| |
THE EPISTLE OF
PAUL THE APOSTLE
TO THE ROMANS
Commentary by DAVID BROWN
[1]
[2]
[3]
[4]
[5]
[6]
[7]
[8]
[9]
[10]
[11]
[12]
[13]
[14]
[15]
[16]
CHAPTER 13
@Ro
13:1-14. SAME SUBJECT CONTINUED--POLITICAL AND SOCIAL
RELATIONS--MOTIVES.
1, 2.
Let every soul--every man of you
be subject unto the
higher powers--or, "submit himself to the
authorities that are above him."
For there is no power--"no
authority"
but of God: the powers
that be are ordained of God--"have been ordained
of God."
2.
Whosoever therefore resisteth the power--"So that
he that setteth himself against the authority."
resisteth the ordinance
of God; and they that resist shall receive to themselves
damnation--or, "condemnation," according to
the old sense of that word; that is, not from the
magistrate, but from God, whose authority in the
magistrate's is resisted.
3, 4.
For rulers are not a terror to good works--"to
the good work," as the true reading appears to be
but to the evil.
4. he
beareth not the sword in vain--that is, the symbol of
the magistrate's authority to punish.
5.
Wherefore ye must needs be subject, not only for wrath--for
fear of the magistrate's vengeance.
but also for conscience'
sake--from reverence for God's authority. It is of Magistracy
in general, considered as a divine ordinance, that
this is spoken: and the statement applies equally to all
forms of government, from an unchecked despotism--such as
flourished when this was written, under the Emperor
Nero--to a pure democracy. The inalienable right of all
subjects to endeavor to alter or improve the form of
government under which they live is left untouched here.
But since Christians were constantly charged with turning
the world upside down, and since there certainly were
elements enough in Christianity of moral and social
revolution to give plausibility to the charge, and tempt
noble spirits, crushed under misgovernment, to take
redress into their own hands, it was of special importance
that the pacific, submissive, loyal spirit of those
Christians who resided at the great seat of political
power, should furnish a visible refutation of this charge.
6, 7.
For, for this cause pay ye--rather, "ye pay"
tribute also--that
is, "This is the reason why ye pay the contributions
requisite for maintaining the civil government."
for they are God's
ministers, attending continually upon this very thing--"to
this very thing."
7.
Render therefore to all their dues--From magistrates
the apostle now comes to other officials, and from them to
men related to us by whatever tie.
tribute--land tax.
custom--mercantile
tax.
fear--reverence for
superiors.
honour--the respect
due to persons of distinction.
8. Owe
no man anything, but to love one another--"Acquit
yourselves of all obligations except love, which is a debt
that must remain ever due" [HODGE].
for he that loveth
another hath fulfilled the law--for the law itself is
but love in manifold action, regarded as matter of duty.
9. For
this, &c.--better thus: "For the
[commandments], Thou shalt not kill, Thou shalt not commit
adultery, Thou shalt not steal, Thou shalt not covet, and
whatever other commandment [there may be], it is summed
up," &c. (The clause, "Thou shalt not bear
false witness," is wanting in all the most ancient
manuscripts). The apostle refers here only to the second
table of the law, as love to our neighbor is what he is
treating of.
10.
Love worketh no ill to his--or, "one's"
neighbour; therefore,
&c.--As love, from its very nature, studies and
delights to please its objects, its very existence is an
effectual security against our wilfully injuring him. Next
follow some general motives to the faithful discharge of
all these duties.
11.
And that--rather, "And this [do]"
knowing the time, that
now it is high time--literally, "the hour has
already come."
to awake out of sleep--of
stupid, fatal indifference to eternal things.
for now is our salvation--rather,
"the salvation," or simply
"salvation."
nearer than when we--first
believed--This is in
the line of all our Lord's teaching, which represents the
decisive day of Christ's second appearing as at hand, to
keep believers ever in the attitude of wakeful expectancy,
but without reference to the chronological nearness
or distance of that event.
12.
The night--of evil
is far spent, the day--of
consummated triumph over it
is at hand: let us
therefore cast off--as a dress
the works of darkness--all
works holding of the kingdom and period of darkness, with
which, as followers of the risen Saviour, our connection
has been dissolved.
and let us put on the
armour of light--described at length in @Eph
6:11-18.
13.
Let us walk honestly--"becomingly,"
"seemingly"
as in the day--"Men
choose the night for their revels, but our night is past,
for we are all the children of the light and of the day (@1Th
5:5): let us therefore only do what is fit to be
exposed to the light of such a day."
not in rioting and
drunkenness--varied forms of intemperance; denoting
revels in general, usually ending in intoxication.
not in chambering and
wantonness--varied forms of impurity; the one pointing
to definite acts, the other more general.
not in strife and
envying--varied forms of that venomous feeling between
man and man which reverses the law of love.
14.
But--to sum up all in one word.
put ye on the Lord Jesus
Christ--in such wise that Christ only may be seen in
you (see @2Co
3:3 Ga 3:27 Eph 4:24).
and make no provision--"take
no forethought."
for the flesh, to fulfil
the lust thereof--"Direct none of your
attention to the cravings of your corrupt nature, how you
may provide for their gratification."
Note,
(1) How gloriously adapted is Christianity for human
society in all conditions! As it makes war directly
against no specific forms of government, so it directly
recommends none. While its holy and benign principles
secure the ultimate abolition of all iniquitous
government, the reverence which it teaches for magistracy,
under whatever form, as a divine institution, secures the
loyalty and peaceableness of its disciples, amid all the
turbulence and distractions of civil society, and makes it
the highest interest of all states to welcome it within
their pale, as in this as well as every other
sense--"the salt of the earth, the light of the
world" (@Ro
13:1-5). (2) Christianity is the grand specific for
the purification and elevation of all the social
relations; inspiring a readiness to discharge all
obligations, and most of all, implanting in its disciples
that love which secures all men against injury from them,
inasmuch as it is the fulfilling of the law (@Ro
13:6-10). (3) The rapid march of the kingdom of God,
the advanced stage of it at which we have arrived, and the
ever-nearing approach of the perfect day--nearer to every
believer the longer he lives--should quicken all the
children of light to redeem the time, and, seeing that
they look for such things, to be diligent, that they may
be found of Him in peace, without spot and blameless (@2Pe
3:14). (4) In virtue of "the expulsive power of a
new and more powerful affection," the great secret of
persevering holiness in all manner of conversation will be
found to be "Christ IN US, the hope of glory" (@Col
1:27), and Christ ON US, as the character in which
alone we shall be able to shine before men (@2Co
3:8) (@Ro
13:14).
|
|