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THE EPISTLE OF
PAUL THE APOSTLE
TO THE ROMANS
Commentary by DAVID BROWN
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CHAPTER 14
@Ro
14:1-23. SAME SUBJECT CONTINUED--CHRISTIAN
FORBEARANCE.
The
subject here, and on to @Ro
15:13, is the consideration due from stronger
Christians to their weaker brethren; which is but the
great law of love (treated of in the thirteenth chapter)
in one particular form.
1. Him
that is weak in the faith--rather, "in
faith"; that is, not "him that is weak in the
truth believed" [CALVIN, BEZA, ALFORD, &c.], but
(as most interpreters agree), "him whose faith wants
that firmness and breadth which would raise him above
small scruples." (See on Ro 14:22,23).
receive ye--to
cordial Christian fellowship.
but not to doubtful
disputations--rather, perhaps, "not to the
deciding of doubts," or "scruples;" that
is, not for the purpose of arguing him out of them: which
indeed usually does the reverse; whereas to receive him to
full brotherly confidence and cordial interchange of
Christian affection is the most effectual way of drawing
them off. Two examples of such scruples are here
specified, touching Jewish meats and days.
"The strong," it will be observed, are those who
knew these to be abolished under the Gospel; "the
weak" are those who had scruples on this point.
2. one
believeth that he may eat all things--See @Ac
10:16.
another, who is weak,
eateth herbs--restricting himself probably to a
vegetable diet, for fear of eating what might have been
offered to idols, and so would be unclean. (See @1Co
8:1-13).
3. Let
not him that eateth despise--look down superciliously
upon "him that eateth not."
and let not him that
eateth not judge--sit in judgment censoriously upon
"him that eateth."
for God hath received
him--as one of His dear children, who in this matter
acts not from laxity, but religious principle.
4. Who
art thou that judges another man's--rather,
"another's"
servant?--that is,
CHRIST'S, as the whole context shows, especially @Ro
14:8,9.
Yea,
&c.--"But he shall be made to stand, for God is
able to make him stand"; that is, to make good his
standing, not at the day of judgment, of which the apostle
treats in @Ro
14:10, but in the true fellowship of the Church here,
in spite of thy censures.
5. One
man esteemeth one day above another: another esteemeth
every day--The supplement "alike" should be
omitted, as injuring the sense.
Let every man be fully
persuaded in his own mind--be guided in such matters
by conscientious conviction.
6. He
that regardeth the day, regardeth it to the Lord--the
Lord CHRIST, as before.
and he . . .
not, to the Lord he doth not--each doing what he
believes to be the Lord's will.
He that earth, eateth to
the Lord, for he giveth God thanks; and he that eateth
not, to the Lord he eateth not, and giveth God thanks--The
one gave thanks to God for the flesh which the other
scrupled to use; the other did the same for the herbs to
which, for conscience' sake, he restricted himself. From
this passage about the observance of days, ALFORD
unhappily infers that such language could not have been
used if the sabbath law had been in force under the
Gospel in any form. Certainly it could not, if the sabbath
were merely one of the Jewish festival days; but it will
not do to take this for granted merely because it was
observed under the Mosaic economy. And certainly,
if the sabbath was more ancient than Judaism; if, even
under Judaism, it was enshrined among the eternal
sanctities of the Decalogue, uttered, as no other parts of
Judaism were, amidst the terrors of Sinai; and if the
Lawgiver Himself said of it when on earth, "The Son
of man is LORD EVEN OF THE SABBATH DAY" (see @Mr
2:28)--it will be hard to show that the apostle must
have meant it to be ranked by his readers among those
vanished Jewish festival days, which only
"weakness" could imagine to be still in force--a
weakness which those who had more light ought, out of
love, merely to bear with.
7, 8.
For none of us--Christians
liveth to himself--(See
@2Co
5:14,15), to dispose of himself or shape his conduct
after his own ideas and inclinations.
and no man--"and
none" of us Christians "dieth to himself."
8. For
whether we live, we live unto the Lord--the Lord
CHRIST; see @Ro
14:9.
and whether we die, we
die unto the Lord; whether we live therefore, or die, we
are the Lord's--Nothing but the most vivid explanation
of these remarkable words could make them endurable to any
Christian ear, if Christ were a mere creature. For
Christ is here--in the most emphatic terms, and yet in the
most unimpassioned tone--held up as the supreme Object of
the Christian's life, and of his death too;. and that by
the man whose horror of creature worship was such, that
when the poor Lycaonians would have worshipped him, he
rushed forth to arrest the deed, directing them to
"the living God," as the only legitimate Object
of worship (@Ac
14:15). Nor does Paul teach this here, but
rather appeals to it as a known and recognized
fact, of which he had only to remind his readers. And
since the apostle, when he wrote these words, had never
been at Rome, he could only know that the Roman Christians
would assent to this view of Christ, because it was the
common teaching of all the accredited preachers of
Christianity, and the common faith of all Christians.
9. For
to this end Christ both, &c.--The true reading
here is, To this end Christ died and lived
("again").
that he might be Lord
both of the dead and--"and of the"
living--The grand
object of His death was to acquire this absolute
Lordship over His redeemed, both in their living and in
their dying, as His of right.
10.
But why, &c.--The original is more
lively:--"But thou (the weaker believer), why judgest
thou thy brother? And thou again (the stronger), why
despisest thou thy brother?"
for we shall all--the
strong and the weak together.
stand before the
judgment-seat of Christ--All the most ancient and best
manuscripts read here, "the judgment-seat of
God." The present reading doubtless crept in from @2Co
5:10, where "the judgment-seat of Christ"
occurs. But here "the judgment-seat of God"
seems to have been used, with reference to the quotation
and the inference in @Ro
14:11,12.
11,
12. For it is written--(@Isa
45:23).
As I live, saith the
Lord--Hebrew, JEHOVAH.
every knee shall bow to
me, and every tongue shall confess to God--consequently,
shall bow to the award of God upon their character and
actions.
12. So
then--infers the apostle.
every one of us shall
give account of himself to God--Now, if it be
remembered that all this is adduced quite incidentally, to
show that CHRIST is the absolute Master of all Christians,
to rule their judgments and feelings towards each other
while "living," and to dispose of them
"dying," the testimony which it bears to the
absolute Divinity of Christ will appear remarkable. On any
other view, the quotation to show that we shall all stand
before the judgment-seat of God would be a strange
proof that Christians are all amenable to Christ.
13.
Let us not therefore judge--"assume the office of
judge over"
one another; but judge
this rather, &c.--a beautiful sort of play upon
the word "judge," meaning, "But let this be
your judgment, not to put a stumbling-block," &c.
14,
15. I know, and am persuaded by--or rather,
"in"
the Lord Jesus--as
"having the mind of Christ" (@1Co
2:16).
that there is nothing
unclean of itself--Hence it is that he calls those
"the strong" who believed in the abolition of
all ritual distinctions under the Gospel. (See @Ac
10:15).
but--"save
that"
to him that esteemeth
anything to be unclean, to him it is unclean--"and
therefore, though you can eat of it with out sin, he
cannot."
15.
But if thy brother be grieved--has his weak conscience
hurt
with thy meat--rather,
"because of meat." The word "meat" is
purposely selected as something contemptible in contrast
with the tremendous risk run for its sake. Accordingly, in
the next clause, that idea is brought out with great
strength.
Destroy not him with--"by"
thy meat for whom Christ
died--"The worth of even the poorest and weakest
brother cannot be more emphatically expressed than by the
words, 'for whom Christ died'" [OLSHAUSEN]. The same
sentiment is expressed with equal sharpness in @1Co
8:11. Whatever tends to make anyone violate his
conscience tends to the destruction of his soul; and he
who helps, whether wittingly or no, to bring about the one
is guilty of aiding to accomplish the other.
16,
17. Let not then your good--that is, this liberty of
yours as to Jewish meats and days, well founded though it
be.
be evil spoken of--for
the evil it does to others.
17.
For the kingdom of God--or, as we should say,
Religion; that is, the proper business and blessedness for
which Christians are formed into a community of renewed
men in thorough subjection to God (compare @1Co
4:20).
is not meat and drink--"eating
and drinking"
but righteousness, and
peace, and joy in the Holy Ghost--a beautiful and
comprehensive division of living Christianity. The
first--"righteousness"--has respect to God,
denoting here "rectitude," in its widest sense
(as in @Mt
6:33); the second--"peace"--has respect to our
neighbors, denoting "concord" among brethren
(as is plain from @Ro
14:19; compare @Eph
4:3 Col 3:14,15); the third--"joy in the Holy
Ghost"--has respect to ourselves. This phrase,
"joy in the Holy Ghost," represents Christians
as so thinking and feeling under the workings of the Holy
Ghost, that their joy may be viewed rather as that of the
blessed Agent who inspires it than their own (compare @1Th
1:6).
18.
For he that in these things--"in this,"
meaning this threefold life.
serveth Christ--Here
again observe how, though we do these three things as a
"kingdom of God," yet it is "Christ"
that we serve in so doing; the apostle passing here from
God to Christ as naturally as before from Christ to
God--in a way to us inconceivable, if Christ had been
viewed as a mere creature (compare @2Co
8:21).
is acceptable to God,
and approved of men--these being the things which God
delights in, and men are constrained to approve. (Compare
@Pr
3:4 Lu 2:52 Ac 2:47 19:20).
19.
the things, &c.--more simply, "the things of
peace, and the things of mutual edification."
20.
For--"For the sake of"
meat destroy not the
work of God--(See on Ro 14:15). The apostle sees in
whatever tends to violate a brother's conscience the incipient
destruction of God's work (for every converted man is
such)--on the same principle as "he that hateth his
brother is a murderer" (@1Jo
3:15).
All things indeed are
pure--"clean"; the ritual distinctions being
at an end.
but it is evil to that
man--there is criminality in the man
who eateth with offence--that
is, so as to stumble a weak brother.
21. It
is good not to eat flesh, nor to drink wine, nor any thing--"nor
to do any thing"
whereby--"wherein"
thy brother stumbleth,
or is offended, or is made weak--rather, "is
weak." These three words, it has been remarked, are
each intentionally weaker than the other:--"Which may
cause a brother to stumble, or even be obstructed in his
Christian course, nay--though neither of these may
follow--wherein he continues weak; unable wholly to
disregard the example, and yet unprepared to follow
it." But this injunction to abstain from flesh,
from wine, and from whatsoever may hurt the
conscience of a brother, must be properly understood.
Manifestly, the apostle is treating of the regulation of
the Christian's conduct with reference simply to the
prejudices of the weak in faith; and his directions are to
be considered not as prescriptions for one's entire
lifetime, even to promote the good of men on a large
scale, but simply as cautions against the too free use of
Christian liberty in matters where other Christians,
through weakness, are not persuaded that such liberty is
divinely allowed. How far the principle involved in
this may be legitimately extended, we do not inquire here;
but ere we consider that question, it is of great
importance to fix how far it is here actually expressed,
and what is the precise nature of the illustrations given
of it.
22.
Hast thou faith--on such matters?
have it to thyself--within
thine own breast
before God--a most
important clause. It is not mere sincerity, or a
private opinion, of which the apostle speaks; it is
conviction as to what is the truth and will of God. If
thou hast formed this conviction in the sight of God, keep
thyself in this frame before Him. Of course, this is not
to be over-pressed, as if it were wrong to discuss such
points at all with our weaker brethren. All that is here
condemned is such a zeal for small points as endangers
Christian love.
Happy is he that
condemneth not himself in that which he alloweth--allows
himself to do nothing, about the lawfulness of which he
has scruples; does only what he neither knows nor fears to
be sinful.
23.
And--rather, "But"
he that doubteth is
damned--On the word "damnation," see on Ro
13:2.
if he eat, because he
eateth not of faith--On the meaning of
"faith" here, see on Ro 14:22.
for whatsoever is not of
faith is sin--a maxim of unspeakable importance in the
Christian life.
Note,
(1) Some points in Christianity are unessential to
Christian fellowship; so that though one may be in error
upon them, he is not on that account to be excluded either
from the communion of the Church or from the full
confidence of those who have more light. This distinction
between essential and non-essential truths is denied by
some who affect more than ordinary zeal for the honor and
truth of God. But they must settle the question with our
apostle. (2) Acceptance with God is the only proper
criterion of right to Christian fellowship. Whom God
receives, men cannot lawfully reject (@Ro
14:3,4). (3) As there is much self-pleasing in setting
up narrow standards of Christian fellowship, so one of the
best preservatives against the temptation to do this will
be found in the continual remembrance that CHRIST is the
one Object for whom all Christians live, and to whom all
Christians die; this will be such a living and exalted
bond of union between the strong and the weak as will
overshadow all their lesser differences and gradually
absorb them (@Ro
14:7-9). (4) The consideration of the common
judgment-seat at which the strong and the weak shall stand
together will be found another preservative against the
unlovely disposition to sit in judgment one on another (@Ro
14:10-12). (5) How brightly does the supreme Divinity
of Christ shine out in this chapter! The exposition itself
supersedes further illustration here. (6) Though
forbearance be a great Christian duty, indifference to the
distinction between truth and error is not thereby
encouraged. The former is, by the tax, made an excuse for
the latter. But our apostle, while teaching "the
strong" to bear with "the weak," repeatedly
intimates in this chapter where the truth really lay on
the points in question, and takes care to call those who
took the wrong side "the weak" (@Ro
14:1,2,14). (7) With what holy jealousy ought the
purity of the conscience to be guarded, since every
deliberate violation of it is incipient perdition (@Ro
14:15,20)! Some, who seem to be more jealous for the
honor of certain doctrines than for the souls of men,
enervate this terrific truth by asking how it bears upon
the "perseverance of the saints"; the advocates
of that doctrine thinking it necessary to explain away
what is meant by "destroying the work of God" (@Ro
14:20), and "destroying him for whom Christ
died" (@Ro
14:15), for fear of the doctrinal consequences of
taking it nakedly; while the opponents of that doctrine
are ready to ask, How could the apostle have used such
language if he had believed that such a catastrophe was
impossible? The true answer to both lies in dismissing the
question as impertinent. The apostle is enunciating a
great and eternal principle in Christian Ethics--that the
wilful violation of conscience contains within itself a
seed of destruction; or, to express it otherwise, that
the total destruction of the work of God in the renewed
soul, and, consequently, the loss of that soul for
eternity, needs only the carrying out to its full effect
of such violation of the conscience. Whether such effects do
take place, in point of fact, the apostle gives not the
most distant hint here; and therefore that point must be
settled elsewhere. But, beyond all doubt, as the position
we have laid down is emphatically expressed by the
apostle, so the interests of all who call themselves
Christians require to be proclaimed and pressed on every
suitable occasion. (8) Zeal for comparatively small points
of truth is a poor substitute for the substantial and
catholic and abiding realities of the Christian life (@Ro
14:17,18). (9) "Peace" among the followers
of Christ is a blessing too precious to themselves, and,
as a testimony to them that are without, too important, to
be ruptured for trifles, even though some lesser truths be
involved in these (@Ro
14:19,20). Nor are those truths themselves disparaged
or endangered thereby, but the reverse. (10) Many things
which are lawful are not expedient. In the use of any
liberty, therefore, our question should be, not simply, Is
this lawful? but even if so, Can it be used with safety to
a brother's conscience?--How will it affect my brother's
soul (@Ro
14:21)? It is permitted to no Christian to say with
Cain, "Am I my brother's keeper?" (@Ge
4:9). (11) Whenever we are in doubt as to a point of
duty--where abstinence is manifestly sinless, but
compliance not clearly lawful--the safe course is ever to
be preferred, for to do otherwise is itself sinful. (12)
How exalted and beautiful is the Ethics of
Christianity--by a few great principles teaching us how to
steer our course amidst practical difficulties, with equal
regard to Christian liberty, love, and confidence!
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