2. The Judgment of God Rom 2:1-16
2. The Essential in Religion Rom 2:29
ii. THE JEW CONDEMNED
It is evident that at this point the apostle turned
to the Jew, although he did not immediately name him. The Jew condemned
Gentile sins, evidently under the impression that the possession of the
law resulted in a closer relationship to God, and ensured some kind of
benefit to himself. This view the apostle combated, ruthlessly sweeping
away all such false confidence. Again his method was characterized by
clearness and skill. In the course of it he enunciated two basic
principles of religious life. Between his dealing with these, in a brief
passage he showed wherein lay the sin of the Jew, and thus accounted for
his condemnation. Knowing that certain difficulties would arise as the
result of his argument, he dealt with these in a closing paragraph.
a. A PRINCIPLE. RELIGION IS ETHICAL
The attitude of the Jew to the Gentile was that of
contempt, resulting in the first place from the idea that the possession
of knowledge of the things of God was in itself of the essence of
religion. The Gentile had received no Divine revelation, and was corrupt
in life. The Jew had received the Divine revelation, and therefore
arrogated to himself the right to sit in judgment on the Gentile.
Against that view, and its consequent attitude, the
apostle's first statement of principle was directed. He declared that no
man was in a position to pass judgment on another man, who himself was
guilty of the sins he condemned in the other. He thus inferentially
charged upon the Jew the sin of practicing the very evils which he
condemned in the Gentiles.
He then proceeded to describe the judgment of God,
and in such a way as to demonstrate the fact that the Jew was equally
under condemnation with the Gentile. His dealing with this subject of
the judgment of God falls into three parts.
In the first he simply declared that it was according
to truth, proceeding against the practice of sin after forbearance and
longsuffering.
It follows therefore that His judgment is according
to works, rewards or punishments being meted out absolutely upon the
basis of the kind of life which men live. The Jew, having the law, is
not by the fact of that possession freed from obligation as to conduct.
Those sinning without the law, perish without the law. What the apostle
meant by that, must be gathered from that earlier paragraph in which he
had described Gentile sin, and Gentile judgment. Those sinning under the
law, perish under the law. The law itself has no virtue save as it is
obeyed. Thus the apostle denied the view that religion is essentially
intellectual, by declaring that the only expression of it which is of
value is ethical.
Thus, at the very beginning of this letter, the
master-theme of which is salvation by faith, we have an overwhelming and
unanswerable indictment of that particular heresy to which an improper
emphasis of the doctrine is liable to give rise. Nothing can be clearer
than the apostle's teaching that works will be the final test of
judgment. Faith which does not produce these is declared to be useless.
Privilege which does not issue in response to responsibility, is but
severer condemnation. God has no people in whom He excuses sin. The
privileged soul who sins must die on account of the sin, and in spite of
all the privileges. The Jew is as great a failure as the Gentile in the
matter of actual righteousness. Godliness as privileged relationship is
of no value except as it produces actual righteousness.
The final statement of the apostle is that judgment
will be according to the Gospel of Jesus Christ. In this statement the
light of the Gospel is seen shining with a new glory through the
severity of the teaching which had just been advanced. Not for a single
moment does it lower the standard of requirement, but it sings the song
of hope to the man under condemnation. In reading this paragraph
particular notice should be taken of the fact that verses fourteen and
fifteen are in parenthesis, and that the main statement of the apostle
can only be gained by reading verses thirteen and sixteen in immediate
relationship. The basis of judgment is to be the actual condition of
man, whether he has lived without the law or under the law; but he is to
be judged finally by Jesus Christ. That is to say, the final test of
character and of conduct is to be that of man's attitude to the Saviour.
Evidently therefore the presentation of the Gospel is the last
opportunity that man has; and equally evident is it, that every man must
have this opportunity as the basis of judgment.
b. THE CONDEMNATION OF THE JEW
Turning from his discussion of the first principle,
the apostle definitely and directly dealt with the condemnation of the
Jew. This he did by first describing his mental attitude. It was that of
intellectual godliness. The Jews were proud of their name, were resting
upon the fact that they possessed the law. They gloried in the God Whose
they were, knowing His will, and approving; that is, they were convinced
of the excellencies of excellent things because they were instructed out
of the law. Intellectually therefore he admitted that they were
orthodox.
He then proceeded to describe their consequent
attitude toward the outside nations. They considered that as a nation
they were "a guide ... a light ... a corrector . . . a teacher." This
revealed their sense of superiority over all other peoples, and their
consequent confidence in their right to be didactic and dogmatic.
Moreover that attitude was in some senses justified, for the apostle
recognized that in the law they did actually possess the form of
knowledge, and of truth; and it should be remembered that this word
"form" () indicates far more than an outward formality. It suggests that
the law has in it such embodiment of knowledge and of truth as to be
equal to the realization of conduct and character when obeyed. As truth
itself is a sanctifying power, so the law being a correct revelation, a
true form, a full unfolding of a Divine power, does issue in the life of
holiness and righteousness in the case of such as observe its
commandments to do them.
Having recognized these facts, the apostle charged
the Jews with ethical failure. This he did in a series of questions,
each one of which inferentially charged them with actual failure in
conduct in the very matters which were regulated by the law for which
they stood, and which they professed to teach.
Finally, upon the basis of this argument, the apostle
charged the Jew with that which was his principal and most terrible sin.
Because his mental attitude was correct, his relative position should
have been that of a guide to those without revelation; but he had
absolutely failed in realization of that at which the law ever aims, and
therefore he had become a blasphemer of the name of God among the
Gentiles. If it were true that the Gentiles had imperfect light, they
ought to have received the more perfect light from these people, who
upon their own showing were placed in the position of guide, and light,
and corrector, and teacher. But because in the actualities of outward
conduct they had committed the very sins which their law condemned, the
Gentile had seen no reason to believe through their testimony in the one
living God to Whom they professed to be related. Thus therefore His name
had been blasphemed as the result of Jewish failure.
c. A PRINCIPLE. RELIGION IS SPIRITUAL
Having made this most serious charge, the apostle
declared his second principle, namely that religion is spiritual. This
was for the correction of their false conception that the true
expression of religion was ceremonial. Before dealing with this more
particularly, it may be well to notice the apostolic method. He had
corrected their view that religion was essentially intellectual by
declaring that its expression must be ethical. He now corrected their
view that the expression of religion was ceremonial, by declaring that
essentially it was spiritual.
In sentences characterized by almost overwhelming
force and incisiveness, he swept away the refuge of lies. The boasted
privileges were all valueless. The externalities which were the symbols
of possession counted for nothing, because the inward condition
demonstrated the absence of the essential fact. Then turning to a
statement of the case from the other side, he made all this even more
emphatic by affirming that where the external symbols are lacking, if
there be the inward fulfillment of intention, the lack of the external
is of no moment.
Arguing in the clear light of the Divine requirement
and purpose, he made the most sweeping and tremendous statement when he
announced that a Jew who is one outwardly merely, is not a Jew; but that
he who is a Jew inwardly, even though he lack the outward mark, is the
true Jew.
Thus again from a new angle, and with new emphasis is
the idea that justification is by faith, without regard to its
expression in works, declared to be false. The principles underlying
this passage are of permanent value, and of searching power. Their
unanswerable logic should prepare us for all that is to follow, and thus
prevent any disproportionate explanation of the doctrine of
justification by faith.
d. THE DIFFICULTIES
The apostle then turned to a brief discussion of
certain objections which would almost inevitably be raised in
consequence of what he had said concerning the true spiritual
interpretation of the position of the Jew.
First, "What advantage then hath the Jew?" If
circumcision is in itself of no avail, where is the gain? Is this
covenant not a Divine covenant? Underneath the question suggested, which
the apostle knew would be the question of the Jew, there lurked the idea
that there is a profit in the external fact of circumcision. The apostle
did not again state his argument on the matter, having done so already;
but in a brief sentence declared what he considered to be the advantage
of the Jew. He said "Much every way," and then proceeded to mention only
one, which he spoke of as being "first of all," that is, of supreme
importance, that they were entrusted with the oracles of God. By this he
referred to the revelations, declarations, and promises of God, which
constitute the basis of faith - that is, the Old Testament Scriptures in
their entirety. To these people, separated from other nations. He had
committed that great deposit, consisting of utterances and writings in
which He was revealed, and His will concerning man made known. Therein
lay the supreme advantage of the Jew.
A new question naturally arose. If faith on the part
of man fail, will God be unfaithful? Does His faithfulness depend upon
man
Yet another question logically followed. If sin
becomes the means of glorifying God, in that it demonstrates His
faithfulness, is it righteous to punish the sinner? The question is so
terrible that when the apostle stated it, he parenthetically added, "I
speak after the manner of men," and then proceeded to declare that
unless God did punish sin, He could have no basis upon which He could
judge the world at all.