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THE EPISTLE OF
PAUL THE APOSTLE
TO THE ROMANS
Commentary by DAVID BROWN
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CHAPTER 4
@Ro
4:1-25. THE FOREGOING DOCTRINE OF JUSTIFICATION BY
FAITH ILLUSTRATED FROM THE OLD TESTAMENT.
First: Abraham
was justified by faith.
1-3.
What shall we say then that Abraham, our father as
pertaining to the flesh, hath found?--that is, (as the
order in the original shows), "hath found, as
pertaining to ('according to,' or 'through') the
flesh"; meaning, "by all his natural efforts or
legal obedience."
2. For
if Abraham were justified by works, he hath whereof to
glory; but not before God--"If works were the
ground of Abraham's justification, he would have matter
for boasting; but as it is perfectly certain that he hath
none in the sight of God, it follows that Abraham could
not have been justified by works." And to this agree
the words of Scripture.
3. For
what saith the, Scripture? Abraham believed God, and it--his
faith.
was counted to him for
righteousness--(@Ge
15:6). Romish expositors and Arminian Protestants make
this to mean that God accepted Abraham's act of believing
as a substitute for complete obedience. But this is at
variance with the whole spirit and letter of the apostle's
teaching. Throughout this whole argument, faith is
set in direct opposition to works, in the matter of
justification--and even in @Ro
4:4,5. The meaning, therefore, cannot possibly be that
the mere act of believing--which is as much a work as any
other piece of commanded duty (@Joh
6:29 1Jo 3:23)--was counted to Abraham for all
obedience. The meaning plainly is that Abraham believed in
the promises which embraced Christ (@Ge
12:3 15:5, &c.), as we believe in Christ Himself;
and in both cases, faith is merely the instrument that
puts us in possession of the blessing gratuitously
bestowed.
4, 5.
Now to him that worketh--as a servant for wages.
is the reward not
reckoned of grace--as a matter of favor.
but of debt--as a
matter of right.
5. But
to him that worketh not--who, despairing of acceptance
with God by "working" for it the work of
obedience, does not attempt it.
but believeth on him
that justifieth the ungodly--casts himself upon the
mercy of Him that justifieth those who deserve only
condemnation.
his faith,
&c.--(See on Ro 4:3).
Second: David
sings of the same justification.
6-8.
David also describeth--"speaketh," "pronounceth."
the blessedness of the
man unto whom the Lord imputeth righteousness without
works--whom, though void of all good works, He,
nevertheless, regards and treats as righteous.
7, 8. Saying,
Blessed, &c.--(@Ps
32:1,2). David here sings in express terms only of
"transgression forgiven, sin covered, iniquity not
imputed"; but as the negative blessing necessarily
includes the positive, the passage is strictly in point.
9-12. Cometh
this blessedness then, &c.--that is, "Say
not, All this is spoken of the circumcised, and is
therefore no evidence of God's general way of
justifying men; for Abraham's justification took place
long before he was circumcised, and so could have no
dependence upon that rite: nay, 'the sign of circumcision'
was given to Abraham as 'a seal' (or token) of the
(justifying) righteousness which he had before he
was circumcised; in order that he might stand forth to
every age as the parent believer--the model man of
justification by faith--after whose type, as the first
public example of it, all were to be moulded, whether Jew
or Gentile, who should thereafter believe to life
everlasting."
13-15.
For the promise, &c.--This is merely an
enlargement of the foregoing reasoning, applying to the law
what had just been said of circumcision.
that he should be the
heir of the world--or, that "all the families of
the earth should be blessed in him."
was not to
Abraham or to his seed through the law--in virtue of
obedience to the law.
but through the
righteousness of faith--in virtue of his simple faith
in the divine promises.
14.
For if they which are of the law be heirs--If the
blessing is to be earned by obedience to the law.
faith is made void--the
whole divine method is subverted.
15.
Because the law worketh wrath--has nothing to give to
those who break is but condemnation and vengeance.
for where there is no
law, there is no transgression--It is just the law
that makes transgression, in the case of those who break
it; nor can the one exist without the other.
16,
17. Therefore, &c.--A general summary: "Thus
justification is by faith, in order that its purely
gracious character may be seen, and that all who
follow in the steps of Abraham's faith--whether of his
natural seed or no--may be assured of the like
justification with the parent believer."
17. As
it is written, &c.--(@Ge
17:5). This is quoted to justify his calling Abraham
the "father of us all," and is to be viewed as a
parenthesis.
before--that is,
"in the reckoning of."
him whom he believed--that
is, "Thus Abraham, in the reckoning of Him whom he
believed, is the father of us all, in order that all may
be assured, that doing as he did, they shall be treated as
he was."
even God, quickeneth the
dead--The nature and greatness of that faith of
Abraham which we are to copy is here strikingly described.
What he was required to believe being above nature, his
faith had to fasten upon God's power to surmount physical
incapacity, and call into being what did not then exist.
But God having made the promise, Abraham believed Him in
spite of those obstacles. This is still further
illustrated in what follows.
18-22.
Who against hope--when no ground for hope appeared.
believed in hope--that
is, cherished the believing expectation.
that he might become the
father of many nations, according to that which was
spoken, So shall thy seed be--that is, Such "as
the stars of heaven," @Ge
15:5.
19. he
considered not, &c.--paid no attention to those
physical obstacles, both in himself and in Sarah, which
might seem to render the fulfilment hopeless.
20. He
staggered--hesitated
not . . . but
was strong in faith, giving glory to God--as able to
make good His own word in spite of all obstacles.
21.
And being fully persuaded, &c.--that is, the glory
which Abraham's faith gave to God consisted in this, that,
firm in the persuasion of God's ability to fulfil his
promise, no difficulties shook him.
22.
And therefore it was imputed, &c.--"Let all
then take notice that this was not because of anything
meritorious in Abraham, but merely because he so believed."
23-25.
Now, &c.--Here is the application of this whole
argument about Abraham: These things were not recorded as
mere historical facts, but as illustrations for all time
of God's method of justification by faith.
24. to
whom it shall be imputed, if we believe in him that raised
up Jesus our Lord from the dead--in Him that hath
done this, even as Abraham believed that God would
raise up a seed in whom all nations should be blessed.
25.
Who was delivered for--"on account of."
our offences--that
is, in order to expiate them by His blood.
and raised again for--"on
account of," that is, in order to.
our justification--As
His resurrection was the divine assurance that He had
"put away sin by the sacrifice of Himself," and
the crowning of His whole work, our justification is fitly
connected with that glorious act.
Note,
(1) The doctrine of justification by works, as it
generates self-exaltation, is contrary to the first
principles of all true religion (@Ro
4:2; and see on Ro 3:21-26, Note 1). (2) The
way of a sinner's justification has been the same in all
time, and the testimony of the Old Testament on this
subject is one with that of the New (@Ro
4:3, &c., and see on Ro 3:27-31, Note 1).
(3) Faith and works, in the matter of justification, are
opposite and irreconcilable, even as grace and debt (@Ro
4:4,5; and see on Ro 11:6). If God "justifies the
ungodly," works cannot be, in any sense or to any
degree, the ground of justification. For the same reason,
the first requisite, in order to justification, must be
(under the conviction that we are "ungodly") to
despair of it by works; and the next, to "believe in
Him that justifieth the ungodly"--that hath a
justifying righteousness to bestow, and is ready to bestow
it upon those who deserve none, and to embrace it
accordingly. (4) The sacraments of the Church were never
intended, and are not adapted, to confer grace, or
the blessings of salvation, upon men. Their proper use is
to set a divine seal upon a state already
existing, and so, they presuppose, and do not create
it (@Ro
4:8-12). As circumcision merely "sealed"
Abraham's already existing acceptance with God, so with
the sacraments of the New Testament. (5) As Abraham is
"the heir of the world," all nations being
blessed in him, through his Seed Christ Jesus, and
justified solely according to the pattern of his faith, so
the transmission of the true religion and all the
salvation which the world will ever experience shall yet
be traced back with wonder, gratitude, and joy, to that
morning dawn when "the God of glory appeared unto our
father Abraham, when he was in Mesopotamia, before he
dwelt in Charran," @Ac
7:2 (@Ro
4:13). (6) Nothing gives more glory to God than simple
faith in His word, especially when all things seem to
render the fulfilment of it hopeless (@Ro
4:18-21). (7) All the Scripture examples of faith were
recorded on purpose to beget and encourage the like faith
in every succeeding age (@Ro
4:23,24; and compare @Ro
15:4). (8) Justification, in this argument,
cannot be taken--as Romanists and other errorists
insist--to mean a change upon men's character; for
besides that this is to confound it with Sanctification,
which has its appropriate place in this Epistle, the whole
argument of the present chapter--and nearly all its more
important clauses, expressions, and words--would in that
case be unsuitable, and fitted only to mislead. Beyond all
doubt it means exclusively a change upon men's state
or relation to God; or, in scientific language, it
is an objective, not a subjective change--a
change from guilt and condemnation to acquittal and
acceptance. And the best evidence that this is the key to
the whole argument is, that it opens all the wards of the
many-chambered lock with which the apostle has enriched us
in this Epistle.
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