Verses 1-3
Romans 7:1-3. Know ye not,
brethren — The apostle, having
shown that justified and
regenerated persons are free
from the dominion of sin, shows
here that they are also free
from the yoke of the Mosaic law,
it being dead to them, Romans
7:6; and they to it, Romans 7:4
: for I speak to them that know
the law — To the Jews or
proselytes chiefly here; that
the law — The Mosaic
dispensation in general, to
which you were espoused by
Moses; hath dominion over a man
— Over a Jew married to it, and
engaged to observe it; as long
as he — Rather, as long as it
liveth; that is, abideth in
force, and no longer. For it
would be contrary to the
apostle’s design, to suppose the
sense of this to be as our
translation renders it, as long
as he, that is, the man in
question, liveth; for he
professedly endeavours to prove
that they had outlived their
obligations to the law. But the
rendering here proposed is
natural, and suits the
connection with the following
verses, in which the law is
represented as their first
husband, whose decease left them
free to be married to Christ.
The law is here spoken of, by a
common figure, as a person to
which, as to a husband, life and
death are ascribed. It is as if
he had said, The dominion of the
law over particular persons can,
at the utmost, last no longer
than till it is itself
abrogated; for that is, as it
were, its death; since the
divine authority going along
with it was the very life and
soul of it. Suppose that to
cease, and the letter of the
precept becomes but a dead
thing, and with respect to its
obligations, as if it had never
been. But he speaks
indifferently of the law being
dead to us, or us to it, the
sense being the same. For the
woman, &c. — Just as it is,
according to the law itself,
with respect to the power of a
husband over his wife, who is
bound by the law to be subject
to her husband so long as he
liveth —
The law here referred to is not
merely that particular branch of
the law of Moses which respected
marriage, but also and
especially the law of marriage
promulgated in paradise, Genesis
2:24; whereby our Lord declared
marriages were appointed to
continue for life, except in the
case of adultery, Matthew 19:6.
This argument was peculiarly
adapted to the Jews, whose
connection with God, as their
king, was represented by God
himself under the idea of a
marriage, solemnized with them
at Sinai. But if the husband —
To whom she was bound, be dead,
she is loosed —
From that law, which gave him a
peculiar property in her. So
then, if while her husband
liveth, γενηται ανδρι ετερω, she
become the property of another
man, &c. — The apostle, says
Theodoret, “does not consider
here the permission given by the
law of Moses to the woman
divorced to be married to
another, as being taught by
Christ not to approve of such
divorces; but he seems only to
intimate that she had no power
to dissolve this bond by putting
away her husband, or that this
divorce rendered her husband
dead in law to her, she being
not to return to him again.
Deuteronomy 24:4.” Perhaps we
ought rather to say, he speaks
in the general, not entering
exactly into every excepted case
that might be imagined. To
infer, therefore, hence, as some
have done, that adultery is not
a sufficient foundation for
divorce, is very unreasonable.
But if her husband be dead, she
is free from that law — Which
bound her to be in subjection,
and yield conjugal affection to
her husband only; so that she is
no more an adulteress — Subject
to the shame and punishment of
one; though she be married,
γενομενην ανδοι ετερω, becoming
the property of another man; for
death, having interposed between
them, hath dissolved the former
relation. He is dead to her, and
she to him.
Verse 4
Romans 7:4. Wherefore, my
brethren — Hence it follows, or
by this comparison it appears;
ye also — Believing Jews, and
much more believing Gentiles;
are become dead to the law —
Taken off from all hopes of
justification by it, and
confidence in your obedience to
it: and so likewise it has
become dead to you, and has no
life or efficacy in these
respects; by the body of Christ
— By the offering up of Christ’s
body on the cross; that is, by
the merit of his death, by which
it evidently appears, that there
is no other way of making
reconciliation for sin, or of
obtaining deliverance from wrath
but by that; his death and
sufferings having now
accomplished the design of the
law, and abrogated its
authority; and it, therefore,
expiring with him. That ye
should be married to another —
(2 Corinthians 11:2;) so that
you must now give up yourselves
to Christ, as your second
husband, that you may be
justified by faith in him. The
apostle speaks of Christ as the
husband of the believing Jews,
because he was now become their
Lord and head; and he calls him
another husband, because they
had been formerly, as it were,
married to the Mosaic law, and
relied on that alone for
salvation. And the crucifixion
of their old man, or corrupt
nature, and their obtaining a
new nature, through the death of
Christ, was a fit preparation of
them for being espoused to
Christ. Who is raised from the
dead — Who is alive himself, and
will bestow spiritual life on
those that believe on him, and
give up themselves to him; that
we should bring forth fruit —
Namely, of holiness and good
works, Galatians 5:22; unto God
— To his glory, Matthew 5:16;
John 15:8; Philippians 1:11. In
this passage the union of Christ
with his people is represented
as a marriage, as it is also
Ephesians 5:31-32; Revelation
21:9; Revelation 22:17. The
apostles probably took that idea
from the ancient phraseology
concerning the Jews. See on
Romans 7:2. But from whatever
source it was derived, it is a
strong representation of the
friendship and endearment which
subsists, and to all eternity
will subsist, between Christ and
believers, and of the happiness
which they will derive from his
love to them, and from their
entire subjection to him.
Verse 5-6
Romans 7:5-6. For — We ought now
to be fruitful in good works,
because we were formerly
fruitful in evil: when we were
in the flesh — Under the
comparatively carnal
dispensation of Moses, and in
our natural corrupt state,
before we believed on Christ and
were regenerated. Thus, οι οντες
εν σαρκι, they that are in the
flesh, and οι κατα σαρκα οντες,
they that are after the flesh,
(Romans 8:5; Romans 8:8,)
signify those that are
influenced and governed by the
fleshly principle, in opposition
to the guidance and influences
of the Holy Spirit; and ειναι εν
σαρκι, to be in the flesh,
(Romans 7:9,) ζην περιπατειν
κατα σαρκα, to live, to walk
according to the flesh, (Romans
7:12-13,) bear the same sense.
It is evident, therefore, as Dr.
Whitby justly observes, that
this expression, when we were in
the flesh, not only signifies to
be under the carnal ordinances
of the law, for so were all the
pious Jews, who lived from Moses
to gospel times; but that it
more especially relates to them
who, living under these
ordinances, were themselves
carnal, and so had the law of
the flesh still warring against
the law of their minds, and
bringing them into captivity to
the law of sin, which could not
be the state of Zacharias and
Elisabeth, or any other of those
persons who were righteous
before God, and walked in all
the commandments of the Lord
blameless. And if of such
[unregenerate persons] only, we
understand the apostle’s
following discourse in this
chapter, the sense will be
clear. The motions of sins — τα
παθηματα των αμαρτιων, sinful
passions; which were by the law
— Accidentally occasioned or
irritated thereby; did work in
our members — Spread themselves
all over the whole man; to bring
forth fruit — Very different
from that which has just been
mentioned, even such as would
have been unto death, Romans
6:21; Romans 6:23; that is,
would have exposed us to, and
have issued in, eternal death,
if God in his mercy had not
interposed, and brought us
acquainted with the gospel. But
now — Being brought out of that
carnal state; we are delivered
from the law — Set at liberty
from our subjection to it as a
law, and our obligation to
observe it, and from the
condemning, irritating power
thereof, and therefore from the
sinful passions occasioned by
it; that being dead wherein we
were held — In subjection, as
the wife to her living husband;
that law being now made void,
and having no further power to
condemn us. It may be proper to
observe here, that the Syriac
and Arabic versions, Origen,
Theodoret, Œcumenius, and
Theophylact, (with whom agree
Bengelius, Mill, Macknight, and
others,) read αποθανοντες, we
being dead to that by which we
were held: which, says Origen,
is undoubtedly the best reading,
agreeing with Romans 7:4, ye are
become dead to the law. That we
should serve — God and our
generation; in newness of spirit
— In a new and spiritual manner;
and not in the oldness of the
letter — Not in a bare, literal,
external way, as we did before.
The new service here enjoined
implies, 1st, A freedom from the
dominion of the flesh, by the
power of the Spirit enabling us
to mortify the deeds and lusts
of the flesh, Romans 8:13. 2d,
The serving God, not chiefly
with bodily services and carnal
ordinances, but in the spirit of
our minds, Romans 12:2;
Philippians 3:3; having our
minds renewed and transformed
after the image of God, in
righteousness and true holiness,
which are the fruits of the
Spirit. 3d, The serving him by
the continual aid of his Spirit,
strengthening us with might in
the inner man, Ephesians 3:16,
so as to live and walk in the
Spirit, or to live as those who
are renewed by the Spirit, and
possessed of his various graces.
With regard to the believing
Jews in particular, it implies,
that being loosed from the
Mosaic law, they were no longer
to worship and serve God with
rites and ceremonies pertaining
to their flesh, but with
services of their spirit,
consisting in faith, love, and
new obedience. From this,
however, we must not infer that
the pious Jews under the law did
not serve God with spiritual
services: all the services in
which true piety and morality
consist, were enjoined in the
covenant with Abraham, and were
practised by the pious
Israelites. But to these the law
of Moses added numberless
services pertaining to the body,
from which the converted Jews
were freed since their embracing
the gospel.
Verse 7-8
Romans 7:7-8. What shall we say
then? — This, to the beginning
of the next chapter, is a kind
of digression, wherein the
apostle, in order to show, in
the most lively manner, the
weakness and inefficacy of the
law, changes the person, and
speaks as of himself. This he
frequently does when he is not
speaking of his own person, but
only assuming another character.
See Romans 3:7; 1 Corinthians
10:30; 1 Corinthians 4:6. The
character here assumed is that
of an unrenewed, unregenerated
man; first, ignorant of the
spirituality and holiness of the
law, then acquainted therewith,
and convinced of his depravity
and weakness thereby, and
sincerely but ineffectually
striving to serve God. To have
spoken this of himself, or of
any true believer, would have
been foreign to the whole scope
of his discourse; nay, utterly
contrary thereto, as well as to
what is expressly asserted
Romans 8:2. Is the law sin? —
Macknight connects this with the
preceding words thus: What then,
do we say that the law is sin?
is a bad institution, that
causes or encourages sin? that
there is any moral evil in it,
or that it is intended by God,
or adapted in its own nature, to
lead men into sin? That this is
the apostle’s meaning is plain
from Romans 7:12, where he
mentions, by way of inference,
the proposition which his
reasoning was designed to prove,
namely, the law is holy, &c. God
forbid — We revere the high
authority by which it was given
too much to insinuate any thing
of that kind. Nay, I had not
known sin — Either not at all,
or not clearly and fully: I had
not known its evil nature and
destructive consequences; nor,
in many instances, what really
was sin; but by the law — As the
apostle is speaking of the law
of Moses, and, as appears from
the last clause of the verse, of
the moral law, the quotation
there being from the tenth
commandment, his words must not
be understood universally. “For
it is not to be supposed that
the reason and conscience of the
heathen gave them no knowledge
at all of their sins; the
contrary is affirmed by the
apostle, Romans 2:14.
Nevertheless, the most
enlightened among them had but
an imperfect knowledge of the
nature and demerit of sin in
general, and of the number and
aggravations of their own sins
in particular, compared with the
knowledge of these things which
they would have derived from
revelation. The truth is, they
fancied many things to be
innocent which were real
enormities; and many things
trivial sins which were very
heinous, as is evident from
their writings. The inference to
be drawn, therefore, is, that
since the law discovers, or
forbids and condemns sin, in
order that it may be avoided, it
does not directly promote it,
but only by accident, by reason
of the corruption of our nature.
For I had not known lust — To be
sin; επιθυμιαν, desire — That
is, the desire of an unlawful
thing, or the inordinate desire
of what is lawful. The word
signifies desire, or, as Dr.
Macknight renders it, strong
desire, whether good or bad.
Here it is used in the bad
sense, as it is likewise 1 John
2:16; επιθυμια της σαρκος, the
lust of the flesh. “But it
signifies strong desire of a
good kind also, Luke 22:15 :
επιθυμια επεθυμησα, I have
strongly desired to eat this
passover. 1 Thessalonians 2:17,
Endeavoured the more abundantly,
πολλη επιθυμια, with great
desire, to see your face. Except
the law had said, Thou shalt not
covet — In this commandment, the
desire that is forbidden is of
what belongs to others. Now, as
the operation of such a desire
is to prompt men to acts of
injustice, the existence of it
in the mind is obviously sin,
because it could not hold its
place there for any length of
time, unless it were indulged.
However, the knowledge that
strong desire, not exerted in
outward actions, is sin, is not
very obvious; and therefore the
apostle ascribes it to the
information given us by the
revealed law of God.” But sin —
But what I say is, not that the
law is sin, but that sin,
namely, the corrupt inclination
of fallen nature; taking
occasion by the commandment —
Forbidding but not subduing it,
and being excited, quickened,
and drawn forth into action by
it; wrought in me — While
unrenewed; all manner of
concupiscence — Every kind of
evil desire; inclinations to
sins of all sorts. This evil
principle in human nature is
acknowledged even by heathen,
whose words are frequently
quoted in illustration of it:
Gens humana ruit per vetitum
nefas: Nitimur in vetitum
semper, cupimusque negata.
“Mankind rush into wickedness,
and always desire what is
forbidden.”
The reader will observe, that
this, which appears to be the
true sense of the words, namely,
that the prohibitions of the law
awaken and irritate men’s evil
desires, supposes such desires
to exist in the mind previous to
these prohibitions, and that
these desires, with other evil
dispositions, prompt men to make
trial of things forbidden, the
inclination of human nature
being too generally like that of
a froward child, who will do a
thing because it was forbidden;
and perhaps is, as it were,
reminded of an evil, on hearing
it mentioned in a prohibition.
It must not, however, be
supposed, that all evil desire
arises from hence; for fleshly
appetites, and other strong
desires, which prevail in men’s
minds, do not owe either their
existence or their operation to
the prohibitions and penalties
of the law, or to the knowledge
thereof; but only their power to
kill, of which, therefore,
Macknight interprets the words.
For without the law sin was dead
— Neither so apparent nor so
active; nor was I under the
least apprehension of any danger
from it. Sin, which he still
represents as a person, would
have had no being, or at least
no strength to kill men, had not
the law, revealed or natural,
existed; for the essence of sin
consists in its being a
violation of law. Though the
apostle speaks this primarily
and directly of the law of
Moses, it is equally true of the
law of nature, and may be
applied to the state of mankind
before the law of Moses was
given. For unless there had been
a law written in men’s hearts,
sin would have been dead, or
have had neither existence nor
power to kill.
Verses 9-11
Romans 7:9-11. For I was alive —
In my own conceit; without the
law — Without the proper
knowledge of its spirituality,
extent, and obligation. I
apprehended myself to be
righteous, and in the way to
life eternal; but when the
commandment came — That is, the
law; (a part being put for the
whole;) but this expression
particularly intimates its
compulsive force, which
restrains, enjoins, urges,
forbids, threatens; — when, in
its spiritual meaning, it came
to my heart: or, when the
spiritual meaning and full
extent of the law, condemning
desires of evil, was brought
home, and closely applied to my
conscience by the Spirit of God;
sin revived — My conscience was
awakened and convinced, and I
found myself guilty of many
sins, which before I perceived
not, and a lively sense of the
guilt of them was imprinted on
my soul; and I died — My virtue
and strength died away, and my
former persuasions vanished: for
I saw myself to be dead in sin,
in a state of condemnation, and
liable to death eternal. And the
commandment — The law; which was
ordained to life — Which
promised life to them that kept
it, saying, The man that doeth
these things shall live in, or
by them; and which, if rightly
used, would have been a means of
increasing spiritual life, and
leading to life everlasting.
“The law of nature, and its
transcript in the moral precepts
of the law of Moses, were
intended for life; because the
threatening of death for every
offence, is virtually a promise
of life to those who obey
perfectly. This appears from the
law given to Adam in paradise.”
I found to be unto death — To be
attended with deadly
consequences, both as it
consigned me over to destruction
for past sin, and occasionally,
though not intentionally, proved
productive of new guilt and
misery. Perfect obedience being
impossible, according to the
present state of human nature,
the law, which threatens death
for every offence, necessarily
ends in death to the sinner,
although it was originally
intended to give life to the
obedient. For sin, as I said
before, (see on Romans 7:8,)
taking occasion by the
commandment — Prohibiting it
under the severest penalties,
but affording me no help against
it; deceived me — Came upon me
unawares, while I was expecting
life by the law; and by it slew
me — Slew all my hopes, by
bringing me under guilt,
condemnation, and wrath. In
other words, Satan, the grand
enemy of mankind, and author of
sin, finding a law which
threatened death to the
transgression of it, takes
occasion thence more earnestly
to tempt and allure us to the
violation of it, that so he may
more effectually subject us to
condemnation and death upon that
account. Thus, when God had
forbidden, under the pain of
death, the eating of the
forbidden fruit, Satan thence
took occasion to tempt our first
parents to the breach of it, and
so slew them, or made them
subject to death. Dr. Doddridge
paraphrases the verse rather
differently, thus: “Sin, taking
occasion by the terror and curse
of the violated commandment, and
representing the great Lawgiver
as now become my irreconcileable
enemy, deceived me into a
persuasion that I could be no
worse than I was, and thereby it
slew me; it multiplied my mortal
wounds, and rendered my case
still more desperate.” Instead
of sin taking occasion, Dr.
Macknight renders αφορμην
λαβουσα, taking the opportunity,
an expression which he thinks
less likely to countenance the
idea, that men’s evil desires
are owing to the prohibitions of
the law; to suppose which, would
be to make God the author of sin
by his law. “The apostle’s
meaning,” says he, “is, that sin
took the opportunity of men
being under the commandment,
first to deceive, and then to
kill them.” According to
Bengelius, the most approved
copies read, not, sin taking
occasion or opportunity by the
commandment, but, by the
commandment deceived and slew
me; connecting the commandment,
not with the former, but with
the latter clause of the verse.
In the words, deceived me, there
seems to be an allusion to the
excuse which Eve made for eating
the forbidden fruit. The serpent
deceived me, by assuring me that
I should not die. “The apostle
speaks of a two-fold opportunity
taken by sin, while men are
under the commandment. The first
is, sinful dispositions,
deceiving men into the belief
that the prohibitions of the law
are unreasonable, that the thing
forbidden is pleasant or
profitable, and that it will not
be followed with punishment,
persuade them to do it. This was
the serpent’s discourse to Eve;
and it is what men’s sinful
inclinations always suggest to
them. The second opportunity
which sin takes under the
commandment, is that of killing
the sinner by the curse annexed
to the commandment which he hath
broken.”
Verse 12-13
Romans 7:12-13. Wherefore —
Since then, by what has been
said, it appears that the law is
not the cause of sin or death,
except indirectly and by
accident, it must be acquitted
from this charge, and
acknowledged to be holy; and the
commandment — The preceptive
part of the moral law, and every
particular precept of it; is
holy, just, and good — It
springs from and partakes of the
holy nature of God; tends only
to promote holiness and a
conformity to God, and
prescribes our duty to God in
his worship and service. It is
every way just and right in
itself, and commands nothing but
what is agreeable to those
common apprehensions of right
and equity which are imprinted
in our natures: it is designed
wholly for the good of man, 1
Timothy 1:8, and is really
profitable and conducive to our
good, both temporal and eternal,
and subservient to the common
interest of mankind. Was then
that which is good made the
cause of evil to me? — Yea, of
death, which is the greatest of
evils? Was it made the proper
and direct cause of death? Not
so: But it was sin, which was
made death to me, inasmuch as it
wrought death in me, even by
that which is good. Here the
apostle clearly distinguishes
between a proper cause and an
occasion, or cause by accident.
The law is the occasion of death
to sinners; but sin is the
proper or efficient cause of
that evil. That it might appear
sin — Might appear superlatively
vile; working death in me by
that which is good — By the good
law: that sin by the commandment
— Manifesting and forbidding it,
and thereby awakening and
irritating it; might become
exceeding sinful — That, being
quickened and excited by so
innocent and holy a thing as the
commandment, it might thereby
show its horrid and vile nature;
the guilt of it being hereby
greatly aggravated. “Our
translators suppose that
αμαρτωλος [rendered sinful] is
put here for the adjective. But,
as Beza observes, it is used as
a substantive, and signifies a
sinner. For the apostle carries
on the personification of sin,
begun chap. Romans 6:6, by
showing its exceeding sinfulness
in this respect, that it makes
the law, which was intended for
life, the occasion of men’s
death.” — Macknight.
Verse 14
Romans 7:14. For we know that
the law is spiritual — Extending
to the spirit of man; forbidding
even the sins of the spirit;
sins internal, committed merely
in men’s minds, such as vain
thoughts, foolish imaginations,
carnal inclinations, pride,
self-will, discontent,
impatience, anger, malice, envy,
revenge, and all other spiritual
evils, in the commission of
which the body has no concern:
enjoining, at the same time, all
spiritual graces and virtues,
such as humility, resignation,
patience, contentment, meekness,
gentleness, long-suffering,
benevolence; with all holy
intentions, affections, and
dispositions, included in loving
God with all our heart, and our
neighbour as ourselves, which
the law especially enjoins:
being intended, at the same
time, to purify and exalt the
spirit, and assert its
superiority over the meaner part
of our nature. But I am carnal —
That is, man, considered in
himself, as in a state of
nature, and destitute of the
regenerating grace of God, is
carnal. See note on Romans 7:5,
where to be in the flesh is
evidently of the same import
with the word carnal here, as
are also similar expressions,
Romans 8:5; Romans 8:8-9, &c.,
expressions which, all are
agreed, solely respect the
unregenerate; and in which the
person that is in the flesh, or
carnally minded, is represented
as being in a state of death,
and enmity against God. Very
different, surely, from the
spiritual man, whom this same
apostle represents as living in
a state of favour and friendship
with God; minding chiefly the
things of the Spirit; yea,
having the Spirit of God
dwelling in him, and giving him
dominion over all fleshly lusts,
which, through that Spirit, he
is enabled to mortify; whose
passions submit to the
government of reason, and whose
reason is itself under the
influence of grace; whose
enjoyments are chiefly of a
spiritual nature, and his great
employment to work out his
salvation with fear and
trembling. The Scriptures,
therefore, place these two
characters in direct opposition
the one to the other; and the
apostle begins this paragraph by
informing us that it is his
carnal state which he is about
to describe, in opposition to
the spirituality of God’s holy
law, saying, But I am carnal;
and adding, as a still more
decisive proof that his meaning
is as is here stated, sold under
sin — That is, sold as a slave,
to remain under the dominion of
sin, and to be compelled to do
those evil actions to which
sinful inclinations prompt men.
“In peccati potestatem,
libidinis et concupiscentiæ
predio redactus,” says Origen;
brought under the power of sin
by the enticement of lust and
concupiscence. “So enslaved to
it,” says Theophylact, ωστε μη
αναβλεψαι δυνασθαι, as not to be
able to look up: “a willing
slave, who had sold himself to
it,” says Theodoret. The meaning
is, totally enslaved: slaves
bought with money being
absolutely at their master’s
disposal. In this sense, the
phrase is continually used in
the Old Testament, as the reader
may see by consulting the texts
referred to in the margin. By
the addition of this clause,
therefore, the apostle evidently
shows that he does not here use
the word carnal in the sense in
which it is taken 1 Corinthians
3:1, namely, to denote only such
a state of imperfection in
knowledge and holiness, as
persons may be in who are newly
converted; but that he uses it
in the worst sense, namely, in
the same sense in which the
expression, to be in the flesh,
and carnally minded, is used;
that is, to signify a state of
death and enmity against God.
Those commentators, therefore,
who suppose that in this and
what follows, to the end of the
chapter, the apostle describes
his own state, at the time he
wrote this epistle, and
consequently the state of every
regenerated person, must be
under a great mistake.
Universally, indeed, in the
Scriptures, man is said to be in
this state of bondage to sin
until the Son of God make him
free; but in no part of the
sacred writings is it ever said
of the children of God, that
they are sold under sin, or
enslaved to it. The very reverse
is the Holy Spirit’s description
of Christians, for the Son of
God makes them free, and
therefore they are free indeed;
free especially from the power
of sin, which has no longer
dominion over them. See notes on
Romans 6:13-22; Romans 8:2. The
truth is, through this whole
paragraph the apostle, to wean
the Jews from their attachment
to the Mosaic law, is showing
how little that dispensation,
even the moral part of it,
considered as a covenant of
justice, independent of the
covenant of grace, could do for
them, or for any of the fallen
offspring of Adam. It could
convince them of sin, but not
constitute them righteous. It
could show them their guilt,
depravity, and weakness, but
could neither justify their
persons, nor renew their nature,
nor furnish them with power to
do the will of God. As he
expresses himself, Romans 8:3,
It was weak through the flesh,
or through the corruption and
infirmity of human nature. In
pursuance of his design, having
compared together the past and
present state of believers, that
in the flesh, Romans 7:5, and
that in the spirit, Romans 7:6.
in answering two objections, (Is
then the law sin? Romans 7:7,
and, Is the law death? Romans
7:13,) he interweaves the whole
process of a man reasoning,
groaning, striving, and escaping
from the legal to the
evangelical state. This he does,
from Romans 7:7 to the end of
the chapter.
Verse 15
Romans 7:15. For that which I do
— Greek, κατεργαζομαι, what I
thoroughly work, the word
signifying earnestness and
perseverance in working till the
work in which the agent is
employed is finished. It is
therefore used by the apostle to
denote the continued employment
of God’s people in his service
unto the end of their lives;
Philippians 2:12, Work out your
own salvation. That is, as you
have, in time past, laboured to
serve God in all things, so
persevere in that service to the
end. The word here denotes a
continued employment of a very
different nature. Therefore he
says, What I work, I allow not,
or, approve not; for the word,
γινωσκω, which literally
signifies I know, is used in the
sense of approving, Matthew
7:21. For what I would — That
is, incline to, or desire, as
Macknight renders θελω, which,
he observes, cannot here signify
the last determination of the
will, “actions always following
that determination; but such a
faint ineffectual desire as
reason and conscience, opposed
by strong passions, and not
strengthened by the Spirit of
God, often produce.” These
corrupt passions frequently
darken the understanding,
mislead the judgment, and
stupify the conscience; in
consequence whereof the will,
strongly impelled by criminal
desires, in the place of being
governed by these higher powers
of the mind, governs them
herself. But, “when order is
restored to the soul by
regeneration, then the
enlightened understanding
determines the judgment, and the
decisions thereof, enforced by
the voice of conscience,
determine the will, whose
volitions, thus excited, become
the spring of action; so that
the good the regenerated man
would, he doth, — and the evil
he hates, he doth not. But, in
the unregenerate, those
volitions neither obey the
directions of reason nor
conscience; hence there is a
continual conflict in his
breast, between appetites and
passions on the one side, and
reason and conscience on the
other. The latter, however, are
generally overcome; and in this
state the person, with
propriety, may say, What I
would, that do I not; but what I
hate, that I do: or, as it is
expressed, Romans 7:19, The
good, that I would I do not; but
the evil which I would not, that
I do. Ovid, a heathen, describes
the conduct of depraved men in
words very similar to these:
Sed trahit invitam nova vis,
aliudque cupido, Mens aliud
suadet. Video meliora, proboque;
Deteriora sequor. OVID, Metam.,
lib. 7. Romans 7:19. ‘My reason
this, my passion that persuades;
I see the right, and I approve
it too; Condemn the wrong, and
yet the wrong pursue.’
The apostle does not say that
this took place in his conduct
on some particular occasions
merely, but he gives us this
account of himself as his
general conduct, while he was
carnal and sold under sin, as
appears from Romans 7:21. where
see the note.” — Smith, On the
Carnal Man’s Character.
Verse 16-17
Romans 7:16-17. If then I do
that which I would not, &c. — In
willing not to do it, I do so
far, though to my own
condemnation, consent to the
law, and bear my testimony to it
that it is good — And do indeed
desire to fulfil it; though when
temptations assault me, contrary
to my resolution, I fail in my
practice. This is an inference
from the former verse, the
obvious sense of which is, that
men, even in an unconverted
state, approve of the law of
God: they see its propriety and
equity, consequently their
judgment approves of it as good,
though their passions and
inclinations oppose it. It is
not supposed here that the
person spoken of consents at all
times to the whole of God’s law
as good: this inference is
limited by what he said in the
former verse. Nor is it every
evil which he hates, that he
does; nor does he always feel
that hatred which he mentions
against the sins which he
commits. He only mentions it as
a thing which frequently
happened, that the evils which
he hated, and was inclined to
avoid, were actually committed
by him; and the good deeds which
his conscience inclined him to
do, were not performed. From
this he infers, that this
inclination implied the consent
of his judgment unto the
goodness of those laws, which
under these circumstances he was
in the habit of breaking. And,
that the minds even of wicked
men consent to the law of God as
good, is obvious from their
approbation of good actions in
others. Now then it is no more I
that can properly be said to do
it, but rather sin that dwelleth
in me — Which makes, as it were,
another person, and tyrannises
over me. “Here the apostle
considers man as composed of two
parts, flesh and spirit, each of
which has distinct volitions,
affections, and passions. And,
because the influence of these
on men’s actions is very
powerful, he calls the one the
law of the members, and the
other, the law of the mind;
(Romans 7:23;) and, like the
ancient philosophers, he
considers these two principles
as distinct persons. And as in
this discourse he personates
mankind, he speaks of the
former, which (Romans 7:22) he
terms, ο εσω ανθρωπος, the
inward man, or spiritual part of
human nature, as his real self,
and calls it, εγο, I, (Romans
7:17; Romans 7:19,) and αυτος
εγω, I myself (Romans 7:25,)
because it is the part in which
man was made after the image of
God. The other person he calls
his flesh, or carnal part; and,
ο εξω ανθρωπος, the outward man;
(2 Corinthians 4:16;) and sin
dwelling in him, in this verse;
and the body of sin; (Romans
6:6;) and the body of death;
(Romans 7:24;) and the old man;
(Romans 6:6; Ephesians 4:21;
Colossians 3:9;) and denies that
this part is his self; (Romans
7:17;) and to prevent our
confounding this with his real
self, having said, (Romans
7:18,) I know that in me
dwelleth no good thing, he
immediately corrects himself by
adding, that is, in my flesh.
But notwithstanding the apostle
considered the flesh and spirit
as distinct persons, who have
different affections and
members, and though he ascribes
to those persons different
volitions and actions, and
denies that the actions of the
outward man, or flesh, are his
actions, it does not follow that
he thought himself no way
concerned in, or accountable
for, the actions of his flesh.
For he told the very persons to
whom he said those things,
(Romans 8:13,) If ye live after
the flesh ye shall die. But he
thus spake to give a more lively
idea of the struggle between
reason and passion, [or rather,
between grace and nature,] which
subsists in the minds of those
whose conscience is awakened by
the operation of the law, but
who are not completely
converted.” Perhaps, as
Doddridge conjectures, he might
have read the passage in
Xenophon’s Cyropedia, lib. 6.,
where Araspes complains of two
souls contending within him.
But sin that dwelleth in me —
“As the apostle had personified
sin, he very properly represents
it as dwelling in him; because
this suggests to us the absolute
and continued influence which
sin hath in controlling the
reason and conscience of the
unregenerated, and in directing
all their actions. By
distinguishing his real self,
that is, his spiritual part,
from the self, or flesh, in
which sin dwelt, and by
observing that the evil actions
which he committed were done,
not by him, but by sin dwelling
in him, the apostle did not mean
to teach that wicked men are not
accountable for their sins, but
to make them sensible of the
evil of their sins, by showing
them that they are all committed
in direct opposition to reason
and conscience, the superior
part of their nature, at the
instigation of passion and lust,
the lower part. Further, by
appealing to the opposition
which reason and conscience make
to evil actions, he hath
overturned the grand argument,
by which the wicked justify
themselves in indulging their
lusts. Say they, since God hath
given us passions and appetites,
he certainly meant that we
should gratify them. True, says
the apostle; but God hath also
given you reason and conscience,
which oppose the excesses of
lust, and condemn its
gratification: and as reason and
conscience are the superior part
of man’s nature, a more certain
indication of the will of God
may be gathered from their
operation, than from the
impulses of the other.” —
Macknight.
Verses 18-20
Romans 7:18-20. For I know that
in me, that is, in my flesh —
The corrupt and degenerate self,
my animal appetites and
passions, debased and enslaved
as they are by sin through the
fall; or in me, while I was in
the flesh, chap. Romans 8:8, and
not in the spirit, Romans 7:9;
dwelleth no good thing — ουκ
οικει αγαθον, good dwelleth not.
Hence he asserts, in the place
just referred to, that they who
are in the flesh, whose reason
and conscience are under the
government of passion and
appetite, or who are in their
natural unrenewed state, cannot
please God. For to will — To
incline, desire, and even
purpose; is present with me —
παρακειται μοι, lies near me,
or, is easy for me; but how to
perform — κατεργαζεσθαι,
statedly to practise, or,
habitually work, (see on Romans
7:15;) that which is good —
καλον, excellent, I find not —
Have not sufficient ability. For
the good that I would, &c. — See
on Romans 7:15; Romans 7:17, for
an explanation of this and the
next verse.
Verse 21
Romans 7:21. I find then a law —
An inward constraining power,
flowing from my depraved nature;
that when I would — When I
incline and purpose to do good,
evil is present with me — To
prevent the execution of such a
purpose. The expression, when I
would do good, intimates that
this inclination to do good was
not permanent; it only arose on
particular occasions. This is
another feature of an
unregenerate man; his
inclinations and purposes to do
good, and live to the glory of
God, are only temporary. “They,”
says Macknight, “who think the
apostle is here describing his
own case, and the case of other
regenerated persons, should
consider that he does not speak
of single instances of omission
of duty, and commission of sin;
for the words which he uses all
denote a continuation or habit
of acting. Now how such a habit
of doing evil and neglecting
good can be attributed to any
regenerated person, and
especially to the Apostle Paul,
who, before this Epistle to the
Romans was written, told the
Thessalonians, Ye are witnesses,
and God also, how holily, and
righteously, and unblameably we
behaved among you, I confess I
do not comprehend. See also 2
Corinthians 1:12; 2 Corinthians
7:1-2; 2 Corinthians 10:2-3. To
elude the force of this
argument, Augustine affirms that
the apostle does not speak of
his outward actions, but of the
inward motions of his
concupiscence, by which he
means, evil desire in general:
and that for the reason
mentioned in the note on Romans
7:17, he expresses these motions
by the pronoun I. Be it so. On
this supposition, Romans 7:15
will mean, ‘What I, my
concupiscence, thoroughly
worketh, in my mind, I do not
approve. For I, my
concupiscence, practiseth not,
in my mind, that to which I
incline; but what I hate, that
I, my concupiscence, doth.’ Now,
not to insist on the impropriety
of applying words which denote
outward actions, to motions of
evil desire in the mind, I ask,
what sense is there in the
apostle’s telling us, that his
concupiscence did not practise
in his mind what he inclined to?
For if what he inclined to was
good, it could not possibly be
practised by concupiscence, if
concupiscence be evil desire;
consequently, it was foolishness
in him either to expect it from
concupiscence, or to complain of
the want of it, as he does
Romans 7:19. He might complain
of the existence of
concupiscence in his mind; but
if it were suffered to remain
there uncontrolled, and if it
hindered the actings of his
sanctified will so effectually
that he never did that to which
he inclined, but always did the
evil to which his sanctified
will did not incline, is not
this the clearest proof that
concupiscence, or evil desire,
was the prevailing principle in
his mind, and that his
sanctified will had no power to
restrain its workings? Now could
the apostle give any plainer
description of an unregenerate
person than this?”
Verse 22
Romans 7:22. For I delight in
the law of God — On this verse,
chiefly, rests the opinion that
the apostle, in the latter part
of this chapter, is describing
the character of a regenerate
man. Its votaries think they
find in this verse all the marks
of a Christian. In general they
assert, “to have our inward man,
our mind and heart, delighted in
the law of God, is to have our
souls delighted in a conformity
to him; it is to love God
himself, to love to be like him
in the inward man, having his
law written on our hearts, which
they say is the sum of all
religion.” This is not
reasoning, it is mere assertion;
it is not to be inferred from
this passage, and is plainly
contradicted by the context. All
judicious commentators will
allow, that if any passage of
the Scriptures appears obscure
or susceptible of two senses, it
must be explained in a
consistency with what precedes
and follows, and that
interpretation must be chosen
which agrees best therewith.
Therefore, though it be true, in
the fullest sense, that
regenerated persons delight in
the law of God after the inward
man; yet, since the general
scope of the paragraph, and the
connection of this sentence with
the context, show that Paul is
here speaking of his unconverted
state, our interpretation of it
must be regulated by its
connection with the whole
passage. Those who maintain that
Paul is here speaking of his
state after his conversion,
assert, that by the inward man
is meant, the new man, or man of
grace, spoken of Ephesians 4:24;
Colossians 3:10. Did the context
lead to that sense, it might be
admitted. But the general sense
of the whole passage leads us to
understand the expression of the
rational part of man, in
opposition to the animal, which
is its usual signification, as
has been shown by several
authors. The phrase occurs in
two other passages of the New
Testament, namely, 2 Corinthians
4:16; Ephesians 3:16; in the
former, the apostle’s words are,
We faint not, though our outward
man perish, yet the inward man
is renewed day by day; where the
inward man must signify the mind
or soul, which is renewed, or
created anew in its faculties,
in proportion as it grows in
grace. In the other passage the
apostle prays for the Ephesians
that they might be strengthened
with might, not in the outward
man, the body, which was not a
matter of much importance, but
in the inward man, the soul;
that it might become strong in
faith, fervent in love, and
conformed to the divine image;
and that Christ, by his Spirit,
might dwell in it. “The inward
man, therefore, always signifies
the mind, which either may or
may not be the subject of grace.
That which is asserted of either
the inward or outward man, is
often performed by one member or
power, and not with the whole
man. If any member of the body
perform an action, we are said
to do it with the body, although
the other members be not
employed. In like manner, if any
power or faculty of the mind be
employed about any action, the
soul is said to act: [and with
still greater propriety, as] our
souls are not, like our bodies,
made of many members; they are
pure spirits, and indivisible.
If the mind wills, it is the
spirit willing; if it hates, it
is the soul hating; if it loves,
it is the soul loving; if
conscience reprove or excuse, it
is the inward man accusing or
excusing. This expression,
therefore, I delight in the law
of God after the inward man, can
mean no more than this, that
there are some inward faculties
in the soul which delight in the
law of God. The expression is
particularly adapted to the
principles of the Pharisees, of
whom Paul was one before his
conversion. They received the
law as the oracles of God, and
confessed that it deserved the
most serious regard. Their
veneration was inspired by a
sense of its original, and a
full conviction that it was
right. To some parts of it they
paid the most superstitious
regard. They had it written upon
their phylacteries, and carried
these about with them at all
times. It was often read and
expounded in their synagogues,
and they took some degree of
pleasure in studying its
precepts. On that account, the
prophets and our Saviour agree
in saying, that they delighted
in the law of God, though they
regarded not its chief and most
essential precepts.” — Smith, On
the Carnal Man’s Character.
Verse 23-24
Romans 7:23-24. But I see
another law — Another
commanding, constraining power
of evil inclinations and fleshly
appetites, whose influence is so
strong and constant, that it may
be fitly called another law; in
my members — In my animal part;
(of the members, see note on
Romans 6:13;) warring against
the law of my mind — Against the
dictates of my judgment and
conscience, which conflict is
spoken of Galatians 5:17; The
flesh lusteth against the
spirit, &c.; and bringing me
into captivity to the law of
sin: As if he had said, The
issue of which conflict is not
dubious, for passion continually
prevails over reason, the flesh
over the spirit, and I am led
captive in spite of all my
efforts to resist. O wretched
man — Namely, in this respect,
as to this particular; who shall
deliver me — Miserable captive
as I am; from the body of this
death? — Some prefer translating
the clause, from this body of
death; joining τουτου, this,
with σωματος, body, as is done
in the Vulgate version. But it
seems more proper to consider it
as an emphatical Hebraism,
signifying the body, that is,
the passions and appetites, or
the lusts of the body, which
cause this death, the death
threatened in the curse of the
law. Or, as Mr. Smith, in the
discourse above mentioned,
observes, The body of death may
signify death in all its vigour,
even that death which is the
penalty of a broken law, just as
the body of sin signifies the
strength of sin. The greatness
and insupportable weight of
death is its body; and the man
here described is represented as
exposed to that death, which is
the wages of sin. This is the
object which chiefly alarms the
guilty. Though the remonstrances
of conscience are not heard,
perhaps, against sin at first,
yet after it is committed,
conscience raises her voice in
more awful accents, and
proclaims God’s wrath through
the whole soul, which produces a
fearful looking for of judgment
and fiery indignation from God,
which is precisely the state of
mind expressed in this passage,
namely, the state of a man
labouring under the spirit of
bondage to fear, or the state
described Romans 7:5; when being
in the flesh, that is,
unregenerate and under the law,
sinful passions, manifested and
condemned, but not removed by
that dispensation, wrought in
his members to bring forth fruit
unto death.
Verse 25
Romans 7:25. I thank God, &c. —
As if he had said, I bemoan
myself as above, when I think
only of the Mosaic law, the
discoveries it makes, the
motives it suggests, and the
circumstances in which it leaves
the offender: but in the midst
of this gloom of distress and
anguish, a sight of the gospel
revives my heart, and I cry out,
as in a kind of rapture, as soon
as I turn my eyes, and behold
the display of mercy and grace
made in it, I thank God through
Jesus Christ our Lord — The
Clermont and some other copies,
with the Vulgate, read here,
χαρις του θεου, the grace of
God, namely, will deliver me.
But the common reading, being
supported by almost all the
ancient manuscripts, and the
Syriac version, is to be
preferred; especially as it
contains an ellipsis, which, if
supplied, according to the
apostle’s manner, from the
foregoing sentence, will give
even a better sense than the
Clermont reading, thus: Who will
deliver me? I thank God, who
will deliver me, through Jesus
Christ. See on Romans 8:2. Thus
the apostle beautifully
interweaves his complaints with
thanksgiving; the hymn of praise
answering to the voice of
sorrow, Wretched man that I am!
So then — He here sums up the
whole, and concludes what he had
begun, Romans 7:7. I myself — Or
rather, that I, (the man whom I
am personating,) serve the law
of God — The moral law; with my
mind — With my reason and
conscience, which declare for
God; but with my flesh the law
of sin — But my corrupt passions
and appetites still rebel, and,
prevailing, employ the outward
man in gratifying them, in
opposition to the remonstrances
of my higher powers.
On the whole of this passage we
may observe, in the words of Mr.
Fletcher, “To take a scripture
out of the context, is often
like taking the stone which
binds an arch out of its place:
you know not what to make of it.
Nay, you may put it to a use
quite contrary to that for which
it was intended. This those do
who so take Romans 7. out of its
connection with Romans 6:8., as
to make it mean the very reverse
of what the apostle designed. In
Romans 5:6., and in the
beginning of the seventh
chapter, he describes the
glorious liberty of the children
of God under the Christian
dispensation. And as a skilful
painter puts shades in his
pictures, to heighten the effect
of the lights; so the judicious
apostle introduces, in the
latter part of chap. 7., a
lively description of the
domineering power of sin, and of
the intolerable burden of guilt;
a burden this which he had so
severely felt, when the
convincing Spirit charged sin
home upon his conscience, after
he had broken his good
resolutions; but especially
during the three days of his
blindness and fasting at
Damascus. Then he groaned, O
wretched man that I am, &c.,
hanging night and day between
despair and hope, between
unbelief and faith, between
bondage and freedom, till God
brought him into Christian
liberty by the ministry of
Ananias; — of this liberty the
apostle gives us a further and
fuller account in chapter eight.
Therefore the description of the
man who [unacquainted with the
gospel] groans under the galling
yoke of sin, is brought in
merely by contrast, to set off
the amazing difference there is
between the bondage of sin, and
the liberty of gospel holiness:
just as the generals who entered
Rome in triumph, used to make a
show of the prince whom they had
conquered. On such occasions,
the conqueror rode in a
triumphal chariot crowned with
laurel; while the captive king
followed him on foot, loaded
with chains, and making, next to
the conqueror, the most striking
part of the show. Now, if, in a
Roman triumph, some of the
spectators had taken the chained
king on foot, for the victorious
general in the chariot, because
the one immediately followed the
other, they would have been
guilty of a mistake not unlike
that of those who take the
carnal Jew, sold under sin, and
groaning as he goes along, for
the Christian believer, who
walks in the Spirit, exults in
the liberty of God’s children,
and always triumphs in Christ.
See Fletcher’s Works, vol. 4.,
Amer. edit, pp. 336, 337. |