Verse 1-2
Romans 6:1-2. What shall we say
then — What shall we think of
this doctrine? namely, taught in
the latter part of the preceding
chapter, that where sin abounded
grace did much more abound? Does
it not follow from thence that
we may continue in sin, that
grace may abound still more, and
may appear more glorious in
pardoning and saving us? The
apostle here sets himself more
fully to vindicate his doctrine
from this consequence, suggested
Romans 3:7-8. He had then only,
in strong terms, denied and
renounced it. Here he removes
the very foundation thereof;
proceeding to speak of some
further benefits (besides those
mentioned Romans 5:1, &c.) of
justification by faith in
Christ, namely, the promoting of
holiness, and not of sin, as
some might imagine: to which
subject his transition is at
once easy and elegant. God
forbid — That such an unworthy
thought as that of continuing in
sin should ever arise in our
hearts! We have disclaimed such
a consequence above, and we most
solemnly disclaim it again, and
caution all that hear us,
against imagining that our
doctrine allows any such cursed
inferences. For though it is
true, that where sin abounds
grace does frequently still more
abound, yet this is not owing to
sin in any degree; which of
itself brings death, Romans
6:23; James 1:15; and the more
sin, the more punishment; but
wholly to the superabounding
mercy and love of God in Christ.
For how shall we that are dead
to sin — By profession,
obligation, and communion with
Christ our head in his death; or
who are freed both from the
guilt and the power of it; live
any longer therein — In the love
and practice of it? Surely it
would be the grossest
contradiction to our profession,
and the obligations we are under
to do so: on the contrary, it is
apparent that nothing has so
great a tendency to animate us
to avoid sin, as this doctrine
of gospel grace.
Verse 3-4
Romans 6:3-4. Know ye not — Can
any of you be ignorant of this
great and obvious truth, that so
many of us as were baptized into
Christ — That is, into the
profession of the Christian
faith; or implanted into and
made a part of the mystical body
of Christ by baptism, (as εις
χριστον seems to imply,) were
baptized into his death —
Engaged by baptism to be
conformed to his death, by dying
to sin, as he died for it, and
crucifying our flesh with its
affections and lusts, as his
body was crucified on the cross;
and also were made partakers of
the benefits thereof, one of
which is the mortifying of sin,
and all sinful passions. Being
baptized into Christ, or
ingrafted into him through
faith, we draw new spiritual
life from this new root, through
his Spirit, who fashions us like
unto him, and particularly with
regard to his death and
resurrection. Therefore we are
buried with him — Alluding to
the ancient manner of baptizing
by immersion; by baptism into
death — That is, to engage us to
die unto sin, and to carry on
the mortification and death of
it more and more: that like as
Christ was raised up from the
dead by the glory — That is, the
glorious power; of the Father,
even so we also — In conformity
thereto, should rise again by
the same power; and should walk
in newness of life — As Christ
being raised from the dead lives
a new life in heaven. From all
this it appears, that baptism,
the rite of initiation into the
Christian Church, is an
emblematical representation of
our dying to sin, and living to
righteousness, in consequence of
our union with Christ as members
of his body; as also of the
malignity of sin, in bringing
death upon Christ, (Romans
6:10,) and upon all mankind, and
of the efficacy of Christ’s
death, in procuring for all
pardoning mercy, renewing grace,
and future glory; a resurrection
both from spiritual and temporal
death, to spiritual and eternal
life.
Verses 5-7
Romans 6:5-7. For — Surely these
two must go together; so that if
we have been united to Christ by
faith, (to which baptism engages
us,) and have been made
conformable to his death, by
being dead to sin, we shall also
know the power of his
resurrection, by rising to
newness of life. Knowing this —
Not in theory merely, but by
experience; that our old man —
Coeval with our being; our evil
nature derived from Adam; the
whole system of our former
inclinations and dispositions.
It is a strong and beautiful
expression for that entire
depravity and corruption which,
by nature, spreads itself over
the whole man, leaving no part
uninfected. This in a believer
is crucified with Christ,
mortified, gradually killed by
virtue of union with him; the
remembrance and consideration of
his cross co- operating in the
most powerful manner, with all
the other motives which the
gospel suggests, to destroy our
corrupt passions, and former
sinful habits, and inspire us
with an utter aversion to and
detestation of them: that the
body of sin — The body belonging
to sin, including sinful
tempers, words, and works. The
apostle personifies sin, after
the custom of animated writers,
who, to make their discourses
lively and affecting, speak of
the virtues and vices of which
they treat, as so many persons.
Corrupt passions and evil
actions are the members of the
old man, Colossians 3:5. Might
be destroyed — Utterly and for
ever; that henceforth we should
not serve sin — Should be no
longer under its power, as we
were before we became savingly
acquainted with Christ and his
gospel. For he that is dead —
With Christ; is freed from sin —
From the guilt of past, and the
power of present sin, as dead
men from the commands of their
former masters. The original
expression, here rendered is
freed, is δεδικαιωται, which
properly signifies, is
justified; that is, he is
acquitted and discharged from
any further claim which sin
might make upon his service. The
word as here used implies, that
a sense of justification by the
cross of Christ is the great
means of our delivery from the
bondage of sin, as it animates
and exercises us to shake off
its yoke, and is accompanied
with the Spirit of adoption and
regeneration, the fruit of which
is always liberty, 2 Corinthians
3:17.
Verses 8-11
Romans 6:8-11. Now if we be dead
with Christ — Conformed to his
death by dying to sin; we
believe that we shall also live
with him — We have reason
sufficient to assure ourselves
that we shall be conformed to
him in life too, by living an
uninterrupted life of grace
here, and glory hereafter; and
shall die no more, even as
Christ being raised from the
dead dieth no more, Romans 6:9.
He died unto sin — To atone for
and to abolish it; but he liveth
unto God — A glorious eternal
life, such as we shall live
also. Likewise — ουτω, so, in
correspondence to Christ’s death
and life, Romans 6:8-9, reckon
ye yourselves to be dead indeed
unto sin — To be under an
indispensable obligation, from
duty and gratitude, to die to
it, and never more return under
its power, or live in the
commission of it; but alive unto
God — Endued with spiritual
life, and thereby enabled to
live to the glory of God, in a
steady, uniform, and cheerful
obedience to his wise, just, and
holy commands; through Jesus
Christ our Lord — By virtue of
his death and resurrection, your
union with him by faith, and
grace received from him.
Verses 12-14
Romans 6:12-14. Let not sin —
Any sinful disposition or
inclination; therefore — Since
you are regenerate and
spiritually alive; reign in your
mortal body — That is, reign in
your soul while it dwells in
your body. Many of our sinful
inclinations have their seat in
the body, and such evil
inclinations as are of a more
spiritual nature, are always
some way more or less turned
toward the body. That ye should
obey it — Should yield to and be
overcome by it; in the lusts
thereof — In the irregular or
inordinate desires which it
excites within you. Neither
yield ye your members — The
members of your bodies, or the
faculties of your minds; the
word μελη, here used, as also
chapter Romans 7:5, signifying
both, and indeed every thing in
us and belonging to us, which is
employed as an instrument in
performing the works of the
flesh, enumerated Galatians
5:19-21. For some of these do
not require the members of the
body to their being performed,
but are wholly confined in their
operation to the mind. Hence,
Colossians 3:5, evil desire and
covetousness are mentioned among
our members upon the earth which
we are to mortify. As
instruments of unrighteousness —
Employed in its service; unto
sin — For the committing of it.
The original word οπλα, rendered
instruments, properly denotes
military weapons; and may be
here used to signify, that those
who employ their powers, whether
of body or mind, or any ability
they possess, in the service of
sin, do in fact fight for it,
and for its master and father,
Satan; and the principalities
and powers under his command,
against God and Christ, and all
the company of heaven. But yield
yourselves unto God — Your
lawful king, governor, and
captain: dedicate yourselves,
both body and soul, to his
service; as those that are alive
from the dead — Who, after
having been spiritually dead,
are quickened and put in
possession of spiritual life;
that is, are no longer alienated
from the life of God, but have
vital union with God; not as
formerly, carnally minded, which
is death, but spiritually
minded, which is life and peace,
chap. Romans 8:6; no longer
under condemnation to the second
death, but justified and
entitled to eternal life; and
your members — All your powers
and abilities; as instruments of
righteousness — Instruments
employed in the promotion of
piety and virtue; unto God — For
his service and to his glory; or
as weapons, to fight his
battles, and oppose the designs
of your spiritual enemies. For
sin shall not have dominion over
you — It has no right, and shall
not have power to reign over
you. The word κυριευσει, denotes
the government of a master over
his slave, and might be
rendered, shall not lord it over
you. As if he had said, Though
it is true sin is strong, and
you are weak in yourselves, yet
if you faithfully strive against
it, looking to God for power
from on high, you shall be
enabled to conquer. For ye are
not under the law — Under a
dispensation of terror and
bondage, which only shows you
your duty, but gives you no
power to perform it; and which
condemns you for your past
violations of it, but offers no
pardon to any on their
repentance. The Mosaic law seems
to be particularly intended, and
the propriety of what is here
observed is well illustrated, in
that view, by the apostle in the
next chapter. But his words may
well imply also, that we are not
so under any law as to be
utterly condemned for want of a
perfect conformity, or unsinning
obedience to it. Not under a
dispensation that requires such
an obedience, under the penalty
of death; which offers no
assistance for enabling those
who are under it to perform its
requisitions, and grants no
pardon to any sinner on his
repentance. For the apprehension
of being under such a
dispensation would tend utterly
to discourage us in all our
attempts to conquer sin, and
free ourselves from its power.
But under grace — Under the
merciful dispensation of the
gospel, which offers to all that
will accept it, in the way of
repentance toward God and faith
in Christ, a free and full
pardon for all that is past, an
entire change of nature, and
those continual supplies of
grace, which strengthen human
weakness, and confer both the
will and the power to conquer
every besetting sin, and live in
the practice of universal
holiness and righteousness. For
the nature of the grace, that
is, of the new gracious
covenant, under which we are
placed, is such, that it does
not require an impossible
perfect obedience to the law of
Moses, or any law, but the
obedience of faith; promising,
at the same time, the aids of
the Holy Spirit, to enable men
to do God’s will sincerely as
far as they know it, and
offering the pardon of sin to
all on condition of repentance
and faith in Christ, and in the
declarations and promises of the
gospel through him. Now under
this gracious covenant mankind
have been placed ever since the
fall; ever since God said, The
seed of the woman shall bruise
the serpent’s head; ever since
that time the apostle’s doctrine
here, Ye are not under the law,
but under grace, has been true
of all the posterity of Adam; a
doctrine which, instead of
weakening the obligation of the
law of God, written on men’s
hearts, or the moral law in any
of its requirements, establishes
it in the most effectual manner.
See note on Romans 3:31.
Verses 15-18
Romans 6:15-18. What then are we
to infer? Shall we sin — Go on
in our transgressions; because
we are not under the law — Under
the law of Moses, or any mere
legal dispensation which forbids
sin, but gives no strength
against it; but under grace — A
dispensation perfectly the
reverse, offering pardon to the
most guilty, holiness to the
most depraved, and strength to
the most weak and helpless! God
forbid — That we should draw any
inference so odious and
destructive. Know ye not — Is it
necessary to inform you; that to
whom ye yield — Greek,
παριστανετε, present yourselves
servants to obey his commands,
his servants ye are whom ye obey
— Not his whose name you may
bear, without practically
acknowledging his authority; but
his to whom ye are in fact
obedient, to whom you are
subject, and whose will you do.
“By the expression, ye present
yourselves servants, the apostle
taught the Romans, that grace
does not destroy human liberty.
It was still in their own power
to choose whether they would
present themselves slaves to
sin, or servants to
righteousness.” Whether of sin
unto death — Which will bring
you to eternal death; or of
obedience — To God and his
gospel; unto righteousness —
True and evangelical, and which
will certainly be rewarded with
eternal life. But God be thanked
that ye were — That is,
although, or whereas, you were
once the servants of sin — A
bondage this now passed and
gone; ye have now obeyed — Not
in profession alone, but from
the heart, that form of doctrine
which was delivered to you —
Greek, εις ον παρεδοθητε τυπον
διδαχης, literally, the model of
doctrine into which, as into a
mould, you were delivered; for
the word τυπος, rendered form,
among other things, signifies a
mould, into which melted metals
are poured to receive the form
of the mould: and the apostle
here represents the gospel
doctrine as a mould, into which
the Roman believers were
delivered, in order to their
being formed anew, and conformed
to the gospel in all its
doctrines, precepts, and
promises: and he thanks God,
that from the heart, that is,
most willingly and sincerely,
they had yielded to the forming
efficacy of that doctrine, and
were made new creatures both in
principle and practice. The
allusion is not only beautiful,
but conveys a very instructive
admonition: intimating, that our
minds made all pliant and
ductile, should be conformed to
the nature and design of the
gospel, as liquid metals take
the figure of the mould into
which they are cast. Being then
made free from sin — Set at
liberty from its power and
dominion; ye became servants of
righteousness — At once enabled
and obliged to lead a life of
true piety and exemplary
goodness. The word
ελευθερωθεντες, here rendered
being made free, is the word by
which the act of giving a slave
his liberty was signified,
called by the Romans
emancipation.
Verses 19-22
Romans 6:19-22. I speak after
the manner of men — He seems to
mean that his reasoning was
taken from the customs of men,
and was accommodated to their
apprehension; and that he used
metaphors and allegories which
were well known; because of the
infirmity of your flesh —
Dulness of apprehension, and
weakness of understanding, flow
from the infirmity of the flesh;
that is, of human nature. Or, as
some understand the expression
to mean, I recommend a duty to
you, suited to human nature;
yea, even to the infirmities
thereof; that you should do as
much for God as you have done
for sin, and be as diligent in
the service of Christ as you
have been in the pursuit of your
lusts. For as — In time past,
while you were ignorant of the
gospel, and many of you the
slaves of heathen vice and
idolatry; ye yielded your
members servants to uncleanness
— To various fleshly lusts which
defiled you; and to iniquity —
Or unrighteousness toward
others; unto iniquity — Adding
one iniquity to another; even so
now — Being enlightened by the
gospel to see the evil of such
things, and the miserable
consequences awaiting them; and
being renewed by the influences
of divine grace, it is but
reasonable that you should be as
ready to pursue a pious and
virtuous line of conduct, and to
do good now, as formerly you
were to do evil; and become
servants of righteousness unto
holiness — Observe, reader, they
who are true servants of
righteousness, which may here
mean a conformity to the divine
will, go on to holiness, which
implies a conformity to the
divine nature. For when ye were
the servants of sin — Were under
its guilt and power; ye were
free from righteousness — You
not only had not righteousness
enough, but, strictly speaking,
had no true righteousness at
all; never doing any single
action that was truly good, and,
on the whole, acceptable to God,
because none was performed from
such principles as could entitle
it to his complete approbation.
In all reason, therefore, ye
ought now to be free from
unrighteousness; to be as
uniform and zealous in serving
God as you were in serving the
devil. What fruit had ye then in
those things — Consider, what
advantage did you derive from
the practices to which you were
then habituated, and whereof ye
are now ashamed? — The very
remembrance of which now gives
you pain, and creates in you
much remorse and trouble? For
the end of those things is death
— The word τελος, here rendered
end, signifies both the end for
which a thing is done, and the
last issue of it. It is used in
the former sense, 1 Peter 1:9;
receiving, το τελος, the end of
your faith, the salvation of
your souls; the end or purpose
for which ye believed. But its
meaning here is, that the
punishment of death, to be
inflicted on sinners, is the
natural consequence, or issue,
and reward of their sin.
Verse 23
Romans 6:23. For the wages of
sin is death — “The word οψωνια,
rendered wages, properly
signifies the food and pay which
generals give to their soldiers
for their service. By using this
term, the apostle shows what
sort of pay the usurper, sin,
gives to those who serve under
his banners. Further, as the sin
here spoken of is that which men
commit personally, and which
they continue in, the death
which is the wages of this kind
of sin must be death eternal. It
is observable, that although in
Scripture the expression,
eternal life, is often to be met
with, we nowhere find eternal
joined with death. Yet the
punishment of the wicked is said
to be eternal. Matthew 25:46;”
(Macknight;) as also in many
other passages. But the gift of
God — Greek, χαρισμα, the free
gift, or gift of grace; is
eternal life — Or, eternal life
is the free gift of God. “The
apostle does not call
everlasting life οψωνια, the
wages which God gives to his
servants, because they do not
merit it by their services, as
the slaves of sin merit death by
theirs: but he calls it a free
gift, or gift of grace; or, as
Estius would render the
expression, a donative; because,
being freely bestowed, it may be
compared to the donatives which
the Roman generals, of their own
good- will, bestowed on their
soldiers as a mark of their
favour.” We may now see the
apostle’s method thus far: —
1st, Bondage to sin, Romans 3:9.
2d, The knowledge of sin by the
law, a sense of God’s wrath,
inward death, Romans 3:20. 3d,
The revelation of the
righteousness of God in Christ,
through the gospel, Romans 3:21.
4th, The centre of all faith,
embracing that righteousness,
Romans 3:22. 5th, Justification,
whereby God forgives all past
sin, and freely accepts the
sinner, Romans 3:24. 6th, The
gift of the Holy Ghost, a sense
of God’s love, new inward life,
Romans 5:5; Romans 6:4. 7th, The
free service of righteousness,
Romans 6:23. |