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THE EPISTLE OF
PAUL THE APOSTLE
TO THE ROMANS
Commentary by DAVID BROWN
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CHAPTER 7
@Ro
7:1-25. SAME SUBJECT CONTINUED.
Relation
of Believers to the Law and to Christ (@Ro
7:1-6).
Recurring
to the statement of @Ro
6:14, that believers are "not under the law but
under grace," the apostle here shows how this
change is brought about, and what holy consequences follow
from it.
1. I
speak to them that know the law--of Moses to whom,
though not themselves Jews (see on Ro
1:13), the Old Testament was familiar.
2, 3.
if her husband be dead--"die." So @Ro
7:3.
3. she
be married--"joined." So @Ro
7:4.
4.
Wherefore . . . ye also are become dead--rather,
"were slain."
to the law by the body
of Christ--through His slain body. The apostle here
departs from his usual word "died," using the
more expressive phrase "were slain," to make it
clear that he meant their being "crucified with
Christ" (as expressed in @Ro
6:3-6, and @Ga
2:20).
that ye should be
married to another, even to him that is--"was."
raised from the dead--to
the intent.
that we should bring
forth fruit unto God--It has been thought that the
apostle should here have said that "the law
died to us," not "we to the law," but that
purposely inverted the figure, to avoid the harshness to
Jewish ears of the death of the law [CHRYSOSTOM,
CALVIN, HODGE, PHILIPPI, &c.]. But this is to mistake
the apostle's design in employing this figure, which was
merely to illustrate the general principle that "death
dissolves legal obligation." It was essential to
his argument that we, not the law, should be the
dying party, since it is we that are "crucified with
Christ," and not the law. This death dissolves our
marriage obligation to the law, leaving us at liberty to
contract a new relation--to be joined to the Risen One, in
order to spiritual fruitfulness, to the glory of God [BEZA,
OLSHAUSEN, MEYER, ALFORD, &c.]. The confusion, then,
is in the expositors, not the text; and it has arisen from
not observing that, like Jesus Himself, believers are here
viewed as having a double life--the old sin-condemned
life, which they lay down with Christ, and the new life of
acceptance and holiness to which they rise with their
Surety and Head; and all the issues of this new life, in
Christian obedience, are regarded as the "fruit"
of this blessed union to the Risen One. How such holy
fruitfulness was impossible before our union to Christ, is
next declared.
5. For
when we were in the flesh--in our unregenerate state,
as we came into the world. See on Joh 3:6 and Ro 8:5-9.
the motions--"passions"
(Margin), "affections" (as in @Ga
5:24), or "stirrings."
of sins--that is,
"prompting to the commission of sins."
which were by the law--by
occasion of the law, which fretted, irritated our inward
corruption by its prohibitions. See on Ro 7:7-9.
did work in our members--the
members of the body, as the instruments by which these
inward stirrings find vent in action, and become facts of
the life. See on Ro 6:6.
to bring forth fruit
unto death--death in the sense of @Ro
6:21. Thus hopeless is all holy fruit before union to
Christ.
6. But
now--On the same expression, see on Ro 6:22, and
compare @Jas
1:15.
we are delivered from
the law--The word is the same which, in @Ro
6:6 and elsewhere, is rendered "destroyed,"
and is but another way of saying (as in @Ro
7:4) that "we were slain to the law by the
body of Christ"; language which, though harsh to the
ear, is designed and fitted to impress upon the reader the
violence of that death of the Cross, by which, as
by a deadly wrench, we are "delivered from the
law."
that being dead wherein
we were held--It is now universally agreed that the
true reading here is, "being dead to that wherein we
were held." The received reading has no authority
whatever, and is inconsistent with the strain of the
argument; for the death spoken of, as we have seen, is not
the law's, but ours, through union with the
crucified Saviour.
that we should--"so
as to" or "so that we."
serve in newness of
spirit--"in the newness of the spirit."
and not in the oldness
of the letter--not in our old way of literal,
mechanical obedience to the divine law, as a set of
external rules of conduct, and without any reference to
the state of our hearts; but in that new way of spiritual
obedience which, through union to the risen Saviour, we
have learned to render (compare @Ro
2:29 2Co 3:6).
False
Inferences regarding the Law Repelled (@Ro
7:7-25).
And
first, @Ro
7:7-13, in the case of the UNREGENERATE.
7, 8.
What . . . then? Is the law sin? God forbid!--"I
have said that when we were in the flesh the law stirred
our inward corruption, and was thus the occasion of deadly
fruit: Is then the law to blame for this? Far from
us be such a thought."
Nay--"On the
contrary" (as in @Ro
8:37 1Co 12:22; Greek).
I had not known sin but
by the law--It is important to fix what is meant by
"sin" here. It certainly is not "the
general nature of sin" [ALFORD, &c.], though it
be true that this is learned from the law; for such a
sense will not suit what is said of it in the following
verses, where the meaning is the same as here. The only
meaning which suits all that is said of it in this place
is "the principle of sin in the heart of
fallen man." The sense, then, is this: "It was
by means of the law that I came to know what a virulence
and strength of sinful propensity I had within me."
The existence of this it did not need the law to
reveal to him; for even the heathens recognized and wrote
of it. But the dreadful nature and desperate power of it
the law alone discovered--in the way now to be described.
for I had not known
lust, except, &c.--Here the same Greek word
is unfortunately rendered by three different English
ones--"lust"; "covet";
"concupiscence" (@Ro
7:8)--which obscures the meaning. By using the word
"lust" only, in the wide sense of all
"irregular desire," or every outgoing of the
heart towards anything forbidden, the sense will best be
brought out; thus, "For I had not known lust, except
the law had said, Thou shalt not lust; But sin, taking
('having taken') occasion by the commandment (that one
which forbids it), wrought in me all manner of
lusting." This gives a deeper view of the tenth
commandment than the mere words suggest. The apostle saw
in it the prohibition not only of desire after certain
things there specified, \ but of "desire after everything
divinely forbidden"; in other words, all
"lusting" or "irregular desire." It
was this which "he had not known but by the
law." The law forbidding all such desire so stirred
his corruption that it wrought in him "all manner of
lusting"--desire of every sort after what was
forbidden.
8. For
without the law--that is, before its extensive demands
and prohibitions come to operate upon our corrupt nature.
sin was--rather,
"is"
dead--that is, the
sinful principle of our nature lies so dormant, so torpid,
that its virulence and power are unknown, and to our
feeling it is as good as "dead."
9. For
I was alive without the law once--"In the days of
my ignorance, when, in this sense, a stranger to the law,
I deemed myself a righteous man, and, as such, entitled to
life at the hand of God."
but when the commandment
came--forbidding all irregular desire; for the apostle
sees in this the spirit of the whole law.
sin revived--"came
to life"; in its malignity and strength it
unexpectedly revealed itself, as if sprung from the dead.
and I died--"saw
myself, in the eye of a law never kept and not to be kept,
a dead man."
10,
11. And--thus.
the commandment, which
was, &c.--designed
to--give
life--through the
keeping of it.
I found to be unto death--through
breaking it.
For sin--my sinful
nature.
taking occasion by the
commandment, deceived me--or "seduced
me"--drew me aside into the very thing which the
commandment forbade.
and by it slew me--"discovered
me to myself to be a condemned and gone man" (compare
@Ro
7:9, "I died").
12,
13. Wherefore--"So that."
the law is--"is
indeed"
good, and the
commandment--that one so often referred to, which
forbids all lusting.
holy, and just, and
good.
13.
Was then that which is good made--"Hath then that
which is good become"
death unto me? God
forbid--that is, "Does the blame of my
death lie with the good law? Away with such a
thought."
But sin--became
death unto me, to the end.
that it might appear sin--that
it might be seen in its true light.
working death in--rather,
"to"
me by that which is
good, that sin by the commandment might become exceeding
sinful--"that its enormous turpitude might stand
out to view, through its turning God's holy, just, and
good law into a provocative to the very things which is
forbids." So much for the law in relation to the
unregenerate, of whom the apostle takes himself as the
example; first, in his ignorant, self-satisfied condition;
next, under humbling discoveries of his inability to keep
the law, through inward contrariety to it; finally, as
self-condemned, and already, in law, a dead man. Some
inquire to what period of his recorded history these
circumstances relate. But there is no reason to think they
were wrought into such conscious and explicit discovery at
any period of his history before he "met the Lord in
the way"; and though, "amidst the multitude of
his thoughts within him" during his memorable three
day's blindness immediately after that, such views of the
law and of himself would doubtless be tossed up and down
till they took shape much as they are here
described (see on Ac 9:9) we regard this whole description
of his inward struggles and progress rather as the finished
result of all his past recollections and subsequent
reflections on his unregenerate state, which he throws
into historical form only for greater vividness. But now
the apostle proceeds to repel false inferences regarding
the law, secondly: @Ro
7:14-25, In the case of the REGENERATE; taking himself
here also as the example.
14.
For we know that the law is spiritual--in its demands.
but I am carnal--fleshly
(see on Ro 7:5), and as such, incapable of yielding
spiritual obedience.
sold under sin--enslaved
to it. The "I" here, though of course not the regenerate,
is neither the unregenerate, but the sinful
principle of the renewed man, as is expressly stated in @Ro
7:18.
15,
16. For, &c.--better, "For that which I do I
know not"; that is, "In obeying the impulses of
my carnal nature I act the slave of another will than my
own as a renewed man?"
for,
&c.--rather, "for not what I would (wish, desire)
that do I, but what I hate that I do."
16. If
then I do that which I would not--"But if what I
would not that I do,"
I consent unto the law
that it is good--"the judgment of my inner
man going along with the law."
17.
Now then it is no more I--my renewed self.
that do it--"that
work it."
but sin which dwelleth
in me--that principle of sin that still has its abode
in me. To explain this and the following statements, as
many do (even BENGEL and THOLUCK), of the sins of
unrenewed men against their better convictions, is to do
painful violence to the apostle's language, and to affirm
of the unregenerate what is untrue. That coexistence and
mutual hostility of "flesh" and
"spirit" in the same renewed man, which is so
clearly taught in @Ro
8:4, &c., and in @Ga
5:16, &c., is the true and only key to the
language of this and the following verses. (It is hardly
necessary to say that the apostle means not to disown the
blame of yielding to his corruptions, by saying, "it
is not he that does it, but sin that dwelleth in
him." Early heretics thus abused his language; but
the whole strain of the passage shows that his sole object
in thus expressing himself was to bring more vividly
before his readers the conflict of two opposite
principles, and how entirely, as a new man--honoring from
his inmost soul the law of God--he condemned and renounced
his corrupt nature, with its affections and lusts, its
stirrings and its outgoings, root and branch).
18.
For, &c.--better, "For I know that there
dwelleth not in me, that is in my flesh, any good."
for to will--"desire."
is present with me; but how
to perform that which is good--the supplement
"how," in our version, weakens the statement.
I find not--Here,
again, we have the double self of the renewed man;
"In me dwelleth no good; but this corrupt self is not
my true self; it is but sin dwelling in my real self, as a
renewed man."
19,
21. For, &c.--The conflict here graphically
described between a self that "desires" to do
good and a self that in spite of this does evil, cannot be
the struggles between conscience and passion in the unregenerate,
because the description given of this "desire to do
good" in @Ro
7:22 is such as cannot be ascribed, with the least
show of truth, to any but the renewed.
22.
For I delight in the law of God after the inward man--"from
the bottom of my heart." The word here rendered
"delight" is indeed stronger than
"consent" in @Ro
7:16; but both express a state of mind and heart to
which the unregenerate man is a stranger.
23.
But I see another--it should be "a
different"
law in my members--(See
on Ro 7:5).
warring against the law
of my mind, and bringing me into captivity to the law of
sin which is in my members--In this important verse,
observe, first, that the word "law" means an
inward principle of action, good or evil, operating with
the fixedness and regularity of a law. The apostle
found two such laws within him; the one "the law of
sin in his members," called (in @Ga
5:17,24) "the flesh which lusteth against the
spirit," "the flesh with the affections and
lusts," that is, the sinful principle in the
regenerate; the other, "the law of the mind," or
the holy principle of the renewed nature. Second, when the
apostle says he "sees" the one of these
principles "warring against" the other, and
"bringing him into captivity" to itself, he
is not referring to any actual rebellion going on within
him while he was writing, or to any captivity to his own
lusts then existing. He is simply describing the two
conflicting principles, and pointing out what it was the
inherent property of each to aim at bringing about. Third,
when the apostle describes himself as "brought
into captivity" by the triumph of the sinful
principle of his nature, he clearly speaks in the person
of a renewed man. Men do not feel themselves to be
in captivity in the territories of their own sovereign and
associated with their own friends, breathing a congenial
atmosphere, and acting quite spontaneously. But here the
apostle describes himself, when drawn under the power of
his sinful nature, as forcibly seized and reluctantly
dragged to his enemy's camp, from which he would gladly
make his escape. This ought to settle the question,
whether he is here speaking as a regenerate man or the
reverse.
24. O
wretched man that I am! who shall deliver me from the body
of this death?--The apostle speaks of the
"body" here with reference to "the law of
sin" which he had said was "in his
members," but merely as the instrument by which the
sin of the heart finds vent in action, and as itself the
seat of the lower appetites (see on Ro 6:6, and Ro 7:5);
and he calls it "the body of this death,"
as feeling, at the moment when he wrote, the horrors of
that death (@Ro
6:21, and @Ro
7:5) into which it dragged him down. But the language
is not that of a sinner newly awakened to the sight of his
lost state; it is the cry of a living but agonized
believer, weighed down under a burden which is not
himself, but which he longs to shake off from his renewed
self. Nor does the question imply ignorance of the way of
relief at the time referred to. It was designed only to
prepare the way for that outburst of thankfulness for the
divinely provided remedy which immediately follows.
25. I
thank God--the Source.
through Jesus Christ--the
Channel of deliverance.
So then--to sum up
the whole matter.
with the mind--the
mind indeed.
I myself serve the law
of God, but with the flesh the law of sin--"Such
then is the unchanging character of these two principles
within me. God's holy law is dear to my renewed mind, and
has the willing service of my new man; although that
corrupt nature which still remains in me listens to the
dictates of sin."
Note,
(1) This whole chapter was of essential service to the
Reformers in their contendings with the Church of Rome.
When the divines of that corrupt church, in a Pelagian
spirit, denied that the sinful principle in our fallen
nature, which they called "Concupiscence," and
which is commonly called "Original Sin," had the
nature of sin at all, they were triumphantly
answered from this chapter, where--both in the first
section of it, which speaks of it in the unregenerate, and
in the second, which treats of its presence and actings in
believers--it is explicitly, emphatically, and repeatedly
called "sin." As such, they held it to be
damnable. (See the Confessions both of the Lutheran
and Reformed churches). In the following century, the
orthodox in Holland had the same controversy to wage with
"the Remonstrants" (the followers of Arminius),
and they waged it on the field of this chapter. (2) Here
we see that Inability is consistent with Accountability.
(See @Ro
7:18 Ga 5:17). "As the Scriptures constantly
recognize the truth of these two things, so are they
constantly united in Christian experience. Everyone feels
that he cannot do the things that he would, yet is
sensible that he is guilty for not doing them. Let any man
test his power by the requisition to love God perfectly at
all times. Alas! how entire our inability! Yet how deep
our self-loathing and self-condemnation!" [HODGE].
(3) If the first sight of the Cross by the eye of faith
kindles feelings never to be forgotten, and in one sense
never to be repeated--like the first view of an enchanting
landscape--the experimental discovery, in the latter
stages of the Christian life, of its power to beat down
and mortify inveterate corruption, to cleanse and heal
from long-continued backslidings and frightful
inconsistencies, and so to triumph over all that threatens
to destroy those for whom Christ died, as to bring them
safe over the tempestuous seas of this life into the haven
of eternal rest--is attended with yet more
heart--affecting wonder draws forth deeper thankfulness,
and issues in more exalted adoration of Him whose work
Salvation is from first to last (@Ro
7:24,25). (4) It is sad when such topics as these are
handled as mere questions of biblical interpretation or
systematic theology. Our great apostle could not treat of
them apart from personal experience, of which the facts of
his own life and the feelings of his own soul furnished
him with illustrations as lively as they were apposite.
When one is unable to go far into the investigation of
indwelling sin, without breaking out into an, "O
wretched man that I am!" and cannot enter on the way
of relief without exclaiming "I thank God through
Jesus Christ our Lord," he will find his meditations
rich in fruit to his own soul, and may expect, through Him
who presides in all such matters, to kindle in his readers
or hearers the like blessed emotions (@Ro
7:24,25). So be it even now, O Lord!
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