to
complete his great comparison
and to show that the wide effect
of the sin of Adam has its
parallel in the universal
benefit accruing to all who put
their trust in Christ, he docs
so by showing that as one act of
disobedience resulted in
bringing all men under
condemnation, so "one act of
righteousness," namely, the
voluntary death of Christ for
the sins of the world, brings
justification to all who put
their trust in him. "So then as
through one trespass the
judgment came unto all men to
condemnation; even so through
one act of righteousness the
free gift came unto all men to
justification of life." Then, to
sum up his entire analogy, Paul
concludes, "For as through the one man's
disobedience the many were made
sinners, even so through
the obedience of the one
shall the many be made
righteous." It remains only for the apostle
to show the true function of
the law. He has stated that,
even between Adam and Moses, sin and death had
reigned supreme. In the earlier
portion of his epistle he has
shown that the law was unable to
secure justification for men.
What, then, was it province?
Paul here declares that it" came
in besides, that the trespass
might abound." Instead of
relieving men from the guilt of
sin, it actually led to the
multiplication of sins. Rut
through the work of Christ a
glorious result was
achieved: "where sin abounded,
grace did abound more exceedingly." Until the coming
of Christ, sin ruled in the
realm of death like a pitiless
monarch; but since the re
deeming work of our Lord, grace
has been enthroned and given
sway over the followers of
Christ, so that they may be
delivered from death and made
heirs of eternal life, vs. 20,
21. Thus Paul not _only shows
the wide application of the
justifying grace of God, but
also indicates what in the next
chapter he proceeds to develop,
namely, that its issue is life
in its largest and truest
aspects, both for time and for
eternity. This is one of the most
intricate and perplexing paragraphs in the Bible, and
therefore its interpretation demands both humility and charity.
Unfortunately, it has been for
centuries the battlefield of
theological controversy. Its
statements are so profound and
its implications are so wide
that all readers should not
expect to agree upon their
meaning. The main message,
however, is clear. It is
intended to show the gracious
provision which God has made for
a race which has fallen wholly
under the dominance of sin and
of death, a provision of
righteousness and of eternal
life made possible through the
atoning work and divine power of
Jesus Christ our Lord.
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