| |
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 8
@Ro
8:1-39. CONCLUSION OF THE WHOLE ARGUMENT--THE GLORIOUS
COMPLETENESS OF THEM THAT ARE IN CHRIST JESUS.
In this
surpassing chapter the several streams of the preceding
argument meet and flow in one "river of the water of
life, clear as crystal, proceeding out of the throne of
God and of the Lamb," until it seems to lose itself
in the ocean of a blissful eternity.
FIRST: The
Sanctification of Believers (@Ro
8:1-13).
1.
There is therefore now, &c.--referring to the
immediately preceding context [OLSHAUSEN, PHILIPPI, MEYER,
ALFORD, &c.]. The subject with which the seventh
chapter concludes is still under consideration. The scope
of @Ro
8:1-4 is to show how "the law of sin and
death" is deprived of its power to bring believers
again into bondage, and how the holy law of God receives
in them the homage of a living obedience [CALVIN, FRASER,
PHILIPPI, MEYER, ALFORD, &c.].
no condemnation: to them
which are in Christ Jesus--As Christ, who "knew
no sin," was, to all legal effects, "made sin
for us," so are we, who believe in Him, to all legal
effects, "made the righteousness of God in Him"
(@2Co
5:21); and thus, one with Him in the divine reckoning.
there is to such "NO CONDEMNATION." (Compare @Joh
3:18 5:24 Ro 5:18,19). But this is no mere legal arrangement:
it is a union in life; believers, through the
indwelling of Christ's Spirit in them, having one life
with Him, as truly as the head and the members of the same
body have one life.
who walk not after the
flesh, but after the Spirit--The evidence of
manuscripts seems to show that this clause formed no part
of the original text of this verse, but that the first
part of it was early introduced, and the second later,
from @Ro
8:4, probably as an explanatory comment, and to make
the transition to @Ro
8:2 easier.
2. For
the law of the Spirit of life in Christ Jesus hath made me
free--rather, "freed me"--referring to the
time of his conversion, when first he believed.
from the law of sin and
death--It is the Holy Ghost who is here called
"the Spirit of life," as opening up in
the souls of believers a fountain of spiritual life (see
on Joh 7:38,39); just as He is called "the Spirit of
truth," as "guiding them into all truth" (@Joh
16:13), and "the Spirit of counsel and might, the
spirit of knowledge and the fear of the Lord" (@Isa
11:2), as the inspirer of these qualities. And He is
called "the Spirit of life in Christ Jesus,"
because it is as members of Christ that He takes up His
abode in believers, who in consequence of this have one
life with their Head. And as the word "law"
here has the same meaning as in @Ro
7:23, namely, "an inward principle of action,
operating with the fixedness and regularity of a
law," it thus appears that "the law of the
Spirit of life in Christ Jesus" here means,
"that new principle of action which the Spirit of
Christ has opened up within us--the law of our new
being." This "sets us free," as soon
as it takes possession of our inner man, "from the
law of sin and death" that is, from the enslaving
power of that corrupt principle which carries death in its
bosom. The "strong man armed" is overpowered by
the "stronger than he"; the weaker principle is
dethroned and expelled by the more powerful; the principle
of spiritual life prevails against and brings into
captivity the principle of spiritual death--"leading
captivity captive." If this be the apostle's meaning,
the whole verse is to this effect: That the triumph of
believers over their inward corruption, through the power
of Christ's Spirit in them, proves them to be in
Christ Jesus, and as such absolved from condemnation. But
this is now explained more fully.
3, 4.
For what the law could not do, &c.--a difficult
and much controverted verse. But it is clearly, we think,
the law's inability to free us from the dominion of sin
that the apostle has in view; as has partly appeared
already (see on Ro 8:2), and will more fully appear
presently. The law could irritate our sinful nature into
more virulent action, as we have seen in @Ro
7:5, but it could not secure its own fulfilment. How
that is accomplished comes now to be shown.
in that it was weak
through the flesh--that is, having to address itself
to us through a corrupt nature, too strong to be
influenced by mere commands and threatenings.
God, &c.--The
sentence is somewhat imperfect in its structure, which
occasions a certain obscurity. The meaning is, that whereas
the law was powerless to secure its own fulfilment for the
reason given, God took the method now to be described for
attaining that end.
sending--"having
sent"
his own Son--This
and similar expressions plainly imply that Christ was
God's "OWN SON" before He was sent--that
is, in His own proper Person, and independently of His
mission and appearance in the flesh (see on Ro 8:32 and Ga
4:4); and if so, He not only has the very nature of
God, even as a son of his father, but is essentially of
the Father, though in a sense too mysterious for any
language of ours properly to define (see on the first
through fourth chapters). And this peculiar relationship
is put forward here to enhance the greatness and define
the nature of the relief provided, as coming from
beyond the precincts of sinful humanity altogether,
yea, immediately from the Godhead itself.
in the likeness of
sinful flesh--literally, "of the flesh of
sin"; a very remarkable and pregnant expression. He
was made in the reality of our flesh, but only in the likeness
of its sinful condition. He took our nature as it is in
us, compassed with infirmities, with nothing to
distinguish Him as man from sinful men, save that He was
without sin. Nor does this mean that He took our nature
with all its properties save one; for sin is no
property of humanity at all, but only the disordered
state of our souls, as the fallen family of Adam; a
disorder affecting, indeed, and overspreading our entire
nature, but still purely our own.
and for sin--literally,
"and about sin"; that is, "on the business
of sin." The expression is purposely a general one,
because the design was not to speak of Christ's mission to
atone for sin, but in virtue of that atonement to destroy
its dominion and extirpate it altogether from
believers. We think it wrong, therefore, to render the
words (as in the Margin) "by a sacrifice for
sin" (suggested by the language of the Septuagint
and approved by CALVIN, &c.); for this sense is too
definite, and makes the idea of expiation more
prominent than it is.
condemned sin--"condemned
it to lose its power over men" [BEZA, BENGEL,
FRASER, MEYER, THOLUCK, PHILIPPI, ALFORD]. In this
glorious sense our Lord says of His approaching death (@Joh
12:31), "Now is the judgment of this
world; now shall the prince of this world be cast out,"
and again (see on Joh 16:11), "When He (the Spirit)
shall come, He shall convince the world of . . .
judgment, because the prince of this world is judged,"
that is, condemned to let go his hold of men, who, through
the Cross, shall be emancipated into the liberty and power
to be holy.
in the flesh--that
is, in human nature, henceforth set free from the grasp of
sin.
4.
That the righteousness of the law--"the righteous
demand," "the requirement" [ALFORD], Or
"the precept" of the law; for it is not
precisely the word so often used in this Epistle to denote
"the righteousness which justifies" (@Ro
1:17 3:21 4:5,6 5:17,18,21), but another form of the
same word, intended to express the enactment of the
law, meaning here, we believe, the practical obedience
which the law calls for.
might be fulfilled in us--or,
as we say, "realized in us."
who walk--the most
ancient expression of the bent of one's life,
whether in the direction of good or of evil (@Ge
48:15 Ps 1:1 Isa 2:5 Mic 4:5 Eph 4:17 1Jo 1:6,7).
not after--that is,
according to the dictates of
the flesh, but after the
spirit--From @Ro
8:9 it would seem that what is more immediately
intended by "the spirit" here is our own mind
as renewed and actuated by the Holy Ghost.
5. For
they that are after the flesh--that is, under the
influence of the fleshly principle.
do mind--give their
attention to (@Php
3:19).
the things of the flesh,
&c.--Men must be under the predominating influence of
one or other of these two principles, and, according as
the one or the other has the mastery, will be the
complexion of their life, the character of their actions.
6. For--a
mere particle of transition here [THOLUCK], like
"but" or "now."
to be carnally minded--literally,
"the mind" or "minding of the flesh" (Margin);
that is, the pursuit of fleshly ends.
is death--not only
"ends in" [ALFORD, &c.], but even now
"is"; carrying death into its bosom, so that
such are "dead while they live" (@1Ti
5:6 Eph 2:1,5) [PHILIPPI].
but to be spiritually
minded--"the mind" or "minding of the
spirit"; that is, the pursuit of spiritual objects.
is life and peace--not
"life" only, in contrast with the
"death" that is in the other pursuit, but
"peace"; it is the very element of the soul's
deepest repose and true bliss.
7.
Because the carnal mind is enmity against God--The
desire and pursuit of carnal ends is a state of enmity to
God, wholly incompatible with true life and peace in the
soul.
for it is not subject--"doth
not submit itself."
to the law of God,
neither indeed can be--In such a state of mind there
neither is nor can be the least subjection to the law of
God. Many things may be done which the law requires, but
nothing either is or can be done because God's law
requires it, or purely to please God.
8. So
then--nearly equivalent to "And so."
they that are in--and,
therefore, under the government of
the flesh cannot please
God--having no obediential principle, no desire to
please Him.
9. But
ye are not in the flesh, but in the spirit, if so be that
the Spirit of God dwell in you--This does not mean,
"if the disposition or mind of God
dwell in you"; but "if the Holy Ghost
dwell in you" (see @1Co
6:11,19 3:16, &c.). (It thus appears that to be
"in the spirit" means here to be under the
dominion of our own renewed mind; because the
indwelling of God's Spirit is given as the evidence that
we are "in the spirit").
Now--"But."
if any man have not the
Spirit of Christ--Again, this does not mean "the disposition
or mind of Christ," but the Holy Ghost; here
called "the Spirit of Christ," just as He is
called "the Spirit of life in Christ Jesus" (see
on Ro
8:2). It is as "the Spirit of Christ" that
the Holy Ghost takes possession of believers, introducing
into them all the gracious, dove-like disposition which
dwelt in Him (@Mt
3:16 Joh 3:34). Now if any man's heart be void, not of
such dispositions, but of the blessed Author of them,
"the Spirit of Christ."
he is none of his--even
though intellectually convinced of the truth of
Christianity, and in a general sense influence by its
spirit. Sharp, solemn statement this!
10,
11. And if Christ be in you--by His indwelling Spirit
in virtue of which we have one life with him.
the body--"the
body indeed."
is dead because
of--"by reason of"
sin; but the spirit is
life because--or, "by reason"
of righteousness--The
word "indeed," which the original requires, is
of the nature of a concession--"I grant you that the
body is dead . . . and so far redemption is
incomplete, but," &c.; that is, "If
Christ be in you by His indwelling Spirit, though your
'bodies' have to pass through the stage of 'death' in
consequence of the first Adam's 'sin,' your spirit is
instinct with new and undying 'life,' brought in by the
'righteousness' of the second Adam" [THOLUCK, MEYER,
and ALFORD in part, but only HODGE entirely].
11.
But--"And."
if the Spirit of him
that raised up Jesus from the dead dwell in you--that
is, "If He dwell in you as the Spirit of the
Christ-raising One," or, "in all the resurrection-power
which He put forth in raising Jesus."
he that raised up Christ
from the dead--Observe the change of name from Jesus,
as the historical Individual whom God raised from the
dead, to CHRIST, the same Individual, considered as the
Lord and Head of all His members, or of redeemed Humanity
[ALFORD].
shall also quicken--rather,
"shall quicken even"
your mortal bodies by--the
true reading appears to be "by reason of."
his Spirit that dwelleth
in you--"Your bodies indeed are not exempt from
the death which sin brought in; but your spirits even now
have in them an undying life, and if the Spirit of Him
that raised up Jesus from the dead dwell in you, even
these bodies of yours, though they yield to the last enemy
and the dust of them return to the dust as it was, shall
yet experience the same resurrection as that of their
living Head, in virtue of the indwelling of same Spirit in
you that quickened Him."
12,
13. Therefore, brethren, we are debtors, not to the flesh,
to live after the flesh--"Once we were sold under
sin (@Ro
7:14); but now that we have been set free from that
hard master and become servants to Righteousness (@Ro
6:22), we owe nothing to the flesh, we disown its
unrighteous claims and are deaf to its imperious
demands." Glorious sentiment!
13.
For if ye live after the flesh, ye shall die--in the
sense of @Ro
6:21.
but if ye through the
Spirit do mortify the deeds of the body--(See on Ro
7:23).
ye shall live--in
the sense of @Ro
6:22. The apostle is not satisfied with assuring them
that they are under no obligations to the flesh, to
hearken to its suggestions, without reminding them where
it will end if they do; and he uses the word
"mortify" (put to death) as a kind of play upon
the word "die" just before. "If ye
do not kill sin, it will kill you." But he
tempers this by the bright alternative, that if they do,
through the Spirit, mortify the deeds of the body, such a
course will infallibly terminate in "life"
everlasting. And this leads the apostle into a new line of
thought, opening into his final subject, the
"glory" awaiting the justified believer.
Note,
(1) "There can be no safety, no holiness, no
happiness, to those who are out of Christ: No
"safety," because all such are under the
condemnation of the law (@Ro
8:1); no holiness, because such only as are
united to Christ have the spirit of Christ (@Ro
8:9); no happiness, because to be
"carnally minded is death" (@Ro
8:6)" [HODGE]. (2) The sanctification of
believers, as it has its whole foundation in the atoning
death, so it has its living spring in the indwelling of
the Spirit of Christ (@Ro
8:2-4). (3) "The bent of the thoughts,
affections, and pursuits, is the only decisive test of
character (@Ro
8:5)" [HODGE]. (4) No human refinement of the
carnal mind will make it spiritual, or compensate for the
absence of spirituality. "Flesh" and
"spirit" are essentially and unchangeably
opposed; nor can the carnal mind, as such, be brought into
real subjection to the law of God (@Ro
8:5-7). Hence (5) the estrangement of God and the
sinner is mutual. For as the sinner's state of mind is
"enmity against God" (@Ro
8:7), so in this state he "cannot please
God" (@Ro
8:8). (6) Since the Holy Ghost is, in the same breath,
called indiscriminately "the Spirit of God,"
"the Spirit of Christ," and "Christ"
Himself (as an indwelling life in believers), the essential
unity and yet Personal distinctness of the
Father, the Son, and the Holy Ghost, m the one adorable
Godhead must be believed, as the only consistent
explanation of such language (@Ro
8:9-11). (7) The consciousness of spiritual life in
our renewed souls is a glorious assurance of resurrection
life in the body also, in virtue of the same quickening
Spirit whose inhabitation we already enjoy (@Ro
8:11). (8) Whatever professions of spiritual life men
may make, it remains eternally true that "if we live
after the flesh we shall die," and only "if we
through the Spirit do mortify the deeds of the body we
shall live" (@Ro
8:13, and compare @Ga
6:7,8 Eph 5:6 Php 3:18,19 1Jo 3:7,8).
SECOND: The
Sonship of Believers--Their Future Inheritance--The
Intercession of the Spirit for Them (@Ro
8:14-27).
14.
For as many as are led by the Spirit of God, they are the
sons of God, they, &c.--"these are sons of
God." Hitherto the apostle has spoken of the Spirit
simply as a power through which believers mortify
sin: now he speaks of Him as a gracious, loving Guide,
whose "leading"--enjoyed by all in whom is the
Spirit of God's dear Son--shows that they also are
"sons of God."
15.
For, &c.--"For ye received not (at the time
of your conversion) the spirit of bondage," that is,
"The spirit ye received was not a spirit of
bondage."
again--gendering.
to fear--as under
the law which "worketh wrath," that is,
"Such was your condition before ye believed, living
in legal bondage, haunted with incessant forebodings under
a sense of unpardoned sin. But it was not to perpetuate
that wretched state that ye received the Spirit."
but ye have received--"ye
received."
the spirit of adoption,
whereby--rather, "wherein."
we cry, Abba, Father--The
word "cry" is emphatic, expressing the
spontaneousness, the strength, and the exuberance of the
final emotions. In @Ga
4:6 this cry is said to proceed from the Spirit
in us, drawing forth the filial exclamation in our hearts.
Here, it is said to proceed from our own hearts
under the vitalizing energy of the Spirit, as the very
element of the new life in believers (compare @Mt
10:19,20; and see on Ro 8:4). "Abba" is the Syro-Chaldaic
word for "Father"; and the Greek word for
that is added, not surely to tell the reader that both
mean the same thing, but for the same reason which drew
both words from the lips of Christ Himself during his
agony in the garden (@Mr
14:36). He, doubtless, loved to utter His Father's
name in both the accustomed forms; beginning with His
cherished mother tongue, and adding that of the learned.
In this view the use of both words here has a charming
simplicity and warmth.
16.
The Spirit itself--It should be "Himself"
(see on Ro 8:26).
beareth witness with our
spirit, that we are the children--"are
children"
of God--The
testimony of our own spirit is borne in that cry of conscious
sonship, "Abba, Father"; but we are not
therein alone; for the Holy Ghost within us, yea, even in
that very cry which it is His to draw forth, sets His own
distinct seal to ours; and thus, "in the mouth of two
witnesses" the thing is established. The apostle had
before called us "sons of God," referring
to our adoption; here the word changes to
"children," referring to our new birth.
The one expresses the dignity to which we are admitted;
the other the new life which we receive. The
latter is more suitable here; because a son by adoption
might not be heir of the property, whereas a son by birth
certainly is, and this is what the apostle is now coming
to.
17.
And if children, then heirs--"heirs also."
heirs of God--of our
Father's kingdom.
and joint-heirs with
Christ--as the "First-born among many
brethren" (@Ro
8:29), and as "Heir of all things" (@Heb
1:2).
if so be that we suffer--"provided
we be suffering with Him."
that we may be also
glorified together--with Him. This necessity of
conformity to Christ in suffering in order to participate
in His glory, is taught alike by Christ Himself and by His
apostles (@Joh
12:24-26 Mt 16:24,25 2Ti 2:12).
18.
For I reckon that the sufferings of this present time are
not worthy to be compared with the glory which shall be
revealed in us--that is, "True, we must suffer
with Christ, if we would partake of His glory; but what of
that? For if such sufferings are set over against the
coming glory, they sink into insignificance."
19-22.
For, &c.--"The apostle, fired with the
thought of the future glory of the saints, pours forth
this splendid passage, in which he represents the whole
creation groaning under its present degradation, and
looking and longing for the revelation of this glory as
the end and consummation of its existence" [HODGE].
the earnest expectation--(compare
@Php
1:20).
of the creature--rather,
"the creation."
waiteth for the
manifestation--"is waiting for the
revelation"
of the sons of God--that
is, "for the redemption of their bodies" from
the grave (@Ro
8:23), which will reveal their sonship, now hidden
(compare @Lu
20:36 Re 21:7).
20.
For the creature--"the creation."
was made subject to
vanity, not willingly--that is, through no natural
principle of decay. The apostle, personifying creation,
represents it as only submitting to the vanity with which
it was smitten, on man's account, in obedience to that
superior power which had mysteriously linked its destinies
with man's. And so he adds
but by reason of him who
hath subjected the same--"who subjected
it."
in hope--or "in
hope that."
21.
Because the creature itself also--"even the
creation itself."
shall be delivered from
the bondage of corruption--its bondage to the
principle of decay.
into the glorious
liberty--rather, "the liberty of the glory."
of the children of God--that
is, the creation itself shall, in a glorious sense, be
delivered into that freedom from debility and decay in
which the children of God, when raised up in glory, shall
expatiate: into this freedom from corruptibility the
creation itself shall, in a glorious sense, be delivered
(So CALVIN, BEZA, BENGEL, THOLUCK, OLSHAUSEN, DE WETTE,
MEYER, PHILIPPI, HODGE, ALFORD, &c.).
22.
For we know that the whole creation groaneth and
travaileth in pain together until now--If for man's
sake alone the earth was cursed, it cannot surprise us
that it should share in his recovery. And if so, to
represent it as sympathizing with man's miseries, and as
looking forward to his complete redemption as the period
of its own emancipation from its present sin-blighted
condition, is a beautiful thought, and in harmony with the
general teaching of Scripture on the subject. (See on 2Pe
3:13).
23.
And not only they, but ourselves also--or "not
only [so], but even we ourselves"--that is, besides
the inanimate creation.
which have the
first-fruits of the Spirit--or, "the Spirit as
the first-fruits" of our full redemption (compare @2Co
1:22), moulding the heart to a heavenly frame and
attempering it to its future element.
even we ourselves--though
we have so much of heaven already within us.
groan within ourselves--under
this "body of sin and death," and under the
manifold "vanity and vexation of spirit" that
are written upon every object and every pursuit and every
enjoyment under the sun.
waiting for the--manifestation
of our
adoption, to wit, the
redemption of our body--from the grave: "not (be
it observed) the deliverance of ourselves from the body,
but the redemption of the body itself from the grave"
[BENGEL].
24.
For we are saved by hope--rather, "For in hope we
are saved"; that is, it is more a salvation in hope
than as yet in actual possession.
but hope that is seen is
not hope--for the very meaning of hope is, the
expectation that something now future will become present.
for what a man seeth,
why doth he yet hope for?--the latter ending when the
other comes.
25.
But if we hope for that we see not, then do we with
patience wait for it--that is, then, patient waiting
for it is our fitting attitude.
26,
27. Likewise the Spirit also, &c.--or, "But
after the like manner doth the Spirit also help.
our infirmities--rather
(according to the true reading), "our
infirmity"; not merely the one infirmity here
specified, but the general weakness of the spiritual
life in its present state, of which one example is
here given.
for we know not what we
should pray for as we ought--It is not the proper matter
of prayer that believers are at so much loss about, for
the fullest directions are given them on this head: but to
ask for the right things "as they ought" is the
difficulty. This arises partly from the dimness of our
spiritual vision in the present veiled state, while we
have to "walk by faith, not by sight" (see on 1Co
13:9 and 2Co
5:7), and the large admixture of the ideas and
feelings which spring from the fleeting objects of sense
that there is in the very best views and affections of our
renewed nature; partly also from the necessary
imperfection of all human language as a vehicle for
expressing the subtle spiritual feelings of the heart. In
these circumstances, how can it be but that much
uncertainty should surround all our spiritual exercises,
and that in our nearest approaches and in the freest
outpourings of our hearts to our Father in heaven, doubts
should spring up within us whether our frame of
mind in such exercises is altogether befitting and well
pleasing to God? Nor do these anxieties subside, but
rather deepen, with the depth and ripeness of our
spiritual experience.
but the Spirit itself--rather,
"Himself." (See end of @Ro
8:27).
maketh intercession for
us with groanings which cannot be uttered--that is,
which cannot be expressed in articulate language. Sublime
and affecting ideas, for which we are indebted to this
passage alone! "As we struggle to express in
articulate language the desires of our hearts and find
that our deepest emotions are the most inexpressible, we
'groan' under this felt inability. But not in vain are
these groanings. For 'the Spirit Himself' is in them,
giving to the emotions which He Himself has kindled the
only language of which they are capable; so that though on
our part they are the fruit of impotence to utter what we
feel, they are at the same time the intercession of the
Spirit Himself in our behalf."
27.
And--rather, "But," inarticulate though
these groanings be.
he that searcheth the
hearts knoweth what is the mind of the Spirit, because he--the
Spirit
maketh intercession for
the saints according to the will of God--As the
Searcher of hearts, He watches the surging emotions of
them in prayer, and knows perfectly what the Spirit means
by the groanings which He draws forth within us, because
that blessed Intercessor pleads by them only for what God
Himself designs to bestow.
Note,
(1) Are believers "led by the Spirit of God" (@Ro
8:14)? How careful then should they be not to
"grieve the Holy Spirit of God" (@Eph
4:30)! Compare @Ps
32:8,9: "I will . . . guide thee
with Mine eye. Be not (then) as the horse, or as
the mule," &c. (2) "The spirit of
bondage," to which many Protestants are "all
their lifetime subject," and the "doubtsome
faith" which the Popish Church systematically
inculcates, are both rebuked here, being in direct and
painful contrast to that "spirit of adoption,"
and that witness of the Spirit, along with our own spirit,
to the fact of our sonship, which it is here said the
children of God, as such, enjoy (@Ro
8:15,16). (3) As suffering with Christ is the ordained
preparation for participating in this glory, so the
insignificance of the one as compared with the other
cannot fail to lighten the sense of it, however bitter and
protracted (@Ro
8:17,18). (4) It cannot but swell the heart of every
intelligent Christian to think that if external nature has
been mysteriously affected for evil by the fall of man, it
only awaits his completed recovery, at the resurrection,
to experience a corresponding emancipation from its
blighted condition into undecaying life and unfading
beauty (@Ro
8:19-23). (5) It is not when believers, through sinful
"quenching of the Spirit," have the fewest and
faintest glimpses of heaven, that they sigh most fervently
to be there; but, on the contrary, when through the
unobstructed working of the Spirit in their hearts,
"the first-fruits" of the glory to be revealed
are most largely and frequently tasted, then, and just for
that reason, is it that they "groan within
themselves" for full redemption (@Ro
8:23). For thus they reason:If such be the drops, what
will the ocean be? If thus "to see through a glass
darkly" be so very sweet, what will it be to
"see face to face?" If when "my Beloved
stands behind our wall, looking forth at the windows,
showing Himself through the lattice" (@So
2:9)--that thin veil which parts the seen from the
unseen--if He is even thus to me "Fairer than the
children of men," what shall He be when He stands
confessed before my undazzled vision, the Only-begotten of
the Father in my own nature, and I shall be like Him, for
I shall see Him as He is? (6) "The patience of
hope" (@1Th
1:3) is the fitting attitude for those who with the
joyful consciousness that they are already "saved"
(@2Ti
1:9 Tit 3:5), have yet the painful consciousness that
they are saved but in part: or, "that being
justified by His grace, they are made (in the present
state) heirs according to the hope (only) of eternal
life," @Tit
3:7 (@Ro
8:24,25). (7) As prayer is the breath of the spiritual
life, and the believer's only effectual relief under the
"infirmity" which attaches to his whole
condition here below, how cheering is it to be assured
that the blessed Spirit, cognizant of it all, comes in aid
of it all; and in particular, that when believers, unable
to articulate their case before God, can at times do
nothing but lie "groaning" before the Lord,
these inarticulate groanings are the Spirit's own vehicle
for conveying into "the ears of the Lord of Sabaoth"
their whole case; and come up before the Hearer of prayer
as the Spirit's own intercession in their behalf, and that
they are recognized by Him that sitteth on the Throne, as
embodying only what His own "will" determined
before to bestow upon them (@Ro
8:26,27)! (8) What a view do these two verses (@Ro
8:26,27) give of the relations subsisting between the
Divine Persons in the economy of redemption, and the
harmony of their respective operations in the case of each
of the redeemed!
THIRD: Triumphant
Summary of the Whole Argument (@Ro
8:28-39).
28.
And--or, "Moreover," or "Now";
noting a transition to a new particular.
we know,
&c.--The order in the original is more striking:
"We know that to them that love God" (compare @1Co
2:9 Eph 6:24 Jas 1:12 2:5) "all things work
together for good [even] to them who are the called
(rather, 'who are called') according to His (eternal)
purpose." Glorious assurance! And this, it seems, was
a "household word," a "known" thing,
among believers. This working of all things for good is
done quite naturally to "them that love God,"
because such souls, persuaded that He who gave His own Son
for them cannot but mean them well in all His procedure,
learn thus to take in good part whatever He sends them,
however trying to flesh and blood: and to them who are the
called, according to "His purpose," all things
do in the same intelligible way "work together for
good"; for, even when "He hath His way in the
whirlwind," they see "His chariot paved with
love" (@So
3:10). And knowing that it is in pursuance of an
eternal "purpose" of love that they have
been "called into the fellowship of His Son
Jesus Christ" (@1Co
1:9), they naturally say within themselves, "It
cannot be that He 'of whom, and through whom, and to whom
are all things,' should suffer that purpose to be thwarted
by anything really adverse to us, or that He should not
make all things, dark as well as light, crooked as well as
straight, to co-operate to the furtherance and final
completion of His high design."
29.
For--as touching this "calling according to his
purpose" (@Ro
8:28).
whom he did foreknow he
also did predestinate--foreordain. In what sense are
we to take the word "foreknow" here? "Those
who He foreknew would repent and believe," say Pelagians
of every age and every hue. But this is to thrust into the
text what is contrary to the whole spirit, and even
letter, of the apostle's teaching (see @Ro
9:11 2Ti 1:9). In @Ro
11:2, and @Ps
1:6, God's "knowledge " of His people cannot
be restricted to a mere foresight of future events, or
acquaintance with what is passing here below. Does
"whom He did foreknow," then, mean "whom He
foreordained?" Scarcely, because both
"foreknowledge" and "foreordination"
are here mentioned, and the one as the cause of the
other. It is difficult indeed for our limited minds to
distinguish them as states of the Divine Mind towards men;
especially since in @Ac
2:23 "the counsel" is put before
"the foreknowledge of God," while in @1Pe
1:2 "election" is said to be "according
to the foreknowledge of God." But probably God's
foreknowledge of His own people means His "peculiar,
gracious, complacency in them," while His
"predestinating" or "foreordaining"
them signifies His fixed purpose, flowing from
this, to "save them and call them with an holy
calling" (@2Ti
1:9).
to be conformed to the
image of his Son--that is, to be His sons after the
pattern, model, or image of His Sonship in our
nature.
that he might be the
first-born among many brethren--"The
First-born," the Son by nature; His "many
brethren," sons by adoption: He, in the Humanity of
the Only-begotten of the Father, bearing our sins on the
accursed tree; they in that of mere men ready to perish by
reason of sin, but redeemed by His blood from condemnation
and wrath, and transformed into His likeness: He "the
First-born from the dead"; they "that sleep in
Jesus," to be in due time "brought with
Him"; "The First-born," now "crowned
with glory and honor"; His "many brethren,"
"when He shall appear, to be like Him, for they shall
see Him as He is."
30.
Moreover--"And," or "Now";
explanatory of @Ro
8:29--In "predestinating us to be conformed to
the image of His Son" in final glory, He settled all
the successive steps of it. Thus
whom he did
predestinate, them he also called--The word
"called" (as HODGE and others truly observe) is
never in the Epistles of the New Testament applied to
those who have only the outward invitation of the
Gospel (as in @Mt
20:16 22:14). It always means "internally,
effectually, savingly called." It denotes the first
great step in personal salvation and answers to
"conversion." Only the word conversion
expresses the change of character which then takes
place, whereas this "calling" expresses the divine
authorship of the change, and the sovereign power
by which we are summoned, Matthew-like, Zaccheus-like, out
of our old, wretched, perishing condition, into a new,
safe, blessed life.
and whom he called--thus.
them he also justified--brought
into the definite state of reconciliation already so fully
described.
and whom he justified,
them he also glorified--brought to final glory (@Ro
8:17,18). Noble climax, and so rhythmically expressed!
And all this is viewed as past; because, starting from the
past decree of "predestination to be conformed to the
image of God's Son" of which the other steps are but
the successive unfoldings--all is beheld as one entire,
eternally completed salvation.
31.
What shall we then say to these things?--"We can
no farther go, think, wish" [BENGEL]. This whole
passage, to @Ro
8:34, and even to the end of the chapter, strikes all
thoughtful interpreters and readers, as transcending
almost every thing in language, while OLSHAUSEN notices
the "profound and colossal" character of the
thought.
If God be for us, who
can be against us?--If God be resolved and engaged
to bring us through, all our enemies must be His;
and "Who would set the briers and thorns against Him
in battle? He would go through them. He would burn them
together" (@Isa
27:4). What strong consolation is here! Nay, but the
great Pledge of all has already been given; for,
32. He--rather,
"He surely." (It is a pity to lose the emphatic
particle of the original).
that spared not--"withheld
not," "kept not back." This expressive
phrase, as well as the whole thought, is suggested by @Ge
22:12, where Jehovah's touching commendation of
Abraham's conduct regarding his son Isaac seems designed
to furnish something like a glimpse into the spirit of His
own act in surrendering His own Son. "Take now
(said the Lord to Abraham) thy son, thine only,
whom thou lovest, and . . . offer him for a
burnt offering" (@Ge
22:2); and only when Abraham had all but performed
that loftiest act of self-sacrifice, the Lord interposed,
saying, "Now I know that thou fearest God, seeing
thou HAST NOT WITHHELD THY SON, THINE ONLY SON, from
Me." In the light of this incident, then, and of this
language, our apostle can mean to convey nothing less than
this, that in "not sparing His own Son, but
delivering Him up," or surrendering Him, God
exercised, in His Paternal character, a mysterious
act of Self-sacrifice, which, though involving none
of the pain and none of the loss which are
inseparable from the very idea of self-sacrifice on our
part, was not less real, but, on the contrary, as far
transcended any such acts of ours as His nature is above
the creature's. But this is inconceivable if Christ be not
God's "own (or proper) Son," partaker of His
very nature, as really as Isaac was of his father
Abraham's. In that sense, certainly, the Jews charged our
Lord with making Himself "equal with God" (see
on Joh 5:18), which He in reply forthwith proceeded, not
to disown, but to illustrate and confirm. Understand
Christ's Sonship thus, and the language of Scripture
regarding it is intelligible and harmonious; but take it
to be an artificial relationship, ascribed to Him
in virtue either of His miraculous birth, or His
resurrection from the dead, or the grandeur of His works,
or all of these together--and the passages which speak of
it neither explain of themselves nor harmonize with each
other.
delivered him up--not
to death merely (as many take it), for that is too
narrow an idea here, but "surrendered Him" in
the most comprehensive sense; compare @Joh
3:16, "God so loved the world that He GAVE His
only-begotten Son."
for us all--that is,
for all believers alike; as nearly every good interpreter
admits must be the meaning here.
how shall he not--how
can we conceive that He should not.
with him also--rather,
"also with Him." (The word "also" is
often so placed in our version as to obscure the sense;
see on Heb 12:1).
freely give us all
things?--all other gifts being not only immeasurably less
than this Gift of gifts, but virtually included in it.
33,
34. Who shall lay anything to the charge of--or,
"bring any charge against."
God's elect?--the
first place in this Epistle where believers are styled
"the elect." In what sense this is meant
will appear in next chapter.
34.
yea rather, that is risen again--to make good the
purposes of His death. Here, as in some other cases, the
apostle delightfully corrects himself (see @Ga
4:9; and see on Ro 1:12); not meaning that the
resurrection of Christ was of more saving value than His
death, but that having "put away sin by the sacrifice
of Himself"--which though precious to us was to Him
of unmingled bitterness--it was incomparably more
delightful to think that He was again alive, and
living to see to the efficacy of His death in our behalf.
who is even--"also"
at the right hand of God--The
right hand of the king was anciently the seat of honor
(compare @1Sa
20:25 1Ki 2:19 Ps 45:9), and denoted participation in
the royal power and glory (@Mt
20:21). The classical writings contain similar
allusions. Accordingly Christ's sitting at the right hand
of God--predicted in @Ps
110:1, and historically referred to in @Mr
16:19 Ac 2:33 7:56 Eph 1:20 Col 3:1 1Pe 3:22 Re 3:21--signifies
the glory of the exalted Son of man, and the power
in the government of the world in which He participates.
Hence it is called "sitting on the right hand of Power"
(@Mt
26:64), and "sitting on the right hand of the Majesty
on high" (@Heb
1:3) [PHILIPPI].
who also maketh
intercession for us--using all His boundless interest
with God in our behalf. This is the top of the climax.
"His Session at God's right hand denotes His power
to save us; His Intercession, His will to do
it" [BENGEL]. But how are we to conceive of this
intercession? Not certainly as of one pleading "on
bended knees and with outstretched arms," to use the
expressive language of CALVIN. But yet, neither is it
merely a figurative intimation that the power of Christ's
redemption is continually operative [THOLUCK], or merely
to show the fervor and vehemence of His love for us [CHRYSOSTOM].
It cannot be taken to mean less than this: that the
glorified Redeemer, conscious of His claims, expressly signifies
His will that the efficacy of His death should be made
good to the uttermost, and signifies it in some such royal
style as we find Him employing in that wonderful
Intercessory Prayer which He spoke as from within the
veil (see on Joh 17:11,12): "Father, I WILL that
they also whom Thou hast given Me be with Me where I
am" (see on Joh 17:24). But in what form this
will is expressed is as undiscoverable as it is
unimportant.
35,
36. Who shall separate us from the love of Christ?--This
does not mean "our love to Christ," as if, Who
shall hinder us from loving Christ? but "Christ's
love to us," as is clear from the closing words of
the chapter, which refer to the same subject. Nor would
the other sense harmonize with the scope of the chapter,
which is to exhibit the ample ground of the believer's
confidence in Christ. "It is no ground of confidence
to assert, or even to feel, that we will never forsake
Christ; but it is the strongest ground of assurance to be
convinced that His love will never change" [HODGE].
shall
tribulation, &c.--"None of these, nor all
together, how terrible soever to the flesh, are tokens of
God's wrath, or the least ground for doubt of His love.
From whom could such a question come better than from one
who had himself for Christ's sake endured so much? (See @2Co
11:11-33 1Co 4:10-13). The apostle says not (remarks
CALVIN nobly) "What," but "Who," just
as if all creatures and all afflictions were so many
gladiators taking arms against the Christians [THOLUCK].
36. As
it is written, For thy sake, &c.--(@Ps
44:22)--quoted as descriptive of what God's faithful
people may expect from their enemies at any period
when their hatred of righteousness is roused, and there is
nothing to restrain it (see @Ga
4:29).
37.
Nay, in all these things we are more than conquerors,
through him that loved us--not, "We are so far
from being conquered by them, that they do us much
good" [HODGE]; for though this be true, the word
means simply, "We are pre-eminently conquerors."
See on Ro 5:20. And so far are they from "separating
us from Christ's love," that it is just "through
Him that loved us" that we are victorious over them.
38,
39. For I am persuaded, that neither death, nor life, nor
angels, nor principalities, nor powers--whether good
or bad. But as the bad are not called "angels,"
or "principalities," or "powers," save
with some addition to show that such are meant (@Mt
25:41 Col 2:15 Eph 6:12 2Pe 2:4--except perhaps @1Co
6:3), probably the good are meant here, but
merely as the same apostle supposes an angel from
heaven to preach a false gospel. (So the best
interpreters).
nor things present, nor
things to come--no condition of the present life and
none of the unknown possibilities of the life to come.
39.
nor any other creature--rather, "created
thing"--any other thing in the whole created universe
of God
shall be able to
separate us, &c.--"All the terms here are to
be taken in their most general sense, and need no closer
definition. The indefinite expressions are meant to denote
all that can be thought of, and are only a rhetorical
paraphrase of the conception of allness" [OLSHAUSEN].
from the love of God,
which is in Christ Jesus our Lord--Thus does this
wonderful chapter, with which the argument of the Epistle
properly closes, leave us who are "justified by
faith" in the arms of everlasting Love, whence no
hostile power or conceivable event can ever tear us.
"Behold what manner of love is this?" And
"what manner of persons ought we to be," who are
thus "blessed with all spiritual blessings in
Christ?"
Note,
(1) There is a glorious consistency between the eternal
purposes of God and the free agency of men, though the
link of connection is beyond human, perhaps created,
apprehension (@Ro
8:28). (2) How ennobling is the thought that the
complicated movements of the divine government of the
world are all arranged in expressed furtherance of the
"good" of God's chosen (@Ro
8:28)! (3) To whatever conformity to the Son of God in
dignity and glory, believers are or shall hereafter be
raised, it will be the joy of everyone of them, as it is
most fitting, "that in all things He should have the
pre-eminence" (@Col
1:18), (@Ro
8:29). (4) "As there is a beautiful harmony and
necessary connection between the several doctrines of
grace, so must there be a like harmony in the character of
the Christian. He cannot experience the joy and confidence
flowing from his election without the humility which"
the consideration of its being gratuitous must produce;
nor can he have the peace of one who is justified without
the holiness of one who is saved" (@Ro
8:29,30) [HODGE]. (5) However difficult it may be for
finite minds to comprehend the emotions of the Divine
Mind, let us never for a moment doubt that in "not
sparing His own Son, but delivering Him up for us
all," God made a real sacrifice of all that was
dearest to His heart, and that in so doing He meant for
ever to assure His people that all other things which they
need--inasmuch as they are nothing to this stupendous
gift, and indeed but the necessary sequel of it--will in
due time be forthcoming (@Ro
8:32). (6) In return for such a sacrifice on God's
part, what can be considered too great on ours? (7) If
there could be any doubt as to the meaning of the
all-important word "JUSTIFICATION" in this
Epistle--whether, as the Church of Rome teaches, and many
others affirm, it means "infusing
righteousness into the unholy, so as to make them
righteous," or, according to Protestant teaching,
"absolving, acquitting, or pronouncing
righteous the guilty" @Ro
8:33 ought to set such doubt entirely at rest. For the
apostle's question in this verse is, "Who shall bring
a charge against God's elect?" In other words,
"Who shall pronounce" or "hold
them guilty?" seeing that "God justifies"
them: showing beyond all doubt, that to
"justify" was intended to express precisely the
opposite of "holding guilty"; and consequently
(as CALVIN triumphantly argues) that it means "to
absolve from the charge of guilt." (8) If there
could be any reasonable doubt in what light the death
of Christ is to be regarded in this Epistle, @Ro
8:34 ought to set that doubt entirely at rest. For
there the apostle's question is, Who shall "condemn"
God's elect, since "Christ died" for
them; showing beyond all doubt (as PHILIPPI justly argues)
that it was the expiatory (character of that death
which the apostle had in view). (9) What an affecting view
of the love of Christ does it give us to learn that His
greatest nearness to God and most powerful interest
with Him--as "seated on His right hand"--is
employed in behalf of His people here below (@Ro
8:34)! (10) "The whole universe, with all that it
contains, so far as it is good, is the friend and ally of
the Christian; and, so far as it is evil, is more than a
conquered foe" (@Ro
8:35-39) [HODGE]. (11) Are we who "have tasted
that the Lord is gracious," both "kept by the power
of God through faith unto salvation" (@1Pe
1:5), and embraced in the arms of Invincible Love?
Then surely, while "building ourselves up on our most
holy faith," and "praying in the Holy
Ghost," only the more should we feel constrained to
"keep ourselves in the love of God, looking
for the mercy of our Lord Jesus Christ unto eternal
life" (@Jude
1:20,21).
|
|