EPISTLE TO THE ROMANS.
Subdivision B.
UNIVERSAL NEED OF RIGHTEOUSNESS.
1:18-3:20.
I.
NEED OF RIGHTEOUSNESS BY THE GENTILES.
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 ["For" is intended to
introduce a direct proof as to the statement in verse 17, thus: The
righteousness of God of which the apostle has been speaking is revealed to a
man by his faith; i. e., it is
seen only by the believing, for all that others see revealed towards man's
unrighteousness is wrath. In other words, only God's gospel reveals this
righteousness, and it is addressed to and received by faith. God's other
revelations seen in nature reveal no pardoning, justifying grace; but show, in
the visitations of terrible judgments, retributions, punitive corrections,
deaths, etc., that God pours out the fruits of his displeasure on the
wickedness of men, whether it be sin against himself (ungodliness), or sin
against the laws and precepts which he has given (unrighteousness), either sin
being a stifling of the truth which they knew about God, by willful indulgences
in unrighteousness. The apostle is here speaking of the Gentiles; he discusses
the case of the Jews separately later on. The precepts, [302] truth,
etc., to which he refers are, therefore, not those found in the Old Testament
Scriptures, which were known to the Jews; but those which were
traditionally handed down by and among the heathen from the patriarchal
days. "All the light," as Poole
says, "which was left in man since the
fall"]; 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 [and God
reveals his wrath against them, because that which is known of God, i. e., the general truths as to his
nature and attributes, is manifested unto them; for God himself so manifested
it, causing his invisible attributes, even his power, divinity, etc., to be
constantly and clearly revealed in the providential working of nature from the
hour of creation's beginning, until now, that they may be without excuse for
sin, and so justly punishable]: 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. [And they were without excuse, for when they knew God they
did not worship him according to the knowledge which they had, nor did they
praise him for his benefits; but they erred in their mind, thus making their
whole inner man senseless and dark, not having the light of truth with which
they started. The phrase, "vain in their reasonings,"
means that their corrupt lives corrupted their minds, for, as Tholuck observes, "religious and moral error is always
the consequence of religious and moral perversity." As
Calvin expresses it: "They quickly choked by their own depravity the seed
of right knowledge before it grew to ripeness."] 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.
[Vaunting their wisdom, these wicked ones made fools of themselves, so that
they exchanged the glory of the [303] immortal God for the
likeness of an image of mortal man, or even images of baser things, as birds,
beasts and reptiles. The audacity of the attempt to reason God out of existence
has invariably turned the brain of man (Ps 53:1), and the excess of
self-conceit and vanity developed by such an undertaking has uniformly resulted
in pitiable folly. In the case of the ancients it led to idolatry. Reiche contended that idolatry preceded monotheism, and
that the better was developed out of the worse; but history sustains Paul in
presenting idolatry as a decline from a purer form of worship "For,"
says Meyer, "heathenism is not the primeval religion from which man might
gradually have risen to the true knowledge of the wisdom of God, but is, on the
contrary, the result of a falling away from the known original revelation of
the true God in his works." Paul does not say that they exchanged the
"form" of God for that of an idol, for God is sensuously perceived as
glory, or shekinah,
rather than as form. Hence, Moses asked to see, not the form, but the glory of
God (Ex. 33:18-22). The Greeks and Romans preferred the human form as the model
for their idols, but the Egyptians chose the baser, doubtless because, having
been longer engaged in the practice of idolatry, their system was more fully
developed in degradation. The ibis, the bull, the serpent and the crocodile of
the Egyptians give us the complements of Paul's catalogue. Schaff
sees in the phrase "likeness of an image" a double meaning, and
interprets it thus: "The expression refers both to the grosser and the
more refined forms of idolatry; common people saw in the idols the gods
themselves; the cultivated heathen regarded them as symbolical
representations."] 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. [Wherefore, finding them living
in lust, God ceased to restrain or protect them from evil (Gen. 6:3), and
abandoned them to the uncleanness toward which their lust incited them, that
they [304] might dishonor their bodies among themselves to
the limit of their lustfulness, as a punishment for dishonoring and abandoning
him. He did this because they had exchanged the truth of God (which from the
start they had hindered in unrighteousness, vs. 18), i. e.,
the truth respecting God and his law and worship, for the sham of idolatry and the
false worship pertaining thereto, and because they had given to the creature
that inward reverence and outward service which was due to the Creator, thus
preferring the creature to the Creator, who is blessed for ever. Amen.
"'Blessed' is not the word signifying happy, rendered blessed in Matt.
5:3-11; 1 Tim. 1:11; 6:15; but the word signifying praised, adored, extolled; i. e., worthy to be praised, etc. In the
New Testament this word is applied to none but to God only; though the cognate
verb is used to express the good wishes and hearty prayers of one creature for
another, as well as praise to God--comp. Heb. 11:20, 21; Jas. 3:9"--Plumer.] 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. [In this horrible picture
Paul shows in what way they dishonored themselves among themselves. The sin of
sodomy was common among idolaters. The apostle tells us that this depth of
depravity was a just punishment for their departure from God. Petronius, Suetonius, Martial,
Seneca, Virgil, Juvenal, Lucian and other classic writers verify the statements
of Paul. Some of their testimonies will be found in Macknight,
Stuart and other larger commentaries.] 28 And even as
they refused [did not deem it worthy of their mind] to have God in their
knowledge, God gave them up unto a reprobate mind [i. e.,
minds rejected in turn by God as unworthy], to do those things which
are not fitting [indecent, immoral]; 29
being filled with all unrighteousness, wickedness, covetousness [inordinate
desire to accumulate property [305] regardless of the
rights of others: a sin which is not condemned by the laws of any country on
the globe, and which is the source of unrest in all nations], maliciousness
[a readiness to commit crime without provocation, a chronic state of illwill and misanthropy]; full of envy, murder,
strife, deceit, malignity; whisperers [talebearers, those who slander
covertly, chiefly by insinuation--Prov. 16:28] 30 backbiters [outspoken slanderers], hateful
to God [many contend that this should read "haters of God," since
Paul is enumerating the vices of men, and not God's attitude toward them.
Others, following the reading in the text, see in these words what Meyer calls
"a resting-point in the disgraceful catalogue"--a place where Paul
pauses to reveal God's moral indignation toward the crimes particularized. But
Alford takes the words in a colloquial sense as describing the political
informers of that period. "If," says he, "any crime was known
more than another, as 'hated by the God,' it was that of informers, abandoned
persons who circumvented and ruined others by a system of malignant espionage
and false information," though he does not confine the term wholly to that
class], insolent, haughty, boastful [these three words describe
the various phases of self-exultation, which, a sin in all ages, was at that
time indulged in to the extent of blasphemy, for Cicero, Juvenal and Horace all
claim that virtue is from man himself, and not from God], inventors
of evil things [inventors of new methods of evading laws, schemers who
discover new ways by which to unjustly accumulate property, discoverers of new
forms of sensuous, lustful gratification, etc.], disobedient to
parents, 31 without understanding [those who have so
long seared their consciences as to be unable to determine between right and
wrong even in plain cases. The loss of moral understanding is very apparent
among habitual liars, whose minds have become so accustomed to falsehood that
they are no longer able to discern the truth so as to accurately state it],
covenant-breakers [those who fail to keep their promises and agreements],
without natural affection [those having an abnormal lack of love towards
parents, children, kindred, etc.], unmerciful: [306] 32 who, knowing the ordinance of God,
that they that practice such things are worthy of death, not only do the same,
but also consent with them that practise them.
[All were not guilty of all these sins, but each was guilty of some of them.
Though many of these evils still exist in Christian lands, they do so in
spite of Christianity; but then they existed because of idolatry.
Lard observes that the Gentiles, starting with the knowledge of God, descended
to the foolishness of idolatry. At this point God abandoned them, and they then
began their second descent, and continued till they reached the very base and
bottom of moral degradation, as indicated in the details given above. The
Gentiles had traditions and laws, founded on original revelations, declaring
these things sinful; and, though they knew that death resulted from sin, yet
they not only defied God and persisted in their sins, but even failed to
condemn them in others; yea, they encouraged each other to commit them. Such,
then, was the helpless, hopeless state of the Gentiles. When they were justly
condemned to death for unrighteousness, God revealed in his gospel a righteousness unto life that they might be saved.] [307]
|
II.
NEED OF RIGHTEOUSNESS BY THE JEWS.
2:1-29.
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
thing. [The apostle, it will be remembered, is proving the universal
insufficiency of human righteousness, that he may show the universal
need of a revealed righteousness. Having made good his case against one
part of the human race--the Gentiles, he now proceeds to a like proof against
the other part--the Jews. He does not name them as Jews at the start, for this
would put them on the defensive, and made his task harder. He speaks to them
first as individuals, [307] without any reference to race,
for the Jew idolized his race, and would readily admit a defect in himself
which he would have denied in his race. But Paul, by thus convicting each of
sin in his own conscience, makes them all unwittingly concede sin in all, even
though Jews. It was the well-known characteristic of the Jews to indulge in
pharisaical judgment and condemnation of others (Matt. 7:1; Luke 18:14),
especially the Gentiles (Acts 11:3; Gal. 2:15). The apostle knew, therefore,
that his Jewish readers would be listening with gloating elation to this his
castigation of the Gentiles, and so, even in this their moment of supreme
self-complacency, he turns his lash upon them, boldly accusing them of having
committed some of the things which they condemned, and, hence, of being in the
same general state of unrighteousness, though, perhaps, on a somewhat less
degraded plane. To condemn another for his sin is to admit that the sin in
question leads to and justifies condemnation as to all who commit it, even
including self. The thought of this verse is, as indicated by its opening
"Wherefore," closely connected with the preceding chapter, and seems to
form a climax, thus: The simple sinner is bad, the encourager of sin in others
is worse, but the one who condemns sins in others, yet commits them himself, is
absolutely defenseless and without excuse. Whitby has collected from Josephus the
passages which show that Paul's arraignment of the Jews is amply justifiable.] 2 And we know that the judgment of God is according to
truth against them that practice 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? [The argument
may be paraphrased thus: Yielding to the force of argument, that like sin
deserves like condemnation, even you, though most unwillingly, condemn
yourself. How much more freely, therefore, will God condemn you (1 John 3:20).
And we know that you can not escape, for the judgment of God is according to
truth; i. e., without error or partiality against the doers of
evil. And do you vainly imagine, O man, that when thine own moral sense [308] is so outraged at evil that thou must needs condemn others for
doing it, that thou, though doing the same evil thyself, shalt escape the
judgment of God through any partiality on his part? Self-love, self-pity,
self-justification, and kindred feeling, have, in all ages, caused men to err
in applying the warnings of God to themselves. Among
the Jews this error took the form of a doctrine. Finding themselves especially
favored and privileged as children of Abraham, they expected to be judged upon
different principles from those of truth, which would govern the judgment and
condemnation of the rest of mankind. This false trust is briefly announced and
rebuked by John the Baptist (Matt. 3:7-9), and afterwards more clearly and
fully defined in the Talmud in such expressions as these: "Every one
circumcised has part in the kingdom to come." "All Israelites will
have part in the world to come." "Abraham sits beside the gates of
hell, and does not permit any wicked Israelite to go down to hell." The
same error exists to-day in a modified form. Many
expect to be saved because they are the children of wealth, culture,
refinement; because they belong to a civilized people; because their parents
are godly; or even, in some cases, because they belong to a certain lodge, or
order.] 4 Or despisest thou the riches of his goodness
and forbearance and longsuffering, not knowing that the goodness of God leadeth
thee to repentance? 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 [The apostle here touches upon a second error which
is still common among men. It is, as Cook says, that "vague and undefined
hope of impunity which they do not acknowledge even to themselves." God's
present economy, which sends rain upon the just and the unjust, and which
postpones the day of punishment to allow opportunity for repentance, leads
untold numbers to the false conclusion that God is slack as to his judgment,
and that he will ever be so. They mistake for indifference or weakness that
longsuffering grace of his which exercises patience, hoping [309] that he may thereby lead men to repentance (2 Pet. 3:9). Those
who, by hardness of heart, steel themselves against repentance, thereby
accumulate punishments which will be inflicted upon them in the day when God
reveals that righteous judgment which has been so long withheld or suspended,
for God is righteous, and he will render to every man in that day according to
his works, after the following described manner]: 7
to them that by patience in well-doing seek for glory and honor and
incorruption, eternal life: 8 but unto them that are
factious, and obey not the truth, but obey unrighteousness, shall be
wrath and indignation [to those who, by steadfastly leading a life of work
(which, as Olshausen observes, no man can do, according to Paul, save by faith
in Christ), seek for glory (and the future state is one of unparalleled
grandeur--John 17:24; Rev. 21:24), honor (and the future state is an honor;
bestowed, though unmerited, as a reward--Matt. 25:23, 40) and incorruption
(which is also a prime distinction between the future and the present life--1
Cor. 15:42), eternal life shall be given. But God's wrath and indignation shall
be poured upon those who serve party and not God (and the Jews were continually
doing this--Matt. 23:15; Gal. 6:12, 13), and obey not the truth (John 8:31, 32),
but obey unrighteousness], 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. [Paul here reiterates the two
phases of God's judgment which he has just described. He does this to emphasize
their universality--that they are upon every
man, regardless of race. The punishment shall come upon Jew and Gentile alike;
but the Jew, because of pre-eminence in privilege, shall have pre-eminence in
suffering (Luke 12:47, 48). The blessings also shall be received alike, but
here also the Jew, having improved his privileges, and having more pounds to
start with (Luke 19:16-19), shall have pre-eminence in reward in as far as he
has attained pre-eminence in life; for [310] there is no
unfair partiality or unjust favoritism with God. The man born
in a Christian home stands to-day in the category then occupied by the Jew.
He will be given greater reward or greater punishment according to his use or
abuse of privilege.] 12 For as many as have sinned
without the law [Gentiles] shall also perish without the law [i. e.,
without being judged by the expressed terms of the law]: and as many
as have sinned under the law [the Jews] shall be judged by the law [i. e.,
his conduct shall be weighed by the terms of it, and his punishment shall be
according to its directions. Thus the Gentiles, having the lesser light of
nature, and the Jews, having the greater light of revelation, were alike
sinners. By his altars, sacrifices, etc., the Gentile showed that nature's law
smote his conscience as truly as the clear, expressed letter of the Mosaic
precept condemned the Jew. Thus both Jew and Gentile were condemned to perish; i. e.,
to receive the opposite of salvation, as outlined in verse 7]; 13 for not the hearers of the law are just before God, but
the doers of the law shall be justified [Of course, the Jew had a great
advantage over the Gentile in that he possessed the law--Paul himself concedes
this (3:1, 2); but this mere possession of the law, and this privilege of
hearing and knowing the will of God, by no means justified the sinner. Jews and
Gentiles alike had to seek justification through perfect obedience to their
respective laws, and no one of either class had ever been able to render such
obedience. The Jew had the advantage of the Gentile in that he had a clear
knowledge of the Lord's will, and a fair warning of the dire consequences of
disobedience. The Gentile, however, had advantages which offset those of the
Jews, thus making the judgments of God wholly impartial. If the law which
directed him was less clear, it was also less onerous. In a parenthesis the
apostle now sets forth the nature of the law under which the Gentiles lived; he
evidently does this that he may meet a supposed Jewish objection, as though
some one said, "Since what you say applies to those who have a divine law
given to them, it can not apply to the Gentiles, since they possess no law at
all." It is to this [311] anticipated objection that
Paul replies]; 14 (for when Gentiles that have not
the law do by nature the things of the law, these, not having the law, are the
law unto themselves; 15 in 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) [The
meaning here may be quickly grasped in the following paraphrase: Jews and
Gentiles are alike sinners, yet each had a chance to attain legal
justification; the former by keeping an outwardly revealed law, the latter by
obeying an inwardly revealed one. Now, the Gentiles have such a law, as appears
from their general moral conduct; for when those who do not have the law of
Moses, do, by their own inward, natural promptings, the things prescribed by
the law of Moses, they are a law unto themselves, having in themselves the
threefold workings of law, in that the guidance of their heart predisposes them
to know the right, the testimony of their conscience bears witness with their
heart that the right is preferable, and lastly, after the deed is done, their
thoughts or inward reasonings accuse or excuse them according as their act has
been wrong or right. These well-known psychological phenomena, observable among
the Gentiles, are proof conclusive that they are not without law, with its
power and privilege of justification. Therefore, all are not sinners because
there is respect of persons with God, for all have the possibility of attaining
justification]; 16 in the day when God shall
judge the secrets of men, according to my gospel, by Jesus Christ. [This
verse relates to the thought interrupted by the parenthesis; i. e.,
the thought of verse 13. Not hearers, but doers, shall be justified in the
judgment-day, that day when God shall judge the secrets of men's lives and
judge them, as my gospel further reveals, through Jesus Christ as judge. The
Jewish Scriptures revealed a judgment-day, and the thought was not unfamiliar
to the Gentiles; but it remained for Paul's gospel to reveal the new truth that
Jesus was to be the Judge. Paul started with the thought that, in judging
another, a sinner condemned himself (v. 2:3). [312] Having discussed that thought and shown that it is applicable
to the Jew, because God's judgments rest on moral and not on national or
ceremonial ground, the apostle here resumes it once more, in connection with verse
13, that he may show that if the law of Moses did not shield from condemnation,
neither would circumcision.] 17 But if thou bearest 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 of the truth; 21 thou
therefore that teacheth another, teachest thou not thyself? [But if doers,
and not hearers, are not justified, why do you put your confidence in mere
hearing, and such things as are analogous to it? Since only the doers of the
law are justified, why do you vainly trust that you will be acceptable because
you bear the proud name of Jew (Gal. 2:15; Phil. 3:5; Rev. 2:9), rather than
the humble one of Gentile? Why do you rest confidently merely because you
possess a better law than the Gentiles, because you glory in the worship of the
true God (Deut. 4:7), and in knowing his will (Ps. 147:19, 20), and in being
instructed so as to approve the more excellent things of the Jewish religion
above the debauchery of idolatry? Of what avail are these things when God
demands doing and not mere knowing? And of what profit is it to you if
the law does give you such a correct knowledge of the truth that you are to the
Gentiles, yea, even to their chief philosophers, as a guide to the blind, a
light to the benighted, a wise man among fools, a
skilled teacher among children? Of what avail or profit is it all if, with all
this ability, you teach only others and fail to teach yourself? The apostle
next shows, in detail, how truly the Jew had failed to profit by his knowledge,
so as to become a doer of the law.] 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 [313] abhorrest idols,
dost thou rob temples? 23 thou who gloriest in the law,
through thy transgression of the law dishonorest thou god? [These questions
bring out the flagrant inconsistencies between Jewish preaching and practice.
Teaching others not to steal, the Jew, though probably not often guilty of
technical theft, was continually practically guilty of it in his business
dealings, wherein, by the use of false weights, extortion, cheating, etc., he
gathered money for which he had returned no just equivalent. Unchastity was
also a besetting sin of the Jews, showing itself in the corrupt practice of
permitting divorces without reasonable or righteous cause (Matt. 19:8, 9). Some
of the most celebrated Rabbis are, in the Talmud, charged with adultery. Paul's
accusation, that the Jews robbed temples, has been a puzzle to many. This
robbing of the temple, according to the context of his argument, must have been
a species of idolatry, for he is charging the Jews with doing the very things
which they condemned. They condemned stealing, and stole; they denounced
adultery, and committed it; they abhorred idols, yet robbed the temples of them
that they might worship them. Such is the clear meaning, according to the
context. But we have no evidence that the Jews of Paul's day did such a thing.
The charge is doubtless historic. The Jewish history, in which they gloried,
showed that the fathers, in whom they had taken so much pride, had done this
thing over and over again, and the same spirit was in their children, though
more covertly concealed (comp. Matt. 23:29-32). The last question sums up the
Jewish misconduct: glorying in the law, as is shown in verses 17-20, they yet
dishonored the God of the law by transgressing it, as is shown in this
paragraph.] 24 For the name of
God is blasphemed among the Gentiles because of you, even as it is written.
[Isa. 52:5; Ezek. 36:20-23. By their conduct the Jews had fulfilled the words
of Isaiah and the meaning of Ezekiel. The Gentiles, judging by the principle
that a god may be known by his worshipers, had, by reason of the Jews, judged
Jehovah to be of such a character that their judgment became a blasphemy. (See
also Ezek. 16:51-59.) Thus Paul [314] took from the Jew a
confidence of divine favor, which he had because he possessed the law. But the
law was not the sole confidence of the Jew, for he had circumcision also, and
he regarded this rite as a seal or conclusive evidence that he belonged to the
people of God, being thereby separated by an infinite distance from all other
people. He looked with scorn and contempt on the uncircumcised, even using the
term as an odious epithet (Gen. 34:14; Ex. 12:48; 1 Sam. 17:26; 2 Sam. 1:20;
Isa. 52:1; Ezek. 28:10.) The apostle, therefore, turns his fire so as to
dislodge the Jew from this deceptive stronghold. He drives him from his hope
and trust in circumcision.] 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? [In verse 25 the apostle takes up the case of the Jew; in verse
26 that of the Gentile. By circumcision the former entered into a covenant with
God, and part of the terms of his covenant was an agreement to obey the law.
Thus the law was superior to circumcision, so much so that it, as it were,
disfranchised or expatriated an Israelite for disobedience, despite his
circumcision. On the contrary, if an uncircumcised Gentile obeyed the law, then
the law naturalized and received him into the spiritual theocracy,
notwithstanding his lack of circumcision. The verses are not an argument, but a
plain statement of the great truth that circumcision, though beneficial to the
law-abiding, has no power to withstand the law when condemning the lawless. In
short, the Jew and Gentile stood on equal footing, for, though the Jew had a
better covenant (circumcision) and a better law, yet neither attained to
salvation, for neither kept the law.] 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? [The
Gentile, remaining as he was by nature, uncircumcised, if he fulfilled the law,
shall, in his turn, judge the Jew, who was so ready to judge him [315] (v. 1), who, with a written law and circumcision, was yet a
transgressor. The judging referred to is probably the indirect judging of
comparison. On the day of judgment, the Gentile, with
his poor advantages, will condemn, by his superior conduct, the lawlessness of
the Jew. Comp. Matt. 11:21, 22; Luke 11:31, 32.] 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. [He is
not a Jew in God's sight (though he is, of course, such in the sight of the
world) who is simply one without; i. e., by being properly born of
Jewish parents, nor is that a circumcision in God's sight (though it is in the
sight of the world) which is merely fleshly. But he is the real, divinely
accepted Jew who is one within; i. e., who has in him the spirit of
Abraham and the fathers in whom God delighted (John 1:47). His life may be hid
from men, so that they may see nothing in him to praise, but it is praiseworthy
in the sight of God, and circumcision is not that outward compliance with the
letter of the law--literal circumcision--but that inward spiritual compliance
with the true meaning of circumcision, the cutting off of all things that are
impure and unholy, and that make the heart unworthy of an acceptance into the
household of God.]
|
III.
JEWISH
PRIVILEGE DOES NOT DIMINISH GUILT,
AND THE SCRIPTURES INCLUDE BOTH
JEW AND GENTILE ALIKE UNDER SIN.
3:1-20.
1 What advantage then hath the
Jew? or what is the profit of circumcision?
[Paul's argument was well calculated to astonish the Jews. If some notable
Christian should argue conclusively that the Christian and the infidel stood on
an equal footing before God, his argument would not be more [316]
startling to the church than was that of Paul to the Jews of
his day. They naturally asked the two questions found in this first verse, so
Paul places the questions before his readers that he may answer them.] 2 Much every way: first of all, that
they were entrusted with the oracles of God. [To the circumcised Jew God
had given the Scriptures. The law, the Psalms, the prophets were his, with all
the revelations and promises therein contained. They revealed man's origin, his
fall and his promised redemption; they also described the Redeemer who should
come, and prepared men to receive him and to believe him. How unspeakable the
advantage of the Jew in possessing such a record. But the Jew had not improved
this advantage, and so we may regard him as asking the apostle this further
question, "But, after all, the greatest part of us have
not believed on this Jesus, and so what advantage were our oracles to us in
reality?" The apostle now answers this objection.] 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
[Ps. 51:4], That thou mightest be justified
in thy words, And mightest prevail when thou comest into judgment. [True, the Jew, by unbelief, had
failed to improve his advantage in possessing the Scriptures; but that
did not alter the fact that he had had the advantage. He had failed, but God
had not failed. Had the unbelief of the Jew caused God to break his promises, then indeed might the advantage of the Jew have been
questioned, for in that case it would have proven a vanishing quantity. But, on
the contrary, God had kept faith, and so the advantage, though unimproved, had
been an abiding quantity. And this accords with the holiness and sinlessness of God. He is ever blameless, and because he is
so, he must ever be assumed to be so, even though such an assumption should
involve the presumption that all men are false and untrue, as, indeed, they are
in comparison with him: for David testified to the incomparable righteousness
of God, that it was a righteousness which acquitted God of all unfaithfulness
to his [317] words, and which causes him to prevail
whenever men call him to account or pass judgment upon him.] 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.)
[I am not expressing my own views, but those of the man who objects to the
truth I am presenting.] 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? 8 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.
[But some of you Jews, objecting to my argument, will say, "According to
your statements, the unbelief and disobedience of us Jews, with reference to
God's Scripture, drew out, displayed and magnified the faithfulness and
goodness of God in fulfilling his Scripture. Therefore, since our unbelief,
etc., added to the glory of God by commending his righteousness, is not God
unjust to punish us for that unbelief, etc., since it works such praiseworthy
results? "My answer is, God forbid that sin should become righteousness,
for if sin ceases to be sinful, how shall God judge the world, since then there
shall be no sin to be condemned or punished? You see, then, the absurdity of
your question, since it is a practical denial of the divinely established fact
that there is to be a day of judgment. Sin, though it may, by its contrast,
display the righteousness of God, is nevertheless utterly without merit. As an
illustration, my case is analogous to yours. You arraign me before the bar of
Jewish opinion, even as you yourselves are arraigned before the bar of God; yet
you would not permit me to use before you the very same argument which you are
seeking to use before God. You Jews regard me as a sinner, and charge me with
being untrue to the Jewish religion, and with being a false representative of
it, in that I declare it to be fulfilled in the gospel. Now, my lie (as you
consider it), in this respect, redounds to the glory of God by being a contrast
to his truthfulness. But would you Jews [318] acquit me of
the sin of heresy if I should make use of this your argument? And, again, if
your reasoning is correct, why should I not, as certain, meaning to slander me,
report that I do, and affirm that I say, Let us do evil that good may come? But
those who avow such principles are justly condemned. Thus Paul showed that, in
condemning him (though falsely), they condemn the very argument which they were
seeking to affirm in verse 5.] 9 What then? Are we
[Jews] better than they? [The Gentiles.] No,
in no wise: for we before laid to the charge both of Jews and Greeks, that they
are all under sin [Having met the effort of the Jew to make an exception in
his case, as set forth in verse 5, the apostle now reaffirms his original
charge of universal unrighteousness, in which both Jews and Greeks were
involved. This charge he further proves by an elaborate chain of quotations,
taken from the Old Testament, and chiefly from the Psalms]; 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 [Ps. 14:1-3; 53:1-3]: 13 Their throat is an open sepulchre;
With their tongues they have used deceit [Ps. 5:9]: The poison of
asps is under their lips [140:3]: 14 Whose
mouth is full of cursing and bitterness [Ps. 10:7]: 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 [Isa. 59:7, 8]: 18 There is no fear of God before their eyes. [Ps.
36:1. The above quotations are placed in logical order. "The arrangement
is such," says Meyer, "that testimony is adduced: first, for the state
of sin generally (vs. 10-12); second, the practice of sin in word (vs.
13, 14) and deed (vs. 13-17); and third, the sinful source of the
whole--v. 18."] 19 Now we know that what things soever the law saith, it speaketh to them that are under the law [i. e., to the Jews]; that
every mouth may be stopped, and all the world may be brought under the judgment
[319] 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. [Having, by his quotations from the Old Testament,
shown that the Jew was sinful, the apostle sets forth the result of this sin.
Does the law provide any remedy? Is the Jew right in hoping that it shall afford
him immunity from his guilt? These questions have been for some time before the
apostle, and they now come up for final answer. We, says he, universally accept
the truth that when the law speaks, it speaks to those who are under it. If,
therefore, it has no voice save condemnation--and it has no other--and if that
voice is addressed particularly to the Jew--and it is--his state is no better
than that of the Gentile; he is condemned; and the law thus speaks for this
very purpose of silencing the vain, unwarranted confidence of the Jew, that he
may see himself in the same condition as the Gentile, and brought, with the
rest of the world, under the condemnation of God; and there can be no legal
escape from this condemnation, because, by the works of the law, it is
impossible for humanity, in its frailty, to justify itself in God's sight--nay,
the law works a directly contrary result, for through it comes the knowledge
and sense of sin, and not the sense of pardon or justification.]
|