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THE EPISTLE OF
PAUL THE APOSTLE
TO THE ROMANS
Commentary by DAVID BROWN
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CHAPTER 1
@Ro
1:1-17. INTRODUCTION.
1.
Paul--(See on Ac 13:9).
a servant of Jesus
Christ--The word here rendered "servant"
means "bond-servant," or one subject to the will
and wholly at the disposal of another. In this sense it is
applied to the disciples of Christ at large (@1Co
7:21-23), as in the Old Testament to all the people of
God (@Isa
66:14). But as, in addition to this, the prophets and
kings of Israel were officially "the servants
of the Lord" (@Jos
1:1 Ps 18:1, title), the apostles call themselves, in
the same official sense, "the servants of
Christ" (as here, and @Php
1:1 Jas 1:1 2Pe 1:1 Jude 1:1), expressing such
absolute subjection and devotion to the Lord Jesus as they
would never have yielded to a mere creature. (See on Ro
1:7; Joh 5:22,23).
called to be an apostle--when
first he "saw the Lord"; the indispensable
qualification for apostleship. (See on Ac 9:5; Ac 22:14;
1Co 9:1).
separated unto the--preaching
of the
gospel--neither so
late as when "the Holy Ghost said, Separate me
Barnabas and Saul" (@Ac
13:2), nor so early as when "separated
from his mother's womb" (see on Ga 1:15). He was
called at one and the same time to the faith and the
apostleship of Christ (@Ac
26:16-18).
of God--that is, the
Gospel of which God is the glorious Author. (So @Ro
15:16 1Th 2:2,8,9 1Pe 4:17).
2.
Which he had promised afore . . . in the holy
scriptures--Though the Roman Church was Gentile by
nation (see on Ro 1:13), yet as it consisted mostly of
proselytes to the Jewish faith (see on Introduction
to this Epistle), they are here reminded that in embracing
Christ they had not cast off, but only the more profoundly
yielded themselves to, Moses and the prophets (@Ac
13:32,33).
3, 4.
Concerning his Son Jesus Christ our Lord--the grand
burden of this "Gospel of God."
made of the seed of
David--as, according to "the holy
scriptures," He behooved to be. (See on Mt 1:1).
according to the flesh--that
is, in His human nature (compare @Ro
9:5 Joh 1:14); implying, of course, that He had another
nature, of which the apostle immediately proceeds to
speak.
4. And
declared--literally, "marked off,"
"defined," "determined," that is,
"shown," or "proved."
to be the Son of
God--Observe how studiously the language changes here.
He "was MADE [says the apostle] of the seed of
David, according to the flesh" (@Ro
1:3); but He was not made, He was only "declared
[or proved] to BE the Son of God." So @Joh
1:1,14, "In the beginning WAS the Word . . .
and the Word was MADE flesh"; and @Isa
9:6, "Unto us a Child is BORN, unto us a
Son is GIVEN." Thus the Sonship of Christ is in
no proper sense a born relationship to the Father,
as some, otherwise sound divines, conceive of it. By His
birth in the flesh, that Sonship, which was essential and
uncreated, merely effloresced into palpable manifestation.
(See on Lu 1:35; Ac 13:32,33).
with power--This may
either be connected with "declared," and then
the meaning will be "powerfully declared"
[LUTHER, BEZA, BENGEL, FRITZSCHE, ALFORD, &c.]; or (as
in our version, and as we think rightly) with "the
Son of God," and then the sense is, "declared to
be the Son of God" in possession of that
"power" which belonged to Him as the
only-begotten of the Father, no longer shrouded as in the
days of His flesh, but "by His resurrection from the
dead" gloriously displayed and henceforth to be for
ever exerted in this nature of ours [Vulgate,
CALVIN, HODGE, PHILIPPI, MEHRING, &c.].
according to the spirit
of holiness--If "according to the flesh"
means here, "in His human nature," this uncommon
expression must mean "in His other
nature," which we have seen to be that "of the
Son of God"--an eternal, uncreated nature. This is
here styled the "spirit," as an
impalpable and immaterial nature (@Joh
4:24), and "the spirit of holiness,"
probably in absolute contrast with that "likeness, of
sinful flesh" which He assumed. One is apt to wonder
that if this be the meaning, it was not expressed more
simply. But if the apostle had said "He was declared
to be the Son of God according to the Holy Spirit,"
the reader would have thought he meant "the Holy
Ghost"; and it seems to have been just to avoid
this misapprehension that he used the rare expression,
"the spirit of holiness."
5. By
whom--as the ordained channel.
we have received grace--the
whole "grace that bringeth salvation" (@Tit
2:11).
and apostleship--for
the publication of that "grace," and the
organization of as many as receive it into churches of
visible discipleship. (We prefer thus taking them as two
distinct things, and not, with some good interpreters, as
one--"the grace of apostleship").
for obedience to the
faith--rather, "for the obedience of
faith"--that is, in order to men's yielding
themselves to the belief of God's saving message, which is
the highest of all obedience.
for his name--that
He might be glorified.
6.
Among whom are ye also--that is, along with others;
for the apostle ascribes nothing special to the Church of
Rome (compare @1Co
14:36) [BENGEL].
the called--(See on
Ro 8:30).
of Christ Jesus--that
is, either called "by Him" (@Joh
5:25), or the called "belonging to
Him"; "Christ's called ones." Perhaps this
latter sense is best supported, but one hardly knows which
to prefer.
7.
beloved of God--(Compare @De
33:12 Col 3:12).
Grace, &c.--(See
on Joh 1:14).
and peace--the peace
which Christ made through the blood of His cross (@Col
1:20), and which reflects into the believing bosom
"the peace of God which passeth all
understanding" (@Php
4:7).
from God our Father, and
the Lord Jesus Christ--"Nothing speaks more
decisively for the divinity of Christ than these
juxtapositions of Christ with the eternal God, which run
through the whole language of Scripture, and the
derivation of purely divine influences from Him also. The
name of no man can be placed by the side of the Almighty.
He only, in whom the Word of the Father who is Himself God
became flesh, may be named beside Him; for men are
commanded to honor Him even as they honor the Father (@Joh
5:23)" [OLSHAUSEN].
8.
your faith is spoken of throughout the whole world--This
was quite practicable through the frequent visits paid to
the capital from all the provinces; and the apostle,
having an eye to the influence they would exercise upon
others, as well as their own blessedness, given thanks for
such faith to "his God through Jesus Christ," as
being the source, according to his theology of faith, as
of all grace in men.
9. For
God . . . whom I serve--the word denotes
religious service.
with my spirit--from
my inmost soul.
in the gospel of his Son--to
which Paul's whole religious life and official activity
were consecrated.
is my witness, that
without ceasing I make mention of you always in my prayers--so
for the Ephesians (@Eph
1:15,15); so for the Philippians (@Php
1:3,4); so for the Colossians (@Col
1:3,4); so for the Thessalonians (@1Th
1:2,3). What catholic love, what all-absorbing
spirituality, what impassioned devotion to the glory of
Christ among men!
10.
Making request, if by any means now at length I may have a
prosperous journey by the will of God, to come to you--Though
long anxious to visit the capital, he met with a number of
providential hindrances (@Ro
1:13 Ro 15:22; and see on Ac 19:21; Ac 23:11; Ac
28:15); insomuch that nearly a quarter of a century
elapsed, after his conversion, ere his desire was
accomplished, and that only as "a prisoner of Jesus
Christ." Thus taught that his whole future was in the
hands of God, he makes it his continual prayer that at
length the obstacles to a happy and prosperous meeting
might be removed.
11,
12. For I long to see you, that I may impart to you some
spiritual gift--not any supernatural gift, as the next
clause shows, and compare @1Co
1:7.
to the end that ye may
be established.
12.
That is, that I may be comforted together with you by the
mutual faith both of you and me--"Not wishing to
"lord it over their faith," but rather to be a
"helper of their joy," the apostle corrects his
former expressions: my desire is to instruct you and do
you good, that is, for us to instruct and do one another
good: in giving I shall also receive" [JOWETT].
"Nor is he insincere in so speaking, for there is
none so poor in the Church of Christ who may not impart to
us something of value: it is only our malignity and pride
that hinder us from gathering such fruit from every
quarter" [CALVIN]. How "widely different is the
apostolic style from that of the court of Papal
Rome!" [BENGEL].
13.
oftentimes I purposed to come unto you, but was let--hindered.
hitherto--chiefly by
his desire to go first to places where Christ was not
known (@Ro
15:20-24).
that I might have some
fruit--of my ministry
among you also, even as
among other Gentiles--The GENTILE origin of the Church
at Rome is here so explicitly stated, that those who
conclude, merely from the Jewish strain of the argument,
that they must have been mostly Israelites, decide in
opposition to the apostle himself. (But see on Introduction
to this Epistle.)
14,
15. I am debtor both to the Greeks--cultivated
and to the Barbarians--rude.
15.
So, as much as in me is, I am ready to preach the gospel
to you that are at Rome also--He feels himself under
an all-subduing obligation to carry the gospel to all
classes of mankind, as adapted to and ordained equally for
all (@1Co
9:16).
16.
For I am not ashamed of the gospel--(The words,
"of Christ," which follow here, are not found in
the oldest and best manuscripts). This language implies
that it required some courage to bring to "the
mistress of the world" what "to the Jews was a
stumbling-block and to the Greeks foolishness" (@1Co
1:23). But its inherent glory, as God's life-giving
message to a dying world, so filled his soul, that, like
his blessed Master, he "despised the shame."
for it is the power of
God unto salvation to every one that believeth--Here
and in @Ro
1:17 the apostle announces the great theme of his
ensuing argument; SALVATION, the one overwhelming
necessity of perishing men; this revealed IN THE GOSPEL
MESSAGE; and that message so owned and honored of God
as to carry, in the proclamation of it, GOD'S OWN
POWER TO SAVE EVERY SOUL THAT EMBRACES IT, Greek and
Barbarian, wise and unwise alike.
17.
For therein is the righteousness of God revealed--that
is (as the whole argument of the Epistle shows), GOD'S
JUSTIFYING RIGHTEOUSNESS.
from faith to faith--a
difficult clause. Most interpreters (judging from the
sense of such phrases elsewhere) take it to mean,
"from one degree of faith to another." But this
agrees ill with the apostle's design, which has nothing to
do with the progressive stages of faith, but solely with
faith itself as the appointed way of receiving God's
"righteousness." We prefer, therefore, to
understand it thus: "The righteousness of God is in
the gospel message, revealed (to be) from (or 'by') faith
to (or 'for') faith," that is, "in order to be
by faith received." (So substantially, MELVILLE,
MEYER, STUART, BLOOMFIELD, &c.).
as it is written--(@Hab
2:4).
The just shall live by
faith--This golden maxim of the Old Testament is
thrice quoted in the New Testament--here; @Ga
3:11 Heb 10:38--showing that the gospel way of
"LIFE BY FAITH," so far from disturbing, only
continued and developed the ancient method.
On the
foregoing verses, Note (1) What manner of persons
ought the ministers of Christ to be, according to the
pattern here set up: absolutely subject and officially
dedicated to the Lord Jesus; separated unto the gospel of
God, which contemplates the subjugation of all nations to
the faith of Christ: debtors to all classes, the refined
and the rude, to bring the gospel to them all alike, all
shame in the presence of the one, as well as pride before
the other, sinking before the glory which they feel to be
in their message; yearning over all faithful churches, not
lording it over them, but rejoicing in their prosperity,
and finding refreshment and strength in their fellowship!
(2) The peculiar features of the gospel here brought
prominently forward should be the devout study of all who
preach it, and guide the views and the taste of all who
are privileged statedly to hear it: that it is "the
gospel of God," as a message from heaven, yet not
absolutely new, but on the contrary, only the fulfilment
of Old Testament promise, that not only is Christ the
great theme of it, but Christ in the very nature of God as
His own Son, and in the nature of men as partaker of their
flesh--the Son of God now in resurrection--power and
invested with authority to dispense all grace to men, and
all gifts for the establishment and edification of the
Church, Christ the righteousness provided of God for the
justification of all that believe in His name; and that in
this glorious Gospel, when preached as such, there resides
the very power of God to save Jew and Gentile alike who
embrace it. (3) While Christ is to be regarded as the
ordained Channel of all grace from God to men (@Ro
1:8), let none imagine that His proper divinity is in
any respect compromised by this arrangement, since He is
here expressly associated with "God the Father,"
in prayer for "grace and peace" (including all
spiritual blessings) to rest upon this Church (@Ro
1:7). (4) While this Epistle teaches, in conformity
with the teaching of our Lord Himself, that all salvation
is suspended upon faith, this is but half a truth,
and will certainly minister to self-righteousness, if
dissociated from another feature of the same truth, here
explicitly taught, that this faith in God's own gift--for
which accordingly in the case of the Roman believers, he
"thanks his God through Jesus Christ" (@Ro
1:8). (5) Christian fellowship, as indeed all real
fellowship, is a mutual benefit; and as it is not possible
for the most eminent saints and servants of Christ to
impart any refreshment and profit to the meanest of their
brethren without experiencing a rich return into their
bosoms, so just in proportion to their humility and love
will they feel their need of it and rejoice in it.
@Ro
1:18. WHY THIS DIVINELY PROVIDED RIGHTEOUSNESS IS
NEEDED BY ALL MEN.
18.
For the wrath of God--His holy displeasure and
righteous vengeance against sin.
is revealed from heaven--in
the consciences of men, and attested by innumerable
outward evidences of a moral government.
against all ungodliness--that
is, their whole irreligiousness, or their living
without any conscious reference to God, and proper
feelings towards Him.
and unrighteousness of
men--that is, all their deviations from moral
rectitude in heart, speech, and behavior. (So these
terms must be distinguished when used together, though,
when standing alone, either of them includes the other).
@Ro
1:18-32. THIS WRATH OF GOD, REVEALED AGAINST ALL
INIQUITY, OVERHANGS THE WHOLE HEATHEN WORLD.
18.
who hold--rather, "hold down,"
"hinder," or "keep back."
the truth in
unrighteousness--The apostle, though he began this
verse with a comprehensive proposition regarding men in
general, takes up in the end of it only one of the two
great divisions of mankind, to whom he meant to apply it;
thus gently sliding into his argument. But before
enumerating their actual iniquities, he goes back to the
origin of them all, their stifling the light which still
remained to them. As darkness overspreads the mind, so
impotence takes possession of the heart, when the
"still small voice" of conscience is first
disregarded, next thwarted, and then systematically
deadened. Thus "the truth" which God left with
and in men, instead of having free scope and developing
itself, as it otherwise would, was obstructed (compare @Mt
6:22,23 Eph 4:17,18).
19.
Because that which may be--rather, "which
is."
known of God is manifest
in them; for God hath showed it unto them--The sense
of this pregnant statement the apostle proceeds to unfold
in @Ro
1:20.
20.
For the invisible things of him from--or
"since"
the creation of the
world are clearly seen--the mind brightly beholding
what the eye cannot discern.
being understood by the
things that are made--Thus, the outward creation is
not the parent but the interpreter of our
faith in God. That faith has its primary sources within
our own breast (@Ro
1:19); but it becomes an intelligible and
articulate conviction only through what we observe
around us ("by the things which are made," @Ro
1:20). And thus are the inner and the outer revelation
of God the complement of each other, making up between
them one universal and immovable conviction that God
is. (With this striking apostolic statement agree the
latest conclusions of the most profound speculative
students of Theism).
even his eternal
power and Godhead--both that there is an
Eternal Power, and that this is not a mere blind force, or
pantheistic "spirit of nature," but the power of
a living Godhead.
so that they are without
excuse--all their degeneracy being a voluntary
departure from truth thus brightly revealed to the
unsophisticated spirit.
21.
Because that, when they knew God--that is, while still
retaining some real knowledge of Him, and ere they sank
down into the state next to be described.
they glorified him not
as God, neither were thankful--neither yielded the adoration
due to Himself, nor rendered the gratitude which
His beneficence demanded.
but became vain--(compare
@Jer
2:5).
in their imaginations--thoughts,
notions, speculations, regarding God; compare @Mt
15:19 Lu 2:35 1Co 3:20, Greek.
and their foolish--"senseless,"
"stupid."
heart--that is,
their whole inner man.
was darkened--How
instructively is the downward progress of the human soul
here traced!
22,
23. Professing themselves--"boasting," or
"pretending to be"
wise, they became fools--"It
is the invariable property of error in morals and
religion, that men take credit to themselves for it and
extol it as wisdom. So the heathen" (@1Co
1:21) [THOLUCK].
23.
And changed--or "exchanged."
the glory of the
uncorruptible God into--or "for"
an image . . .
like to corruptible man--The allusion here is
doubtless to the Greek worship, and the apostle may
have had in his mind those exquisite chisellings of the
human form which lay so profusely beneath and around him
as he stood on Mars' Hill; and "beheld their
devotions." (See on Ac
17:29). But as if that had not been a deep enough
degradation of the living God, there was found "a
lower deep" still.
and to birds, and
four-footed beasts, and to creeping things--referring
now to the Egyptian and Oriental worship. In
the face of these plain declarations of the descent
of man's religious belief from loftier to ever lower and
more debasing conceptions of the Supreme Being, there are
expositors of this very Epistle (as REICHE and JOWETT),
who, believing neither in any fall from primeval
innocence, nor in the noble traces of that innocence which
lingered even after the fall and were only by degrees
obliterated by wilful violence to the dictates of
conscience, maintain that man's religious history has been
all along a struggle to rise, from the lowest forms
of nature worship, suited to the childhood of our race,
into that which is more rational and spiritual.
24.
Wherefore God also--in righteous retribution.
gave them up--This
divine abandonment of men is here strikingly traced in
three successive stages, at each of which the same word is
used (@Ro
1:24 26; and @Ro
1:28, where the word is rendered "gave
over"). "As they deserted God, God in turn
deserted them; not giving them divine (that is,
supernatural) laws, and suffering them to corrupt those
which were human; not sending them prophets, and allowing
the philosophers to run into absurdities. He let them do
what they pleased, even what was in the last degree vile,
that those who had not honored God, might dishonor
themselves" [GROTIUS].
25.
Who changed the truth of God into a lie--that is, the
truth concerning God into idol falsehood.
and worshipped and
served the creature more than the Creator--Professing
merely to worship the Creator by means of the
creature, they soon came to lose sight of the Creator in
the creature. How aggravated is the guilt of the Church of
Rome, which, under the same flimsy pretext, does
shamelessly what the heathen are here condemned for doing,
and with light which the heathen never had!
who is blessed for ever!
Amen--By this doxology the apostle instinctively
relieves the horror which the penning of such things
excited within his breast; an example to such as are
called to expose like dishonor done to the blessed God.
26,
27. For this cause God gave them up--(See on Ro 1:24).
for even their women--that
sex whose priceless jewel and fairest ornament is modesty,
and which, when that is once lost, not only becomes more
shameless than the other sex, but lives henceforth only to
drag the other sex down to its level.
did change,
&c.--The practices here referred to, though too
abundantly attested by classic authors, cannot be further
illustrated, without trenching on things which "ought
not to be named among us as become the saints." But
observe how vice is here seen consuming and exhausting
itself. When the passions, scourged by violent and
continued indulgence in natural vices, became
impotent to yield the craved enjoyment, resort was had to
artificial stimulants by the practice of unnatural
and monstrous vices. How early these were in full career,
in the history of the world, the case of Sodom affectingly
shows; and because of such abominations, centuries after
that, the land of Canaan "spued out" its old
inhabitants. Long before this chapter was penned, the
Lesbians and others throughout refined Greece had been
luxuriating in such debasements; and as for the Romans,
TACITUS, speaking of the emperor Tiberius, tells us that
new words had then to be coined to express the newly
invented stimulants to jaded passion. No wonder that, thus
sick and dying as was this poor humanity of ours under the
highest earthly culture, its many-voiced cry for the balm
in Gilead, and the Physician there, "Come over and
help us," pierced the hearts of the missionaries of
the Cross, and made them "not ashamed of the Gospel
of Christ!"
27.
and receiving in themselves that recompense of their error
which was meet--alluding to the many physical and
moral ways in which, under the righteous government of
God, vice was made self-avenging.
28-31.
gave them over--or "up" (see on Ro 1:24).
to do those things which
are not convenient--in the old sense of that word,
that is, "not becoming," "indecorous,"
"shameful."
30.
haters of God--The word usually signifies
"God-hated," which some here prefer, in the
sense of "abhorred of the Lord"; expressing the
detestableness of their character in His sight (compare @Pr
22:14 Ps 73:20). But the active sense of the word,
adopted in our version and by the majority of expositors,
though rarer, agrees perhaps better with the context.
32.
Who knowing--from the voice of conscience, @Ro
2:14,15
the judgment of God--the
stern law of divine procedure.
that they which commit
such things are worthy of death--here used in its
widest known sense, as the uttermost of divine vengeance
against sin: see @Ac
28:4.
not only do the same--which
they might do under the pressure of temptation and in the
heat of passion.
but have pleasure in
them that do them--deliberately set their seal to such
actions by encouraging and applauding the doing of them in
others. This is the climax of our apostle's charges
against the heathen; and certainly, if the things are in
themselves as black as possible, this settled and
unblushing satisfaction at the practice of them, apart
from all the blinding effects of present passion, must be
regarded as the darkest feature of human depravity.
On this
section, Note (1) "The wrath of God"
against sin has all the dread reality of a
"revelation from heaven" sounding in the
consciences of men, in the self-inflicted miseries of the
wicked, and in the vengeance which God's moral government,
sooner or later, takes upon all who outrage it; so this
"wrath of God" is not confined to high-handed
crimes, or the grosser manifestations of human depravity,
but is "revealed" against all violations of
divine law of whatever nature--"against all
ungodliness" as well as "unrighteousness of
men," against all disregard of God in the conduct of
life as well as against all deviations from moral
rectitude; and therefore, since no child of Adam can plead
guiltless either of "ungodliness" or of
"unrighteousness," to a greater or less extent,
it follows that every human being is involved in the awful
sweep of "the wrath of God" (@Ro
1:18). The apostle places this terrible truth in the
forefront of his argument on justification by faith, that
upon the basis of universal condemnation he might
rear the edifice of a free, world-wide salvation; nor can
the Gospel be scripturally preached or embraced, save as
the good news of salvation to those that are all equally
"lost." (2) We must not magnify the supernatural
revelation which God has been pleased to make of Himself,
through Abraham's family to the human race, at the expense
of that older, and, in itself, lustrous revelation which
He has made to the whole family of man through the medium
of their own nature and the creation around them. Without
the latter, the former would have been impossible, and
those who have not been favored with the former will be
without excuse, if they are deaf to the voice and blind to
the glory of the latter (@Ro
1:19,20). (3) Wilful resistance of light has a
retributive tendency to blunt the moral perceptions and
weaken the capacity to apprehend and approve of truth and
goodness; and thus is the soul prepared to surrender
itself, to an indefinite extent, to error and sin (@Ro
1:21, &c.). (4) Pride of wisdom, as it is a
convincing evidence of the want of it, so it makes the
attainment of it impossible (@Ro
1:22; and compare @Mt
11:25 1Co 3:18-20). (5) As idolatry, even in its most
plausible forms, is the fruit of unworthy views of the
Godhead, so its natural effect is to vitiate and debase
still further the religious conceptions; nor is there any
depth of degradation too low and too revolting for men's
ideas of the Godhead to sink to, if only their natural
temperament and the circumstances they are placed in be
favorable to their unrestrained development (@Ro
1:23,25). The apostle had Greece and Egypt in his eye
when he penned this description. But all the paganisms of
the East at this day attest its accuracy, from the more
elaborate idolatry of India and the simpler and more
stupid idolatry of China down to the childish rudiments of
nature worship prevalent among the savage tribes. Alas!
Christendom itself furnishes a melancholy illustration of
this truth; the constant use of material images in the
Church of Rome and the materialistic and sensuous
character of its entire service (to say nothing of the
less offensive but more stupid service of the Greek
Church,) debasing the religious ideas of millions of
nominal Christians, and lowering the whole character and
tone of Christianity as represented within their immense
pale. (6) Moral corruption invariably follows religious
debasement. The grossness of pagan idolatry is only
equalled by the revolting character and frightful extent
of the immoralities which it fostered and consecrated (@Ro
1:24,26,27). And so strikingly is this to be seen in
all its essential features in the East at this day, that
(as HODGE says) the missionaries have frequently been
accused by the natives of having forged the whole of the
latter part of this chapter, as they could not believe
that so accurate a description of themselves could have
been written eighteen centuries ago. The kingdoms of
Israel and Judah furnish a striking illustration of the
inseparable connection between religion and morals. Israel
corrupted and debased the worship of Jehovah, and the sins
with which they were charged were mostly of the grosser
kind--intemperance and sensuality: the people of Judah,
remaining faithful to the pure worship, were for a long
time charged mostly with formality and hypocrisy; and only
as they fell into the idolatries of the heathen around
them, did they sink into their vices. And may not a like
distinction be observed between the two great divisions of
Christendom, the Popish and the Protestant? To test this,
we must not look to Popery, surrounded with, and more or
less influenced by, the presence and power of
Protestantism; nor to Protestantism under every sort of
disadvantage, internal and external. But look at Romanism
where it has unrestrained liberty to develop its true
character, and see whether impurity does not there taint
society to its core, pervading alike the highest and the
lowest classes; and then look at Protestantism where it
enjoys the same advantages, and see whether it be not
marked by a comparatively high standard of social virtue.
(7) To take pleasure in what is sinful and vicious for its
own sake, and knowing it to be such, is the last and
lowest stage of human recklessness (@Ro
1:32). But (8) this knowledge can never be wholly
extinguished in the breast of men. So long as reason
remains to them, there is still a small voice in the worst
of men, protesting, in the name of the Power that
implanted it, "that they which do such things are
worthy of death" (@Ro
1:32).
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