Analy Exe Grom Turner
Analy Exe Grom Turner
Divisio
Secti 071...
           Number,
                                       THE
BY
                               NEW YORK:
  ANSON          D. F.      RANDOLPH,               683    BROADWAY
                                         1859.
                       Entered according to Act of Congress, In   tlia   vcar 1958,
                                      By   Sajicel H. Tcbsee,
Id the Clerk's Office of the District Court of the United States for the Southern
                                                                                  District of New York.
                                                    :                            ,   ;
TO THE MEMORY OF
                                           OF DIVINE
                                            TRUTH
                                            TO THAT
                                      GRATEFUL MEMORY OP
                                         THE INDEBTED
                                            AUTHOR      ;
Thkolooioal Seminaet,
    August 1, 1S53.
                             CONTENTS.
                                         4*-
PAGB
INTRODUCTION, . ix
ANALYSIS, 1
SECTION I.
Chap. I. 1-15.
IHTEODUCTION, 19
                               SECTION                      II.
                                      Chap.   I.   lQ-32.
                              SECTION                    III.
                                        Chap.      II.
                               SECTION                      IV,
                                       Chap. III.
                                SECTION                     V.
                                        Chap. IV.
                               SECTION                      VI.
                                      Chap. V. 1-11.
                                SECTION                VII.
                                        Cbap. V. 12-21.                                  rial
                               SECTION                 VIII.
                                          Chap.   VL
TDE DOCTRINES OF        JUSTIFICATIONBY FAITH AND SALVATION BY DIVINE
       FAVOUR,   AFFORD NO    ENCOURAGEMENT TO SIN, BUT RATHER PRESENT
       TUE STRONGEST MOTIVES TO HOLINESS,                                                 95
                                 SECTION                  IX.
                                   Chap. Vir.-VIIL        17.
                                  SECTION                 X.
                                    Chap. VIII. 18-89.
THE TRIALS OF LIFE AND THE BLESSINGS OF THE GOSPEL BOTH HERE AXD
    HEREAFTER COMPARED. GOd's PURPOSE TO CONFER ALL THESE BLESSINGS
       ON HIS REDEEMED.     CONSEQUENT EXULTATION AND TRIUMPH,                  .   .    134
                                 SECTION                  XI.
                                    Chaps. IX. X. XI.
                                SECTION                   XII.
                                        Chapi XII.-XVI.
i. 14. Sincerely attached to the religion of his nation, zealous for all
INTRODUCTION.
led   him    to perceive "the state          into which he had fallen."* Neander
also gives a       still    stronger representation of " internal impressions
made       in opposition to his will"                 on     his Pharisaic mind, raising
thoughts favourable to the                new religion, and            "   producing an inAvard
struggle repelled as Satanic suggestions."f                                I   am   unable to per-
ceive      any   sufiicient evidence to           support these views.                    There      is   no
proof that such deep longing or agitating impressions influenced
his   mind       in the    manner        stated   by    these writers.              The account           in
the Acts of the Apostles contains no intimation to this                                    effect.        A
persecuting         spirit,         "breathing out threatenings and slaughter,"
characterises the agent of the                 Synagogue up to the very moment
of his miraculous conversion.                    We have no evidence that any
change took place in his mind favourable to sacred truth until that
period, and this change is to be attributed wholly to divine influ-
ence.   Olshausen allows that "the miraculous vision, and the
startling nature of the announcement that he who was still the
raging opposer of the crucified was henceforth to be his messenger
to the Gentiles, are of course to be considered as the decisive causes
of the sudden change in his spiritual state." This is certainly true.
But he adds: "At the same time, we cannot doubt, that his sin-
cere striving after righteousness                  by the mere works of the law had
   GcsDcral Introduction to the Epistles of St Paul, p. 8.
  t Gosclilclite (ler rflanznnfl!, 4c. History of tlio Planting of the Christian Oliurch   by the   Apostles,
Hamburgh,    1S32, Vol. I. p. 73.
                                                    INTKODUCTION.                                                          xj
on John xii. 28, 29, adduces the instance of St. Paul alone hearing
the internal voice, (Acts xxii.                                        9,)   in illustration of his theory, that
this voice  can only be heard when the mind is in a susceptible
spiritual condition. The writers above quoted draw an inference
from what they assume to be the state of mind of the zealous
Hebrew, and then state this inference as a fact. Whereas, neither
the condition of mind nor the inference therefrom can be proved to
have existed, although it may be granted, that it would have been
very reasonable to have felt the one and deduced the other. This
state of mind, which they regard as preceding the miraculous call
of the Apostle, ought to be placed immediately after it and was                                                 ;
  *See        Irenffius,   Adv. Hser. Lib.      iii.   Cap.   1,   p   199, Edit.   Grabe, Oxon. 1702; Eusobius, Hist. Ecclos.
Lib.   ii.   Cap. 14, 15, 25,   iii. 1, vi.   14.
XU                           INTKODUCTION.
Peter was regarded as the head of one and St. Paul of the other,
and thus the discrepancies respecting the early episcopal Roman
succession have been attempted to be reconciled.            See Cave's
Life of St, Clemens, Bisho]) of Rome, Sect. 4, pp. 188-190, Philadel-
phia, 1810.       If such views were well founded, the Christian com-
munity    at   Rome must     indeed have made     itself   known, but in a
very different manner from that stated by the Apostle.             But the
theory   is   not sustained by sufficient evidence.     Certain parts of the
Epistle evince the existence of differences of opinion         and practice
in matters indifferent, but not of   open   collision   between the parties,
a result which the wise directions of the author are well adapted
and were doubtless intended to prevent. It is very probable that
those Hellenistic Jews from Rome who witnessed the effects of the
miraculous effusion of the Iloly Spirit on the day of Pentecost,
(Acts ii. 10,) obtained some acquaintance with the Gospel, and per-
haps were converted to it, before they left Jerusalem, and that, on
their return, they informed their brethren of " the wonderful works
of God" which they had seen, and announced to them the glad
tidings of salvation.   Either these or some other very early con-
verts must have originally planted the church of Rome. The little
community thus formed appears to have grown rapidly.
   In the time of the emperor Claudius, the Jews were exiled
from Rome.         Suetonius, in his Life of Claudius, Cap. xxv., states
as the cause, that the Jews had been engaged in a tumult, im-
pulsore Chresto.   Hence it is not improbable, that either a real
attcm])t of some imperfectly converted Jews to raise an insurrec-
tion, or a calumnious charge of this nature, had given occasion to
the edict of banishment.         It is   reasonable to think that     many
Christians were confounded with the         Jews and shared     their exile;
INTKODUCTION. XUl
siderable time with liim at Corintli               and Epliesus, and they both
followed the same occupation.                It is   easy to perceive that thus
the Apostle might         become familiar witTi a considerable number
of   Eoman     Christians,   and that gradually his knowledge of the
state of their       church and the interest which he felt in its welfare
would haA'e greatly increased.
    That the Roman church contained very many Jewish converts
is in itself altogether probable.    This was the case with most of
the early churches, and the general scope of the Epistle refers to
a Jewish doctrinal element as influential, against which the
Apostle found it necessary to guard his readers, and to which
Gentile converts would have been exposed.         Still it would seem
vs. 13-15.   So also in xi. 13, " I speak to you Gentiles ;" and in
XV. 16, he represents himself as a priest of Jesus Christ " offering
up the Gentiles," and this in close connection with the boldness
he had used in addressing the Roman Christians. That the word
which he emploj^s cannot be understood in the general sense
of people so as to comprehend the Jews, is evident from the
manner in which the Apostle employs it to mark the distinction
between them and the Gentiles. Comp. ii. 14, 24, iii. 29, ix. 24,
80, xi. 13, 25, XV. 9-12, 16, 18, 27, xvi. 4, 26.
     The            body at Rome
            Christian                        consisted then of both classes of
converts.      Each had doubtless            its   own   habits of thinking     and
feeling in reference to the general topics of Christianity, and un-
questionably differences of views and practices prevailed                  among
them   to   some         must have been the case in a greater or
                     extent, as
less degree in every Christian community.        But there is no
sufficient reason to think that the Epistle was composed in order
XIV INTRODUCTION.
the Gospel there had never been afforded hira                       ;   he embraces the
occasion })resented   by the intended visit of Phebe, to give them
in writiii<5 a general view of its most important doctrines, namely,
those of redemption by Christ, of justification through faith, of
sanctification by the Holy Spirit, and of its design to promote the
salvation of         all       men.     The   Epistle   may be    conveniently divided
into    two     parts      ;   the doctrinal, comprehending the             first    eleven
chapters,      and the hortatory, contained              in the   remaining   five.     The
leading topics of the former portion are justification                       by     faith in
opposition to works cither moral or ceremonial, and the compre-
hensiveness of the Christian scheme of salvation, which extends
its   blessings indiscriminately to all              mankind.      Other most import-
ant matters are interwoven with the development and discussion
of these two fundamental                     and leading   principles, of     which the
author, notwithstanding the diversified character of his instructions,
never loses          sight.       As     the ensuing    work     contains a somcAvhat
minute Analysis of             whole portion, divided into separate
                                      this
sections, it     would be superfluous to enter into any particulars in
this Introduction.
      It is   unnecessary to say anything in defence of the genuineness
of the Epistle to the       Romans, which has scarcely ever been con-
troverted.                have been known by Clement of Eome
                 It appears to
and the venerable Polyearp, both of whom quote from it. The
former in his Epistle to the Corinthians, chap. 35, cites the words
of i. 30, 32 " For they that do these things are odious to God
                 :
and not only they that do them, but also all such as approve of
those that do them."                   The   latter in his Epistle to the Philippians,
chap.    6,       from xii. 17, "Providing what is good both in
              extracts
the sight of God and man."
   Although the inscri]jtion appended to the Epistle is not a
genuine portion of it, the statements which it contains are never-
theless correct.  " "Written to the Romans from Corinthus, and sent
parison of Acts xix. 21 with                 Kom. xv.     28,   shows the same purpose
of visiting       Eome      after   haying been           at   Jerusalem.   In xvi. 23,
Gains with Avhom the Apostle was staying sends his salutations
to the    Eoman        Christians.          But from      1 Cor.   i.   14   it   appears that
Gains was a resident of Corinth. So also was Erastus,                              who     in the
same verse is mentioned as " chamberlain of the city                               :"   Comp. 2
Tim.          Phebe, who most probably was the bearer of the
        iv. 20.
hoped     for than expected, as the topics      which must come under
consideration in            such an exegetical work comprehend several
much      controverted points of theology.                     I can say conscientiously,
however, that          it   has been        my          and most earnest
                                                  sincere prayer
effort to   be guided by a love of truth        and under the influence
                                                           ;
                              /
XVi                        INTHODUCTION.
SECTION I.
Chap. I. 1-15.
INTRODUCTION.
the members of the Church of Rome, which was celebrated for its primitive
faith, and expresses his earnest wish to visit them for mutual benefit,
although as yet he had not been able to accomplish his purpose                                       :   6-13.
A     deep sense of the divine favours which he had received prompts                                        his
ardent desire to benefit            all   men, and   to proclaim the             Gospel even    at       Rome,
notwithstanding the probability of                   its    rejection     by many, and        also of his
persecution        :   14, 15.
                                          SECTION                   II.
                                             Chap.   I.    16-32.
to salvation, the condition being faith, and the benefit being intended for
all       who comply       therewith.        It   contains God's scheme of justification,
which       is   wholly of a living and growing              faith,   and reveals     his anger against
sm 16-18. Even
      :                          the works of creation have, from the very beginning,
made the being and               attributes of    God      sufiiciently     known     to   become a        rule
                                                                                                                    ;
ANALYSIS OF THE
to men with reason and conscience. But the Heathen disregarded this
                                              SECTION                  III
                                                       Chap.   II.
The Apostle             here censures the Jews for their wicked inconsistency, in
practising the           same        vices for which they unscrupulously                      condemned        the
privileges, with all his                  knowledge and confidence                in his     own   ability,   with
the divine delineation of religious knowledge and truth which he possesses,
while he does the very things which he denounces,                                 is   not only absurdly        in-
 17-24.     Tlien the        author repeats more particularly what he had before said.
.Fudaism      is   indeed beneficial to those                  who     sincerely       obey the law of God           ;
they had been Jews ; and, moreover, such Gentiles shall condemn those
Jews, who, notwithstanding the great privileges which they enjoy from the
Scriptures and their covenant relation to God, do nevertheless break the
divine law.             For the          true Jew, he     who   deserves the honourable                       name of
the ancestor            whose brethren were            to praise him,*            is in      his heart       what        his
SECTION IV.
Chap. III.
   * The author undoubtedly alludes to the meaning of the word Jew as a descendant of JudaJi.
Thus In Gen. slis. 8, the Hebrew words for Judah and pra ise are of the same root. Observe also the
language of Leah in sxix. 35 " Now will I praine the Lord, and she called his name Judnh.'^ On the
                                     :
former passage, Aben Ezra remarks: "Thou art Judah ; according to thy name, and so (it follows,)
thy brethren       shall   praise thee."
                                     ANALYSIS OF THE
moral law, which was iu)i promulgated with the intent of procuring this
blessing, but in order to give               men       a proper consciousness of sin                  :   19, 20.
But now, the gospel being established, justification, irrespective of law, is
made known, the truth and reality of which were attested by the whole
tenour of the former dispensation                  ;   that justification which               is    extended to
all   sinners      who     believe in Christ,         and which         is   founded on the redemption
efll'cted    by    his    atonement.       Him God            hath publicly exhibited to the world
as a proper sacrifice, in this               way        declaring his sense of justice to his
violated law, and at the               same time securing a                   sufficient   ground whereon
he    may     justify the believer.          Such a system excludes                     all   self-confidence
to the      whole argument          in the three chapters, is                then drawn,      namely,       that
man's       justification is    by faith. Thus God appears as the universal parent
of men, accepting            both Jews and Gentiles on the very same condition. In
conclusion, the Apostle guards against the supposition that this doctrine
makes       the law nugatory, affirming that, in a very comprehensive sense,                                    it
SECTION Y.
Chap. IV.
Thus        far the      Apostle has conducted his argument with a view to the unde-
niable fact             that both Gentiles and            Jews have             flagrantly         broken God's
moral law, and consequently that                       justification         on the ground of obedience
thereto       is   precluded.       And     it   is    the moral law to which generally in the
argumentative part of the Epistle he                              refers.    But    this is    not invariably
 the case.         The Jews attached an undue estimate                          to their ceremonial           and
 ritual     law, and especially to the initiatory rite of circumcision.                                   And   as
                                                  Matt.      iii. 9.
                                   EPISTLE TO THE EOMANS.
 arc not readily dislodged from their position, as they cannot easily be                                                          made
 to feel    the weight of reason and argument.                                              The same confidence was
 fondly cherished, and                       it        gives occasion to the Apostle's remarks.                                        He
 begins    by an inquiry        be said that our great ancestor found the
                                        :    Shall          it
Now     under what circumstances of Abraham was this condition made avail-
able?      Was     it   before he had received the external sign of the covenant or
after? Before,      most           certainly, that sign being an attestation of his previous
through Jacob, not simply to                                 all       who     are so descended, but to those of
them who imitate that faith of Abraham which he had before his circum-
cision.  For the grand promise of being lord of the world, which was made
to him with a particular view to the Messiah as his most distinguished
spiritual descendant, was not given through or in consequence of the law,
but of that justification which comes through faith 9-13.    For faith and                       :
6 ANAL Y S I S F T II E
being well aBsurcd of tho divine ability and willingness to verify the
promise.           This        fuith         of   his,   which,      by    its   persevering steadfastness, notwith-
staiuliiig        kuig continued discoiiragenicnts, showed itself to be a living prin-
ciple,       was accepted as                      justify ing    :   H-2'Z.              That                  it   was so        acccpti-d      is   not
'ecorded simply to eulogize the patriarch                                                ;   but for our instruction and
comfort,          who    shall also                be    acce})tcd, if         we        believe in Christ,                        who      died and
rose again in order to secure to us this ines'timable benefit                                                                 :    23-25.
                                                       SECTION                           YI.
                                                             Chap. V. 1-11.
and that again increases and confirms our hope                                                    ;       and that hope never makes
us ashamed by failing us in any exigency                                             ;    for             God's love to us                  is   com-
municated abundantly to our hearts by the Holy                                                                      Spirit,   whom          he hath
bestowed on us                     :   3-5.            For when we were                               in       a condition of spiritual
weakness, Christ, in suitable time, died on our account and                                                                        in    our place,
although          we were ungodly and                        sinful        persons            ;       thus showing the greatness
of divine love.                        For, in the place of a religious man, scarcely any one
would be willing                       to die      ;   or, the   more          vividly to illustrate the representa-
tion,   It    may   be    made somewhat                      dllferently, thus                        :    For, in place of the good,
the religious and benevolent man, whose                                                  life             is    spent in benefiting his
fellow-creatures,                  some one perhaps might even venture                                                  to    give up his          life.
This     is   the utmost limit to which                           human love may ever be expected to
extend.           But the peculiar love                      of God is shown in this, that he gave Christ
to die for us while                     we were          grievous sinners, and, of course, enemies to his
law: 6-8.               If,        therefore,     we have now been justified by                                                      his atoning
ciled, may we confidently look for salvation through him, who lives eter-
                                             SECTION                         YII.
                                                      Chap. V. 12-21,
THE UNHAPPY EFFECTS OF THE FALL OF ADAM ARE MOEE THAN COUNTER-
       BALANCED BY THE BLESSINGS OBTAINED THROUGH CHRIST.
In accordance with what has already been said, the Apostle proceeds as
follows         :   In the course of his remarks he shows that                               we have, at the very
least,      gained through Christ what                          we      lost      through    Adam. As sin was
introduced into the world by our                             first   parent,       and followed by misery and
ruin,      and           in this   way misery and              ruin pervaded the whole                    human      race,
inasmuch as      became partakers of a sinful nature, and in accordance
                           all
existence that preceded the Mosaic law sin existed, yet, as sin is not
accounted where there is no law, and there was none which made mortality
and the evils necessarily connected therewith the penalty of its infraction,
and nevertheless mortality universally prevailed, its origin and dominion
must be ascribed to some other cause and that is the one just stated,  ;
namely, the                 sin of     Adam       entailing      on        all his    posterity a sinful nature,
which produces                   in all conscious agents                   sinful acts:          12-14.     There     is   a
correspondence between                       Adam          and Christ as regards              their relation to the
human           family.          But   this      correspondence              is   not in   all   respects analogous.
If,   in the         one case, misery and ruin follow, much rather                                  may we          expect
abundance of grace and benefit as the bountiful                                       gift   of God, in the other.
And        if   the sentence pronounced on one offence condemned,                                    much     rather       is
become         the ground of their justification and eternal salvation, which shall
be received and enjoyed on the condition of faith and obedience                                                          :    15-19.
The law was introduced not to justify, but to show the nature of                                                             sin,   and
thus    it   became        the occasion of exciting sinful nature in opposition to its
demands, and          in   these circumstances grace abounds                                    still   more, God's favour
extending even to               life    eternal        :    20, 21.
                                           SECTION                                    VIII.
                                                             Chap, VI.
Do     the doctrines stated sanction the inference, that                                         we may         indulge in sin
in   order to afford         full       scope for the exercise of divine favour?                                         Most       cer-
tainly not.         This would be at variance with our condition as baptized into
Christ,      by which baptism we became                                            spiritually dead, buried,         and        risen,
through divine power                   ;   and moreover, avow our obligations to abandon sin
and     live    a   life    of holiness.                   The moral                   resurrection thus implied, and
further inculcated, implies also a belief in a future glorious resurrection,
which, according to the divine intention, as shown                                                by        the scheme of the
gospel, is a result of the moral                                  :       1-9.        As   Christ died once on account
of   sin,    and now       livctli in         heaven to the glory of God, so should we regard
ourselves as dead to sin and alive to righteousness.                                                  We must not,              there-
fore,   permit sin to rule                 us,   but rather submit to the holy law of God.                                          And
this    we   are enabled to do, inasmuch as                                          we    live not   under the          inefficient
system of law, but under the gospel, which imparts divine strength. It
                                               SECTION                        IX.
                                                  Chap. VII.-VIII.            17.
THE LAW CAN NEITHER JUSTIFY NOR SANCTIFY. IT IS THE GOSPEL WHICH
   ALONE CAN MEET, IN THESE RESPECTS, THE WANTS OF MAn's WEAK AND
                                                                                         *
   SINFUL CONDITION.
It is the prerogative of                       law to rule the man during                        his   life.       In the case
of the marriage relation, the death of either party dissolves the obligation
on the other.              And        this   analogy        may     be applied to the connection of the
Jews with      the law.                You have become                  figuratively     dead to            it,   that   is,      your
union with         it is   dissolved; and                  this, in     order that    you may be                   spiritually
connected with Christ, the risen bridegroom, and thus produce the genuine
fruits of holiness.                   Formerly, indeed, our                  sinful passions            roused into vig-
orous action by occasion of the law, showed their really ruinous character.
But now, we are delivered from the                                  incidental consequences of law, and,
through the Gospel, placed in a condition to serve                                           God       spiritually            :    1-6.
Shall   we    therefore charge the moral law with sinfulness                                             1        This were a
gross perversion of the truth.                             On     the contrary, this law shows fully and
clearly   what       sin    is.        It    displays      its   deadly nature.              This mischievous prin-
ciple   avails itself of the                    moral law to             incite     my       natural evil passions.
Formerly       I    lived without a consciousness of the obligation of God's law
but when the perception of                        this obligation            came home             to    my        conscience,
my   sinful principle                 displayed        its vital    energy, and moral and spiritual ruin
was shown          to   be the inevitable consequence.                              Thus God's holy law, the
intention and natural bearings of which are to advance spiritual                                                         life       and
happiness, was             made        the occasion of transgression and destruction, through
the deceitful influence of                     sin.        We     see, then, that      God's moral law                            is in
the highest degree excellent, and that                              it is    human    sinfulness             which has be-
come    the cause of all our unhappiness, thus displaying itself in                                                      its       true
colours   :   7-13.          We         know indeed               the spirituality of God's law                      ;    but, in
my   natural condition, destitute of the grace of the Gospel and under the
uncontrolled influence of                     sin, I   am     compelled by          this     tyrant to do what the
better part of          my        nature, reason and conscience, so far enlightened as to
see the excellence of God's law but destitute of spiritual energy, revolts
from.     So   that        it is      not properly          I,   not    my    reason and conscience, but                            my
degraded nature that commits the                                 sin.    1   know and        feel, alas,          that in this
sinful nature           of mine there                 is   no    spiritual good.             I   can, indeed, indulge
the vain wish, but                I   have no power to obey, and therefore                              it is     that    I       act in
10                                           ANALYSIS OF THE
conduct arc shaped by                       my    degraded moral condition.                     I   feel       that   when      I
have God's                 spirit,   you are not so devoted.                       And    ifyou have, and are
therefore truly Christ's, although indeed the frail                                      body must succumb to
the natural efiects of sin, yet                           the soul has already a principle of divine
life   ;    and, in the end,               God   will raise to life           even your present corruptible
bodies, on account of the Spirit,                           whom      he hath given you as a pledge of
this result.                We    are therefore            under the strongest obligation to                          live ac-
cording to the promptings and aids of the Spirit, and thus to be God's sons.
ITie possession of this Spirit                       is   incompatible with a condition of servitude to
sin,       and of consequent apprehension.                          The       results of his action              and    influ-
ence are directly opposite.                          He makes        us the adopted children of                   God and
enables us most affectionately to recognise the privilege.                                            He        attests tho
SECTION X.
THE TRIALS OF LIFE AND THE BLESSINGS OF THE GOSPEL BOTH HERE AND
   HEREAFTER COMPARED. GOd's PURPOSE TO CONFER ALL THESE BLESSINGS
   ON HIS REDEEMED. CONSEQUENT EXULTATION AND TRIUMPH.
I    REGARD   all     the sufferings of the present                  life,   however   afflictive      they    may
be, as not at all          comparable to the glory of that state of happiness which the
gospel secures to            its recipients.          God's creatures have long been waiting
for some such improved and blessed condition. And such expectation is
quite reasonable. For they have been subjected to the present unsatisfac-
tory and miserable condition, on account of God's glory, and in order to
advance       his     purpose of leading              men       to     ultimate      happiness, of M'hich
they cherish the hope.            For there shall be a glorious deliverance. And, as
it   is   true that        mankind in general have been in a state of distress and
anguish until the present time               ;   so   it is   also true that we, the favoured recip-
ients of the divine blessing,               do also deeply lament our degraded condition,
and wait         for the fulness of Christian blessedness,                         when our adoption            as
God's children             shall    be publicly recognised and also completed by the
deliverance of our bodies from corruptibility, in the glorious resurrection
at the last  day 18-23.:               We
                               are saved indeed, but still we are in a state
in   which hope must be continually exercised, and " patience have her perfect
work."        And, as hope       assists us, so also does the Spirit of God, who
prompts       in us    most earnest and deeply felt though not to be fully uttered
intercessions,        which are in entire accordance with the will of God 24-27.                        :
We        know     also that all the events of                life   promote the good of those who
love God, and are partakers of the gospel which his benevolent                                         mind hath
planned.           Them from          eternity he regarded with affection                    ;       he predeter-
mined them            to    be   like his   Son       in    moral character,          in suffering,         and in
happiness      ;   so that of this vast band of united brothers he should be the
head.       And,      in   harmony with          this affectionate regard,              he hath so called
them      that they received his gospel                 ;   and he       justified   and    glorified       them
28-30.        Who now              can venture, with any prospect of success, to oppose
those     whom God sustains 1               What           will or    power can stand            in opposition
to God's    1  What blessing             can be too vast for our Christian expectations                            1
He who  gave up his Son cannot be supposed to withhold any good thing.
Nothing further is to be thought of or wished for. Who will dare to
accuse those          whom God selects           and regards as              his choice ones     ?     Will God,
who       justifies    them?         Who     condemns'?                Does       Christ,   who        died,   who
12                                        AN ALYSIS OF THE
rose,    who         sits   at God's right hand, ever                          more   to intercede         ?     Who          or
what         shall    sever us from              Christ's            love?      Shall all      the trials             of    life,
however hard, lead us                     to    withdraw from him, and thus destroy our
connection?             No, most assuredly.                    We         triumph ovor    all      through his grace
who     hath so loved us.             I   express            my      fueling in the firmest persuasion that
no created being whatever can                          elfect      such a severance       :   31-39.
                                          SECTION                             XI.
                                                Chaps. IX. X. XI.
indeed the very             chief,   namely, that from them^ sprang the Messiah                                        in    his
human         nature, that wonderful being, who, in his divine,                                    is   supreme God,
and to be eternally adored                 :    i.x.   1-5.
      But, notwithstanding this unhappy condition of the Jews, although as a
nation tht-y have rejected the promised Messiah and consequently have
themselves been rejected by God,                             it is   not to be assumed that God's prom-
iscs to their forefathers             have       failed        of accomplishment.                  Some, and not a
few, have chosen the better part.                             It     is    to be considered that the Israelite
who     is    really    worthy of the name                    is   inwardly religious.             It is   not merely
a connection with the people of Israel by                                   lineal descent    from the patriarchs,
which constitutes the true                     Israelite in               the spiritual sense, nor         is    it   such a
descent from the great founder of the race, which                                     makes persons             the spirits
ual children of  Abraham. This is followed by an illustration of                                                  the doc-
trine   drawn from a history of the patriarchs, and tending to show                                               that the
Jews need not be              surprised at the statement, for                      God had ahvays              acted with
their ancestors according to his                       own         purposes, in bestowing particular priv-
                                    EPISTLE TO THE EOMANS.                                                                        18
your nation, well                may           it   rather be asked, what right has a                              weak man       to
find fault        with the All- Wise and Almighty One, for exercising his just and
natural prei'bgative              "?       Has he            not, as Creator, the right to place his crea-
tures in whatever condition he chooses?                                          As          well might the thing inade
complain of             its   maker        for not          having formed               it   something        else.      God     has
plainly a right to put the being which his                                  power hath produced, in any rank
among        his various creatures,                       and to        bestow upon it as many or as few ad-
vantages as he pleases.                         You would have had no                          reason to complain,           if   he
had never granted you the benefits of his covenant; and, therefore, cannot
reasonably object,               if,     for suflficient reasons                and          in order to       promote most
important purposes, he withdraws them from you as a nation.'                                                        But   this is
only a general answer to the Jewish objection.                                       The Apostle now proceeds
to reply          more     particularly,                 showing that the          Jews have no reason to com-
plain of their rejection, since                          God had         treated    them with           the greatest indul-
14                                      ANALYSIS OF THE
gence.         'He    hath borne long with your sinful conduct and persevering*
obduriioy      ;    and now, that you have                   filled   up the measure of your                           sins    and
are    fitted for destruction,          he hath abandoned you                   ;   and he              nialvcs   your       rejec-
tion the occasion of extending his                           Gospel to Gentiles, uniting those who
embrace        it   with the faithful Israelites, both of                      whom           he hath prepared for
the blessings of his        kingdom, and               l)oth    of whom he hath called to the enjoy-
ment thereof:' 19-24.
   The Apostle now illustrates what he had                              said,   by applying passages from
Ilosea, in which the prophet speaks of the reception of the ten tribes into
favour after their long abauduninent by                            God and
                                                                         ;          also           from      Isaiah,   who      an-
nounces the divine promise, that all the various and repeated excisions to which
the    Jews might be       subjected, should not be utter and complete, but, on the
contrary, that a portion should be preserved to perpetuate the nation. These
divine promises he explains as verified in part,                              by    the preservation as God's
people of that portion          who had embraced                       the Messiah                 :   25-29.      lie then
sums up        the general conclusion, namely, that Gentiles have through faith
obtained acceptance with God, which Israel as a body has failed to secure.
The reason of the         failure       is,   that they proceeded              on a wrong                   principle.       They
sought to be justified         by works, and rejected                    the Gospel                scheme of faith, and
thus, as    had been predicted, refused, through                             their incorrigible prejudice, to
object which the law uniformly held in view, and having come and estab-
tion might be expressed by doing perfectly the demands of the law, and,
as a rightful consequence, living in God's favour as a state to be legitimately
claimed. But God's justification, which is by faith, speaks of no such impos-
sibility.      It   does not    demand            as   its   condition something particularly                                 diffi-
cult. On the contrary, it offers an expedient within the reach of every sin-
cere and resolute seeker after truth, namely, the Gospel system received
by    faith,   and publicly professed by the true convert                                      :       5-10.      This most
impartial and righteous system                         knows no         difi*erence          among men.                 It    pre-
to enjoy these blessings, they must truly believe on him ; therefore thoy
       Chap. xi. Does this admission of the Gentiles in the place of unbelieving
Jews imply the irrevocable                      rejection of          God's ancient covenant people                    '?
of the state of Israel in the time of Elijah.                              Although the prophet repre-
sented himself as alone adhering to the true God, in contradistinction to
the whole nation,                 whom   he supposed to have apostatised to idolatry, yet
he     is   divinely informed, that            God had       reserved for himself seven thousand
sincere worshippers.                  These were the holy germ of the nation, the very
life    principle of its being.            Had       ten righteous persons been found in                      Sodom,
it   would not have been destroyed.                          The        spiritual leaven        would so             flxr
have leavened the whole lump as to have preserved                                     it   from utter corrup-
tion.         Thus did the seven thousand in the degenerate time of the prophet,
and thus does now           tlje holy remnant who have accepted Jesus as the
true Messiah, the choice ones                   whom God              has graciously chosen with the
view of their becoming partakers of his favours, this gracious choice
springing entirely from his                  own benevolence             :   1-6.     It   appears, then, that
Israel as a nation has not secured                    what   it       aimed    at,   but only that portion
of the nation which accepted the Gospel.                                 The remainder are unhappily
given over, in accordance with representations occurring in the Old Tes-
tament, to judicial blindness, and                    its   deplorable consequences                 :   7-10.
       Shall      we say now          that the       Jews have been permitted to refuse the
Gospel, in order to effect their                    irrevocable rejection and utter ruin? Cer-
tainly not.           The         refusal has resulted in the reception of the                          Gospel by
Gentiles,         and   this divine course          of eliciting good from evil                is       kindly pur-
sued by          God    in order to incite          them    to emulate the Gentiles                 and embrace
the     same       faith.        And were    this to    be    the result,    how vast would be                      the
benefit to           mankind, since          their, rejection           by God has been made                        the
16                                         AN ALYSIS OF THE
occasion of so            much good             to the      world      in general.             If his    wisdom causes
even the unbelief of the Jews to advance                                         by extending a know-
                                                                         his plans
ledge of the truth,               much    rather will the             same wisdom make their submission
to the (Jospel illustrate                 its   divine origin, and promote the best interests
of mankind.                In   hoping for and anticipating the conversion of the Jews,
I    honour        my    ofTiec      as an apostle to the Gentiles,                      whose    full    and complete
conversion would be thereby promoted.                                    I   therefore so speak as to endea-
vour to rouse up the dearly beloved brethren of                                          my    nation to accept the
Gospel, that they also                    may      partake of            its    blessings.        The      first            Jewish
converts, and the ancient patriarchs                              from   whom            the nation       is    descended,
are holy in the estimation of                      God      ;    and   so, in    a limited sense,              is   the whole
body.             Let the Gentile converts remember, that the Hebrews were                                                        first
the people of God, with the believing portion of                                              whom       they have but
lately   become incorporated; and                               let   them learn          to retain the advantages
of this their spiritual position by humility and                                     faith.     Let them not boast
themselves against that unhappy                             people, lest they also fall                  away and be
rejected: 11-21.                     The divine dispensation towards both                            parties exhibits
both goodness and severity.                        If the Gentile              convert on         whom God                     hath
bestowed           his   bounty disregard             it,   he also shall be rejected                ;    and the unbe-
lieving Jew, if he turn to                      God   in faith, shall again               be admitted               to favour.
This   is     not only very possible, but                        it   may      reasonably be expected from
God's benevolence, and                          may be            regarded as a procedure altogether
natural       :    22-25.         It is   important, in order to repress anything like arro-
gance    in       Gentile Christians, that they should                         know and         consider what                  may
seem obscure             in the divine          procedure, namely, that the Israelites in part
are permitted to be in a condition of spiritual blindness until the conver-
sion of vastnumbers from other nations. And this result shall be succeeded
by their national conversion, as predicted in the Old Testament. For it
must not be overlooked that, while, as respects the Gospel they are hostile
to God and considered by him as enemies, and this condition of theirs has
been overruled                  to    promote the               spiritual      benefit        of Gentiles           ;
                                                                                                                            yet,    as
respects God's original choice of the nation to be his peculiar people, they
are   still       regarded with affection on account of the beloved ancestors.                                                    For
God    does not alter his plans of mercy and kindness towards those                                                          whom
he has blessed with their privileges.                      As Gentile                     believers were formerly
in   a condition of unbelief, but                   now have obtained                    the   mercy of God                  in    the
are in a state of unbelief, that the                        goodness shown to Gentiles may become
the occasion of their future conversion and admission to the divine favour.
                     his intention of extending mercy to all
Thus God's plans evince                                      25-32.                                                     :
SECTION XII.
Chap. XII.-XVI.
St.   Paul now proceeds with                    practical    and hortatory            directions.           He   urges
his readers to              devote themselves to God, to renounce the world, and to
cultivate the various graces of the Christian                                  life   :   xii.       He    inculcates
obedience to the              civil      powers,   xiii.   1-7, impresses the duty of love and
conformity to Christ, reminding them that time                                  is    rapidly passing away,
and eternity           at   hand    :   8-14,      He   gives directions respecting usages and
observances in themselves indifferent, and counsels those of various views
and habits to regard each other kindly, and to yield the claim of judgment
to God, to            whom     it       rightfully belongs      :   xiv.       1-12.           He    warns against
using one's           own    liberty of conscience in such a                   way        as       may   occasion sin
in another, inculcating such a course of conduct as tends to                                         harmony and
kindness      ;   declaring that inward religion, and the peace and joy that accom-
pany    it,   constitute the essential characteristic of the Gospel dispensation
13-23.        He       presents the example of Christ as a motive to seek the general
good, and to bear with each other's weaknesses                             :    xv. 1-7.            Christ   was sent
by God        in confirmation             of divine promises          made           to the early          Hebrews,
and also that the Gentiles might become the people of God ami glorify
him. He speaks of his own commission, and of its successful prosecution
among people who had not heard the Gospel before 8-21.                                     :               He    states
                       Romans on his way to Spain also
his intention to visit the                                                                     ;          his present
SECTION I.
Chap. I. 1-15.
INTRODUCTION.
tion,   any more than those of the                           original twelve.                        The several accounts of his
conversion and                  call in the        Acts,* fully prove what he says in Gal.                                            i.        1,        that
he was "an Apostle not of                             men             neither            by man."             God's purpose to set
him apart to his service is expressed in the 15th verse of the same chapter,
by the word here used and this reference is much more directly to the
                                              ;
thesis.
          " According                       to   the flesh            :"          This expression relates to Christ's
human nature                 as subsisting during his earthly condition until his resurrec-
tion,   and consequently implies his state of humiliation, as                                                           in    John         i.    14.
7, Acts xiii. 33. " In power" may be used adverbially for powerfully, in
Scriptures" in 1 Cor. xv.3,4. Others, retaining the same meaning of the phrase,
For these nccounts huA nllnsions to tbeiti, sec Acta ix. 5, 6, 15, 17, 20, ss. 24, xxii. 14, l.\ xzvi.
     t Horn.   I.   on Kom., Opera, Edit IJcncd. Vcnct.                          1741,   Tom.   Ix. p. 432.
 Cn. 1.3-5.]                                 EPISTLE TO THE EOMANS.                                                                                 21
TOlg e'&veoiv vnep rov ovofiarog obedience to the faith among all
See Ps. cxliv.,Sept. (cxlv., Heb.) 5, xcv. (xcvi.) 6. In Heb. ix. 14, where
see the note, pp. 123, 124, spirit appears to be used in the                                                             same sense as
in this place,                  and to denote              Christ's divine condition as glorified Messiah,
his elevated state in the exercise of his original divine attributes,                                                                    and as
man, of lordship over the universe.                                         So perhaps           in 1       Tim.        iii.   16   :
                                                                                                                                         "    Was
manifest in the flesh," that                            is,     in    human         nature, "justified in the spirit,"
shown         to      be approved of and honoured by God                                         in his gloriously exalted
and divine condition. Comp. John xvii. 5, Matt, xxviii. 18, and Heb. ii. 9.
'E^    is   used in the sense of from,                               aftei\     See Matt.         xix. 20,         and 2 Pet.                 ii.   8.
The Greek                  is    elliptical,        and the preposition eK must be supplied before
VEKQGJV as before [lov in Acts                                  i.    5.      The meaning of the whole may be
thus expressed                   :     'a descendant of David, as to his condition of humiliation
while       in    human              nature on earth, (but) proclaimed the Son of God in power,
as to his divine nature in connection with his glorified humanity,                                                                 from the
time of his resurrection.'
   5. " Grace and Apostleship                                    :"    These words         may      express the two ideas
Kuinoel and Euperti. It comprises six octavo volumes, and was publislied at Leipsic in 1794-1799.
A   Supplement by Pott and Euperti appeared at Helmstadt, entitled Syllogo Commcntationum Theo-
logicarum, in eight volumes, in 1800-1S07.                           Home's    Introduction, vol.   ii.     part   ii.   Appendix,            p. 280,
sixth edition, Lond. 1S23.
    22                                                        COMMENTARY ON THE                                                                             [Sect. 1.
    G    iKiiions,                  for            his       name,            among              avTOv,            h        ol<;       iare koI          vfietg      6
         wlioin            arc        vc also the called of                                      kXtjtoI 'It/ooD Xpiarov, rraai roig                                 7
    7    Jesus            Christ           :        to       all    that          he in          ovmv            ev 'Pw/x?/ dyajTTjrolr deov,
         Komc, beloved of God, cnlkd                                               to he         kXtjtoI^ dyioi^                   
                                                                                                                                       X"P^C ^7"^ ^
         saints;               {,'race             to you,          and peace,                   dpi'ii'?]        arro      deov         -rrarpbc        I'miov
         from God our                      father,             and the Lord                      Koi Kvpiov 'ItjOov Xpiarov.
8        Jesus Christ.                             First, I          thank          my                  UpioTOV             fiev       evxapiard rCi                 8
         God         throufjh Jesus Clirist for                                    you           deio jiov did 'Irjaov                  Xpiorov vzrtiQ
         all,    tliat          your faith                     is    spoken of                   rravrcjv v/iwr, orf                    //    rrin-K; i'/iwv
'
    obedience which springs from faith                                                     ;'    or     it   may       be taken adjectively, and
the translation be,                                     '
                                                            faithful obedience.'
                                                                                                    " For           his      name           :"    meaning      '
                                                                                                                                                                    on
account of his honour.'
         0.     "The Called:" The word                                              is     used to denote those                               who have been
invited to receive the benefits of the Gospel,                                                                       and also those who have
accepted them.                                 Here and frequently elsewhere                                           it    means the              latter.     See
1       Cor.    i.    24        ;    also           vii.      17, 18, 21, whore the verb also expresses the                                                   same
meaning.                       It     is           God who                   is    uniformly represented as calling                                         men     to
the Gospel.                          See the texts referred to                                          in   the latter part of the note                            on
Heb.          iii.    1.            "The                    called of Jesus Christ" are they who,                                                 by embracing
his religion,                   belong to him as their Lord and benefactor.
         7.    The         latter clause                       of the verse might be translated,                                         '
                                                                                                                                              father of us      and
of the Lord Jesus Christ.'                                               But       this    would not be                  in    harmony with other
passages.                      The meaning                         is,   "from God our                           fiithcr,     and (from) the Lord
Jesus Christ                    ;"     and              this       remark applies                       to St. Paul's epistles generally.
dently represents grace as coming both from God and from Christ.
fiari rov deov sXdelv TTpbg vf^iag. God to come unto you. For I long 11
1       'E m-Q^G) yap Idelv vfiag, Iva rt                            to see you, that I            may    impart unto
        fierad^          Xapioj-ia       viilv      Ttvevfia-         you some           spiritual gift, to the          end
        rcKOV elg rb orrjptX'^Tjvat vfiag                            ye  may be              established:         that    is,    12
12 Tovro 6e earc, oyiiTTafOKhjdjlvat                                 that I may             be eomforted together
   iv vjuv 6ia TTJg ev dXXi)AOtg iri-                                with you by the mutual                     faith   both
13 areuig, Vjiujv re Koi efiov.   Ov                                  of you and me.               Now      I   would not 13
   i?eAa) 6e viiag dyvoelv, ddeXcpoc,                                have you ignorant, brethren, that
        5~c TToXXaKig 7:poe-&eii7]V eX^elv                           oftentimes I purposed to come unto
        npbg       vfiag,    KOt eKCjXv'&rjV dxpL                    you, (but           was     let hitherto,) that I
        Tov Sevpo, Iva rivd Kapnov o^w                                might have some               fruit     among you
        Koi iv vfiiv, Ka^cjg Koi iv rolg                              also,   even as among other Gentiles.
14 XoiTTolg e^veotv. "HXXijoi re koi                                 I   am    debtor both to the Greeks and 14
   l3apf3dpoig, GO(pdig re Koi dvoi]-                                 to the Barbarians, both to the wise
favoured as to              visit you.'            In    2    ISIac. x. 7,     the Greek           word has the same
meaning.
        11. Xapiaiia              means any         spiritual gift,        whether ordinary or miraculous.
See          1   Cor.   vii. 7,   Rom.      xii.   6 et      seq,, 1 Cor. xii. 4, 9.
        12, 13.          " That    is :"    This        is   equivalent       to, I     mean.       The Apostle            does,
as      it   were, correct what he had said.                          Instead of jiwfelling on the thought
of obliging the              Roman         Christians by imparting to tliem some benefit, he
speaks as               if his visit       would become the occasion through their mutual
faith of comforting                  and strengthening each other.                                And    so in the next
verse he represents his connection with  them and other converts as the
means of benefit to himself: "That I may have some fruit;" that is, de-
rive advantage.  This is the proper meaning of Kap-nbv ex^tv. See vi. 21,
and compare ixio^bv exe^e m Matt. v. 46, vi. 1. The sentiment also suits
the modesty of St, Paul's character, and is entirely in harmony with that
in the following verse.
         14, 15. Strictly speaking, the                        Apostle was indebted to God, and hence
he feels and expresses his obligation to benefit God's creatures                                          ;     and   ovro), so,
SECTION II.
Chap. I. 16-32.
IG. ITere St. Paul enters on the argument of his Epistle, introducing
                                                                                                                                  of God," like
"salvation" for Saviour in                                  Luke     ii.    30,    is    the abstract for the concrete,
meaning God's                       efficient         means.         Comp.          1    Cor.        i.   24.               "   Every one            that
works whether moral or ritual, and also the comprehensiveness of the offer
although, according to the divine scheme, it was first made to the Jews,
and their rejection of                      it    became the occasion of                            its    being extended to the
Gentiles.            The word               Greek, both here and in several other places,                                                      is    used
in this enlarged                    meaning.
       17.   The reader who                           desires to see the various                               meanings which have
been given           to the              phrase "righteousness of                            God"          here,                must consult the
commentators.                       It    evidently does not                      mean            his justice, nor                    probably his
kindness or any other attribute.The general sense of the word in this
Epistle when connected with the author's argument or statements allied
therewith,       \9,     justification, that                 is,    pardoning, acquitting;                              or, state           or method
oi justification. The last agrees best with the context in this place. It
God;' as the former of these phrases cannot well mean our own method ^
17 "EXXtjvi. AiKaioavvT] yap deov                                                  also to the Greek.                       For therein            is   the 17
   ev avTU) diiOKaXvTireraL t/c -ni-                                               righteousness of                         God   revealed from
      areisdg elg ttlotlv,                      Kaddg yejpa-                       faith            to   faith     ;        as    it    is       written,
      Tcrac        
                            6 6e diKaiog ek Triarecjg                              The            just shall live                by    faith.
Phil.     iii.      9,      which cannot,                 in that passage,                    mean God's method of justifica-
                                                                                                         '
which         is   a proper             meaning of the word,                        is        probably used for the method of
justification,               and        this idea will               be conveyed by a                    literal translation:                           '
                                                                                                                                                            God's
justification is revealed in                             it,'   naturally suggests the thought, that his                                            method
of justification                   is    made known                   in the       Gospel; and this                              is    the fact.             "   De
modo      et ratione                   explicandum esse videtur, quibus venia impetrari queat."
Ammon              in       Koppe,        p. 16.
                                                        '"''
                                                               Ratio favoris divini consequendi per metonym."
Wahl, Clavis Novi Testamenti sub                                          voce, 5.
      "   From              faith to faith."                    I    must again                   refer the reader,                    who wishes                 to
see the various views which have been given of this phrase, to the com-
mentators.                   I    will state       one or two, and then what seems to me the best
exposition.                      Some         connect " from faith" with the clause just explained,
and read, 'the righteousness of God from (or by)                                                                   faith.'              Comp.           iii.     30.
The next two words are understood                                                   either in the sense of                                   '
                                                                                                                                                 to produce
faith,'       or faith            is    supposed to be put for                        '
                                                                                              the faithful             ;'
                                                                                                                            that       is,   the abstract
for the concrete,                        as in          Heb. x. 39 in the Greek.    The meaning thus
obtained               is   as follows          :
                                                    '
                                                        The righteousness of God by faith is revealed in
the Gospel in order to produce faith                                          j'   or,        '
                                                                                                  in reference to                 and        for the bene-
fit   of the            faithful.'            Macknight says of the former "translation," that                                                                    it
"results from construing the words properly,^'' and that it "aflfords a clear
influence its possessor, and which, being in itself a vital principle, grows
                                                                        Hodge,     p. 41.
                                                                     ;                                                                  
and     increases.'                 The same respected author,                          in considering             what has been
adduced as an analogous                           f)hrase,       "to iniquity unto                  iniquity,"      Rom.     vi.       19,
remarks, that "in                     all   such cases, the accusative denotes the end or object
to which the thing that                         had just been named tends," and quotes as proof
2    Cor.    ii.    IG     :    "Savour of death unto death, of                              life   unto   life."     But the          re-
mark        is     not applicable to other similar phrases, such                                         as,   "   from glory to
glory     from                strength to strength,"                    2 Cor. iii. 18, Ps. Ixxxiv. 7, which evi-
dently expresses the idea of increase.                                      Comp. 2 Cor. iv. 17, in the Greek,
whicli       is    but inadequately rendered                             in   our Bibles " a far more exceeding."
The Apostle's meaning of the clause under consideration appears to be
this: 'In the Gospel God's method of justification is revealed (to be) from
a living faith which perpetuates itself and increases by virtue of its essen-
tial    character.'                  And    I   think that the sense of the quotation which follows
confirms this interpretation.                                It is       from Ilab.          ii.    4,   and   is   cited also in
Heb.     X. 38.                The    2)rophet         is   speaking of the truly religious man's steady
faith in          God under apprehended                         calamity.              He     lives in a       calm and happy
state of acceptance                    and favour with God by the uniform exercise of a                                            reli-
gious confidence.                      Thus       his faith is the               same        as that which the Apostle
represents as justifying.
       18. "       For         ;"   This    may be          illative     of the implied thought, that some such
scheme of            justification as the                    Gospel reveals             is   necessary for           all   men     ;    or,
the full development which the Gospel makes of God's anger against sin
may be             stated as another reason for the author's glorying in                                               it.    Comp.
Acts     xvii. 30.
                               " From          heaven" probably                       qualifies " revealed," to               which
it   appears to be added as indicating the divine source of the revelation.
"Who          hold the truth in unrighteousness."                                      The    truth here intended cannot
be that which is peculiar to Christianity, as is evident from the following
verses.  It means religious truth in general, such as mankind possessed in
an early period, the influence of which they weakened, and much of which
they      by inconsistent and wicked lives. The word rendered "hold"
         lost,
 sible, as         the general religious truth held by the Heathen was perverted and
 darkened by their                     sinful conduct.
                                                                                                                   ;
   6 ^ebg yap avroTg e(f)av^po)oe.                             God bath sbewed it unto them. For 20
20 Ttt yap dopara avrov                  d-jo ktl-             the invisible things of him from
      aEO)g Kuofiov rolg TTOiTJiiaot voov-                     the creation of the world arc clearly
      [leva Kadoparat,         7/   re dtdtog av-              seen,     being       understood     by       the
   TOV dvvafxig icai ^eior/ig, elg to                          things that are made, even his eter-
21 elvat avTOvg dva-:TOAoy?iTOvg' di-                          nsd     power and Godhead;             so that
   OTt yvovTeg tov ^ebv ovx "?                                 they are without excuse.             Because 21
   debv edo^aoav ij rivxapioTTjaav,                            that,     when they knew God, they
      dXX' ifxaTOL^&rjaav ev Tolg 6ia-                         glorified       him not as God, neither
      XoyiGfioTg avTCJv,         icai   eOKOTLO^r]             were thankful, but became vain in
22    7]   davvETog avTOJv Kapdia,                <Pd-         their imaginations,          and their    fool-
19. " That which may be known :" The original is one word, with its
      20. "    The   invisible things of          him    :"    That      is,   his attributes    and nature, as
the latter part of the verse declares.
                                                              "   From        the creation of the world           :"
Either, by       means of the created objects; or, most probably, from the very
time the       world was made. The Greek bears either sense, but the former
makes        the phrase, " the things that are                     made," a useless         repetition.           The
general meaning of the verse                is,   that the             works of creation have always
been to such a rational and moral creature as                                  man    a sufficiently practical
exponent of God's nature and attributes.                             Two       particulars, however, ought
to be considered in relation to this subject:                             first,     that the Apostle        is   not
speaking of a        full    degree of religious knowledge                       ;   and, gecondly, that the
influence on the       human mind          of man's original condition as stated in the
book of Genesis and of any primitive revelation of which he may have been
the subject, must be allowed their due weight.    What such a creature as
man,       in his present state,      might be able to ascertain by the exercise simply
of his      own   reasoning on the works of nature, had he no other direct or indi-
rect sources of information, is a             very different question, and one which the
Apostle's language does not take into consideration.                                    A   spurious philoso-
phy assumes a          certain conceivable condition of primitive                             human      nature;
but   all   well ascertained facts support the foith which maintains such assump-
tions to      be groundless.
      21.     "When   they knew:" That is, having enjoyed abundant means of
knowing.          Compare "seeing and hearing" in Matt. xiii. 13. "Heart,"                        
Kapdia.         This word is often used by the Hebrews to denote the mind
                                                                         :
24 Wherefore God also gave them up juaig ~u}v KapdiCJv avTU)V eig
26 For this cause God gave them up                                                dji/jv.  Aid rovTO 7Tapt6o)Kev 20
     unto vile affections                 :    for   even their                   avrovg 6 -debc eig -nddr] drijxiag                   
but often            also, as here,            with a direct reference to the affections.                                       Thus we
read    :
            "   With the heart man                         believeth unto righteousness," or rather,                                justifi-
cation, Horn. X. 10; that is, justifying faith must be cordial, and have its
       22, 23. "            They became                    fools :" This                 may comprehend                    a declarative
meaning; they both showed and increased their folly. The absurd and
ridiculous idolatry into which they were permitted to fall abundantly veri-
fies   the statement in both respects.
       24-31. The Apostle now proceeds to                                                     describe the moral condition
of the Heathen world.                            The corrupt and debasing                                  vices into which           men
were allowed                  to     fall,     were        in part a judicial                    punishment, and               in   part a
natural consequence, of the degrading idolatry.                                                       The correctness of                   this
description of the abandoned and wicked state of the Heathen, has been
confirmed by various writers.   Whitby and Leland, in their respective
works on the advantages and necessity of a divine revelation, abound with
evidence and illustration; and Paganism as it                                                 now exists      verifies the inspired
statement, and shows that such results are the invariable concomitants of
stupid ignorance and idolatry.                                      It       is    to     be observed, however, that                       this
                                                                                                                                    ;
       dvrijuaMav,              rjv edet,, rrj c TrXdinj^                    rccompcnce of their error Avhich was
   avrdv iv eavrolg dTToXafijid-                                             meet.  And even as they did not 28
28 t'ovreg. Kai Kadojg ovk edoKi-                                            like to retain   God in their know-
       jxaoav Tov &ebv tx^iv ev imyvcj-                                      ledge,     God gave tlicm over to a
       oei,       TTapidoKev avroi/g                       6 i9eo^           reprobate mind, to do those things
       elg dSoKifiov vovv, -rrocelv                         rd     fifj      -which are not convenient                   ;       being 29
29 K^^M^mvra,               TTerrXTjpiOj^ievovg red-                         filled     with       all      unrighteousness,
       ay ddiKia, Tropveia, TrovTjpia,                           irXe-       fornication,       wickedness, covetous-
       ove^ia, Kaicia, fiearovg (p&ovov,                                      ness,    maliciousness;            full    of envy,
       (povov, epiSog, doXov, icaKOT]-&Eiag,                                 murder, debate, deceit, malignity
30 ipi^vpiardg,                  KaraXd^ovg,                     i9eo-       whisperers,        backbiters,             haters      of 30
       arvyetg, v{ipta-dg, vTreprjcpdvovg,                                    God, despiteful, proud, boasters, in-
       dXa^ovag, e^evperdg KaKcHv, yo-                                       A-entors of evil things, disobedient
abstract for the concrete, and put for an idol, implying the vain and deceit-
of evil things          :"     In    2 Mac.        vii.   31, Antiochus              is   called " the author, or dis-
coverer, or inventor, evperr^g, of all mischief against the                                            Hebrews,"            Vir-
SECTION III.
CUAP. II.
II. ITicrefore, thou art incxcus- Aid dvaTToXoyqTog el, d) dv- II.
Chap.     ii.   1-11. "Therefore                   :"     This    is   not a mere particle of transition.                       St.
Paul has convicted the Heathen of gross immorality, and consequently has
proved        that,     on the ground of mural obedience, they can have no claim to
God's favour, and must look for acceptance or                                              justification to     some other
dependence.                  lie     is    now about         to prove that the situation of the                      Jews
does not in this respect                      differ at all       from that of the Gentiles.                        This   is   the
ultimate design of his argument.                                 Inasmuch, however, as the Jew, although
Ch.   1.   32.II.      6.]            EPISTLE TO* THE ROMANS.                                                                         Si
2     oeiq 6 Kpivuv.                   0L6a[j,ev 6e, 8ti                       thyself;        for    thou        that    judgest,
      TO Kpi^M Tov -deov ioTi Kara                                             docst the same things.But we are                         2
      dXijSeiav im rovg ra roiavra                                             sure that the judgment of God is
8     TTpdooovrag.                  Aoy^^               6e tovto,              according to truth, against                   them
      w                          rd
             dvdp0)7:e 6 npivojv rovg                                          which commit such                  things.    And        3
  TOiavTa TxpdaaovTaq Koi ttomv                                                thinkest thou this,                O   man, that
  avrd, on av SK^ev^xi to Kpifia                                               judgest them which do such things,
4 TOV deov     "H tov ttXovtov TTJg
                            ;                                                  and doest the same, that thou shalt
  ^prjOTOTTjTog avTOv Koi TTjg dvo-                                            escape the judgment of God ?    Or                       4
      ^Tjg Koi TTjg ^laKpodvuiag KaTa-                                         despisest       thou the riches of his
      (ppovelg, dyvo<x)V, otl                      to ^prjOTOv                 goodness and forbearance and long-
      Tov ^eov              elg [leTdvoidv ae dyei                    ;
                                                                               suffering,       not knowing that                the
5     Kara             6e       ttjv OKX7]p6Tr]Td               gov            goodness of           God      leadeth thee        to
committing similar offences, did not scruple to criminate the Gentile, the
immediate object of the Apostle here                                           is   to   show him the inconsistency and
culpability of his conduct.                              Thus we see                the proper illative force of " there-
fore."           It applies,        as other similar illative particles occasionally do, to the
latter part of the verse.                          Compare       " therefore " in               John       vii.   22, and   2 Tim.      ii.
10, which most probably qualifies the words that follow.                                                          The    author's idea
may        be expressed thus                   :
                                                    '
                                                        Since those            who commiit such crimes                    are worthy
of punishment, thou,                      O        Jew, art therefore inexcusable, because thou art
guilty of the very                 same            things as those Gentiles,                   whom         thou art continually
condemning.'                     The   antithesis lies               between " them that do them,"                           in   i.   32,
and        " doest the            same," here.                 This       is   confirmed by the words in the next
verse, " against                 them     that          commit such                 things,"   and those          in the following,
" and doest the same."                                  Undoubtedly the censorious disposition and con-
duct of the                 Jews    are        meant       to    be denounced, but the chief point of the
remark           is,   the gross inconsistency of judging and condemning Gentiles for
the        same        sort of practices                  and vices            in   which Jews themselves indulged.
No     doubt the remark                            is   of general application to                     all     inconsistent        men       ;
but        it    is clear,       from the context and the subsequent part of the chapter,
that the Jews are particularly referred to.
      "
     Judge " is here used in the sense of censuring, condemning, as in
Matt. vii. 1, 2, and John vii. 51.                               
                                    " We know:" It must be admitted by
all.^" According to truth :" that is, equitable and right. Comp. Acts x.
34.   " Riches of                  his        goodness         :"    Equivalent to his                '
                                                                                                           abundant goodness.'
See        ix.   23 and Eph.              i.   7,       'his   abundant and excellent glory' or                                 'grace,'
                                                                    ;                                                                               1
12 respect of persons with God.                                  For         TGj          i9ec5.          "OooL        yap dvupug 12
     as   many          as have       sinned without                         ijpaprov, dv6po)g Koi                            dTToXovv-
     law, shall also perish without law                                      ~at      
                                                                                           KOL oaot tv vojuo TJjiaprov,
     and     as    many     as have sinned in the                            6id vSfiov KpidqoovTaL, (ou yap 13
     law, shall be judged by the law                                         ol       dnpoaral rov Vupov diKatoi
13 (For not the hearers of the law arc
here entirely              lost,     and the word means nothing more than heap up or
prepare abundantly.                  "Contentious:"                         literally, 'of contention,' like,                         "they
that are of faith" in Gal.                      iii.      7, for 'the faithful.' "Peace" in ver.                                          10   is
       Trapd T6J    &(!),     a/lX' oi TTOirjToi           rov          just before God, but the doers of
 14 vofiov diKaioydrjaovrai.                              "Orav          the law shall be justified.                      For 14
       yap    tdvT] TO,          fiTJ   v6[iOV           sxovra          when      the Gentiles, which have not
 duced by the             illative,     " for."            This     is    a clew to the meaning of the next
 verses,     which do not refer to the ground of                                   justification,     but simply assert
 the inefficacy of hearing and knowing God's law, and the necessity of sin-
 cere obedience to secure acceptance.                               It is    not justification properly speaking
 but sanctification which                 is      the subject of the verse, the whole idea of which
 is   contained in    Hebrews xii. 14, " without holiness no man shall see                                                      the
 Lord."       St.   James has the same thought, which he expresses partly in                                                    the
 same terms,         i.    22-25.             It is      a great mistake to suppose that the Apostle
 is   speaking here of justification.                         He      does not       mean         to assert that         any one
 can be justified by doing the law, for the whole scope of the Epistle and
 of Scripture in general                 is       against this error.               He means          that the privilege
 of hearing the law, which the Jews overvalued, was                                                 useless unless they
 endeavoured to keep                    it.       This endeavour, being a test of their sincerity
 and a proof of                their faith,         was     also an evidence of their justification, but
 certainly not the cause of                       it.
tion."* If the meaning were, that the words of the Apostle would fitly
 express such rule, the remark would be admissible.                                                 No   doubt           St.   Paul
 might properly have stated                             this rule in the           very terms here used, but the
 context shows that such was not his intention.                                        He     does not merely intro-
 duce "a supposed case," as the same author affirms                                               in his commentary on
 verses 14 and 27.                 Professor              Hodge also makes              the       same remark on verse
 26.     "   Paul does not say that any Heathen does                                                 fully   answer             the
                                                                               /        7/6          f^      ^
                                                                                                         'yy^            1m.
                                                                                                                                                    :
       the law, do by luitiuT thu                                  tliiiiys           <pvaf:i         rd rov vufiov         TTOiy,   ovroi
       contained             ill   the luw, these, having                             vo^iov          fXTJ    ^^''^vrt^    iavTolg dot
expresses more than the preceding one.* The obedient Gentile would not
only be accepted" Sic. If the obedience is hypothetical, as it must be to
the law," and " the uncircumcision that keeps the law shall judge" or con-
demn         the Jewish transgressor,                                is   evidently not the language of hypothesis.
!Much of the confusion of thought occasioned by                                                              this part    of the Epistle has
arisen from translating the original verb in verse 13 " shall be justified,"
while        it   should rather be rendered,                                '   shall      be approved             of,   accepted.'       The   re-
marks of Morus on this point are very judicious. "The terms justification,
salvation,                new man,             faith,      are used in various senses, and therefore are not
always            to      be explained               in the        Same way. Attention                           to this will    remove         ap-
       The     Professor has         made no         objection to such pointing and meaning; and, if be bad,                         it   would not
Affect    my    reniarlc.
  t Not to embarrass the reader, I prefer throwing a few quotations from this writer, accompanied
by areinarlc or two, in a note. On tlie words " to every man that worlictli good " in ver. 10, lie says
"He who had performed bis duty, if any stich could he found, should enjoy rest and satisfacUon."
Is the verse hypothetical                 ?   and can     it   be believed that the Apostle here makes a promise which he knew
was    practically worthless?                 On    ver. 12: "      Without laie, that is, a written law, for none are without
law.      The     Gentiles had not received the written law                           ;   they had, however, sinned, and they shall perish,
that   Is   to say,       bo condemned witliout that law.                 The Jews had received tlie written law; tliey had also
Binned, they will be judged, that                    is   to s.iy,   condemned by that law; for. in the next verse, St. Pa\il do-
cliircs     that only the doers of the law                       sliall   be justified; and consequently, as condemnation stands
oppo-sed to ju.stifleation, they                 who      are not doers of            it   will   bo condemned."          According to    this state-
ment the Apostle               affirms the            Jews and Gentiles. The expositor's error results
                                                 condemnation of                all
from not recognising the emphatic character of the word " sinned," and others in the same connection,
as above st.ated, and also the true meaning of "shall be justifled." On ver. 13: "The doers of the law
shall be justifled.         
                     By tlds we must understand an exact obedience to the law to bo intended." On                                              
ver. 25: "When, therefore, the Apostle says, if thou keep the law, he supposes a case, not implying
that it was ever verified but if it should exist, the result would be what is stated." And on the
                                      ;
nest verse        :
                      "   He                                    This hypothetical mode of reasoning is
                               supposes aca.se In regard to the Gentiles.
common                         we have an example in the .ftme chapter, where bo says, that th doers
               with Paul, of which
of the law shall be juKtifted; of whom, however, in the conclusion of his argument, Chap. iii. 19. be
affirms that none can be found." The exposition of tlie first text is erroneous, and assumed without
.proof; and in the latter the subject Is different. On ver. 27  "Tlio fulfilling of the law and its trans-
                                                                                                  :
gression are here to bo taken in tlieir fullest import, namely, for an entire and complete fulfilment, and
for the slightest transgression of the law." The reader will be graUfied to learn, tli.it after so much of
what baa been called hypothetical, (wliicb, however inapplicable he may regard the epithet in reference
                                                                                    " the Apostle, In vs.
to the Epistle, he will probably allow is strictly appropriate to the expositions.)
28, 29, passes to what is reality, not supposition." So Mr. Ilaldane allows.
                                                                                                                            :;
15    vofiog,      oiTiveg           MecKVVVTat rb            not the law, are a law unto tlicm-
      tpyov TOV                v6iiov   ypanrbv ev            selves:           which show the work of 15
has in view, can be nothing more than a general endeavour to live in accord-
ance with that degree of religious knowledge which the sincere Gentile
may have. There is therefore no inconsistency. Yet the supposition has
given rise to an attempt to explain                        this   passage differently, by changing the
usual punctuation, and understanding                         by "Gentiles" those                 -who had been con-
       the law ^^Tittcn in their hcurtfl, their                              ralg Kapdiaig                        avrdv^          ovfifuip-
       conscience also bearing Mituess, and                                  rvpovOTj^                  avrojv        rTjg        ovvEtdrj-
now made known unto them, and submit to the righteousness                                                                                  of    God
that is now manifested in their sight; these, though they have                                                                            not the
law, are a law unto themselves, their faith in Christ and his doctrine does
more than supply                    the jdace of the law of                         Moses           ;   and by         their submission
to tliat promised seed, in                             whom          all    the nations of the earth Nvere to be
blessed,      and who           is       the very end of the law itself for righteousness to every
one that believeth, they evidently show the great work of the law written
iu their hearts."                  It        seems strange that a man should be able                                              to persuade
himself that such can be the Apostle's meaning. The statement                                                                    is   evidently
irreconcilable with the whole scope of the context,                                                     and indeed with the very
last       words rightly understood.                             The Apostle                is      not contrasting Jews and
converted Gentiles, but endeavouring to                                             make        the irreligious                 Jew        feel his
no propriety be said not to have the law, and to be a law unto themselves.
Yet so        satisfied is the                  author of this exposition with the truth of                                                it   as to
^affirm, that " the context plainly                             shows, and the sense of the whole Scri[>ture
proves, that the words not only fairly mai/ but necessarily ought to be so
translated."*
      "    Work      of the law               :"   This has been supposed by some to be equivalent
to the       common          expression,               '
                                                            works of the            law.'        But         in   such case the word
is   always plural. Besides, such works are open to general observation, and
the phrase expresses a holy course of living; whereas what                                                                 is   here spoken
of    is    " written in the heart."                       The       phrase has also been regarded as pleo-
nastic for      law simply. Such pleonasms are not uncommon, and                                                                 illustrations
Bernard's Selections from the lad, chap. iv. sect. 7, p. ll.f And in the
     *8ee the Religion of nature proved to be a mere                   idol,   by Charles        Willats,     M. A. an ;        article   published
In the Scholar armed, vol.              i.   p. 20", 210,   Lond. 1795.
     t This worlc   is   a small   ocUvo volume, which               will   be found very useful in               ikcilitatiDg the acquisition
of Kabbinical IXebrow.             It    was    publisliod at   Cambridge in        1832.
                                                                                           
    crewf Kot [iera^v            dXh]Xo)v rdv                    their       thoughts          the    mean     wliile
    XoytOfiiov Kar7]yopovvT(j)v                 ij   koI         accusing, or else excusing, one an-
the reality (nature) of the                   day of atonement,' &c.                The expression of St.
Paul     is   probably of the same                    sort,      and "        the work of the law" is its
reality,      and    efficiency, that          which        God        hath          engraven on the heart or
moral nature of man.                 Tlie sincere though imperfect                              endeavour of some
Gentiles, to         do what     is right,          shows that there                  is   a moral law which the
God      that   made them        has stamped upon their nature.                                 '
                                                                                                    The conscience of
such     men     bears concurrent witness with this law of which                                      it is   the index,
and     their thoughts        and reasonings interchangeably condemn or apologise                                         for
them     ;'
              that    is,   sometimes do the one and sometimes the other.                                        The
preposition         avv     in composition with the participle here used, is considered
by many as adding nothing to the sense. I prefer, as above, giving its pro-
per meaning, because                 it   makes a good                 sense,        and corresponds with the
author's ordinary usage, as will hereafter be seen.                                            Mera^v dXXrjXcov is
rendered in our translation, " the                     mean           while    one another."         Each of the
two words certainly bears the meaning here given, but not                                               in such a con-
struction as this.             Besides, " one another" cannot refer to the persons
under consideration, for the Apostle                        is   not speaking of some of them accus-
ing or defending others              ;    but rather of the actings of the mind on                              its       own
character and condition.                  "   One     another" relates to the thoughts, and the
two Greek words mean interchangeably, alternately. The idea is that the
thoughts and reasonings of the individual sometimes accuse and sometimes
apologise for him.
   The connection of             the 16th verse has been the subject of considerable
discussion.          Bengel connects            it   with the word show in the beginning of
ver. 15, which, although in the present tense, he regards as having a future
meaning.         Thus he       elicits this         sense   :
                                                                 '
                                                                     character will then be manifested.'
Still   the remainder of that verse will                        mark        the condition of such Gentile
mind     in the      present state of being.                    His meaning may be thus expressed                           ;
'And they will show that God's law is really written on their hearts,
(their conscience, &c.) in the day' &c. Olshausen favours this arrange-
ment. Such may be the construction, but all the clauses of the 15th verse
should certainly have been in the future.                                   The construction most usually
adopted places            vs. 13, 14, 15, in a parenthesis, connecting vs.                                IG and 12.
Professor Stuart rather prefers making the 12th also parenthetical.                                             Tholuck
objects to so long a parenthesis.                               But        this is     not unnatural in such a
writer as St. Paul.             It   were      idle to swell this note with illustrations taken
from Hebrew and other ancient writers; but                                       I   think     we need        search no
38                                    COMMKNTAUY ON THE                                                                  [Sect. III.
farther for parentheses in the Bible, though they                                        may not be marked either
in printed editions or in                  manuscripts, than the                        Book of Deuteronomy and
Solomon's prayer at the dedication of the temple                                             ;    and   in the classics,         than
the Odes of Horace, and the                        ^neid of            Virgil.           A       diction springing             from a
glowing imagination                  is   very likely to abound with parentheses.                                        A     writer
of such a temperament, striking on a certain thought allied to another just
expressed, would naturally dwell on                               it   for   a time          ;    and, under the influence
of such feeling, might indeed be drawn off entirely from his main topic,
provided his tcmi)crament should got the better of his reason and judgment.
But    this is         never the case with               St.    Paul, whose logical faculty and ardent
feeling are                always    in    ha])py         harmony, the thoughtful element                                      in his
in   2 Tim.           i.   12, means, the         Gospel with the preaching of which                               I   have been
intrusted.                 Our   ])araphrastic translation, '-that                         which        I   have committed
unto him," does not give the right meaning, which would rather be para-
phrastically expressed                    by,      'that        which has been committed unto me.'
This will be evident to any one                           who         will carefully               compare       in the        Greek
1    Tim.       i.   18, vi. 20,    and 2 Tim,            i.    14.     The        silly     exposition which would
make        "    My        Gospel" equivalent to the Gospel of                             St.     Luke, supposed to be
written under the Apostle's superintendence,                                       is    unworthy of notice.
      17-24. "Behold:" Instead of ide                                 many         ancient authorities read                     t't   dg
but   if;       and thus the Vulgate,               si   autem, which               is   followed by Wiclif and the
Rheims.               In this case the first part of the sentence, technically called the
protasis,            will      extend to the end of the 20th verse, and the 21st will
begin the latter part or the apodosis.                                 The    best critics prefer this reading,
which       is       supported by most respectable external testimony, as                                                 may         be
Ch.   ir.   16-24.]                       EPISTLE TO THE EOMANS.                                                                                           39
va~av'q rS) vofio) Koi Kavxaoat boast of God, and knowcst his 18
IS    f!'   deio Kol yivuxTKEtg to -^eXTj^ia                                    will,and appi-ovcst the things that
      Koi doKiiid^eig                     ra            diacp^povra,            arc more excellent, being instructed
      Karrjxovi^EVog                      e/c           rov     vofiov,         out of the law; and art confident 19
Id ~t:~oidag re oeavrov ddTjybv                                                 that thou thyself art a guide of the
   elvai rv^Xo)V, (poig ruyv kv oko-                                            blind, a light of                  them Avhich                  are in
20    TEL, TTaidevTTJv                    a/)p6j^WT,            didda-          darkness,            an           instructor              of        the 20
      KaXov        VT]m(j)7',             e^ovTa              ttjv    j.i6p-    foolish,       a teacher of babes, which
      (pMOiv TTJg yvu)Geu)g koI Trjg dXr]-                                      hast the form of knowledge and of
21 Seiag iv     rw vofio) 6 ovv didda-          
                                                                                 the truth in the law.                              Thou        there- 21
      Kcov        ETEpov OEavTOV                            ov diddo-            fore wliich teachest another, tcach-
      KEtg    ;    6 KTjpvoacov                      firj     kXettteiv          est        thou not thyself? thou that
22 KXETXTEig            ;       6 XEyo)v            fir)    jlolxevelv           preachest a          man           should not                   steal,
the foct which in the other is hypothetically stated. ' Behold, thou are
called a Jew, &c. ; art thou therefore practically inconsistent?' Or: 'If
thou art named a Jew and hast so many claims, and advantages, dost thou
then that teachest another not teach also thyself,' &c(i.1~KavxdoaL is the
second person present passive, an unusual contracted ^oxm oi KavxaEoai put
for the regular Kavxdxi or                                  Kavxa.         It   occurs also in ver, 23, and                               is   similar to
later       common dialect.* "Knowest his will:" The article in the Greek
supplies the place of the pronoun and therefore there                                                              is   no occasion                  for the
use of       italics.               See Middlcton on the use of the                               article,              Chap.        v. Sect.         i.
                                                                                                                                                            3,
and bad,           in that thou arte                          informed by the lawe."                           Both have able advo-
cates,      who have appealed alike to Phil.                                           i.   10,   where the same expression
occurs.            Either meaning suits the context here and would well apply to
the character described.           But the former is better adapted to the context
in Philippians, as a                       prayer for the approbation of what                                           is   best         is     more       in
character with the Apostle, than one for any degree of mental discrimina-
tion would be.   The Vulgate has here probas utiliora, and in the other
place ut           probetis potiora.                            "A       light of           them      that             are         in darkness:"
                  See Eobinson's translation of Buttman's Greek Grammar, Sect. 103,                                          iii.   1,   note   t.
                                                                                                                                                     
of godliness," in contradistinction to                                    its    " power         ;"   that   is,      a show, pretence,
without the reality.                           But here        it   describes           some supposed advantage and
superiority,               and therefore must have the                             latter       meaning.          Ver. 21                et seq.
The        interrogative construction                        is     generally preferred in this and the                                              fol-
lowing verses, and the particle " therefore" seems to be in favour of it.
mere           trifling.             Nothing appears plainer than the meaning of the 2Gth
verse      :
                '
                    If the Gentiles sincerely                     obey the law of God so far as it is known
to them, they are just as acceptable to                                  God as if they were Jews.' And
that a real, sincere, though imperfect, obedience                                                is   what       is   meant, and not
a hypothetical perfect one, " which has never actually existed,"                                                                is       proved
bv    the next verse.                       For preposterous would                         it    be    to speak of Gentiles
 Ch.   II. 25-27.]                             EPISTLE TO THE ROMANS.                                                                             41
hypothetically keeping the law, and yet really condemning                                                                  Jews          for their
transgressions.                          Or     is       the condemnation hypothetical too                                   ?     This would
seem necessary                        in order             to    preserve consistency, but would involve too
great an absurdity to be maintained.                                                  Its meaning is made luminous by
our Lord's language in Matt.                                    xii.      41, 42,       "The men of Nineveh, the queen
of the South, shall condemn this                                                   generation." Here the original for
"   condemn"               is       the    same word compounded with a preposition                                                as that here
translated                "judge," and the preposition                                       is    often omitted                 without any
diminution of the proper meaning of the compound word.                                                                              It    follows
therefore that the keeping of the law in verse 25,                                                       is   not an absolutely per-
fect obedience,                     but only a sincere one, although imperfect.
      In verse 26, the                     word           " uncircumcision " as first used, is the abstract for
the concrete,               and equivalent                       to 'the uncircumcised man,'                           and the pronoun
" his," which follows the second instance of the word, has this intended con-
crete for its antecedent. "                               The uncircumcision                      that   is   by nature :" This may
mean, the Gentile who                                is   naturally uncircumcised.                         It  must be granted that,
in this          case,5     the words                     "by nature"               are unnecessary             ;    still       such adjuncts
are not          uncommon.                      Nevertheless there                    is   undoubtedly force in Olshauseu's
remark, that the whole phrase                                        is in     evident contrast with the last clause of
the verse, "               by the              letter      and circumcision dost transgress the law."                                            He
connects the words by or rather, of nature, ek ^vae(j)g^ with the clause                                                                     '
                                                                                                                                                 the
uncircumcision that                            fulfilleth        the law.'             The whole idea                 will therefore              be
expressed thus                  :
                                     '
                                         Gentiles,          who of            their natural condition, that                        is,   without
any    direct revelation, live in accordance with the                                                  law of reason and con-
science.'
                     "   By        the letter            and    circum.cision :"                 Maeknight remarks that " the
common               translation,"               which connects                    this phrase       with the next, " makes no
sense."              He         "though a Jew," I'egarding "letter and cir-
                           prefixes the words,
cumcision" as a hendiadys, thus " Judge thee, a transgressor of law, though
                                                                     :
a   Jew by           the literal circumcision                             ;"   that    is,    outwardly.              But the meaning
thus obtained                   is       less forcible than                    one might expect                 in   such a connection
and from such a writer                               ;    and   it   requires the insertion of an expression, the
omission of which                         is   improbable.                     Ata, with a genitive,                hij,   through, some-
times denotes circumstance,                                     state,        and    may be       expressed by, along with.
Thus        in   2   Cor.   ii.      4, " with,(Jta,             many          tears ;"      v. 10, " done in his body," 6t.d,
in his bodily                   condition.                 Also          in    Heb.    ix.    12,    "not with the blood, but
with his             own            blood,"              where did            is   used twice.            Closely allied to this                  is
42                                             C      MMENTA                  i:   Y    ON THE                                      [Sect. 111. IV.
    the   word Israel is once used                           to denote those of the lineal descendants of
    Jacob who were                       spiritual in character.                             Such are the genuine                        Israelites,
    (comp. John              i.   47,) as here the true                     Jew               is   the inwardly religious                             man.
    The general thought                      in   these verses            may be             thus expressed            :
                                                                                                                           '
                                                                                                                                It is   not a scru-
    pulous attention to outward                            rites,        but an inward principle of holiness, which
    makes         a   man     acceptable to God.'
Ch.   II.   28 III.          2.]             EPISTLE TO THE EOMANS.                                                                             43
SECTION lY.
Chap. III.
 III.   Ti ovv TO TxepiGGOv rov                                    IlOV-                 ^Yha.t advantage then liath the III.
      daiov         ;   ?/   rig     i)      oxpeXeca ~rjg        Tzepi-             Jew      ?   or   what     profit is there of eir-
 2    TOj.iT]g      ;
                             UoXv Kara navra                          rp6-           cumcision          ?       Much        every    way     ;    2
      7T0V    
                        TrpwTOV           jLtev    yap,        on em-                chiefly,          because       that    unto them
      o-revdrjaav                   ra Xoyia rov &eov.                               were committed the oracles of God.
Chap.        iii.       There           is    a very close connection between this chapter and the
preceding.                   There the Jews as well as the Gentiles are said to have broken
God's law, sincere obedience to which                                                    is       insisted      on as a condition of
his favour.                  In this the charge against the                                 Jews        is    renewed, and proved by
reference to the                        Old Testament                 ;   and       in this        way        the author returns to his
main        topic,           and comes to the conclusion that neither Jew nor Gentile can
expect justification by moral obedience.
      Vs.     1, 2.           After such a course of remark as pervades the previous chap-
ter, distasteful as it                         must have been                       to prejudice, ignorance                   and vanity,         it
tive,and the correct translation thus   they were entrusted with.' Wher-        :
                                                                                     '
ever the original word occurs in the sense of committing or entrusting, the
person is in the nominative, except in one case where the verb is in the in-
finitive      ;     and even here                    it       follows another verb the nominative to which                                        is
personal. See 1 Cor. ix. 17, Gal. ii. 7, 1 Thess. ii. 4, 1 Tim. i. 11, Tit. i. 3.
The term "oracles" is used in Acts vii. 38, for the divine law as received
by Moses. It may here comprehend the whole revelation as contained in
the Old Testament.   The possession of this sacred treasure principally dis-
tinguished the Hebrews from all other people, and gave them spiritual
advantages which could in no other way be secured.
   3-8. The question before put is What is the advantage of Judaism ?           :
                                                                                                                                                                                       
 3      For wliat               !       if   some did not         believe,                T yap              ;    el 7)maTt](jdv riveg,                                        i^u)       3
        shall tlicir unbelief                            make    the        fiiith        ?)   aTnoria avriji'                                  rifV         liaTLV rov
 4      of Ciod without eH'ect?                                  God         for-         i9toD          Karapy/jam                             ;       .M/}      ytvocro'                4
        bid   :    yea, let              God be          true,   but every                yivta^u)                 (5k      6 -dtoc                      a/iz/i^T/f,       TTag
        man       a    liar         ;    as    it is      written. That                   6e     dvdpojTTog                               ipevarTjc,                     Kadcog
        thou mightest bo justified in thy                                                 yfiypa-n-ai                   
                                                                                                                             utxux;                     uv   diKaiiod'^g
        sayings,            and               mightest           overcome                 iv rolg Xuyoig aov Koi viKiiaTjg
 to which an answer has just been given.                                                         Tlie question results very natu-
 rally    from the representation before made of the moral condition of the
 Jews; consequently                                 it   stands in close connection with                                                  it.           The author               says,
 "some"            Jews.                     He     might have said many, but                                      his delicacy                             of feeling leads
him      to spare his                        much        loved nation.                Comp.                  xi. 14.              '   What                   if     some,        influ-
every man a liar.' In this case, however, the Greek would most probably
be, nr) yevoiro' yevoiro de, &c.                                             The     usual construction can hardly be im-
proved.           The verb                     is   declarative, 'let                God appear                         to be,' as in                          2 Cor.           iv. 7,
"the excellency of the power                                      may          be of God," that                              is,          'may               evidently ap-
pear to be divine.'                                 The sentiment of                      the verse                    is   plain                   :
                                                                                                                                                        '
                                                                                                                                                            the fidelity of
God must be                     maintained, whatever                                 may        be the consequence as respects
every individual of mankind.'                                           His truth                is          essential,                    and of course can
never waver                 ;           but man, weak,                 sinful, unstable, is                                 always prone to error
and     falsity.                The quotation                     is   from Ps.                li.       (Sept.             1.)       6,            and corresponds
with the words of the Septuagint.                                              Kpiveadai,                    may be either                                  middle or pas-
sive.    If the former, the translation will be,                                                 '
                                                                                                         when thou judgest                                     ;'
                                                                                                                                                                    and        if    the
latter, as in          our English Bible, " when thou art judged," that                                                                         is,     w^hen        weak and
arrogant          man assumes                            to question the correctness of thy procedure.                                                                           The
                                                                                                             ^           -^VV
latter exposition agrees                  very well with the connection here, but would not
suit that in the            Psalm, the          literal translation                     of which             is,   '
                                                                                                                       that thou         mayest
be   justified in          thy speaking, (and) be pure                              in thy judging;'                     and the paral-
lelism requires the latter phrase to be equivalent                                             to,       '
                                                                                                             thy j)assing sentence.'
      In ver. 5, the             same    objection            is       again resumed, although in a different
form.        The Apostle may intend                           to speak of                 man's wickedness                      in general
not improbable that both meanings                                       may be merged                              into one,        and the
phrase express God's righteousness as shown in his offering justification and
salvation, through the                   Gospel scheme, alike to Jew and Gentile.                                                         There
appears to be a sudden suppression of the sense, an aposiopesis, as the
rhetoricians call the figure.                     The objection                    is   commenced and suddenly                                 in-
right      conclusion'?           that    God          cannot justly punish you for this faithless-
ness?'    "Taketh               vengeance;"             literally,            bringeth                  wrath           upon,       equiva-
tnith of God hath more abouiidcd rov deov iv tu> Ifii^ i/^euCT/iart
     throuj,'h                my       lie    unto     liis (,'loiy.     why             eTTKfuaaFvaev el^ ttjv S6^a%> av-
     yetam I                      also    judged as a suiner                    ?        tov, ri ^ri Kuyu)               <l)c      iiiiapritiXbr
speak as a man :" that is, as men are accustomed to speak. This phrase is
some have imagined, 'I argue with you weakly and in a way adapted to
your imperfect understanding;' but, 'I appeal to you as one reasonable
man may                      properly appeal to another.'
       Tlie careful reader will                                 have observed that the inspired author has not
yet fully met the                                 infidel      Jewish objector.                      He      has merely stopped his
mouth, by asserting the unwavering truthfulness and                                                                      fidelity               of    God          in
right.              All this the                   Jew might              grant,         and yet renew                  his objection.                      And
this    he          is       made        to       do   in the          next verse.            "    The     truth of         God"        is      evidently
identical with                         his faithfulness                   and righteousness before spoken of; and
"my         lie" is               but a stronger                mode of expressing Jewish impiety and wicked
infidelity.                       The objection                therefore does but repeat                           what had been before
said    :
            '
                If the perfect                         and true character of God become the better known
by means of what you                                     are pleased to represent as                               my         false         and wicked
behaviour,                    why         should        I,    who have become                      the occasion of advancing God's
glory, be considered and punished as a sinner, since                                                                     it   is     admitted that
through              me           God's honour                 is      augmented?                  The complete answer immedi-
ately follows.                            The       principle on which the objection rests                                         is   that detesta-
ble one M'hich justly condemns its advocates, that the end sanctifies the
means    We may do what is wrong in order to advance what is right.'
                :
                         '
The Apostle speaks of this principle as one which was calumniously charged
     1                                                                                                                                                       :
'and       why may we                   not say, as                  we   are slanderously reported to assert;' or,
supplying ri before                       //?/,     and reading                 in connection with                        on       TTOCi^jaujiev,         the
intermediate words being in a parenthesis, thus                                                       :
                                                                                                            '
                                                                                                                and why may we not do
evil to       promote good.'                        The simplest construction seems                                               to   be as follows.
After         firj    understand eori and read the clause interrogatively,                                                                           thus
'
    And     is   it    that,         &c.     "?    does         it    mvolve              this      conclusion            V        Or, supply the
imperative earo), and                         make the                sentence affirmative and imprecativc, thus                                             :
'And        let it        not be, (as          we are                 caliimniously charged to affirm,) that                                              we
may        do' &c.              The reader may                        find a similar                method of bringing out a                              full
the words so as to                           form one clause, " what advantage then do we pos-
sess?"*              It    is    remarkable, however, that he has nothing corresponding
with, " in           no wise."               Perhaps he                   felt       that this reply                   would not                suit the
equivalent to this:                          'What then? have we Jews any advantage over                                                                  the
    Gentiles in pleading exemption from                                              sin,      and consequently                    in expecting to
12 none that scekcth after God.                          They        ^/cC^twv               tov      -Btov         TravTef 12
                                                                                                                                
     oic     all   gone out of the way, they                         i$eKXivav,              d[ia        rixpei^dr^aav
     are together become unprofitable                           ;
                                                                     ovK    tan        TTOtCJv ;]^;p7/aT0T;/Ta,              ovK
     there     is      none that doeth good, no,                     lariv       tc>)<;     tvu^.       'rd(pog dveoyy- 13
is certainly the usual meaning of the Greek.    Even if the other is admis-
sible, it does not agree so well with the fact.  The sinful condition of the
Gentiles has indeed been fully exhibited in the                                              first      chapter, and as the
the charge before made, or, according to the other view of the word, con-
firms the evidence of guilt before implied, and                                        it   may be        said, in a         degree
proved.           "   Under     sin :" that           is,   subjected to        its      domination, sin being pro-
bably personified, and regarded as an imperious despot. Comp. vii. 14.
   The Apostle now proceeds to prove Jewish sinfulness by referring to
statements             made    respecting the people in their                          own        scriptures.              The 10th
verse in substance, and the following verses to the 19th even in language,
are found in the Alexandrine copy of the Septuagint of                                               Psalm       13, with this
exception that vtto in verse 13                          is   added, and that St, Paul has put the sen-
timent of verse 11               in       the form of an express negation, which in the                                      Psalm
is   only plainly implied, the second verse of which contains precisely the
same sentiment.                 It is         possible that the        words "there                is   none righteous, no,
not one,"           may       be the Apostle's                 own remark drawn from the passages
immediately afterwards                         cited.        On the third verse of the Psalm Jerome
observes as follows               :
                                          "   From      this verse    on to that where                   it is   said, there is
no   fear of        God       before their eyes, the                  Hebrew              contains nothing to corre-
spond.        It is     inquired, therefore,                 how    the Apostle uses this testimony in his
Epistle to the               Romans.             I   reply that the testimony which he adduces con-
sists   of passages interwoven together from Deuteronomy, the Psalter, and
other places of Scripture,"* lie then proceeds to                                            comment on                the   Psalm
as   it is   in the          Greek.            Breitinger, in his edition of the Septuagint, after
giving the passages at the bottom of the page, adds, " the scholiast remarks
that all these are wanting in the                              Hebrew."            The probability                is       that they
make them              coincide with the Epistle, not that they have been lost from
                              Opera, Edit. Mart. Paris. 1699,        Tom.   IL   Appendix, CoL 146.
                                                                                                                                                       ;
 14    (x)v    TO GTOiia dpag Kot mKpiag                                           asps    is    under their              lips:     whose 14
  15   ytfiei.                  'O^eig ol        rrodeg      avruv                 mouth        is full     of cursing and bittcr-
 16 EKxeai                  alj.La    
                                           o{ivrtjJi^iaical       ra-             ncss.       Their        feet are swift to         shed 15
       XaiTiopia EV rdtg odolg avrtdv                                   
                                                                                   blood   ;    destruction and misery are 16
 17 KOL 66bv elpijvTjgovK tyi-waav                                                 in their         ways;        and the way of 17
 IS ovK eoTC ^ojiog -deov dnivavTL                                                 peace have they not known. There 18
 the    Hebrew.                      They      are taken from various places of the                                   Old Testament
 verse 10           is       from Ps.         xiv. (Sept. xiil.) 1 ha the general thought;                                       11 from 2;
12 from 3               ;       13 from       v. 9,    and   cxl.   3     ;    14 from         x.   7   ;   15-17 from           Isa. lix. 7, 8,
and Prov.               i.      16; 18 from Ps. xxxvi,                        1.     See Erasmus                in loc.,    and compare
the note on verse 3 of the                                  Psalm         in Bible             de Vence,* Tom.                   vii. p.    390.
This view suits the Apostle's argument better than that which supposes
that they            were            all    taken from one Psalm.                          For, by proving that sinfulness
has in various ages been affirmed of the people or of great masses of them
by       own prophets, he shows that it need not surprise them, if the
       their
charges here made are not intended of every individual.      This is plain
from the context of the                           original passages,                  and also from the                   fact that there
are     many            to       whom         they would not apply.                             See particularly Ps. xiv.                         4,
where God's people are mentioned                                       in contradistinction to those                              who     in the
former verses are spoken of as                               fools, corrupt,               without understanding, having
become             filthy,           ignorant and careless workers of iniquity.                                             Immediately
afterwards, too, these people of                                       God          are called the generation of the
righteous and the poor whose refuge   is the Lord. " Who will venture,"
says Morus,f in reference to such passages from the Psalms, " to under-
stand them as of universal application 1"                                                  The Apostle's             description, like
that which he                        gives       of the Gentiles in the                          first       chapter,       is     evidently
only of general application.                                 It     ought, however, to be considered, that
although St. Paul                           conducts his argument with reference to the people
as a body, which                           was   sufficient for his purpose,                            yet the inference which
he     deduces                  is    certainly        true of every                  individual              of mankind, on                     all
of    whom          sin          may        justly be charged, though not all the particular sins
here specified.
      The word                       " understand eth"            in          ver. 11, is like                 "knowing"             in    ii.   4,
where see the note on                             p.   31.   "Open                 sepulchre:" This                 is    a figure for a
source of corruption, venting itself in filthy or injurious language and
calumny.                   "   "Way of peace          :"   that    is,       a religious course of                 life   which brings
along with              it      peace with        God and         one's conscience, and happiness both here
and hereafter.
      This   is   a vaUiable Bible In Latin            and French, with              critical      and     historical notes, prefaces       and
             drawn from tlie works of Calmet, De Vence, and other distinguished French
dissertations,                                                                                                                            critics
The second edition was published at Paris, 17G7-1773 in seventeen 4to volumes.
   t Herm. Sac. torn. i. p. 257.
                    4
60                                              COMMENTARY ON THE                                                           [Sect. IV.
who are under the law ; that every </pay^ Koi VTTodlKog ytVTjTCU TTog
      1   9.   The word             "   law"      in this verse is first           used for the Scriptures of the Old
Testament. Coinp. John                            x.     34,   xii.   34, xv.      2"),    and       1    Cor. xiv. 21.      Immedi-
ately afterwards                   it   moans          the system of religion, or the dispensation                                embod-
ied   and delineated                    The transition from the one meaning to the other
                                     therein.
is   natural,           and accords with analogy. The statement in the former half of
the verse               is   evidently           this,    that the descriptions contained in the places
quoted are intended of Jews. The quotations were certainly made in order
as there           is   no evidence              to show that the author intended any farther applica-
tion,      we have no                right        to assume any other.    The Apostle's remark may
seem superfluous, as the citations are so palpably descriptive of the irreligion
and wickedness of Hebrews. But national vanity and conceit would lead
them to appropriate such statements to the despised Gentiles, as unworthy
of the honourable descendants of Abraham. Some illustrations of the per-
version of the plain meaning of Scripture may be seen in Jewish commen-
tary on Isa. lii. 13                 
                     liii., of which I will cite one instance.  Presuming the
prophet's representation of vicarious suflering to be unworthy both of
himself and his people, the divine declarations to this                                                             effect are         most
unwarrantably, and in opposition to the whole context, supposed to be
uttered by ignorant Heathens. Tlius                                    David Kimchi on                      ver. 4:    "This      is   what
the nations will say                    :   truly he hath borne our grief and such like, and is their
own        language."               And on             ver. 11, he      remarks: "Thus
                                                      far, the words of the
has been before stated. If the latter half of this verse is applied exclu-
sively to Jews, the language " every                                      mouth           "   and "          all   the world "         must
be limited to them.                             And      general expressions of this sort do occur in a
restricted              meaning, and                  this is    always indicated by the context or nature
of the case.                  But, in this instance, there                      is    not sufficient reason for such a
limitation.  Although the words are intimately connected with the imme-
diately preceding quotations, from which they ate undoubtedly an infer-
ence; yet, they are probably intended to express also the result of                                                                all   the
preceding discussion                        ;   namely, that          man    in general,             both Gentiles and Jews,
are proved to be guilty, and can offer no plea to arrest the divine judg-
                    Sco      my   Jewish Babbles, Commentary on             Isa.   lii.   13liii:       pp. bot, 112, 123, H2.
                                                                                                                             
ment.      " Become            guilty      :"   This must be understood declaratively, meaning
'
    appear and be acknowledged to be                               guilty.'       Comp. 2        Cor.     iv. 7.
      20. "Therefore             :"    The conclusion               is   here drawn from the previous course
of argument, and represented as one which                                        is    legitimate and incontroverti-
ble    :
           '
               by moral obedience no human being             The connection       is justified.'
makes it certain, that moral law is what is meant, not ceremonial, of Avhich
not a word has yet been said.     Man is denoted by the term " flesh," be-
cause it expresses him as he appears to be, and perhaps intimates also his
frailty.  It is here and often elsewhere employed to designate his whole
being.     
         " For by the law is the knowledge of sin :" Koppe, who under-
stands the word law here in the same sense in which it is first used in verse
19, explains this clause thus:                      'We know, on the contrary, that the sacred
books themselves                testify that all      men are sinners.' But the word law must
have the same meaning as that                                 in     which        it    was    just used,         namely the
perfect rule of man's moral action,                     by virtue of obedience to which no man
can claim justification in the                     sight of God.   The connection between the
former and latter clauses of                      this verse is too intimate, to                             allow us to go
back, for the meaning of the term, to the                                       first    clause of verse 19.               The
Apostle here states with great brevity what he subsequently develops at
large in the 7th chapter.                        The law awakens man                           to a proper            knowledge
of moral obligation, and to a suitable consciousness of his sinfulness.                                                    This
is its     legitimate province              ;    to prepare the                mind      for a   proper reception of
the Gospel, rousing the                     man     to        a perception of his                 sins.          It   never was
intended to become the ground or instrument of his justification.
      21-26. "But now:" This                        is        evidently a designation of time, and not
merely a form of                    transition.          It    refers to the                 accomplishment of God's
purpose by Christ, and corresponds with "                                             this   time " in verse 26, while
it    is   set in contrast with the                  period of " the law and the prophets."
"    Law"       is   used here      in the sarne sense,                  and " God's righteousness"                     also, as
before.          "    The law and          the prophets "                is   a phrase equivalent            '
                                                                                                                 to the whole
religious dispensation of the                     Hebrews as embodied in the Pentateuch and
the prophetical books.' See                      Luke xvi. 16, with which comp. Matt. xi. 13. See
also Matt. xxii. 40.                  "   Witnessed
                                                  :" Here, as elsewhere, the word implies
    favourable attestation.              Comp. Luke iv. 22, Heb. xi. 2, 39. The meaning                   
of the whole verse               is    as follows   But now, in the Gospel, God's method
                                                          :
                                                               '
52                                                    COMMENTARYONTHE                                                                     [Sect. IV.
witnessed by the law and tin- 1)10- povfitVT] vnb rov vufiov Koi tg5v
tic, and very frequently for the principle in the mind of the believer. In
the former sense                               it   occurs in Gal.              i.   23,    iii.   23, 25, 1 Tim. v. 8; and in the
latter too often to                             need reference.                      In this, also,   it is very commonly used
avTOv   James ii. 1, " faith of {in) our Lord, rov Kvpiov rjudv." Comp. the
                ;
use of the word in the same chapter of James, vs. 5, 14 et seq. The idiom
is the same as the Hebrew, and it occurs in Isa. liii. 11, "his knowledge,"
meaning                   '
                              a proper knowledge of him,' and frequently in other places.
The former                      may            possibly be           its    meaning                here,    and then the idea will be
'
    God's           justification                   by means of                  the Gospel system.'                       But   this is             very
improbable, as the author immediately speaks of                                                                 believers,   and both before
and        after of failh as the principle in the                                                mind and heart of such.
       "   Unto               all    and upon             all :"      The            three last words are omitted in several
manuscripts and versions, while in many other authorities they are retained.
As  they seem to embarrass the sense, they were probably removed from
the text by some ancient transcribers, who could not satisfactorily explain
them. Thus it is easy to account for the omis^on, while for the same
reason              it    would be                  difficult to      explain the introduction of                            them     ;    and con-
sequently, the probability                                     is    in    favour of their genuineness.                             Stuart con-
siders the clause                               "upon         all     them (hat                 believe, as       a kind of parenthesis,
thrown              in to           guard against the idea that the actual bestowment of justifica-
tion       is       as universal as the offers of                                    it."       But   it is   very improbable that the
word        believers, so necessarily associated                                                with the leading thought, should be
    placed          in        any but a prominent position and if this word is not parentheti-
                                                                                            ;
    cal the others                cannot be. It has been said that the Apostle varies his pre-
    positions, without attaching to                                       them a            different       meaning.         This   may some-
    times be the case.                               But Gal.        i.    1,        which has been referred to as proof,                               is
    not at all in point, as there is the strongest probability that each of the
    prepositions there used has                                     its    own           distinct     and appropriate            signification.
Here unlo may refer to the offer of justification to all, and upon to the
      and adjectives                   may be          qualified             by the word               believers,            and the meaning                           be,
      'offered        and given to                 all       who        possess the qualification of                               faith.'
            Now,       in       accordance with one general thought which pervades the Epistle,
      namely, that the blessings of                                     justification         by           faith are          through the Gospel
      intended for                all,      the author remarks, that no difference                                                 is   made between
      Jew and              Gentile, for            all        are in the            same          condition, that of sinners.                                          He
      does not         mean            that all are equally guilty,                               it is     enough            for his           purpose that
      all   must be classed                      in the           same category,             that of sinners,                      and consequently
      such as have no natural claim to the divine flivour, which they have failed
      to deserve               and obtain.          "The glory of God                                :"   That        is,   his approbation,                          and
      the happiness both here and hereafter which shall be bestowed on those                                                                                          who
      secure         it.        This corresponds with the meaning of the word in various
      places.          See John                 v. 44, xii.             43; also Rom,                      v. 2, viii. 18.
                                                                                                                                      "Being                     justi-
      fied :"    With            the     Greek         participle,              we may understand                            oc    elai.,    who            are,      and
      translate both as a verb, or                                     we may         retain the participial construction.                                              In
      the latter case, the                        most natural connection                                   will           be with the preceding
      verse,     '
                     all fail,         or       come     short of God's glory, being justified freely' &c.                                                              In
      the former, the connection will be with ver. 22, the intermediate portion be-
      ginning with, " for there                              is    no   difference," being parenthetical, thus                                          :
                                                                                                                                                             '
                                                                                                                                                                 all   be-
      lievers        (who are) justified                     freely' &c. This                is   the       more probable arrangement.
    "nJ     "   Eedemption," w^hich                               is   sometimes limited                      in its         meaning,             is   here and
      elsewhere employed in                                  its       most extensive                      signification,               comprehending
      complete ultimate liberation from sin and                                                   all its         consequences.                        It        occurs
      in the following places                            :    Luke           xxi, 28, here,                Rom.            viii.   23,      1     Cor.           i.    30,
      Eph.      i.   7, 14, iv. 30, Col,                      i.       14,   Heb.     ix. 15, xi.             35       :    In the last               it     is       ren-
      dered in our translation "deliverance."                 "Freely:" Locke has a note on 
      this verse               which ought not to be passed over unnoticed. " Redemption by
      Jesus Christ does not import (that) there was any compensation                                                                                   made             to
      God by paying what was                                           of equal value, in consideration whereof they
.     (were) delivered                      ;   for that is inconsistent with                                     what        St.       Paul expressly
      says here,                viz,     that sinners are justified                               by God                   gratis       and of              his free
      bounty."                 It is   true that sinners are so justified                                    by God, but then                          it is          also
      true, that this respects the                                      payment of any compensation or equivalent
      by    the7n ; and,                moreover, whatever                            God         chooses to accept                         may             well be
      called an equivalent,                       and on                this    ground and also on that of                                  its       own         suffi
      ciency to effect the end in view, Christ's sacrifice                                          was eminently so. See an
      excellent note of                     Whitby on                  Pleb, x, 14,           Mr. Locke proceeds "What this                 :
      redemption                is St,          Paul     tells us,             Eph,    i.   7, Col,          i.   14. 'even the forgiveness
'64                                           COMMENTARY ON THE                                                                      [Sect. IV,
faith iji his blood, to declare his trioTecjg hf rCi avTov aifiari, elg
without any ii-gard to                        its   etymological force.                     With respect to the conclud-
ing remark in the note under review, "that                                                ifwe will strictly adhere to the
metaphor, the price paid must be to those                                                 from whom we are redeemed,
viz. sin      and Satan;                  (Tit.   ii.    14,    'redeem us/ro?;i                 all iniquity ;^)              and that the
price could not be paid to                              God      in strictness            of justice, unless the same per-
son ought to have the thing redeemed, (Rev. v. 9, 'hast redeemed                                                                                 to
Ood,'')     and the price paid                      ;" I       consider the following as a sufficient answer.
In Tilus iniquity                   is   plainly put for          its effects,           and these being under God's con-
    coming on the sinner through God's permission and as a just punish-
trol,
ment, and removeable by means which God alone could adopt and carry
out, the redemption-price (to use a figurative                                                 term which ought                     to   be em-
ployed with                suitaljle discretion.)                     may      well be said to have been paid to
God     ;   and, inasmuch as                        God        accepted            it,   may     also     be well said                   to   have
been satisfactory.*
      "Set forth:"                    W^iclif has               "ordeyned," and the marginal reading                                             is
      Wahl,    In   III*    Clavls  Novi TestamenU Philolopica, published at Lolpslc, 182-J, (from wliicli Dr.
Eoblnson      i>rcparcil tlic first eilition of bisGreek and English Lexicon of tlio New Testjiment, Ando-
ver, 1S2j,)   seems        to   have had in view some sucli objection as that of Locke, when under the word
redemption, uTzo/.VTpuair, ho speaks of Christ, by laying                                 down   Iiis life,   paying as   it   were a ransom,
and adds In brackets, Deo no an dlabolo? characterising the question and not inappropriately by the
term inepte. It certainly i3 not In character with that wisdom which Is often associated with the
name    of Locke.
                                                                                                                                                        ;
covering over and of propitiating both.                                                         See Levit.      xvi.        13-15,            in Ileb.
and Sept.               In      Exod. xxv.                  17,    emdejia           is       added to iXaorripiov.                      Our Eng-
lish translation uses                       the term " mercy-seat."                                    This    may         be regarded as a
symbol of           CInist,           and he as our propitiation be denoted by the word.                                                                     It
has been objected that this exposition involves a confusion of figure, Christ
being spoken of as the propitiatory or mercy-seat                                                            itself,       and also           in   other
places as the victim whose blood                 was sprinkled on it. To this it may be
replied, that as                 the mercy-seat and the sprinkled blood were both typical
of Christ, he                may      '   properly be described                                  by     either, as          he     is    elsewhere
represented as both priest and                                      sacrifice.                Still, it is    well to avoid any such
confusion of figure where                                   it is    unnecessary, and therefore -dvna should be
supplied, as            is      done by the best                         critics.             The expiatory               sacrifice      of Christ
will then        be what the Apostle intends.
      "   Through            faith in his blood."                          The blood of Christ                       is    put for his             suffer-
ings      and death, as                   in v. 9,            and various other                       places, all of            which become
frigid    on any other principle than that of the atonement.                                                               It   conveys more
than the simple idea of death.                                            It    is    death undergone as expiation, in
accordance with Heb.                                  ix.     22,     "without shedding of blood there                                             is       no
remission," and therefore almost always used to express his death as
atoning.       The attempt of Taylor of Norwich to identify the meaning of
" the     blood of Christ" with his " perfect obedience and goodness," certainly
needs no refutation.                            The reader may                       see       what    this writer          says in defence
of his view         by          consulting his                    Key     to the Apostolic Writings, sections 120,
121, 122, prefixed to his Paraphrase with Notes on the                                                               Eomans,             4to. Lon-
don, 1745.                  A   construction which would connect this phrase with the                                                              word
propitiation            is      too harsh to be admitted without very strong reasons, which
in the present case                        do not appear.                           The atoning death of                           Christ          is       the
object of the faith here mentioned.                                             I   have before remarked on ver. 22,                                         p.
52, that the object of faith                                 is    frequently expressed in the genitive.                                             This
may be       denoted as the                           first       form.        But others              also occur.              Secondly, the
simple dative.                   See Matt.                  xxi. 25, 32,            Rom.         iv. 3, x. 16,        Gal.        iii.   6,    2 Tim.
i.   12, Tit.    iii.   8,      James           ii.   23,     1    John    iii.     23, v. 10.           Thirdly, the dative, with
ev.       See Mark               i.   15, Gal.              iii.   26, Eph.           i.      15, 1Tim. iii. 13, 2 Tim. iii. 15.
These agree with the passage before                                            us.        I   do not refer to 2 Pet. i. I, as it is
at least exceedingly doubtful                                 whether " righteousness"                         is    there the object of
faith.      Fourthly, the dative with em.                                         See Luke xxiv. 25, Rom.                         ix.    33, x. 1 1,
1    Tim.   i.   16, 1 Pet.               ii.    6.     Fifthly, the accusative simply.                                    See John            xi.      26,
TovTO and               1    Cor.         xiii. 7.            Sixthly, the                 accusative with                 elg.      See Matt.
56                                               COMMENT AUY ON THE                                                        [Sect. IV.
      that he         inij,'ht    he just, and the jus-                        Kaioavvr]^ avrov tv rui vvv Kaipu>,
      titier    of liim            whieh              helievctli      in       t/r    to elvai uvruv 6iKaiov koX
27 Jesus.             Where           is     boasting then                ?    diKaiovvTa rbv tK ncOTeojg                      'It^-
xviii. 6,       Mark         ix.      42,        John        vi.    29, 35, 40, 47, Acts xx. 21, xxiv. 24, xxvi.
18, Gal.        ii.    IG, Col.            ii.   5.      Seventhly, the accusative with eni.                              8ee Acts
xvi. 31,    Rom.            iv. 5.           And       lastly, irgog          with an accusative.            See    1    Thess.       i.   8.
These are            all   the forms that appear in the                                   New    Testament.         Kuinoel con-
siders did in Acts                    iii.    IG as connected with avrou him as the object of                                    faith.
Gen. XX. 13, some have given                                   it   that signification here, 'for the manifesta-
tion of his benignity.''                          And         it    has even been afiirmed that, while                           strict
justice    and even severity                            is    the prominent thought intended in ver. 25,
kindness and favour are designated in the next.                                                         See Olshausen          in loc.
But    this is        an arbitrary distinction, and ought not to be assumed of the
same term              in so close a connection                               and introduced             in so similar a         way.
In the    New          Testament the word                            is   never used merely               in this sense.              The
idea of kindness                 is   sometimes implied, but some other properties necessary
to constitute a sincerely religious character are always comprehended.
And    as the adjective "just" in ver.                                    26 has an evident reference to it, and is
also as evidently antithetic to "justify," the                                       same general meaning must
be conveyed by the noun.                                  This       may       be identical with that          in   i.   17,   iii.   21,
God's method of                    justification.                   This method            is    manifested by the propiti-
atory sacrifice of Christ through which sins are pardoned.                                                      But the most
probable meaning                      is     God's       justice,         which      is   so strikingly displayed to the
world     in the           atoning           sufil-rliigs          and death of Christ              in   honour of the divine
law violated by human transgression.                                                His sense of         justice in respect to
that law        is    shown, in his requiring satisfaction                                  in   order that he might remit
punishment.                 Thus he              is    able to be just, and yet to justify, that                         is,   to par-
don and acquit the                           believer.             "That he may                  be,"    may mean,         '
                                                                                                                               that he
may    continue to be                   ;'
                                              or,     probably,           it is     another instance of the declarative
sense.      Compare                   the conclusion of the note on ver. 19.
                                                                                                            "For," or 'on
account        of,'    " the remission of sins that are past."                                      The marginal           reading,
"passing over,"                  is     more            literal,      but      it    implies what the other directly
affirms.         " Past sins" are, no doubt, those of former times, whether com-
ix. 15.    "    For        the remission"                 <Szc.     may       be connected with the clause " f lith in
his blood," the intermediate phrase being                                            thrown      in parenthetically.            Then
the idea will be, that                       God        hath set forth Christ as a propitiation, by faith
                                                             
in    whose atoning                      sacrifice past sins,                   through the divine forbearance have
been passed over, and consequently remitted.                                                         The           idea in the parenthesis,
being prominent                         in the author's               mind,         is    therefore immediately expressed,
and afterwards repeated as the engrossing thought, God's                                                                           justice having
now, through the Gospel plan, been conspicuously displayed, while at the
same time he                            can, consistently                  with his moral                           character, justify              the
offender          who         believes.
      Tbi' eK niaTeo)g is equivalent to                                    rbv Tnorevovra, the believer.                                    It is   like
o't   i^ epi-&eiag             ii.      8,    the contentious, oi                   m vofiov,                iv.       14, they that are of
(meaning depend on) the law.                                          Upbg      evSei^tv in ver.                        26   is    evidently a re-
sumption of                   elg        evdei^iv in the preceding one, and                                                 both are properly-
rendered               in     our English translation by the same phrase.                                                          In the former
verse God's righteousness                              is   said to            be manifested                       in reference to the for
giveness of past sins through Christ's atonement                                                         ;    in the latter,          by showing
that    now           in the        Gospel dispensation, he can be just and yet justify the be-
liever.           But the two prepositions may well be reg;jrded as exactly synony-
mous, and the Apostle                                may     vary his expressions without intending any
change of meaning.                             We      have an instance of this                              in the case of ek              and 6td
in ver. 30.
of the Gentiles ? Yes, of the Gen- Saicjv 6 dedg fiovov ovxt Koi ;
30 tiles also: seeing it is one God, idvcjv; vat Kul y^vcjv. 'R-jei- 30
which shall justify the circum- "rrtp elg 6 deoi;, be diKaitJOU tte-
ble.        In vor, 80,            " circum!;i.siou"'                     and "           uiiclrcu incision"                         are abstracts for
concretes,          meaning Jews and Gentiles, as                                              in       ii.   2G, and iv. 12.    The prep-
ositions Ik             and did seem to be employed                                        in the             same sense and for the sake
of variety.              They are both used                              in reft-rence to                     the same topic, justification.
See     v. 1,      Gal.    iii.         24, and             ii.   IG.      In the latter text both occur.                                          As the
first   preposition                is   used in connection with the Jews, the phrase Ik                                                           mareug
may      stand in contradistinction to Ik TrepiroiiTjg or                                                                t'/c   vop-ov.        See   iv.   12,
14,     and especially                  16.           The         article       connected with the latter Trtcrrswf                                    indi-
cates that the faith which justifies the Gentiles                                                               is   the        same as        that which
justifies the           Jews.
      31.      "Law" may                     here           mean          the Scriptures of the                                  Old Testament,             as
the     word       is   used in ver. 19,                          Then the sense                        will        be    this    :   'Does      this doc-
the person and history of              Abraham. Stuart thinks " this exegesis quite
plain."            Still   the Apostle may employ the term in the sense of the moral
law, and affirm that his doctrine of justification, so far from subverting, does
in reality sustain                  it.       It      does        so,     by showing its spirituality, and the neces-
sity of vindicating its character in                                        demanding a reparation of its violated
honour         ;   by making a knowledge of it requisite to convince a man of his
sinfulness,         and to bring him to receive the Gospel scheme by a living
faith    ;   and as        this         very          faith recognises the                          moral excellencies of the law,
it   constantly regards                      it       as the rule of               life,       and consequently establishes                                its
SECTION V.
Chap. IV.
IV.         Ti ovv epoijiev; 'AjSpaan Tov                               What      shall        we     say then           ?   that IV.
      rrarepa     i'juCjv evpi^Ktvai Kara                          Abraham our             father, as pertaiuiiig
2     odpKa',Eiyap'A(3pad[J,e^tpj(j)v                              to the flesh,           hath found?                   For       if   2
ix.   14, 30.              And        "Wiclif   seems      to    have intended             this division, if I                     may
judge from Bagster's reprint                           in his   English Hexapla            :
                                                                                                "   What thanne                   schulu
we    seie   :     that      abraham oure               fadir aftir the fleisch foonde :" Grotius                                   and
Le Clerc adopt                   this punctuation.               And   it   appears quite natural and proba-
ble, particularly as the                    Eabbinical formula,              1?a"'?a? js^'^i*       ^iiif2,   what       is   here to
say, (or to           be    said,)        accords exactly with the Apostle's words.                                     See Suren-
husius, or Buxtorf's                      Hebrew Abbreviations under                      ^^>3) p.       126, Basil. 1G30,
and Lexicon Chal, Talmud,                            et Rabbin., Basil. 1G30, col. 81, top.                             It   having
been proved that the Jew cannot claim                                  justification           on the ground of moral
obedience, the Apostle very naturally inquires, what then                                                     is   to   be said or
done    ?        Is   connection with           Abraham to be claimed and appealed                                       to   1     Did
he find acceptance                       with God Kara odgKa, according to the flesh ?
    The connection and meaning of these last words have also been the sub-
ject ofno little discussion. They are often associated with Abraham, thus:
"our father according to the flesh," that is, in the course of nature. But
their position in the sentence will not allow this, and some old transcribers
urged, that, on this exposition, the words are unnecessary, and add nothing
to the sense; and, moreover, that, although they are often used of lineal
descent^ they              never occur in reference to ancestry.                           It is     not to be supposed
that the Apostle                      would have used them merely to round                                     off a sentence.
                                                                                                                                     ;
In this sense, the           word "         flesh"          is   not unfrequently used, as in                  I'hil.        iii.   4,
where " confidence               in the flesh" is illustrated                          by various     external particu-
lars of superiority wliieh the                          author might claim over those posscsseil by
many      others.         The prominent                 thouglit here             is   certainly that of       Abraham's
covenant relation to                  God   sealed           by      the rite of circumcision.                     It   may be
allowed         that, " in the          immediate context, the Apostle                           is   showing, not the
mefficacy of circumcision to secure the patriarch's acceptance with God,
but the inefiicacy of his works in general."* This is undoubtedly true
and the quotation from the Psalm immediately afterwards made shows
that    it is   the moral law which he there refers to, the breach of which re-
quired forgiveness.                   But although                  this is true of the          immediate context,
it is   no   less true, as            appears from the subsequent verses, that the circum-
cision of       Abraham          is   the point which he has in mind, and which he                                        Ijriiigs
But such speculations are                   useless,             and wholly inconsistent with the simpli-
city    and practical character of                          St. Paul's           mode     of thinking and writing.
Abraham, of course, had a                     right to challenge the honour of                            men; but                  in
the point of his justification, he, like others, failed in that perfect obedience
      ypa^/)              Xtyei        ;
                                                enioTevae                    6e     before God.                       For what           saith       tlie       3
      'AiSpadfi ru) ^eai, Kol eXoyia-&rj                                            Scripture               ?    Abraham           believed God,
which alone could give a claim with God. This meaning coincides with
what immediately follows: 'the Scripture ascribes his justification to his
faith.'         See Gen. xv.                      6.      "It was counted unto                                       him    for righteousness:"
tJKit    is,    '
                     his faith         was regarded                     as available to his justification.'                                    Nothing
but one's faith                  is   ever said to be thus " counted" or reckoned.                                                             For does
not     mean         instead           oj\      implying that                     faith       was substituted                      in the place of
that is, made over to him and regarded as his, by which imputation he is
eousness        that righteousness might                                         be imputed                    ;"       that    is,    that     Christ's
moral obedience might be accounted as the obedience of the                                                                              justified      man
in   consequence of his                              faith.         A    careful examination of all the texts con-
nected with this subject has compelled                                              me        to    abandon                this    view, which for
many      years in early                        life I    regarded as true and scriptural.                                               There        is       no
passage in this chapter where the word righteousness, dtitaioavvr], occurs in
this sense.               It     always means                      justification.                  Dr. Robinson says that " the
righteousness of faith so reckoned to believers,                                                                is   according to Paul the
ground or occasion of                             their justification                '
                                                                                         before God.' "                         Lex. under 6tKai-
oavi'T], 2,          b)    /3) (2),          p.      184.          I   would rather                    say,           it   is    their justification
       and       it    wiw counted unto him for                                    avriT)        elg        diKaioavvTjv.                      Tip       de      4
4      ri^'liteousncss.       Now to him that                                      tpyusop'i'w                   6     jiio^uc;       ov Aoyt-
       Avotketh         is   the reward not reckoned                               ^urai          Kara           X"P^^'i        ^-^            KaTci
5      of grace, but of debt.                       But            to   him        dcpeiXijiia          
                                                                                                            tw       tJt ft?)   tpyaL,ofuvu>,                    5
       tluxt    workcth        not, but belicveth                          on      TiLOTEdovTL                   di.    inl      ruv SiKai-
       hini that justilieth the ungodly, his                                       ovvTa rbv                 dae^T],            Xoyii^erai                Tj
longinjT to. A due attention to the meaning of the two words, will, I think,
determine that of every passage                                           in the      chapter wherein they occur.                                        Thus,
in vs. 3, 5, 9, 22, 23, 24,                         '    his faith           was reckoned to him as justification.'
Stuart indeed says on ver.                                   (5,     that   this " makes no tolerable sense."  But
it   makes a very                  clear    and good sense.                               We     may        either regard the                     noun as
the abstract for the concrete, justification for that which justifies                                                                      ;   or as used
for its instrument or condition, according to the                                                      terms of the Gospel.                               Then
the language will be similar to that of                                               1   John    v. 4, " this is the victory that
overcometh the world, our fiiith," which evidently means that faith is the
principle             whereby the victory                            is   gained: thus faith would have a similar
relation to justification.                          In ver. 6,               we may read,                   'unto        whom God                    reckon-
eth justification,'                 maketh              it   over to his account                       ;    that       is,whom he                    regards
as justified.                In ver. 11, " the righteousness of the faith" is equivalent to
'the justification which                           is    from           faith    ;'       and, "that righteousness might be
imputed unto them also" conveys                                             this thought, 'that justification                                    might be
accounted to them,' or regarded as                                              theirs.          In ver. 13, the promise                                 is    said
to be       '
                through the justification which                                       is    of   faith.'             Hence       it       follows that,
whether           faith is said to             be reckoned unto a                               man        for justification or justifica-
tion     is     said to be reckoned unto him, the idea                                              is      the      same       in    each case; in
the one, his faith                  is    represented as availing to his justification                                                ;   in the other,
4, 5. Verse four lays down a general principle, which would apply in this
case were              its   application possible.                              In the next,                "   him         that workcth                     not"
is    emphatic.               It    implies that he doth not                                    work with the view of securing
his justification thereby; to obtain this he believes.                                                               In the     language of the
Homily on Salvation, " faith excludeth good works, so that we may not do
them to this intent, to be made just by doing of them." So in ver. 14,
" they who are of the law " does not denote Jews merely, but Jews who
depend on the law as the means of attaining the blessing referred to. The                                                                                
       1   am   aware that        >rr.   HaliUnc on          iii.   21, nfllrms that       "the word translated righteouitneita docs not
    eicnify ptMiflcation.'^           But   tlie   statements of this dogmatical writer aro not always to be relied on,
    or bis censures to bo regarded.
Ch.IV.4-7.]                      epistle TO THE ROMANS.                                                                              63
phrase        "him     that justifieth the ungodly"                              is     not merely a periphrasis for
God.          It   refers to     him       as the sinner's justifier,                       and the     faith          implied must
act     upon him        in this character,                    and thus             it   hecomes available                    to the be-
liever's justification.                   So    in ver. 24, " belief                    on him that raised up Jesus"
comprehends            faith in his resurrection,                      and consequently                 in all the           important
doctrines connected with                        it.
      6-8. See Ps. xxxii.                  1, 2.      "Describeth the blessedness                             :"       properly, pro-
nounces or declares to be happy.                                      Compare               Gal. iv. 15,          '
                                                                                                                      the felicitating
of yourselves.'             It   implies a condition of happiness.                                      This blessed condi-
tion     is   that of forgiveness of sins,                    which are not reckoned to the transgressor.
David         is   said to describe the                  happy              state of the justified                     man, and the
quotation          makes    it   consist in his having                       been pardoned.                   Hence two           con-
clusions are evidently deducible                              ;   first,     that this state of acceptance with
God, which the Psalmist so highly eulogizes,                                             is    not the consequence of a
perfect obedience, for                    it is    the state of a pardoned sinner                             ;       and secondly,
that justification and forgiveness of sins                                       mean         the   same     thing.          In confir-
mation of the           last     remark, the reader                         is   referred to the language of St.
Paul     in the     synagogue of Pisidia,                         "   Through           this   man     is   preached unto you
the forgiveness of sins                   ;   and by him               all       that believe are justified                   from   all
things,       from which ye could not be                              justified         by     the law of Moses."                 Acts
xiii.    38, 39.       What          is   the      meaning of being                        justified   from           things, but ab-
solved from charges                  1     The idea           that justification, in the Apostle's view of
it, is   something over and above a state of forgiveness which comprehends,
of course, what upon Gospel principles and promises belongs to such a
state, is          unfounded.             The pardoned                 is    also a justified               man, cleared and
acquitted of          all   charges which                may          at   any time have been brought against
him.
      In order to illustrate the consistency of this                                       view of justification with that
of our        own   annex the following quotations from the Homily on the
                     church,     I
      is       the       man     to   whom           tlie    Lord     will       piog           ai'jyp,       a>       ov    fuj   Xoyiarj-ai
9     not impute                 sin.       Comrth          this bless-          Kvpiog                  ufiapriav.                'O         fiaKa-
      cdncss then upon the circumcision                                          piap-oq             ovv ovTog tra                 ttjv nepi-
      only, or                 upon the uncircumcision                           ronrjv,             ?}      koI       inl    rifV          dnpo^v-
      also      ?     for       we      say        tliat    faith     was        ariav           ;       Xiyojiev yap, on.                      tXo-
Paul speakcth of when he                                    saith,     no       man        is   justified l)y the                  works of the
law, &c.             ;    and again, we he justified                           freely, &c.           The sum of                   all      Paul's dis-
putation             is this;         that \(justice come of works, &c. And, as St. Peter saith,
of Christ                all    the     prophets do witness that through his name all they that
believe in               him     shall receive the remission                           of sins.              And        after this wise to                     be
justijied''''             &c.    And,             after quoting               from    St.      Ambrose                 the words " without
works, by faith only, freely                                     we   receive remission of our sins" the Ilomily
adds       :
                "   These and other         we he justijied by faith only,
                                                           like sentences, that
we do read oft times in the best and most antient writers." Afterwards                                                             
we meet with this language: "In this matter oi forgiving of sin by                                                                                    
Chiist we have remission of our sins or justification.''''  And in the third
part of the sermon we have the following language       " Our own works do                                         :
not justify us; to speak proiicrhj of our justification; that is to say, our
works do not merit or deserve remission of our sins, and make us of unjust
just before God ; but God of his own mercy through the only merits and
deservings of his son Jesus Christ doth justify us.                                                                    Nevertheless because
faith      doth directly send us to Christ for remission of our sins, and that by
faith      given us of God we embrace the promise of God's mercy and of the
remission of our sins, therefore the Scripture useth to say, that faith with-
out works doth                     justify.'''             It is     undeniable that the Ilomily represents                                                  for-
meaning, as before iii. 30, Jews and Gentiles. " For we say :" For is illa-
before his circumcision, and he received this rite as a sign and seal, (that
is,   as the words mean, an external attestation both to himself and                                                                            all oth-
ers   who           should        know of its                reception,) of his justification                                by the         faith   which
he had before his circumcision.                                            For    this sense of seal, see                               1    Cor.     ix. 2,
 Ch. IV. 8-n.]                               EPISTLE TO THE KOMANS.                                                                                 65
and John              vi.       27.        This   is     so plainly the Apostle's meaning, that                                          it   would
be superfluous                   to       add one word of exposition.                                Instead of the genitive                   "of
circumcision" in ver. II, several ancient authorities read the accusative.
But     this is            doubtless a gloss introduced                                by some                transcriber       who       did not
understand the idiom.                                 The   genitive          is   exegetical.                  "    The   sign of circum-
cision "        is    equivalent to               '
                                                      the sign, that              is   circumcision,' just as, in                    2 Cor.         v.
the context.                    Professor Stuart thinks " that                              it       should be referred to the
compound                 idea designated                 by" both          the words.                    The     collocation of the ar-
ticle in      the          Greek favours the construction,                                  '
                                                                                                which           faith   he had      ;'
                                                                                                                                          and       its
correctness                is    sustained            by    the concluding                  words of                 ver. 12, " that faith
which he had."                       "   That he might be               :"       The     original             might be rendered,               '
                                                                                                                                                    so
that he       might             b.'        But the common translation                                    is   preferable, as            it   gives
a reason for this divine arrangement.                                                  Abraham's                faith   and consequent
justification              preceded his "Circumcision                         ;    and one reason for                       this   was, that
he might be the spiritual parent of                                      all believers,                  even those who had not
been circumcised.                           Aid, through, here has the meaning of notwithstand-
ing, as in           ii.    27.   In        ver. 12,       Koppe puts a colon                           after " father of circum-
cision."            He      considers          all    the rest of the verse as referring to the Gentiles.
He     is   induced to adopt this view                              by   ver. 16.               But           this   makes a mere              rep-
etition of           what had been said                     in the latter part              of the preceding verse, where
the Gentiles are plainly spoken                                  of.       It      is   better to regard this portion as
referring to Jews,and as stating the condition without which not even they
can claim spiritual connection with Abraham namely, the imitation of                             ;
that   fixith        which governed the                       life     and conduct of the patriarch.                                     Jewish
writers frequently speak of circumcision as a seal and sign, and of                                                                Abraham
as the fixther of the faithful.                              See Tholuck                in loc.               The dative rotg imme-
diately following the genitive Treptro/i^^' is an instance of that looseness of
                     5
66                               COMMENTARY ON THE                                                           [Sror. V.
12 putotl unto them also:                   oiid    the         Trarffxi    TTtpironTic, rdtg           ovK    U
     father of circumcision, to         them who                TTepiTOftTif; fiuvov,       dkAa       Kal rotg
     arc not of the circumcision                   only,        OTOixovai Tolg Ixyeai Ttjg feV
     but    who   also   walk    in the steps of                aKpoftva-ia niaTECjg rov Trarpbg
     that faith of our father           Abraham,                7//WJV 'Afipadfi.  Ov yap 6ta 13
     which he had, being yet uncircum-
illative particle " for," which, in this view, refers to what immediately pre-
cedes.  Or it may be logically connected with ver. 10, thus: 'as the pro-
mise was made to Abraham before he was circumcised, it was not by law,
but by justification through faith.'
   The first point of inquiry is the meaning and application of the word
"seed"      in this verse.        Its   usual meaning                 is   progeny, descctidants, subject
however      to such modifications                 and restrictions as the context                      in   which     it
occurs      may     require.        That here              it    does not embrace                all    Abraham's
descendants       is   self-evident     ;    and the nature of the discussion shows that                              it
does not even comprehend                    all his    descendants through                  Israel.     It   must be
limited to his spiritual progeny, the faithful.                              But      in   what sense can        it   be
said, that to these a           promise was made of being heir or lord or possessor
(for this is the       import of the Greek,) of the world                         1     Some have attempted
to limit the meaning of the   word to the land of Canaan. Thus Schleusner
under Koonog, No. 5, and Wahl, 2, b) (i3). But it never has this limited
signification, and the texts referred to by these lexicographers as proof are
Messiah's kingdom along with themselves. See Isa. liv. 3, and Amos ix.
 12,   where the words "inherit" and "possess," are translations of the same
 Hebrew       term.       Thus they are represented as taking possession of the con-
 verts to Christ, and in proportion as his         kingdom extends in the world,
 Abraham's         spiritual     progeny become lord of                       it.      In this     way       the vast
Cii.   IV. 12,13.]                     EPISTLE TO THE KOMANS.                                                                  67
Gen.        xii. 7, xiii,           15, xv. 7,      xii. 3, xviii.            and xxvi, 4; or rather
                                                                         18, xxii. 18,
a development of their                           full   meaning, as springing from the typical rela-
tion of the                   possession of the promised land                            to    the      enjoyment of the
heavenly inheritance.                            See Heb.
                                        and note, pp. 57, 58. Accord-
                                                                iii.     11,
ing to this view, it will relate to that universal empire, which was
promised by the prophets to Abraham's posterity through the Messiah.
Compare             the texts just referred to in Isaiah,                               Amos, and            also other simi-
lar places.                   In    whatever light         this      empire was regarded by the Jews,
it    was no doubt                    spiritual in its nature,                  and involves the universal                     ex-
tension of the true church of                             God        in its real         moral and             spiritual     char
acter.
is made void, and the promise made KtKtvoiraL i) iriarig Kul Karrip-
of the justification which comes by                              faith,   the language shows that his                        mind
rests on the blessings intended for                              Abraham and                  his spiritual      progeny        in
       14, 15. "Tliey that are of the                      law     :"     This phrase          is   interpreted      by some
of " those           who enjoy           the privilege of living under the law."                               So Stuart        in
the Professor does, the qualifying terms "only"' and "without walking in
the steps of              Abraham           as to faith."          It   cannot        mean simply Jews, all the
pious and believing of                       whom       were undoubtedly                heirs. Most probably it
describes those               who were connected with and depended on                                         the law    ;   as in
Gal. iii. 7, 9, " they that are of faith," is equivalent to true believers, and
in V. 24, " they that are of Christ," to such as are really and spiritually
united to him.                Thus the Apostle's remark                       is     true and important.             '
                                                                                                                         If   they
who look for justification through the law whether ceremonial or moral,
become thereby heirs of the heavenly inheritance, faith is superseded and
useless,          and the promise becomes good for nothing.' This is a necessary
conclusion, for the inheritance         was originally "given by promise," as the
author expressly asserts in Gal.                            iii.   18.       In the next verse he proceeds to
state        that this            happy        result    of justification             and heirship cannot come
through law, which                     inflicts    punishment on             its     transgressor.            He   then adds
as a general principle, that transgression implies law and cannot exist
without            it;    a principle which the Apostle elsewhere lays                                        down   in other
terms, (see. v. 13 and vli. 8,) and which is true in its most unlimited extent,
consistently with                     what has been             said.    The benefit referred to comes by
faith,      and thus         is   according to favour.                  The Iva is most likely ecbatic and
not     telle; in other               words,      it   rather expresses the fact than the direct inten-
tion.         With Ka-a               x^-pi-v   compare         ver. 4.      Now        follows the reason           why       the
promised, might be secured to the whole seed, that is, the whole body of
Abraham's spiritual progeny, the faithful, whether they be Jews or Gen-
tiles.            The word only              plainly implies, that the portion                      of"   the seed which
i-nayyeUav Tiavrl roi aTrepfiari, might be sure to all tlie seed not ;
       ov Tfe) iK TOV voiiov novov, dXXa                                         to that only which is of the law,
       Kal    Tw   iK      TTiOTEGjg 'APpadjJ,, og                               but to that also which is of the
17 ioTC TTaT7)Q TTavTCdv ?J^wv, {Kuddg                                           faith of Abraham, who is the father
of the promise             ;    and therefore the phrase "of the law" cannot have exactly
the    same meaning here                as in ver. 14, but must denote Jewish believers.
These are a part of the patriarch's                                      spiritual         progeny, and are here placed
in contradistinction to the Gentile believers, expressed                                                        by the next clause,
" but to that also which                            is    of the faith of Abraham."                                 The word also
marks something                  additional to what had just been said, and therefore the
clause containing               it   must be understood with such limitation otherwise it                             ;
of it only who are Jews, participating in the benefits of the law, but to
those also Avho, although they have not the law, possess the                                                         same     principle
of     faith   which Abraham had.'                                  As       applicable to this last statement, the
Apostle quotes from Gen.                            xvii.    5  "I have made thee a father of many
                                                                    :
      God, who quickcneth the dead, and                              ovvTog Toiig VEKpovg                         Koi     Ka-
      calletli     tliose thinfj^s       which be not                Xovvro^         TO,    fiTJ    ovra     <1)^       dvra.
18 as     thou-^li tliey were.            Who afjainst               "Of     Trap'         tATTifia        ^tt'     ^TrMt 18
      hope believed              in    hope,    that        he       tTriaTtvatv, eig to yevtadat av-
      might beeome the father of many                                Tov 7Ta~(pa TToAAtDv                e-dvCjv,       Kara
      nations, according                to that      which           TO    elpT]fif:VOV      
                                                                                                   OVTOig tOTUl TO
      was spoken, So              shall   thy seed bo.               arrtpftaaov     Koi fuj dadtri'iaag 19
19    And        being not weak in              faith,      he       T^ TxioTEi ov KaTcvoTjoe TO tav-
      considered not his    own body now                             TOV Odlia tJStj VeVEKQCOfitVOV, tKO-
      dead,      when he was about a him-                            TOVTatTTjq 7T0V VTidpX^^': "^'^^ ~^^
      dred years old, neither yet                        the         veKpcjaiv Trjc prjTpag "Ldppaq, elg 20
20 deadness           of     Saroli's      womb; he                  6e    TTjV      errayyeXiav tov deov
      staggered not at the promise of                                ov dLEKpidrj t^ dmaTia, aAA'
      God        tlirough unbelief;            but      was          eve6vvap.u)dr]              Ty      moTEi, 6ovg
      strong in faith, giving glory to God,                          do^av     TU)     deC), Koi           TTXT]po(f)OpTj-      21
21 and           being fully persuaded                 that          deig, oti o TrfjyyeXTai,                    dvvaTog
      what he had                promised,          he was           ia-L Koi TToiTjoai.                 Aid koI eXo- 22
22 able also to perform.                   And       there-          yiadrf       aiTO)          Elg     diKaLoavvTjv.
and things that arc most probably denote also what is comparatively of
no worth and importance, and what is most valuable and distinguished.
      18-21, " Against hope                    :"    that     is,   against    all   human and ordinary                     pro-
bability, in        view of the advanced age of himself and                                            his wife,     and their
heretofore childless                   condition.
                                                       "So          shall    thy      seed         be:"      Gen. xv.          5.
Jewish Rabbies,             p.    1   39 with note       .      The comparison              is    with the stars, which,
                                                        Ov KaTEv67]oe,
as well as the sand, were used to express vast multitudes.
"he considered not:" Two very important manuscripts, the Syriac and
Coptic versions, and some other authorities omit the negative particle.
Olshausen defends the omission, which he says gives to de in ver. 20                                                            its
SECTION VI.
Chap. V. 1-11.
     TOv,      6i'   ov KOI T?)v rrpooaycoyrjv                             whom also we have access by faith
     eax'>]ii-afiev          rirj       TTiarei          elg     rrjv      into this grace wherein we stand,
     Xdpiv TavTT]v, ev                       xj     karrjuafiev            and    rejoice in       hope of the gloiy of
Chap.      The Apostle has shown that mankind being all sinners, cannot ex-
             v.
pect justification by obedience, and must obtain it only through faith, which
secures  this blessing to Gentiles as well as to Jews      Chaps, i. ii. iii. He                   :
has proved also that this doctrine was not at all novel, as it is recognised
in the language of David, and also in the history of Abraham, from which
it is evident that his justification was by faith, and previously to his circum-
cision   :    iv.      He now                proceeds to trace the effects flowing from justification
by   fiiith.
3    God.        And    not only        so,     but we            Kol Kavx(^fitda tn' eknidc T^f
     gloiy in tribulations also:                knowing           6u^7jg          rov     t9tou.         Ov       fiovov 6e,            3
     that tribulation workith patience                            aAAa Koi                 Kav^ojfie^a iv                    Toi^
4    and patience, experience and ex-       ;
                                                                  -dXi^peaiv, eldoreg,                    on      tj   -dXiipig
joice in hope of the glory of God," will express the second happy result of
justification.         Or, access through Christ                        by        faith        may be           the second, and
rejoicing the third. Some prefer the former, thinking it to agree better
with the position of the jcopulative.                            The noun           is    used      in   Heb. iii. 6, where
see the note.           As     the    Jew     rejoiced in his connection with                             Abraham, in his
circumcision and covenant relation to God, the Apostle represents the
Christian as rejoicing in his hope of future glory, and in those                                                       means and
instrumentalities which are intended to facilitate his attainment thereof
^OKijxi'iv in ver. 4, is              rendered        in    our translation, " experience                              ;"    and so
by Tyndale, Cranmer, and Luther, and                               in the         Geneva version. Wiclifhas
"provynge" and the Rheims "probation."                                            The w;prd means trial, proof,
and here most probably implies the result of trial, a character firm and
consistent, well tried and proved. See Phil. ii. 22.
     "Hope maketh               not ashamed            :"       The meaning                is, it   does not disappoint
those      who   cherish       it,   or put them to shame as                              if    they had indulged                  in   a
vain expectation.               Comp.       ix.   33, x. 11, which are cited                        from the Septuagint
of   Isa. xxviii. 10.
                               "The love of God:"                      That        is,    according to the general
signification of the phrase,                  God's love to                 us.     See on          viii.       35.    Here        it is
used as a metonomy of the cause for the effect, meaning the result of God's
love.|^he effusion of the Holy Spirit here spoken of refers chiefly to his
      Xvrai iv ralg Kapdiaig ^juwv Sta                                unto        us.    For -when we were yet                         6
      nvevfiarog dyiov rov                       doMvTog              -without           strength,          in    due       time
6     riiilv.     "Eri yap XpLOrog dvTU)V                             Christ died for the ungodly.                           For       7
      7/jUwi'   dadevQiV Kara Kaipov vnep                             scarcely for a righteous                        man    will
V     daejScov       dntdave.              MoXig yap                  one die; yet peradventure for a
      iiTTtp    diKaiov Tig drro^aveirat                        
                                                                      goodman some would even dare to
      VTTep     yap rov dyadov rdxa rig                               die.        But God commendeth                    his love       8
8     Kal roXj.ia diro^aveiv. IvviarTjOi                              towards           us, in that,        while      we were
      6e ri]v eavrov dydTTi]v elg                        rjfidg
      6 deog,     on en            ajxaprcoXiov 6v-
righteous and good.    The connection adopted by our translators makes the
latter clause somewhat parenthetical, though it serves to heighten the force
of the former. The sense is clear, but the Greek will hardly bear such a
translation, as the second yap cannot be expressed by " yet." The difficulty
arising       from    this particle is            probably the cause of                     its   having been               in a   few
unimportant manuscripts entirely omitted, as                                        it is   also in the translations of
Tyndale and Cranmer.                           Wiclif has:f "vnnethis (scarcely) dieth ony                                         man
for the just      man, and           zit for       a good            man      :    perauenture              summe man              dare
die;" the        Geneva has: "but                       for a       good man,"           &;c.          The Rheims           is   more
accurate than either, translating                         yap for        in       both cases, which              is   most proba-
bly correct.          Each        clause        is in    contradistinction to                  what     follows,         and either
    The reader will find an explanation of Griesbach's most important critical marks in my brief ana-
lysis of hisProlegomena, contained in the Translation of Planck's Introduction to Sacred Philology
tnd Interpretation, pp. 254-25T.
  1 1 quote from Bagster's English Hexapla.
7-i                                    COMMENTARY ON THE                                                        [Sect. VI. VII.
      yet        sinners,       Christ died         for    us.      tiov         XpLOTog vntQ iniwv
                                                                            iffiCov
9       Miuh more           tlien, bein-,'    now     justi-        UTXtdavf.    lloXku) ovv fiaXXov 9
        lied   by his blood,        we   sliull    be saved         diKuiiodtvre^ vvv tv rw aifiari
10 fiom wrath throuj,'h                   liira.     For,    if     avTov au){ir]nufud(i 6l' avrov
        wlien  we were enemies, we were                             drrb rrig opyTJ^.  Y.I yap ix^poi 10
one who            does not confine his action and deportment within the literal re-
quisition of the law, but with the feeling of habitual benevolence, does all
the good in his             power        to his fellow creatures.               Vorstf considers diKaiog as
equivalent to the                Hebrew word               p"'"!?   generally translated in our English
just or righteous, meaning a religious and good man, and ayaiSof, which
immediately follows, as synonymous and explanatory.                                                  But    it is   not at       all
probable, that St. Paul would inadvertently introduce two such clauses
without attaching a definite meaning to each, or that he would intentionally
use both as precisely equivalent; and therefore the meaning of the two
words cannot be regarded as                               identical.       In the latter there is a climax.
The one denotes a righteous man, a person really good and religious, con-
ductuig himself uprightly                          towards        man and humbly towards God                                ;   the
other describes the                    marked also by a benevolent, self-
                                     same         character,
sacrificing disposition, which inclines him to acts of benevolence and
used in Matt. xx. 15: "Is thine eye evil (euvious) because I am <7oot/,"
not merely              just,   but benevolent and liberal?                      The Apostle seems to have
begun          his antithesis        with the       first    character in       his mind  then suddenly to
                                                                                                 ;
filled      with divine love, prompts him to benefit his fellow creatures by con-
stantly doing good,    some one perhaps will even venture to die; but God
establisheth and    recommendcth his own love to us, in giving Christ to die
for      us while we were yet sinners unworthy of his kindness.'     Comp.
John        iii.   10.
        9-11.       '
                        Much     rather, therefore,           having       now been justified by his blood                           :'
That       is,     having been pardoned and accepted by                           God through his atoning
     Aanotatlonos riiilolopica> In          Novum Tcstamentnm         ex Xenoplionte, et    caet.,    8vo, torn.    11.   p. 252.
    t   De Hebraismis Nov.         Tc;t., Svo. Edit. Fisclier; Lips. 1778, pp. 55, 50.
                                                                                                                           
oo^-qaoi^ie^a iv t^ ^<jyq avTOV. life. And not only so, but we also 11
11    Ov     [lovov 6e,      dXXa Koi           Kavx(^-           joy in God, through our Lord Jesus
      uei'Ot fev TO) deco dta           tov Kvpiov                    Christ,    by   whom we      have      now     re-
sufferings      and death.           See        iii.    25,     iv.    QS, and        notes, pp. 55, 63, 64.
"   Enemies     :"    See    viii. 7,    which shows that the enmity referred to develops
itself in hostility to          God's law.             "Through                his life:"   meaning doubtless,
his glorious         life   in heaven,          where he              acts as our        permanent           intercessor.
See John xiv. 19, and note on Heb. vii. 25, pp. 98, 99."Not only:"
This refers to what had been before said in vs. 2, 3, and is sufficiently ex-
SECTION VII.
Chap. V. 12-21.
This section has been the occasion of much critical and theological discus-
sion.  To examine it thoroughly, investigating the various theories both
exegetical and dogmatic which have been applied to or supposed to be
founded on it, would require a volume.    The reader of this commentary
must not therefore be disappointed, if he finds nothing more than a brief
notice of the preeminent exegetical and theological points necessary to be
kept in view          in    attempting to              elicit   the Apostle's meaning.                  I   have endeav-
oured to state the purport of this as well as the other parts of the Epistle,
independently of any doctrinal bias arising merely from education or asso-
 ciation.       It    seems     to   be the design of                          St.   Paul to show           that, as the
    expressed in the former part of the chapter,                                 may    have suggested          to   him an
76                                     COMMENTARY ON THE                                                       [Seof. VII.
amplification of tlie statement, and have led him to draw a parallel be-
tween the benefits which we                             may        thus receive and the injury which                        we
sustained      by the      fall      of    Adam.             It is   undoubtedly true that condemnation
through the one and justification through the other                                          is   a prominent part of
the comparison.  The statement of Professor Ilodge may well be admitted,
" We are condemned on account of what Adam did, we are justified on
account of what Christ did."  Hut this is not the whole scope. The lan-
guage   more comprehensive. It is evidently designed to set in contrast
          is
contents of the section harmonize with the scope of the whole Epistle.                                                   They
tend to place in a clear light these two points                                    ;    that justification      is   not of
human obedience but of God's favour through                                        Christ,        and that   this blessing
      12. " Therefore :"               Some commentators                     connect this word with the pre-
ceding verse.   Among them is Macknight, who paraphrases thus: "Our
Lord Jesus Christ by whom we have received the reconciliation, for this
                             :
reason, as through one man sin entered," &c. He adds in support of this
arrangement        :
                       "   For       the Apostle              is   giving a reason           why     all   have received
reconciliation through Jesus Christ."                                But, not to urge that such a connec-
tion of " therefore," 6ca rovro,                        is   very unusual,         it is     evident that if this had
been the Apostle's intention, he would have introduced the word all                                                      in the
11th verse,       in   order to show that he meant his statement there to have a
general application.                 Whereas             it is     certain   from the whole preceding part
of the chapter, that he                is   speaking exclusively of justified Christians.                                 It is
^pcoTTOV q dfA,ap~ia elg rbv koghov entered into the world, and death
ciatcd with             him       ;   and also on account of the parallel intended to be drawn
between him and                        Christ, as is             done also          in 1 Cor. xv. 22,                  45-49.
      " Sin entered into the world."                                       The word                    sin in the Bible generally
expresses the act or habit of sinning^ as every reader must have observed;
but    it    is    also       employed                in the sense of sinfulness, that                                   is,   the tendency,
disposition, quality or                      element              in fallen         man, which of                  its   own     nature pro-
duces       in    our present imperfect condition those acts or habits.                                                             Thus we
find   it   used in          vii. 8, 9,          11   "Sin wrought in me concupiscence
                                                      :                                                                                sin    was
dead        sin revived                  sin   deceived me and slew me." And so also                                             in vs. 13,
one with the other.                         And       there can be no reasonable doubt, that the idea
of this physical death, and                            all       the evils producing and connected with                                       it,   is
mine this point. And the evident appeal which he makes in ver. 14, to
what every one knew to be the                                            fact,      namely, that "death had reigned
from        Adam         to   Moses,"            settles            it   most         conclusively.                 Still, this will           not
prove that the meaning                           is   to     be limited              to the        mere separation of                   the soul
from the body.                       is more certain, than that the Scriptures employ
                                      Nothing
the    word        in    a much more  extended signification. It denotes the miseries
of a state of condemnation, comprehending banishment from the enjoy-
ment of God's                 presence, and positive punishment inflicted; and thus                                                           it is
with this idea                more         or less clearly developed,                              it is     used to express misery
                                                                 * Gen. iU.   19,   li.   17.
                                                                                                                                                                
life, and in the pathway thereof there is no death :" and in 1 John iii. 14,
"we have passed from death unto life." See also Prov. xi. 19, John viii.
21, 24, 51.                         And         this general                    idea of misery                is    most probably the true
meaning of the word                                   in this text.                    It    certainly cannot be limited to phy-
manifestations, induced through the one man, misery passed through or '
tion        is,   that this death took effect                                    on mankind thoroughly and universally.
"   For       (or in) that all have sinned."                                          The various expositions which have been
given of this clause and the doctrines supposed to be sanctioned thereby,
make          it       expedient to examine                                it    with particular attention.
        "   For            (or in) that,"                   i<p'      W"        To      the        same purpose, Tyndale, Cranmer
and the Genevan, "                                   in so       much."                Wiclif has, "       in which man," and the
marginal reading in our Bibles                                                  is,   " in     whom."             This translation has been
given by   many commentators. The meaning will then be that all men
sinned in Adam. This statement will be made, either on the ground of the
identity of the human nature possessed by him with that possessed also by
all his           descendants, or on that of his being their representative, his acts in
either case being attributable to them.                                                             As   it   does not comport with the
design of these notes to enter into metaphysical disquisitions,                                                                        I   shall      merely
say with respect to such theories, that they are not                                                                    in    harmony with                     the
practical character of St.                                       PauFs            writings, and that a                        man      of plain           good
sense, not under the influence of                                                     some         religious or philosophical system,
will not easily believe that a voluntary offence of one can justly                                                                            be charged
ou any             other, not cither participating therein or even at the time existing as
Ch.V.12.]                                     epistle to THE EOMANS.                                                                                 79
      6 '&dvaroi'                     
                                           Koi ovTO)g elg ndv-                       all     men,       for that all        have sinned:
in his ancestorsome hundreds of years before birth, and this involves noth-
ing of a moral nature. It is adduced also by the sacred writer with an in-
troductory formula which greatly qualifies                                                        its  application.  See the note
there, p. 93,                 and Whitby.                       And        further, the             Greek preposition is different
from that here employed, the one being                                                       em      and the other ev. The right
translation                 is,   '
                                          for (or in) that,          inasmuch            as.'      Thus the same phrase                        is   used
in   2 Cor.            v.    4    :
                                          " not for that            we would be unclothed,"                         e0'   o),   for   which some
copies read                  eTTEidi].           Koppe,             in his note          on Romans, explains                     it in      the     same
way, quoting from Thomas Magister,*                                                  e(f>'   o)    avrl rov dwri, that                  is,    instead
of because              ;     and from Phavorinus,                           e</)'   ^     rrjv kAott^v elpydao),                     inasmuch as
thou hast committed the theft                                        ;     and from Theophilus to Autolychus, 0'                                     tj
would seem, that the Apostle predicates such sinning of all mankind, infants
and       idiots not excepted.                                But with respect                     to the latter class, this is evi-
dently incredible, as they are not responsible agents                                                               ;   and      it    is    possible
that,      on account of their comparative paucity, they are not taken into con-
sideration.                   As           to the former,             it   may       be said that we do not know at how
early an age moral consciousness commences.                                                                  This   is true,      and there           is
those       who             die before              ;   and to affirm conscious transgression of such were
more than                   ridiculous.                      Even        the inquirers, "               Who         did     sin, this          man    or
his parents, that he                            was born blind                   ?" cannot              be proved           to    have carried
       This writer,               who was      a learned    monk and grammarian, probably of the 14th century, made a se-
lection of Attic expressions,                       with illustrations of their meaning from Greek writers. Tlio treatise,
which      is       contained in a small 12mo volume, was published                               by Nicolas Blancard, at Franekcr in 1G90.
The   autlior quotes passages                   from Sunesius and Tliucydides in support of                   tlio meaning above given to
the phrase.
80                                        COMMENTARY ON THE                                                                   [Sect.    VI I.
the reply         is,   that then his        argument            is   defective.              However         various           may       be
the opinions respecting certain parts of this discussion, most divines and
commentators agree                       in this   one point, that the author's general design                                            is,
to   compare the            evils resulting            from the         fall    with the benefits accruing from
the redemption, and to                     show       that the latter are at least equivalent to the
mankind.                But, since infants, dying before consciousness can with any
probability be affirmed of them, constitute a very large proportion of the
race, they cannot                be excluded or overlooked                          in the         argument.              The      result
therefore appears evident, namely, that as infants                                                 and    idiots        do not die
either physically or spiritually in consequence of their                                              own        personal trans-
gressions, this interpretation of the                            words "have sinned"                        is   inadmissible.
erally rjiiap-TjKcjg toofiai                 :   but the Vulgate explains^ ero peccati reus. The
meaning           is, I   am     willing to be regarded as a sinner and subjected to the
necessary consequences.                          And       in 1    Kings       i.   21,       what our       translation very
 party so regarding them being in the one case the father and in the other
 the reigning prince.                     Christ      is   said to      be made               for us " sin        and a curse,"
 that      is,   (the abstracts being used for the concretes,) a sinner                                                and a cursed
On. V.         12.]                      EPISTLE TO THE ROMANS.                                                                      81
lation very correctly renders it, ' call not thou common."   And in 1 John
V. 10,   hath made him a liar," can mean nothing else but, hath represented
               '                                                                                             '
first, and perhaps also to the second of the two just given. " In that all
have sinned," may be explained thus: 'inasmuch as all have become sin-
ful.'          It       may comprehend               also the idea of actual sin, predicable of all con-
scious and responsible                         human         agents as a universal consequence in such                                    ;
as in the               first   clause of the verse, the                word        sin is equally comprehensive.
Thus the degree and extent of the death or misery which                                                           is   the necessary
result of sinfulness,                    may be          modified according to the degree of meaning
affixed to the                  word.          "   The   subject of the Apostle                   is     the entrance of sin
into the world                   and     its   spread.         The whole dominion of                         sin is intended."*
therefrom, may vary, and the death alluded to may, in the one case, extend
practically no farther than physical                                 and temporal           evils,          while in the other,
it   may        involve spiritual and everlasting. f                              The connection of                      the condition
of the race with the act of their progenitor                                       the       idea which                 beyond any
doubt pervades the whole representation                                          is   shown by the                fact that in this
spond with the two clauses of the former ; " by sin death," misery, ruin,
being parallel with, " thus death passed through ;" and, " by one man sin
(or sinfulness) entered," with, " in that all have sinned" or become sinful.
for all."
      2.    "    It   destroys the analogy between Christ and                                       Adam.              The point of
the comparison                   is          Adam was the source
                                       not, as                                              of corruption, so                    is   Christ
of holiness           ;    but, as       Adam was the cause of our                          condemnation, so                     is   Christ
of our justification."                  The         comparison         is     not limited either to the one or
the other.             The Professor assumes                       this point    of his argument.                          On    a former
page he remarks                    :
                                       " All that the Apostle says tends to the illustration of
Adam all die, even so in Christ shall all be made alive." There the life
promised to those " that are Christ's," ver. 23, is that condition of glory
which       is    consequent upon the resurrection of the just                                      ;    who, as they " have
borne the image of the                       first    man, the earthy,            shall also               bear the image of
the second man, the heavenly                              :" vs.   48, 49.      It is       evident that not only does
the antithesis lie                     between condemnation and                             justification,            but that           sin,
death and ruin are contrasted with pardon, free                                             gift,   abounding grace, and
reigning in            life      eternal.        The       objection that        some of these statements are
parenthetical               is   of very     little       importance.          Others are not; and what                                may
be allowed to be a parenthesis, on account of a difficulty in the construc-
tion, which shall presently be noted, is nevertheless essential to a full
exhibition of the meaning.                            As      all    our woes flow from that state of con-
demnation into which human nature was brought by the                                                       fall      of    Adam, and
all    our blessings from that state of justification or acceptance with                                                        God
which was procured by the atonement of Christ a statement of the causes                 ;
      What            has been said implies also a sufficient answer to the Professor's
other objections.                    His remark, that "the analogy                                   is   destroyed,         if   anything
in   us be assumed as the ground of the infliction of the penal evils of which
the Apostle             is    here speaking," needs one qualifying circumstance to                                                        make
it   correct.          It     should be stated thus                     :
                                                                                '
                                                                                        simply as   the original          ground           ;'
                                                                                                                                                or
'anything in us independently of the sin of Adam,.''
     The Apostle's general statement                                             is       probably to          this     effect    :
                                                                                                                                      '
                                                                                                                                          Thus,
through the            full     of    Adam,           death, physical                     and   spiritual misery, took effect
on all men, inasmuch as all men have thereby become sinful, and, when
conscious agents,                    sin.'        The moral depravity brought into human nature
by the      sin       of   Adam            will      be represented as the cause of                               its    wretchedness.
Every       assertion in the verse harmonizes with the whole statement.
     Theodoret, on verse 12, speaks of God's creating                       '                                 Adam      under a law              in
order to exercise his reasoning faculty, and of his transgressing                                                                     it  by;
gressed, the whole race received the sentence of death."*                                                                 May         he not
mean, therefore,               in the           former passage, that the changed moral condition of
man,      in other words, the sinfulness introduced into his nature in conse-
quence of the                fall,    is   the cause of his death                           %   This does not proceed as a
direct result              from the             sin of    Adam, but                     directly    from       his    own    sinfulness,
which however, was thus derived. If so, what the Greek father loses in
then did death enter and exercise power 1 By the sin of the one.      And
what means 'in that all have sinned V He having fallen, all they also who
had not eaten of the tree became from him mortal."
   On the construction of the verse commentators are also very much
divided in opinion. The sentence is generally regarded as imperfect. This,
13 fur until tlu- law, sin was in llic tuc dv^pu)novg 6 ddvuTog diTjX-
woi Id; but sin is not imputed wlicn ^t:v, icp' w Trarrtr ijfiaprov.
however, is questioned l>y some, who translate KaX ourwf, so also, instead
vs.    15,   18, 19, 21, xi. 31, where we find ovto) Kai, as the phrase ocx-urs
also in      1 Cor. xii. 12, and many other places.   The construction given by
Erasmus makes                      the second clause the apodosis or concluding part of the
sentence,             hi connection with Kai he supplies a ovnog, which he thinks                                                      is   to
be understood, and                         this   he illustrates by referring to Matt.                            vi.      10,    "as       in
troduces         it     in    a compressed form in the words: "                               who     is    the figure of              him
that       was   to     come."              But        this still leaves the difficulty                   of the construction
unexplained.                      Most commentators suppose the Apostle, in the warmth of
his feeling, to                   be hurried on by the train of thought which he had com-
menced          to other closely connected thoughts, and not to return to complete
the sentence begun in the 12th verse until the middle of the 18th.                                                                    Thus
the latter part of this verse will serve as the conclusion both of the former
half,      and of the 12th,                    its     form and language being adapted to what im-
mediately precedes                       it.     The intermediate              portion, although in               some       respects
parenthetical,                is   still    to    be regarded as essential to the                         full   representation
of the Apostle's comparison.                                    So long a parenthesis                is    quite in character
with       St. Paul's style,                   and we have a remarkable                           illustration in           Eph.           iii.,
the    first     verse of which                   is    connected with the 14th, the parenthetical por-
tion being, however, of great importance.
      13, 14.           The statements made                       in these        two   verses, exclusive of the last
clause, are the following: Sin existed in the world until the giving of the
Ihave given the usual meaning of aXQi, though Theodoret and some modern
annotators explain it so as to require the sense of during^ and thus extend
the period to the establishment of the Gospel.                                          But the phrase " from                     Adam
to    Moses"            is   decisive in favour of the                    common          signification.              The Apostle
cannot intend these statements to stand as independent propositions.                                                                   This
Cn. V.        18.]                     EP     I   S       TLE T                        Til E          E       MANS             .                                      85
         KoaiJO)     
                          dfiapTca        de              ovk      e/LAo-               death reigned from                         Adam to             Moses,
14 yeirai fiij 5vTog vofiov                           
                                                           dXX'         e/3a-           even over them that had not sinned
is    certain        from        his character as a writer                                  ;    and the use of the                          particles for,
but, nevertheless,                 sufficiently               prove their logical dependence on each other.
The       idea of Professor Stuart                                is,       that St. Paul intends to                               meet an objection
taken from what he had before said in                                                   iv.      15,       "where no law                     is,   there         is    no
transgression," namely, "                                 how      then were                    men          sinners before the law                               was
given ?" and therefore states that                                men were sinners before the Mosaic law.
But       it is   hardly credible that any person                        who thought on such topics at all,
could imagine that rational                                 beings like men were under no moral law until
the time of Moses.                       Neither                  is it      to        be supposed that the Apostle would
employ            his    time in refuting or denying so improbable an objection.                                                                                  The
Professor very truly says, that "                                           we    are not to suppose that Paul had to do
only with candid and intelligent                                            men        ;"   but to           this    it is     sufficient to                remark,
that neither are                  we    to suppose that he argues with                                                     men              of no sense or
reflection.
for any actual sin of their own  and the previous verse suggests the only
                                                                        ;
     t   Whitby introduces the word '' generally " in                              his Paraphrase, and regards the Ajitedilurians and
people of    Sodom as exceptions to the application                               of the statement.                  He   does not seem to have con-
sidered that the punishment inflicted on these                                was       'violent death,          whereas St. Paul uses the word to
denote mortality, to which they were subject, in                                       common              with every descendant of Adam, in the
ordinary course of nature.
8(5                                      COMMENTAKY ON THE                                                         [Sect. VII.
death, how did all they that were before the law die 1 For if death had its
root from sin, and there being no law sin is not reckoned, how did death
exercise force    Whence it is evident that it was not this sin which is of
                             J
the transgression of the law, but that which                                  is   of the disobedience of Adam
whiih destroyed                    all things.         And what          is   the proof?          For death          reigned,
of the Professor above                         cited,      "from    Adam           to Moses.           Why         should the
Apostle stop within these narrow limits]                                           Why     confine his assertion"
thus?           I   would rather             say, the designation of this period                  ;    for that he     meant
thus to             litnit       the   operation           of the death spoken of                     is   an imfounded
assumption.                  It   may        not be easy to give a reason for this designati(jn.
And          yet    it is    very conceivable,              that, writing to "a          church consisting chiefly
of Jewish converts, he might choose to note the introduction of the law by
Moses           in contrast to the                  time of Adam's              fall,   as representing a period
during which there was no law threatening mortality as the                                                 effect    of trans-
gressing            it,   although      it   would have served                his general   purpose equally well
to have extended the period even to his                                       own   day.     lie might have said,
from the time of                   Adam        to the present no such law has existed.                              The      pro-
mulgation of the Mosaic law was a great epoch, especially with the
Hebrews, and therefore might very                                fitly   stand in contrast with the original
transgression of God's law         by Adam.                           If the       Zcchariah of Matt,               xxiii.   35,
be the          prophet mentioned in 2 Chron.                       xxiv. 20-22, as          is       maintained by the
best commentators, the question                                 may be        asked,     why      does not our Lord
extend the period designated by him to his                                     own      day, from the time of the
first        murder         to that of the last?                The      striking character of the death of
Zechariah, and the impression                              it   had made on the Jewish mind,f supply
the answer.                  So    also does the application of the                        same        principle in the
    Of 80rL              TVTTog       rov [^ifAXovrog.                             offence, so also is the free gift               :   for
15 'AAA' ovx                w^-       rb     Trapdnrojua,
    ovTG) Kol rb '^aptCTjua                           
                                                               el    yap
intended.               If the   author means in this clause of the verse to express some
additional idea to that in the former, then he                                                 may    be supposed            to   compre-
hend     infants          and     idiots,         who          are not conscious transgressors against any
known divine law. Both clauses, however, may relate to the same whole
body of Adam's descendants, the latter merely stating that this body
had not sinned in the same way as their first father had. This is true
in more points than one. His condition was that of innocence theirs, of                                                      ;
general class, and the second, distinguished                                              by   the   word      even, only a portion
of that class."            But        this inference is                           founded on the English translation
' even,*'       and will be without support                                        if   the copulative be rendered and.
The    first     clause will affirm that death held general                                               sway      ;    the second will
state a distinction               between the                       sin of the parent              and that of his children.
   "   The        figure (literally, type) of                             him       that     was     to   come."           The     original
participlerov [leXXovrog, although used in the feminine to designate
Messiah's kingdom, or the Gospel dispensation as regarded in contradis-
tinction to the Jewish,                     is   equally applicable to Messiah himself,                                     who is      here
intended.  The word usually employed is 6 ipxofievog. Probably                                                                           the
Apostle preferred the other from having in mind the contrast between                                                                     the
blessings of Messiah's kingdom as a whole, with their forfeiture in                                                                      the
natural condition of fallen man.                                         The       word type means an impression,
image or representation of something.                                                   It   generally supposes points of
similarity          in     the two, as                    is    illustrated               in the     case of the priesthoods
of ^Iclchisedek and Christ.                                     Sometimes, however,                       it   is       used to express
88                                             COMMENTARY ON THE                                                              [Sicr. VII.
      if   through the offence of one                        many        ru)   rov Lvb^ napa-nrcjfuiTi                    ol    noX-
      bc iliad   ;     much more                 the grace of            koi drrtSavov, tto/J.Cj fiaXXov                            7)
      Ciod,    and the          gift       hy grace, which               j^ap'f      ~ov Snov Koi                 1)   dcoped iv
      is   by one man, Jesus                        Christ,     hath     X^P'-'^      ~V        '''^'^
                                                                                                           ^^^C        dvdpcj-^Tov
                                                                         'Irjaov     Xptarov             elg    rovg iroXkoiig
contrast, as in the p'-osent instance,          and most probably in that which occurs
in 1 Pet.       iii.   21,       where baptism seems to be contrasted with the flood.
Here Adam              is   introduced as the type of Christ, as he                                       is   also in    1     Cor. xv.
21, 22.         In vs. 45, 47,                       he    is   spoken of as "the                    first      man:" and                the
Messiah as " the                     last''      and " the second," meaning,                                  in his character as
contrasted with                 Adam, both                standing in a relation to the                        human      race some-
what       similar.
      15.     Having stated                    the typical analogy of the two, the author                                     now   pro-
ceeds to note certain points of dissimilarity.                                             These either show that the
restoration through Christ completely counterbalances the evils induced     by
means of Adam's transgression, or that it does in reality go beyond them,
making the advantage superior to the loss.        But the gracious benefit, to        '
XdQia[ia, is not (in all respects) as the fall for, if by the fall of the one :
the    many      died       ;    much           rather hath the grace of God, and the gift through
the grace which                 is   of the one              man       Jesus Christ, abounded to the many.'
The language            is      pleonastic, expressive of the greatness                                       and the froeness of
the gratuity.               The       article         t^ which         qualifies xo^P^-'h                shows that the           trans-
lation just given                    is    the true one.               Here we have                  the       fall    or offence or
transgression, contrasted                            with the divine favour;                        the misery                and ruin
brought on the mass by                               this fall of       Adam,        with the gracious                    gift    of the
Gospel procured through Christ                                    for the        same mass                ;    and we have the
Apostle's statement, that                            it is    much      rather to be expected that this great
benefit should abound to Adam's posterity, than that the ruinous effects of
neither clause does it admit a limited signification. And this is true also
of the same word in ver. 19, which is certainly equivalent to the phrase
"all men" which immediately precedes it.                                             This view of the universality
of the results both of Adam's fall and of                                         Christ's atonement,                    is   the only
one which corresponds with the scope of the section and the connec-
tion in which it stands with the writer's argument. It illustrates his
exclusive.
Ch.V.15,16.]                        epistle TO THE KOMANS.                                                                                            89
16 inepiooEvae.                    Kal ovx          wt;"    6i'        abounded unto many.                                     And     not as 16
     h'bg dfiaprijoavTog rb                      6u)pr]iJ.a
                                                              
                                                                       it   was by one that sinned,                               so is the
     TO      jutv       yap     Kpi[xa     e^ evbg         elg         gift      :    for the            judgment was by one
     KaraKpifia,              rb    6e     ^dpiajxa         ek         to    condemnation                      ;    but the free gift
     TToAAwv            7TapaTTT0)[idT(t)v elg              6i-        is    of       many              offences unto justifica-
drawn out immediately afterwards, both                                      in the              remainder of                   this verse            and
in the next.              'E| evog        is   not equivalent to                     Si'   evog, for this relates to                            Adam
and that to             his   one transgression, which                      is   contrasted with the                             many           trans-
fall    of the one        the          grace of the one          ;'    also ver. 17,                      '
                                                                                                               by       the    fliU   of the one
death reigned through the one                             shall reign in life                          through           the    one   ;'       also in
tains the same general idea as before stated, is also somewhat exegetical.
In contrasting the benefit of the                            redemption with the                                        evil of the fall,              he
 speaks of those                who      receive the precious                    boon           ;       implying thereby the co-
 operation of the party benefitted with the gracious giver.                                                                     The    benefit is
90                                     C         M M   Ji   N TA    li   V    ON          T    II   E                      [Sect. VII.
17 tion.        For       if   by one man's            offence           Kai(oua.  El yap T<i rov kvdg 17
      death reigned by one                   ;   mucli more              TrapaiTilijLaTL bSavaTO^ eliaoi-
      thcy whieh receive abundance of                                    Xevas 6id tov h'ug, 7toA?m ^aX-
      grace and of the gift of righteous-                                Xovol TTJvnepiaatiavrTicxdpiTog
      ness, shall         reign        in    life   by one,              Koi T^g 6u)peag tTjc diKaioavvTjg
described in language e.xprcsslve of abundance, and is like the phrase " riches
evidently in contrast with the reign of death attributable to the                                                            fall,   and
describe the true Christian's everlasting happiness,
      It is   thought by              many       distinguished commentators that in this contrast
between        Adam            and Christ, the Apostle intends to show that the amount of
benefit received is vastly greater than that of evil entailed.                                                        This has been
supposed to be implied                          phrase "the abundance of grace," rrjv irepia-
                                             in the
aeiav rfjg x'^P'^'^^^-                 Locke speaks of a " surplusage of the gift " as " a justifi-
cation to       life      from a multitude of sins, whereas the                                          loss   came only     f.)r   one
sin." This       he      calls " the excess of the favour, the inequality                                         of the   gift itself,
vs.   15-17 consists             in the fact, that the              death of Christ procures pardon for the
numerous         offences which                  we commit,              while the effects of          Adam's sin have
respect only to one oflence.                                The remedy             is    far    more powerful and effica-
cious than the corruption and misery."                                       He     repeats this view several times
afterwards.              Professor Hodge, in commenting on the 15th verse, allows
that " the design                is   not to show that the blessings procured by Christ are
greater than the evils caused                           by    Adam           ;"   and     this           he says " the attentive
reader will perceive constantly increasing evidence" of                                                          He     remarks very
truly, that         '"
                         the force of the passage lies in the                                   words much              more.'''     But
nevertheless on ver 16, he maintains the                                      same view of surplusage                         or supe-
riority.        "   The point of                 this verse        is,   that the sentence of                         condemnation
which passed on                 all   men        for the sake of             Adam, was                   tor one offence,    whereas
we are justified by                   Christ from            many    offences. Christ                      does much more than
remove the               fault   and        evils   consequent on the sin                                of Adam.'-' The same
substantially             is   stated afterwards               more than                once.
On reading the Apostle's contrast, the first impression is, that he does
intend to teach some such superiority of benefit through Christ over evil
through        Adam.             Doubtless most readers                           feel   a desire to              make    out such a
superiority          ;    and furthermore, various considerations, drawn from the                                                     in-
spired author's phraseology and from the paternal and benevolent charac-
ter of     God, make             it   highly probable that the grace of the Gospel does really
afford        more than a mere counterbalance
                                        to the evils of the fall.   The 20th
verse also does expressly state that " where  sin doth  abound    grace hath
     Ch.V.       17-18.]                   EPISTLE TO THE ROMANS.                                                              91
     sary in order to counterbalance them that Christ should " procure pardon
     for the      numerous offences which                    w'e   commit."              A    liberation   from the conse-
     quences of these comprehends nothing beyond what our condition required
     in order to      remove the existing evil. It would seem, therefore, that a su-
     periority of favour     beyond what was necessary for this purpose, is not
     clearly      deduced from the expressions which have been supposed to justify
    such a conclusion                ;    the language, as             I    have already         said, being rather            an
     appeal to our right appreciation of God's benevolence, as a sufficient ground
     for expecting at the                 very least a prompt and willing remedy.
              18, 19.    "By       the offence of one             by         the righteousness of one:"                  This
     translation          is   sanctioned             by   several distinguished commentators,                        among
     whom         is    Tholuck.              Our marginal reading                   is,     'by one offence       by     one
     righteousness.'                 This corresponds best with the Greek,                                di^    evog napan-
     TcJfj.aTog         dt'   evbg 6tKaiu)[j,arog           ;   and       it is   probably the true version.             For,
     as   I   have already remarked, where the other meaning                                     is   clearly intended, the
     Apostle always employs the article. The one offence is the sin of Adam,
     and the one righteousness the obedience of Christ. This latter compre-
     hends whatever was necessary to constitute his atonement and satisfaction
     to divine justice, which the Scripture generally represents as his sufferings
     and death, these being most especially prominent and                                             essential.    Thus, as
     the contrastwas before stated to be between the condemnation resulting
     from Adam's one offence and the deliverance procured by Christ from our
     many offences so here it will be between his one sin and Christ's succes
                               ;
     sive acts          and whole habit of obedience both active and passive.                                             Any
     separation between these two kinds of obedience so as to give an importance
                                                                                                                           
     nere,       so    by the obedience of one                     <^o)rj^.     "iZaTtp       yap t^id tTjc ttu- 19
     shall       many          be     made     righteous.          paKOTJ^ rov hvoc            dvdpunov dfiap-
                                                                   TOiXol KaTEOTux^Tjaai' oi noXXoi,
                                                                   ovTG) Kol 6id rTjc v-JUKoTjC rov
                                                                   ivog       diKaiot,        KaTaara^TJaovTai
and superiority to the one over the other, is without scriptural warrant. In
the first clause of the text we must supply from the IGth verse the word
"sentence,'" and in the second "free-gift."                                   The whole passage                 as an infer-
ence from what had been before said and in accordance therewith, is intro-
following verse                is    to the   same general          effect.      The         disobedience of the one
man    corresponds with the one offence just stated                                ;    and the obedience of the
one with the one righteousness.                           It   is     unnecessary to say                      that, in      both
clauses, the           one and the            many    stand    in contradistinction to                    each other; the
many        being equivalent to the whole mass of mankind, as the same adjec-
tive   is   used also in ver. 15.                The word rendered "were made," Kareard-
&T]aav,      means            " to set      down,    settle, establish,         bring into a certain state, to
make        so   and        so, to    cause to be, to render, to make."                            See the Lexicon of
Liddell and Scott, also Robinson's.                                Olshausen's meaning, as given                           in the
translation,           is,   " to be set forth as somewhat, and                        by     the setting forth to be
pronounced to be somewhat." Whether                                    in this    verse       it is      to   be understood
in the sense of regarding as sinners, or actually                                      becoming               sinners,     is dis-
puted.           That        it     may be     taken in the former sense,                         is    evident from the
general tenour of the context, and from the                                    way      in    which such words are
often employed.                      Tlie language in          1    John       v. 10,    "he           that believcth not
God     hath made him a                     liar,"   may be        regarded as parallel.                      Although the
Greek verb                 is irotiu), it will       not be questioned that                  it    is   at least as strong
to express a real                   making of the character described                    as that here used.                 And
yet no one ever thinks of affixing to                                 it   such a signification.                     The other
 sense, however, of actually                          becoming         sinners, is certainly according                         to
 common           usage.            It is   probable that the Apostle means to convey the idea
 with which he commenced his comparison                                       in the    12th verse.              As Adam's
 disobedience was the occasion of the sinfulness and positive transgressions
 of his race, their condemnation in a greater or less degree being conse-
 quently included, so also shall Christ's obedience become the procuring
 cause of the acquittal, acceptance and restoration of the same race, provi-
 ded they embrace the Gospel.                            The   limitation         annexed to the                latter state-
     20, 21. "         The law         :"     The Greek               is   without the              article,    and so probably
should the translation be.                          It is     frequently explained simply of the law as
promulged by Moses.                           But although the moral law thus communicated
may     have been prominent                        in the author's            mind, (compare "froni                             Adam     to
!Moscs " in ver. 14              ;)
                                      yet     I    can see no reason                 why he may                 not comprehend
the law as a moral rule under which man, as a conscious and responsible
being,       was   originally placed.                     See    1 Tin:i.      i.    8-10, where, after stating the
excellence of moral law in general, he proceeds to speak of                                                          it   evidently as
promulgated to the Hebrews.
     " Entered," TrapeiarjXdev.                           Our     translation disregards the preposition
TTupd,       and renders the compound verb, as                                      it    does the simple                      in ver. 12,
" sin entered," to which the Apostlemost probably alludes. Tyndale and
Cranmer translate, " in the meane tyme entred in." The word may be
intended to convey this idea, that law took effect on the sinner unexpect-
edly, or that he came under it in some measure unawares.      Compare the
use of the preposition in composition in Gal.                                            ii.   4,   2 Pet.     ii.   1,   and Jude       4.
It is   more probable, however,                          that the verb expresses the idea of entering
beside or along with.                        Tiicn the           meaning             will be, that along with the
entrance of sin law, that                         is,   a fuller consciousness and appreciation of                                       it,
      "That the     oflence   might abound            :"   The author          explains his meaning           more
fully invii. 5, 7-13, where he represents moral law both as showing the
sinner his guilt and condemnation, and becoming the occasion of exciting
his   weak and       sinful   nature to transgression.                     Were         the former result the
whole of the Apostle's                 idea, Iva    might be      ielic,      that    is, it   might express the
end    for   which the law was given, and the translation be, in order that; as
it   was     certainly one part of the design of the law to bring the oflTender to
a proper sense of his                  sins.   But, as     it   cannot be thus limited, and as the
law does actually become the occasion of                               sins   abounding or increasing,               it
with what precedes it, is justification. The expression eternal life, the full
meaning of which is made clear by the epithet, is placed in contrast with
the   more general and             less accurately defined               one death.
Cn. V. 21-V].        ].]        EPISTLE TO THE EOMANS.                                                              95
                                       SECTIOX                         VIII.
                                                    Chap. VI,
VI.         Ti oiv epovixEV       ;   EmiJ.evoviJ.ev              What shall we say then ? Shall VI.
      rfj    ajjapria, iva ^ %api5" ttXeo-                      we continue in sin, that grace may
Chap.        vi.    The Apostle now proceeds                       to       guard the doctrine advanced
from becoming the ground or occasion of                             sinful indulgence.               The grace of
God      through Christ, which the previous discussion has shown to abound
towards the           human      race, has in all ages                  been perverted by the corrupt
heart to antinomian recklessness of living.                                 The question         in ver. 1    may    be
the language of a depraved objector, or                           it   may be        the author's       manner of
stating the mischievous inference             drawn from the previous truth. What
follows contains two             most important considerations in direct opposition to
the practical fallacy            of such a conclusion. The first develops the funda-
mental principle, that                in the truly baptized                 person such a continuance in
sin is      simply impossible, because by real Christian baptism he has become
mystically united to Christ, therefore dead and buried with                                            him     to sin,
with a view to a moral resurrection, the precursor of a physical and spiritual
and glorious one at the               last day.     The other               consideration, which         is   brought
forward in connection with this and  made the ground of exhortation, is, that,
the profession of Christianity which we publicly make in baptism, binds us
to avoid sin and to cultivate holiness. Hence it follows that, as professing
Christians, we cannot consistently abuse the grace of the Gospel'by prac-
tising sin, nor, as real Christians mystically united with Christ                                       and   receiv-
ing from       him through        this   union a principle of divine and holy                           life, is   such
practice possible.             These two points will be more fully                              illustrated in     what
follows.
      Ver.     1.   The received reading                  is    ETnjjevovpiev^ for           which many, both
ancient and valuable authorities, have                            e7Ttnev(0[j,ev.           The reader who is
acquainted with the Greek forms will perceive that either reading affords a
clear meaning,             and accords with the context                 :
                                                                            '
                                                                                shall' or   '
                                                                                                may we continue V
      2.    "Dead          to sin:"   Such     figurative language is very                        common in the
New         Testament.        Thus    in the   next chapter, the Jews are said to be " dead
to the law," ver. 4;             and    in   Eph.   ii.    1,   men     in their natural state are called
" dead in trespasses and sins."                     It     is    unnecessary to multiply references.
i)G                                     CO M     M    KN TA            li   Y      O N          T   II   E                            [Sect. VIII.
2     abound?             God       forbid.    How         .shall           vdau; Mf) yh'oiTO ohiveg d-rre-            
                                                                                                                                                  2
      Avc, tluit     ure dead to sin, live                  any             ddvofuv ry diiapria, TTWf tri
a     lunger        therein?           Know          ye     not,            ^Tjoofitv ev avry "11 dyvodTe,        ;                               3
travagantly fur; and any degree                                 is   extravagant, which becomes forced and
unnatural.           There are points of resemblance, however, which must recom-
mend themselves                  to every reflecting mind.
view as a dead              object.         The Apostle suggests                            this         thought           in ver. 6,      where
he represents the "old man" as "crucified with"                                                     Christ, "that the                   body of
sin   might be destroyed." Compare Gal.                                         vi.   14: " the world                      is   crucified      unto
me."         As     the dead object cannot                            e.xcite          the pleasurable emotions                                and
desires to which when living                          it    gave          birth, so neither can sin in the                                  mind
of the Christian.                As, on the contrary, the dead object excites the opposite
sentiments or feelings, those namely of aversion and disgust; so does sin
in the soul of the true Christian.                                   Other points of similarity might doubts
less    be traced, but these                    will sufliciently illustrate the Apostle's figure.
The     Christian         is    dead to       sin,   and        sin is      dead           to him.               Living any longer in
the practice of                it is   therefore impossible, because he                                          is    influenced by the
Jesus Christ were baptized into his death?"                                             What             is it    to       be baptized into
Christ? or what does true Christian baptism                                                mean?                 A    proper answer to
this question             may throw           light not              only on the Apostle's statements here,
but also on other parts of the sacred word.
  When John distinguished his own baptism from that of the Messiah,
whom he introduced by the announcement that he should " baptize with
the    Holy Ghost and with                     fire,"      (Matt.           iii.      11   ;)there can be no doubt that
the miraculous effusion of the Spirit on the                                                day of Pentecost, when the
ability to       unknown languages was conveyed under the
                   speak       in                                                                                                     significant
emblem of apparent fiery tongues, was intended: See Acts i. 5, xi. IG.
But     it   does not therefore follow that the Baptist's language had no further
reference.           It    exhibits undoubtedly, in striking contrast, the dilR-rencc be-
tween        his   own    preliminary and imperfect baptism, and that of the divine one
who was "above                      all,"   and who "must increase"                                      until        he should receive
again "that glory which he had witli the Father before the world was."
Christ's         baptism and Christ's spirituality and divine nature are                                                              in perfect
Cn.VI.2-4.]                              EPISTLE TO THE EOMANS.                                                                               97
affusion or aspersion with water in the                                       name of             the holy Trinity, and                      by a
minister of Christ acknowledged to be properly authorised, would be to
form a very imperfect conception of its true nature and                                                          signifiicancy.        Real
Christian baptism                    is    both internal and outward             most generally    ;    and    it is
most certainly the thing                            inculcated.             ''^Mave           ^mt on          Christ," Gal.           iii.   27:
in other words,                     have become                    like him.             " Shall be clothed with shame,"
Job      viii.   22     :    the meaning                 is   evident, shall                 be openly and              really disgraced.
And      so in Ps. xxxv.                   26   :
                                                     "   Let them be clothed with shame and dishonour."
Compare           also cix. 17-10.                       In Isa.     lix.   17, "        he     ivas clad     with zeal as a cloak,"
expresses the real possession of what                                                   is    thus figuratively represented.
And       so also           Ixi.    10,    ''he     hath clothed           me          with the garments of salvation,"
&c.       Compare Judg.                     vi.     34, " the Spirit of the                      Lord came upon (Heb. and
Sept. clothed) Gideon."
      With        all        this    accords the statement in our catechism, that baptism
comprehends "water, the outward and                                               visible sign,"              and also "an inward
         7
98                                        CO     MM         ENTA R V             ON          Til E                     [Sect. VI    1   1.
      buried with             him by baptism                     into     (prjfiev     ovv avru) 6ia rov ftanria-
      deiith     ;    that     like   as        Clirist          was      {JLarog eig      rov ddvarov, Iva &a-
      raiscd         up from the dead by the                              Trep iiyfpdr] Xpiaroc;               fe/c   veKpuJv
      glory of the Father, even                             so    we      6id T//9 6u^7]g rov irarpog, ovtcj
and        spiritual grace,"              namely, " a death unto                             sin   and a new          birth unto
rigliteousncss."               It   follows, therefore, that                     where either of these                is     wanting
baptism          is    imperfect      ;    and surely               it   cannot be imagined that                      tin-   inward
part of the sacrament                      is    less       important than the outward.
      Now,       in the chapter            under consideration, as                          is   also generally the case in
the   New        Testament, the Apostle represents the baptized Christian as having
fully received this sacred                       and divine              institution,            and consequently experi-
enced the inward reforming character which                                             it   symbolizes.        He      speaks of
baptism and of the baptized as they really are according to the Christian
scheme, not            in     accommodation                  to    any imperfect view and reception of the
sacrament.              Therefore          it is   that he          employs language so greatly                       significant.
And        the fulness of his thought                              is    not applicable              to,   neither can         it   be
rightly appreciated by,                    any one who has not been inwardly baptized with
the   Holy Ghost,               as well as outwardly with the symbolical element.                                                   To
be baptized into Christ does not simply                                        mean         into the     acknowledgment of
Jesus as the true Messiah, but rather                                     it   denotes a spiritual connection with
him, whence results a participation of the blessings of his grace, those flow-
ing from his death and resurrection.                                           The     truly baptized Christian has
been incorporated into                     Christ, so as to                have become really                in spirit,       though
not personally, one with him                            ;    as Christ died literally and                     was buried, so
does the scripturally baptized Christian die and become buried spiritually.
Thus the Apostle carries out the figure with which he begins, implying the
thoroughness of the true Christian's spiritual death and burial to                                                      sin.        He
gives also the counterpart of this representation in the baptized Christian's
privilege to           be raised        to a      new and holy                 life,   in imitation         of Christ's resur-
rection. This            is   said to     have been accomplished "by the glory of the Father,"
meaning  his divine power.   Thus the word '"glory" is used in John xi. 40,
" thou shouldst see the glory of God," and in Exod. xvi. 7, " ye shall see
the glory of the Lord."    According to this view the reader will perceive,
that       it   is    not merely what the Christian professes in baptism wiiich the
Apostle here speaks                   of,       but rather w^hat by                    full      baptism he receives.
      It   has been inferred from                       the 4th verse, that St.                     Paul alludes        to the an-
speaks of himself as not only dead, but " crucified to the world," the
excruciating kind of death amplifying the figure and increasing the im-
pression.
Ch.VI.4,5.]                     epistle TO THE KOMANS.                                                                                99
Kal '^[ielg iv KaivoTTjTC ^Ufjg tre- also should walk in newness of life.
     5.    "Planted (or grown) together :" This implies most intimate connection,
and with            Christ, as the avroi in the previous verse shows.                                             The     figure is
taken from the vegetable kingdom                              ;    and the points on which the resemblance
turns are Christ's death and resurrection.                                        Our death            to sin corresponds
with the former, and our present moral and future glorious resurrection
with the        latter.      The     ellipsis in the last clause is                         correctly supplied in our
English translation.                  'AAAa Kai               is    best rendered                '
                                                                                                     truly also, yea even.'
Comp. Luke               xii. 7, xvi.   21.      The              latter part of the verse expresses                                 the
twofold resurrection just stated                      ;       the future glorious one                       bemg     the natural
result, according to the principles                           of the Gospel, of the present moral one.
     6, 7.      "   Our old man         :"     The        sinful          element or condition of                      fallen na-
Literally, justified           from     it.     Compare                  the similar jDhrase in Acts                      xiii.      39.
It   means          cleared from        its    imputation, and liberated from                                  its   controlling
power.          See      ver. 18.
                                                                                                                                                                ;
7      not serve              sin.             For he that                is   dead           flag,tov fiTjKETt dovXeveiv 7'jiJ.dg
8      is       freed from sin.                          Now         if    we        be       T^ dfiapTia. 'O yap drro^avcjv                                    7
       dead with                     Clirist,         we       believe that                   6tdiKaii,)Tai               aTo     TT/f      dfiapria^.
9      we       shall also live                      with him: know-                           Ei 6t d7:tddvop,EV avv XpLOTU),                                  8
       ing that Christ, being raised from                                                      ntOTevofiev, 6ti                  ku'l       avi^ijoofiev
       the dead, dieth no more; death hath                                                     avrcj, eldorec;, 8tl                Xptorug iycp-                9
10 no more dominion over him.                                                   For           delg            t/c    VEKpiov           ovKtrt      diro-
and therefore, according                                       to his          promise, " because he liveth they shall live
also."               Compare                   Ileb.     vii.       25, and John xiv. 19                             ;   and see the same                senti-
that he lives : See Tholuck. This would be equivalent to the common trans-
     11-13. Thus far the author has described chiefly the                                                    effect          of a true
union with Christ                 in     producing a principle of spiritual                         life   incompatible with
a state of sinfulness.                         But, inasmuch as                  its   actual     developments and ope-
ration in the Christian's holiness                                is,     in the present state of being,                       always
imperfect and generally so to a very great degree, he                                                       now        proceeds, in
view of the               Chi'istian profession                  made       in   baptism, to exhort to a consistent
character and conduct.
     "   So       also you," &c.               :   This     is   founded on our union with Christ before
spoken           The exhortation does not lose sight of the truth that here sin
                  of.
will     exercise some influence, since " there is no man that sinneth not," and
therefore the Apostle says, " let not sin reign in your mortal body," &c.
The    epithet here              employed describes the body                                in its present frail             and dying
condition, in which                      it is     made       the organ of             sin, in   contradistinction to the
same body immortal and become                                         the instrument of sanctity and happiness.
Such language gives no ground                                 for the opinion, already adverted to, of the
body being the                  seat of sinful passions.                   The concluding                 clause of the 12th
verse        is   variously read in ancient authorities.                                    The reading        in the received
     14. "          The law,"             as such, conveys                  no power wherewith                    to resist sin.
But      " grace" or the Gospel does in the influence of the                                          Holy        Spirit.        This
difference of the                two      states affords a sufficient reason for the assertion, that
sin shall not lord                  it   over the Christian.
     15. This verse,                     which      is   in striking             analogy with the              first,    states the
       not have dominion over you; for                                    ftapTia             yap vfidv ov Kvptevoef
       yc arc not under the law, but under                                ov yup tare vtto vo/xor, dkk' vnb
15     t,'raeo.        "What then? Shall            we        sin,               Ti ovv uiiapr/'iaoiiev, otc 15
                                                                          _;^apa'.                         ;
       beoau.se we arc not under                   tlie      law,         OVK tOfikv vTrb vufiov, aAA' vtto
       but     under        grace?          God      forbid.              %apn' /x?) y^^roiTO. Ou/c oMare, 16
                                                                                      ;
sin. The Apos^tle rejects wilh abhorrence the thought of thus abusing the
grace of          tlie   Gospel.         In the     next he illustrates what he had said, by refer-
ring to the            human         relation of master                 and servant.                     Tlie last clause requires
a few illustrative remarks.                       The words "to                  death," tlr ^dvarov, are omitted
in several             weighty authorities, although the evidence preponderates                                                              in their
favour. If they were not an original part of the text, it wo\ild be difficult
to assign a good reason for their insertion, while the apparent wiint of an-
the Apostle's               statements would conflict with the general scope of his argu-
ment throughout the Epistle. Professor Stuart indeed does contend for
this meaning. But he has not presented any considerations of weight to
sustain       it   ;    and towards the end of                      his   note he substitutes " eternal                                     life" for
this is identical            with obedience,                 may be answered by                                the remark, that suc-
cessive acts of obedience lead to the formation of a righteous or religious
character.               This    is   probably what the Apostle means, as                                                   in    ver. 22, the
terms generally used by Greek writers to express                                                                             this sense are         Xiydog
and xodvTj.               Besides, the verbs                            would not be                         in   keeping with such a               figure.
Form,        sketch, outltne, conveys                                        the Apostle's idea, which                                    he expresses
also in      2 Tim.            i.       13 by the similar word virorvncoatg.                                                      The construction
of the latter part of the verse                                              is    doubtful.                      Tholuck understands                    vttt]-
New     Testament,                  we may                  still   regard the accusative of the noun as flowing
by    attraction          from that of the                          relative.                   JlapadidcofMi                may be           taken in the
sense of to teach, as                             it signifies in                 Luke         i.       2,   Acts    vi. 14, 1           Cor.   xi. 2.     In
the last text, the verb and the noun both occur, and though the latter is
rendered in the text of our ti*anslation " ordinances " and in the margin
" traditions," the true meaning                                          is       undoubtedly instructions delivered or
taught by St. Paul himself.                                     Thus             also the               same word ought                  to   be rendered
in   2 Thess.       ii,       15    :
                                          '
                                              hold fast the              in.<ttrnc(ions                      which you have been taught;'
and    in   iii.   6,     '
                              according to the instruction received from                                                           us.'       Etymologi-
cally the          word means                         directions or truths delivered.                                        The best          ti'anslation
therefore of the clause                                is   probably              this     :
                                                                                                    '
                                                                                                        Ye have obeyed from                      the heart
the form of doctrine in which ye were instructed.'                                                                       The Apostle              thanks
God     for their obedience.                                   Before " ye were," although                                         is   to be supplied.
Comp. Matt.               xi.       25        :
                                                  '
                                                      although thou hast hidden'                                    &;c.
                                                                      ;
   being made free                        from sin, and be-                      ex^'S Tov Kapnbv vfiujv elg
                                                                            i9ecj,
our Lord.
in order the better to adapt himself to the weak condition of his readers.
In ver. 23 ^oages and free gift are in evident contrast, the one expressing
due    desert,     and the other unmerited gratuity.                                Death and            life    are also
contrasted, the epithet of eternal being applied to the latter, as                                        is    done also
in V. 31.
                                            SECTION                  IX.
                                               Chap. VII.-VIII. 17.
THE LAW CAN NEITHER JUSTIFY NOR SANCTIFY. IT IS THE GOSPEL WHICH
   ALONE CAN MEET, IN THESE RESPECTS, THE WANTS OF MAn's WEAK AND
     SINFUL CONDITION.
VII. "H dyvoelre, d6eX(pOL, (yivcj- Know ye not, brethren, (for I VII.
     OKOVOt yap vojiov XaXoJ,)                     on     6   speak to them that                  know    the law,)
     vonog Kvpievei              rov dvdpu)Trov,              how   that the law hath dominion
Chap.    vii.     Christians are not connected with the law, either as a                                        means of
acceptance with              God   or of their sanctification             ;   for    it   can neither place             men
in   such a state, nor give them grace to live a holy                                     life.     It   can but show
clearly the nature of sin, excite its propensities,                            and condemn the sinner.
Freedom from             the condemnation and dominion of                           sin,    and acceptance with
God, together with power to live a holy                           life,   are peculiar to the Gospel.
And    hence results obligation on the part of the Christian to live in accord-
ance with       its   nature, and also with a view to obtain its ultimate blessings.
     The connection of             justification        and   sanctification is here, as elsewhere
in this Epistle, evidently implied                        and indeed avowed.                      The former       is   the
principle and          germ of         the latter.        The grace of         justification             developed in
its practical efficacy           necessarily produces sanctification.                             This fact of Chris-
tiaqjtiy     may      account for the Apostle's transition from the one to the other,
which thereby becomes perfectly natural.
      Ver.   1.    "I speak        to   them       that   know  the law." For the various mean-
ings which have been ascribed to the                        word law in this verse, I must refer
the reader to the commentators.                           The Mosaic law in general, the ceremo-
nial   law   in particular, the             law of the marriage relation                    specially,         have their
respective advocates.                  It   cannot be the ceremonial law, for the whole tenor
of the chapter           is   opposed to such a supposition.                        Nor       is    there reason to
limit   it   to the law respecting marriage, for                     what       is   said of this          is    confined
to   two or three            verses,    and   is   merely     illustrative.          The simplest and most
natural sense would                seem      to be,   moral law      in general,             not merely as exist-
ing or even as           first   promulgated by Moses; but as the law under which
106                                        COMMENTARY ON THE                                                                       [Sect. IX.
man       as a responsible creature of                         God always was and                          ever must be.                The
Apostle addresses himself to those who have a general knowledge of the
application and bearing of moral law.      The word is at first without the
article,                   employed on a renewed mention of the subject in
               which however                is
the next clause. Comp. viii. 0, 11, where " spirit" occurs first without and
then with the article, although expressive of precisely the same idea.
     "    As    long as he liveth                :"      From           the time of Origen to the present day,
some       interpreters have predicated this of the law, translating 'as long as
it liveth,'         that       is,    remaineth         in force.           But      this is certainly                     a very harsh
sense, and inadmissible, unless required                                   by absolute              necessity.               To say     that
the law rules the                    man    as long as         it       has force        is   not, indeed, a                mere truism,
but     much        nearer to one than can be allowed in such a writer as St. Paul.
The advocates of                      this vie\v        have appealed to the following verses, where
they suppose the                     man   or husband to correspond with the law and the                                            woman
or wife with the                     Jews or those under                  the law.             But the correctness of such
correspondence cannot be proved, and of course any argument drawn from
it is     uncertain,           and     may       be erroneous.                  The usual meaning, which appears
in    our      common                translation, is           more        in      accordance with the language                            in
1 Cor. vii. 39,                where the same phrase occurs with the additional words,
" her husband."                       And    in ver. 4, the             persons addressed are said to be dead,
not the law              ;   and so        in ver. G,      according to the true reading dTTO^avovreg,
'
    we having            died.'        The Apostle might undoubtedly have spoken of the law
as dead        ;   but he has chosen to express                            this condition as that                     of the persons.
And        so also of himself in Gal,                          ii.      19, "I      am     dead to the law."                       Perhaps
he preferred                 this     phraseology on account of his having before spoken of
Christians as " dead to sin,"                            vi.   2   ;    and perhaps,               also,    from           his reluctance
to represent                 God's moral law as                    in   any sense dead, since                    it   cgntains within
itself     a principle of perpetual                        life.
      2, 3.        "    From         the law of her husband                         :"   That       is,    from the law which
binds her to her husband.
                                                'Eav yEV7]Tac yevofitvrjv become                                            to, that     is,
tion entered into, so               your (figurative) death to the law releases you from
any connection with                it   as the instrumentality of                   your acceptance with and
sanctification before God.'
      The attempt            to carry out the author's analogy into particular detail has
given rise to a vast variety of theories.                     The reader who                        desires to       become
acquainted with them                    may   perhaps find        sufficient to gratify his curiosity
in the notes of              Tholuck and Olshausen, and the authors to                               whom         they refer.
      4.    The Apostle now               applies his comparison, and represents Christian
believers as " dead to the law."                        He   does not speak of                         it    as a code of
morals, which, although no                  human   effort    can attain to                   its   perfect excellence,
is    notwithstanding to be perpetually set up as the divine standard (Matt.
V. 17, 18),            but rather as a means of acceptance with God.                                         This accords
with the general             scope of the Epistle, and also with the particular one of
this chapter.
                       
                      " The body of Christ :" This means most certainly his literal
personal         body which was offered on the cross, and which thereby effected
the figurative death here spoken                  of.     This death, like that of the one mar-
ried party which releases the other from previous obligation, prepares the
way        for   your becoming connected with another, him who hath been raised
from the dead.           Stripped of all figure, the idea is, that Christ's atonement
enables us to look for acceptance and sanctification to a vital union with
him.          Thence        (to   resume again the         figure,)         proceeds the legitimate                         off-
spring of this spiritual alliance, namely, the fruits of good works tending
to advance God's glory.
       5, 6.     These verses express two contrary                         states, one, that                of fallen       sin-
ful    nature          the other, that of Christian character elevated                                 by         the Gospel
to a       new and
                  ;
sinful condition'             under the influence of carnal                  lusts.            Thus     in vii. 18,       "in
me, that         is,   in   my    flesh ;" in viii. 8, 9, "       they       who         are in the flesh              ye are
108                                       COMMENTARY ON THE                                                                            [Sect. IX.
      riiiscil        from        the    dead,          that     wv            "Ore yap             i)fie.v      tv    rrj   oapKi,       rd     5
     should bring forth fruit unto Cod.                                        Tradijiiara rojv djuiprcCJv, to, 610,
6    For Avhcn we were                   in the flesh, the                     TOv        v6[iov,         ivTjpyetTO          iv        roTg
     motions of           sins,    which were by                 tlic          fitXeoiv           Tjiiuiv       elc    to Kap-o(po-
not    in the flesh ;"              in   Eph.       ii.   11,        " Gentiles in the flesh."                               No   doubt the
persons .spoken of were under the law; but the sinfulness of their character
while in such a condition,                         is   the particular point which the phrase denotes.
      "   The         passions of sins ;" that                    is      sinful passions.
                                                                                                          " Which were by                      the
transgressors the nature of sin and                                       its eflects        on the awakened conscience,
as his argument led                      him and            as he does in vs.                        7    et seq., here speaks of
the result of a natural sinful condition, and                                             it is   here placed in evident con-
trast with the result of the Christian's union with Christ, as expressed in
the previous verse under a figure                                    drawn from               the marriage relation.
       In opposition to the sinful condition before described, the author pro-
ceeds to say as follows                        :    'But now, we, having died, have become freed
from the law                 in    (or   by) which we were                               held.'       The common reading                         is
dead."            But    the marginal reading in the original edition has " being                                                       dead     to
Ch. VII.            5-7.]                       EPISTLE TO THE ROMANS.                                                                            109
and versions, also by the figurative language of the author in the immediate
context.            
           " Newness of spirit, oldness of letter."    These phrases denote
the new, spiritual dispensation of the Gospel, and^he old one of the Law,
the merely outward and literal sense of which showed                                                                          its    imperfection.
The former is the development of the full spiritual meaning of the latter
and of what it adumbrated. In 2 Cor. iii. G, the Apostle employs the
same language " Not of the letter but of the spirit for the letter killeth
                                      :                                                                              ;
but the spirit giveth life." That is, the law condemns.and punishes, but
the Gospel acquits and favours with unmerited blessings.
      7.    "       What              shall          we     say then            '?   is   the law sin               V         The     force     of the
question results from the representation                                                      made          in ver. 5, of the            law becom-
ing the occasion of                             sin,      which had been stated                         in the terms, 'sinful passions
which were by the                           law.'               The imputation                    is   promptly          rejected.        Yet    sin is
made known by                             the law           :    and the tenth commandment                                     is    alleged as an
illustration of this                        :        The law              is    not       sin.         No, certainly           :    but   it   gives a
fuller consciousness of sin, than otherwise                                                        I   could have, and becomes the
occasion of                  my           sinful propensity operating                                  on     me     in opposition to             law.
"   Not only                is       the law not a teacher of sin, but                                      it is    sin's accuser."             Theo-
doret. Opera,                        Tom.        iii.     p. 53.
      As         the Apostle                     now employs                     the      first        person, and continues to em-
ploy       it       until the third verse of the next chapter, this                                                      seems      to   be a proper
place to examine whether he speaks particularly of himself, or personifies
a character; and,                               if       he does speak of himself, whether he describes                                             his
Christian condition, or a state antecedent thereto.
      That           St.     Paul cannot intend to limit                                          to himself         what he here              says, is
most probable, inasmuch                                         as he manifestly depicts the experience of a class;
110                               C     M M E N T A U Y OX THE                                                         [Sect. 13L
and, as his statement applies to himself as well as to                                       all     others of the class
described, and as he             employs the             first   person,         it   would seem unreasonable
to exclude         him from the          class intended.                    It   is    of   little        consequence, as
regards the interpretation of the whole portion, whether he                                                is    speaking of
himself as an individual of a                         class, or   whether he personifies such                               class.
But the other point of discussion has a                           direct bearing on the interpretation
of the portion, namely, whether                        it is   the really Christian state of the party
spoken     of,    or an antecedent one, which                      is   here intended                 ;   whether          it   be a
regenerate or ante-regenerate condition.                                Olshausen says, that                       all     exposi-
tors agree that "7-13 applies                           to the state before regeneration, as the
Apostle indicates by the aorist                         that the state            is   gone by.                  But whether
14-24     is     also to       be so considered            is    uncertain, since in this section Paul
makes use of the present only, while viii. 2, &c. the aorist again appears."
The argument from the change of tense does not seem to be of much force,
as the change naturally arises from the author's method of representing his
subject. Divines, both of ancient and modern times, have differed respect-
ing the main point.   Among the fiithers, Origen, Chrysostom, Theodoret,
state the ante-regeneration view, while                           Augustin             and others maintain the
opposite theory.   Modern theologians, from the time of the Reformation,
have also differed in the same way. It is impossible to arrive at any satis-
factory conclusion on this particular, by settling the possible meaning of
some phrases which may occur in the latter portion. AVhile it is certainly
susceptible of proof that the language, "carnal  sold under sin," and much       
of the accompanying description, are strictly inapplicable to the inwardly
regenerate Christian; yet the Scriptures supply us with                                              many        instances of
most pious men,        such, for instance, as Daniel, Job,                            and David, applying simi-
lar   language to themselves as expressions of penitential confession                                              ;   and such
expressions of self-abasement have always characterized the holiest.                                                            Yet,
on the other hand, the                fact that        language of       menthis      kind     is    used by such
in theway of penitent confession, will not authorise the inference, that it is
intended of them when it occurs in a logical train of argument. The scope
and general design of the author afford therefore the best clew to ascer-
tain his    meaning        ;    and   this       I   have endeavoured to present                          in the analysis.
J shall    now attempt            to explain the portion in accordance with the view
there given.
      The Apostle      is      speaking of the state of a person before he becomes a
Christian,         lie describes the conflict of such a one's natural feelings and
passions with his reason, conscience, and imperfect knowledge of God's
law.      Still,    as the       same imperfect condition and                               sinful        tendency          exist,
Ch. VII. 8,9.]                    EPISTLE TO THE EOMANS.                                                                         Ill
8   eTTidyfiijaeig.            'AcpopftTjV              6e Xa-           said,    Thou   shalt not covet.           But       sin,     8
    fiovaa      i)    dfiapria 6ia rrjg ^vroXTJg                         taking occasion, by the command-
    Kareipyddaro iv                tfiol     iraoav em-                  mcnt wrought             in nio all      manner        of
    dvjuav   x^P^^ y^Q voiLOV
                  
                                                         dfiap-          concupiscence. For without the law
9   ria VEKpd. 'Eyw 6k t^uv                             ;\;wpi?          sin     teas   dead.       For      I    was        alive     9
own     Christian experience at different times, and such language                                                      may      well
be used of the regenerate, as suitably depicting                                                 their    inward emotions.
All this    may        be allowed, while                  it   may        still    be maintained, that the Apos-
tle's    argument compels us                      to give          one definite exposition of his w^ords, and
to maintain that they describe one clearly                                     marked        condition.    The view of
Olshausen         is   worthy of attentive consideration.                                    "    The Apostle sets out,
vii. 9,   from a        state in        which the              man       is    living entirely without law,                       and
closes    viii.   11,   with the glorification of the bodily substance.                                           The question
occurs here,           how many         stages of development are properly distinguished?
I^OKT clearly present themselves.                                  First, a life without law, in                   which        sin is
(comparatively) dead                ;   next, a life                under the law, in which                        sin       becomes
alive    and has dominion               ;
                                            further, a state, in which                        by    the    power of           Christ,
the spirit has dominion and sin                               is    (in a great degree)                  mastered        ;
                                                                                                                             finally,
the state of the entire separation of sin                                     by   the glorification of the bodily
substance."
    8.    " Sin :"       Not      the overt act of sin, but the sinful principle, which                                          is   so
for personified as to              be represented as an agent.                               "   Taking occasion, by the
commandment wrought in me." Most likely the phrase, " by the com-
mandment," should be connected with the words that immediately follow.
Thus the sentiment will be, that sin, by means of the commandment
wrought, &c.             And      this certainly agrees best                        with the eleventh verse, which
connects " the
           commandment" with "wrought," for it                                                     is    there said, "        by the
commandment deceived me, and by it slew me."                                                      Sin     is    the agent that
works     all     eTri-dviiiav, that              is,   all    illicit    desire.
                                                                                        "   Without the law                    sin is
dead."      This        is   true absolutely.                  If there          were no moral law                 at    all,   there
could be no living and active sin at               same is true in all the
                                                                     all.        And     the
degrees in which sin can be conceived to exist. The sin is in proportion
to the moral law as known or capable of being known.
9, 10, "I was alive :" Does this language express simply the foct that
the speaker            was    at one time living without a right appreciation of the
character and bearing of God's moral law.                                          Such a supposition would agree
with the context, and give a correct exposition.                                             The Apostle may intend
to say    merely          this,   that antecedently to the time of which he                                        is    speaking,
he, or the party             spoken         of,   was passing               his existence           without a right              esti-
mate of     the nature and purport of God's law.                                        Still,    the antithesis with the
112                                         COMMENTARY ON THE                                                                                [Sect. IX.
        without the law                 oiiec    ;    but          \vlicn        vvfiov       TTOTt                IXdoCoTjg dt                       TTJg
        the    commandment came,                            sin      re-         evrokrir           rj        dfiapria             dvt^rjaev,
to vivcd, and                 I    died.    And           the com-               ^ya> 6i        dntdavov                       Koi evptdrj 10
        mandmcnt, which                    tens ordained to                    ftot     7/    ivToXii              rj   elq    ^it>r\v,          avTT)
language of the next verse, "                                  I   died," does              seem         to   demand               a fuller sense.
"   I   died," expresses, certainly, a consciousness of being condemned, and in
a state of moral and penal death.                                        It   would seem most reasonable,                                         then, to
give to the antithetic phrase, "I was living," a meaning somewhat analo-
gous, thus        :
                      '
                          I       was not properly conscious of                                sin, I         did not experience the
influence of law as the occasion of its action, the influence of law either                                                                                   on
my       perceptions of the cliaracter of                                 sin,     or in becoming the instrunicntality
of rousing        my              sinful passions into life                    and energy.'
        "But, when the commandment came;"                                                    or, the           commandment having
come.          According to Tholuck on ver.                                   8, IvtoXi)            means               the particular                     com-
mandment              not to covet, and thus in Ileb.                                        vii.   18 the              commandment                          has
been restricted to the law of the priesthood.                                                  See        my            note there, which                      is
intended to show that in both places it is better to take the word in its
involves an unnatural figure, as the Apostle would then represent his per-
sonified character as living before the time of the ^losaic law, through its
faith    came, after that                   faith is           come."         The idea here intended cannot be
limited to the historical coming of the Gospel.                                                     It    expresses also the liber-
ating influence of faith on the believer's mind.
                                                                                                 'Sin                  revived, but                  I   died,
and the very commandment which was intended to produce happiness was
found to result in misery.'                                        "Sin"      is      the carnal principle in our fallen
nature, and the " I"                       is    the better part of the                             man,           his rational spiritual
11 elg Sdvarov.             'II yap dfiapria                             life,   I      found    fo ie   unto death.              For 11
       dipopfifiv     Xa^ovaa 6ia Ttjg ivro-                             sin,    taking occasion, by the com-
       XTJg e^Tj-ndrrjae /te Koi di' avrrjg                              mandment               deceived me, and              by    it
13 dtKaia Kol dya&rj. To ovv dya- and just, and good. "Was then 13
moral law, as impressed thereon.                                    The phrases,               "sin revived,"          or,    became
active,       dominant           ;   and,        '
                                                      I    died," are manifestly antithetic.                           As     the one
gains or exerts strength, the other feels                                     its       own weakness               in a proportion-
sented as the source of that death of which in the former clause, the law is
said to have been the occasion. Here the language is, " sin slew me,"
aTTEKTeive       ;    in    2 Cor.          iii.       6, it is, " the letter               (meaning the law,)                killeth,"
dTTOKTeivei. In the one text, the law is said to do what, in the other, is
usual in   common life, and abounds also in Holy Scripture. Thus we read
that    "God hardened Pharaoh's heart," that "Pharaoh hardened his heart,"
and "that the heart of Pharaoh was hardened;" (Exod. vii. 13,                                                                 viii.      32,
vii.14 ;) the last phrase expressing the ostensible and undeniable                                                            fact,      the
preceding one, the personal agency of the                                               man     himself, and the              first      the
divine permission.                      Perhaps the most striking instance of                                         this    kind of
language        may be               found in the scriptural account of David's numbering the
people.         In    2 Sam, it is said, that "the anger of the Lord was
                                        xxiv. 1,
kindled against        and he moved David against them to say, go num-
                              Israel,
ber Israel" &c.; while the same thing in 1 Chron. xxi. 1, is ascribed to the
Devil " Satan stood up against Israel and provoked David to number
          :
are reconciled,             is       the very simple one, of the agent speaking or acting as
the principal           :   qui facit per alium facit per se.                                    Thus, in the case under
consideration, the                    law    is        the occasion, sinful passion the cause.                                "   By     the
commandment," and "by                                      it,"   are evidently connected respectively with
the verb that follows; and, as was before said, determine the connection of
the phrase,           "by        the    commandment,"                    in the 8th verse, to                      be with the sub-
sequent verb.                    Thus       it        is   evident from the foregoing representation, that
the law        is in all         respects, excellent,                and not            at all the cause            of sin, however
it   may      have been the occasion of developing and even of exciting                                                       it.
       13.    Nothing now could be more natural, than to repel the idea that
 God's moral law, which must be essentially good, could become the cause
                  8
                                                                                                                                                                      
     that which            is   good made death unto                                 -dbv        ifiol              ytyove ddvaro^                        ;    fu]
     me?          God  But sin, that it
                           forbid.                                                   ytvoiTO               '
                                                                                                                   uXXa          t\    ajiapTia'               Iva
   miglit appear sin, working diutli                                                 (jtav^       uuapria, 6id rov dyaSov
   in mc h\ that whiili is godd   that                          ;                    fioi       Kampya^ontri]                              Sdi'aroi>, Iva
   sin by the commandment might be-                                                  -yti'7/rat                    /cat?'       vTTEpfio/.riv             djiap-
14 come exceeding sinfuL      For we                                                 tcjAo^-       ?/          dfiapria did ttj^ ivro-
   knowthat the law is spiritual but                                ;
                                                                                     /.TJg.        Oldanev yap, art 6                                     vo/iof      14
                                                                                      "rrvEVfiarLKuq iariv                             
                                                                                                                                               iyu) 6i aap-
of ruin.          Such          Is   the thought in the                            first    clause of this verse.                                   To dya-&6v
Emphatically, the good thing, the very counterpart of him                                                                                          whom         it   de-
scribes         and emanates from, and of                                          whom          alone, personally considered,                                         it
cah ill its fullest sense be affirmed. Comp. Matt. xix. 17,
      'II      d/naprta, like to dyadov, is the subject of a verb, which                                                                            may        be and
probably          is   yeyove.           If so, the         meaning                   will       be    :
                                                                                                               '
                                                                                                                   not the good (law of God),
but       sin   became           the cause of              my                ruin.'        Thus the punctuation may be (but
this is not necessary,) that                          which Griesbach has introduced, namely a colon
after     tj    dfiapria.             In this case, the anarthrous djiapria                                                 which follows,                    may be
nominative             to (pav'q.          Then            <pavx{                 and Karepyai^ofitvTj                               may be           connected,
and the construction be thus                                :
                                                                        '
                                                                            that sin            might appear working'                                     &cc.   ;    or,
without such connection, that                                       sin,          working death by means of the good
(law) might appear, that                          is,      that              its   true nature might                                  become known.
But the verse admits another                                    construction, which, as                                         it    preserves the ordi-
nary usage of the                      article with the subject                                 and omits                       it   with the predicate,
seems preferable.                      According to                         it,    the thought runs thu^s                                  :
                                                                                                                                               '
                                                                                                                                                   Was     then the
good (law) the cause of                    my ruin ?                                Certainly not                      ;    but       sin,         that   it    might
appear          sin,   (was)         working my ruin
                                    by means of the good (law,) that (or so
that,) by means of the commandment, sin might appear (be seen to be.)
as follows         :
                       '
                           Was
                        then the good (law) the cause of ray ruin ?       Certainly
not   ;   but sin (was the cause of it,) which " that it might appear sin," in other
words, to show (or showing)                           its       character,                  wrought ruin by means of the good
(law), thus displaying                     its    detestable nature,'                                  The concluding                              clause of the
verse from the second Iva,                            is   merely a                    fuller exhibition of the last idea,
      14,       The Apostle's mind dwells on                                          the absurd suggestion which he had
before in ver, 7, indignantly repelled, "                                                  is   the law sin ?" and which he had
just denied.               The         illative       ['article " for" here used implies the confutation
       KiKoq etju, TTE'npai.iEVO^ vrrb                       -'?}?'    I    am    carnal, sold           under       sin.        For 15
15 diiapriav. "O yap KarepydsOfiai                                     that Avhich           I     do I allow not: for
   ov yivu)aKG}   ov yap o deXo)
                              
                                                                       what      I   would, that do              I   not    ;    but
   T0VT0 7:pdaact),dXX' u iugCjtovto                                   what      I hate, that do            I.       If then I 16
16 TTOtG). Ei 6e o OX! dtXi,) tovto                                    do that which I would not, I con-
       Txoid,       avp,(l>7iiiL   tG>    v6[jlo),    on      na-      sent unto the law that                    it is      good.
IT Aof.             Nw(     6e ovk^ti           tyw Karep-            Now        then      it is   no more I that do              it,   17
       ydi^ofiat avro,             dAA'    ?/    o'lKOvaa ev          but sin that dwelleth in me.                          For    118
18     ei-iol       djiapria.           Ol6a yap, ore
word denotes superiority, excellence in the highest degree, and the noun is
often employed in the same sense.    See note on John vi. 63, in the Essay
on our Lord's Discourse at Capernaum, p. 101. "But I am carnal, sold                       
under          sin."        This expresses our natui;al inability, subjection to fleshly
inclinations and sinful indulgence.                               In the last phrase,               some have imagined
an allusion to the                  Roman            usage of selling property sub hasta.                                   But     it is
shall first note such particulars as                              seem      to require elucidation,                     and then
state the result in a paraphrase.
       Here Olshausen again                      calls the attention             of the reader to the change of
the tense, from the past before employed, to the present, which follows to
the end of the chapter.                         Hence he concludes                that the subsequent represent-
ation     is    of a more general nature than the preceding, and comprehends the
conflicts           even of the regenerate mind, the                             man       in his        Christian state.                I
have already remarked that the use of the present is quite natural. It
makes the exhibition the more graphical, and brings the personified condi-
tion directly before the                      mind.          It   seems     also to arise spontaneously                           from
the statement               made        in the       14th verse, that "the law                      is    spiritual," which,
expressing a present as well as a past and also an immutable                                                     fact, is        natu-
rally followed              by     a description of a present conflict in the carnal man.                                               It
116                                          COMMENTARY ON THE                                                                                       [Sect. IX.
state,      and perhaps the                        conflicts                of   this stale         which the author had experi-
enced, did suggest or modify the language; but                                                            it    does not follow from any
part of the description, that the conflicts of the regenerate were intended to
be portrayed.
      Tivu>aK(o              may      retain its usual meaning, to know, provided                                                         it   be regarded
as emphatic, declaring a want of proper knowledge of the cause,                                                                                      full char-
acter, and results of what is done. But another meaning is also supported
by    usage,           to    regard kindly,                    to like, to             approve           of.         This has been objected
to    on the ground that                     it    produces a tautology, as the same idea                                                      is    expressed
bv the word                  ivill.       To
                                     might be replied that the particle for in the
                                                   this it
latter      half of the verse may, as well as that in the former, be illative of the
condition expressed in the verse preceding.                                                         Still this is                   unnecessary               ;   for
ceitainly one                 may      give as a reason for not approving a course of action,
that       it is      opposed to            his inclination.
       2i;/ti^7/jui-          literally, I              speak along with                       ;    that        is,       I    concur with.                  "   But
now        :"    This        is   not so           much a               notation of time, as a formula introducing
what has a close and                         logical connection with                                 what had preceded.                                   See the
note on Ileb.                 viii. 0.
                                                  '"
                                                        No more :"                    This must not be regarded as imply-
ing that the speaker, the                               I,    according to the Apostle's phrase, had formerly
done himself what he now ascribes to indwelling                                                                     sin.        It    rather intimates
that he is not at all to be regarded as the agent. The I is the better part
of the man, his reason and conscience.                                                  This better part                         is   enslaved by the
sinfulness of fallen nature, and, in despite of                                                    it,   the tyrannical master carries
 which pervades the whole portion compels the author to make an occa-
 sional transition. Sometimes the pronoun designates the better, sometimes
the worse part of the personified man. Before it was the former ; here it
nature, the sinful tendency ; so called doubtless from its inferior, corrupt-
against the spirit and the spirit against the flesh." In this carnality of
 nature there                is   no good           ;   evil is its essential                      element, or rather                          its   very sub-
 stance.              The Apostle, however, does not here speak                                                          entirely in the abstract;
                                                                                                                                                           
   dyaMv, aAA' 5 ov &iXo) kukov,                                               would,            I   do not but the evil which
                                                                                                                 ;
for   he proceeds to say,                    that, in the condition all                                along before spoken                        of,      his
wish accords with the law, but he                                         is   incompetent to carry                              it       out in holy
obedience.              "To    will:" This                       word may express the bent of                                                the whole
inner man, according to which the individual shall be influenced both in
character and conduct.                       Or it may denote merely the inefficient wish or
desire, not followed                     by any corresponding character or conduct. In this
latter sense it           must be understood here and                                           in the context, as the slightest
'
 Although the desire is present with me, the doing what is good is not.'
This    is   followed          by a      repetition of                 what had been before                              said,       with the view
probably of strengthening the impression, and perhaps also                                                                       in order to in-
rative. This law or ruling tendency is called in ver. 23 the "law in the
members," and "the law of sin." The former phrase seems to have                                                                                       arisen
118                                           COMMENTARY ON THE                                                                                [Siot. IX.
from the            figurative          view of            bodi/, Jlesh, as               the instrumentality             by which the
sinfulness of nature develops its character in overt acts.                                                           The members are
the integral parts of which the body, the flesh,                                                      is   the   aggregate. The three
expressions denote the fallen, sinful character of man.                                                                    This one three-
named law               stands in contrast to the law of God, which                                                            is       evidently his
moral law, or the law of the mind, that                                                   is,   the        same law so                  far as       made
known            to the man's reason                       and conscience.
       "1 delight           in the          law of God                    after the        inward man."                    In       order to have
a clear comprehension of the Apostle's representation,                                                                    it       is   necessary to
understand rightly what he means by the inward man.                                                                       Ordinary readers
of the Bible very generally suppose this to be identical with the internal
religious character, " the                                new man,"               the      grown or               at least the                  growing
divine           life in    the spiritual nature, that which                                         is    " created in righteousness
and true holiness," (Eph.                                 iv.   24,) in the soul                     by    the operation of the                      Holy
Spirit.          Hence, as             is   quite natural, they cannot conceive                                      it    possible that the
Eph. iii. 16, the same phraseology occurs: "strengthened with might in
the inner man:'' that is, in the soul, the spiritual part of the individual. In
the inward man," that is, my soul, my spirit is under the influence of its
is restricted to the inward 7nan, and not spoken of the soul generally; As
the term inward man meant at first the soul in opposition to the body, and
as the former                is    superior to the latter,                           it    naturally             became expressive of
excellence, and              when opposed                       to       something         in the soul, indicates iis                          renewed
or better feelings."                    He     then refers to the texts in Ephesians and Corinthians,
Ch. VII. 22-24.]                      EPISTLE TO THE ROMANS.                                                                     119
explaining the               first   by         " their holy atrections being confirmed,"            and adding
to the last as follows                    :
                                               " In all these          and similar passages, the phrase includes
the idea of excellence.                         When        opposed to the body,          it is     the soul        ;   but when
opposed to something                             in   the mind, as in this passage to 'the law in the
members,'             it    nieans the better feelings or principles."
        That     the soul is the original                          meaning of the phrase                is   here admitted.
That      it    ever " indicates                its   renewed          feelings" cannot   be proved.               Its "    better"
element          it   may         indicate.            But    this      may just   as well be understood of                       its
rather that spiritual part of man in which the Holy Spirit has planted holy
affections. In the last, " the inward man" is plainly antithetic to " the outer
man."           According to the author's view, the former means " the renewed
feelings" or        "holy affections;" and consequently the latter must mean the
carnal sinful nature.                          But the whole context shows that                         this   cannot be          its
man"       the sinful tendency in fallen nature                             was meant, the Apostle's language
would have been                    that of           triumph       at the destruction of a          deadly and               spirit-
affliction,"      The Professor quotes also 1 Pet. iii. 4, " the hidden man
                      &c.
of the heart."    But the phrase and meaning are both different. The lan-
guage then which is here employed by no means implies or expresses the
regenerated Christian character.    It is true also of the mind in its natural
garded as expressing any more than the word before employed                                                         in ver. 16,
"   I   consent to,"          '
                                  speak         in    unison with.'         The mouth merely utters what the
heart dictates. Still                it       may well       be allowed      that, becoming more warmed with
120                                             COMMENTARY ON THE                                                                     [Sect. IX,
the subject, and being desirous of stating as fully as possible the complete
acquiescence of reason and enlightened conscience                                                            in   the excellency of
God's moral law, the Apostle prefers a stronger term.                                                             It   does not express
the idea of conformity, but                              it   does that of approbation.                            For    it   must not be
forgotten, that the personified character                                         is    not the gross, sensual, abandoned
sinner, recklessly stifling his                               moral feeling                 in habitual iniquity.                     St.    Paul
is   not speaking of the careless, profligate oflender, but of the                                                              man whose
reason          is   being acted on and whose conscience                                      is    becoming           alive to religious
obligation.
      The        result of the contest                        between the predominating                                 sinful      tendency
and the perceptions and impotent wishes of the reason and conscience                                                                               is
      '
           The body of                 this       death       ;"   or    '
                                                                             this      body of           death,' according to the
of the      flesh,''           and remarks               that, in the             one place, the body                    is    represented
as   combined with the                          flesh,   and,      in   the other, with death.                         Schoettgenf and
others regai'd the phrase as a periphrasis for death, expressing                                                           its     substance,
reality^ as the                Hebrew writers employ                             the words           C]ia,   t25. nb^^-               See the
note on          ii.   15, p. 3G.       But another view seems                               preferable.              The terms body,
flesh,     members, are indeed often used in their literal meaning, as in vi. 12,
13,   and elsewhere.     But they are also used figuratively to denote carnal
or sinful nature, the one expressing                                     its     aggregate, and the other                       its   particu-
lars or the sins which spring from them. See vi. G, vii. 18, and C\>1. iii. 5.
It is from the entire carnal and sinful nature, therefore, that deliverance is
truth which the                     words imply, and thus announce even mote strongly
than        if   they had simply declared                        it.        It is   of    little   consequence whether               we
read, "          I   thank God,"            or,   according to very respectable authorities,                                  *
                                                                                                                                  thanks
(be) to God.'                     In either case the sense is the same.                                     The former agrees
best with the general construction of the preceding context.                                                     The personi-
fied    man           of the foregoing representation                               still   makes      his presence felt,           and
appears in his assumed individuality:                                               "I thank God!"                    Some       ancient
authorities read the                   Greek so as               to    make         the     words a direct answer                 to the
question, thus: 'the grace of God,' rj %apt^ rov '&eov. But either of the
other readings harmonizes better with the deep feeling of the context, and
the last             is   very    much      like the gloss of                    some    dull reader,        who would substi-
tute a direct prosaic reply for the answer of a mind deeply                                                      embued with
poetical feeling,                  and excited by those grateful emotions which express them-
selves voluntarily and almost unconsciously, in the outbursting of unfettered
nature rather than in the calm and measured phraseology of cool, logical
propriety.                 The common reading                          is   the best, both on the                ground of exter-
nal and internal evidence.
    Here              it   may be     well to stop a              moment               in order to recal to                mind some
particulars contained in this chapter, either                                            by   direct expression or neces-
Rary implication.
       1.    It is        plain    from the Apostle's remarks,                          that he describes a class of men
as living without any right consideration of the real nature and practical
bearing of God's moral law: "I was alive without the law once."                                                                     The
truth of this statement need not be proved,                                               however much                it   may    be de-
plored.              And     the Apostle's description to be limited to unconverted Jews
                             is
through Jesus Christ our Lord. So Xpiarov rov Kvpiov ^/xtDv. 'Apa
its pcrfet'tioii.                 The hiw then awakens the conscience                           to a      due sense of that
natural sinfulness which rules in every                               man      not religious.               This being             so,
truth illustrated and evinced in the case of any class or grade of offenders.
Who             ever conversed with a sinner, however abandoned, who, in his
thoughtful, serious                      moments, did not assent to the excellence of true re-
ligion,         and bitterly lament                 his own want of if?     St. Paul portrays his
pictures from real life, and his characters are the very image of the breath-
a good           ;        and so also are many other amiable natural properties, which give
a zest to the enjoyments of                         human     life.      But some of these                  qualities        huma-
nity shares with the brute creation,                           and while they are good                          in their place,
they do not form a part of that good of which the Apostle is speaking.
The ordinary progressive movements of the physical economy in accord-
ance with the laws imposed by the God of nature the planetary revolu-                       ;
tions       ;    the formations in the vegetable, animal and mineral kingdoms, are
all    good           :    that   is,   they are in obedience to the laws of nature imposed by
their all-wise                and omnipotent creator.                  But the good of which the Apostle-
speaks               is    that of a moral, intellectual,                and responsible being.                             It is    a
religious good, which                       fits   such a being for assimilating with and enjoying
God both                   here and hereafter,           A   good     like this belongs not to fallen                            man.
It is       not at          all   connatural.       It is   wholly superinduced by the influence of
God's Spirit; and                       this influence      was procured         solely      by      the merits of Christ
and flows to weak humanity in no other channel than that which his satis-
ovv avTog iyo) rw fiev vol dov- then, -with the mind I myself serve
pensation      is       not necessarily a legal condition; so,^n the other hand, that
of many Christians so called                        may         not be an evangelical one.                          When       the
Scripture speaks of the law as without grace and condemning, and the Gos-
pel as justifying and saving,                      it    describes their respective characters in the
abstract.       But, in former dispensations the sincere and religious believer
was not under the law                     in the sense in                which   St.   Paul uses the phrase, but
under grace, although indeed as a system                                      this     had not been completely
promulged.               And        in the   present glorious evangelical dispensation, he                                   who
lacks a living faith, though ostensibly connected with                                               it, is      nevertheless
under law and condemned by                              its   righteous sentence.
      6.   Lastly, the connection in which this chapter and the                                            first    part of the
next stand with the main scope of the Epistle, tends to sustain                                                     in general
the above exposition.                      The author shows                 in detail,     what           is   also elsewhere
frequently stated or implied in Scripture, the inefficacy of the                                                 Law    as such
to   meet the exigencies occasioned by man's                                  fallen condition.                 Three things
the    Law    can do.                It   can develop the nature of sin                         ;   it    can become the
occasion of rousing up natural sinful passions against                                              its    holy and divine
requisitions        ;    and    it   can condemn the sinner to merited punishment.                                            But
in the great            work which           is   absolutely essential to his well being, the                                work
of his salvation,              it   can do nothing.                 It   has no forgiveness to                 offer,   no   state
of justification, and acceptance to promise, no divine aid without which
sanctification           is   unattainable to give.                      All these necessary preliminaries to
or elements of salvation can only be secured through Christ.                                                        This latter
point,     which        is    implied in the burst of thanksgiving,                            is   distinctly       and     fully
brought out             in the      beginning of the next chapter.                       Thus the inadequacy of
the    Law and           the sufficiency of the Gospel                      become      evident.               On   the theory
124                                   COMMENTARY ON THE                                                           [Sect. IX.
      the Imv of (lod, Imt with                  tliL'   tiesli        Xevu)    vofiui   -dtov,   -^ 6e oapKl
      the law of sin.                                                  I'o^o) dfiapriag.
that the Apostle               is   describing the conflict of nature with grace in the Chris-
tian      mind,    it    will be dilliciilt to discover the direct bearing of this descrip-
tion      on    his general course of thought                     and argument.
     The        latter half of the          25th verse            is   by no means         clear.        It is   not easy
to determine whether           avruc t'yw be best rendered, I myself or I /he same
person.          In either case, however, the general sense is most probably tlie
same, as the former cannot without harshness be referred to any other than
the speaker            who had been lamenting his weakness and had just expressed
his thankfulness.            The person aflirrns that "with his mind he serves the
law of God, but with                 his flesh the          law of sin." This language does certainly
bear a strong similarity to that before used                                      in vs.   lG-23, and therefore
many       expositors regard                it   as a repetition of the description there made.
Thus, to consent               to, to     delight in or be pleased with, and to serve the law
of God, are supposed to express the same thought, namely, the harmony
of reason and consciei^e                    in   the     awakened mind with                that law.             But, inas-
much       as    it is   difficult to see       why the Apostle should revert to the man's
former condition after he                   had made him exult in the Gospel through Christ,
these expositors have resorted to various expedients in order to                                              remove or
at least to lessen this difficulty.
     !Macknight reads the clause interrogatively, thus making the latter part
of   it   equivalent to a negation, and to present his view the                                     more       clearly,   he
subjoins to the interrogation the words, " by no means."                                          But    if   the Apostle
intended thus to declare the Christian's state of liberation, he has dune so
with an obscurity of manner not at                            all in      character with the plainness of his
ordinary interrogative appeals, which his intelligent readers can hardly mis-
understand.              Comp.       ver.   24 and       viii.    31-35.         Besides, the use of the phrase
"serve the law of God" to denote nothing more than the                                            full    acriuiesccnce
of the mind as under the influence of reason and conscience,                                            is    harsh.      To
serve      is   to obey, to          do the commands                    of,    and will not bear such a very
modified signification.
  The           last   remark        is   also an objection to Stuart's interpretation, which
makes           the clause          "a summary of                 the whole preceding representation."
He     places the former half of the verse which contains the thanksgiving in
a parenthesis, and says, " to parenthesis                                 it   clearly belongs, inasmuch as               it
pation of what            is   about to follow."                  But    I   apprehend that very few readers
will      approve of such a view as                       this,        llie lamentable cry for help is so
triumphantly overpowered by the thanksgiving for experienced deliverance,
that the natural feeling                  would seem to be absorbed                      in the pseudo-critical,
VIII.        Ovdev dpa vvv Ka-dKpi[ia                              There      is   therefore       now no     con- VIII.
                             /xr) Kara
       rdlg iv Xptaru) ^Irjaov                                demnation to them -whieh arc in
       If the     meaning of the expression,              "   I   serve the law of                God" would allow
it, I    would propose to place the latter half of                             this    verse in contradistinc-
tion to the first verse of the next chapter,                           and     to regard the one clause as
stronger than in this case                 it   could bear.            Besides, the particle ovv, then,
seems most naturally                 to    be connected with what immediately precedes.
I   do not      feel at liberty, therefore, to            adopt        this   arrangement.
   Apart from any particular examination of the clause in question, it
would seem most reasonable to suppose that, after the Apostle had brought
the description of his personified character to the point of expressing grate-
ful     emotions for deliverance, he would immediately proceed to delineate
the     same person's          Christian condition.               If therefore        what follows            is   suscep-
tible of such an exposition, its correctness                       would seem^ to be highly probable.
Such an interpretation                may certainly be given, provided we regard the
serving of the law of              God as emphatic or make that the prominent thought.
It is certain that, in              the former description, no such assertion had been
made       of the awakened but as yet not Qarlstianized mind.                                         The most          that
had been said amounts merely to acquiescence in and satisfaction with
God's law.            And      moreover, the serving of                it,   that    is,   the doing         its   require-
ments,       is    the very thing which the             man had         repeatedly said he neither did
nor could do.           'To wish      is   present with me, but to perform the good                                    not.'
As Olshausen            well remarks, in the former state "the whole man, the                                         mind
included,          was miable       to serve the        law of God; but here the mind, (now)
the ruling principle in the whole man, appears as freed, and in this freedom
serving the law of God, and only the lower sphere of                                       life   remains subjected
to the law of sin."                The    result therefore         seems       to be this, that the     mind                 in
its    now      Christian condition has,           by   the grace of Christ,                  become enabled                 to
render a holy obedience to God's law; though in his carnal and sinful na-
ture the          man   is still   subjected to     its   tendencies.
        viii. 1.    "Therefore;" apa- the same word occurs in the preceding clause
with ovv, here we have vvv now, which marks more distinctly the man's
Christian condition.
                                   " In Christ     Jesus         :"   This phrase expresses the true
Christian's intimate union with Christ, and is of frequent occurrence.                                                     It is
taken probably from our Lord's comparison of himself to a vine and his
disciples to its living branches,                 and   his expressions of their connection with
    him which spring from the same                  figure.            See John xv.               1, 2,   4-7,     xvii.    21,
23, 2G.            This connection         is   not simply outward by becoming                                 members
ostensibly of his church, but inward also                              by partaking of                    his nature       and
12G                                              COMMEXTAUY ON THE                                                                         [Sect. IX.
      Christ Jesus,                  who walk              not after                 adpKa           TrepmaTovaiv.                    'O yap           2
      tlic flesh,       but after the                  Sjjirit.              For     vofiog rov           Trvevnarog TTJg                  (^(oTjg
character.            Having Leen baptized                                   into Christ        both externally and internally,
we become thereby members                                          not only of his visible but also ofhis inyslica!
body.          On      the ground of such union, Christ                                         is    said to        be   in    us and       we      are
said to be in               and of           Christ, parts                   even ofhis very                 self.       See 2 Cor.          xiii. 5,
Col.   i.   27, Phil.                iii.    9, 1 Cor. xv. 23, Gal. v. 24,                             Eph.        v.   30.      Such cannot
be    in    danger of condemnation.                                           Tiic remainder of the verse                             is   probably
not genuine.                    It    is     wanting              in    many        of the best ancient authorities, and
was perhaps             at first a marginal gloss taken                                     from       ver. 4.           As     other weighty
authorities retain all except the last three words, Ilahn has adopted this
reading.The language describes the course of those who are in Christ Jesus.
     The Apostle now resumes the personification which he had so largely
     2.
wanting.             If so,          and must be                  inserted after Spirit.                       Or       the phrase          may be
equivalent to life-giving Spirit.                                            The whole          clause        may       denote the Gospel
as a spiritual and life-communicating system, as the                                                          word law           is   often used.
See    iii.    27,     James                i.   25, Mic.              iv. 2, Isa.        ii.   3,    xlii.   4.        In this sense             it is
taken by         Amnion                 the annotator on Koppe.                                  "   The law of               sin     and death"
he considers as the same law spoken of                                                in the         former chapter as becoming
the occasion of sin and thus condemning to or producing death.                                                                                    But,
although this view would keep up an antithesis between the two parts of
the verse, and would harmonize also with the meaning of law in ver. 3, the
evident opposition between this place and                                                   vii.     23, forbids          its   adoption.             It
from the         state of              thraldom produced by the                                 sinful        and deadly "law of the
members" before mentioned.                                              According to             this latter            view    also, the         two
laws stand in direct contradistinction to each other, the one as the carnal
controlling impetus of fallen humanity, and the other as the spiritual ele-
ment which inducnccs and grows in the regenerated mind.
   3, 4. To diiva-rov is like rb yvojorov in i. 19. It may be                                                                   the accusative
and also with their result as expressed in the next; and then what the
                                                                                                        \
 Cn. VIII.           2, 3.J             EPISTLE TO THE EOMANS.                                                                                      127
           Kol rov davdrov.     To yap d6v-                                           from the law of sin ami death. For
           varov rov vofiov, iv o) i]0^tvei                                           what the law could not do, in that
           6id T/jg oapKog, 6 -deog, rov tav-                                         it   was weak through the                 flcsli,   God,
           rov vibv Tr^fiipag      ououofiari    h                                    sending his            own Son    in the likeness
           oapKog di-iap-iag koI -rrepl dfiap-                                        of sinful flesh,            and       for sin,      con-
thing entirely                beyond the capability of the law. Its weakness is ascribed
to " the flesh."                    This does not                      mean on account of                     the imperfection of the
law as a system                     chiefly external, " carnal," as the adjective is                                            used in Heb.
vii.       IG   ;    for the        Apostle          is   not speaking of the Mosaic law as such, but of
the moral law which had been the topic of the preceding part of the section.
The cause of its inadequacy lies in human weakness and sinfulness. See
vii. 12-14, Heb. vii. 18, Gal. iii. 21, 22, Acts xiii. 39. "Sending his
own         son      :"    This aflirms the son ship of the messenger before he was sent,
which           is    also    most          strikingly represented in                                John      iii.   16.      " Likeness of
sinful flesh :"               Flesh here, as often elsewhere,                                        is   used for the whole man.
See John              i.   14,   and     Isa. xl. 5. The Apostle does not say in " sinful flesh,"
but in          its likeness.           Thus he guards against the errour of attaching sinfulness
to Christ's nature.                         Comp. Heb.                       iv.    15.        The     introduction of sin through
Adam            vitiated but did not destroy the nature in                 which he had been "made
upright," Eccles.                    vii.   29, and this original     human nature was assumed by
Christ.
              "And              for sin:''            This may simply mean 'on account of sin,' like
the dative in vi.                     10    ;    or,      it       may            convey the idea of atonement                            for sin,
rrpoocpopd or ^vna or                          Svoia being understood.                                   See Heb.          x. 8,     where the
same         ellipsis occurs, "                  burnt offerings and                           nep).   dfiapriag" and in the Sep-
tuagint, " the priest shall offer                                  to nepl dfiapriag                   first,    and    shall sprinkle of
the blood rov nepl TTJg duaprlag.''''                                                 Levit. v. 8, 9.                 So    also in vi. 30,
vii. 7,      37, xiv. 19.
                                     "Condemned                             :"The verb is declarative and equivalent
to,    '
           showed          his   condemnation                      of.'        This was done by subjecting Christ to
suffering            on account of human                               sin    whereby it was atoned for. The close
connection in which this stands with the former phrase favours the meaning
just given to                 it.
                                     "In        the flesh:"                  Some         explain this of Christ's                   flesh,    and
consider the phrase as parallel to that in                                                 1   Pet.    ii.   24, " in his        own body."
Others, with                  whom          I    should concur, prefer the meaning in which                                                    it    is
   The author has pointed out one thing effected by Christ which the law
was incompetent to do, that is, making satisfaction for sin by an atonement.
He now proceeds                      to another                :
                                                                   "   That the righteousness of the law might be
fulfilled in us,              who walk               not after the flesh but after the Spirit                                    :"   This im-
plies grace procured                            by   the atonement and imparted to the believer,                                                    by
which he             is    enabled to live a holy                             life;   all      which      lies entirely          beyond the
                                                                          :                                                                                ;
dcmiud sin in the flesh ; that the riac;, KartKpive rz/i/ dfiapTiav
      the flesh, but after the Spirit.                                For          Kara adpKa Trepnrarovaiv, dkXd
      they that are after the flesh do                                             Kara Trreu^a.     Oi yap Kara                                       5
against God ; for it is not sulycct to oapKo^ ^X^pa eig deov roi yap
the law of God, neither indeed can ro/io) tov deuv ovx VTTordoatTai,
V. 18.
             "Fulfilled:"                 Better, 'fully done.'                             The verb             TrXrjpocs)            often takes
its   meaning from the context, and expresses a good measure of the subject
concerning which   it is predicated. Thus in Matt.'iii. 15 fullt/ to comply                                         :
                                                                                                                         ^
                                                                                                                                                       ;'
uith    all religious             obligations           ;'
                                                              Acts          xii.    25, ^fuHi/ j^erformed their ministry
liom.        xiii. 8,    '/% obeyed                    the law.'                  Of course         St.   Paul does not speak of
an absolutely perfect, but an honourable and sincere obedience, showing
that " the law of the mind" predominates over that "of the flesh."       Thus
in James ii. 8   "if ye fulji/;'
                             :   fidli/ do, " the royal law," where the Greek
word         Te?.eiTe       is    quite as strong as that here used.
                                                                                                       "         In us :"             He      says in
rather than iy, probably to call attention to the all-important fact, that this
vii. IT, 20. What follows is added to describe the Christian character.
The meaning is: who do not live according to the promptings of the sinful
flesh is flesh, and that which is born of the Spirit is spirit." As the spiritual
element            in the        regenerate             is    the production of the                          Holy            Spirit, the          same
word         is   used both for the agent and his work.                                           Thus      the term               liffht      denotes
both Christ himself and also the blessings of his Gospel. See John i. 4, 5, 7-9.
   5-8. " Do mind :" That is, are bent upon.' Thus the word is used in
                                                                  '
 general character.                       Cornp. Phil.                 iii.   15, 16, 19, Col.             iii.   2.         So    also the       noun
 <pp6vT)fia.           If    understood actively,                             it   will e.xpress the minding, the                                being
Ch. VIII. 4-n.J                 EPISTLE TO THE ROMANS.                                                                  129
      aapKL ovTEq deu) dpeaai ov dv-                            flesh cannot please             God.          But ye         9
9     vavrai.  'Tfietg de ovk 'iore ev                          are not         in   the flesh, but in the
      aapKi, aXX" ev            Tzvevf^iari,,      elTreQ       Spirit, if so        be that the Spirit of
             Seov oiKel ev vfiiv
      TTVEv^ia                     el               
                                                                God dwell            in you.        Now        if    any
   de TCg TTvevfia Xpiarov ovk %e(,                            man have          not the Spirit of Christ,
10 ovTog OVK eanv avrov. E/ 6e                                  he    is   none of     his.    And         if Christ,       10
   Xpiorbg ev vfuv, to [.lev G(x)p.a                            he in you, the         body    is   dead because
   veh'pbv di' dfiapriav, ro 6e nvev-                           of sin     ;   but the spirit       is life   because
11    f.ia (^Ci)7J   did diKaioovvrjv.          Et 6e           of righteousness.              But    if   the Spirit 11
      rb TTvevfia rov eyeipavrog ^Irjaovv                       of    him      that raised      up Jesus from
      etc   veKpCJv olKeX ev vfuv, 6 iyei-                      the    dead dwell in you, he that
      pag rbv Xpiorbv eK veKpSiv ^uo-                           raised     up Christ from the dead                  shall
bent upon and governed by; if passively, the principle, the sinful character
from which such a condition sprmgs. The latter is to be preferred. Com-
pare the word in ver. 27, where it denotes the mind or will of the Spirit.
The Greek phrase               in the text    is   thus employed in our 9th Article to denote
the sinful element of nature as remaining in the regenerate.                                         Death on the
one hand and            life   and peace on the other, are the respective                                  results pro-
duced by the influence of the two principles. In ver. 7, the carnal princi-
the man.             Hence     the   meaning and truth of the remark, that                                  " they     who
are in the flesh cannot please God," are self-evident.                                         For       the    meaning
of " in the          flesh," see     on   vii. 5, p.     107.
      9-11.      As    the phrase "in the Spirit" is'antithetic to that " in the flesh,"
its   meaning must             be, 'in a holy state, under the influence of the Spirit.'
Comp.       ix. 1, 1     Cor.   xii. 3.      And such is necessarily the result of the condi-
tion annexed, " if the Spirit of                God dwell in you." These words describe
habitual influence, and imply close association.   See Exod. xxix. 45, 2 Cor.
vi,   IG,   and especially John              xiv. 23,       "we
                                                  make our abode with him."
                                                                      will
The Spirit of God is also the Spirit of Christ, as whose messenger and
agent he is sent. Comp. John xiv. 26, xv. 26, xvi. 7, 14, 15. The general
meaning is identical with that of the word " Christ" in the next verse. The
first two phrases may be equivalent to      a Godly or Christlike mind,' and
                                                                  '
express religious and spiritual character, and the same mind may afterwards
be personified and spoken of as Christ                          himself.         But   it is   preferable to con-
sider the Holy Spirit and Christ both                           to    be personally intended, and                      their
intimate union with the believer to be implied.                                 Middleton admits the Holy
Spirit to        be meant        in ver. 11,        but not          in ver. 9,      where he maintains the
other sense of            "a Godly and             Christian frame of mind," referring to texts
                         9
130                                      COMMENTARY ON THE                                                                 [Sbct. IX.
where the word                  spirit is       used to mark the temper and disposition.*                                          But
the words, " dwell in you," which arc added in each case, favour an identity
of meaning, and                  1    presume that nothing but the absence of the                                          article in
respect to sin ;' but this is neither sanctioned by usage nor in accordance
with the context. In this case the body is supposed to mean natural corrup-
tion, as            probably     it    does in     vi. 6, vii.      24, and      below          ver.     13   ;   and     this is said
to be dead, that                is,    comparatively, because                 its    power          is   broken and abated.
But       in     opposition to this view                 it is     quite sufficient to say, that the connec-
tion of the                two verses shows            " the     dead body" of the one to be the same
as the " mortal bodies" of the other.                                Now       it   would be preposterous                      to ex-
ous and living through the Gospel, but always, on the contrary, as some-
thing which                 must be crucified, put                  to death,            and abolished.                    The term
"body"              therefore    must be taken in                   its literal           meaning.                It is    said to   be
"dead:" Perhaps because                              this is       soon to be            its   condition; perhaps also
because              its    true, ultimate,        and future             glorified life            is   not yet operative.
Thus           in vii. 8, sin is called                 '
                                                             dead," meaning comparatively                                 inefficient.
that       is,      they are thoroughly impregnated with the scent of such odoriferous
herbs.
                    " On account of righteousness."  Justification cannot be the true
meanin"- here, for this would not preserve the antithesis with sin in the
former clause; religiousness of character, holiness of the inner man, is the
Apostle's idea.
                              
                 "Him that raised up Jesus from the dead:" This and the
similar clause that follows are periphrases for God, yet intended to impress
the thought of Christ's resurrection by divine power, introductory to the
thought of the same power being exerted                                       in     our resurrection.                     Comp. on
iv.       24.  " By          his Spirit that dwelleth               in    you      :"   This accords with the com-
mon Greek                   reading, which has the preposition did with the genitive.                                              But
the marginal reading                      is    greatly to be preferred                   :    "because of              his Spirit."
This           is    also    the translation of Tyndale, Cranmer, and the                                            Geneva and
 Rheims              versions,        and the meaning of Wiclif's                             also,      which employs the
         The Doctrine        of the   Greek   article ftpplled to the    criUclsm and Illustration of the           New    Testament.
New        York,     1818, p. 1i46.
On.   Vm.      12, 18.]            EPISTLE TO THE ROMANS.                                                                    131
word     " for,"           The best       external authorities have the accusative, and thus
sustain this reading and signification, which are also strongly corrobo-
rated    by     the internal evidence.                 The remark of Professor                       Stuart, that the
" agent had been already named, he                           who    raised       up Christ,"              is   not of       much
force, for       God might           be said to raise us up               bij    means of           his Spirit.                  But
it is   not the Apostle's intention to refer to the Spirit as the agent in                                                  effect-
ing the Christian's glorious resurrection, only as the given pledge of                                                 it.    The
accusative reading expresses this sense, on account                                     of.         Tliis is         confirmed
by    the   same use of the preposition                  in ver. 10,        on acsouiit q/                sin, o?t     account
o/ righteousness, and also by the language                          in   2 Cor.       v. 5,    where "the Spirit"
is   said to    be    " given unto us" as " the earnest" of our resurrection.                                              Comp,
John.    vi.    39, 40, 44, 54,           where the promise of future resurrection                                     is   made
to those        who belong to Christ, who believe in him through                                               the Father's
drawing,        who are incorporated in him by a living union. All                                             these phrases
imply one and the same                    thing, as    do the indwelling of the Spirit and that of
Christ before explained.                   Thus,   in the correct          language of the commentator
just    named, " the             last clause assigns a         reason       why       he   who           raised       up Jesus
from the dead              will quicken his true followers, because                            he has given them
his Spirit."      The whole              statement then           is    to this effect         :
                                                                                                     '
                                                                                                         If Christ           be   in
you by a         spiritual        and   vital union, although the                body indeed                  in its   present
condition        is   spiritually feeble        and must soon become                     literally dead, yet the
ally influences and governs you, God, who raised Jesus Christ from the
dead, will give life even to those frail, weak and mortal bodies of yours, on
account of his Spirit whom he hath caused to abide with you and to pene-
trate into       your inmost being.'
       12-14. The conclusion drawn in ver. 12, which expresses the Christian's
obligation not to live according to the promptings of natural sinfulness,                                                          is
 ence to John              vi.   50, to    show    that not dying           is       equivalent to being raised
at the last day,            is   not satisfactory, as that glorious resurrection                                 is   not iden-
132                                       COMMENTARY ON THE                                                                                  [Sect. IX.
14 For as many as aie led by the Spirit yuQ rri'tvfiaTl ^tov dyovrai, ov-
      al God, they are the Sons of (Jod.                                            Tui    tlaiv        viol         deov.               Ov yap 13
15 For ye have not received the                              sjjirit                ikdi3eTe -nvtvfia                6uv?Mag rrdkiv
      of bondage again to                      feai-   j    but yo                  tig (pofiov,        dXk' iXdjhrt TTVeu/iO
      have received the             Spii'it     of adoption,
This word preserves the figure.                                       The aggregate of                         sin    being represented
as a     body and              also        personified, individual                                sins,       which are sometimes
depicted as             its   members,             (see Col. Hi. 5,)                       may      naturally be considered as
its    acts   ;    and here these are substituted by a metonymy                                                             for the feelings
and passions whence they spring. In Col. iii. 9, the same word occurs in
the sense of sinful actions and motions:                                                    "ye have put                    ofF the old               man
with his deeds."                    The whole                    phrase, therefore,                      is    equivalent to such an
opposition to sinful passions as tends to their                                                  final    destruction,
      15-17. "Again" should be connected with " fear," not with " received."
"      Spirit of         bondage              spirit       of adoption                   :"    These phrases                   may be             pleo-
nastic,    and express simply Avhat                                   is   denoted by the latter words.                                        But, as
their use         seems       to    have been suggested by the term                                           .Spirit     before employed,
the     meaning          is   probably as follows                           :       'the Sjjirlt        whom you              have received
is    not one which brings you again into a condition of fearful apprehension,
but which          efiects         your adoption into God's family.'                                           ITius in              1    Cor,     11.   12,
the spirit whom the Apostle claims to have received is said to be "not of the
world but of God." In Isa. xi. 2, we read of " the spirit of wisdom and
understanding, the spirit of counsel and might, the spirit of knowledge and
of the fear of the Lord," meaning the                                                     eflicient      power which enables                             its
 adoption attendant on the resurrection                                         :    See ver. 23.         The thought                      in the lat-
Cn. VITI. 14-17.]                 EPISTLE TO THE ROMANS.                                                                                         133
ing of love and docility which accompanies the recognition.                                                                      The same use
of both languages occurs also in the parallel place, Gal.                                                   iv, 6,     and in our Lord's
prayer in the garden,                Mark            xiv. 36.               Here         the language of recognition                                is
put     in the     mouth of         the Christian: ^^tve cry."                                     In Galatians                   the   same       act
is   attributed to the divine agent                         :
                                                                    "       God     hath sent forth the Spirit of his
Son     into      your hearts, crying, Abba, Father."                                         This         is    readily explained on
the principle, qui facit per alium facit per                                       se, as it is            only through the                    influ-
ence of the Holy Spirit that the child of                                          God        is   brought to recognise with
joyous trust his heavenly father.                            The emotion                        is,   in the         one place, ascribed
to the Spirit,              and in the other, to Christians themselves.                                                          And     thus, in
ver. 26, the            '
                            inward intercessions of the Christian are attributed to the
Spirit,      inasmuch as they are produced by                                       his operation.'                     The same usage
occurs also in relation to cases of demoniacal agency, the language said to
be uttered being ascribed indifferently to the demon and to the possessed.
Compare           the narratives of the cure of the                               two demoniacs of Gadara                                in   Matt.
viii.   28     et seq.,      Mark     v. I et seq.,             and Luke                  viii.       26        et seq.
      The      attestation of the Spirit here spoken of                                         is    made           to the        mind of the
believei",        and   is    therefore internal, as                            it is   said in        1    John        v. 10,          he " hath
the witness in              himself.''''        It   consists chiefly in the Christian character, but
as this      is   the   work of the         Spirit, it is               he      who      testifies.              This       is    proved more
clearly        by the       parallel place in Galatians before quoted,                                                where God            is   said
to   have sent forth the Spirit into the heart, implying the mission of a per-
sonal agent.                The witness          consists in satisfying the individual of his                                                   filial
and by habitual, though                    it    may      not be invariable, hope and trust in future
blessedness.                K feeling of acceptance,                         amounting even to assurance,                                  is   hap-
pily not the test of filiation laid                          down                in Scripture;                  for such a test                must
ever be uncertain, and often dependent on physical condition and natural
temperament.            
                       -It is better to give the proposition its proper force, as is
done      in   our authorised version, and also in the Genevan,whlch has " together
134                                   COMMENTARY ON THE                                                       [Skct. IX. X.
suffer with him, that we may be elnep avnTTdaxo[iev, Iva KoX avv-
with."  Wiclif and the llheims translate " to ;" and this is the sense of
Tyndalc, and Craiimer, " ccrtilicth cure spretc." The Apostle's meaning
is,   that the thoughts          and    reflections            and reasonings,     in   a word,       tlie     operations
of the mind on              itself,   act   on and thus join along with                   its    regenerated and
renewed character              in attesting          a state of sonship.            It is     true that this               view
does not necessarily follow from the use of the preposition                                      in    composition             ;
still, it    agrees best with St. Paul's manner, and with the three                                            compound
words       in the        next verse.         Heirship along with Christ results from                            filiation,
as glorification docs from the true Christian's "fellowship" with his master's
" sufferinjjs."             Sec Phil.       iii.   10.
SECTION X.
THE TRIALS OF LIFE AKD THE BLESSINGS OF THE GOSPEL BOTH HERE AND
   HEREAFTER COMPARED. GOd's PURPOSE TO CONFER ALL THESE BLESSINGS
   ON HIS REDEEMED. CONSEQUENT EXULTATION AND TRIUMPH.
Verses         18, 19. In addition to the well                         known English commentators,                          the
reader      is   referred on these and                   some of        the following verses to a disserta-
tion    by Doederlein,            in the           Commentationes Theologicie,                  vol.      I.   pp.    483     et
seq.,   and another by Danhauwer,                             in the   Thesaurus Theologico-Philologicus,
appended             to    the Critici Sacri, Anistel. 1702, pp.                        503     et seq.          Also, to
Stuart's 8th Excursus in his                        Commentary, or            his article       on the passage                in
the Biblical Pvepository for April 1831, vol.                                I.   pp. 363-406.                 The Com-
mentaries of Tholuck and Olshausen contain farther references to                                                  German
writers,       and also important original remarks.
   "For:" This shows the connection with what immediately precedes.
Having mentioned suffering and glorification along with Christ, the Apostle
here presents the Christian with the strongest motive to bear such sufiering
with resignation and cheerfulness, in consequence of the infinitely superior
blessings which the glory that                           is    to follow comprehends.
                                                                                                     "   I    reckon       :" 1
reason for limiting the meaning.                             Both the present and future blessings of
Christ's        kingdom are here to be taken in connection, as constituting one
whole.           The future part, however, is to be regarded as incomparably the
greatest, both in the nature                             and degree of            its      enjoyments, and also on
account of their being eternal.                            It is   on the ground of               this      union of the pre-
sent and the future, that the called, the justified, in ver. 30, are also the
glorified. Their glorification hath already begun. In harmony with this
view, " the believer on the Son" is said to " have" already " everlastin<T
life :"    John         iii.   36.       With      the spirit and general tenor of the verse, compare
1 Pet. iv. 13.                  It is      uncertain whether elg             is      better rendered in or                to us.
Either      is    allowable, and either                   makes a good            sense.          The revelation of the
glory      is   partly to the soul and therefore in us                            ;   and partly also to be under-
stood and appreciated                       by     others,   and thus        in a       degree         to us.    The former
view, however, coincides best with the Apostle's general tone of feeling and
description,            and with the character of the                     glorified condition,               which     is cliiefly
internal.
      The       revelation of the sons of                    God    is   not the manifesting of them to the
universe.               As     the phrase          must be explained by                    the previous verse,            it    can
mean nothmg                  else than the glorious condition                         which       is   to   be made known
136                                         COMMENTARY ON THE                                                                 [Sect.   X.
to them by their uwii blessed experience; and this is what the creature is
and mental ingenuity.                             These     1    shall omit,           and mention three only, each
of which has been defended by                                    men     of good sense and sound philological
learning.
      1.   Several commentators of distinction consider the word as expressing a
moral creation, and understand by                                 it    Christians converted either from Juda-
ism or Heathenism or both.                                The term         " creature,'' Krioig,                and " woikman-
ship," TTOiTjua,             which          is    analogous to            it,    are certainly used to denote true
Christians.             The       latter occurs            with this application in Eph.                          ii.   10,   and the
former      in texts         which          will     be quoted inmiediately.                        Tliis       usage arises out
of the     fact, that         the Christian                is   another being than he was before his con-
version,        and has become so by the creative power of God operating within
him. Thus              St.   Paul says with striking beauty and                                   force, "       God, who com-
manded the             light to shine out of darkness, hath shined in our hearts, to give
                                                                                                                                       :"
the light of the knowledge of the glory of                                       God         in the face of      Jesus Christ
2    Cor. iv. G.         The word                   therefore fitly expresses the Christian condition.
But, whenever                it is     thus used in the                 New      Testament,             it is   accompanied by
certain adjuncts which determine this to be                                            its   meaning.           Thus,   in    Eph.     iv,
Besides, in vs. 22, 23, those w ho had " received the                                                      first    fruits      of the
Spirit" are contrasted with " the                                 whole creation, the creature" of                            ver. 19.
summation.          In defining this          view more accurately, some take into consid-
eration this world in             its   present condition, understanding the irrational in
opposition to the rational creation                      ;    while others grasp in imagination the
universe, without, however, expressing themselves fully or clearly as to                                                       all
material and spiritual world, must be understood."                                             And       yet the phe-
nomena by which he attempts                       to illustrate his              view are      all   taken from               ter-
restrial nature, the birth              of animals, the bui'sting and growth of plants, and
what he lepresents as               their struggles              towards an unattainable perfection.
I   may   remark, by the way, that                  among         these intended illustrations there                            is
not one     in   which the supposed struggle of nature results                                 in    any superiority
over the parent plant or animal.                             They      are therefore rather efforts after
preservation and continuance than improvement and ultimate perfection,
and consequently do not bear on the point to be                                      illustrated.        Indeed           I   am
constrained to say, that imagination and poetic feeling seem here to have
had more influence on               this   devout and thoughtful commentator, than calm
reasoning or well settled                  facts.        Doubtless the introduction of sin into
the world        by man, did produce a change                           in the inferior parts of earthly
creation, substituting thorns                 and     thistles for fragrant flowers                       and       fruitful
plants, disturbing the            harmony even                 in material,          and most probably much
more      in irrational nature.                And           therefore a state of blessedness which
shall entirely counteract                the effects of the                 fiill,    may      well be described
as   embracing a change even                  in irrational nature.                      This would be equiva-
lent to declaring that the original perfection,                                    which characterised God's
work, when he surveyed the immense whole and pronounced                                                    it all        to    be
" very good," shall be restored.                     In other words, all the evil of sin shall                                 be
abundantly repaired.                 A   poetic     mind may well be conceived                            to    pour out
this   thought in language which represents                                all    nature as wailing at              its       pre-
sent degradation, and anxiously and with bitter throes labouring in the
hope of a glorious birth and youthful immortality.                                            And    thus in the sub-
lime language of the prophets, the mountains and the forests burst forth in
exulting strains, and the hoary deep                          lifls    up    his voice        on high, and surges
out the praises of God.*                   This    may        be the Apostle's general thought, as                              it
is also    the prophets',         when they         describe the peaceful, loving character of
Messiah's reign. f             But the nature of the                   figure     and of the truth         to       be    illus-
* See Isa. xllv. 23, Iv. 12. Ps. xcvi. 11, 12, and other similar places,
                    t Ps.   Ixxii. 3, 6, 16, Isa. xl. 6-9, Iv. 12, 13. Ix. Ixv. lT-25.
138                                   COMMENTAKY ON THE                                                                  [Sect.   X.
trated forbids us to                make      all   the details of the imagery real.                                    We   must
not infer a radical change of material nature                                      ;   we must not                  expjact the
noxious beast or reptile to be transformed into the bland and gentle com-
panion, or the discords of the present sublunary creation to                                                 become attuned
to tlie         harmony of divine             love.        By    attempting to carry the figure to ex-
tremes we counteract                  its    rightful illustrative element.                         This has been done
by the          Ivabbies,      whose exhibitions of the renovation which                                      is   to mariv tho
completely counteract the ruinous                          effects of sin              which has degraded God's
originally beautiful             and harmonious creation, and establish universal                                            right-
eousness, holiness, and happiness in                         all      the wide domains of his glorified
kingdom.                Whether       this   kingdom        shall      embrace within                its         borders regen-
erated material and irrational nature,                           is    a useless speculation, about which
men may            indulge their imaginations at the expense of sober and religious
thought, and which has been and may again become the fruitful source of
unbounded and mischievous corporeal indulgence. See, for one illustration,
the extravagant traditional statements of Papias in Irenajus ad Hvov. Lib. v.
Cap. 33, pp. 454, 455, Edit. Grabe, Ox. 1702.
      Another view of the word KTiaig, creature, is defended by some of
      3.
the most judicious commentators, and conveys most probably the Apostle's
leading thought.   It may be used for mankind generally, the popular use of
proportion. Thus in John x. 8, " all that ever came before me are thieves
This is undoubtedly the case in John xii. 19, " Mc icorld has gone after
Gospel to every creature the Gospel, which was preached to every creature
d-rroKaXvipiv rwv Viwt' rov deov creature -waitctli for the manifcsta-
all   men       cannot be meant, since the regenerate as such, ver. 19, are ex-
pressly excepted." This objectionis urged by Olshausen, who nevertheless
hends all men. But I have already shown that such language often ex-
presses what is common, though very far from being universal.         The
regenerate, although a part of mankind in its totality, is no part of that
whole creation with which they are contrasted; just as in 1 John v. 19,
" we,"     meaning true              Christians, are set in opposition to " the ^uhole ivorld
lying in wickedness;" and in                       Num.         xvi. 29, the rebel faction of                Korah,
Dathan and Abiram                    are contrasted with           '^
                                                                        all   meny         Secondly      it is   ques-
tioned whether St. Paul would have represented such a feeling and wish
on the part of Heathen                 men     as a " longing after Christian glorification, con-
sidering        how much         the feeling       was     destitute of a            moral basis."           Such a
"thought would have been expressed quite differently from the tone of                                             this
multitudes             who    felt   something of         it,   very weak.            I    see no   good reason,
however, for assuming that the Apostle's statement requires any other
supposition.             Admitting        this   moral weakness, the desire for a better oon-
ditiun         may     nevertheless have been exceedingly strong.                                The thought        is
glimpse, and the Christian's present knowledge, true and well founded in
the degree to which it extends, the difierence compared with the magnitude
of the future " revelation,"      may be very inconsiderable. And if the objec-
tion applies to the        meaning now under review, much more does it to that
maintained by the objectors, which represents inanimate creation as long-
ing for this " Christian glorification."                             To attempt              to   remove      this difficulty
by    calling the Apostle's language a bold personification,                                             is trifling;    for   by
such a figure material nature cannot possibly be represented                                                    *as lonfrin"
for   what      is j^roj^erhj    Christian glorification.                          On any view                of the place,
" the revelation of the sous of                      God" must be understood                               in a limited ap-
plication.
      It is   well   known      that the       more thoughtful and serious portion of man-
kind, both before and since the                  coming of Christ, have often been under the
influence of feelings such as those here stated                                   by    the Apostle.            The reader
may     find illustrations of this in the writers before referred to                                            and also        in
other interpreters.
      20, 21.     "Vanity       :"    That     is,   a   frail,      unhappy, miserable condition.                            It is
deed affirms that "this is not true of mankind. It cannot be said, in its full
and proper        force, that        they were brought into their present state not by
their   own      act or 'willingly,' but                 by the       act and      power of God."                 In reply       I
remark, that the         first    of ^ose two statements                          is   true,      and can therefore be
said in its fullest sense;                 and that the second                    is   not     made by        the Apostle.
The Professor seems     confound the voluntary breach of God's law with
                                 to
the penal consequences that ensued  and therefore he represents the other
                                                               ;
Ch. VIII.      20, 21.]            EPISTLE TO THE ROMANS.                                                              141
21 en' iX-iSr ore koc avri]                   t]   Kriotg    hope: because the creature                          itself   21
       eXevdepco^ijaerac dno rTjg 6ov-                       also       sliall     be delivered from the
       Xeiag    rTjg (j)^opag eig Trjv             iXev-     bondage              of corruption           into     the
is, as in such construction it scarcely ever occurs in any other meaning. Z?y,
most invariable usage, I prefer it to the other. This accords with the
older English versions.                 Wiclif, Tyndale, Cranmer, and the Rheims, have
" for   ;" Geneva and King James', give the same meaning in the transla-
             the
tion "by reason of."    They all agree with, and perhaps followed, the
Vulgate, propter.  The agent who is said to have subjected is the devil,
according to Locke, who refers to Gen. iii., Col. ii. 15, and Heb. ii. 14, 15.
Others, among whom is James Capel, think Adam to have been meant,
and suppose an allusion to the                        fall   and to          v.   12    et seq.     But the larger
proportion of respectable authorities apply the term to                                         God   ;    and     this    is
probably the most natural exposition, and accords best with the context,
and also with          St. Paul's habit             of referring every thing to God.                         The       sub-
jection took place                by God, of       course, inasmuch, as he induced the state of
things implying             it,   and placed the sinning                fallen creature therein; a state
too which the culprit would gladly have avoided, had this been within his
power.         The   subjection        was compulsory, but on account of the divine being
who     effected     it,   in order to    promote his purpose by subjecting man to trial
and     suffering,         thereby leading him to repentance, submission and                                        faith.
The     sinful creature            must be a       suffering creature, and this                 on account of the
honour of God, who by a suitable discipline                              elicits        good from     evil.
142                                   COMMENTARY ON THE                                                             [Sect. X.
        " In hope       :"     Muny    interpreters            and     critics       of high reputation connect
this     piirase with the preceding                    verb vTTETdyr], made                     subject^ placing the
intermediate clause in a parenthesis and closely uniting the verse with the
next.         "On       will then   have the sense oi                 that.         The meaning        thus elicited            is
be placed.
     22, 23.        The verbs here employed                          fitly    represent the painful distress
attendant on the efforts to be                      made        in   order to rise from present degrada-
tion to ultimate bliss,                    hiasmuch as          this bliss is the state of filiation into
which we are partially born again here by the                                              Spirit,   (John   iii.   G,)    and
completely          in the great "regeneration                       when the Son of man                shall sit         upon
the throne of his glory," (Matt. xix. 28,)                            and " he that raised up Christ                      shall
also quicken our mortal bodies on account of his indwelling spirit," (liom.
viii.   11    ;)   the figure chosen          whereby           to express those efforts is taken                         from
parturition, the anguish of                  which        is    sustained in the hope that a child of
God      is   being born into the kingdom of heaven                             :    Comp. John         xvi. 21      .    Tiie
      "And         not only." Here                  we must supply from               the former verse the
words       " the        whole creation."             A similar    ellipsis      occurs in           ix.   10    :
                                                                                                                      "   and not
only" was this so                 in the caste       of Sarah, "but" &c.              "The           first-fruits"          were
portions of the harvest which were cut the earliest, and were oifered to
God.           See Levit.         xxiii. 10,       and Deut. xxvi.    2.     Hence         the       word        is    used by
a figure to denote the early converts of a place.                             Rom.       xvi. 5, 1 Cor. xvi. 15.
It is   applied also to Christ as being "the                         first    born from the dead," after
whom        they that belong to him are to be raised.                             Col.     i.    18, 1 Cor. xv. 23.
Here     it      means      the gracious influences of the Spirit given to the early con-
verts as an earnest and pledge of his                         most abundant communications                                  to    be
afterwards dispensed.                     "Even       we    ourselves:"         A   comparison of ancient
authorities         shows a vast variety of readings                   here.         But    this is of               very   little
this benefit.  Comp. vs. 15, 16, and 1 John iii. 2. But here the word is
employed in its fullest signification, comprehending those blessings which
are connected with the resurrection of the body, here called                                               its       " redemp-
     24, 25. "            For"     is illative      of what has just been said.                  The imperfection
of our present condition requires the exercise of hope of a better one.
"   By hope :"            If this    be the correct         translation, then        hope        is    to   be regarded
as one      among         other Christian properties tending to secure our salvation,                                            in-
144:                                                COMMENTARY ON THE                                                                                   [Sect.         X.
a man seetli, why doth lie yet liope ovK tarcv ilni^- o yap /SAtrrei
2 J for?             But        if   we hope for                    that        we       rig, ri Koi              tXmi;n          ;    Et        (5t-   H    oi)       25
      sec not, then                  do we witli                 patience               /iAt'Tro/xtv,             i/^Tri^ojiev,              Sl'        vno-
26 wait for i^                        Likewise the Spirit                               fiovTjg uTiticdexofit^a.                           'ilaavTO)g                  26
      also helpcth our infirmities                                  :    for    we      <5t-      Koi rb -nvEvfia avvavrikajj^
       know          not wliat            we        should pray for                     fidverai ry dadi;vda ijnoju                                     
                                                                                                                                                             to
asmuch as we are                          led thereby to adhere                              and persevere.                   But probably the
dative Iknidi, expresses our condition.                                                        The meaning             will then be,                        we         are
in a state of salvation, in                               which hope                   is    to   be continually exercised.                                      Men
are said to be saved,                               when they have accepted                                the Gospel             ;   and hence                    it is
that believers are called the saved and unbelievers the                                                              lost.            Sec Acts               ii.       47,
2   Cor.       ii.   15, iv. 3.
                                           "Seen:"                       This means in present possession as some-
thing external, and                           is    equivalent to enjoyed.                                It is   as if the author had said,
'hope enjoyed                        is    not properly hope.'                                 Tt    is    rendered in our translation
   why    ;"        how is perhaps preferable. Hope produces patient and persevering
expectation.               
                          The word as first employed in these verses comprises the
principle,                afterwards                 it   denotes the object on wliich the principle                                                             acts.
Spiritum, quod nos gemere facial caritate.*                                                               The     principle on which such
language             is        used has already been stated on ver. 15,                                                p. 132.                   This inter-
In Josn. EvanR. Cup. 1. Tract, vl. Sect. 2, Opora, Edit. Bened., Tom. ill. Par. Ii. Ant. 1700, col.
211. Also,      Expos. Prop. ox. Epist, ad Itom. Ibid.                               coL. 605.
                                                                                                                                                  ;
with most earnest emotion, with feeling too deep for utterance.                                                                "   He that
searcheth the hearts:" This                         is   a periphrasis for                   God    as omniscient.                              The
verb expresses thorough knowledge, and                                              is   thus used in           1       Cor.   ii.         10.
" The mind of the Spirit" is the intention of the                                            Spirit,     which leads him to
prompt and direct the Christian's prayer; or the                                             disposition, character,                            and
desire,       which he implants                   in the Christian,                 and which leads              to such suppli-
cation.           "Otc     may
                 be rendered " because," and then the meaning will be
that God knows and approves the Spirit's intention, inasmuch as it is in
accordance with his                       will.     Or,    it   may be                translated         that,          and then the
thought will be,             God knoweth that the intention of the Spirit is according
to his will.             Kara deov, literally, according to God, is equivalent to ac-
cording to             the will of God.  Comp. 1 John v. 14, where the full phrase
occurs.           In   2 Cor.       xi.    17, KaTo,           Kvpcov          is     employed       in a similar                  way.
       28.    The         proposition in this verse                      is,    that all things co-operate to the
advantage of God's loAnng children                                   ;   and, in the following ones, for to do
good to such               is   his eternal purpose,             and           this      he intends to carry into                          effect.
to   them       that love          God      that all things are to                       work together          for      good          ;        such
lovers of         God       are therefore the called according to his purpose.'                                                    This           is
the inference, and to love                        God     is   said to          be the condition of being                            called.
Now       let     us reverse the position of the logical terms.                                          '
                                                                                                             It is to      the called
according to God's purpose that aU things are to work together for good
such called are said to love God.   The inference therefore is that to be-
come the lovers of God we must have been those who were to be called.'
The one course of argument is just as logical as the other and, as they                                             ;
prove contrary conclusions, they prove nothing.  Most likely the theolotr-
ical    controversies which gave rise to the above specimens of logic, were un-
known         to the author             from whose statements they are thought                                      to    be derived.
He     describes a certain class of persons in two aspects                                           ;   they love God, and
they are the called according to his purpose.                                               Whether          the former                    is    the
ground of the                   latter,    or the latter of the former                         ;   whether they become
the called because they loved, or whether they love because they were the
called, is a           mere matter of              speculation, of which St. Paul does not say one
                     10
14(5                                       COMMENTARY ON THE                                                                          [Sect.    X.
all things work together for good rov debv rcdvra avvepyel elg
"
means those who have received the Gospel.                                                 See note on              i.   C, p.        22.
      What        is    the purpose referred to?                                   A
                                                                              most important question; the
answer to which               1    shall    endeavour to               give from a view of what the Scripture
states      on   this   much          controverted subject.
      The noun          is    employed                 in the        New       Testament twelve times, of which
only four have any bearing on the topic to be considered, namely                                                                     Rom.   viii.
28,   ix.    ll,Eph.         i.    11,   iii.   11,    and 2 Tim.             i.   9.     The verb occurs three times,
Eph.    i.   9 alone having the same bearing.                                           These places must be carefully
examined.
      Omitting the                first,   as that         is     the one to be illustrated,                        I   begin with the
second; the meaning of which                                 is   almost self-evident.                   "    The children being
not yet born, neither having done any good or                                                    evil, that             the purpose of
God     according to election might stand," &c.                                               This relates to the divine
intention as           shown         in the choice                of Jacob, in preference to Esau, to become
the father of the favoured progeny with                                        whom God              would renew                     his cove-
nant relation.
      The     texts in Ephesians mutually illustrate each other.                                                        In      i.   9,   God   is
said to " have made known the mystery of his will ;" that is, his will here-
tofore concealed or but imperfectly revealed, as the                                                word mystery                     often sig-
nifies:      See the note on                    xl.   25   :      "according to            his     good pleasure                     ;" that    is,
his benevolent intention, "                           which he hath purposed                       in   himself"                     The next
two verses may                    assist us in          forming an idea of what                          God            is      here said to
have purposed.                " That he               might gather together                   in   one       all   things in Christ,
"both which are in                heaven and which are on                          o^-xrth,   even      in   him        ;    in   whom alfeo
we have obtained an                      inheritance, being (or having been) predestinated accord-
ing to the purpose of                      him who worketh                     all      things after the counsel of his
own     will."         It    is     evident from these words, that God's purpose, or good
pleasure which he had purposed,                                 is   not limited to man, but comprehends also
celestial beings.                  An attempt                  indeed has been              made        to    show           that " things
in heaven and on earth" mean Jews and Gentiles. But such an interpreta-
mony with several other places. Compare particularly Eph. iii. 15, Col. i.
20, Ileb. xii. 22, and note John i. 51. And true Christians, for they most
certainly are intended                     by " we," are represented                          as a part of this great body,
and admitted to the enjoyment of                                       its   privileges.            These privileges, men-
tioned under the figure of an inheritance, are the benefits of Messiah's king-
                                                                                                                                          :
dya^ov, rolg Kara irpodtaiv kXtj- to them that love God, to them who
dom, both         in this       world and         in   the next. This predestination                         is   affirmed to be
in   accordance with the purpose of God,                            who does every                thing as his            own        will
prompts,         in   other words, as he pleases, which, of course, must always imply
infinite    wisdom and benevolence.                            In the 4th           and 5th verses of Ephesians,
God's predestination and choice are represented as                                         antei'ior to the creation.
This and other statements of the same kind are in accommodation to                                                                human
imperfection.                We speak of God as foreseeing the                           fall,   planning a scheme of
redemption, choosing, predestinating, before the world or in eternity.                                                               But
all this    is     language accommodated to our                                finite    conceptions.                With God
there can be neither past nor future plans or events; everything                                                         is       equally
open before him as                   now    taking place. Inasmuch as this                       is   the constant, never-
beginning, never-ending purpose of God,                                   it is     represented to us as formed
before the creation, in eternity, ere the notation of time could be marked.
      Further, this predestination and choice have heavenly blessings in view.
No    candid       man        can read and reflect on what the                            New         Testament says on
this subject           without acknowledging                      this.        It   is   impossible to limit these
representations to a merely outward covenant relation, existing on earth
and temporary, as                    members           of Christ's visible church.                     It is      also internal,
spiritual,    heavenly, an adoption intended to be perfact and eternal                                                        ;    a pur-
pose, having in view our ultimate holiness                                 and consequent happiness.
      In   Eph.       iii.   11, the       same general idea              is   presented         :    "According                   to the
eternal purpose which he purposed in Christ Jesus our Lord."                                                        In order to
ascertain    what            it is   that   is   said to accord with this purpose,                      we must examine
the preceding context.                      In the       commencement of                   the chapter the Apostle
alludes to the trials he                    was enduring           for the Gentiles.                   This leads him to
introduce what he calls a " mystery of Christ."                                          This, as        I    have before             re-
in   order that the church might become the occasion, and even ineans, of
making known God's most extraordinary wisdom.                                                        And      then he adds
"According to the eternal purpose which he purposed                                                   in Christ          Jesus our
Lord."      It   has been hence inferred, that God's " purpose" as stated                                           in St.Paul's
epistles,    is,      to unite        Jews and Gentiles               in the        church of Christ.                     Had        the
inference been limited to the statement, that this entered into or                                                                made   a
part of the divine purpose,                       it   would doubtless be                 true.        But        to say that            It
tla- ti'xt IukI it       stuod alone.                 In   other words,             it    is    drawing a general con-
dusion from a particular preinise.                          'lliis,    most unfortunately,                        is   a treatment
to which the           word of (Jod has often been                            subjected.                 In reference to his
works, philosophy scorns such a procedure, and regards those                                                        who         act thus
as unworthy of confidence,                        llie careful         and conscientious inquirer both                                  in
natural science and revealed religion, will examine all the known facts that
bear upon the point to be elucidated, and will draw his inferences accord-
ingly.        The     logical conclusion               from   this     passage            is,    that the union of                    Jews
and Gentiles           in the   one church of Christ                     is    the mystery here referred to,
and that       this    union    is   "according to God's purpose."                                     But    the    may
                                                                                                                    purpose
have comprehended a vast deal more.                                 And        so doubtless                  it  And that
                                                                                                                  did.
the Apostle had a vast deal                        more       in    view       is       certain,         and made evident
from the context.               For      there he not only speaks of heavenly principalities
and powers deriving divine knowledge from God's church, but speaks of
*'
   the whole family" (or, every family, according to the more accurate ren-
dering of the Greek and the best of the Greek fathers,) " in heaven and
earth as       named" of         Christ.           This corresponds with what was before said,
and confirms the view that God's purpose regards angels as well as men.
Hence        it is,   that the reconciliation of                   men        to    God through                   the    atonement
of Christ, and the association of angels with those so reconciled,                                                       all   forming
one holy body            in blessed              union with God, and with Christ their head,                                             is
very similar to that             in the          passage under consideration.                                "God        hath saved
us,   and called us with a holy                       calling,   not according to our works, but ac-
cording to his         own purpose and grace, which was given us in Christ Jesus
before the          world began." Here it is necessary to remark, that the word
"given"        is     not to be limited to the "grace," but relates also to the
" purpose" spoken              of.     It    may       be applied to both nouns by a zeugma,* and
mean purpose with regard
         '
                                                  to    and grace         given.'               The grace is said to be
given " before the world began," or from eternity.                                                  The Greek is, -npo
^ovuiv        ai(i)vi(i)v, literally,        hefore eternal times, or, eternal times ago ;                                      and the
construction corresponds exactly with that in 2 Cor.                                                  xii.   2,7Tpo erojv dena-
TEOodpojv, ''fourteen years ago.^^                         The Apostle's meaning is that even then
it   was God's purpose           to    bestow          this grace. Thus the language is the same as
that constantly          employed            in legal       transactions            ;
                                                                                         just as property                  is   said to
purpose to redeem                    fiillen     man by          the atonement of his                         Son and the agency
of his Spirit; and so redeemed, to unite them under Christ in one holy
body with             the angels of heaven.                        Consequently, they are called out of the
world into            his church,           and supplied with whatever                                   is     necessary to their
ultimate and everlasting happiness in                                   glorj-.         God's purpose has in view                         all
that this result requires, and also the result itself That this result shall
dation of the world. Will any one venture to prove that God's will is less
are stronger than tvill ; and therefore that, while the latter may in multi-
will.        Tlius      we     find that the                 Apostle speaks of the will of                                 God      in    im-
mediate connection with what he says of his purpose.                                                          Compare, "           that the
purpose of            God     according to election might stand" in                                       ix.   11, with,         "he hath
mercy on             whom       he will and                whom     he will he hardeneth," and                              "who         hath
resisted his ivill," in vs. 18, 19.                                In the         same way he speaks                         also in his
Epistle to the Ephesians.                             "According as God hath chosen                                 us, &c.,        having
predestinated us &c, according to the good pleasure of his                                                              will:''^    "The
mystery of his               will,    according to his good pleasure which he hath piaposed
in   himself:          Being        in-edestinatcd according to                        iho.      purpose of him who work-
eth    all      things after the counsel of his                              own      ivill :"      i.   4-11.          In the      Greek
(36vXr]iJ.a  and MXrifia arc both expressed by the same English word will,
'^
     counseV' in Ephesians being in the original I3ov?.tJv and the same verb                              ;
deXo)      is   used        in the texts         before cited from                    Romans and Timothy.                               God's
intention or purpose                    or decree, then,                    is   nothing more than his expressed
will.
are true Christians                  who have embraced                           the Gospel              made known                to   them
                                                       y
     are the called according to hit pur-                       Tolg ovaiv.                   "On ovq      npoiyvcj, 29
29   jrosc.        For   whom     he did foreknow,              Koi TTpooJpiae avniJ,up(ljovg rrjg                       el-
     he also did predestinate                to be con-         Kuvog rov vlov avrov, tig rd tlvai
     formed to the image of his Son, that                       avrbv npuTOTOKOV ev TToXXolg
in accordance with              God's eternal purpose to                     effect, in        the   manner and way
stated, their everlasting salvation.
     29,   .'50.     These verses represent God's carrying out                                   his   purpose before
mentioned so             far as   regards the "/anuVy on earth."                              See Eph.      iii.   15.       The
particle " for"'denotes this connection.
     "   Whom        ho did foreknow            :"    In the usual           meaning attached               to the           word
knowledge with the prefix fore, the word would express a                                               trifling      truism.
In this sense            God foreknows               everything, however unimportant.                                Such a
frigid     view must of course be rejected, as unworthy of the writer.
     Some      give the meaning as follows,                     '
                                                                     whom      he before knew would accept
the Gospel.'             But   this    adds to the         text.       It is      the commentator's idea, but
it   may    not be the author's.        makes the next clause worse than
                                                Besides,        it
a tautology, the Apostle gravely saying that those, whose moral character
God furesaw would lead them to accept the Gospel, were by him predeter-
mined to be conformed to Christ. The only way of removing the absur-
dity of this statement                 is    to say, that the predetermined conformity does
not comprehend moral character.                              But      this is      a     mere begging              the point,
and cannot be admitted.
     The meaning of predetermined,                      is   by many maintained                      to   be the idea of
\\ns foreknoioing.                Olshausen, after saying that in the latter word "the
property of the divine knowledge only," and in the former "tiiat of the will
alone is marked," and that " both appear combined in the purpose,^'' allows
that " nevertheless there                    seems    to     be no dlfierence here between, he did
foreknow, and, he did predestinate
     Now      it     may      be admitted that irpoyivuiaKeiv,                           to    knoio before,        is   some-
times employed in the sense of                          'rTpoopi<^eiv, to           determine before.                    This   is
the verse before us               it   is    only conformed             to   the        image &C. that forms the
advance       in the thought."                But     this is   mere unsupported assertion. We
must therefore endeavour to give to                          the word some definite meaning of its
own, in harmony with scriptural usage and with the                                            context.
                                                                                                                     .
      The simple verb                       io    Jcnoio often                    conveys the idea of having the mind
kindly fixed on, regarding with unusual tenderness.                                                                       Thus         in    Ps.     i.   6.
"Tlie Lord knoxceth the                           way           of the righteous;" in                       Amos          iii.   2,    "You          onlv
have    I    known of            all   the families of the earth ;" in                                          1   Cor.      viii. 3,       " If    any
man     love God, the same                             is       knoivn of him                  ;" Gal. iv. 9,             "Now,             after that
ye have known God, or                             rather, are knoivn of                              God ;" 1 Thess. v. 12, "To
knoiv    them     that labour                     among you." And                              thus   we may interpret Rom. xi,
2,   "God     hath not rejected his people                                        whom \iQ foreknew,^''                   in other          words         re-
garded with kindness                        ;    and        1   Pet.    i.    2,    "elect according to the foreknoivledye
of God," meaning his eternal kind regard.                                                           On    this      ground the Scripture
uniformly places God's benevolent course of conduct towards his ancient
people the Hebrews, and also towards those                                                          whom        he hath blessed with a
knowledge of his Gospel.                               This must be                     known        to   every reader of the Bible,
and therefore          I   shall refer to                       only one or two illustrations.                                   In Deut.        vii. 8,
the reason stated for God's choosing the                                                   Hebrews          is:          "because the Lord
loved   youy        In Eph.                 ii.   4,    we       find    God's "great love" given as the reason
of his life-giving favours                         ;    and therefore the beloved disciple says                                              :
                                                                                                                                                 "   We
love him, because he                        fii-st      loved us."                 1    John        iv.   19.
      The most probable meaning                                    therefore of the                       word under consideration
seems to be        this      :    'Whom                     he before (of                 old, that        is, as shown by passages
Pet. iv. 1,) in holiness, (Rom. vi. 3-7,) and in future happiness (vi. 8, viii.
17.)
           " First-born :"                     Among             the         Hebrews               the    eldest son had peculiar
privileges.        He        took precedence over the other children, and had a double
portion of the patrimonial estate.                                           See Gen. xxv. 31-34, Deut.                               xxi. 17,       and
1    Chron. v.     1, 2.           Some                writers, both ancient                         and modern, add the                         priest-
hood    ;    but this       is    uncertain.                      The word                Jirst-born therefore                    is   sometimes
equivalent to heir or lord, and thus                                              it is   used here.                Jewish writers apply
the    same term           to the Messiah.
      30. This verse expresses the                                 manner                 in   which       God       carries'out his eter-
nal purpose, so far as regards his course of influence and operation towards
men.         Them whom                      he had previously intended to be conformed to the
likeness of Christ                     "he        called."               This expresses something more than a
mere        invitation to the blessings of the Gospel, namely, its acceptance.                                                                        See
152                                          COMMENTARY ON THE                                                                         [Sect. X.
connected are                 in the    same        tense,   and evidently relate to what                                      is   past.     He
foreregarded              ;     he predetermined             ;    he called                 ;    he    justified        ;    of course, the
next must mean, he glorified.  All diHiculty vanishes, when we keep in
mind two considerations. First, the glorification referred to comprehends
the {iresent benefits of the Gospel which Christians                                                       now        enjoy, the amelio-
ration of their condition already produced, the gifts                                                      and graces of the Spirit
already bestowed, and the reasonable expectation of future glory which the
believer anticipates.                        Theodoret has        mind the same view, although he
                                                                        in
does not sutficiently draw out the thought                           " Having justified, he glorified
                                                                                   :
(them,) naming them sons,                              and giving to them the grace of the Holy
Spirit,"           Ubi sup. pp. 68, 69. Secondly, the future full enjoyment of the
blessings of Christ's         kingdom do as certainly belong to the true Christian,
as if he      were already                   in possession of them.                              So long             as he preserves the
real Christian character, the full fruition is his right. The present benefits
actually attained, and the certainty of the believer's claim to the future, are
expressed by a past tense, "he glorified."                                             This           is   in    accordance with the
language of prophecy, which speaks of prospective blessings as already ex-
isting       and being enjoyed.                      Indeed so far does St. Paul carry out this view,
that he represents Christians as not only quickened, but also raised with
Christ,      and made to               sit       with him    in   heaven.                  See Eph.             ii.   5, 0.     The circum
stance of death, though regarded                                  by    short-sighted mortals as terminating
life    and enjoyment, seems to be overlooked by the inspired Apostles, and
they speak of everlasting glory and eternal life as already begun. Conip.
John iii. 36. " He that believeth on the Son hath everlasting life ;" and
xvii. 22,       "the glory which thou gavest                             me            I    have given them."                        That the
word here employed might be used of present glory                                                               is    evident from what
was      said      on    vs. 18,       19    ;    and that   this is at least                     a part of what the Apostle
means,        is   made          highly probable from the question in the next verse.
       The reader               will bear in         mind        that, in the                    whole of             this portion          which
treats of       God's benevolent purpose towards those who love him and are                                                                   his
called ones, and of the method employed by him to carry it into eOoit, the
the counsel of His will who is the unseen worker of the whole scheme of
mercy, (Eph.               i.   4, 11.) are called to be,                   and     so, in the               use of        all      the appli-
ances and means which                           He      hath given them for this purpose, are in the
way     to be,       and by natural consequence, (which yet they have the power
always to intercept                    in its      progress and defeat,) should be eventually, inher-
itors     of   salvation.''^               On Heb.       i.    14.
     Neither          is    it       satisfoctory to say that the Apostle                                     is    not speaking of
individuals but communities.                              As     all    communities are made up of                                    individ-
uals, his        statements must regard them as such, otherwise he would be
speaking        in the abstract,                and     this     would give very poor consolation                                      to the
suffering individuals, sustaining persecutions for Christ's sake,                                                          whom        he ad-
dresses.            The     true view           is,    that real Christian character is                 presumed of all
those to        whom            the statemei>ts apply.                        And     the       same remark holds good
of   all   such places as affirm the eternal salvation of Christ's members,
whether they are described as believers,                                      in reference to the principle                            which
unites     them        to their Lord, or,                by a         figure, are called                 lambs or sheep.                   If
God's purpose be equivalent to                                his will, then, as      was before remarked, the
absolute certainty of the result                          is   not to         be assumed. Whether, in the case
of each individual                    it   shall   be carried into               effect,    may depend upon                           the use
made       of the opportunities and means of grace afforded him in Christ's
church.          And        in       accordance with this view                       is    the exhortation, "give                        dili-
gence to niake your calling and election sure :" 2 Pet. i. 10.
31   What        shall Ave then say to these                             Ku^'    Tjfiijv     ;    "Oaye rov Idiovviov 32
     things      ?     If   God       be for us,   who can               ovK iipeiaaro, dkX' vnep rjfuov
32 ie against us             ?    He     that spared not                 TrdvTCJV irapeduiKev avrov, Trwf
     his   own       Son, hut delivered               him up             ov;^t    Koi            ovv avTU) rd rravra
     for us all,        how       shall ho not              with         I'lfuv xo-pt'<^^~0'i'         ',    I''?        t:yKa/JoEt 33
     him    also freely give us all things ?                             Kara tKXtKruiV deov                     ;       i^eof 6 6i-
33   Who      shall         lay       anything to the
     charge of God's elect                 ?     It    is   God
behold this thy family, for which our Lord Jesus Christ was contented to
be betrayed, and given up Into the hands of wicked men, and to suffer
death upon the cross."   The prayer, no doubt, comprehends the whole
Christian church.  But who would hence infer that it was intended to limit
to this community the benefits of Christ's death 1 The interpreter who
would ascertain the exact sense of Scripture must be careful not to append
to the text           what       it   does not contain, nor to draw conclusions from                                             it   which
it   does not sanction.
      31, 32. This appeal                   is   founded on what had just been                                  said.           The com-
prehensive expression "for us all" recognises the universality of the divine
Intention,           and the union of Gentiles and Jews                                          in   the church of Christ.
Compare          the language of St. Peter in Acts                                xi.    17.
      33-37.          From        the time of St. Augustln to the present,                                     some of the most
profound and judicious expositors have preferred the interrogative punctu-
ation.      It       Imparts a vividness and boldness to the thought, quite                                                in   character
with the Apostle's intensity of feeling and elevation of mind.                                                             No wonder
that    Erasmus, embued with                          all   that classical antiquity contains of the beau-
tiful   and sublime, should indulge his feeling                                    in the          appropriate words, quid
usquam Cicero dixit grandiloquentlus The objection of Tholuck and Stuart
                                                                     !
to the number of the questions Is not of much weight.     The latter author
enumerates 17, but they may easily be reduced to 8, as the clauses and
words in vs. 34, 35, are mere amplifications of that which introduces them,
and, except this and the last in each verse, might be pointed with commas.
                                                                                                                                                              
His objection from the want of answers                                                         is    met    l)y the         remark, that each
question contains the answer in                                           itself.
accordance with God's purpose before explained, and that they are choice
ones and beloved by God.                                           In the Septuagint the                            word    is    used of Joshua,
the chosen and choice servant of                                          Moses            :   Num.       xi.   28    ;    of Moses the chosen
one of God                :    Ps. cv. 23              ;     of David, chosen and exalted                                    by God             to   be the
head of his people                         :    Ps. Ixxxviii. 20                      ;    of the Messiah, represented under
the figure of a chosen foundation-stone                                                    :   Isa. xxviii. 16.             It is      used also both
in the singular                        and plural of the Hebrew people, as God's peculiar and
chosen nation.                         See      Isa. xlii. 1,            which, although referring undoubtedly to
the Messiah,                  is   interpreted                by       the Septuagint translators of Israel, and xlv.
4, for the singular                         ;    and, for the plural,                           1   Chron. xvi. 13, Ps. Ixxxviii.                             4,
(3,) civ. (cT.) 6, 43, cv. (cvi.) 5.                                           These expressions correspond with                                          the
language of Moses                          :
                                                " Because he loved thy fathers,                                           had a delight              in thy
fiithers to love them, therefore he chose their seed after them." Deut. iv.
that portion of the Jews who, by divine grace, had embraced the Gospel.
In every case a conformity in heart and life to its requisitions, is presumed,
and so the word elect was employed by those very early Christian
writers,       who            are       known          as the Apostolical fathers.               Thus, in the Shepherd
of Hermas, " his elect" occurs                                            in     connection with " his church ;" also,
"   You can             relate these things to the elect of                                              God    ;
                                                                                                                     the    Lord hath sworn
respecting his elect, that                              if    any one            sin       he shall not have that salvation                               ;
go and relate                 his       mighty deeds to the                                elect of       God."*             In the account of
themartyrdom of Poly carp contained in the epistle of the church of Smyrna
and preserved by Eusebius, " the elect" and " the unbelievers" are set in
opposition,              and           " this      most admirable person," Polycarp, mentioned                                                       as one
of the former.f                         And Clement                      in his epistle to the Corinthians, chap. 29,
after saying that God 'has made us a portion of his own election,' illus-
trates his meaning by referring to Deut. xxxii. 8, 9, and iv. 34, where the
    * Vision   I.       chap.   ili.    vis. II.   1. ii.   vis.   IV.   ii.   Pat. Apost. Edit. Cotcl. Aat. 1700, vol.                  1.   pp. 76, 77, 88,
    t Eus. Eccles. Hist. Lib. iv. cap. xv. p. 134. Edit. Paris. 165D.
                                                                                                                                                   ;
choice of the Hebrews as a. people is the subject.  The confident and tri-                         
umphant challenge of St. Paul, is strikingly similar to that which Isaiah
puts into the mouth of the Messiah, in 1. 8, 9. Indeed the Septuagint has
the very words, 6 diKUMoag and 6 KQivonevog. Either the Apostle quoted
the prophet; or, more probably, the same excellent feeling in both
prompted the same natural expressions of                                  faith          and joyous confidence.
   " The Love of Christ :" Some ancient                                       authorities read 0/ God, but the
Christ's love to us, not ours to him, as             some have supposed. It must be
granted that the               words immediately following do seem to support the latter
exposition, as            it   is     difficult   to conceive            how            the Apostle could represent
         and persecution as at all likely to sever Christ's affection from his
affliction
chosen ones, while they would rather tend to unite the beloved parties the
more closely. Still there are weighty considerations which decide in
favour of the other meaning.                           The     phrase, or       its          synonyme,                " love of            God,"
most generally                 in the epistles         means,     love exercised (awards vs.                                          So   in   the
other three places in which                       it   occurs in this Epistle,                              v. 5. 8, viii.           39.        The
language         in ver. 37, "           through him that loved us," coincides with                                                  this view,
which       is   also in       harmony with             the exposition before given of " foreknow"
in ver. 29,              Besides, the phrase,              '
                                                               to separate us                 from the love that we                             feel
Christ as          the source of that power which makes the Christian victorious.
What          follows, taken in connection with the previous context, has been
Ch, VIII. 86-39.]               EPISTLE TO THE ROMANS.                                                                157
(for the Greek word is the same in both places,) in reference to his dearly
beloved converts who had shown their filial regard for him, is of the same
character,      and might be adduced                to illustrate               what     is    here meant.            The
Apostle expresses              his strong confidence, that true Christians shall forever
enjoy the blessings which the love of Christ had procured.                                               He     declares
that     no   trials,   however great and            various, shall destroy their connection
with their Saviour, and then expresses in animated language his persuasion
that     no external power of any kind                        shall    be able          to    produce      this cftect.
The reader will do well to compare the declarations in John x. 28, 29,
which our Lord makes of                     his sheep.           Who           and what they are must be
gathered from other passages.                  With           ver.   3G compare Ps. xliv. 22, (Sept.
xliii.   23,) which       is   here accommodated.                    The expressions which follow are
to be understood generally of all                   powers which                  may        be supposed         to con-
tend with the Christian.   Koppe very judiciously remarks, that it is the
whole idea in the Apostle's mind which is to be attended to, and that we
are not to inquire how every individual being here specified, angels for
instance, can be regarded as opposing the Christian's faith and virtue. To
illustrate the observation,                 he refers to         1     Cor.    iii.    22, and Gal,        i,   8.    It is
plain that, in the last instance, " though an angel                                   from heaven preach any
other Gospel unto you than that ye have received, let him be accursed,"
the author puts the             most extreme hypothetical                      case, in order to present in
this eonsideratiun,           expound the words of             evil angels.       Height and depth
have been thought to refer to heaven and earth,                             or, figuratively, to the
                                       SECTION                   XI.
                                           Chaps. IX. X. XI.
It is the      opinion of several expesitors, that the three chapters which imme-
diately follow           have no necessary or direct connection with the preceding
discussion.         Koppe speaks of the            subject of     them as      entirely new, and alto-
gether distinct from the former               :    plane novum, nee ulla ratione            cum    supe-
riorum capitum sententiis cohosrens.                    But     this is certainly a mistake.            The
Apostle might undoubtedly have brought his argument to a close with the
eighth chapter, the termination of which would form a noble peroration, in
all    respects worthy of the           mind and       heart of the writer.          But the inspired
man     has not yet developed            all his    thoughts, not yet poured forth his deepest
feelings,      not yet advanced to the sublimest climax of his divine aspirations,
hopes and         belief.      He    has reasons to give for the rejection of impenitent
Jews from          the    kingdom of the          I>Iessiah   and the admission therein of be-
lieving Gentiles          ;   and   in presenting      them     to his readers, he again explains
and enforces the great doctrines of justification by                      faith   and of the compre-
hensiveness of God's plan of mercy through the Gospel, which form the
leading topics already proved and illustrated.
       It   may    be, as Olshausen remarks, that the                   triumphant language just
uttered       by   the Apostle "         awakens powerfully              his    feelings   for his o\ni
nation," and leads            him    to express     them      in the   commencement of this        chap-
ter.        But, independently of this connection, other considerations might very
naturally have produced such an outburst of affection.                            The former     charac-
ter of Saul of       Tarsus had, no doubt, prepared the leading Jews to expect                           in
him     the determined advocate of Judaism, and the persevering and relent-
less        opponent of Christianity,               His extraordinary conversion was an
unexpected death-blow to their hopes.                          Admiration and respect            for his
talents and character               were changed      into the    most indignant       hatred.     They
calumniated him as an enemy to their nation, and a traitor to his country's
usages and religion.                Among    the converted Jews, too, there were multi-
Cn. IX.         1-8.]                 EPISTLE TO THE ROMANS.                                                                159
garded him with suspicion and                               distrust.           Moreover, the statements which
he was about to                 make        respecting the rejection of the                        Jews and the           accept-
ance of the Gentiles could not but be distasteful to national vanity, and in
part unpleasant even to the converted portion of the people.                                                      The Apostle
therefore introduces these topics with the strongest expressions of attach-
ment         to his Israelitish brethren.                       The good sense and                 tact   and acquaintance
with        human           nature which seem never to forsake him, would of themselves
Jiave suggested expressions of fraternal kindness                                       ;     but, even in the absence
of these, such an exordium would be the natural ebullition of that inex-
haustible spring of love, which welled out from the depth of his heart.
        Chap.         ix.   1-3. 'Ev XptarOj-               Some regard           this as         a formula of swearing,
and         translate,        'by    Christ.'      But, although the preposition                       is   thus employed,
it is       usually connected with the verb.                               The common meaning is prefera-
ble     ;   as a true Christian, one united to                          Christ. Comp. John xv. 4, xvii. 23,
2 Cor,           V.       17, xii.    19.       Thus       it   corresponds with the last phrase of the
verse, "in" or through                        "the Holy Ghost:" that                        is,    speaking in harmony
with him and under his influence.                                "Also"         is   probably intended to express
the force of ovv.                     The Apostle by employing the                                preposition denotes the
concurrent attestation of his conscience and of the Spirit                                                  who   guides him.
He          generally intends the preposition in composition to have                                                its   proper
meaning.                  See on      viii.   2G, p. 144.
        "   I   could wish       :"    The Apostle of                  the Gentiles,        whose heart was equally
devoted to the Jews, thus introduces the avowal of his deep affection for
his nation            ;     an affection which has none greater in the history of man, ex-
cept the not to be                    known       love of Christ, (Eph.                iii.     19,) nor equal, unless            it
be that of the beloved disciple, which prompted the words, " we ought to
lay down our lives for the brethren," (1 John iii. 16,) or of the Hebrew
deliverer, who expressed his devotion for his misguided and sinful people
in the language, " Blot                         me,    I   pray thee, out of thy book which thou hast
written:" Ex. xxxii. 32.                          But      still   he does not here utter a prayer for his
 own everlasting destruction,                         as   Chry sostom and others have supposed,*                               The
        De Sact.rd. Lib. iv. cap.       6, p.   1S6, Edit. Joan. Iluglies, Cantab. 1710,           and Suicer under dvu'&efj.a,
I. 2,   Tom. I. Col. 270, 271.
                                                                                                                                               ;
word docs not express a                            positive wish.                      The imperfect              is   used in the sense
of the optative.                       Thohick quotes from Photius,                                    'I   could be willing,            if it
were proper,                 if it     were allowable,                     if   the choice were permitted me.'                           The
same tense              is   employed              in Gal. iv. 20,                 '
                                                                                       I    could desire, TJ&ekov, to be pre-
sent,' &ZC.,           and     in      Acts xxv. 22,               '
                                                                       I   could wish,'            t/^ouP.o/xTyv.
      " Accursed," drddefxa' for the older form dvd^Tjfia.                                                           In the    New     Testa-
ment        it   denotes a person devoted to destruction.                                              See       1   Cor.   xii. 3,   xvi. 22,
thought to express his willingness, like Moses, to share with his sinfid
brethren the general excision of the nation.                                                       According to             this    view dWo
is to      be understood                 in the sense                  of vtto and translated by, as both preposi-
tions       seem        to be used in the                     same sense               in   James      i.   13, 14:          "tempted iy
God,'^ drro' " b?/ his                   own            lust,"    vno.            This, however,             is      a very    uncommon
meaning of               dTTo          and the excision of the Jews                                  is     never elsewhere thus
spoken           of.     Others again, influenced by the same desire to modify, have
endeavoured to identify the meaning with excision from Christ's church
but without success,                     for,      as Tholuck very justly remarks, this                                      comprehends
excision also from Christ himself                                               To become anathema from                             Christ   is
your connection with him has been severed.                                                        Conip.    Rom.        vii. 2, 0,     where
the   same verb               is   followed by the same preposition.                                       It    seems necessary            to
allow that the warmth of the Apostle's feelings led him to employ hyper-
bolical          language which must not be too strictly analysed.                                                            His general
meaning           is    plain      :   he   is     willing to sustain                       any conceivable                 evil,   which he
can rightly undergo, for the benefit of his beloved nation.                                                                    No     motive
could properly induce a Christian to desire his                                                    own      everlasting severance
from       Christ.  That would be to desire not only misery but sin. It would
be    in    a very marked sense of the phrase, to desire " evil that good may
come        ;"   a detestable principle, which the Apostle has already stamped with
the seal of his reprobation.
      4, 5.       The Apostle here enumerates some of the                                              privileges of his nation.
He    purposely selects the term Israelite as being a more honourable appella-
tion than          any other that could be employed, having been given to Jacob in
token of his prevailing with God.            Sec Gen. xxxii. 28, and compare John i.
47,   2 Cor.           xi.   22, Phil.           iii.    5.      " Adoption:" acquired sonship, implying fa-
Ch.IX.4.]                                epistle to THE EOMANS.                                                                    161
ijv 7] viodeaia Koi 1) do^a Koi at taineth the adoption, and the glory,
6iad7JKac Koi 7) vo}io-&eoia Kol 1) and the covenants, and the giving
vour, and affectionate union. See Ex. iv. 22, " Israel is my son, my first-
born."       "Glory"                    may         express the genei*al dignity to which                                  God had
elevated his ancient people                                ;    or, if    some      particular be intended,              it   may be
that of the visible divine appearance expressed                                                      by   the phrase " the glory
of the Lord appeared."                                    See Ex.         xvi. 10, xl. 34, Levit. ix. 23,                and comp.
1     Sam.       iv.   22.          "   The covenants               :"        The plural may be used to denote
excellence, as              it    often    is        elsewhere.               See Heb. ix. 23 and note. Or it may
refer to the           two        tables deposited in the ark, which are called "the covenant"
in 1    Kings           viii.      21.       Tholuck objects to                           this,      that thus understood, the
covenants are comprehended within the giving of the law which imme-
diately follows.                     But the moral law                         "   engraven by the finger of                     God on
the    two tables of stone"                           is       so important, that               it   would be quite natural to
bring       it   prominently before the reader by a special notice.                                                  Still it is   very
probable that the plural has reference to the repeated covenants, or the
renewal of the same covenant, made by                                                 God      with the patriarchs and their
descendants.  Comp. Ecclus. xliv. 11,2 Mace. viii. 15, Eph. ii. 12, in which
places the word is in the plural.   "The giving of the law" implies, of  
course, the extraordinary                                 and divine attestations which accompanied that
event.       "The               service" or worship recals to Jewish readers the former
splendour and magnificence of their sacred tabernacle and temple services.
Comp. Heb.                  ix.   1-6.     " The promises"                         reminds them of their connection
with the bountiful author of their religious blessings.                                                         The Apostle sums
up the catalogue of these by mentioning their venerable ancestors, the
patriarchs, from whom sprang the Messiah himself in his human nature.
The     article limits the bearing of the expression,                                                and the phrase ro Kara             is
equivalent to                '
                                 simply as respects.'
      If the reader wishes to                                  examine thoroughly the various views which
have been given of the                            by Eationalistic, Socinian,
                                                     latter half of this verse
Arian, and other expositors, he must consult the   more extended comment-
aries.  The received reading is no doubt correct. The substitution of d)i^ 6
for 6 u)V has no better foundation than the conjecture of certain critics, who
desired thereby to                        weaken the evidence of                               Christ's divinity.           It   may   be
 said in support of this conjecture, that the substituted reading harmonizes
 well with the context                           :
                                                      '
                                                          whose      is       God        blessed forever.'           If the external
 evidence were favourable to the reading which conveys this thought, this
 reading might certainly be explained in consistency with the context.                                                               But
 it   would be necessary                         to limit its natural full force, otherwise the author
 would contradict what he had before                                            said in         iii.   29, 30, namely, that          God
 is   God        of the Gentiles as well as of the Jews.                                          Although a limitation might
 be pleaded             for       by such            places as Eph.                ii.   12,   where the Gentiles are repre-
                       11
                                                                                                                                                                 :
      of the law, unci         tJie     scnicc of                (iud,      kuTpda                   Koi al inayyekiai, <Lv                                  5
6     and the          proiuist-s   ;   whose nre the                       oi TTurtptr,                      Koi f$ (Lv 6 Xpiardg
      I'utheis,      and of whom, as eoncerniny;                            ru Kara aupKa, o u)V                               tTTi -rravriov
a colon after odpKa, and others after navruv.                                                             According to the former
construction, the             words that follow                          will    be simply a doxology                              :    'God, who
is   over     all,     be    blessed for ever                     !'
                                                                          And         so also, according to the latter
'God be         blessed forever!'                       Only       in this case, the                      words,          "who         is    overall,''
5,    Eph.     iii.   20, 21, 1 Tim.               i,   17   ;    to     which        may be                  added, Clement's epistle
to the Corinthians, chap. 32, 38, 43, 45, 58, 60.                                                             And        such ascriptions do
also occur referring directly to Christ.                                              See            1    Pet.          iv. 11,   2    Pet.        iii.      18,
Rev.     V.    12-14; also Clement's                             epistle, chap. 20, 50.                                 General usage there-
fore does not determine                           whether the doxology under consideration relates
to     God      or to Christ.                     The strength of the expression "over                                                      all," is         no
objection to applying                    it       to Christ, for of course the universal father                                                   is     him-
self excepted                from        this           category, and                  expressions equally strong are
elsewhere employed of Christ.                                      In Tit.       i.   3,   he    is       called " God our Saviour,"
and     in    ii.     13, " the great             God and              our Saviour."                          That the former passage
does relate to Christ                   is    evident from the context, which speaks of St. Paul's
having been                 commanded              to preach the Gospel                                   by       this Saviour,              and also
before of          God's eternal promise; and the                                         latter can relate to                         none        other,
because the appearing, tincjidveLa, of this " great God and Saviour" is the
    antithesis with "according to the flesh,"          and thus sets                                                     his   human         nature in
    contradistinction to his divine.                               It is    most           in   accordance with grammatical
    arrangement, as            it   makes 6 wv, who                        is,   in close connection with the                                      imme-
    diately preceding               antecedent, Christ.                               Secondly,                    it    is    required           by         the
    unless the verb           s/jui     or yivo^iat be expressed.                                         As       the cases are very nu-
                                                                                                                                                           :
     i9eof evXoyTjTog elg                           rovg aldvag                            the     flesh, Chi-ist            came,     who     is    over
      df^LrjV.                                                                             all,    God       blessed for ever.   Amen.
6          Ovx            olov 6e,          on        eKTrenroKEV                             Not          as    though the word of God                         6
      6   Xoyog rov deov                        
                                                     ov yep irdv-                          hath taken none                       effect.     For they
      ref oi         fc'^       'IcpcT/A, ovtol 'laparjX-                                  are not all Israel that                    ai*e   of Israel
merous in the Old Testament and several are found in the Now, it is
(Sept. Ixvii.) 20.                          There we have Kvpiog 6                                         -^ebg evXoyrjTOg.                       But these
words are immediately followed by the usual phraseology evXoyrjTog KvpLog.
The former                  is    probably an interpolation, as there                                                  is   nothing corresponding
with      it in Hebrew, Chaldee, Syriac, or Vulgate. If genuine, the different
                     the
formula may have been added by the translator for the sake of emphasis.
Such an exception can be of no weight against the general usage, particu-
larly as, in this case, it is of such frequent occurrence. For the satisfaction
of the reader,                    I    refer        him    to the instances which occur in the                                                New        Testa-
ment       :    Luke             i.   68,   2       Cor.   i.    3,        Eph,       i.   3, 1 Pet.              i.   3.     To     these the follow
ing    may be added                         as      somewhat analogous morog 6 &e6g in 1 Cor. i. 9,    :
In the latter part of the verse the word Israel is used in the original first for
the patriarch himself, and the phrase " they                                                           who            are of Israel" for his lineal
descendants.                      But afterwards                      it       has a spiritual signification.                              In 1 Cor. x. 18,
the merely natural descendants are called " Israel according to the flesh."
All these are not true Israelites                                          ;   that    is,   they are not really what the honour-
 able     title       implies; not such as their great ancestor was,                                                              who      prevailed with
 God and              received his blessing.                                    In other words, all Jacob's lineal descend-
ants are not his spiritual children. C<)mpare ii. 28, 29, where the rightful
 claim to the honour of being a.Jew                                                  is    limited to the inwardly religious                                   He-
 brew.              The          Apostle' s          meaning                   is   shown by the very nature of the                                     case, as
                                                                                                                                              :
7     neither, because they are the seed of                                ovS" 6ti elol                   a-jepua 'APpadfi,                 7
      Abniluim, are thnj                all   children     :   but,        Truvrtc:            rUva,       dA/L'   
                                                                                                                         h 'laauK
      In Isaac shall thy seed be called.                                   Kkri^i)atrai aoi aitpfia.                            Tour'        8
8    That         is,   they which are the childicn                        tariv, ovra rtKva ttJ?- oapKug,
      of the        flesli,   these are not the chil-                      ravra rtKVa tov ^eov       dkXd                
     dren of God, but the children of the                                  - rtKva TT/f tTTayyeXiac Aoyt^-
     proniise arc counted for the seed,                                    e^rai       dg      arcep^a.            'E-rayyt'/uag             9
9     For    tliis is      the    word    of promise.           At         yap   Aoyof ovroe;
                                                                                      6       Kara tuv             '
this time will I come, and Sarah Kaipbv tovtov iXEvaop,ai kol
Spirit,"      meaning             in   an extraordinary way                       :    See      iv.   23, 29.          The quotation
is   from Gen.             xviii. 10,         which   is       rendered           in      our translation, "according to
the time of                       but means, most probably,                                   when     the time lives (again,)'
                                                                      
                                                                                          '
                         life,"
that is, about this time next year.* ^The expression, " that is," in ver. 8,
10 hrai T^ lappa vlog.                            Ov novov             shall          have a son.           And        not only 10
       rfe,   dXXa Kal             'Pe(3eKKa          t| h'bg          t/as       ;   but    when Rebecca              also   had
       KOtTTjV       exovoa 'loaaK rov                        Txa-     conceived by one, crfw                   bj-   our father
11 rpo^- 7/jtiwv               p/TTW yap              yevvT]-          Isaac; (for           ^/je c7(//(/;t/(   being not yet 11
       &t:vrwv       jj,T]de   -pa^dvruv              tl dya-          born, neither having done                      any good
       i9ov   7]   KttKOV, Iva        1]   Ka-' iKXoyi]V               or evil, that the purpose of God, ac-
       npo^eaig rov '&eov                   liivij,   ovk e^           cording to election might stand, not
       epycov, dXX' Ik               tov KaXovvrog,                    of -works, but of              him that calleth ;)
12     ippT^dTj      avTy      
                                    Sri 6    iieii^cjv    6ov-         it   was said unto           her, The elder shall 12
case of Sarah, but also in that of Rebecca ; and this instance is adduced in
confirmation of what had just been said.                                    Perhaps the Apostle was induced
thus to establish his statement, in order to                                           meet some flimsy objection
which might be urged on the ground that Ishmael was not the son of Abra-
ham's wife, but of                   his    Egyptian servant.                         Nothing of the sort could be
alleged in this case, as Rebecca was Isaac's only wife, and the honourable
mother of both the            children, who moreover were twins. The very remark-
able expression            "of one," which would seem to be quite superfluous, not
to say unexpected                   and strange,         is   best accounted for on this supposition.
       "The purpose of God according                                 to election" or his choice,                       may    I'elate
to that general purpose of his                         which has already been spoken of on                                 viii.    28.
But,       most probably               it    is   limited to the divine intention of electing or
choosing the posterity of the one brother to the blessings of a covenant
relationship with himself, in preference to the posterity of the other                                                          ;   re-
hardly necessary to say that God's will must be consistent with his                                                             own
benevolent character.                       Nevertheless, his will                     is   the ultimate arbiter of all
things.
       "   The     elder shall serve the younger :" Gen. xxv. 23.                                        A slight        attention
tx)   the account in Genesis which                             is    here referred to                is sufficient       to show,
106                                         COMMENTAUY ON THE                                                              [Sect. XI.
that neither the sacred historian nor the inspired Apostle has in view the
persons Jacob and Esau.                                 It is    undeniable that communities, in other
M'ords, their descendants, are                        The divine declaration is expressly
                                                         meant.
said to relate to "               two nations and two manner of people one people shall                    ;
be stronger than the other people, and the elder                                              shall serve the            younger."
As    regards the individuals, the prediction was not verified.                                                          Jacob was
never the superior of his brother                           ;    on the contrary he constantly recognised
Esau as      his chief,           and called him                his lord.          This      is   denied by Mr. Haldane
on this       text.          lie maintains that the suVycction of                                    Esau          to   Jacob was
" personal."             Ilis first         proof is, the transfer of the birthright.                               But    this   was
nothing       more than             the voluntary relinquishment of a claim.                                            His second,
that "     Esau was compelled                      to leave that land               and to yield               to Jacob."         This
statement he founds on Gen. xxxvi.                                    6.      But the             text   merely          states that
Esau, finding his                 own       possessions and those of his brother too large to
admit of their remaining together, amicably removed elsewhere, and thus
accommodated Jacob.                             lie probably          went    to   Mount           Seir,   where         his brother
had promised to follow him.                                   See     xxxiii. 14.              In this particular,             Esau
seems to have imitated the conduct of his grandfather Abraham.                                                             See    xiii.
See Luke           xiv. 26,        where " hating" one's nearest lelations and one's own
life is    put     in   connection with coming to Ciirist.    Comp. also John xii. 2.').
In Gen. xxix. 31,           it is said that " Leah was hated," while the same thought
is   expressed in the verse preceding, by the words, "he loved Kachel more
than Leah."              Olshausen here remarks that such considerations " cannot
satisfy the conscientious expositor, since                                    he cannot overlook the                       fact that
St. P.iul     has advisedly selected a very strong and repulsive expression
from the passage                  in question.             Nor does           it    make          against this, that in the
passage of Malachi the immediate question                                           is       of outward circumstances,
since these also are to be                          viewed as expressions of the wrath of God."
Admitting          all this to             be   true,    we     are   still   driven back to the inquiry, what
is   the meaning of G^d's being said                                  to   hate? ITie feeling implied                        in   the
                                                                                                                                        
15 TTapd TO) deco              ]   ixi]   yevoiTO.          Tw        God        forbid.           For hesaith              to Moses, 15
      yap McjiJoy Xeyei               
                                          iXe{]O0)        ov dv       I Avill             have mercy on            whom        I will
      iX.eu),    KOt olKreiprjoG) dv dv oIk-                          have mercy, and                       I will      have com-
                                                                      passion on                whom        I    will have      com-
word when used by man in his present moral state is out of the question.
The laniTuaee can be nothiiie else than an accommodation to human weak-
ness.  It can mean nothing beyond this       to act towards with seeming     :
                                                                                      '
or kingdom of the Messiah, he acts on the same principle, and admits to all
the privileges of this kingdom some Jews, while he excludes therefrom the
others. The character and conduct of God are shown to be invariably the same.
      14-16.      From what                the Apostle has said, his Jewish readers could not
but   infer, that       there       must be a             principle of faith to constitute any the true
Israelites, the spiritual                 seed of         Abraham        ;        and that the rejection of unbe-
lieving        Jews from being                      a portion of God's covenant people,                                           was    in
accordance with his past dealings with their ancestors, and not surprising
or extraordinary in                itself,     however shocking                  it       might be      to their prejudices.
"   What       shall   we      say then         1   Is   there unrighteousness with                              God ?"       Shall     we
accuse     God     of injustice because he did not comprehend the posterity of
Ishmael and Esau among his covenant people, and has rejected the present
body of unbelieving Jews 1 Certainly not. Comp. iii. 6. Whether this
verse     is   intended to express a Jewish objection, or                                              is   merely the author's
oratorical       mode       of carrying on the argument,                                  is   uncertain, and has no bear-
ing on the general train of thought.
      "   He    salth to INIoses," &c.                    The common reading                                is   Moarj, but most
critics prefer         Mwiia^, which                is   supported by very excellent authority.                                        The
former reading            is   nearer to the form of the                                  Hebrew name, and                    its   really
Hebrew          origin.        Pharaoh's daughter                 calls the child                      whom       she had rescued
from a watery grave, Moses, Ti'd'o,                          literally       drawing, (the word                        is   the present
168                                                       COMMENTARY ON THE                                                                [Sect. XI.
that willcth, nor of liim tliat run- TOf, ovde rov rptxovroc;, d'/.Xa
      neth,           but        of      God                   that       showeth            rov f:XeovvTog dtov.                    Atytt ydp 17
17 mercy.                   For the ScriiHure saith
participle,) because, says she,                                                inti'^ffiT?,     "/       drew him out of the water."
Exod.           ii.    10.        According to the Egyptian or Coptic,                                                /iui    means water and
voTJg saved ; and, in all prol)ability, that led the Alexandrine translators of
the Septuagint to adopt this form of the word, which so                                                                      fitly   expresses the
fact.          Still, it will          not follow that the original                                  name of Moses was of Egyptian
origin; as the narrative in                            Exodus proves                                either that the princess                    adopted
the language of the                               Hebrews in applying                               the   name to a Hebrew child, or
that the author of the account expressed in                                                              Hebrew what she had before
said in her                own        dialect.*
      "   For :" The thought which                                             the following words are intended to impress
and       in      reference to which the particle                                                   is   illative,    appears to be this:
'In the distribution of his favours                                                  God      acts according to his              own       pleasure.'
In ver. IG this thought                                        is   plainly expressed                ;   and to establish and              illustrate
and       ''
               runneth" of Isaac's desire to bless Esau, and of Esau's runtiing to
procure agreeable food for his father.                                                              But    this is fanciful          ;   and         if    the
Apostle had intended such an allusion, he would most likely have chosen
a word e.xpressive of hunting.                                                  Running implies                 earnest      effort,          word
                                                                                                                                         as the
is   used        in Gal.           ii.      2     :
                                                          " lest          I   should run or had run in vain."                            The mean-
ing     is     simply            this       :
                                                  '
                                                      the favours in contemplation do not depend on                                                 human
inclination                and     eflbrt,                 but on God's goodness and mercy.'
      17, 18.              The     case of Pharaoh stands in contradistinction to that of ^Moses
      See .Tablonskl's Voces ^gyptiacas apud Scriptorcs vetcres, in his Opuscnld, Edit.                                                       Te Water,
Lugd. Bat.            1S04,     Tom.   i.       p. lo2 et scq.
                                                                                                                                                 
introduced in ver. 15 by the                                    same       particle for.          Both are stated                 in   order
to illustrate the principle                              which the Apostle was establishing, namely, that
God        acts according to his                         own good           pleasure.           This          is   the leading idea.
"The Scripture                        saith unto          Pharaoh       :"    That     is, it   contains what                God   said to
him by Moses.
      " Raised thee up :" e^rjyeipd oe.                                      See Exod.          ix.   16,          where the Hebrew
has     'n'^Pi'i'P.Sri,               /   have made thee stand or                       co7itiniie,            and the Septuagint
6itTrjpi]^riq                 thou hast been 2)reserved.                         I    shall state the                    most prominent
interpretations.
      1.     Some             explain        it   thus-.    '
                                                                I   have raised (brought) thee into being, given
thee existence.'                          But      this involves doctrinal difficulties                              with which             it   is
tory clause, " that thou shouldst the more contumaciously resist ;" meaning,
of course, God See the passages in Tholuck, and the remarks of Olshausen
                                  :
against the supralapsarian scheme on ver. 17, note on p. 333.                                                                 The Greek
has certainly this meaning both in classical writers and in the Septuagint.
If it      be admitted here,                       we must apply              the usual principle that                       God       is   said
to   do what he allows                            to take place,        and explain thus                  :    'I   have suffered thee
to    be roused to opposition against me,                                        in order that I                   might use thy pas-
sions as an occasion of the display of                                        my      power.'             This view involves no
doctrinal difficulty, and such rousing                                      is in    reality identical with                  God's hard-
ening Pharaoh's heart.                                  In each case         it is     simply permissive.                      Neither            is
the objection urged by Tholuck of                                      much          weight, that             we might        rather have
expected STTurpwa,   or, what afterwards occurs, eauArjpvva.    His other,
that thewords against vie would have been added, is of more importance.
   4. The only other meaning of the word which I shall mention, and en-
      clurc'd         througliout all              the earth,       fiov iv rrdaxj        ry yy. "Apa ovv 18
18 Therefore hath he mercy on                         whom           6v    -dikei,     iXtd, dv de dtXet,
      he will hare mercy, and                       whom he
but of          its haviii},' Ijoen          the result of causes operating in direct accordance
with the di\            iiio     will,    thus showing           why God       preserved him.               By changing
theword he intimates that Pharaoh had been an instrument in the hand of
God. The Greek translator rather gives the general sense than an accurate
version of the original.                          Still,   the point of the quotation                 is   evidently          this,
that Pharaoh's    had been prolonged, and that thus his conduct had be-
                                 life
come the occasion of carrying the divine purpose into effect. The decla-
ration         is   made by Moses after Pharaoh and the Egyptians had been greatly
afflicted           by former plagues. A slight attention to the connection in which
it   stands will illustrate the meaning.                            After the usual           command                to let the
people go, the address proceeds thus: 'I could at                                        tliis     time send            all   my
plagues, &c.            \    I   could     now     stretch out      my hand that         I   might smite thee and
thy people with pestilence, and thou shouldst be cut                                           oti'   from the           earth.
But       in    very deed for              this   have     I   caused (or permitted) thee to continue, to
show       in thee          my     power,' &c. The Hebrew future is oflen used in this po-
tential sense.*                   The same Hebrew word is used in Exod. xxi. 21, in refer-
ence to a servant coiilinuing (to live) a short time; and the Greek eyepel
occurs in James v. 15, of raising up a sick man, in other words, causing
him       to continue in                 life.    Pharaoh may well be regarded as brought low
by    the former plagues which had been inflicted on                   him and his people and                             ;
his   being caused by                God to continue, which is the exact sense of the He-
brew word,              St.      Paul may express by the Greek 'I have raised,' meaning
'kept thee             up.'      The 18th verse contains                  the assertion before              made put           in
the form of an inference: "Therefore"                                 Sic.
      "   He        hardeneth, OK?iT]pvver                     This word with dno             is   used     in   the Septu-
agint,         Job    xxxix. IG, in the sense of treatelh harshli/.                           For      this reason,           and
also because                it    makes a         suitable antithesis with iXeel, he shows mercy                                to,
some       critics      have given the same meaning here, explaining thus                                        :    'accord-
ing to his pleasure, he                      is   benignant to some, and to others severe.'                                   But
the narrative of Moses, and the general signification of the verb, are deci-
sive in favour of the usual                         meaning "to harden,"               that    is,    'to suffer to con-
tinue obstinate.'                       The form of expression                 respecting this subject varies.
Sometimes God                      is   represented as the agent in hardening; sometimes Pha-
raoh       is       said to harden himself;          and sometimes the general statement is
made, that             his heart          was hardened. See Exod. vii. 3, ix. 12, x. 1, 20, 27,
     * See      Conanfs Translation of KoeJigcr's Gcsenlus,               Sect. 125, 3, d), Part III. p. 23S, Apploton,
N. Y.     1S46.
Ch. IX. 18-20.]                         EPISTLE TO THE EOMANS.                                                                                171
xi. 10, xiv. 4, 8, 17, viii. 15, 32, vii. 14, 22, viii. 19, ix. 7, 35. The first
of these formula)                  is   the   most frequent, probably                              in   order to draw the read-
er's attention to the divine                               agency           in    allowing such a condition of mind to
show        itself.       But      it is      evident that God's agency in such induration can be
nothing        more than permissive         it cannot militate against the free agency
                                                                 ;
of the man.                Olshausen rightly observes, that " this hardening is not the
beginning of an evil state                             ;    it   rather supposes this as being already begun.
St.   Paul does not say that God awakens the beginnings of evil                                                               in   men.           He
considers these as already in being,                                             first   as a consequence of original sin,
and then on account of man's own unfaithfulness, which does not suppress
the already existing sinfulness, but only gives                                               it   sway."
      19. This is generally regarded as an objection founded                                                              on the immedi-
ately preceding declaration, "                                       whom
                                                                But, most          he will he hardeneth."
probably,      drawn from the whole doctrine which the Apostle has all
                     it   is
is governed by a regard to his own plans, which human efforts cannot alter,
and if he makes even human wickedness subserve those plans, why does
he find fault with                  us, as        our rejection of the Gospel promotes his purpose,
(comp.        iii.    5, 7,)       which no one can effectually resist?                                          If   he shows favour
to some and suffers us to remain obstinate, as you intimate, why does he
blame us, since such is his will, which no ci'eated power can withstand V
   20-23. The objection above stated involves a censure of God for dis-
continuing to the Jews the religious privileges which they had so lon^
enjoyed.         St.      Paul here replies to                            it.     He begins by            declaring the absurdity
and wickedness of a creature's undertaking to censure the creator for not
having made him a different sort of being from what he is, and illustrates
his   remark by the case of the potter moulding the                                            clay.   Admitting that '
God    rejects the greater part of the                                            Jewish nation, has he not as creator
the right to place his creatures in                                             whatever situation he chooses? What
right have you, a                   weak man,                    to find fault with                him        for exercising his just
and natural prerogative?                                   As    well might the thing                     made complain of its
maker        for not having                formed                it       something        else.        God has plainly a ri^^ht
to put the being                    which             his       power has produced                      in     any rank amono-                    his
creatures,           and to give                  it       as    many            or as few advantages as he pleases.'
                  Jews would have had no reason to complain
Since therefore the                                                                                                                       if      the
Supreme Being had never granted them the peculiar benefits of his                                                                         cove-
nant    ;
             they surely could not reasonably object,                                                   if,   for sufficient reasons
172                                       COMMENTAKY ON THE                                                             [Sect. XI.
      that foi-mcd jV,*AVljy hast thou                made              eTTot'qoagovrug    "H OVK t;^;a 21
                                                                                                    ,
21 me thus? Hath not the potter power i^ovaiav 6 Kepafievg rov tttjaov,
mercy," are figurative expressions, naturally arising from the image of the
potter before employed, and denoting those persons                                                who may          be the sub-
jects respectively of the divine benevolence or chastisement.                                                  That the one
class       may become              the other,           is    certainly true, although this consideration
has no bearing on the Apostle's statement.                                          "Show        his    wrath:" Comp.            i.
18, iii. 5. " His power," dvvarov for diivafiLv, as in ver. 17. Comp. yv(t)(j-
Tov in i. 19.
      tK rov avTOv (j)vpd^aToq TTOiqaai                                     over the clay, of the same                    lump to
        jtifci'       eig TinijV OKSvog, 8 de eig                           make one        vessel unto honour,              and
22 drifiiav                ;
                                 Ei de deXuv 6 deog                         another unto dishonoui-             ?        What       if   22
thinks that the antithesis between this                                     word and the phrase " whom he had
before prepared," proves that the condition of being fitted                                                         is   ascribed to
divine agency.                        There would be no                     difficulty in explaining the                      meaning
and showing                    its   accordance with other parts of Scripture,                              if it    were certain
that such             is       the sense.           But    this is     not proved by the antithesis.                          For        the
Apostle              may        speak of God's being the agent in preparing for glory, in order
to keep              up    in the reader's              mind          the necessity of the divine influence for
good; while,                    at the         same     time, he        may         designedly employ an indefinite
term        in        describing the moral condition of obdurate sinners.                                                  Professor
Hodge judiciously                   "when speaking of the vessels of mercy,
                                          observes, that
the active voice is used, as if designedly to mark the difference between the
two cases." To the same purpose Doddridge: "Every attentive reader
will,   I       doubt           not, infer for          himself the great difference of 2>hrase                               in   which
they    who               are vessels of wrath and they                              who    are vessels of                mercy are
spoken of;                 it   being said simply of the former, that they WQve fitted for                                               de-
struction,            but of the            latter that         God     ine-pared them for glorrj              :     a distinction
of so great importance that                               I    heartily wish         we may     ever keep                it in     view."
Olshausen                 is    of the same opinion.                    "   Prepared before           signifies          God's      fore-
knowledge as well as his working and creation of the good, both in its
conamencement, continuation and end.                                          But of the       evil,       on the other hand,
Paul    will not consent to say that                                  God    creates the evil in them, but only
the    form which the                      evil     assumes.           Therefore he does not use prepared of
them        ;    moreover instead of the active he uses the middle form, by which
the production of evil itself                             is   transferred to the side of the creature.                              The
Apostle intended by this method to signify the different relation                                                             in   which
God     stands to the good and the evil."                                           To which he adds that the other
view    is        inconsistent with the expression, " endured with                                much long suffer-
ing."            "There              is   something not only discordant but absolutely contradic-
tory in the idea that                           God       thus endures what he has himself prepared."
As    cases           somewhat              similar,      I    will   remark        that in the last verses of the 5th
and 6th chapters, the Apostle adds to                                        life   the epithet eternal, although he
omits           it                     word death.
                     in reference to the                  contrasted
       "And that he might make known." Tholuck examines various ways
in    which these words have been thought to be connected with the preced-
ing.            According to Stuart,                           Iva    yv(,jpiaxi      is   dependent          on -deXuv, and
equivalent to the infinitive yvupiaai as expressed in ver. 22.                                                           As   this con-
with the context.                          I   am   disposed to believe, however, that the Apostle ha?
174                                    CO   M M E N T A K Y OX T II E                                                      [Sect. XI.
God, willing to show hit wrath, and iv6d^aa^ai rr/f dpyfjv Kol yvu)-
another thought in mind.                    "Iva   may be             ecbatic and the                 words be explained,
'and thus does he make known.'                            The         following statement will assist the
reader    in   perceiving and judging of the proposed meaning.
   It   appears from historical statements in the                                          New         Testament,               that, in
making known the Gospel to mankind, it was the divrne purpose that it
should    first      be promulgated to the Jews.                                  This accords with our Lord's
own     practice,          who   spent a considerable portion of the                                  first   year of his min-
istry in   Jerusalem and Judea; with                              his directions to his Apostles;                                      and
with their practice pursuant thereto.                             See John           ii.    13        iv, 3,    45,   Luke        .\xlv.
47, Acts       i.   4,     and other similar             places.            Multitudes of Jews did indeed
receive the Gospel, but                  still   the   mass of the nation rejected                               it.      It   appears
from the evangelical history so                          far as        it    is    given in the Acts, that the
Apostles       first       made   the offer of the Gospel to the Hebrews, and on their
rejection of         it,   proclaimed       it   freely to Gentiles; and, moreover, that its re-
degree dispelled by the fact that the Jews obstinately closed their eyes to
the truth, while Gentiles "gladly received the word."                                                      Thus the            rejection
of the Gospel by the former led,                         in the       providence of God, to                         its   becoming
known, appreciated, and obeyed by the                                 latter:        "To             the   Jew     first       and also
to the Greek."                Comp. Acts           xi.   19-21.             In liom. xi. 11, 12, 15, 30, the
admission of Gentiles to the benefits of Christ's religion,                                                 is   represented as
having taken place in consequence of                              its      rejection            by    the Jews.                Is it   im-
possible that the Apostle                   may have been                   influenced by the                      same        thought,
when he wrote this passage 1 He does not indeed say in express terms
       Jews had rejected the Gospel but his course of remark implies,
that the                                                          ;
utterly    unworthy of                his continued favour,                 and thus he has                      pro7nul(j/ed the
abundance of               his kindness          to others.            These indeed are represented as
consisting of         Jews       as well as Gentiles; but                    it is   evident that the latter con-
stitute the         predominant portion                in the     view of the Apostle.
Cn.IX.22.]                             EPISTLE TO THE EOMANS.                                                                    175
       h> noXX^ fiaKpoT&v[J,ia aKevT] dp-                                  with much long-suffering the ves-
       yTjg KaTTjpTianiva elg dnoJXeiav,                                   sols of -wTath fitted to destruction                  ;
He     says that            if   the       Jews had obtained                    the ascendancy, they                 would have
opposed the admission of the Gentiles into the church, unless they submit-
ted to circumcision                    and the Mosaic law, and that                           this is evident              from the
feeling         which prevailed so extensively on                               this subject        among many              influen-
tial Jewish converts. See Acts xv. 1 et seq. and xxi. 20 et seq. But since
they were             much        the smaller body, they were not in a condition to impose
laws on the others.                        And      thus, he remarks, that                    God, by a wisdom truly
admirable, brought light out of darkness.                                         But    this representation is quite
more numerous than the Gentile, the same divine grace which enabled
them to perceive and feel the truth of the Gospel, would also have imparted
to them such knowledge of its spirituality, and such practical wisdom and
charity towards all their converted brethren, as would have prevented such
a result.  Like Peter, the great body of them would have remitted their
attachment to the external law, and liberated themselves from a system
which        he,      who had been               so long under complete subjection to                                it,   declared
to be " a          yoke which neither our fathers nor we were able to bear                                                  :"   Acts
XV. 10.
                " Riches of                his glory,"         conveys the idea of the fulness and excel-
lence of the divine favour, as before explained.                                             Comp. Eph.         i.   7, 18,      ii.   7,
Col.    i.      27.
       UpoTiToifiaae.                  "   Afore prepared             :"    This, as Professor            Hodge remarks,
IS   " the      common             and proper meaning of the word."                                 But what he adds                   in
both it has the same meaning, and the correct translation of the latter is,
'
    that   we      should walk              in    which     God       hath before prepared.'                     Without the
preposition the                  word occurs 40            times,      and always            in the   sense oi preparing,
never of destining.                         Neither        is    it   con-ect to say that "this meaning                                is
23     aiidtliat hfiuiylit               make known                        the      nut          ira          yiuopiaij                 tov ttXovtov 23
      riches of his glory on the vessels of                                         T/)f du^yjc;               avruu               tTTi    okevj] ike-
givo this sense, but he says nothing in defence of it. The place in
Acts     is     not parallel, inasmuch as the word                                                    is ditlcrent,                 and the meaning
cannot bo proved to be the same.                                                    Roseniniillcr, in his Scholia on the
New      Testament,                 refers, for the                   same signification of predestinating, to Gen.
x-\iv. 14,        and Matt. x.w. 34.                                  But the references are unsatisfactory. In
the     first   text, the              English translation has, "thou hast appointed," and the
Septuagint ijToindaag.                             In the             Hebrew            the      word          is    Pin^in, which, according
to Jarchi,        and the best Biblical                                   scliolars,        means, ihou hast proved or                                      ffiven
2)roofof; that                   is,   hast    shown                 to    be the damsel who                             is        to    become        the wife
of Isaac.             In the second, the ordinary meaning of                                                             ''
                                                                                                                              prepared for you"                       is
in the verse under consideration. To " prepare before for glory" those on
whom God               intends to confer the                               full   blessings of Messiah's kingdom,                                           is    the
same      thing as to               make       all          necessary previous preparations for their future
happiness.                  It is    identical with the idea in Ephesians                                                :     'God hath made all
previous preparations that                                      we    should walk                    in   good works.'               The Vulgate
in both places translates p?Yr/;/-av7.                                             Thus w-e read, that honours have
" been     jy^'cpcu'ed              by   the father," of a "                       kingdom 2)re2)ared,^^ of Christ's going
''
     to prepare a place," of " things                                     prepared           for those               who           love God," and of
his   having          ^''
                            2}repared for                   them a          city."          See note on Ileb.                              ix.     23, p. 132.
The     inspired writers                   may                  speak of the prepai-ation of the place or of the
persons or of the arrangements necessary to the accomplishment of the
divine scheme of salvation                                      ;
                                                                    yet the general thought                                   is   one and the same.
God      hath done the whole                                ;       the preparation for glory, as well as the plan
whereby          it    becomes            attainable,                     is all his        own.
      There      is still           another view which                            may be              taken of this and similar pas-
sages; and probably                           it       is       best to          comprehend                   it     within that just stated.
It is   simply              this,   that as            God           is   said to       do what he determines, so he                                          may
here be represented as having prfpared fur salvation those                                                                                     whom      he had
purposed         to save.                But       this will               not affect the meaning of the word, Mhich
will    still   convey the idea of preparing those contemplated by the divine
purpose.
      Here       it   may be             well to give a brief view of the leading train of thought
from the 14th verse.                               '
                                                       From what                    has been said, can                                   God be charged
with injustice?                     Certainly not.                        But he acts according                               to his       own pleasure,
as he says,           '
                            I   will   show favour and benignity                                         to   whomsoever                       I   will.'        His
plans     all    originate from and are carried out in accordance with his                                                                                    own
will, so that their direction                                       and arrangement do not at                                            all   depend upon
human         inclination or effort, but solely                                         on the divine wisdom and benevo-
lence.          And, to give an instance of a bad man being made subservient to
Cn. IX. 23-2G.]                       EPISTLE TO THE ROMANS.                                                                    177
26 Trrjusvqv                 kol earai ev tcj           tottcj,      beloved,        which was not beloved.
      ov    eppri^T]          avTolg        
                                                 ov Xaog [lov        And     it    shall come to pass, that in 26
the divine plans,                it is      said of Pharaoh, that   God had allowed him to con-
tinue in order to display his                          power through the monarch's obduracy, and
thus to spread his glory in the world.                                 It is plain,          therefore, that             God       so
disposes         all       things as to           promote     his   own     purposes, extending his benefits
to some,          and        suffering others to continue obdurate.                          Will you object                    that,
GKEVT], vessels, that is, the persons so designated. The quotations are from
i.   10,    and        ii.   23;      or,       according to the           Hebrew      notation,      ii.       1,   25.        The
prophet          is    certainly speaking of the restoration of the Israelites to divine
favour, and there is                   no reason        to suppose that St.             Paul either understood
or intended to expound his meaning otherwise.                                          The prophecy                  relates to
the ten tribes, whose idolatry and wickedness are described under the
ima^e of a faithless wife and abandoned children, who are disgraced and
punished by the indignant husband and father, but after a long period of
penal discipline, are at length readmitted to favour.*                                   The feminine,                     " her
      The reader          may find   an exposition of the first chapter of Hosea, as given in the Targum of Jon-
athan ben Uzziel, and in the            Commentary of David Kimchi, in my Jewish Rabbies, p. 165 et seq.
                      12
                                                                                                                                        ;
       the place where                 it   was      said unto           vfielg,        ^KtT.         KXij^h'iaovrai       viol
       them, Ye are not                my        people; there           t^foD L,iI)VToq.              'ilnuiar    6t:   Kpd^ei 27
       shall they he ealk'd the children of                              vmp          tov        ^lapa/iX'         euv y         6
27 the living God.                     Esaias also crieth                dptdiibq          rdv vidv        ^lapafjX cjg          rj
beloved," refers to the                          fact,   that the prophet describes the once rejected but
now     restored people under the                              symbol of his          dauf/hter,        named Lo-nihamah^
that    is,        not beloved.            " In the place :"            This does not                 mean instead of;' it
                                                                                                              '
marks             locality.       This      is    proved from the adverb that follows, "there;" and
thus    we have              the    same language, both                   in the           Hebrew and             Septuagint, in
1    Kings         xxi. 19:        " In the 2)lace where dogs licked the blood of Naboth, there
shall       dogs      lick    thy blood."                The prophet undoubtedly means,                            that in zvhal-
cver countries the scattered Israelites                                may be          dispersed, there shall they, on
their conversion,                  be recognised as God's people.                           The language of God                      to
the favoured Israelites                          by which          the renewal of his love                    is   expressed,          is
27,    is    evidently to this effect: 'however numerous                                          may be     the     body of          the
Jewish people, yet the remnant (only)                                          shall       be saved.'         To     KardXeijijia
is     undoubtedly emphatic.                              It    refers   to      the divine promise, repeatedly
alluded to            by     Isaiah, that,          although the nation might be exposed to various
attacks and even excisions, yet their enemies should not entirely triumph
there should              still    be a reserved portion, a remnant of the people,                                       in accord-
ance with the divine promise                                    made     to the prophet                  when      called to his
mission             among  his countrymen.  Notwithstanding the wasting, and the
desolation            and the removal and the forsaking, " a tenth shall return, the
holy seed:"               vi.    11-13.            This promise            is,   as    I   have       said, several      times        re-
ferred to. The very name of one of Isaiah's sons, Shear-Jushub, that is, a
remnant shall return, was given him evidently in order to keep up in the
mind of the people this promise, and thus to strengthen their faith in it.
This accounts for the fact that the prophet                                      is    directed to take this son with
him when he goes                    " to    meet Ahaz            :"   vii. 3.     Now, although             the preservation
of this remnant, and                        its    restoration after temporal and political dangers,
are announced by Isaiah,                          it is       by no means necessary                   to limit his prediction
to merely civil occurrences and            immunity from national evils. The Apos.
tie applies            the promise more generally. He shows that it comprehends a
reference to the faithful part of the Israelites, the deliverance or salvation
secured to them being spiritual and heavenly, and by the instrumentality
Ch. IX.    27, 25.]               EPISTLE TO THE EOMANS.                                                                   179
phecy." See his note on vs. 7-9.     Rosenmiiller, on ver. 7, remarks, that
" some consider the language as descriptive of those miserable times during
the reign of Ahaz,              when not only          the Israelites under Pekah, but the Syrians
also from the north, the Edomites from the south, and the Philistines from
the west, invaded Judea, ruining the country, seizing the cities, and captur-
ing thousands.                  See 2 Chron.           xxviii.     5-19."            He     objects to this view,
however, on account of the order in which the prophecies are arranged, and
thinks that  what is here said relates to the state of things under Uzziah,
after   Amaziah had been conquered by Joash, King of Israel, his people
terribly slaughtered, his country                       and      capital laid waste,               and even the walls
of Jerusalem              in   a great measure destroyed.                 See 2 Kings              xiv.       8-14, 2 Chron.
XXV. 14-24.               The prophet may have
                                            mind on these        his                               eruptions, and also
on the     devastations which were caused by the Assyrian                                          invasions, of which
we have        so graphical and poetic a description in Isa.                               vii.    18-25,       viii.   21, 22,
and    X. 6.     This representation of the wretched condition of the people, the
Apostle applies to the spiritual state of the                             Israelites, rejected                  by God with
the exception of the chosen and choice remnant.
     This comprehensive view of Isaiah's language accords with the appli-
cation     of the prediction in                      Genesis        relating          to    the        vast     number of
Abraham's progeny, which                       is   made by        the Apostle in            iv.   16     ;    where see the
note, p. 09.
      The 28th verse remains to be considered     For he will finish the         :
                                                                                      '
work"    &;c. The word rendered " work" is Xoyov in both places, and there
180                              COMMENTARY ON                               Tllf:                       [Sect. XI.
      the     Lord make upon the              cartli.        Kai KadCjg              TrpoeiprjKev    'Haata^    
                                                                                                                    29
29    And     as Esaias said before, Except                  el   fiii   Kvpio^ oai3au}d iyKartXinev
      the Lord of Sabaoth had left us a                      7//>' a7:epiia,<l)(;       ludofxa dv eyev-
      seed,wc had been as Sodom, and                         if^i]}it^v        Koi      cjg   Yujioppa         dv
      been made like unto Gomorrah,                          cjfwioj&rjfiev.
    The words in Isa. x. 22, latter half, and 23, here quoted, are explained
by  the great mass of commentators, as referring to the overwhelming de-
structions which God had determined to bring upon the Jews and Israelites.
And certainly this view of them agrees with the former half of ver. 22,
" though thy people Israel be as the sand of the sea, yet a remnant of them
shall return,'' and also with their apparent application by the Apostle.
Still, it would seem that the prophet has in view the immediate overthrow
of the Assyrian forces, and the very extraordinary destruction which swept
off multitudes of        them    in   one night        :   See 2 Kings           xix. 35, or Isa. .\xxvii. 30.
The     section begins with the 5th verse.                        The prophet             describes the infidel
insolence of this haughty power, that regards itself as independent, and
threatens excision to the people of Jehovah.                                lie speaks of it as the feeble
and passive instrument            in the     hand of the Almighty workman, and threatens
it    with deserved punishment under the figure of the conflagration of a
forest:       5-19.     Then follows the               effect      of this divine judgment on the
character of those of the Israelites                   who had escaped former                    attacks   ;    they
shall turn      from those human helps which, instead of benefiting, had injured
them, and shall trust            in the      only defence, their              own true God. To him
they shall return by penitence and                          faith.        Numerous though they may
have been and           may    even continue hereafter to be, yet the remnant only
shall return.          While     the prophet does indeed limit this promise to the
remnant, yet       it is     quite certain that a very prominent thought in his                                mind
is,   that they shall most certainly return.                       It    would       therefore, be very natu-
ral for     him   to connect      immediately with                   this   promise a declaration, that
                                             Bobinson"8 Lexicon.
                                                                                                                                             :
30           Ti ovv epovfiev             ;
                                             on     e^vr]             ra           ^Yl\at shall           we   say then      ?    That 30
      ftTJ    dtcjKOVra diKaioovvTjV Kars-                                       the Gentiles, which followed not
count of their connection in Isaiah with the main statement; or, that lan-
guage by which the prophet announces the destruction of the Assyrians the
Apostle applies to the spiritual overthrow of the unbelieving Israelites.
In other words, he expresses his                                 own thought                     in   the prophet's words.                See
remarks on quotations in the Commentary on Hebrews, pp. 26 et seq.
   30, 31. Olshausen seems to regard the whole of vs. 30, 31, as the ques-
tion,     and to make the answer follow " wherefore," SiaTi, in ver. 32. In
this case OTt    would mean inasmuch as, since, as in John ii. 18 and ix. 17 ;
and the sense would be thus                         :
                                                         '
                                                                 What           shall   we        say then, since Gentiles &c.,
but Israel &c.            ?     Wherefore               is       it    thus?'           The reason follows                   in   ver 32
'
    Because' &c.              But the usual arrangement                                     is   preferable.          What        shall   we
say then        1    what conclusion                shall             we come           to   ?        The answer which imme-
182                                        COMMENTARY ON THE                                                                              [Sect. XI.
     Isruel, wliich        followed after the law                              ov 6iKaioavv7]q OVK                    t(}j^aoe.            Aid
     of rif^hteousness, hath not attained                                      ri       ;
                                                                                            on   ovK tK         Triorecjq,           dAA'     0)C   32
32 to the law of righteousness. Where-
to secure, that           is,   justification.                 Here        the scope of the writer                              is   ascertained
by    own express
      his                              statement, and no rule of interpretation can possibly
be more certain.
      In speaking of the Gentiles as not '"following after," or                                                            aiming          at, jus-
tification, the           Apostle does not mean to represent them as negligent and
careless concerning acceptance with God,                                                     when      this blessing                 was    offered
them. Undoubtedly those among them who " attained unto justification,"
had become interested                        in the         Gospel         ;    and          this is      most expressly               stated re-
specting those            who      are mentioned in Acts                                     xiii.   4G-48.         St.     Paul refers to
their      former irreligious condition, when living without                                                      God in the world.
And     in the      same way he describes them                                          in x. 20, as those          who had neither
sought nor inquired after God.                                  On     the Gospel being                         made known to them,
they embraced              its      offers         and secured                      its      benefits.          But    this          was not the
case with the Israelites.                         They followed                      voiiov ditcaLoavvqg- literally, a law
of    justification,       but according to an idiom, very                                                common           in    Hebrew and
also in other languages, a justifying law                                           ;       but they did not reach                 it. They
clung tenaciously to an ideal system of their own, and therefore failed to
secure the vainly hoped for benefit.*                                           But such a system                     is   chimerical, and
cannot possibly, in the present condition of fallen                                                        human      nature,           have any
real existence.             In this              way does        St.       Paul speak                 in Phil.      iii.    0,       of his   "own
justification       which         is       of the law           ;"     meaning a hypothetical or                                     ideal one, a
     * After writing as nbovc,         I   see that Tlioluck lias triven, not only the                          same general view bat oven
the same word.        The       rcailer will      perhaps alh>w that the coincidence favours the exposition.                                    After
Btatln<;   various views of earlier writers, (which                    I   did not think             It   expedient to introduce,) such as a
hypallaco ot law o/jtislificntion                fiiT   juntijlcation      hy       late,    and others of the fame sort; he prefers ex-
pKiinlng     law of juntijicdlion           '
                                                 \on einom idealem vorgostelltem Gesctz oder einer Norm, duroh
welche     man   Gerechtlgkelt crlangen kann."
                                                                                                                                                               ;
      e^   tpyuv     vofxov    '   TrpooeKOxpav                    yap        fore ?     Because they sought                            it       not
33    TO) Xid(t)  Tov TTpooKOimaTog, Ka-                                      by    faith,    but as              it   were by the
      iJaif   yeypanTac Idov, ri^rmt, ev
                                                                             Avorks of the law               :    for they             stum-
                                                                          bled at that stumbling-stone                                  ;    as      it   33
Hebrew         n)a      T-J'^sS, is     omitted         in        our translation, " he was a                              fliithful            man,"
whereas the true meaning                           is,    '
                                                               he was         how      fixithful    a       man        ;'    that           is   really
so,    one      whose        fidelity        was indubitable.                           Thus the                  meaning                   will          be
equivalent to indeed, really.                             They sought                  it   not of          faith,          but indeed of
the    works of the law.                     John             i.   14    is    cited in confirmation of the                                          same
meaning.            In both cases, however, a slight ellipsis                                       removes the                     difficulty,
while         the   particle retains its ordinary signification.                                                   In       St.     John the
meaning probably                   is,   '
                                             such glory as belongs to the only begotten, and
might be expected                   to    be manifested by him;' and here, 'but                                                     (as          I   may
well say,)          by   the deeds of the law.'                           Comp.          Phil. 14.
      The quotation            is    principally from Isa. xxviii. 16, although the Apostle
introduces also certain words from other places, alluding to                                                                      Isa, viii. 14,
and perhaps to Ps.                  cxviii. 22.                    By    the stone laid in Zion he                                 means the
Messiah; and, while he thus figuratively represents him as the support of
his    church and of every individual                                    member             thereof, he suggests that he
may become               an occasion of injury and ruin to those                                            who         reject him.                           In
exactly the         same way does                 Lord of hosts" being " a
                                                   Isaiah speak of " the
sanctuary" for some, and " a stone of stumbling" &c. for others.   Such a
combination of the words of one or more passages of the Old Testament is
not uncommon.      See the remarks on quotations in the Commentary on
Hebrews, p. 21, and the work of Surenhusius, before mentioned, Lib. ii.
Thesis vii. pp. 45-47.  Although it be granted, which indeed is most prob-
able, that in Isa. viii. 13, 14, the divine                                        Messiah     is   the object referred to
yet    it   will not follow that               he        is        inti'oduced as the speaker in vs.                                    16-18             :    a
theory which seems to have originated in an endeavour to reconcile the
language of the prophet with                             its        application in            Heb.          ii.    13.            In the 118th
Psalm         the rejected stone              is   immediately David, but ultimately Christ.                                                                  In
Isa. xxviii. 16,           the " foundation"                       is   certainly the Messiah.                              This    is       allowed
by Jarchi and some other Jewish authorities, although Aben Ezra and
David Kimchi explain it of Hezekiah. It is usual with the prophets to
introduce           the Messiah or to                         describe the               blessings of his                         government
and period in contrast with                              evils, political               or moral or both, which pre-
vailed in their              own times             ;     and therefore such a view of                                             this passage
say the least, as no intelligent hearer can doubt that the speaker                                                is   Jesus.
"That they might be saved:"                            Literally, 'for salvation.'                       The meaning               is,
that they         may        be converted and enjoy the blessings of Messiah's kingdom.
Comp.       xi.   26.
      2.    "I bear them record:" The original word sometimes expresses sim-
                                                                                                                                                       :
      Tov        i9e6v      vnep avrcjv [eoriv] elg                            they might be saved.                             For     I    bear     2
2     a(x)TT]piav.           Uaprvpoi yaQ avTOig,                              them            record, that they                have a zeal
      on       C,T]Xov          deov exovoiv, dXX' ov                          of God, but not according to                             know-
3     Kar' emyvcjaiv. 'Ay voovvreg                              yap            ledge.              For    they, being ignorant of                     3
      T7)v       rov ^eov diKatoavvqv, koI                                     God's               righteousness,               and         going
     T7)v Idiav diKaioovvTjv ^7]TovvTeg                                        about to establish their                          own        right-
very lofty ones. But the better meaning is zeal for God,' as the genitive '
is   often used.                  Comp. John ii. 17, " zeal of (for) thine house."
     3.    "Ignorant:" The ignorance of the Jews respecting the spiritual na-
ture of Messiah's                     kingdom was               certainly a guilty ignorance, as they                                          might
and ought              to    have known better                     ;    but        still it is       not to be doubted, that the
Apostle here uses the expression as somewhat apologetic.                                                                        This    is   evident
from the connection.                          And       thus St. Peter tells the Jews, that he                                         knew they
had    crucified the Messiah, without being                                              aware of what they were doing
Acts      iii.    17.           St.   Paul also speaks of                          his        own     persecuting course of con-
duct as carried on in ignorance:                                       1     Tim.        i.   13,   Acts xxvi.
                                                                                                           9.  The                           guilt of
such actions                is   not done away, although                             it is      somewhat modified.                      " God's
righteousness :"                      That    is,   God's plan of                   justification in opposition to a fan-
think, appear in                      Koppe's note.                    He      gives the general idea of the verse
thus: 'the law having been abolished through Christ,                                                                we      are   all justified
by    faith      ;'
                       and       refers to Gal.          iii.   24.           As     the general scope of the Apostle'3
186                                        CO M   M    KXTAUV                <J       N T    II   E                                        [Sect. XI.
in tliine heart, Who shall ascend rai elg tov ovpavov tout' eo- ;
ceremonial and moral, referred to him as the one and only source of justi-
fication.           It   was intended             to lead to him,                     and to prepare                  for his coming.
See Gal.         iii.    24.        He            away the law, so as to show that it
                                           has forever done
neither was nor could be the            means of a sinner's justification. This can be
obtained          in     no other way than by faith in Christ; and to him the law al-
ways had            reference.
      5.    "The         righteousness" or rather justification "which                                               is       of the law:"
That       is,   a conceivable but merely ideal justification, as in vcr. 3 and                                                                 ix.   31.
The quotation is from Lcvit. xviii. 5. St. Paul does not mean to say, that
Moses intended to describe this justification when he wrote the words here
quoted.  They contain a promise of happiness to the sincere observer of
God's laws.               But, inasmuch as they                      fitly     express the principle of                                     justifica-
                                                             ;                                                                    ;    
     Karaf^rjaerai elc                r^v dfivoaov           ;    Christ       down from               above    :       or,   Who      7
      tovt'        tOTi Xpiarbv ek veKpu)V                        shall    descend into the deep                          ?   that
8     dvayayelv.                'A/LAa         ri    Aeyei        is,   to hring           up Christ again from
      ^yyi;f oov rb pTjud eoriv, ev tCo                           the dead.               But what saith it ? The                      8
      OTOfiari aov koX iv t^ Kapiia                               word         is    nigh thee, even in                        thy
      GOV    tovt' eOTL TO prjiitt Tfjg
             
                                                                  mouth, and in thy heart                           :    that   is,
9     TrioTeug,           o     Kijpvaaonev          
                                                         on,      the    word of faith which we preach
      edv        ofioXoyfjaxig ev tgj               GTOfiaTi      that    if    thou shalt confess with thy                            9
      aov KVpLOV              'Irjoovv, Koi ttiotev-              mouth             the       Lord    Jesus,        and       shalt
      aigg   ev    txj   KapSia gov, otl 6               -Qeog    believe in                  thine   heart that              God
      avT0vi']yeLpeveKveKpix>v,aii)-B'i]Oxi.                      hath raised him from the dead,
10 Yiapdia ydp TTioreveTat elg diKai-                             thou shalt be saved. For with the 10
tlon   by        law, the Apostle introduces his                        own thought                   in this       most appro-
priate language of the   Hebrew lawgiver.                                  See the remarks on quotations
in the  Commentary on Hebrews, p. 27.
    6-9. The principle just stated in illustration of                                           the quotation from Le-
viticus, applies also to those here made from Deut.                                             xxx. 12-14, with which
St. Paul interweaves his own. illustrations.     The                                            justification of faith is
personified and          made to speak in the words of the address of Moses to the
Israelites,        when he endeavours to induce them to obey the law of God,
because,          instead of being attended by any particular difficulty, it is com-
paratively easy.                 As   the descending into the deep, or abyss,                                   is set in         con-
or descended              1    who     hath gathered the wind in his                               fists?       who hath bound
the waters in a            garment? who hath                      established^ all the ends of the earth                                 ?
what     is    his      name and w hat is his                     son's       name,           if   thou canst       tell   ?"      The
meaning           is    evident, these things are extremely difficult; they require a
superhuman power.                       And     so in the Apocryphal                         book of Baruch,           iii.   29-31,
speaking of wisdom the author says                                       :
                                                                              "   Who         hath gone up to heaven,
and taken her, and brought her down from the clouds                                                       ?     Who    hath gone
over the          sea,   and found            her,   and     will bring her for                      pure gold?            No man
knoweth her way, nor thinketh of her path."                                                  It is   plain that in the pas-
sage quoted              Moses does not              refer to the particular points discussed                                 by       the
Apostle.            He        is   persuading the Hebrews to obey the divine law.                                             It   does
not involve anything of special                       difficulty, as if             the heavens were to be scaled,
or the broad and stormy sea, with                                 its    mountain billows and deep watery
chasms, to be passed over.                           It is   comparatively easy and within the reach
of moderate              effort.       Employing           the     same language, and adapting                              it   to his
purpose, St. Paul expresses thereby this thought, that the blessings of the
Gospel scheme of                    justification     were also attainable on the very                                 facile con-
dition of faith,               which was within the power of every sincere and earnest
seeker after salvation.                        " In thy      mouth and              in       thy heart" are strong                 figu-
guage     in      Matt.        X.   32, implies the open avowal of faith in and attachment
to him, notwithstanding the difficulties and persecutions to which such a
course        may        subject the confessor.                    The        resurrection of Christ from the
dead     is    here put             by a synecdoche               for the          whole system of Christianity,
 Ch.X.          11-14.]                EPISTLE TO TUE ROMANS.                                                                 180
          Kal "EXXrjvog            
                                       6   yap avrbg Kv-               For there       is    no difference between 12
          ptof TTavrwv TrAot'Twv elq -ndv-                             the     Jew andthe Greek for the        :
          ra^ rovg iniKaXovnevovg avrov.                               same Lord over all is rich unto all
 13 Ilaf yap, bq dv eTTiKaXeoTjrac rb                                  that call upon him.    For whoso- 13
 14 ovona Kvpiov, oco^/jaerai.                                HuJg     ever shall call upon the name of
which stands or                   falls    with this most fundamental principle.                            The 10th verse
contains the simple but all-impoi'tant statements, that justifying faith        must
be        sincere,       and available confession open and public notwithstanding all
dangers.
          11. "    For     :"     This refers to what had been before said, namely, the                                      facil-
ity with          which the blessings of the Gospel might be obtained on the con-
dition of          fliith,      inasmuch as they are not exclusively confined                                 to   any       class,
ha\ing been promised to the believer,                                       or, as   the Apostle says, to every
believer.            See        Isa. xxviii. 16,           and similar          places.        "   Whosoever           :"   more
accurately           '
                          every one who,' nag 6 or                    6g.      The    adjective,          which    is    not ex-
pressed either               in'   the     Hebrew        or Septuagint, although necessarily implied,
is   probably added by the Apostle, to make the meaning the more                                                        definite.
    " Believeth on,"                  em-        This intimates that he               who      exercises such a faith,
so trusts in              its     object as to        make          that his support                and dependence.              It
ner       man on          Christ and his system for acceptance and ultimate salvation.
It is      the    germ of           the divine       life,     VFhlch unites the soul to                 God and        the Ee-
deemer, and thereby develops                             itself in the        well formed Christian character.
          12, 13.     "The Jew and                  the Greek," or Gentile,                   Heathen; as the word
Greek frequently means.                            " The same          Lord over            all    is   rich unto all that
call      upon him."               The       epithet " rich" implies the fulness of his blessings,
and        also the free               and abundant manner                     in    which he dispenses them.
    '
          Call     upon     :"     That     is,   pray     to, as in    2 Tim.        ii.   22, "    them     that call        on
the Lord."                 The description               is    entirely      appropriate, whether applied to
God         or Christ.             But fiom the words that follow                           it is   probable that " the
same Lord"                i-efers to Christ.             They harmonize with the usage in the Acts.
See       ix.    14, 17,        where "calling           upon the name of the Lord" is equivalent
to invoking Christ.                        In 1 Cor.          i.   2, also. Christians are distinguished                       by
the appellation, those "that call upon the                                   name of Jesus               Christ our Lord."
The verses that follow confirm this view, as Christ is evidently he who is to
be preached and heard and believed in, and consequently called on. The
quotation in ver. 13 is from Joel ii. 32, (in the Heb. iii. 5,) and in immediate
connection with the promise of the abundance and extraordinary efflision
of the Spirit, which was verified at the                                     first   Christian Pentecost.            With
the expression              "The same Lord                    overall,"      compare the very similar one of
St. Peter,          "he      is    Lord of all," employed                   directly of Christ in Ac^s x. 36.
    5
1 00 COM M E N T A K V O N T II E [Sect. XL
14 the Lord shall he saved.                              How then            ovv iiriKaXeaovrai, tic bv ovK
        HJiull tliL   y   cull   on him         in   whom          they      hrioTevaav ttwc ^^ marevaov-
                                                                                                       ;
how .shall they preach, e.veept they ol nude^ tCjv EvayyEkii;ofitvu}v ei-
believing countrymen, that many of them had not heard the Gospel
proclaimed.   The Apostle answers that many who had heard it did not
believe it.  To this the Jew replies, that the quotation itself implies that
men must hear the Gospel before they can believe it." The 17th verse
is also regarded as
                    " the suggestion of the objector, who means to insist by
it that many of the Jews are not culpable for unbelief, inasmuch as they
have not heard the Gospel, and hearing is necessary to believing." In the
jection       is   not very likely                   ;   because       it   admits that            if      the    Jew on        hearing the
Gospel had rejected                       it,   he would be guilty.                          But       this is    a postulate, which
of course, he would not allow, and the Apostle could not assume.                                                                             And
without supposing any such formal objection and answer, the series of                                                                         re-
Tholuck thinks that the Apostle terminates with ver. 13 the course of
thought begun at ver. 4, and then returns to that in vs. 1-3, intending to show
that the opportunity of believing had not been withheld from the Jews.
He       remarks that although                            in ver.     13 the word             Traf,        everyone,            may    be em-
ployed to show that the heathen are not excluded, yet those that follow,
referring to the comprehensiveness of the cf^ression,                                                             may         include both,
having a special reference however to the Jews.                                                    lie does not consider the
words "not all"                     in ver. 16, as relating to individuals                                       among         heathen and
Jews, but rather to the latter as a body, at least to them principally                                                                  in    con-
tradistinction to the                     mass of heathen.                    If      it   should be thought strange that,
after      what has been                  said in vs. 15, 16, the question should                                      be raised        in ver.
18, "       have they not heard ?" he considers the                                          difTiculty as             removed by sup-
posing        it   to     be emphatic, declaring that they had heard most abundantly
and       fully.
        "Sent      :"      Either by Christ or                       God     or both conjointly, for in this mission
                                                                                                                                             !
the    Holy        Trinity with the Messiah co-operate.                                         Such sending implies both
an internal              call    by    the Spirit, and an external commission                                                  by   legitimate
ecclesiastical authority.                        Although the Prophet                           is    describing poetically the
delight with which the messengers                                     who announce                the return                  from the Bab-
ylonian captivity are received                              ;
                                                                 yet he has also                 in   view the heralds of the
Gospel proclaiming to                         men     its    " glad tidings of great joy."                                     The passage,
which         is   from         Isa.   lii.    7, is    not accommodated, but cited in accordance
with the ultimate meaning of the prophetic word.                                                            See Discourses on
Prophecy, the 5th, pp. 86, 87, and Note                                            xvii.
this meaning of the same word be retained in ver. 17, where our transla-
tion renders it " hearing," then " the word of God " will denote the divine
command.                 The     different shade of                   meaning expressed by our translation
arises quite naturally                   from the verb                   io   hear before used.                      If this translation
be preferred, the sense will be that foith follows the hearing of the pro-
the excellence of his                    revealed word.  The Psalmist speaks of the divine
works, especially the heavenly bodies, as proclaiming to the universe the
majesty and power of their almighty framer and director                                                          ;    and the Apostle
quotes them, as admirably suited to express the universal proclamation of
the Gospel as a                 new and heavenly                   creation, a re-making of the                                 moral chaos,
and a forming of                 its   discordant materials into one united, harmonious whole,
to the        honour of          its
                                                                         
                                       "great original." "Their sound " &c. The Hebrew
has    i;^,    " //ne," the Septuagint (pdnyyog, "
                                                sound,'''' which is followed by the
Vulgate " sonus."           The former may express simply the idea of extension,
which         is   denoted by the very meaning of the word, and in the author's
mind      it   may be            carried out indefinitely                      ;   and the            latter     may           be a declara-
tion to thesame effect in                             the language of the poets,                                who speak of                     the
harmonious movements of                             the heavenly bodies, or the divine liarmony of
the celestial spheres.                        In either case, the general thought                                    is       the same.
192                                        C     MM        KN TA K Y                   U N     T        1 1   E                             [Szct. XI.
     not           Israel      know?           First        Moses            ^yw napa^TjX^au)                              vjiag         trr'   ovK
     saith,        I   will   provoke you to jealousy                        edvei,          tTrt       t^vei davvtrii) -napop-
     by      tfiem that are           no people, and by                   )'tw        Vfidg.            'lloatag de aToroP./xa 20
     a foolish nation                 I   will   anger you.                  Koi Xiyei              
                                                                                                              evpe^v        rolg         i[it    [J.TJ
calling of the Gentiles                    and    their           admission into the Christian church.                                         Did
not the Israelitish nation                       know        that such            was God's purpose?                                     They did            ;
that    is   to say, they            had own Scriptures abundant evidence of this in-
                                           in their
tention.             Compare " when they knew" in 21 and " seeing " and " hearing"i.
in   Matt.          xiii. l.S. The Apostle begins by citing the testimony of Moses;
afterwhich he limits himself to one passage in Isaiah, although he might
have quoted many from the same prophet, and also from other Old Testa-
ment writers. The language of Moses in Dent, xxxii. 21, expresses God's
indignation at the Israelites on account of their idolatries, and implies his
                                                                                                                            ";
to the Gentiles.                 The quotation from Isaiah Ixv. I, 2, is plain and directly
to the point.                  The Gentiles are represented as those who had " not sought
or "asked after" God.                          This refers to the condition of ignorance and                        indif-
ference into which they had sunk before the Gospel                                             was proclaimed              to
them.          See   ix.       30, and note.                The next verse declares the disobedient and
obstinate character of the Israelites, and the earnest though fruitless efforts
of untiring goodness to reclaim them.
      xi.   Having shown why                          the    Jews     in general      were excluded from the
kingdom of the Messiah, St. Paul now proceeds to console those of his na-
tion who had embraced the faith of Jesus, under the affliction which a con-
sideration of the lamentable state of their countrymen must have produced
and to discourage in the Gentile converts any disposition to inordinate self-
complacency, and any tendency to treat the Jews with contempt on account
of their       own        spiritual superiority.                     He   states that in fact      many Jews had
become converts                  to Christianity             ;   that the unbelief of those         who remained
obstinately prejudiced against the truth, had been                                        made conducive           to the
welfare of the Gentiles                    ;   and    lastly,     he speaks as      if   he confidently expected
the   coming of a period when the Jews as a nation would acknowledge Jesus
as the true Messiah and accept his Gospel.
      1-4. "        Hath God             cast   away        his people ?"          Is this   a legitimate conclu-
sion from            what has been before                         said respecting         the rejection         of unbe-
lieving Jews,             and the substitution of converted Gentiles?                               It is   not.     The
Apostle solemnly denies                         it,   and proceeds to sustain               his denial.         In order
               13
194                                  COMMENT AKY ON                                      TIIH                                  [Sect. XI.
settle the            meaning of the phrase                   " his people."                     This cannot possibly be
limited to that portion of the                          Hebrews who had                         received the Gospel.                     It
denotes the nation as a whole, as the word is used irt the immediately
preceding verse.                 This     is   the usual sense of the phrase, and                                     it is   often   em-
ployed in connection with the most affectionate expressions of regret on
account of their pcrverseness and wickedness, and the severest denuncia-
tions of wrath.              See,   among            a multitude of instances of the same phrase, Ps.
Niv. 7,       liii.   6, xciv. 14, Isa. xxx. 26,              Joel     ii.               Luke i. (58, vii. IG.
                                                                             18, Mic. vi. 2,
The words              "   my    people" often occur                 in the same general meaning. See,
for a       few examples,          Isa.   i.    3,   lii.   4, 5, G,   and Mic. vi. 3, 5. Usage then sus-
tains the general meaning.                           And     the context admits of none other.                                  It is   not
uncommon,              indeed, to explain the verses which immediately follow in such a
way        as to agree with          and even sustain the limited meaning                                         ;   as if the Apos-
tle had intended to allege the fact of being an Israelite himself as a proof
that God had not rejected the nation.    But this is a very frigid sense, and
quite unworthy of such a writer.                                   Who   that properly estimates his charac-
ter or        works can suppose that he would undertake                                               to show, that            God had
not rejected that portion of his ancient people whom he had admitted to
the blessings of Messiah's kingdom 1 or that, if he thought it worth while
to prove such a self-evident proposition, that he would choose to do so
by adducing himself as the evidence ? This is not in character with so
logical a head, or so humble a heart. Not in such manner, or by such help,
may we           look for the support of truth                      by Paul.                    lie does not            mean      to say,
    '
        God   hath not rejected           all his       people, for          I   myself              am   a Christian of Israel-
itish descent.' According to this view, there is no point in the latter half
of the verse. Why does he particularize 1 " I am," says he, " an Israelite :"
ham         :"    He       recals to themind of his readers the venerated patriarch, " the
    pillar" of the          nation, as Maimonides denominates him.      " Of the tribe of
    Benjamin          :"   The   least yet           most esteemed of                         all,    who had            allied    them-
    selves to the tribe of Judah, and had not rejected the divinely established
    government of "the house of David," the                                      softly flowing waters of Siloah                              :
    Isa. viii. G.         he merely intended to show that the whole of God's an-
                           Had
        cient people had not been cast away by alleging himself as an example, it
        would have been enough to say, 1 claim that I myself have not been re-
                                                               '
sand devoted servants who were even then his chosen people so the Jews ;
who have               received       Jesus as the Messiah are now his people, and these he
hath not rejected.                   But       this is   not the point of comparison.                   Rather, in accord-
ance with the analogy of God's dealings as exhibited in Scripture,                                                       it   runs
thus    :    As, in the degenerate days of the prophet, the seven thousand                                           faithful,
the holy " remnant," preserved the true religion, and thus prevented the
divine vengeance from e.xterminating the whole nation                                             ;   so   now, those holy
and     faithful Israelites                   who have embraced                 the Gospel, preserve their faithless
brethren from utter and                              final    abandonment by God. The " little leaven
leaveneth the whole lump."                                   The holy few preserve, in a degree, the mul-
titude       ;    the devoted portion consecrates, in a sense, the whole mass.
      The         correctness of this view                      is   sustained also            by what      follows.          The
introductor^Mvords of ver. 11 evidently refer to those of ver.                                               1,   the subject
of which              is   certainly in the Apostle's mind.                            The falling corresponds with
the casting                off,   and both are denied                 in the        same emphatic terms. Yet it is
unquestioned that the stumbling and the falling relate to the nation                                                      ;   and
indeed the subsequent verses place this beyond                                           all   doubt.       The same          con-
clusion follows                   from   ver. 16,       where " the lump" or mass, and "the branches,"
both of which are said to                               be " holy," correspond with the body of the
nation.               And what           is   stated in vs. 28, 29, settles the true interpretation of
the phrase under consideration.                                 'As respects the Gospel, they are enemies
to    God         ;   but as respects God's choice of the nation to be his covenant peo-
ple,        they are beloved on account of their fathers: for God's gracicus                                                  gifts
196                                            COMMENTARY ON TUE                                                                             [Sect.   XL
and the benefits of that state into which he calls and places, are matters in
relation to which lie does not change his mind.' This is true, although
multitudes who have been placed in that state may forfeit its blessings
English versions both here and elsewhere.                                                          It   occurs also in the authorised
in  2 Cor. viii. 1, "do you to wit," for 'inform you;' and in Phil. i. 22,
"   Iwot not." These are the only instances in which it is employed as the
translation of yvwpt^w, although the Greek word occurs 24 times.   In Acts
iii. 17, the original of "I wot," is ol6a.  The quotation is from 1 Kings                
xix. 10, 18.
                         
                 " Of Elias:" The Greek is ev 'HAm.   The preposition may
be rendered of or concerning as the Hebrew beth often means. Thus David
Kiinchi on Isa. xi. 4, 5, uses it " Concerning the Messiah  concerning the
                                                                   :                                                            
righteous."               And, although the passage                                     is   not cited so                 much        in reference to
5    OvTCjg ovv Koi iv              rw vvv             Kaipio        ent time also there       is    a remnant ac-
     Xelfifia           Kar'    EKXoyijV         x'^P'-'^^           cording to         the election       of grace.
6    yeyovev.             EZ 6e xapiri, ovkstl                       And    if   by    grace, then    is it   no more       6
in   Eve,       Thus      St.   Paul   may       say 'in           Elijah,'   meaning,      in that     part of Scrip-
ture which relates his history.                               The Vulgate        has, in Ella,       and      is   followed
by Wiclif and the Rheims translation. Some commentators trace the same
method of quotation in Mark .%ii. 26, where they translate " in the bush."
This      is    our authorised version, and                         it   coincides with Tyndale, Cranmer,
Geneva and Rheims. Wiclif has, " the book of Moises on the buysch,"
meaning probably that part of the Pentateuch which relates to the bush and
the occurrence there.                  The other               translations       may       very     fairly      be under-
stood to        mean      that    God spoke             in the bush.          Besides, the preposition, which
is ^TTt, is      better rendered             at^       and connected with the words that follow,
"God       spake unto him."             T^ BdaX.                   The use of           the feminine article has
led several critics to suppose an ellipsis of elicovi, image, and to construe
BaaA      in the genitive, thus              ;
                                                   '
                                                       to the       image of       Baal.'     But, as Tholuck re-
marks,         in this case       we would             expect the article before the genitive.                            The
expedient          is   also quite unnecessary, as Baal is both masculine                               and feminine.
The    latter      form occurs         in   Hos.        ii.   8,   and Zeph.      i.   4, Sept.      Although         in the
place cited the Septuagint has the former, yet St. Paul, quoting from
memory,            uses the gender               most          familiar, or       which      first    occurs to him.
Whether          the Phenician and Syrian idolaters united both sexes in Baal, or
held the notion of a male and a female Baal,                                       is   uncertain.        The idea of
Gesenius, which Tholuck regards as on the whole the most probable,                                                         is,
that the feminine gender had been substituted for the masculine, from dis-
respect to the pretended deity.                               Thus       the Rabbies speak of heathen gods
in the feminine,               and passages            to the     same effect are found in the Koran.
It is also       quite probable that the                      Jews altered Beelzebub, the lord of Jlies,
into Beelzebul, the dtinff-lord, through contempt.                                         See Robinson on the
word.
     5.    "   A    remnant according                  to the election of grace :"                That     is,     a portion
of the whole people                 who have embraced                       the Gospel through God's gra-
cious choice.             The language has a                   retrospective reference to              ix.    27 and      11,
where see the             notes.
      6. The latter half of this verse, which Hahn has introduced in                                               brackets,
is   by many regarded as a gloss, and stricken out of the text.                                                    It is cer-
tain that several and very important ancient authorities reject the words ;
and      on the other hand, the Vatican manuscript and the Syriac version
       yet,
retain them. It has been thought that a marginal gloss would have been
constructed more in accordance with the form of the preceding clause ; but
this   remark would apply as well                              to the supposition of its originality.                       It
does not indeed add any idea not already contained                                            in the     former half;
                                                                                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                                             :
    election hath obtained                         it,   and the                   TVj^ev      '    ol        de Xoinol e~(jjpu)-dq-
8   rest      were blinded             ;    according as                it         aav, Kado)^ yeypanrai                                 
                                                                                                                                               tSuKev        8
still,   the Apostle              may         repeat that idea in another form for the sake of em-
phasis.           It is difficult            to decide the question of its genuineness                                                          ;    but the
weight of external evidence seems to be against                                                         it.        The sentiment                      in the
    7.    "    What         then ]"            What               has been the issue                          ?        It is          what the author
had before stated                 in ix.       31 and             x. 3,      with this difference, that there he con-
trasts the failure of the                         mass of the Jews with                                 the success of the Gentile
converts, while here the contrast lies between the former and that portion
of their brethren                 who had embraced                                 the Gospel.                    These are called " the
election."              This     is    simply the abstract for the concrete                                              '
                                                                                                                             the elect,' and the
connection shows that                         it is   limited to Jewish converts.                                     The remainder of
the people have been suffered to continue blind.                                                                  Their sin has become
judicially their punishment.
    8-10.           The Apostle now quotes passages from                                                               the        Old Testament,
showing that the threat of such judicial punishment had been denounced
by God         against obstinate and impenitent offenders.                                                              The places referred
to are principally the following, though there                                                     is   an allusion to and even a
selection of             words from others of similar import.                                                          Isa. xxix. 10, vi. 10,
Dcut. xxix.             4, Ps. Ixix. 22, 23.                          In ver.          9 the elg                 is    Hebraistic, and the
accusative nouns with the prepositions arc equivalent to the nominative
without.            The general meaninjj of                                  this      verse and the next                               is   as follows
'Let the blessings which                           tliey      enjoy be converted into occasions of injury,
and thus become divine punishments, and a recompense                                                                                   for their sinful
words are found                    in the text of           Deuteronomy, and the expression                                      is    a very
usual one            in   the historical books of the                   Old Testament. See Gen. xlviii. 15,
Deut. xxxiv.               6, Josh. iv. 9, xxii.                 17, xxiii. 8, 2 Sam. iv. 3, 1 Kings viii. 8, 2
Kings        xvli. 34,            2 Chron.        v. 9.         Besides, this construction separates the con-
tents of the 8th verse                      from those of the 9th and 10th, although the general
thought         is    identically the              same     ;    and   this is unnatural.                  It is          probable that,
in quoting the                words from Deuteronomy, the Apostle                                         may             have intended
to apply       them to              his    own      time, as he says in                 2 Cor.     iii.   15,
                                                                                                                     '^
                                                                                                                          even unto this
day,       when Moses               is    read the vail          is   upon      their heart.''             But they must not
be separated from the preceding part of the quotation.                                                          " Spirit of slum-
ber    :"    This does not refer to any                          spirit,   whether good or bad, cominissioned
by God          to    produce spiritual sleep.                         Even       if   the form of expression had                             its
origin in the idea of God's                              Holy     Spirit producing a religious state of the
inner man, and of unholy spirits influencing the soul to evil                                                                ;    still,     the
result, the condition, is all that is intended,                                   and the phrase                 may be           pleonas-
tic,   expressive merely of deep sleep, and denoting a state of apathy, total
and     sinful apathy.                    Tholuck prefers explaining the word                                    '
                                                                                                                     spirit' as        equiv-
alent to effective power, Kraft.                            And       this      seems     to agree with the use of the
word        'spirit' in           some other             places.       Comp.           Isa. xi. 2,     "spirit of wisdom,"
&c.    ;    Eom.          viii.    15, "spirit of          bondage;" Gal.                 vi. 1,    "spirit of meekness."
       11, 12.            "I say then:" These words, as                            I    before remarked in the note
on ver.        1, refer           back to that verse, and determine                          in    favour of the compre-
hensive sense of the phrase "his people."                                              The general meaning                            is   this   :
'
    Although the Jews have                         for a        time refused the Gospel through inveterate
prejudice and judicial blindness, yet                                  it is     not to be thought that this has
been permitted by God with the view of                                           effecting their irrevocable rejec-
tion and utter ruin.                        By no         means.        Their temporary rejection has been
made         the occasion of extending the Gospel to Gentiles.                                                            And    it is     thus
intended to excite the Jews to emulate their example and to embrace the
same        faith.         And were              this to   be the      result,     what immense blessings would
accrue to mankind, since their faithlessness has beenmade the occasion of
so   much       benefit. wisdom causes even the unbelief of the Jews to
                                      If divine
advance his plans by extending Christianity, much rather will this same
wisdom make their submission to the faith of the Gospel illustrate its truth,
and promote the best interests of the world.'
                                                                                                                .                             
       bow down            tlieir   back alway.                            eiv,     Koi rov vojrov avrCjv Sta-
ll          I    say then,     Have they stumbled                          -rravTix;      ovyKaji^'OV
       that they should          fall ? God forbid:                              Aeyw ovv              y,j)    tnraiaav, Iva 11
       "Have         they stumbled that they should fall?"                                             In this translation the
last       verb continues the figure which begins with the                                            first.        But    irpoaKOTTTOi
is   the usual Biblical                  word           for stumble.              Uraioi, which                is   here employed,
occurs only four other times in the                                   New        Testament, namely, James                              ii.    10,
iii.   2   twice,        and 2 Pet.          i.   10.       In the last case              it   may mean             '
                                                                                                                        fail   of success,''
in     the three former,             '
                                         i/i      rfw/y,'   " offendy             It is    doubtful whether in the text
it   refers to such failure, or                      whether          it is     used     in    its    classical           meaning, to
strike against, to stumble.                              Whichever version be adopted, the general
idea in the question remains unaltered.                                            In the one case                  it   will be,          have
they sinned, or failed to secure the blessing of acceptance with                                                               God 1 and
in the other,             have they allowed themselves to be so disgusted with and per-
verted from the truth                    ?         In either         view moral and                  spiritual degradation is
more appropriate                    verb.         The          riches of the            world denotes the abundant
favour bestowed on the Gentiles through the Gospel rejected                                                         by     the Jews.
" Diminishing :" In the                        margin        it is    " decay or loss," and the former of these
two words more nearly expresses the sense than                                                 either of the others.                       The
Greek           is iJTTrjfia,   from              t/ttcjv or ijaocov, loorse,           and conveys the idea of a
bad condition.               Hence        it is         used, both in            the form of a noun and a verb, in
Isa. xxxi. 8, 9,               This      is       the only place in which the noun occurs in the                           Old
Testament.                Although the best                     critics differ as to the                    meaning of the He-
brew        in this passage,             some explaining                   it    of destruction in battle, others of
Ch. XI. 10-12.]                    EPISTLE TO THE ROMANS.                                                                                        201
TTEOwai ; nf\ yevoiTO ' dXXa rcj but rather through their fall salva-
" overcome," where our English term loorsted                                                      would correspond with the
Greek        ;    and    in   2 Cor.     xii.           13, the translation                 is,   "ye were inferior," that is,
less distinguished.                In 1 Cor. vi. 7, the                       noun expresses a bad                    state of religious
character, such as implies havingbecome ivorse, deterioration, declension.
These are the only places where the word is found in the New Testament.
The evident meaning is, a bad and nnhappy condition. The idea of
diminution, diminishing, fewness, applied to this text, seems to have arisen
from supposing some such sense to be required by the antithetic word
" fulness," TrAj^pWjUa, thought to express the complete conversion of the
Jews.            But the idea of diminishing the whole Hebrew nation by so com-
paratively trifling a secession as the converted portion, however considera-
ble in       itself,     would form,                       is   not admissible.                 And       if   the   word be taken                     in
the sense of feloness,                  it    must denote the number of                                    converts,            and then the
contrast would be lost.                               The Apostle would speak of the                                  fall      of    i/if?Ji,    that
is,   of the nation             in general, in contradistinction to the                                              fewness of them,
that   is,       of the converted body.                               This    is   quite improbable.                     '*   Fulness"          may
express a condition of general conversion, a state of complete and                                                                                    full
as if he had said,              My      efforts to excite the                            Jews tend             to exalt the           honour of
my     ministry to the Gentiles, because their conversion                                                            is    accelerated                by
that of the Jews.
                                   "   My             flesh :"          This term expresses deep                               afl'ection.             It
originates from               what      is        said of the marriage relation in Genesis                                            ii.   24, and
isemployed to mark the closest union and most intense                                                                interest          and       love.
Thus the crafty Laban says to Jacob, " Surely thou art                                                               my         bone and ray
 202                                          COMMKNTAKY UN THE                                                                         [Sect. XI.
flesh:" Gen. xxix. 14. Thus Abimelech says                                                             to his mother's brethren
whose favour he was desirous of conciliating ; "                                                     I   am       your bone and your
flesh :"          Judg.      ix. 2.          In the      same terms              the Israelites address                         David      in ap-
plying to him to become                             llieir     king       :   2 Sum,        v. 1.           And by           this figure the
fjrom the             dead    f        The      last clause           may         denote, according to the view of
many commentators,                           the blessing both of a moral resurrection of the soul,
and a future glorious resurrection of the body                                              ;    and thus           it   will express the
full    consummation                   to    be followed by so general a conversion.                                              Or,    it   may
be a figure to denote the greatest possible happiness.                                                               The        latter is the
simpler, and more probable view.
       IG. This verse consists of             two parallel clauses, each of which conveys
the     same general                    The former has been thought to allude to the first
                                      idea.
fruits offered to                God, from which the lump or mass of dough was kneaded
to    make            the consecrated cake.                     See Levit.            ii.   12, 14,              and Num. xv. 20, 21.
Thus the              first fruits       will    be general, comprehending the mass as a part of
it,   and corresponding with the root or trunk which contains the germ and
substance of the branches which spring from                                                      it.        Thus Olshausen.                   But
it is   unnecessary to assume any such correspondence to have been intend-
ed.         The language of                   the     first    clause alludes to that in                            Num.         xv. 20, 21       :
    16 venpiov               \
                                     Ei 6e        i]   aTrapxi) dyia,                    from the dead         ?        For if the        first-fruit        16
           /cot    TO        (j)vpa[J,a       
                                                       koi        ei     rj   pi^a       he holy, the         lump        is   also holi/       ;   and
                                                                                         if   the root         he       holy,        so       are    the
where our translation has " kneading troughs," the marginal reading is
" dough."                        "   The lump"               is    plainly the whole               mass of               the        dough intended
to     be baked, and " the                              first          of"     it is   that portion of the whole, the "cake"
or loaf, which was consecrated to God. Since                                                             this is holy, so also, in a
modified sense, is the whole mass of which it                                                            is   a part.               The same           idea
runs through the Apostle's comparison, which appears before in vs. 2-5
'
    a part consecrates and preserves the whole.'                                                      In order to                   make       a perfect
parallel           with the next clause, some explain                                          this of the pious ancestry of the
Jews, thus               :
                                 '
                                     If the patriarchs                    were dedicated to God, so                            in   a certain sense
are        all     their posterity.'                          Others, however, with greater probability, sup-
pose a reference to the Jirst converts                                                   who were Jews.                         And        this agrees
with the usual meaning of the word. Compare viii. 23, where " first-
fruits"           means               the   Ji'rst       dispensed spiritual blessings                              ;    xvi. 5,          where " the
first-fruits             of Achaia,"                    is    used to express the                    earliest            convert          ;    and     in     1
Cor. XV. 20 " the first-fruits of them that slept," designates Christ as risen
from the dead, the ^rs^ and c/i/e/" of those who belong to him.
       In the next clause the                            meaning and bearing of the word root is to be de-
termined.                    Some           late       commentators consider it as figurative of the divinely
established theocracy.                                  This being continued                         in, is        regarded as identical
with, the genuine spiritual children of                                                   Abraham.             The branches are                             the
people merely externally connected.                                                      In this case, however, the converted
Jews would                       constitute the root in the Apostle's time.                                               And         it is     observa-
ble that he does not say the branches were broken                                                               off,      but some of them.
The unbroken ones then would be identical with the I'oot. Thus the rep-
resentation becomes very confused. The figure expresses origin and refers         
back         to the founders of the nation.                                            If the really religious patriarchs                             were
consecrated to                        God and                holy, then the whole                     mass of              their descendants
     takc'st    of the root and             fatness of          pi(^7]g        Koi ttjc 7nur7]~oc rqc; iXaiag
18 the olive tree;         boast not against                    eyevov,              fi?)    KaraKavxi^ tcjv kXo- 18
     the branches     :   but      if   thou boast,             dcjv       
                                                                                el    6t tcaraKavxaoai, ov ov
     thou bcarcst not the           root,       but the
       17, 18. St.   Paul says, "some are broken                                 oflf."             He     might have repre-
sented the tree as nearly stripped, so great had been the excision                                                           but to
spare the feelings of his brethren, he uses a modified expression.                                                  "Among
                                                                                                                         ;
the view of Theophylact,*                    who          substitutes dvri for Iv, thus                            making the
antecedent to be the broken-off branches.                                       But         this      meaning of iv           is    not
supported, neither does              it     agree with the force of the preposition in avyKOi-
voivog 'partaker alonr/ with them.'                            It is       evident that the Apostle means,
'among them          that remain,' the antecedent being implied in the previous
statement.         It is in   connection with these remaining branches that the Gen-
tile   grafts partake of the fatness of the tree.                               The author enlarges                         on the
figure in the latter half of the previous verse.                                        He         compares the Gentiles
to a wild olive, a tree proverbially unprofitable.                                                However      cautious he           is
not to offend the Jews, (see                       x. 2,)     he docs not hesitate to represent the
Gentiles under a figure that might be considered as harsh.                                                         It    has been
thought somewhat strange that the Apostle should speak of inserting grafts
of a wild olive, which of course would be useless and unproductive,                                                          among
the branches of a good                  oire.        But even allowing such a procedure                                        to   be
unreasonable, and the supposition of                           its   being ever practised improbable;
still,    the representation, as descriptive of the introduction of Gentiles                                                 among
the old covenant people, heightens the                           effect.              The          illustration    is    intended
to   show      that these slips are engrafted into " the                                    good olive tree"             fur their
benefit; not that they              might            retain in connection therewith their former
wild and unproductive nature, but that they might draw from                                                        its   sap such
nourishment as should make even the wild                                       slips         themselves produce                 fruit
equally good with that of the parent plant.                                          That such would not be the
result in the ease of a literal engrafting is                                   no objection to the Apostle's
remark.         He does       not say        it    would.        He may                intend to            mark   a difference
in this respect       between the operations of nature and those of grace.                                                          To
say that he did not           know what would be                     the result of such engrafting,                             is to
21 Ei yap 6 -deog tcov Kara (pvaiv                                  God spared not the natural branches,
                                                                    take heed lest he also spare not thee.
in order to increase the fruitfulness of the bearing olive.                                           Tholuck and 01s-
hausen       refer, for             proof of      this, to     Columella de re rustica,                     v.   9    ;       to Palla-
dius de insitione, xiv. 53, and to Schultz, Leitungen des Hoechsten, Th. v.
p. 88.
     In ver. 18, the                 word    root,    which properly denotes those portions of the
tree    which are embedded and secured under the ground,                                               is   employed                   also
to express the trunk, as here,                          and sometimes the whole plant, as we often
use the word in English.                          See the note on Ileb.                   xii.    15, p. 167.                 After the
word "boast," the reader must supply some such term                                                  as 'remember.'
     19, 21.            The    eyc5, " I," is         probably emphatic, as the form of the verb                                           in
the Apostle does not say that this was the sole or even the chief reason
for the divine procedure.
                                                 "   Take heed-^ This               is    introduced            by       the trans-
lator.       The        ellipsis      would have been more naturally supplied by the word
" fear"      from the preceding verse.
     22-24. The kindness and the severity of the divine procedure are here
pointed out in               its    bearing respectively on Gentile converts and apostatizing
Jews, with a warning to the former that the continuance of this kindness
to  them depended on the condition of their faithful adherence to the
Gospel.    Otherwise they also would be subjected to the fate of the apos-
tate Jews.   And, on the other hand, if the apostate Jews abandon their
prejudice and unbelief, they shall be restored to their former spiritual rela
tion to God, who is abundantly able to restore them.     The probability and
comparative              facility         of this result are expressed in ver. 24 by a comparison.
As     it   would be a process much more natural                                    to re-insert grafts of the pro-
ductive olive into their                     own      original tree than to introduce wild                                    and    fruit-
        severity of                God: on them which                                ov6t:      oov    (pf:iat:rai.       '\dt    ovv XP^]- -~
        fell,      severity         ;    but towards thee,                           OTOTTjTa           Kol       aTTorofiiav           i9eov    
        abide not             still     in unbelief, shall be                        koX ah      t:/co7r//ag*      KUKtlvoi de, idv 23
        graffed in            ;   for    God      is   able to graff                 /z?)   imntivoyai r^ dmaria, iynev.
24 them in again.                           For        if   thou wert                rpia&rjaovTai            '   dwuTog yap eariv
        cut out of the olive tree which                                        is    6 ^ebg TrdXiv eyKevrpiaai avrovg.
        wild by nature, and wert                                      gi-affed       Ei yap av tK                  rTjg    Kara         (pvaiv 24
St. Paul says, " I show you a mystery." Again, it denotes real facts the
manner and operation of which we cannot fully comprehend, and in this
sense the Apostle calls the spiritual union of" Christ and the church a great
mystery :" Eph. v. 32. And it is often applied to what is in no respect
mysterious in itself, but was either not at all or but very imperfectly
known.                 Thus, in Eph.               iii.     3, 4, 9, it         expresses the divine intention of uniting
Gentiles and                  Jews          in    the one church of Christ, " in other ages not                                             made
known             as   now        revealed."                 Here         it   marks that             spiritual blindness           and hard-
ness of heart which                         God         permitted to                affect the Israelites, a fact                   which had
been unknown and was inexplicable to many.                                                            Some         ancient authorities
read eavrolg alone,                       some have                   the preposition iv, and                 some        irapd.    The sense
is   not affected.                   St.   Paul            is       addressing himself principally to the Gentile
converts.               In order to prevent                             them from cherishing                  feelings of superiority
over the Jewish nation, he informs them of what they did not before know,
namely, that the unhappy spiritual condition of the Jews was only partial
and     transitory.                     " In part"               is   better connected with Israel than with blind-
ness.         The meaning                    is    not,          '
                                                                     blindness in           some      respects has affected them,'
but,     '
             it   has taken place on a part of them.                                             This phrase          is in      evident con-
trast with " all Israel," in the next verse.                                                   The expression             is   like the     mod-
ified    language of ver. 17, " some of the branches are broken                                                           off,"    and doubt-
less    was prompted by the same motive.                                                       See the note          there.      The        next
point shows this state to be temporary                                               :
                                                                                          " until the fulness of the Gentiles
become             in."           This does not express absolute universality, but only a very
extensive and general state of Gentile conversion                                                       ;   and thus        it   corresponds
with the language in the next verse, "                                              all     Israel shall          be saved," meaning,
the nation in general.                             The Apostle's remarks                           in vs.     12-15 se^m                to iinply
an expectation on                        his part that                  Jewish conversion would promote                                  tliat       of
Gentiles           ;   a representation which would hardly comport with the theory
that a conversion of                         all   Gentiles               is    to precede that of the Israelitish body.
      26, 27. " All Israel                        :"    That            is,   the whole nation which shall then sub-
sist.        Such expressions are often used                                              in    a general          sense.       "Shall              be
Ch. Xr. 22-2C.]                   EPISTLE TO THE ROMANS.                                                               207
     jispovg T6J 'lopaijX yeyovev, dxptg                        happened       to Israel, until the fulness
     ov TO        TrXTJpcjfia tCjv E-3vtJv ela-                 of the Gentiles be         come     in.        And so      26
26 eXdy.           Kal      ovro) irdg 'lapaTjX                 all Israel shall       be saved:           as    it is
saved      :"    In other words, converted to the Gospel                            and partake of its bless-
ings.      Comp.      X. 1.        On     the promise here                 made, see Whitby's Appendix
to his notes on this chapter, at the end of his                              Commentary on             the Epistle.
     In these verses the Apostle quotes or refers to Isa.                              lix.   20, 21, Ps.         xiii.     7
in the Septuagint, or xiv. in the                     Hebrew and            English.       He may              also   have
in   view Jer. xxxi. 33, 34, which relates to the same subject, and is quoted
also in  Heb. viii. 10, where see the note, pp. 107, 108. The words "when
I shall    take    away     their sins" are              added from the Sept. of Isa.               xxvii. 9,         with
which they agree, except                   in the alteration          of the singular pronoun into the
plural.         The quotation from             Isa, lix. is imperfect,         and the reader             is   expected
to supply the deficiency.                   This    is   usual with Jewish writers.                 See note oniv.
18, p. 70.         The    citation corresponds with the Septuagint, except in the                                          e/c
for eveKev,                  Koppe thinks that this was probably the origi-
                   on account of
nal reading here, and that EK, a contraction of it, was altered to ck, through
a misunderstanding of some transcriber.    The Hebrew is " to Zion." The
reading on account               q/"   would    suit the Apostle's            immediate purpose exceed-
ingly well, as he           is   speaking of Israel's future elevation.                        He     must        there-
fore have        had some reason               for preferring         from.        Tholuck suggests that                   it
may have been             to call attention to the fact, that the                    Redeemer sprang from
the very people           whom           he was to convert.                 But he    is   not satisfied either
with this or any other solution stated by expositors. He conjectures either
that tTC has-been substituted by some transcribers for eveKSv, or that the
author, through lapse of memory, varies occasionally from the Hebrew or
the Septuagint. But this is even less satisfactory. The remark of Fritzsche,
which he thinks inadmissible, appears                           to   be entitled to great consideration.
This commentator regards                       it   as altogether improbable that a passage of
Scripture, to which St. Paul attaches so                             much importance and which he
must frequently have read with great care, should have at all escaped his
memory, or, if so, not have been examined. Vitringa on the text in Isaiah
conjectures that, along with this passage, the Apostle connected in his                                               mind
several otheis, and particularly that in the                               Psalm    referred    to,   where "          sal-
208                                      COMMENTAKY ON THE                                                               (Skct. XI.
                                                                                                                                
       written, There shall  come out of                            aiodrjaeTai,            ai9a)f          yiypa-rrrai
       Zion the Deliverer, and shall turn                           rj^ci     iK     liu)V        6    pvojiE^'JOt;           Kol
27 awiiy            uii|,'odlincss      from Jacob      :   for     dnoarp^xpei dasf3niag drrd                        'laKcJfi.
       thus    IS   my covenant         unto tlain, when            Kal      avTT]         avrolg       7/       rrap'    t/ioy     27
28     I    shall take       away       their sins.         As      6iadi]KT],         urav           d(()t?Miiai          rag
       concerning the gospel,                thci/   are cue-       dfiapriag avToJv.                   Kara           /itT    to 28
vation        from       Zion''    is   prayed       for.        And   it is      very probable that the words
of the Psahn did suggest the form of expression.                                            Still it     does not appear
at all improbable that, in quoting the prediction of Isaiah, St. Paul modi-
fies   the language so as to suit the particular shade of thought he wished to
convey.              The general meaning he does not                              alter.     The Hebrew prophet
speaks of the llcdeemer as coming to Zion.                                          This was perfectly natural,
as Zion        was the centre of national glory.                            The     Christian Apostle, not deny-
ing that the            Redeemer had come                   to   Zion, speaks of his marching as
                                                                                            it were
that turn away from transgression in Jacob."     Grotius, on the text in Uo-
mans, thinks it evident that the Greek translator used a Hebrew copy with
a reading slightly                differing      from the present.                  This     is   possible.              But the
supposition            is   entirely unnecessary, as this translator                         may        have intended to
give merely the general meaning of the passage, intermingling therewith
his    own comments.                    "   When      the prophecy declares," says Vitiinga, " that
the Messiah would come                                    and
                                              to Zion, meaning, for its benefit,                                 to   them      that
turnaway from transgression in Jacob, it expresses the object                                                    for     which he
would come, to convert the posterity of Jacob from sin. So                                                       the Chaldee:
'to turn the rebels of the house of Jacob to the law.' And Kimchi adds :
       EvayyeXiov ex&pol                         6t' vf-iag,           Kara          mies for your sakcs           ;       but as   toucli-
       6'g   rrjv        EKXoyi]v dya-m]Toi                             6ia       ing the election,              thei/      arc beloved
29 rovg -artpag                        
                                           df.ie-a[j,eX7]Ta             yap       for the fathers' sakcs               :    for the gifts 29
       rd    xC'p'^f^H'O,'"' ^i                V K^TjOig rov                       and     calling of   God      are without re-
30 ^eov.                 "QoTTep             yap        KaC           Vfielg         pcntance.      For as ye in times past 30
                                                                                  have not believed God, yet have
Luther gives the same idea, not believe in the mercy which has happened
                                                                 '
unto you,' and so also Tyndale and Cranmer. But, although this would be
an additional thought to that just before stated, yet the want of connection
and dependence would still remain. The comma should follow 7]TTeid'r]aav
The objection that, in this case, Iva must precede to) vfierepo) eXeet is not
of   much         weight, as instances occur where this and other particles are in
serted within the clauses which they are intended to qualify.                                                                See the      latter
Iva both in              1    Cor.         ix.   15,   and 2 Cor.              ii.   4   ;   also Gal.    ii.    10,       and   el in 1      Cor.
XV. 2.          It is       worthy of note that the Apostle does not say                                                  in reference         fro
       "God        hath concluded'." The merely Engli-sh reader must not suppose
that this         word has here any                                  logical force.            The marginal                reading, " shut
up together," the translation of Wiclif, " closid to gidre," that of Tyndale,
Cranmer and the Genevan, " wrapped in," give the meaning of the original,
which is also etymologically expressed by the English word in its old
sense as derived from                            cum and               ckilido.   Macknight           translates thus               :
                                                                                                                                         "    God
                   14
210                                            COMMENT AKY ON THE                                                                         [Sect.      XL
he refers to the use of elg                           in    Mark       i.    4, 1 Cor. xvi. 1,                      2 Thess.        i.   11.        But,
although the English word for expresses the sense of e/f in these places;
yet the idea which                     it      conveys            is   plainly different                     from that which !Mac-
knight intends in this verse.                                   lie must mean, in consequence of ; whereas
in the places referred to elq                               means           either, in order to j)^'ocure, or,                                 for the
benefit      of       or, so as to 2}cr7nit a result.                                   The       references therefore are not
parallel.             This   is    not the only instance in which this commentator errs in
the   same way.                   On       Phil.      iv.   15, he translates                         dno    in,     a meaning which                    it
never bears, but which he attempts to sustain by the phrase dnb fitpovg,
rendered          in   English by                '
                                                     in part,' referring also to his fourth preliminary
Essay, No. 8G, where he quotes these words from 2 Cor.                                                                        i.   14.         Such a
philological criticism could hardly                                    be expected fi'om a scholar of                                     his repu-
tation.          He     argues in favour of his view of                                       elg^     that " while a               man        is   shut
up    in    unbelief or disobedience, that                                  is,    while he            is   made           to continue in un-
belief,      he   is    not an object of mercy, neither can he receive the Gospel."
But     this is       not the meaning of the phrase.                                              The       true sense             may     be       illus-
trated       by       Gal.    iii.     22, "the Scripture hath concluded, shut up,                                                       all    under
sin,"      where the Greek verb                            is    the     same as here. To shut up under or to
another,         is    to subject to his control.                            Thus we read in Dent, xxxii. 30,
" the Lord had shut them up ;" and in Ps. xxxi. 8, (in the Sept. xxx. 0,
where the Greek word is the same as that employed by the Apostle,)
" hast not shut me up into the hand of the enemy." The literal meaning
then of the clauses in the two epistles                                           is   this   :
                                                                                                  '
                                                                                                      God hath subjected all men
to unbelief,' or,             '
                                  the Scripture hath subjected all                                     men to sin meaning that
                                                                                                                             ;'
and he so regards them.                                It is     not affirmed that                      God          pro'^uces this condi-
tion.        Either he            is   represented as allowing                            it,     or the verbs arc declarative.
The        latter      view would accord with usage.                                              Thus we have "hath made
old" for 'hath declared to be                                   so,' in     Ileb.       viii.     13.       
                                                                                                       The last clause of the
verse       is   not to be understood individually but collectively, like "                                                              all Israel''
in ver. 26.
Ch. XI. Sl-36.]                       EPISTLE TO THE ROMANS.                                                                   211
    rd Kpifiara avrov Koi dve^Lxvi-                                   able       are his judgments, and his
n4 aOTOi al 6661 avrov.        Tig yap                                ways past finding out    For who 34   !
    tyvu) vovv Kvpiov       t) Tig ovfx-    ;                         hath known the mind of the Lord ?
35 jiovXog avrov eyevero          i] rig           ;                  or   who hath been his counsellor ?
    Trpot:6iOKev avro), Kal dvranodo-                                 or   who hath first given to him, and 35
7iQ drjoerai avrip      "Ort i^ avrov
                                  ;                                   it   shall be       recompensed unto him
  '
    Kal 6i' avrov Kal elg avrov rd                                    again      ?     For of him, and through 36
      Ttdvra        '
                         avrG)        tj   66^a elg rovg              him, and to him, are             all      things    :   to
      aldvag.            dui]V.                                       whom           he glory for ever.          Amen.
      33-36.            Some    ancient authorities omit the                          first Kai.   Among them is                   the
Vulgate which translates,                        O     altitude divitiarum sapientifle et scientios Dei.
Commentators               differ          on   this point:    whether the three nouns which imme-
diately follow depth express three distinct ideas, or whether this                                                    word and
riches      merely denote the profundity and vastness of what                                          is   comprehended
under the other two.                        According to the               latter view, the         Apostle will utter
             amazement at the immeasurable and incomprehensible great-
his feeling of
ness of God's wisdom and knowledge, and the first Kai will be rendered
both.  The former view retains the usual meaning of the copulative, and
regards riches as equivalent to abundant favour or                                             love.        Although           this
word        is    most frequently employed                          in     immediate connection with some
other to which             it   adds        force, as in      Rom.         ii.           2 Cor. viii. 2, Eph. i.
                                                                                 4, ix. 23,
    The quotation in the next verses is from Isa. xl. 13, 14, with an allusion
to Job xli. 11, (Heb. 3.)    The sentiment which they contain is evidently
this   The purposes of God are beyond the reach of finite intellect or influ-
       :
ence. The idea in the last verse may be expressed as follows From :
God all things are produced, by him they subsist, and to his glory they
tend.   The subject of the Apostle's doxology is undoubtedly God, the Holy
Trinity,          and the propositions which he employs are entirely                                             in   harmony
with scriptural usage in distinct reference to the three persons.                                                     But     inas-
                                              SECTION                            XII.
                                                      Chaps. XII.-XVI.
XII.       I       beseech you, therefore, breth-                        HapaKakd ovv vfiag, d6eX({)oi, XII.
      ren,     by the mercies of God, that yo                         did        Tcjv     olKTipiiCJv         rov      -deov,
As    the leading topics of the Epistle are discussed at length in the preceding
chapters, and those which follow are chiefly confined to                                               what     is   hortatory
and    practical, the notes shall                     be few and            in   general brief
      Chap.          xii. 2.      "That ye may prove :" Either, have proof of by experi-
ence, or, give proof of                 by example. Probably both are comprehended.
Comp. Eph. V. 10, Phil.   10.                 i.
   3. " The grace given unto me                             :"       That   is,       through the Apostolic            gift   and
authority with which he had been graciously entrusted.         Comp. i. 5.
" Measure of faith :" In other words, the degree of faithful character. This
is,   in   every believer, the                 gift   of God.
      4, 5.         Comp.         I   Cor.   x. 17, xii. 12.          With           6 de Kad^ elg,         and every        one,
comp. 3 Mace.                v.    34, 6 kot?' elg 6e        rdv       (l>iX(ov,       but every one of his friends ;
also       Mark          xiv. 19,      John   viii. 9,   and Rev.           x.\i.      21.
      G.     "     Prophecy           :"   The word here means                   the gift of prophesying, that                  is,
of speaking in the authority of                          God and under                  divine influence.            The idea
                                                                                                                                               ;     :
explanatory              :
                                 "       He    shall       be thy spokesman unto the people                                ;       he shall be to
thee instead of a mouth, and thou shalt be tohim instead of God:'''' Exod.
vii. 1, iv.        16.same purpose we read in Jer. xv. 19
                                 To           the             "If thou take                                                :
forth the precious from the vile, thou shalt be as my mouth.''''   The two
words anciently used for prophet by the Greeks, npocpriTr]^ and vTTOcprjT'qg,
seem to be nearly equivalent, meaning one who speaks ybr, before, or under,
that    is,   in the place of another.                               This         is    undoubtedly the                 signification of the
term where               it first             occurs in the Bible, in the narrative of Abraham's resi-
dence with Abimelech. The Almighty warns the king of Gerar in a dream
not to injure the Patriarch, adding, " for he is a prophet, and he shall pray
for thee,          and thou                   shalt live :"            Gen. xx.              7.     He    is   thus declared to be a
sacred personage, the interpreter of God, speaking as his agent.                                                                          This      is
also a very usual sense of the word in the New Testament, A prophet is
11 lening one another ; not slothful in OTTOvdy /Li;) OKVi^poi' roi rrveu-
15 you;       bless,     and curse             not.         Rejoice                 EvXoydre rovg                   6cu)K0vrar viia^                        
                                                                                                                                                                 14
      with them that                     do        rejoice,        and              ev/.oyeire,               KoX    /i//         KUTapaa^e.
ceive any support from the words of the text.                                                              "The     proportion of faith"
is    equivalent to " the measure of faith" in ver. 3, and simply means, the
degree of the divinely imparted                                      gift.            The reader may                        find           some        useful
terpretation, Stuart's Translation, Sect. 34, p. 17, and Morus, Par. 1, Sect.
i. xix. pp. 70, 71, and Sect. ii. Cap. iii. xvi-xviii., pp. 253-259, and Locke in
support from authorities," but                                   still        decides in favour of the former on the
ground of         internal evidence,                        remarking that a charge so entirely general as
*
     to serve the Lord,'                 is   out of place                among such                       altogether special exhorta-
tions."          Such an argument has no groat                                            force, for the phrase                        immediately
preceding, "fervent in spirit," that                                            is,       ardent, zealous                in        mind, (comp.
Acts      xviii. 25,) is            of very general application                                      ;    and indeed so also                           is       the
exhortation which arises from the reading he prefers, " serving the time,"
                                                                            '
15 Xaipeiv fierd X'^''P^'^~^^ '^^^                                                   weep with them that weep. Be oi l&
16 KXaieiv fierd KXaiovruiv.   To                                                    the samemind one toward another,
   avTO elg aXXyXovg (ppovovvreg                                            
                                                                                     ]\Iiud    not high things, hut                            con-
      fiij   -a           v^pi]Xd (ppovovvreg,                      dXXd          descend to          men       of    low   Be  estate.
      rotg raTreivolg ovva-rrayonevoL                                             not wise in your           own conceits. Re- 17
      HI]     yiveade ^poviiioL                          Trap'       kav-         compense           to   no man evil for evil.
1 1 Toic;.                 Mi]devl KaKov dvrl KaKov                                  Provide things honest in the sight
      d-odidovreg                        '   Trpoi'oovfievoi Ka-                  of all men.                 If it be possible, as 18
      Xd      ivu)~iov TTavrcov dvdp(x)JT(OV.                                    much         as lieth in you, live peaceably
18 Ei Svva-ov, ro e|                                   vfiiov,      jxerd            with     all   men.             Dearly beloved, 19
      7idvTG)v aVT^pcoTTCov elprjvevovreg'                                        avenge not yourselves                     ;   but rather
19    [ifj    iavTOvg eKdiKOVvreg, dyanr]-                                        give place unto wrath:                            for it is
      roi,dXXd dure ronov rrj opyxi                                         *
                                                                                 written. Vengeance                   is   mine       ;    I will
21   fire   on his head.                15e     not overcome                       av~6v tovto yu{) -olCjv dvdpa-
                                                                                                
of the verse, and also with the quotation from Deut. .xxxii. 35, which fol-
lows.        The sentiment                      will then               be        this   :   Give way to the just anger of
God, and be not                 solicitous to vindicate yourselves                                         by       inflicting       punishment.
Comp.       1   Pet.      ii.   23.         But the omission of God,                                      the principal party,                  is    un-
natural,        and the         first    clause of the verse affords quite a sufficient antithesis
to the statement of the quotation.                                          If the      wrath be referred to the offender,
the meaning            may        be,       '
                                                yield by avoiding                        it,'      and the direction                  will    be pru-
dential.        If it    be that of the injured person, the meaning of the phrase can-
not be as above given, for                                  this       would manifestly be the very reverse of
the Apostle's intention.                              He         cannot possibly exhort the Christian to                                              in-
dulge     in    angry passion.                        Adhering               to the literal               meaning of the words and
yet applying them according to the nature of the injunction,                                                                       we may        inter-
pret the clause thus                    :       Give room                to,       that      is,     space, opportunity to depart.
The exhortation                 is,   not merely to defer the indulgence or exercise of anger,
but not at          all to       retain          it   ;    to give           it    fj'ce     egress, to                 abandon       it,   and yield
our cause to the righteous God.
     20, 21.The quotation is from Prov. xxv. 21, 22. It is very like the
language     2 Esdras xvi. 54 " God shall burn coals of fire upon his
                 in                                               :
head which saith before the Lord God and his glory, I have not sinned."
The idea prominent in these passages is evidently that of severe penal suf-
fering.  This is expressed by the words themselves, and the antithetic
clause in Proverbs, " the Lord shall reward thee," which immediately fol-
lows the quotation, confirms this result. The pain of penitence, arising
from a consciousness of having done wrong,                                                           is   no doubt comprehended.
Such places as 2 Sam.                           xiv. 7, are             wholly irrelevant, as they only show that
the figure of a coal                    may           be employed                    in illustration of                        what    is   desirable
and valued.              The authors of                          the Proverbs and the Epistle both refer un-
doubtedly to the proper punishment of the offender.                                                                           But    it     cannot be
proved that            cither has in                  view the               gratification of private passion in such
XIII.         Udaa i/'V,Y')           e^ovaiaig vnepe-                           Let every soul be subject unto XIII.
       Xovaaig vTroraaaeadcj                             ov yap                                For there is no
                                                                              the Iiighcr powers.
       eoTiv e^ovaia            d    dnb i9eou, at
                                      j(*>)                                   power but of God the powers that
                                                                                                             ;
nores.         Neither does                    it   enter into the question of the citizen's rights or
duty during the process of a revolution, when                                               political        and   civil affairs           are
in a transition state.                    Government                   is    not dependeift on                  human     will    ;   it is
God's institution               ;    and whatever form man's inclination and action                                                    may
give to        it,   is   given under the permission of his superintending providence,
and therefore              to   be regarded as authoritative.                                   All    human       authority, even
the very highest,                   must yield                 to that of            God,       whom "we           ought to obey
rather than           men       :"    Acts          v. 29.       But         it is   the duty of every              man     to satisfy
his     mind by           careful         and conscientious examination respecting                                        this highest
       venger to execute wrath upon liim                                            yap     diuKovuc; tariv, Pk^iko^ elg
       that           doeth         evil.           Wherefore           j/e         dpyifv      tw to kukuv              rrfxlaaovri.
       their dues              ;
                                  whom tribute
                                   tribute to                                       Sore ovv rrdai rag 6(l>eiXdg                           
                                                                                                                                                   tw
      t    due       ;custom to whom custom                                        rbv        rov <p6pov
                                                                                             (jiupov                         '        tcj          to
      fear to         whom fear honour to whom
                                            ;                                       rtXog ro rkXog  ru) rbv      
                                                                                                                                      tpofiov
cult to avoid the conclusion, that he felt himself to be writing for the ben-
efit    of mankind in                     all       future ages, and under the influence of a                                    superhuman
power.
       7.       ^opog means tax or tribute                               ;        rkXog duties, property tax paid for the
support of the state                            ;
                                                    ^o/Sof and          rifir'j,     reverence and honour to superiors.
       8.       "Owe:" Some                          prefer the indicative translation of the verb                                             :    'you
owe' &c., that                      is,   the circle of your duties comprises nothing                                             more than
love.           But the meaning given by the imperative                                                   is   more probable, as it
accords better with the preceptive nature of the context.                                                           The sentiment
is:     Let nothing be due from you but love, always regard yourselves as
under obligation to cultivate mutual affection; this debt can never be fully
paid.
           "Fulfilled:"                            Comp.        ver.        10.     The use of                this   word        to express
sincere obedience, though                                  it    be imperfect,              may         illustrate the           language                in
viii. 4.
9. "If there be any other:" That is, whatever other there may be.
ing that it strengthens the appeal   compare koi ravra in 1 Cor, vi. 8.       :
CH.XIII.4-n.]                                EPISTLE TO THE EOMANS.                                                                            219
     rbv <p6j3ov tw                           ttjv rLiii]v ttjv                     honour.         Owe no man any thing, but                      8
8    rifiTJv.               'Mr]Sevl i^cqdev 6(peiXeTE,                             to love        one another             :    for   he that
     el    fj,?)
                     TO          dX^Xovg dyanav                            6        loveth another hath fulfilled the law.
     yap dyanijv tov srepov vofiov                                                  For      this,    Thou shalt not commit                        9
9    TreTT/lT/pwKe. To yap ov fioc-                 
                                                                                    adultery,         Thou shalt not kill, Thou
     ^Evaeig            '          ov        (povevaei^       
                                                                         ov         shalt        not steal, Thou shalt not bear
     Kki-ypti^ '     ovK enidvuT'iaetg  Kol                       '                 false witness.            Thou     shalt not covet,
11 pMfia ovv vojiov i] dydnrj. Kal therefore love is the fulfilling of the
rovTO, EidoTEq 70V Kaipov, on law. And that, knowing the time, 11
u)pa ijudg rjdT] e| vnvov EyEp'&rj- that now it is high time to awake
     vat             vvv yap iyyvTEpov                   ijfiojv           i)        out of sleep for now is our salva-
                                                                                                          :
Olshausen adds " so much the more." Here Koppe remarks that St. Paul,
in order to urge his readers to the practice of the Christian virtues, adds
this consideration                       :
                                             " that the return of Christ to earth                                   was not remote, and
that      would be accompanied by the tokens of a better and happier life."
          it
He     refers to his Excursus II. on Thessalonians* to show " that the Apostles
themselves, through the wise permission of divine Providence, cherished
the opinion and hope of Christ's speedy return."                                                              Locke too expresses the
same sentiment.    " It seems by these two verses, as if St. Paul looked
upon Christ's coming as not far off, to which there are several other occurrent
passages in his epistles. See 1 Cor. i. 17." In opposition to this opinion
the reader is referred to Whitby's  note on 2 Thess. iv. 15, and his "Dis-
course by way of inquiry" &c. appended to his annotations on 2nd Thessa-
lonians.                Neither this passage, nor any other in the Apostle's writings,                                                             is
before the consummation of the events there spoken                                                                   of,       which, neverthe-
less,     must take place                     anterior to Christ's second coming.                                       And       in his     second
epistle to the Thessalonians                             he expressly guards them against such a mis-
construction of his sentiments.                                         The view of Macknight and Eosenmueller
that " salvation" refers to the doctrine of the Gospel,                                                             and that          it   has been
brought "nearer" to the mind, that                                                   is,    is    better understood and appre-
ciated             by       the advanced                Christian                   than     it    could be immediately after
conversion,                 is   feeble and improbable                          ;   neither do the places quoted establish
not provision for the flesh, to fitl/il oapKog Trpovoiav pi) TTOiela^e elg
such a meaning of the words.                               " Salvation" signifies here                          most probably
the happiness on which the Christian enters immediately after death, and
" night" in ver. 12, the present state of ignorance, sinfulness, and conse-
minds of many.                   All these circumstances were doubtless                                    in    view when the
Apostle prepared the directions here embodied                                                ;    and which apply,                 in a
greater or less degree, to the various classes concerned, while they will
                                                                                                                                          ;         !
      Tov     EodiovTa                    fii]       Kpivsro)         '      6      which eateth not judge him that
      debg     yap avTOV                         TrpoaeXdfieTO.                     cateth   :   for   God hath received him.
4     Iv     riq el 6 Kpivuv dXXorpiov                                              Who    art thou that judgest another                       4
      olKtrTjv     ;       Tw        Idio)       KVpio) arrjKei                     man's servant         ?   to his       own master
      7]   mnrei,      
                             OTa&rjaerac                     6e   
                                                                          6v-       he standeth or                falleth.         Yea, he
      Tjliepav Kvpiu) (ppovel,                             aal 6           jt/r)    in his   own mind.              He        that regard-      6
      (ppovoiv         TTJv          riiiepav              Kvptu)           ov      eth the day, rcgardeth                    it   unto the
always remain                    to the Christian church in all future ages wise                                                     and prac-
tical      prhiciples directing                            its    procedure in               all   indifferent matters.                       The
general tenour of his remarks, and the respectful manner in which he
refers to the class of persons indicated,                                                prove that he has particularly in
view the weak and scrupulous consciences of pious persons, somewhat
under the control of education and former habits. Towards these he
                              and conciliatory course should be pursued.
directs that a kind, forbearing,
His remarks are distinguished by a meekness and wisdom both admirable
and characteristic.
       Ver.   1.       "Receive.:"                        That    is,      with kindness and respect, not embarrass-
ing with       difficulties,                but rather helping and supporting.                                          The same verb           is
 You man, do you presume to pass sentence in the case of another's servant?
 What know you of its various circumstances 1 Have you taken the pains
    to ascertainthem all 1 Are you even certain that you have the ability to
    do so ? And if you have mastered the facts, can you put them all in the
    right balance and weigh them all with the most scrupulous accuracy, so as
                                                                           Eobinson Lex.
                                                                 :                                                                               1
     the (lay, to the Lord he doth not                                 f:n-&iu      '    ev^apiOTel yap to) Seio
     re^'urd      it.        He       thut oatcth,        catc-tli     Kul      6        fil)   fJO^iCJV           KVpiiO             OVK
     to    the        Lord, for he givcth                   God        t:aditi,         Kol fi};^ap<<77tt toj i9tw.
     thanks       ;       and he that         eatetli not, to          Oi^fJetf -yap            tj^uv         mvru)         (^y,      Kol        7
9 we arc the Lord's. For to this Iva Kal veKpCJv kuI ^ojvtcjv
     end Christ both                  died,   and   rose,    and       KvpiEvoxi.               2i)   (5e,    -i Kpivecg rov 10
     revived,              that he might be Lord                       dSeXcbov GOV              ;    7/   Kal ov, ri i^ov-
10 both of the dead and living. But                                    develg rov ddeXc^ov aov                          ;   Trdvreg
   why dost thou judge thy brother?                                    yap rrapaarrjooiieda                        rCj (i/jnari
or why dost thou set at naught thy ~ov Xpiarov. Ttyparrrai ydp 1
brother ? for we shall all stand be- (^(5 fe)'c5, Aeyet Kvpiog, otl tfiot
     fore the              judgment       seat of Christ.              Kdfiipet           irdv        yovv,         Kal              Trdaa
11 For       it       is   written.      As     I live, saith          yXCJaoa e^oiioXoy^OETat roi deu).
     the   Lord every knee                     shall   bow      to     "Apa ovv tKaoToq rjni^v tpl 12
to bring out the right result?                              It is     possible.            But the Apostle intimates
                                                    Yield the decision to God.                      " Judge nut, that
the only sensible course.
ye be not judged."                       Each man's own conscience must, after all that has
been      said, influence              him.  Of course, his conscience must be rightly taught,
rcfTulated        and directed.                 Then the divine precept applies                               :
                                                                                                                  " Let every one
he seeks.
     11, 12.The quotation is from Is,a. xlv. 23, and agrees very nearly with
the Septuagint.   The prop.het is speaking of the dissemination of true
religion by  means  of the Gospel.     lie predicts the approaching period
when all mankind will reject the worship of idols, and acknowledge and
adore the only true God.                            St.    Paul applies the text to the concluding act
of Christ's mediatorial authority, the exercise of his judicial oftice. This is
comprehended within the prophet's more general idea of submission and
allegiance,which are ultimately to be universally rendered to Christ.
    13. The word "judge" is here employed in diflierent meanings
                                                                     first, in                                                   ;
       eavTov Xoyov                      6u)oet,            tw      i9ew.         nic       and every tongue                    shall confess
                                                                           
13 MT/zcert ovv dXXriXovg Kpivuy^iev                                              to       God.    So then every one of us 12
       dXka TOVTO Kpivare                               fiaXXov, to               shall give account of himself to                           God.
       fiTj   Tidevat TTpoaKOfifia r(o ddeXcpio                                   Let us not therefore judge one an- 13
1-1    7/   oKai'daXov.              Olda Koi mneta-                              other any more                        ;    but judge this
       jxai    iv Kvpio)            'It/ctou,             on       ovdev                     no man put a stumbling-
                                                                                  rather, that
       Koivbv dC avrov,                    el       fiij    tw     Xoyi-          block or an occasion to fall in his
       ^Of^ih'o)         Ti KOLvbv             elvai,             eKeivo)         brother's        way.                 I    know, and am 14
15 Koivov.                Et 6e did Pputfia 6                                     persuaded by the Lord Jesus, that
       d6eX(p6g           gov Xv~elraL^ ovKert                                    tJie}-e    IS   nothing unclean of                       itself;
Dathio, Lib.              II.   Tract.         II.      Cap.       ili.   Tom.        I.   pp.    1342        et seq.               Compare           also
(pdeipet        and       (p'&epel in               1     Cor.     iii.    17,    and the Kptral with dLeKpi^rjre                                         in
James ii. 4.
       15. "        Destroy         :"    That              is,   do not      an example as may tend
                                                                                  set such
      fore follow after the things                           which           olKoSop.?]^ TTJg elg dXXrjXovg.                      Mrj 20
      make         for peace,            and things whcre-                   h'EKev         fipijfiaTog           KardXve             rd
20 with one               may          edify another.              For       tpyov         Tov      deov.Ildvra ntv
      meat destroy not the work of God.                                       Kadapd       
                                                                                                dAAd Kanhv T(7) dvdpd)-
      All things indeed are pure                         ;    but      it    7ra    TO) did TrpoaKuiijiaroc ia^i-
      is    evil        for that             man who         eateth           ovTi.       KaAov TO         fXTj   ^ayelv Kpea, 21
21 with offence.                       It is   good neither to               H7]6t:       TTielv    olvoi>,       ftrfSt     tv       w
      eat flesh, nor to drink wine, nor                                       d6EX(f)UgaOV TTpOOKOTTTet ij OKav-
      atii/      thing            whereby          thy brother                daXi^erac i) da^evel. I,v TTiOTtv 22
      stumbleth, or                     is     oflfended,     or       is     tx^i-g Kara oeavrbv t^e evcJTiiov
                                                                                      '
22 made              Aveak.             Hast thou            faith?           TOV deov- liUKaptog 6 fii] Kpivcov
      have         it        to       thyself     before          God.        iavTov Iv (1) doKCud^ei. 'O 6e 23
      Happy          is      he that condcmneth not                           SiaKpivonevog, idv (pdyq, Kara-
      himself in that thing Avhich he                                 al-     KEKpiTai, OTL              OVK tK TTiarEOjg              
the doxology in xvi.                    25-27     at the       end of         this chapter.             From     the circum-
stance that           it   is     found        in these different                  connections in certain ancient
manuscripts, and also from supposed internal evidence, and                                                      its    similarity
to the        doxology which terminates the Epistle of                                          St.    Jude, some doubts
have been expressed respecting                           its   genuineness.                 But the objections are of
little      or no weight,              and the best        critics        agree that            its   proper position         is   at
the end of the Epistle. The hypothesis of Semler, that the 15th and 16th
chapters were not a part of the Epistle as originally written                                                    by    St.   Paul,
nor intended for the Eomans, but addressed to other persons by the Apos-
tle,   and afterwards connected with this Epistle,                                         is   examined by Koppe                  in
7     AVhcreforc receive ye one another,                          d^ijTe    rov Sebv Koi rraT^pa tov
      as ("luist also received us, to the                         Kvpiov       i]fxCJv '\T]nov       Xpiarov. Aib
circumcision for the truth of God, vfidg eig So^av dtov. Atyo) 6e, 8
      confess to thee       among      the Gentiles,              6e    ti?v7/ vn-fep     eXtovg do^daai rov
10 and sing unto thy name.                            And         deov,        Kaduyg             ytypaTrrat              
                                                                                                                                   6id
11    with his people.           And   again, Praise              tdveai,          Koi        tcj     ovofiari                     oov
      the Lord, all ye Gentiles             ;   and laud          ipaka.         Kal          TrdXtv Xeyet                    
                                                                                                                                   ev- 10
12 him,       all   ye people.          And       again           (ppdvx'^rjre tdvr]               fierd    rov Xaov
      Esaias saith, There shall be a root                         avTov.          Kal     Trd/uv       
                                                                                                           aivelre rov                     1
      of Jesse, and he that shall rise to                         KvpLOV TxdvTa rd tdvij, Kal ETzaiv-
      reign    over the Gentiles,                in   him         eaare avrbv Trdvreg                            oi           Xaoi.
13 shall the Gentiles trust.                    Now    the        Kal -dXiv 'Woaiag Aeyei                             '       tarai 12
      God of hope fill you with all joy                           7/
                                                                       pii^a   rov    'leaaai, Kal 6 dviard-
      abound in hope, tlirough the power                          E^vrj    eXmovoLV.              '0       <5g   iSeof             r^f 13
      of the   Holy Ghost.                                        iXiridog 7rXT]pu)aai                     vjidq TrdoTjg
6. "Goa, even the Father:" Or, 'the God and Father.' See Eph. i.
3, 17.
       8 et seq. "         Of    the circumcision            :"    Meaning, of the Jews, as                                   in    iii.   30.
 The Apostle represents Christ as sent,                                first for     the benefit of the Jews, in
    order to establish God's fidelity by accomplishing the promises                                                               made         to
    the patriarchs     ;    and    also, in     order that the Gentiles should become united
    with the ancient covenant people, and both join harmoniously                                                          in praising
    God     for his    goodness in sending the Saviour.                                  The        divine purpose of
    extending Messiah's kingdom                       among            the Gentiles           is   a prominent idea in
    his mind.         The   quotations, which agree very nearly with the Septuagint,
    are from Ps.       xvii. 50,       Dcut.     xxxii. 43, Ps. cxvii, 1,                 and        Isa. xi. 10,                  accord-
    ing to the notation of Breitingcr.                       In the last passage the general                                      moaning
    of the   Hebrew         is   preserved, although the version                         is   not    literal.
       14, 15.      "In some sort:"                   Literally, 'in part'                    The Apostle                         tells    the
    Roman      church, that, although in                   some         parts of his Epistle, he has very
    freely   urged right views of Christian truth and duty                                    ;
                                                                                                   yet, he regards their
Ch. XV. 7-18.]                 EPISTLE TO THE EOMANS.                                                                      227
\uiivriOKWV viidg, did rijV %apiv you in mind, because of the grace
     T7]V     dodeladv not vtto tov -deov,                that   is    given unto             me         of God, that 16
16 elg TO elvai     fie Xeirovpyov 'li]aov                I should          be the minister of Jesus
     Xpiarov elg rd e^V7], lepovp-                        Christ to the Gentiles, ministering
     yovvra rb evayyeXiov tov &eov,                       the gospel of God, that the offering
     iva      yevrjrac    tj    TTpoa<popd       rcov     up of the Gentiles might be accept-
     e^vcov evTTpoadeiCTog, rjyiaaiievr]                  able, being sanctified by the Holy
means nothing else than offering a                     sacrifice, acting as                 a priest.             The whole
declaration       is   a striking and beautiful           figure.          St.        Paul represents himself
as a priest of Jesus Christ, acting in this capacity in respect to the Gospel
for the benefit of the Gentiles,               whom       he offers up as an acceptable oblation
to   God.       He     employs the same          figure in Phil.           ii.   17     :
                                                                                             " If    I   be offered upon
the sacrifice and sei-vice of your                 faith ;"     that       is,    '
                                                                                      if I    be poured out as a
libation      upon the       sacrifice    of your faith and obedience.'                              The reception of
the Gospel by the Philippians, their dedication of themselves thereby to
God,     is   regarded by the Apostle             in the light         of an acceptable oblation, and
his death       on account of           his efforts in the cause                 of Christ, as a libation or
drink-offering poured out                 upon   it.     Isaiah had              employed                 the     same meta-
 phorical style in reference to the conversion of the heathen, and                                                 it is   very
 probable that our author had his inind upon the passage.                                                    ^^
                                                                                                                  They     shall
 hring all your brethren for an offering unto the Lord out of                                               all    nations to
228                                                COMMENTAKV ON THE                                                                      [Sect.    XII
      hath not wrought by me, to make                                               idvdv,            X6y(i) Kal t/ryw,            iv     6wd- 19
     the Gentiles obedient, by word and                                             fin     arjfieiijjv         koI       TEpdrcjv,              iv
19 deed,          through mighty signs and                                          dvvdjiei TTvevjiaror aytov, u>are
     wonders, by the power of the Spirit                                            fiE   dnu         'lepovnaAiifi         koI KVKXui
     of    God        ;     so       tlmt from Ji-rusukm,                           ji^XP'-       '''^^   ^IXXvfHKov         TreTT/.rjpcjK-
     spoken           of,   they shall                 sec,      and they           dicrjiioaai, ovvijaovac.  Aid Kal 22
     that have not heard shall undcr-                                               EVEK07TT6nr]V TO, TToAAo TOiv tX-
22 stand.                 For which cause                             also     I    ddv     TTpbg viidg.              Nvvt 6e            p,7)KeTi      23
     have been much                                hindered                from     TUTTOV t:xiov iv role; KXijiaoL rov-
23 coming to you. But                              now having no                    TOig, iniTTodiav 6e tx^^v                       rov iX-
     more place              in these parts,                     and hav-           i9eZv     irpbg           viidg       drtb     ttoXXuv
     ing a gr<;at desire these                              many years              iriov, (hg          idv Tropevconai              elg rrfv          24
24 to come unto you                            ;       whensoever              I    Inaviav,            eXttl^u) diaTTopevofievog
     take    my journey                     into Spain, I will                      dedaao^ai vfiag Koi                          v(f)^    vp,(iiv
     come        to       you    :    for I trust to see                    you     npoTTEiKp^Tivai,             iKel,      idv           vfioiv
     in    my jom-ney, and to be brought                                            npCJTOv dnb fiepovg                     inTrXTja-do).
     on    my way thitherward by you, if                                            'Nvvl 6e TTopevofiai elg 'lepovoa- 25
     first I     be somewhat                       filled    with your              Xrin    dtaKovdv rdlg dyloig.
                                                                                                                Eu- 26
25 company. But now                                I   go unto Jeru-                66K7]aav       MaKsdovia koi
                                                                                                          yap
     salem, to minister unto the saints.                                            'A%ata KOLvwviav rivd TTOiTjoaa-
26 For      it   hath pleased them of Macedo-                                       dai     elg       rovg 7T~o)xovg ~b)v dyicov
     nia and Achaia to                             make          a certain          rG)V iv lepovaaXrip,.
                                                                                                  '                         livdoicrjaav 27
     contribution                    for     the poor                     saints    yap, Koi 6(peiXerai avrcjv elatv
27 which are at Jerusalem.                                           It    hath     el    yap rolg nvevfiariKoig avriHv
     pleased them,                      verily          ;    and           their    iKOtvcJvrjOav   rd e^vrj, dcpeiXovai
     debtors they are.                        For           if   the Gen-           Kal iv rolg aapKiKolg Xeirovp-
my    holy mountain Jerusalem, saith the Lord, as the children of Israel briiu/
an   offering in a clean vessel into the house of the Lord.                                                                And       I    will also
take of them fur priests and for Levites, saith the Lord                                                             :"   Isa. Ixvi.        20, 21.
The       priest          and the oflering are alike                                figurative,         and the idea conveyed                          is
28 yrjaat         av'-otg.       Tovro ovv iniTeX-                 tiles     have been made pai'takers of
      EOaq, Kol OippayiodfiEvog avroitg                            their spiritual things, their                     duty        is
   rov Kvpiov ijfiwv 'Irjaov Xpiarov                               shall      come in the                fulness       of the
      Koi Sid TTJg dydTTTjg rov Tzvevfia-                          blessing of the gospel                       of Christ.
      rog, avi'ayo)VLaaoT&ai p,ot ev ralg                          Now        I beseech you, brethren, for                            30
      TTpoaevxdtg vnep eiiov irpog tov                             the Lord Jesus Christ's sake, and
31 deov, IV a pvadio dnb                           rwv   direi-    for the love of the Spirit, that ye
      deog        TT]g   elprjvrjg fierd            ndvTCov        that I      may come            unto j'ou with joy 32
      vnu)v. dfi-qv.                                               by the will of God, and may with
                                                                   you be refreshed. Now the God of 33
                                                                   peade be with you all. Amen.
XVI.          'LvviCT7]pi              6e    vplv         $oi-          I   commend unto you Phebe XVI.
      Ptjv, TTJv d6eX(p7jv r][io)v.                     ovaav      our      sister,   which        is   a servant of the
      SiaKovov           T7]g eKKXrjaiag Trjg               ev     church which              is   at    Cenchrea       ;       that    2
2     Keyxpealg, 'iva avrrjv irpoade^-                             ye receive her in the Lord, as be-
      Tjo^e ev Kvptcf) d^io)g to)v dyio)v                          eometh saints, and that ye assist
      aal     TTapaaTTJTe              avTrj       ev    w dv      her in whatsoever business she hath
      vpoiv XPV'^V "^pdypari     Kal yap                           need of you           :   for she        hath been a
      avTrj TTpoaraTig tcoXXojv eyevrj-drj                         succourcr of many, and of myself
      uecks       :    luito    whom     not only           I   give        (otTtvtf         vTTtp    tTjc    ipvxTi^         l^ov     4
      thanks, but also             all   the churches of                    rbv tavTu)v rpdxv^ov vntdTjKuv,
5     the Gentiles.               Likewise yrect the                        olg ovK lyio fiovo^ evxo-ptaro),
      church that          is   in theLr house. Salute                      dXXd        Kol Txdaai       ai       iKKAijaiai
      mj' well beloved Epenetus,                      who          is       ru>v idvu)V,) koc ttjv kut' oIkov                          5
      the        first-fruits          of Achaia                unto        avru)V tKKXriaiav.               ^AoTrdaaade
6     Christ.           Greet    Mary who bestowed                          'ErraiveTOV, tov dyanTjTvv fiov,
7     much                        And-
                      labour on us.            Salute                       6q tariv         dnapx^  ttj^ 'Aataf elg
14   '
         Aandaao^e 'AovyKptrov,                             <PXe-         logus, and Julia, Nereus, and his
     yovra, 'Epftdv, Ilarpofiav, 'Ep-                                     sister,    and Olympas, and all the
     fiTjv Koi TOvg Gvv avrolg ddeX-                                      saints    which are with them. Salute 16
15   (j>ovg.           W.a-dGaads <^LX6Xoyov                              one another with an holy                  kiss.     The
     KoX        ''\ovXiav,             'Nfjpea       koi     rrjv         churches of Chi'ist salute you.
     dSeXcpTjV              avTOv koX ^OXv^mdv
     Koi        roijg        gvv avrolg rrdvrag
16 dyiovg.                 ''   Aondaaade dXXrjXovg
     ev       (j}iX'fiiiaTi dyici).              "'AaTrd^ovrat
     vfidg        at            eKKXrjoiat         Tzdaai     rov
     XpiOTOV.
17        UapaKaXoi) 6e v^idg, dSeXcpoi,                                    Now            I   beseech you,         brethren, 17
     OKOTrelv              Tovg Tag dtxooraaiag                           mark them which                  cause divisions
     Koi rd OKdvdaXa irapd t7]v 6ida-                                     and     offences contrary to the doc-
     rag, Kal eKKXivare                           an''   avrcjv.          avoid them.  For they that are 18
18 Oi yap toiovtoi                          tw    Kvpio) rjnoiv           such serve not our Lord Jesus
     XpiaTO)               ov dovXevovGLV,                  dXXd          Christ, but their               own     belly   ;   and
The usual           translation gives the                    meaning of the Greek, and probably these
persons were apostles, though not in the highest sense of the word.                                                           It       was
certainly applied to others besides the twelve.                                                See Acts      xiv. 4, 14,      where
it is    used of Barnabas as well as of St. Paul                   also 2 Cor. viii.   ;                              23, Phil.         ii.
25, and Rev.                     ii.   2.     Compare Bishop White's Lectures on                                      the Church
Catechism, Dissertation X. pp. 438-440.
     13. "        His mother and mine                        :"     This    is   expressive of deep affection, pro-
duced probably by proofs of maternal love shown to the Apostle by the
parent of Rufus.                        Comp. Matt.               xli.   49,     John          xix. 26,    and the        Iliad, vi.
429, 430.
     16. In the primitive church the kiss                                      was a token of peace and mutual
Christian affection.                        Its   use was not indiscriminate                       :   but, as   we   read in the
Apostolical Constitutions, " the                             men         saluted one another, and the                         women
those of their                  own     sex."       Lib.    II.    Cap. 57 ad              fin.   Edit. Coteler. Ant. 1700,
vol.     i.    pp. 264, 265.
      19. This suggests a                         motive to comply with the preceding                             direction,           and
thus to maintain the reputation for obedience which had already been
232                                            COMMENTARY ON                               TlfE                              [Skct.   XI L
        by good words and                           fair   speeches      rxj        kavruiv KOiXia, KaX 6ia rT]^
        deceive the hearts of the simple.                                X\ninToXoyiac; koI evkoyiag ^^a-
19 For your obedience                          is   come abroad          TtardnL rue KapiViac rutv dicuKuyv.
        unto    all tnttn.            I   am   glad therefore            'II        yap   vjiuiv vrraKOJi elg         rravrag 19
        on your behalf: but yet                            I    would    d(l)iKeTo           ^otpcj   ovv rb       i:(p''   vjuv,
        have you wise unto that which                               is   i9Acj de vfidg ao(f)Ovg fxtv elvat
      20. This             is       figurative for, 'will speedily give                           you victory over your
spiritual foes,'                    Some have supposed                   an allusion to Gen.                 iii.   15,       which     is
very probable.                        If so, the Apostle's                mind must have dwelt upon                                   the
Hebrew and Chaldee meaning                                      "bruise," rather than the Septuagint transla-
tion     '
             watch      for.'
      21-24.          It   has been thought strange that St. Paul, after having brought
his salutations to                   an apparent close in vcr. 16, and invoked a blessing on
the     Roman              church in ver. 20, should resume the salutations; and that
Tertius his amanuensis should interpose his                                         own between two          of the author's.
Some          critics      have inferred that these verses are an appendage not written
by      the Apostle             ;    others that they were added                           by him, with         the exception
of ver. 22, to              fill     a vacancy in an additional piece of parchment which con-
tained         tJie    doxology of                   vs.       25-27.    It         is   impossible to arrive at any
certainty on such points.                                  Some      trifling        circumstances,         unknown             to us,
may      have caused the author to append certain salutations here which would
have been more regularly incorporated among the others.                                                             It   has been
conjectured that Tertius was the author of the whole portion from 21 to 24
inclusive.            But even then the                        insertion of his          name between        those of others
still   remains unexplained.                           His salutation          may        have been originally written
in the margin,               and          at   an early age transferred out of place into the text.
Or, while writing under the Apostle's dictation, Tertius                                                    may     have intro-
                                                                                                                                           ;
24   (f)6g.
               'H %api? tov Kvpiov 7'ifiU)V                             establish              you according           to   my     gos-
        ^ItjOOV XpiOTOV juera   iravTOV                                 pel     and the preaching of Jesu/
     vfiijv.          diJ,TJv.                                          Christ, according to the revelatioii
     rovg alCJvag              
                                    dfiijv.
past ages, which our English translation expresses, and which appears also
'a   some of the              references above given.
        26. "       By      the scriptures of the prophets :"                                  Partly by means of them,
and partly             in    accordance with their attestations.                                      Comp.    iii.    21.   "Obedi-
ence offaith :" The same phrase as in i. 5.
     Written to the Romans from CorinLlius,                   Hpdf   'Pufiaiov^       typ^^        """^   Kopiv^ov
and    isent by Pliebe, sonant of the cinurh              (It foiling, t7/c   Sigkovov    t7/(    Iv Kf)';fpfaZf
at Cencbrea.                                              iKKkjjaiaf.
is    altogether in favour of the reading.                   The verse resumes what had been
begun         in the 25th.        If the      relative    be retained, however, the sentence
appears to be incoinplcte, as the translation will be, " to the only wise
God, through Jesus               Christ, to      whom      be glory for ever: Amen."                                The
Apostle seems to commence a doxology to God, as                                 in   Eph.   iii.   20, through
Christ,    and then to ascribe          it   to Christ himself          Some         authorities substitute
only wise          God / commend you              through Jesus Christ, to                whom            be glory
forever;'          and the doxology          will relate to Christ.              The     reference in               it   to
making known the Gospel to the Gentiles, and the statement that this
       This   is   a Rhetorical tenn meaning,   want of sequence. It is    applied to claoses where, throogh
the   mode of construction    or the choice of words,   some grammatical inaccuracy bas occurred.                    It if
                                                  THE END.
APPENDIX.
                                     NOTE.
   The    following questions have been prepared with the view of
assisting the reader of the           Commentary        in acquiring     an accurate
knowledge    of its contents,       and thereby of the meaning and              fulness
what has been remarked in a Eeview, that I have "written for the
and are willing       to this      end   to take the trouble of thinking"          and
studying.    And I will          cherish the hope that     among educated        Chris-
tians there will always be found some, who are willing to take such
                                      APPENDIX.
             QUESTIONS OS THE PRECEDING EXPOSITION.
The   reader   is   requested to observe that the page is noted immediately after the questions founded on it.
                                              >INTRODUCTION.
      What          was     St. Paul's native place ? family condition ? early training 1
there any reason to think that he felt the spiritual inadequacy of the
Jewish system, before his miraculous                                   Give some account of
                                                               call 1 x. xi.
the origin of the Church of                   Rome.       Does the address of leading Jews        the
to him on his arrival at Rome prove                           that the Christian              community             in that
city was then unknown to them, or                             in itself unimportant                 1    xi.      Is       there
sufficient       reason to think that in the church of                                Rome two            antagonistic
parties then existed, Jewish                  and Gentile           ;    and that the main object of the
Epistle was to reconcile their doctrinal differences                                   1   State who probably
introduced Christianity into                    Rome.         Mention            the circumstances which
made     the church of             Rome and         its   condition           known        to St. Paul.        xli.     Of
what     classes of converts did the                      Roman             church originally consist                   1       xiii.
Who was                  the bearer of the Epistle, and                 what    ecclesiastical character did
she sustain          ?   How may the          Epistle be divided                1   What are             the leading
topics of the doctrinal parts?                     Is    there sufficient evidence to prove                                     its
How far does the first section extend ? State in general its contents.
p. 1.
      What          does St. Paul          mean when he speaks of himself                           as " separated
to the Gospel"              ?   p. 19.   Does the true exposition of 4 determine the       ver.
origin of Christ's sonship,                or         publication What
                                              state its                  the best con-
                                                                                  ?                is
nection of the words " with power"                        1   20.       State the leading expositions of
                                                                                                                                                  
miraculous? What is the meaning of "to have fruit?" Why does St.
      State the general subject of this section.                                       What reason                        is      given for
glorying in the Gospel   What does contain What
                                               ?                  of the   it                       ?                    is       said
works of                 How did the Heathen regard them?Why
                  creation? p.                1.
plain the words    they became "       27,    W^hat           fools."of          28.                             is    the " truth
God"         equivalent to?             State            the condition of the                          Heathen world as                       de-
scribed       by      the Apostle.            Are          the charges here brought intended of every
individual        ?    28-30.
      State the leading topic of this section.                                  Why                    does the Apostle here
censure the Jews               ?   How does                   he represent God's judgment                                    ?   On what
ground        will the future                 award be made                to each              one      ?   What            is   necessary
in order to            become acceptable with God                           ?   What                   is   said of     Heathen who
endeavour to live agreeably                              to the divine      law       ?    and of Jews who disregard
it?   How does              the author represent the respective conditions of                                                     Jews and
Gentiles?          What description does he give of a true Jew? 2,  What are                                           3.
the meaning and connection of " therefore" in ver.                                                       1 ?      30, 31.     Wherein
lies    the Apostle's antithesis?                         State and            illustrate the                 meaning of "judge
 according             to truth          riches          of goodness          not            knowing,"                in vs. 1, 3,              4:
31,    32. What             is    the logical connection of " for" in ver.                                             12? 32. How
are the words "sinned" and " without law" used                                                  ?       In the 12th              and    follow-
or does hemeet any errour of the Jews ? What is it that he here asserts ?
                                                                   
Does he introduce a supposed case? Show from the context that he does
                        
not 33, 34. What is the meaning here of the word translated, " shall
        :
here be understood of those who had been converted     the Gospel Ex-                                       to                          ?
                                                                                                                                                                
plain the phrase "work of the law": 3G. What is the meaning of the                             
words rendered " the mean while one another" 1 Show the connection of                                          
ver. 16  37.  :                 
              Explain the phrase " my Gospel" 38. State the two read-                                       :       
ings of the                 first      part of ver. 17, and the general thought that follows                                                            :    38,
39.    Does                the        Greek which              is    rendered "approvest the things that are
more        excellent,"                 admit of another translation                                ?   39.       What does               "   commit-
ting sacrilege" here                          mean 1           Is    any particular                    text of the      Old Testament
                 24  What general thought
referred to in ver.                              1                                                          is   contained in vs. 25-29 1
What does circumcision here mean Does the Apostle speak of a hy-               1
entrusted with'                        ?   What          is   the    meaning of " the oracles of God" ? 43. In         
what sense                  is       the     word     " faith" used in ver. 3                     State the two meanincs of
                                                                                                    ?
theword translated " art judged," and its is the meaning here 44. What :
conclusion which is drawn in the latter half of this verse confined to the
Jews or is it general ? How is the tenn " law" employed in vs. 20, 21 1
" righteousness of God the law and the prophetswitnessed" 50, 51. :
the various forms which the object of in expressed the New faith is in
Testament          What
                     :          most probable meaning of "righteousness"
                          54, 55.                              is   the
in ver. 20 56.  How ?               expressed    the Greek
                                                        is     Give one
                                                             the believer                                     in                           1
         27, what
     In ver.          law" equivalent      is  What are circumcision
                                                "                                        to   ?    57.                                "
and uncircumcision" put                                      for in ver.            30   ?    How does               the           New            Testament
doctrine of justification sustain moral law                                                   ?    58.
      Mention the                     different                meanings which the                        first      verse will bear accord-
ing as         it    is    variously pointed.                             State the connection and meaning of " as
pertaining to the flesh :" 59, 60.                                        What               reply       is       given to the question                         in
this verse ?                   60.        In       the phrase, " counted unto                                     him     for righteousness,"
what           is    the       meaning of "for? righteousness? counted unto?"                                                                               What
other equivalent terms to the last are employed in our translation and in
theological discussion                              ?        What         is   said to            be thus counted or reckoned or
imputed to?                 What language does the Apostle here use speaking of                                                    in
62.  
     What general principle is laid down in verse 4 ? Explain the                                                                     
phrase " workcth not."                               
                       Does the language of the liomily on Salvation
                What the
agree with this?                              of "him   is                full signification                                    that justifieth the
ungodly"  What      ? of blessedness does the quotation from
                                                state            Psalm                                                                          the
denote   W^hat are the necessary conclusions deducible from the passage
             ?
the phrase, " for we say," a logical connection with anything previous ?
or      
     after       ?     what
                          If before, in                                   light is his circumcision to                              be regarded? 64.
 Explain the terms " sign and                                               seal    sign of circumcision."What                                       is   the
antecedent of " which" in ver. 11                                               ?   Which the more probable
                                                                                                           is                                      transla-
tion,       "that" or so that "he might be"?                                                       Of whom              w^as        Abraham            to be-
come        the spiritual parent                              ?           What          is   the force here of the                     Greek prepo-
sition expressed                       by    the English                   word          " though"      ?  After the words " father
of circumcision" in ver. 12, what                                               is      the       meaning of the remainder of the
verse, and                   whom          does         it    describe              ?    65.       Show the              logical connection of
" for" in ver. 13.                     What                 is       the meaning of the                          word        " seed"       ?   Explain
the parallel place in Gal,                                        iii.    16.          In   harmony with                 this explanation de-
velop the            full signification                      of the phrase " heir of the world."                                           Is    the last
clause       of the verse applicable to Christ                                                     ?       66, 67.     Who           are       meant by
" they of the law" in ver. 14?                                         What general                         principle         is   now     laid       down?
In   what other parts of                              this Epistle is it                          again stated            ?     Explain "              all" or
the whole " seed" in ver. 16                                          :   68.   How and why do                               the    words " of the
law" in ver. 16                        diflfer       from the same words                                     in ver.      14?       Where             is    the
quotation in ver. 17 taken from?                                                Show                  its      relevancy to the Apostle's
purpose.         What the connection of " before him" 
                                        is                                                                                ?     Illustrate the de-
scription        now given of God      What of a quotation       :    69.  the                   sort                                 is   that at
end of ver.        18?  Explain the 19th verse both with and without the nega-
tive reading.       Why                  of Abraham's
                                                is           recorded
                                                     the efficacy                                                     faith                      in Scrip-
70, 71.
     What            is      the       most accurate                       translation of the first                           Greek word? 71.
    " Eejoice :" does the original                                          term occur elsewhere                              in this connection
      What        is   the general train of thought in this section                                                   ?    What does the
Apostle      now           proceed to show                    1   How was              sin introduced into the                                  world?
 What followed How extensive were the results How does appear
                                  ?                                                                         ?                                it
and the points of dissimilarity : 7. For what purpose was moral law in-
troduced? 8.
      State the design of St. Paul as in                                        harmony with                    the scope of the Epis-
tle   :   75, 76.           What             is   the connection and                  meaning of                 " therefore ?"                   Who
ismeant by                         why is he specified ? 76. What does the
                           the " one man," and                                                                            
                                                        
word sin generally express ? What else does it here denote ? State the                                                              
meaning of the Apostle's first proposition. In what sense does he here em-         
                                                    
ploy the word "death"? State the meaning of the second proposition.
What repetition                  is   contained         in the latter            half of the verse?            State and defend
the true         meaning of the words                                   " for that"          :    77-79.     Mention                        the three
leading expositions of the phrase "have sinned":                                                            79-81. What                           objec-
tions     may be            urged against the                         first ?   Can     it       be allowed that the author
makes       his        statement without regard                                  to     infants             and       idiots        ?       79, 80.
According to the second exposition what will the statement be                                                                                ?    Does
this      sense correspond with                               that         of any other in this context?                                           Is      it
view been objected to?                             How does the context bear on                                           this         sense? 81.
 How            docs scriptural analogy?                  Docs       view militate   this                                         against the
comparison drawn by the Apostle between Christ and                                                                        Adam          ?       In what,
does this comparison consist                              ?       82.   What           is       the Apostle's general state-
ment?        83.          Is the        construction of the verse clear?                                        Give         the views on
this      point            of    some              of    the           most       distinguished                      commentators                   :
                                                                                                                                                           Is
                                                                                                                                                                
      What               practical errour does the Apostle                                        now guard                 against        ?   State       his
two important considerations                                            :   What         sort of language is "                        dead to sin"             ?
-trate the figure                      here employed.    State                               the difference between John's bap-
tism and                     Christ's        :     What
                                                 96,                              is   real      Christian baptism                     ?    Recite         St.
Peter's definition                          of baptism.  How                            is   the figure of clothing used in the
Bible           ?   What              is   meant by putting on the Lord Jesus                                              ?    Give some               illus-
                                                                                                                                                 
Docs he           carry out the figure witli wliidi he begins?                                                 In ver.          4 does he
allude to the            mode       of baptizing by iiniucrsion? 98.                                      What does 'planted
or   grown          together'           imply    ?    lias         the     author a twofold resurrection in
view ?   Explain the phrases                         " old         man     new             man         body        of sin       freed
from            Can
        sin." 99.                       the living with Christ which   8 be                         is   spoken of       in ver.
                                                              
"died unto sin," and "living unto God;" also, "once": 100. On what
is the exhortation begun in ver. 1 1 founded ? Why is the Christian's being           
under grace and not law a reason         not ruling him?       Can you
                                                                for sin's                                            101.
assign any reason why some               have               words
                                                      transcribers  unto                       rejected the                             "
     What         does    St.      Paul intend to show                      in this section                 ?    What use does
he make of the analogy drawn from the marriage relation                                                           the Jews
                                                                                                                 ?    Is it
    In his Christian condition, can the                             man obey God's law? Is                                     he as be-
fore, in     a state of condemnation                        ?      What does the Gospel effect                                  which the
law could not do              ?    What are           the respective results of submission to tho
carnal and the spiritual principle                          ?   What            is    said to           be the ultimate blessed
efieot of the         indwelling of the Spirit?                    What                  is    the test of true filiation?
9, 10.
   The connection of what two doctrines is here implied ? What is the                                                
meaning of "know the law"? 105; and to whom does the Apostle ad-
dress himself?           
               Docs the word "liveth" relate to the man or the law?
Explain the phrase " law of her husband." For what purpose is the                      
thought          in vs. 2, 3,      introduced?          What               is   the general idea of the illustra-
tion?        106.    How           does the Apostle                      apply his comparison                           ?    What              is
meant by              " thebody of Christ " ? Apart from the                                                figure      what           is   the
thought       ?      What two contrary states are expressed in                                             vs. 5,     6     ?    Explain
                                                                                                                                                                           
the phrases "in the                    flesh,     107,          passions of                          sins      by the law members."
 What         is    the phrase                "to bring              forth fruit unto death" contrasted with?
108.  What             is    the. true reading of the                                           Greek which                          is   translated "that
being dead'"?           Explain                 and defend the meaning of that reading.                                                         What
do the phrases " newness of                                   spirit           and oldness of letter" denote                                       Why  ?
does the Apostle put the question, "                                            is           the law sin"                     1       108, 109.    what     In
follows does St. Paul speak of himself?            Does                                                         he intend to represent a
regenerate or            ante-regenerate condition  Can                                     ?                   this point                  be determined
by    the sense which         some phrases will bear ? What                                                                      is       the best clew to
his   meaning?            What state of mind does he describe                                                                    ?    109, 110.             In the
whole representation extending into the next chapter, what stages of de-
velopment are distinguishable                                  ?         In ver.            8 what              is   the meaning of " sin" ?
What      is    the best connection of the phrase "                                                           by      the             commandment"                     ?
What      is   the meaning of the words "I              was alive"? Ill, 112. In what                                                                
sense    is    the     word        "   commandment" employed ? How is it here said to                          
come? W^hat                  is       meant by "I died"? 112, 113. To what does the
word " deceived" appear to allude ? What is here said to                                                                                     slay       ?      Is    the
same elsewhere asserted of the law ? Explain the meaning                                                                                     in    each case                  :
113.     State the           different modifications of                                             meaning, and that which                                      is    the
most probable, of the 13th verse after " God forbid." What does the                                                                    
particle"for" in the beginning of verse 14 imply? 114. What does                                                                              
the word " spiritual" denote ?  Explain " carnal, sold under sin." 
What      is                          Explain the phrases, "I
                described in vs. 15-20? 115.                                                                                                                       allow
not    consent  nowno more my
                        unto                      116 What                          I                        flesh:"                                         is       here
the meaning of      will"  Give the general sense of these
                                  " to                    ?                                                                                              verses.
What      is "
         the law" spoken of   verse 21  What        elsewhere   in                              ?                            is it                           called           ?
the   word rendered,                   "   I   delight in"                ?   and what idea does it express ? 119, 120.
 What          result       is   denoted by the phrase, " bringing                                                           me       into captivity"                 ?
Explain what            is    meant by                " the         body of                  this         death"          :       120.     What does the
first   clause of ver.             25 express                  ?    What reading of                                  the         Greek       is    the best               ?
by    the words "            I    myself"             ?    Explain the terms                                      " mind   serve."       flesh
State the           more prominent                            expositions of the last sentence: 124, 125;
the force of the particle "                               now"            in viii. 1                 ;^the meaning of                               " in Christ
translated, "          what the law could not do"                                        : 126. What does "the flesh"
                                                                                             125,
here     mean ?         How does the phrase                                    "   sending his own son" bear upon the
                                                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                                              ;
of            of righteousness
      fullllincnt                 intended?  Confirm the true meaning by
                                                         is
some other phrases. State the force of " What character docs the in."
the enmity of the carnal mind     God shown  What the meaning of
                                                         to                             ?                    is                                      " in
and translation of the Greek rendered " by Give the sense his Spirit" ?
of the whole verse; 130, 131.  Explain the phrase, "deeds of the body"
in ver. 13; 132;          "spirit of bondage 
                                       also             of adoption"                                Spirit                                      in ver.
15 132.  What
      :               the thought is the       part of      verse?  Explain
                                                                  in          latter                         this
the difference between the form of expression here and in Gal. iv. 6.
What           is   the scriptural test of filiation                      ?   What                  is   the proper force of the
Greek preposition here employed? 133, 134.
 What are the               trials          of   life       intended to promote ?^IIow                                          is       the opera-
tion of            God's eternal         affection            towards the subjects of                                  it    represented              ?
What               appeals does the Apostle                           now make              ?    What            persuasion does he
avow? 11, 12.
   Show the connection of                           this portion                  with what immediately precedes
134.      Give the         correct translation of the                                 word rendered "manifestation"
in ver. 2.            Explain           the sense             of " glory."                   What                is       the meaning of
"the revelation of the sons of God"? 135, 13G. State the three                                                                                      lead-
ing expositions of the word here rendered " creature" and in verse 22
"creation":              136-138.Defend                           the last of these expositions: 138-140.
 Explain what meant by "vanity bondage of corruption"
                             is                                 142.                                                                   :    140,
 Show the moaning of and contrast between "not            and "by                                             Millingly"
reason of him who hath subjected": 140,                 best mean-                    141.           Illustrate the
What        is   meant by "saved" ? What is the force of " likewise" ? the full
sense of the         word rendered "helpeth"? What is meant by the Spirit's                    
interceding? 144.                        "unutterable                           groanings"?                 Explain                the language of
ver. 27.
   State the propositions contained in verse 28 et seq. 145.IIow often
does the noun and verb " purpose" occur in the New Testament, as bearing
on the subject here brought                                     into consideration                      1    Give the            places.        What        is
Explain the meaning and bearing of 2 Tim.                                                                   i.   9.    148.      State             now what
God's purpose embraces                                     :
                                                                  Is it   a necessary consequence that the intended
result shall take place                               ?   May God's                      will as represented in Scripture fail
Does it express the same idea as " predestinate" ? 149, 150. State and                                                                     
defend another more probable meaning of the word        What is the na-                                                      :   
ture of that conformity to Christ's image which predestination has in view?
To what the expressionis                                           " first          born" equivalent ?                 What expressed        is
        
the last.            portion
                      In all this                                       of       whom          is   the Apostle speaking? 152.
Can the           calling &c. here                              spoken of be limited to the enjoyment of the
present blessings of the Gospel                                              ?   What              is St.           Peter's language on this
point?          Is    any           difficulty                removed by supposing                                    St.   Paul to be speaking
of communities                       ?    Does the                     Apostle here teach any thing of those who
are not Christians?                                   153, 154.          What                 does the word " all" in verse 32
recognise?            What                  is       the best punctuation of the following verses? 154.
W^hat does the word " elect" express?                                                         Illustrate its              meaning from the Old
Testament and the Apostolic fathers: 155.                                        Does the phrase "love of
Christ"          mean           '
                                     our love to                 him' or "      us"  Do the following verses
                                                                                          his to                 ?
Phil.      i.   6, illustrate their                            meaning  How are the expressions that follow
                                                                                 ?
to be understood                         ?   157.
                                                                                                                                                     
     Mention the general topics of                                  this section.             Why does                    the Apostle ex-
press his grief so deeply?  What privileges of nation docs he display?                            his
 What constitutes the true                       How the author's
                                                            spiritual Israelite?                                   is                          senti-
ment                 the
         illustrated in              history?         IIow docs God
                                                 patriarchal                              12, 13.                                              act in
favouring and punishing  What cases are mentioned?                                                                     in illustration             ?
God's                      
         justification offer?             general?  W^hat must be done
                                                       Is this offer                                                                                    in
order     enjoy
         to        blessings its   Was         be expected that some would
                                                       ?     14.                it       to
reject the Gospel  Could the    ?        know that was the divine purpose
                                                              Israelites                                 it
whom are the seven thousand analogous What the condition of the ? is
their conversion?  From the character and condition of the patriarchs and
early converts, how does the Apostle represent the whole body  IIow                                                                  ?
State the Apostle's general meaning. Why word here is the " Israelite"
 Can punctuation be
          the                       and     words be regarded as an
                                                      altered,                 the                                                         ascrip-
tion of          God  What
           praise to                        ?                  is    the invariable scriptural
                                                              construction                                                                              in
 Give the leading train of thought from ver. 14 176, 177. Who are                                             :                         
meant " by the vessels of mercy" as here stated by the Apostle ? Of                                                                                      
whom         is       Hosea speaking                        in the passage here                   quoted           ?       177.       What              is   the
meaning of "in the place" ? How is the quotation applied ?              the                                                         Explain
full sense of the remnant being saved    178.  How is the quotation from             :          
Isa. i. 9 to be explained? 179.                                   
                                 In ver. 28, what is the best translation of
the word rendered " work" ?                                      
                                Explain the whole verse connected with it.
  What does Isaiah express by it? 180, 181. How does St. Paul applv                              
it?   Which   the best construction, that which regards vs. 30, 31, as the
                               is
ISO.    How             are the quotations here                              made intended                              to be applied?                   Ex-
plain the sense                  of"       that is" in vs. 6, 7                    :   also of             "going up to heaven, down
to the abyss,                and over the sea," 187                      and other similar phraseology.
                                                                               ;
What         is   the thought which St.                           Paul expresses  Explain the phrases "
                                                                                                       1                                                          in
thy mouth and in thy heart"                                   ;   also," the word of        188.  What              faith"     :                                  is
meant by "Jew and Greek"? What does the word "rich" imply?        
What is " call upon" equivalent to ? Who is the object of prayer here in- 
tended?      
         Explain the meaning and connection of the quotation from Joel;
189.What implied being "sent" preach Gospel?
                            is                       in                                to                          the                          190, 191.
Are     quotations
       the                       accommodated?  IIow
                                           in vs. 15, IG,             18                                                        is      that in ver.
applied  Explain the
             ?                    between      word     sound" here used
                                                     difference                                   the                      "
phrase "his people" to be limited to those Israelites                                                                who had embraced                            the
Gospel, or does                      it   comprehend the nation as a body                                            ?   194.       \S'hy does                  St.
Paul speak here so particularly of himself? 194, 195.                                                                What bearing on                            his
representation has the case of Elijah here stated                                                              ?    Sustain the view given
                                                          
by subsequent verses 195. IIow does the conclusion arrived at harmonize
                                            :
with some prophecies, and with the preservation of the Jews as a people ?
                                  
Explain the obsolete word " wot." Is " of" or " in Elias" the more literal
version      ?      Baal feminine or masculine? What does
                      190, 197.                 Is                                                                                                      the lan-
guage, a          "
          remnant according                 of        mean and       what
                                                              to the election                           grace,"                         ?              to
does    it    197.  What sentiment
             refer      ?              expressed          IIow does          is                               in ver.          ?                                the
statement here made          from              31 and
                                                 differ 3  Explain      that in             ix.                          x.        ?                            the
word                here
         "election" as        What          general meaning of
                                                     used.            10           is   the                                                          vs. 9,         ?
What      denoted by
             is                   Explain words, magnify mine
                                                 " fulness"         ?                                 the                      "    I
          harmony with
office," in                           What              of
                                                      the context.                                    is    the force                   the expression,
"my      flesh"? 201,                     202. What                is   meant by                      "life         from the dead"                         ?To
what does the language                                    in the first clause                     of ver. 10 allude                         ?    Does           the
                                                                                                                                                                    :
term     "first fruits" refer to the patriarchs or early converts                                                                      1   What are
meant by " the root and branches'"? 202, 203. In vei-. 17 who are intended                       
in the words " among and with them" 1     Explain the illustration from in-           
serting grafts of a wild olive into a good one  204.    What word would                                :             
most naturally supply the ellipsis in ver. 21                                                1   How            is   the divine readiness
to receive repentant Jews expressed in                                                       ver.          24    1   205.     What                       is    the
general meaning of the                                 word        "   mystery"            in the           New       Testament                      1    With
what    is       " in part" best connected                              ?   What does                     the clause " until the                               ful-
unbelief"             Recite a
                      ?                        similar passage in Galatians.                                  How God            is                      said to
do    this ?         209, 210. State                    the       meaning of                ver.          33      English
                                                                                                                 iu the                                  transla-
tion,   and also                in that         which substitutes and for                                      Give sentiment
                                                                                                           both.                    the
in vs. 34,            35    ;    also the idea in ver.                      36    :    211.
What is meant by " work of God" and " fiiith" ? 224. Is there suffi-
cient reason for placing here the                                       doxology of                       xvi.   25-27        ?           Is       the quota-
tion in XV.               3 properly accommodated                             ?   To        wliat class does                  it      belong ? 225.
    In vs. 8, 9, for                    what purpose does the Apostle represent Christ as sent
226.       Is       the representation in ver. 16 to be understood literally or figura-
tively     ?     227.       Explain and                     illustrate       it      by     other similar places                           :       227, 228.
    In ver. 19,                from whence                  is     the translation " fully preached" derived?
252                                  QUESTIONS, ETC.
228.      Is   there reason to think that St. Paul ever accomplished his purpose of
going to Spain  Substitute some
                      ?                      phrase ex[)usitory    them               for " sealed   to
                                               THE KND.
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