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A37291 A paraphrase and commentary upon the epistle of Saint Paul to the Romans by William Day ... Day, William, ca. 1605-1684. 1666 (1666) Wing D473; ESTC R6047 560,180 444

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meaneth that his carnal appetite is present with him moving him and inciting him to that which he cannot attain to without sin which would have been in a great measure refrained if there had been any habitual good in him and therefore he complains thus of it PROSOPOPOEIA Prosopopoeia is a Figure whereby we attribute reason and understanding and other properties of a man to things which have no reason or understanding yea to qualities and other accidents as though they were persons that is as though they were individual substances indued with reason and understanding Our Apostle useth no Figure more frequently than he doth this By this Figure he speaks of Sin as of a Man or Woman when he saith Sin entred into the world Rom 5.12 and sin shall not have dominion over you Rom. 6.14 And again ye were the servants of sin verse 17. And again the wages of sin is death verse 23. And thus he speaks of Righteousness as if it were a Person when he saith yield your Members Servants to Righteousness By this doth he also speak of Death as of a Person when he saith Death reigned from Adam to Moses Rom. 5.14 And by this doth he speak of the Law as of a Person when he saith The Law entred that the offence might abound Rom. 5 20. And when he makes the Law as an Husband to them which were under it Rom. 7.1 SYNECHDOCHE Synechdoche is a Figure whereby the whole is put sometimes for a part and a part sometimes for the whole The first is called Synechdoche Integri The second Synechdoche Partis An example of the first we may have in the word World which is put for the Land of Canaan Rom. 4.13 And for all men Rom. ver 6.19 And for the Gentiles Rom. 11.12 And for the wicked of the world Rom. 12.2 An example of the second we have Rom. 3.20 where it is said that by the deeds of the Law there shall no flesh be justified in his sight where Flesh which is but part of a Man is put for the whole Man And Rom. 14.2 where it is said Another who is weak eateth Herbs where Herbs which were clean by the Levitical Law and lawful to be eaten by the Jews which were under it are put for all kind of meats which were clean and might lawfully be eaten by that Law And Rom. 10.9 where it is said That if thou shalt confess with thy mouth the Lord Jesus and shalt believe in thy heart that God hath raised him from the dead thou shalt be saved where one or two Articles of our Creed are put for the whole object of our Faith which conteins many Articles and points as well concerning our practice as our belief which if we believe not effectually it will not be enough to bring us to Salvation to believe and confess that Jesus is the Lord and that God raised him from the dead I have spoken under the Titles of Foreknowing and Holy of some things which may make to the better understanding of some passages of the eleventh Chapter to the Romans And I shall here adde by way of Appendix something for the better understanding or explanation of my meaning concerning some other passages thereof before I conclude The Apostle saith Chap. 11. verse 25 26. that when the fulness of the Gentiles is come in all Israel shall be saved as it is written there shall come out of Sion the Deliverer and shall turn away iniquity from Jacob c. By this Deliverer is meant our Lord Jesus Christ yet I do not conceive that the Lord Jesus Christ shall come in person to the Jews but that what is said of him here he will effect by such ministers or servants of his as he will make choise of whom he will so furnish for this purpose with all things necessary and convenient as that they shall win the greatest part of the Jews to the faith by which they shall be saved from their sins For many things are said and prophesied of Christ which yet Christ performed not by himself in his own person but by his Ministers For that I may give one example for many It was prophesied of Christ by Isaiah that he should be a light of the Gentiles Isaiah 49.6 And by old Simeon that he should be a light to lighten the Gentiles Luke 2.32 yet did not Christ fulfil these Prophesies in his own person but by his Apostles For if we consider him in his own person He was not sent but to the lost sheep of the House of Israel and so not to the Gentiles Mat. 15.24 But that Christ fulfilled these prophesies by his Apostles Saint Paul will teach us when he saith to the Jews seeing yee put the word of God from you and judge your selves unworthy of everlasting life Lo we turn to the Gentiles for so hath the Lord commanded us saying I have set thee to be a light of the Gentiles that thou shouldest be for salvation to the ends of the Earth Acts 13. ver 46 47. Nor do I conceive that there is any ground from hence to assert that the Jewes shall be gathered together under any one visible head but that this Prophesie may be fulfilled in them though they should live dispersed in many parts of the world as now they do That which is prophesied here of the conversion of the Jewes our Apostle saith shall be When the fulness of the Gentiles shall come in cap. 11. ver 25. That is when the full number of the Gentiles are come in which the Prophets speaks of Or when that number of Gentiles which God determined to bring in into his Church before he would extend that amplitude of Grace which is here spoken of to the Jewes is brought in But now when this number or fulness of the Gentiles shall be brought in I do not conceive either that all and Every one of the Gentiles of the world will be then saved Or that after this grace is extended to the Jewes the door of grace will be shut up for the same to those Gentiles which shall then remain in their sins and unbelief For as it is not probable that every particular Gentile will then believe so it is not probable that the extension of this grace of God to the Jewes will be an exclusion of the Gentiles from Gods grace which shall then remain in unbelief For if the fall of the Jewes be the Riches of the world and the diminishing of them be Riches of the Gentiles how much more their fulness Saith our Apostle verse 12 And again If the casting away of the Jewes be the reconciling of the world what shall the receiving of them be but life from the dead Verse 15. I shall adde nothing more Gentle Reader but here conclude this my Preface praying God to be our Guide in all things and rest Thine in the Lord WILLIAM DAY From my Study at Mapledurham Jan. 16. 1665. An Exposition upon Isaiah in Folio written by
the coppy by which he should have drawn a picture may be said 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and not the Limner only but the Picture also which through the unskilfulness of the Limner is drawn unlike the coppy And as the arrow and the picture so may we be said 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which through Adams sin do miss and come short of that Image in which Adam was made when he was endued with those gifts and graces which he had when he was in his best estate to which we should have been conform 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 therefore which is rendred here Peccare to sin is not spoken of us by reason of any sinful Act which we our selves have done in our own persons but by reason of that we have formally missed and come short of that Righteousness that is of those gifts and graces which were given to Adam for us aswel as for himself and which we miss and come short off by reason of Adams disobedience Ver. 13. For until the law sin was in the the world The Apostle prevents a tacite Objection here for whereas he said immediately before that all had sinned A man might object and say But how canst thou say Paul that all have sinned whereas there was no sin in the world for two thousand and four hundred years together that is from the time that Adam fell untill the time that the Law was given by Moses for thou thy self sayst Chap. 4.15 Where there is no Law there is no transgression And there was no Law in all that time This objection the Apostle prevents here saying For until the Law sin was in the world But sin is not imputed to wit for a transgression where there is no Law c. q. d. I acknowledge where there is no Law there is no Transgression but yet it followeth not that where there is no Transgression there is no Sin for though every transgression be a Sin yet every Sin is not a transgression Though therefore there was no transgression in the world from Adams time until the Law yet it follows not but that there might be Sin yea and there was Sin in the world before the Law What a transgression is in the Apostles language See Notes Cap. 4. ver 15. By the Law is here meant the Law which was given by Moses The Apostle when he said that all had sinned spoke as I said not of Actual but Original sin Yet the man in whose person the Apostle raiseth this tacite Objection which he here preventeth or answereth taketh it as though he spoke of actuall sins For of such sins is the Apostle to be understood as well as of Original sin when he saith For until the Law sin was in the world c. Where note that the Apostle doth not alwayes raise objections in the person of one kind of men but sometimes in the person of one kinde of men Sometimes in the person of another And here he raiseth the Objection which he here prevents or answereth in the person of such a one as mistook the meaning of his words when he said All have sinned as though he spoke of Actuall sins when he spoke only of Original sin So when he saith Chap. 6.14 Ye are not under the Law but under Grace Some utterly mistaking the sence of these words as though they were now absolutely freed from the Law in every respect and nothing but favour was to be shewed lived they never so dissolutely concluded from thence that now in this their estate of Christianity they might freely sin whom our Apostle meets with there when he saith What then shall we sin because we are not under the Law but under Grace God forbid And our Apostle raiseth or praeventeth even such objections because there may be some so weak as to raise them and because in his answer to them He can bring in such matter as he would not have them to whom he writes ignorant of And here he raiseth this Objection that by his answer he might shew how sin abounded that having shewed how sin abounded he might shew that when sin abounded grace did much more abound ver 20. But sin is not imputed To wit as a transgression Thus to limit this imputation we have a hint from the following words When there is no Law i. e When there is no Law openly and sensiibly given either by word of mouth as that which was given to Adam or by writing as that which was given by Moses Ver. 14. Nevertheless death reigned from Adam to Moses ever over them that had not sinned after the similitude of Adams transgression q d. Though sin be not imputed as a transgression when there is no Law openly or sensibly given yet nevertheless to shew that sin was in the world before the Law was given by Moses death which is the wages of sin reigned and exercised her power even over them that had not transgressed against any Law openly or sensibly given as Adam had Death reigned i. e. Death shewed or exercised her power or tyranny rather over them c. By slaying them for they dyed From Adam to Moses i. e. From the fall of Adam to the time in which the Law was given by Moses which was above two thousand and four hundred years That had not sinned after the Similitude of Adams transgression i. e. Who had not sinned like unto Adam who sinned against a Law given him openly and sensibly by Gods mouth Gen. 2.17 and therefore sinned by transgression Adams transgression i. e. Adams sin which was commited against a Law openly and sensibly given for such a sin doth the word Transgression signifie in our Apostles language as was said Cap 4.15 Who is the figure of him that is to come i. e. Who is the figure of Christ the second Adam who though he be now come into the world yet was he not come then but to come when death reigned from Adam to Moses Adam was a Figure or type of Christ only in a generall manner to wit because as Adam conveyed or derived something to his children or to his branches so did Christ to his But if we descend to particulars Adam could not be the Type or Figure of Christ but by a contrary comparison For Adam conveyed and derived sin and death to his children or to his branches but Christ conveyed or derived Grace that is the pardon of sin whereby they are justified and life to his Ver. 15. But not as the offence so also is the free gift q. d But yet the free gift supple which cometh by Christ upon his branches or upon his children Is not so supple for equality as the offence is supple which cometh by Adam upon his branches or upon his children but much exceeds it Or thus But yet not so mean as the offence is which cometh by Adam upon his branches or upon his children in its kind is the free gift which cometh by Christ upon his branches or upon his
the Gospel as it commands and giveth power to fulfil her commands so is it ready to pardon sin and iniquities Some when they hear me say that ye are not under the Law but under grace are ready to take from hence encouragement and liberty to sin But what if I said ye are not under the Law but under Grace shall we therefore take liberty to sin God forbid 16. Know ye not that to whom ye yield your selves servants to obey his servants ye are to whom ye obey whether of sin unto death or of obedience unto righteousness 16. Know ye not that to whom ye yield yourselves servants to obey his Servants ye are to whom ye obey whether ye yield your selves servants to sin to obey her and so become the Servants of sin which brings men unto death or whether ye yield your selves unto the Gospel which is the doctrine of obedience to obey her and so become the Servants of the Gospel which brings to righteousness or justification 17. But God be thanked that ye were the servants of sin but ye have obeyed from the heart that form of doctrine which was delivered to you 17. But God be thanked that though ye were sometimes the servants of sin yet ye have now obeyed the Gospel that form of doctrine which was delivered to you 18. Being then made free from sin ye became the servants of righteousness 18. Being therefore made free from sin and her service ye are become the servants of the Gospel which teacheth and commandeth righteousness 19. I speak after the manner of men because of the infirmity of your flesh for as ye have yielded your members servants to uncleanness and to iniquity unto iniquity even so now yield your members servants to righteousness unto holiness 19. I speak in speaking as I do of sin and of the Gospel under Metaphors taken and used amongst vulgar men as a vulgar man which is not acquainted with divine matters and that because of the weakness of your understanding being ye are not yet able to apprehend and bear the high and deep things of God Wherefore as while ye were the servants of sin ye yielded your members to sin as servants to work her work to wit iniquity Even so now being that ye are the servants of the Gospel which teacheth righteousness yield ye your members as servants to the Gospel to do her work to wit holiness 20. For when ye were the servants of sin ye were free from righteousness 20. For when ye were servants to sin ye were as men free from the Gospel which teacheth and commandeth righteousness and so carried your selves and did no work at all for her As therefore when ye were the servants of sin ye were as men free from the Gospel and so carried your selves and did no work for her So being that ye are now the servants of the Gospel be ye as men free from sin and so carry your selves and do no work for her 21. What fruit had ye then in those things whereof ye are now ashamed for the end of those things is death 21. But what fruit had ye then when ye were the servants of sin in those things whereof ye are now ashamed for the end of those things which ye did while ye were servants to sin is everlasting death 22. But now being made free from sin and become servants to God ye have your fruit unto holiness and the end everlasting life 22. But now being that ye are made free from sin and become the servants of the Gospel and so by consequence the Saints of God who is the Author of the Gospel ye have your fruit even holiness and the end of your doings will be everlasting life 23. For the wages of sin is death but the gift of God is eternal life through Jesus Christ our Lord. 23. For the wages which sin giveth to her servants which do her work is everlasting death but the gift which God bestoweth upon his servants which do his work is eternal life which he bestoweth upon them for Jesus Christ our Lords sake CHAP. VI. Ver. 1. What shall we say then In the twentieth verse of the former chapter the Apostle said that where sin abounded grace did much more abound Lest any therefore should think that he might continue in sin for this end that grace might abound And because Christians were defamed with the tenancy of such an opinion as appeareth Chap. 3. v. 8. The Apostle sheweth here the detestation even of such a thought as this is that Christians might continue in Sin that the grace of God might abound and that it is against the very Profession of Christianity Shall we continue in Sin c. i e. Shall we continue in our old course of sinning by adding Sin to Sin Note that the Apostle speaks here of such who had lived in Sin before their conversion to Christianity That grace may abound That is that the grace and favour of God may abound in pardoning our Sins or that God may have the more abundant occasion to shew his grace and favour to sinners Ver. 2. God forbid These words are words of abhorring and detesting as Chap. 3.4.6.31 How shall we that are dead unto Sin live any longer therein The Apostle calls those dead to Sin which are dead in respect of Sin That is which have renounced and cast off the Service of sin and the obedience which they were wont to yield to her and as the dead have no commerce with the living have no commerce with Sin as they were wont to have Or rather as Servants which are now dead are freed from their Masters by death so that their Masters have no command over them neither do they serve them So are they which are dead to Sin so freed from sin as that she hath no power to command them nor do they obey or serve her All which profess Christianity are dead to Sin by profession and by promise for in their very entrance and admission into the Church of Christ they promise and profess that they will renounce sin with her lusts And they which are Christians as well in truth as in profession are dead to sin not in promise and profession only But in truth and reality too for they are so mortified to sin as that they obey her not neither have they their wonted commerce with her If therefore we be dead to sin if it be but by promise and profession only how can we with any face live any longer to sin or in the obedience and service of sin But if we are dead to sin not only in promise and profession but also in truth and in reality too how can we possibly live to sin or in the service and obedience of sin while we are dead to her Thus are Christians two manner of ways said to be dead to sin First by promise and profession Secondly in truth and in reality And being any of these wayes dead to sin they cannot
Wherefore being that ye are now the servants of righteousness ye ought to be free from sin q. d. Yield your members servants to righteousness and wholly and only to Righteousness not at all to sin For when ye were servants of sin ye were free from Righteousness wherefore being that ye are now the servants of Righteousness ye ought to be free from sin Ye were free from Righteousness i. e. Ye did not the works which Righteousness commandeth but ye shewed or carried yourselves as if ye were free from being commanded by her or from being subject to her by slighting and not regarding what she would have done Or thus ye were free from Righteousness that is ye did not the works of Righteousness where to be free from Righteousness is put per Metonymiam causae for not to do the works of Righteousness For a man that is free will not ordinarily do the work of him from whom he is free Were free He alludes here to Civil freedom as he did before by a Metaphor From Righteousness He takes Righteousness here and speaks of it as he did ver 18. When he saith ye were free from Righteousness it is not to be understood that they were free de jure but only de facto for they were bound to do righteousness at all times though then when the Apostle saith here that they were free from Righteousness they had cast off her yoak and would not obey her but carried themselves to her as if they owned her no subjection Note here that the Apostle shews in this his discourse by their obedience past and present or by that they have obeyed and do obey righteousness that they are servants of righteousness And by that that they are the Servants of righteousness he shews again that they ought to obey righteousness for the future For these two do one infer the other Ver. 21. What fruit had ye then in those things whereof ye are now ashamed q d. But what benefit had ye or were ye like to have in those sins which ye are now ashamed even to think of The Apostle useth arguments here to perswade them never to return at all to the service of sin again but to continue wholly in the service of righteousness What fruit i. e. What benefit A Metaphor from Trees or the like What fruit had ye i. e. What fruit had ye or were ye like to have Syllepsis In those things whereof ye are now ashamed It is not likely that the Romans before their conversion and regeneration were better than the Corinthians of whom Saint Paul saith 1 Cor 3.6 9. that they or some of them were Fornicators Idolaters Adulterers Effoeminate Abusers of themselves with mankind Thieves Covetous Drunkards Revilers Extortioners which sins especially those of uncleanness which he seems especially to aim at here would make a regenerate man to blush at the very mention or thought of them This is the fruit of these and the like sins viz. Shame here and Eternal death hereafter if they be not broke off and washt away in the blood of Christ The end of those things is death viz. Death Eternal And therefore they were not like to bring any pleasant fruit in the end Being made free from sin See verse 18. And become the Servants of God He calls them the Servants of God here whom he called the Servants of Righteousness ver 18. Ver. 22. Ye have your fruit unto Holiness q. d. Ye have your fruit or your reward to wit Holiness Vnto Holiness The Greek is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 where note that this Preposition 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Vnto seemeth to be put here 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as Grammarians speak and to signifie as much as to wit q. d. Ye have your fruit to wit Holiness So doth the Preposition 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 seem to be taken Rom. 4.8 in those words 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which I render thus Who against hope believed in hope to wit that he should be the Father of many Nations Holiness By Holiness is not here meant meer holiness for they were holy before but further holiness or increase of holiness He opposeth holiness here to shame caused by their unclean and evill doings and so he may well do if we take holiness with its effect which effect is contrary to shame for it emboldeneth a man with an holy boldness Ver. 23. The wages of Sin is death i e. The wages which Sin payeth to her Servants is death He speaks of sin as of a Person yea as a Queen or Lady by a Prosopopoeia This of paying wages is a Metaphor taken from Souldiers pay For that which is here rendred Wages is in the Greek 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which is a Military word These words For the wages of sin is death relate to those of the 21. verse viz. The end of these things is death The gift of God i. e. The gift which God gives to his Servants and such as obey him Note here that what sin giveth to her Servants is Wages for she gives that which they deserve to wit Death But that which God gives his Servants is a free Gift such as they deserve not to wit Eternal Life which is above all their deserts And therefore he saith not The wages of God is Eternal Life but The gift of God is Eternal Life These words relate to those of the 22. verse The end Everlasting Life As 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which is rendred here Wages is observed to be a Military word so would some have 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which is here rendred a Gift to be a Military word too 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifieth such Wages as Kings were wont to give to their Souldiers for their daily pay And 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 say they was a Donative which Kings were wont to give to such Souldiers as they pleased above their due pay as some piece of Money or some Crown or some Badge or Ensign of honour or other And to this which Kings were wont to do to their Souldiers doth the Apostle say they here allude CHAP. VII 1. KNow ye not Brethren for I speak to them that know the law how that the law hath dominion over a man as long as he liveth 1. I said Chap 5.14 that ye are not under the law but under grace or under the Gospel Now for your better understanding O my Brethren the Jewes of what I said there I will amplifie and enlarge here a little and illustrate what I said by the Metaphor of an husband and a wife resembling the Law to an husband and you which were under the Law to a wife Know ye not therefore Brethren for I speak to you Jews which know and are acquainted with the writings of the Old Testament how that the Law which was given by Moses hath dominion over the man which is under it so that he cannot free himself from the obligation thereof so long as it liveth that is so
of the first Chapter and are an Illation from thence yet have they some reflection upon that latter part of the first Chapter also which mentioneth and setteth forth the sins of the Gentiles For whereas the Apostle did there reckon up many sins of the Gentiles and shewed that they were by the judgement of God worthy of death We must conceive that the Jew hearing this did approve the Sentence of God and proudly condemn the Gentiles as worthy of death for these their sins whereupon the Apostle taketh an occasion to condemn the Jew out of his own mouth seeing that he held the truth in unrighteousness as well as the Gentile and did the same things as the Gentiles did whom he condemned Thou art inexcusable i. e. Thou canst not be excused nor defended from being worthy of the same death as the Gentile is worthy of O Man That is O thou Jew For he turnes his speech here to the Jew that he might shew him in particular that he hath held the truth of God in unrighteousness as well as the Gentiles according to what he said Chap. 1. ver 18. Whosoever thou art that judgest i. e. Whosoever thou art which judgest the Gentile to be worthy of death because of the sins which he hath committed The Apostle supposeth here that the Jews had judged the Gentiles to be worthy of death by reason of their sins And this supposition was not avain supposition For the Jews were a censorious People ready upon all occasions to condemn the Gentiles and to justifie themselves Wherein thou judgest another c. i. e. With the same judgement or with the same sentence with which thou condemnest the Gentile and judgest him worthy of death thou condemnest thy self and judgest thy self Wherein i. e. Wherewith or by which Supple judgement Note that the Praeposition In according to the Hebrew manner may be taken for with or by Thou judgest The Apostle speaks not here of Publique judgement whereby a Publique Judge doth by his Authority condemn a Malefactor that is brought before him But of private censure and judgement whereby a Private man taketh upon him to censure or judge another Another By this other understand the Gentile For thou that judgest doest the same things i. e. Thou which judgest the Gentile to be worthy of death for his sins doest the same things and committest the same sins thy self for which thou judgest and condemnest the Gentile He that condemneth a man and judgeth him worthy of death for committing such or such a sin if he himself hath committed the like he condemns himself though not in words yet in deeds by condemning him Doest the same things These words are not so precisely to be understood as though the Apostles meaning were that every Jew which judged a Gentile worthy of death for his sins were alwayes guilty of the same special sins for which he did condemn the Jew though it fell out oftentimes even so to be But the words are generally to be understood As if he should say For thou which judgest another worthy of death for such and such sins Thou thy self doest the same though not in Specie yet in Genere and committest sins of as hainous a nature as those are of which he committeth He that condemneth a man for Adultery though he himself hath not committed Adultery yet if he hath committed Murther or a sin which deserveth as great a punishment as Adultery doth he condemneth himself and judgeth himself to be as worthy of punishment as he which commited Adultery Ver. 2. But we are sure that the judgment of God is according to truth against them which commit such things Between this and the foregoing verse we must understand that the Jew hearing the Apostle say that he to wit the Jew condemned himself in that wherein he judged the Gentile because he did the same things grew hot and angry with the Apostle for that the Apostle made no difference between a Gentile and him which was a Jew and broke out into these or the like words But what if I condemn the Gentile for doing those unseemly things which you reckoned up must I therefore condemn my self Is there no difference between a Gentile and me A Gentile he is of an unclean Stock he is blind and ignorant and uncircumcised by nature but I am a Jew by Birth and therefore one of that holy People which the Lord the God chose to be a special People to himself Deut. 7.6 And I am skilled in the Laws and Statutes which God gave to us but not to the Gentiles Psalm 147.19 And I am circumcised with that circumcision which is a token of the Covenant made between God and the Children of Abraham Gen. 17.11 I may therefore condemn a Gentile and yet not condemn my self though I had committed the same things which the Gentile had And to this Obiection of the Jew doth the Apostle here answer q. d. Thou O Jew art partial in passing thy Sentence For though thou condemnest the Gentile for the sins which he committeth yet thou wilt not give judgment against thy self though thou thy self doest the same things which the Gentile doth But yet we are sure that the judgment of God is according to truth against all them which commit such things And therefore it is as well against thee who art a Jew and art instructed in the Law and art circumcised as it is against a Gentile Note here that it is the Apostles usual manner of teaching to teach by answering tacite Objections and Questions The chief Scope of the Apostle in the first part of this his Epistle is to shew That Justification is not by the works of the Moral Law Yet because the Jew thought that he might be justified though he had not observed the Moral Law by being a Jew that is by being a Child of Abraham Matth. 3.9 And by the knowledge and skill that he had in the Law And by his circumcision the Apostle doth by the bie as he hath occasion confute this conceit also That he might shew that a man is justified by Faith onely We are sure i. e. We who have the Spirt of the Lord or we who have the true knowledge of Gods word and the right understanding thereof we are sure According to truth i. e. According to the true doings of men without any respect to their persons And therefore this that thou art a Jew and instructed in the Law and Circumcised shall profit thee nothing if thou hast sinned Ver. 3. And thinkest thou this O Man c. q. d. But tell me seriously O thou Jew which judgest the Gentiles worthy of death which do such things and doest the same thy self doest thou think in thy conscience that thou shalt escape the judgement of God only because thou art a Jew and art circumcised and learned in the law Such things i. e. Such sins as are mentioned from Chap. 1. ver 29. to the end of that chapter Shalt
the justice of God for the sins of a sinner by his death must needs be himself of infinite worth and his death of infinite value and so must needs be God And being God he need not to die twice or thrice that by one death he may justifie a sinner by another death save him from wrath to come by another death bring him to everlasting Glory But One death is sufficient for All. Therefore he which is justified by the death of such a one and Christ is such a one may be saved by his life that is may be saved by him though he dies not a second time From the sixth verse hitherto inclusive the Apostle hath proved that which he asserted ver 1. viz. That being justified by faith we have peace with God through our Lord Jesus Christ Now in the next verse following he will prove that which he asserted ver 2. to wit That we may rejoyce in the hope of the glory of God Ver. 11. And not only so but we also joy in God through our Lord Jesus Christ q d. And we shall not only be saved from wrath through his life but we shall also be made partakers of eternal Glory by reason of which we do even now joy in God the giver thereof through Jesus Christ Though it be a great mercy and blessing of God that he delivereth the ungodly from wrath yet doth not his mercy and blessing stay there but it brings him to everlasting glory And not only so i. e. And we shall not only be saved from wrath to come by his life But we also joy i. e. But we do also even now rejoyce In God That is in hope of the glory of God as it is expressed ver 2. Or in God as the giver of Glory in that we are assured he will bring us to Glory By whom we have now received the Atonement i. e. By whom we have already reconciliation with God And precious fruits also of that Reconciliation which are to us as pledges of everlasting glory 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 nunc now is put here for jam nunc i. e even now already The Atonement 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Reconciliation or Reconciliation to wit with God and pretious fruits or effects thereof Take the Atonement or Reconciliation here not barely for the Atonement or Reconciliation it self but for the effects thereof also by a Metonymical Syllepsis that is for the holy Ghost that is for the gifts of the holy Ghost which God giveth to those to whom he is reconciled which gifts are the effects of our Atonement and Reconciliation with God for those to whom God is reconciled He sanctifieth also For our Reconciliation and Justification are never without Sanctification And yet the gifts of the holy Ghost which are given to those which are reconciled to God or to whom God is reconciled are not only effects or signs of the Atonement or Reconciliation but they are also as an Earnest of the glory of God as we are taught 2 Cor. 1.22 2 Cor. 5.5 Ephes 1.14 And as we said before And so they confirm our hope of the glory of God from whence springs the Joy and Rejoycing here spoken of Ver. 12. Wherefore as by one man c. q. d. Wherefore being that we are justified by faith and reconciled to God through our Lord Jesus Christ and have peace with God through him and have hope of the glory of God having even now already received the atonement though we have lost much by Adam we have gained asmuch yea far more by Christ than we lost by him For as by one man to wit by Adam sin entred into the world and death by sin and so death passed upon all men for that all have sinned c. The Apostle takes an occasion here to shew the misery which befell us by Adams sin that so he might take occasion again from thence to illustrate and magnifie the love and benefit of Christ to us By one man By this one man is meant Adam Sin entred into the world i. e. Sin entred into all mankind The world is taken here for all mankind by a Synechdoche otherwise sin entred before this into the world when the Angels first sinned He speaks of sin as of a person when he saith sin entred This sin entred by Adam who was then the head of all mankind Entred into the world By the world is meant all Mankinde that is all men which are carnally and by the common law of generation descended from Adam for so the Apostle expounds himself when he saith And death passed upon all men He speaks of sin as of a person when he saith sin entred To the Traduction of this which is commonly called Original sin nothing is required but that a man be descended from Adam by true natural generation as being in his loins when he sinned And therefore is Original sin derived from Adam by naturall propagation to all which were in his loins when he sinned because that at the time in which he sinned he was the head of all Mankind so that if he had kept the commandment which God gave him of not eating of the tree of knowledge of good and evil they had been pure and clean of this Original sin and free from the subsequent miseries thereof But being that he broke it they were corrupted by it through want of those gifts and graces which were given him for them aswell as for himself and so do partake of his miseries as of the punishment thereof And death by sin i. e. And death by reason of sin By death understand by a Syllepsis not only death but all miseries and diseases which bring to death And so death passed upon all men i. e. And so all men died For that all have sinned i. e. For that all men have been made sinners by that one man as our Apostle speaks vers 19. This sin by which all men are made sinners formally and from whence they are so called is not any actuall sin but that which is commonly caled Original sin which is an effect of that actual disobedience of Adam by which he transgressed in eating the forbidden fruit Note that the Apostle leaveth this speech here imperfect and abrupt and without the sentence which should answer it by reason of other matter intervening untill the eighteenth verse where he taks up his speech again though in other words and makes it perfect and compleat That this supplement to wit by that one Man must be made up here See the eighteenth and nineteenth verses of this Chapter The Greek word which is here rendred have sinned is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 And 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 doth properly signifie a missing or er●ing from a mark which should have been hit And not onely the Archer but the Arrow which missed of the mark by the unskilfulness of the Archer may be said 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 So a Limner which misseth and erreth of
in them And because they were made Sinners therefore the judgement of God came upon them to condemnation ver 18. By the obedience of one This one is Christ Jesus and this his obedience is that which we read Philip. 2.8 whereby he was obedient unto death even the death of the Cross Shall many be made righteous i. e. Shall many be justified The Greek is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which is asmuch as 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is shall be justified So also is the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 taken Chap. 2.13 The righteousness here spoken of is that Righteousness which is called also justification and which consists in the pardon of or absolution from Sins and it is the effect of the obedience of that One that is of Christ Jesus This righteousness did Jesus Christ purchase for us by this his obedience and conferreth on all them which believe in him By the disobedience therefore of Adam were many made Sinners in that by his disobedience the offence that is Original Sin came upon them And by the obedience of Christ were many made righteous in that by his obedience they attained to that righteousness or justification by which they are freed acquitted and absolved from all both Original and Actual Sins Ver. 20. Moreover the Law entred that the offence might abound i. e. Moreover when the Law entred the offence did abound Note that the particle that is a sign here not of the intent but of the event so that the sence of this place is this q. d. The Law which forbiddeth Sin entred into the world in the middle time between Adam and Christ yet the event or issue of that was only this That Sin did abound He speaks here of the Law which was given by Moses and prevents an objection for whereas it was tacitly objected between the 12 and 13 verses That Sin was not in the world before the Law which objection the Apostle answered in the 13 and 14 verses It might be thus objected upon the Apostles answer But if we grant Sin to have been in the world before the Law yet surely when the Law came Sin was then no more in the world for the Law is a perfect remedy against Sin To this the Apostle here answereth that though the Law entred yet when it had entred it was so far from being a remedy against Sin as that Sin did abound and became more abundant by the Law than it was before I have said that these words are an answer to a tacit objection springing from the Apostles answer to a former objection supposed to arise between the 12 and 13 verses But some make them an answer to an objection supposed to arise out of the last words of the 19 verse viz. By the obedience of one man many were made righteous For a man may object from those words and say But why dost thou Paul say that by the obedience of One shall many be made righteous that is many shall be justified For there is no need of the obedience of another that any should be made righteous or that any should be justified since the Law was given for the Law is enough to make men righteous and is sufficient it self to preserve them from Sin To this the Apostle answereth q. d. The Law is so far from making men righteous and from preserving them from Sin as that the Law since it entred hath been an occasion that Sin hath much more abounded than it did before But which way soever of the two we conceive this objection to be raised or whether both ways it skills not much the matter tending still to the same purpose The Law entred that the offence might abound i. e. The Law entred that Sin might abound And therefore did Sin abound when the Law entred Because the Law worketh wrath for where there is no Law there is no Transgression as our Apostle speaketh Chap. 4.15 By the offence he means Actual Sin or Sins And that which he calls 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the offence here he calls 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Sin in the following words But where Sin abounded i. e. But when sin abounded Where is put here for When an Adverb of place for an Adverb of time That which he calls 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 before he calls 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 here as was there observed Grace did much more abound By Grace understand here the grace and favour of God which is said here to abound by reason of its effects to wit Remission of Sins or Justification whereby the Sinner which believeth is justified from all his sins or hath all his Sins forgiven him By how much the more and greater the Sins of a Sinner are By so much the greater and more abundant is the grace and favour of him which forgiveth them And by how much the greater Sinner a man acknowledgeth himself to have been so much the greater grace and favour and mercy doth he confess that he hath received by the remission and forgiveness of his sins as we may learn by the example of the woman which was a Sinner Luke 7. ver 38 c. And by the example of the Apostle himself 1 Tim. 1.12 He saith of the offence or of Sin that it did abound and of grace that it did much more abound Supple than Sin did And this he doth because the grace and mercy of God did prevail above the Sins of men though they did very much prevail and was more powerful than they For the grace and mercy of God did take away the guilt of all sins in the believer and therefore was more powerful in him to justifie him than all his Sins were to condemn him V. 21. That as sin hath reigned unto death i e. That as Sin hath shewed her power which was as the power of Queen over men by b●inging them to death and destruction through her guilt Even so might grace reign through Righteousness unto eternal life i. e. Even so might the grace or favour of God towards men like a Queen shew her power in them which believe in bringing them through the remission of their Sins and of the guilt thereof to eternal life By Righteousness is here meant Justification or Remission of sins See verses 17 and 18. And grace is said to bring men to eternal life through Righteousness that is by Remission of Sins or Justification Because God glorifieth none whom he doth not Justifie And because he doth not only vouchsafe to justifie Sinners from their sins if they believe But doth also bring them when he hath Justified them to life eternal if they persist in their faith Note here that when the Apostle saith that grace reigneth through righteousness unto everlasting life his meaning is not that grace exempteth us so from death as that we shall never die but his meaning is that grace doth confer life so unto us and so exempt us from death as that death shall not always have dominion
Jesus Christ our Lord This he saith because it is by the merits of Jesus Christ and his efficacy that we are brought from the death of sin to the life of God The Apostle as you see makes an exhortatory conclusion here by which he applieth to his present purpose what he said of the death and life of Christ Ver. 12. Let not sin reign therefore in your mortall Body He speaks of sin here as of a Mistress a Lady or Queen by a Prosopopoeia Sin is then said to reign in us when she stirs up naughty motions in us sutable to our own corruptness and we follow them and obey them as commands by consenting to them and putting them in execution This corollary or conclusion which the Apostle here useth may be gathered either in particular from the foregoing verse or in general from what he hath said from the third verse hitherto In your m●rtal Body i. e. The Body is to be taken here by a Synechdoche for the whole man for sin where she reigneth reigneth not only in the body but also in the soul and her works are not wrought only in the body but also in the powers and facul●ies of the soul for her works are not only Adultery Fornication Vncleanness Lasciviousness and the like but also Emulation Wrath Strife Seditions Heresies Gal. 5. ver 19 20. The sence therefore of these words Let not sin reign in your mortal body is this Let not sin reign in you while you are in this mortal life He saith Let not sin reign in your body using a Synechdoche here because the effects of sin are most seen in the body and he adds the Epithite Mortal to admonish us of the evil which sin brings for it was sin which made our bod●es mortal and subject to death which had it not been for sin had not died As also to put us in mind of our mortality here that we might not defer the seeking of that immortality which shall be hereafter as also to put us upon the watch because lust which War against the soul are prone to rise in our bodies while we are here in this mortal life clothed with these mortal bodies of ours That ye should obey it in the lusts thereof i. e. Note that the word Thereof is to be referred not to the word sin but to the word body as will easily appear by the Greek where the word Sin and the word Body are of divers Genders Sin of the Foeminine and Body of the Neuter The same lusts are called the lusts of sin and the lusts of the body And they are called the lusts of sin because sin stirs them up or because they proceed from sin as from the first mover And the lusts of the body because they are stirred up and received in the body To obey sin in her lusts or in the lusts of the body is all one with obeying sin or obeying the lusts of sin As it is all one to obey a King in his commands or to obey a King or to obey a Kings commands By lusts understand here motions to evil as to Adultery Murder Theft Drunkeness and the like proceeding from sin while she tempts us to these and the like evils These we are said to obey when we assent to them and readily fulfill them Ver. 13. Neither yield your members as instruments of unrighteousness q. d Neither yield ye the members of your bodies to be as instruments of sin for her to work unrighteousness or wickedness thereby He speaks of Sin as of a Person or Lady by a Prosopopoeia Your members By the members are here meant the members of the body which are ordained as instruments of the body to work or act by And by a Synechdoche the faculties or vertues of the soul too which are as the instruments by which the soul performeth her operations Sin will if she can make use of all the instruments of man for her work and will be ready to command them and call for them all to serve her if we will be ready to obey and yield them up to her Service He expresseth the members of the body here because he mentioned the body before ver 12. But as the body was taken there by a Synechdoche for the soul also yea for the whole man so must the members of the body be taken here as I said by a Senechdoche for the faculties of the soul too that is for the Instruments of the whole man Of unrighteousness Vnrighteousness is to be taken here generally as cap. 1.18 for all or any manner of wickedness or wicked actions The Genitive case therefore of unrighteousness is Genitivus effecti Vnto sin i. e. Unto sin as to your Queen or Mistress for her to dispose of them Yield yourselves unto God To wit as obedient Servants or Subjects to be ruled and commanded by him and him only As those that are alive from the dead i. e. As behoveth or becometh those which are alive from the dead It was God which raised us from death to life it behoveth therefore and becometh us being that we are quickened by him to live to him For therefore did he quicken us that henceforth we should not live to ourselves or sin but to him that quickeneth us See 2 Cor. 5.15 As alive from the dead By the dead are here meant such as are dead in sin And what these are and how these differ from those which are dead to sin See Notes ver 2. By the living or those which are alive are here meant such as live the life of righteousness that is such as are enabled by God to work righteousness and walk uprightly And your Members What is meant by our Members I said a little before Of Righteousness Righteousness is to be taken here for all manner of holiness or good and holy actions and it is of equal latitude with unrighteousness mentioned a little before to which it is opposed This Genitive of Righteousness is Genitivus Effecti as the former Genitive of Vnrighteousness was Vnto God To wit as to your King to whom ye must yield obdience in all things what he calls for Ver. 14. For sin shall not have dominion over you i. e. For sin though she hath had dominion over you heretofore when ye were not as yet under grace and drew you by her power to give the consent of your wills to her motions and with the members of your body to fulfil her lusts so that ye yielded not your selves and your members as Instruments unto God yet now she shall not have such dominion over you Then sin is said to have dominion over us when she can by her power and strong motions and lusts draw us to consent to those her motions and with our members and faculties to fulfil those her lusts so that we yield our selves to her and not to God He speaks of sin as of a Queen or Lady or Mistress by a Prosopopaeia The Apostle having exhorted those
long as it standeth in force and is not abrogated Surely you do For the case between them which were under the law and the law it self is as the case which is between a woman and her husband 2. For the woman which hath an husband is bound by the law to her husband so long as he liveth but if the husband be dead she is loosed from the law of the husband 2. Now then as the woman which hath an husband is bound by the Law to her husband to cleave to him and to take him onely for her husband so long as he liveth but if her husband be dead she is free from the Law by which she was bound to her husband to have him only and may now lawfully be married to another man So the man wh●ch is under the Law of Moses is bound to that Law so that he cannot free himself from the obligation thereof and betake himself to any other praescript of Religion so long as that Law which is as it were an husband to him liveth and is in force but if the Law which is as his husband be dead and out of force he may betake h●mself to another praescript of Religion without offence 3. So then if while her husband liveth she be married to another man she shall be called an Adulteresse but if her husband be dead she is free from that law so that she is no adulteress though she be married to another man 3. So then as if while her husband liveth the wife be married to another man she is an adulteresse But if her husband be dead she is free from the Law that bound her to that her husband onely and she is now no adulteresse though she be married to another man Even so a man which is under the Law as a wife under her husband if while the Law liveth and is in force he betakes himself to another manner of Religion is a kind of adulteress and may suffer punishment for so doing But if the Law be dead and out of force he is now free from the Law and is no adulteress though he betake himself and is married to another praescript of Religion 4. Wherefore my Brethren ye also are becom dead to the law by the body of Christ that ye should be married to another even to him who is raised from the dead that we shovld bring forth fruit unto God 4. Wherefore Brethren that ye may not be accounted as spiritual whores or adulteresses by being married to another husband because ye were once under the Law of Moses and married as it were to that as to an husband The Law is become dead being mortified by the body of Christ upon the Crosse that ye should be lawfully married to another even to Christ the Author and Subject of the Gospel which is a prescript of Religion different from that of the Law who though he was dead yet is raised from the dead again that we should bring forth good works as Children to him who though he was Man yet was God also 5. For when ye were in the flesh the motions of sins which were by the law did work in our members to bring forth fruit unto death 5. And this that we should bring forth good works as children to him is but just and aequal for when we were under the law in a carnal and fleshly condition the motions of sin which were occasioned by the law did work so in our members as that they brought forth evil works as children unto the law as the law is the ministration of death 6. But now we are delivered from the law that being dead wherein we were held that we should serve in newness of spirit and not in the oldness of the letter 6. But now we are delivered from the Law the Law being dead under which we were held that we should serve God and his Christ in that new kind of life which the Gospel worketh and not live in that old course of sin which was occasioned by the lavv 7. What shall we say then Is the law sin God forbid Nay I had not known sin but by the law for I had not known lust except the law had said thou shalt not covet 7. But because I said we were delivered from the Law and that we should not live in that old course of sin which was by the law what shall we conclude from thence Shall we conclude from thence that the law is a genuine cause of sin God forbid Nay to confute that I had not known sin at least so vvell as novv I do but by the lavv For I had not knovvn sin to have been sin in the invvard motions and desires thereof though they broke not out into outvvard act except the lavv had said as it saith in the tenth Commandment thou shalt not covet 8. But sin taking occasion by the Commandment wrought in me all manner of concupiscence For without the Law sin was dead 8. But yet Sin taking occasion by that Commandment of the law viz. Thou shalt not covet vvrought in me all manner of lust and concupiscence for before the law entred sin lay as it vvere a sleep yea and vvas dead in comparison of vvhat she vvas after the Lavv came in 9. For I was alive without the law once but when the commandment came sin revived and I died 9. For that I might here feign such a Person as had lived both before the law and under the law and put on such a Person the better to teach what I am about to teach I lived an innocent life once before the law was given by Moses in comparison of what I lived afterwards But when the law was given by Moses and that commandment of the law viz. Thou shalt not covet came to my knowledge sin shewed her strength and power by stirring up all manner of lusts in me and I died to innocency so that I was not so innocent and unblamable now as I was before 10. And the commandment which was ordained to life I found to be unto death 10. And that commandment viz. Thou shalt not covet which was given and ordained of God as a means to bring men to an holy and righteous life and which rewarded them with life that kept it I found by experience to be an occasion to bring me to death the death to innocency first and after that to death everlasting 11. For sin taking occasion by the commandment deceived me and by it slew me 11 For sin taking occasion by that commandment allured me with the baits of pleasure and honour and profit and the like which she pretended to me to follow her motions contrary to the Commandment and so I following her she deceived me and by it slew me by depriving me of that innocency which otherwise I should have retained and making me guilty of eternal death 12. Wherefore the law is holy and the commandment holy and just and good 12. Wherefore notwithstanding what I
wedlock when he saith That we may bring forth fruit unto God The sence therefore of these words is q. d That being married to him that is raised up from the dead we should by the seed of his grace conceive and bring forth fruit unto him who also is God Note that the Apostle changeth the person here from the third to the first which he doth for modesty sake that he may comprehend himself in this his speech The fruit or children here spoken of or meant are good works Vnto God That is unto Christ who was raised from the dead who though he was true man yet was he true God also Wives bring forth children to their own husbands not to others by God therefore is meant Christ here Note that the Apostle proves here that the believing Jews were delivered not only from the imperfection of the Law but also from the obligation of it to wit as it was given by Moses though it had been sufficient for his purpose to shew that they were delivered from the Imperfection of the Law only Ver. 5. When we were in the flesh That is When we were Carnal or in a Carnal estate addicted to the profits and pleasures of this life c. There were few under the Law which were spiritual and minded spiritual things but they were for the most part carnal and minded carnal things And they which were spiritual and minded spiritual things were not so nor did they so by the sole power of the Law so that being that all which were under the law that is under the imperfection of the Law and which had no help but what the Law afforded were Carnal and minded Carnal things The Apostle takes those which were in the flesh while he speaks of the Jews which were under the Law And those which were under the Law that is which were under the Imperfection of the Law for the same For the deliverance from this estate which he here speaks of he calls the Deliverance from the Law ver 6. The motions of Sins i. e. The motions of sins which we felt in our selves provoking moving or enticing us to commit sin or produce sin or to follow them Note that this Genitive of sins is Genitivus Causae And that Sins raise motions in us sub ratione causae finalis while we apprehend them as some pleasant or profitable things Which were by the Law That is which were occasioned by the law Supple as by our husband For he speaks of the law still in allusion to an husband as he did before These motions are said to have been by the law because sin being refrained and curbd in by the Law doth the more she is refrained and curbd in the more break out and shew her self in these her motions in sinful men and so will do in sinful men till grace be poured into their hearts whereby they restrein sin and hold her in Nitimur in vetitum semper cupimusque negata This is the manner of sinful nature and such as are accustomed to sin always to endeavour for that which is forbidden and to desire that which is most denied The law doth in a manner speak only to the outward ear and that is not of power alone to turn the hearts of carnal men from their carnal ways yea it makes them the worse by her speaking to them But yet the fault is not in the Law but in them The Law is only the occasion of evil motions not the true Genuine natural cause thereof And that which is good yea very good may be the occasion of that which is evil yea very evil Did work in our members That is q. d. did play their part in our members where they were not idle but very active In our members i. e. In the members of our Body See Notes Chap. 6. ver 13. To bring forth fruit unto death q. d. So that we did bring forth fruit or children and such fruit or children as death did delight and take pleasure in By death he meaneth eternal death and he speaks of it here as of a Person by a Prosopopoeia The fruit or children here spoken of or meant are evil works or actual Sins which are therefore pleasing unto death and such as death delights in because they make them which commit them food for her For as the temporal death feeds upon the bodies of some in the Grave Psal 49.14 So doth eternal death feed upon the souls of others in Hell Note that the particle To signifieth here not the intent only but the event also A question may be here asked why the Apostle did not say to bring forth fruit unto the Law as he said ver 4. That we should bring forth fruit unto God that is to Christ when as he is treating here of the opposition between the Law and Christ Answ Because Sins may not be said to be the fruit of the Law because they are both forbidden and punished by the law But they may be said to be the fruit of death because they make men children of death as the Hebrews speak that is worthy of death Thus some But yet I conceive under correction that by death the Law may be here meant which is called the ministration of death and the ministration of condemnation 2 Cor. 3. ver 7. 9. And therefore may be called death by a Metonymie And it is no absurdity to give the effects which are attributed to death to the Law when we give them and attribute them to the Law not as to the cause but only as to the occasion thereof For it is written ver 10 And the Commandment which was ordained to life I found to be unto death And thus the Antithesis here in hand will well hold out The Apostle seemeth to mention this and to shew how it was with them while they were under the Law in the flesh That now being they were delivered from the Law and from the flesh they might be more careful and more diligent to do those things which were pleasing to God in newness of Spirit abandoning the oldness of the Letter V. 6. But now we are delivered from the law that being dead wherein we held i. e. But now as the Wife is loosed from her Husband if he be dead ver 2. so are we who were as a Wife to the Law delivered from the law which is or was our husband by the death of the Law The Law is to be taken here as it was Chap. 6.14 and Chap. 7. ver 1 viz. For the whole Law of Moses as it was given by Moses and so precisely given without the grace of the Gospel And in this sence to be delivered from the Law and to be delivered from the flesh will signifie both one and the same thing That being dead wherein we were held i. e. The Law under which we were held bound as a Wife under her Husband so long as he liveth being dead By the death of the Law he
by Moses and so personates them as if they were but one single person Theophylact. and Saint Chrysostome before him interpret this place by such a figure This figure 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or of personating others the Apostle doth especially use when he speaks of things which would not be so pleasing to them to whom they truely be long and he doth it First for modesty sake and secondly that he might give the lesse offence to them Ver. 10. And the Commandment which was ordained to life and the Commandment which was ordained of God for this end that they to whom it was given might lead an innocent holy and just life And by so living might attain to an happp and blessed life as a reward thereof I found to be unto death i. e. I found to be an occasion to bring me to death viz. a death to innocencie and holiness and righteousness first and then to the guilt of aeternal death as a reward or punishment of that former death Ver. 11. For sin taking occasion by the Commandment c. Note here that the Law did not if we speak properly so much as give an occasion to sin to stir us up to evill But sin took an occasion by the Law He speaks of sin as of a Person Deceived me He saith deceived me because sin guilds over her baits and her evil mot ons with the appearance of some good which though they are apprehended as good appear at last in their own colours even evill as they are so that the Sinner at length sees that he was deceived by them And by it slew me It slew him by taking away his life of innocency first And then making him guilty of aeternall death Ver. 12. Wherefore the Law is holy i. e. Wherefore the Law is separate f om all evill that is Wherefore the Law is good notwithstanding that which hath been obj●cted against it To be holy signifieth properly to be separate from other things by way of eminency and in a part●cular manner that is said to be holy which is separate from all manner of naughtiness This conclusion or inference is drawn chiefly from those words Viz. I had not known Sin but by the Law c. And the Commandment holy and just and good By the Commandment is meant the tenth Commandment as before This Commandment may be sa●d to be holy because it forbids those lusts and desires which tend to the immediate dishonour of God And just in that it forbids those lusts and desires which tend to the immediate hurt of our Neigbour and good in that it forbids those lusts and desires which tend to the immediate hurt of our selves There is a difference between a Law and a Commandment for a Law is a body of commands or commandments given by a Law-giver As when we say The Law of Moses or the Law of Christ each of which contains many particular commands But a Commandment is but a particular mandat or praecept or branch of a Law which commands or forbids some particular or special thing to be done or left undone Ver. 13. Was then that which is good made death unto me i. e. Was then the Commandment which is in it self good the cause of death to me Or was the Commandment which was in it self good the cause why I died to Innocency first and then through that became guilty of eternal death That which is good By that which is good he meaneth the Commandment of which he spoke in the foregoing verse And under the name of good he comprehends here that which he called Holy and Just and Good before God forbid See ver 7. But sin Supple was made the cause of death to me That it might appear sin i. e. So that it did appear to be sin indeed sin in her own colours by those effects which she wrought in me Note that the particle That is here a note or sign of the Event Working death in me by that which is good i e. By working death or because she wrought death in me by the Commandment which was good The death here spoken of may be understood not only of death to Innocency but also of Eternal death of which the death to Innocency makes the nocent man guilty That Sin by the Commandment might become exceedingly sinful i. e. So that Sin taking occasion by the Commandment and by that working all manner of Concupiscence in me did shew her self exceedingly Sinful He speaks of Sin as of a Person by a Prosopopoeia and therefore calls Her sinfull Ver. 14. For we know that the Law is spiritual i. e. For we all very well know that the Law is Spiritual and commands spiritual things The Law is spiritual The Law is said to be spiritual because it commands spiritual things and ordereth of it self to a spiritual life And now if the Law be such it cannot be made death or be the cause of death in it self to any one By this he proves what he said first in the former verse viz. that that which is good that is That the Law was not made death unto him But I am carnal sold under Sin But I at my best estate am carnal being addicted to the affections and lusts of the flesh which move me contrary to the Law and am carried away with them yea I am as very a servant or slave to Sin as he which is bought or sold in a market is a slave or servant to him which bought him By this he proves that which he said last in the former verse viz. That it was Sin which was made death unto him Note here that the Apostle speaks in the person of one which was under the Law yet which had attained to the highest degree in that Estate that a man could attain to which was not yet in Christ For every one which was under the Law had not such a mind as he here speaks of in the latter part of this Chapter And there were divers degrees of them which were under the Law Suppose therefore that the Apostle speaks here of such an one as that Scribe was which our Saviour speaks of Mark 12.34 of whom he says that he was not far from the Kingdom of God Sold under Sin i. e. As very a servant or slave to sin as he which is bought or sold in a Market is a servant or slave to him that buyes him He alludes here to servants or slaves which are bought and sold in a Market to be under the power or command of the Buyer so that to be sold under Sin is as it were to be sold to Sin to be under her and her command As he alludes here to a servant or slave which is bought or sold in a Market So he alludes to a servant or slave which is taken in the wars ver 23. When S. Paul saith here that he is carnal sold under Sin And when he saith ver 23. I see another Law in my members warring against the
in his will as we may gather from those words ver 15. What I would do not And from those words ver 18. To will is present with me In the Law of God By the Law of God he means the Law which was given by Moses and yet perhaps his delight might be not the whole Law but only in some particular commands thereof when he saith I delight in the Law of God after the inward man c. After the inward man The Greek is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. e according to the inward man where the preposition 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifies a conformity to a thing as 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Xenoph. Non facium secundum Regis literas i. e. They will not do according to the Kings Letters or as the Kings Letters direct them or would have them to do Note that the inward man or the mind that is not the subject here of this delight here spoken of but the will rather or the reasonable appetite is the subject thereof for the mind is not properly said to rejoyce or delight in any thing but the mind propoundeth the Law of God to the will as a thing delectable and perswadeth her to delight in it and to practise it and the Will doth take some small delight in it or in somethings which it commands and would practice them according to what the mind propounds to her perswades her to do but her willingness is imperfect and in efficacious By the inward man he means the mind as appeareth ver 25. which be calls a Man per Senechdochen integri and the inward man because the mind and the operations thereof are remote from the senses of other men so that they cannot perceive them in themselvs Note that whereas the Apostle doth elsewhere make mention of the old man and the new man these are not the same with the outward man and the inward man here for the old man and the new man are so called per Metonymiam subjecti by reason of the diverse qualities in man But the outward man and the inward man are so called per Senechdochen by reason of the parts of a man Ver. 23. But I see another Law in my members i. e. But I find or perceive another mover or actor in my body I see That is I find or perceive by experience He speaks here after the manner of the Hebrews which call all sensations and perceptions by the name of seeing Another Law What he means here by a Law in a general sence see Notes ver 21. In particular he calls the motions of the carnal appetite which some call also concupiscence a Law here In my members i. e. In my body Synechdoche Warring against the Law of my mind i. e. Warring against my mind which is as a Law Or warring against the dictates of my mind which are as a Law See Notes ver 21. His carnal appetite and concupiscence or his carnal affections are said to war against his mind or the dictates of his mind by a Metaphor taken from wars because the carnal affections and desires which flow from his carnal appetite or concupiscence are contrary to the dictates of his mind for they incite to that which is contrary to the Law of Moses but the dictates of the mind speak well of the Law and say it should be kept And bringing me into captivity to the Law of sin i. e. And overcoming me and taking me as it were a Prisoner and making me a Captive and delivering me up as a slave to sin He persists in his Metaphor taken from the wars where they which are overcome by them which serve the Conqueror in his wars are delivered up to the Conqueror to be made Servants and Slaves at his will To the Law of sin i. e. To sin which is as a Law or to the motions of sin which are as a Law Why sin or the motions of sin are said here to be a Law See Notes ver 21. When the mind or understanding of such a man as the Apostle here personates propounds to his will the Law of God as a thing delectable and to be kept as a thing honest and good and useth motives and perswasions thereunto the will doth sometimes incline to it and produce an act of delight and willingness that way But then the carnal appetite or concupiscence or carnal affections arise in him with their pretences of some apparent good and tempteth the will from that real good which the mind propounded to her to follow them And they being stronger than the mind the Will and the whole man is carried after them and so become guilty of a new sin and are made daily more and more prone to sin than they were before And this is that which the Apostle here sayes under the Metaphor of warring and taking Captive Which is in my members i. e. Which is or which dwelleth in me or in my body Synechdoche Ver. 24. O wretched man that I am who shall deliver me from the body of this death Better as it is rendred in the margin of our Bibles Who shall deliver me from this body of death That is who shall deliver me from these my deadly enemies Viz. From my carnal affections and from Sin c. He whom Saint Paul personates cries out here in the sense of his sins and the torture of his conscience which is tortured therewith For the wicked'st men that are do sometimes feel the torture and horrour of their conscience for their sins when they seriously think of the Law of God and their own doings It will be no wonder that a man under the Law should cry out O wretched man that I am who shall deliver me from this body of death When that young m●n in the Gospel who was under the Law For we cannot say That he was under grace said unto Christ Good Master What good thing shall I do that I may have ●ternal life Mat. 19. v. 16. From this body of d●ath That is from this deadly body that is ●●om these my deadly enemies which will destroy me and bring me to everlasting death at last He calls his deadly Enemies to wit sin and her lusts and d●sires And the Flesh and his carnal affections A Body by a Metaphor drawn from Wars which Metaphor he holds hitherto for an Army is ordinarily called a Body and a Company of Horsemen or Foot-men are called a Body of Horse and Foot And by the like kind of Metaphor particular Sins are called the Body of sin Chap. 6. ver 6. Our Apostle calls sins also the Body of Sins Coloss 2.11 though by another Metaphor Of death That is deadly 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of death for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Deadly where a Substantive of the Genitive case is put after the Hebrew manner for an Adjective Ver. 25. I thank God through Jesus Christ our Lord For what he thanks God is not here expressed for there
is an Ellipsis in these words The words therefore may be made up thus q. d. I thank God that he hath delivered me from this deadly body that is from this company of deadly enemies through our Lord Jesus Christ If we take these words in this sence then we must say that the Apostle speaks these words in his own person as he was regenerated and delivered from the Law and then they are to be read as it were with a Parenthesis He that sees the misery of other men how grievious it is and was in the same misery once himself or liable thereunto and is delivered from it will break out in thanks to God for his great goodness in delivering him upon sense of that mercy The aforesaid words of the Apostle may also be made up thus q. d. I thank God that he hath shewed me a way how to be delivered from this deadly body or from this body of deadly enemies For he hath made away to deliverance by Jesus Christ our Lord. And this may he speak which is under the Law and yet hath so well profited as that seeing no hope of salvation by the Law sees salvation in Christ though he be not as yet engrafted into Christ for the Law was a Schoolmaster to bring us to Christ that we may be justified by faith saith our Apostle Gal. 3.24 Such a one though he be yet under the Law I account not to be altogether under the imperfection of the Law though he be not yet engrafted into Christ and Regenerate So then with my mind I my self serve the Law of God q. d So then I my self though I am carnal do with my mind serve the Law of God and by so doing do acknowledge that the Law of God is spiritual This hath its immediate connexion with the 21 or 23 verses And he speaks it in the person of such a man as I told of v. 14. He saith that he serves the Law of God with his mind because he approves of the Law of God as good with his mind and propounds it with his mind to his will to be embraced and followed by her as a real good which is the duty of the mind to do and in which the mind by so doing is subservient to the Law of God whose duty is to teach men what they should do and to stir them up to the doing of it But with the flesh the Law of sin What is meant here by flesh See ver 18. By the Law of sin he means sin it self which he calls the Law of sin that it may answer those words The Law of God And because it doth as a Law incite men to follow her lusts which are as it were her commands See ver 21. They serve sin which follow the lusts and desires of sin and put those things in practice which she allureth or inciteth to By saying But with the flesh I serve the Law of sin he acknowledgeth that he is Carnal and sold under sin So that in this last verse he brings up his Conclusion which he draweth from his discourse from the 14. verse hitherto to that which he said in the 14 verse viz. We know that the Law is spiritual but I am carnal sold under sin CHAP. VIII 1. THere is therefore now no condemnation to them which are in Christ Jesus who walk not after the flesh but after the spirit 1. I said Chap. 5. ver 20 21. That when sin abounded grace did much more abound so that as sin hath reigned unto death even so grace might reign through righteousness unto eternal life by Jesus Christ our Lord Wherefore that being so there is now no Condemnation to them which are engrafted by faith into Christ Jesus who are such as walk not after their sensual and carnal appetite and affections but walk after the spirit to wit the spirit of Regeneration with which we are endued and follow her inclinations and so serve not sin 2. For the Law of the spirit of life in Christ Jesus hath made me free from the law of sin and death 2. And let not any one which is in Christ Jesus say nay but I cannot but serve sin For the spirit of Regeneration which giveth life the spirit which we have received by Christ hath made us free from sin which bringeth unto death so that sin hath now no power or dominion over us whereby to make us to obey her will 3. For what the Law could not do in that it was weak through the flesh God sending his own Son in the likeness of sinful flesh and for sin condemned sin in the flesh 3. I say that the spirit of Regeneration that spirit which giveth life and which we received by Christ I say not that the Law hath made us free from sin For by reason of the impotency of the Law in that it was weak in comparison of sin which dwelt and reigned in us God sending his own Son in the likeness of sinful man and for this end that he might destory sin hath destroyed sin by his body which was crucified for us by which also he purchased and gave us the Spirit of Regeneration 4. That the righteousness of the Law might be fulfilled in us who walk not after the flesh but after the spirit 4. That by the spirit of Regeneration which he purchased for us and which he hath given us the Righteousness which the Law prescribes should be fulfilled in us which are justifyed and are engrafted into Christ by faith who are such as walk not after our carnal or sensual appetite and affections But such as walk after the spirit of Regeneration with which we are endued and follow her inclinations 5 For they that are after the flesh do mind the things of the flesh but they that are after the Spirit the things of the Spirit 5. I say who are such who walk not after our sensual or carnal appetite or affection but such as do walk after the spirit of Regeneration with which we are endued and follow her inclinations For though they which are carnal love and follow after their sensual and carnal appetite and affections they that are spiritual do love follow after and delight themselves in these things to which the spirit which is in them inclineth them to 6. For to be carnally minded is death but to be spiritually minded is life and peace 6. And not without cause for to love follow and delight in those things which the sensual or carnal appetite or affection moveth to will certainly bring everlasting death But to love follow and delight in those things which the spirit of Regeneration inclineth is that which brings everlasting life and peace 7. Because the carnal mind is enmity againsh God for it is not subject to the Law of God neither indeed can be 7. For the man which loves follows after and delights in those things to which his sensual or carnal appetite and affections tempt him to is an
think it not strange my brethren that the sword should be drawn to kill us for this is our portion of old as it is written Psal 44.22 for thy sake O Lord are we which are thy servants and fear thy great Name killed one after another all the day long we are accounted of no o●herwise than of sheep appointed to be slain so little esteem is made of our blood 37. Nay in all these things we are more than conquerors through him that loved us 37. But shall any of these things I say separate us from the love which God sheweth us for Christs sake No for even in the midst of these things doth God so continue and shew his love to us as that we are through the effects of his love and by the assistance and aid that he out of his love giveth us not only Conquerors over all these things but more than Conquerors 38. For I am perswaded that neither death nor life nor angels nor principalities nor powers nor things present nor things to come 38. Wherefore I am perswaded that nothing which we can suffer either in our life or at our death no nor whatsoever all the devils of Hell whether they be Angels or Principalities or Powers can lay upon us Nor the afflictions which we suffer at the present nor the afflictions which are threatned against us for the future 39. Nor Height nor depth nor any other creature shall be able to seperate us from the love of God which is in Christ Jesus our Lord. 39. Nor any creature which is in heaven above or any creature which is in earth beneath or any other creature whatsoever if they should all combine themselves against us to afflict us to the utter most shall be able to separate us from the love of God which he sheweth to us for the merits of Christ Jesus our Lord. CHAP. VIII Ver. 1. There is therefore now no condemnation to them which are in Christ Jesus This Conclusion or Corollary is drawn from that which the Apostle taught in the fifth Chapter of this Epistle and especially in the eighth ninth tenth eleventh verses and so forward Not from that which went immediately before in the precedent Chapter For the sixth and seventh Chapter the Apostle spends in answering objections which rose one after another from the latter end of the fifth Chapter hitherto so that they two chapters come between this and the first Chapter as it were by the By. No Condemnation This is part of the happiness of him which is justified by Faith To them which are in Christ Jesus i. e. To them which believe in Christ Jesus and so are made members of his body and inserted into him by saith as Branches into the vine That is to them which are justified by Faith as he speaks Chap. 5. ver 1. Who walk not after the flesh but after the spirit i. e. Which follow not their sensual or carnal appetite and affections in whatsoever they move them to Who walk not after the flesh The flesh is to be taken here for the sensual or carnal appetite and affections And to walk after the flesh is to follow that sensual or carnal appetite and affections and to be carried away with them which way soever they move which cannot be done without sin The Speech is Metaphorical But after the Spirit i. e. But after the motions and inclinations of the Holy Ghost which dwelleth in them as our Apostle speaks 2 Timoth. 1.14 The Apostle addes this who walk not after the Flesh but after the Spirit not as a note of distinction as though there were some in Christ Jesus or some which were justified by faith which did or might walk after the Flesh and others which did or might walk after the Spirit but he adds it as a note of declaration to declare what all those are and ought to be for conversation of life which are in Christ Jesus or which are justified by faith They are such or ought to be such as walk not after the Flesh but after the Spirit And this he adds least that any one when he hears that there is no condemnation to them which are in Christ Jesus should think that now that he is in Christ Jesus he may securely live in sin or live as he listeth and so bring a scandal on Christian Religion Ver. 2. For the Law of the spirit of life in Christ Jesus hath made me free from the Law of sin and of death The Apostle praevents an objection here somewhat like to that objection which he prevented Cap. 7. ver 14. For a weak and faint-hearted Christian might object here and say you require Paul of all that are in Christ Jesus that they would walk not after the Flesh but after the Spirit But I hope that I am in Christ Jesus and yet having been a slave to sin and walked so long as I have done after the Flesh I am afraid that I have been so long a slave to sin and so long walked after the Flesh that I cannot be but as a slave to them still and follow them still for how shall I be freed from following sin or from walking after the Flesh who have been so long as a slave to them This objection I say the Apostle doth here prevent saying For the law of the spirit of life in Christ hath made me free from the Law of sin and of death The Law of the spirit of life in Christ Jesus hath made me free from the Law of sin and of death i. e. The power and Efficacy of the Holy Ghost which dwelleth in me through Christ Jesus and which brings those to eternal life which follow it hath made me free from my custome of sin or sining and so by consequence from walking after the flesh as I was wont to walk which whosoever walkes after whethersoever she leades them shall die everlastingly That the Apostle is frequent in raising and answering or preventing objections and useth that as one way of teaching the Truths which he hath to teach I observed before The law of the spirit of life By the Law of the spirit of life is meant here the efficacy of the Holy Ghost which dwelleth in them which are in Christ Jesus For the Holy Ghost is said to dwell in them which are in Christ Jesus by reason of those gifts with which the Holy Ghost endueth them and by which they are also sanctified In Christ Jesus i. e. Which is by Christ Jesus That is which is given to me by and for the merits of Christ Jesus In is put here for By after the Hebrew manner Hath made me free from the Law of sin and of death That is hath enabled me to resist or turn away from following my carnal and sensual appetite or my carnal and sensual affections so that they cannot draw me after them which way soever they will as they were wont to do Note that the Apostle might have said only The Spirit of
Faith should think that he might continue in sin that the grace of God might the more abound and so the mercy of God might be the more glorified As some had objected to the Christians that they did and held though falsly to whom he had answered before Chap. 3. ver 6 7 8. In the sixth Chapter he sheweth how inconsistant it is with him who is justified by faith and had his former sins pardoned by Grace to live in sin and useth many arguments to stir him up to live an holy life But least that any faint-hearted Christian in general or Jew in particular for of him by the answer which he gives in this sixth Chapter and which he prosecutes in the seventh he seems especially to speak should say Yea but for my part I cannot follow Righteousness as you would have us nor can I be but a slave to sin having been so great a follower of unrighteousness and sin having had such dmoinion over me The Apostle tells him Chap. 6. verse 14. that Sin should not have dominion over him as it had had for he was not now under the Law but under the Gospel which afforded him these means to free himself from sin which the Law could not afford him CHAP. VII And this his answer he prosecutes Chap. 7. and shews the Jew that the Jews were freed from the Law which was the strength of Sin 1 Cor. 15 56. and were brought under the Gospel that they might serve God by a new kind of Life which the Gospel worketh in us and that they might not follow that old kind of life which they led while they were under the Law through the Motions of sin which were by the Law But now because some might say that there could be no motions of Sin by the Law and others might say that the Law would be the cause of Sin if there were any motions of Sin by it He sheweth verse the seventh and so forward to the end of the Chapter both that the Law was the occasion of sin to those which were under it and that it was not for all that the true and genuine cause thereof wherefore at the seventh verse the better to shew these things which he speaks of and the condition of the Jews which lived before the Law was given by Moses and the condition of the same people when they were under the Law after it was given He puts one in his own person the person of the Jews both as they lived before the Law and under the Law CHAP. VIII Now after the Apostle hath finished these things he comes again in the eighth Chapter to shew the happiness of them who are justified by faith or who are in Christ Jesus for those are all one whom he also describeth by that That they walk not after the Flesh but after the Spirit in relation to what he had taught in the whole sixth Chapter concerning the Life of a man which is justified by Faith or which is in Christ Jesus that it ought to be such as is Holy and free from all Vnrighteousnesse And to this holinesse of life doth he use here divers new Arguments to excite them from the first to the seventeenth verse of this Chapter at which verse shewing that we must not onely do the works of Righteousnesse but also suffer if need be for Righteousness sake He doth in the ensuing part of the Chapter use divers arguments to move them to suffer afflictions patiently and endeth this Chapter with the narration of the happinesse of those which he spake of from the fifth Chapter hitherto that is of those which are justified by Faith or which is the same of those which are in Christ Jesus CHAP. IX Now in the ninth Chapter reflecting upon what he said before that a man is justified by Faith and not by the workes of the Law and reflecting upon the happinesse of those which are justified by Faith and considering withall that the Jewes for the most part were such as he spake of Chap. 2. Verse 8. That is such as were contentious against the Gospel and obeyed not or believed not that Word of Truth but obeyed Vnrighteousness against whom indignation and wrath is revealed He manifests the great heaviness and continual sorrow which he had in his heart For those Jews which were his Kinsmen according to the flesh and to whom among many other priviledges the promises of God did belong to think that they resisting that way which God had appointed for obtaining Righteousness or Justification should invent another way of their own and go about to establish that their own way and submit not or yield not to follow that way of Righteousness which God had prescribed And this heaviness and continual sorrow of his heart for them he doth shew that they considering and contemplating his sorrow for them might pity their own selves and embrace the truth that they might be saved at the last But though he manifesteth here the great heaviness and continuall sorrow which he had in heart for those his Kinsmen to wit the Jewes yet he doth not here express the cause of this his sorrow being interrupted with an objection which might arise from what he had said and to which he would answer but deferreth it to the next Chapter and there resumeth and perfecteth what he here broke off though in other terms The Objection which might arise from what he had sad is this He said that among other Priviledges which belonged to the Jewes which were the people of Israel according to the flesh this was one That the promises of God were theirs upon which a Jew might thus object and say That if we Jewes who are the Childrn of Israel according to the flesh were not justified but were under Wrath and Indignation as thou Paul sayest Then would the promises of God be void and of none effect which is to make God false in his word For God promised by his servant Jeremy and many other his servants the Prophets that he would make a new covenant with them and justifie them Jer. 31. ver 31 32 33 34. To this objection Saint Paul answers here verses 6 7 8 9. to this effect True it is that God made a promise to the Israelites that he would justifie them but whereas there are to sorts of Israelites one which are Israelites according to the Flesh which descended from Jacob and Abraham by carnall propagation The other which were Israelites and the Children of Abraham according to the Spirit because they did imitate and follow Abraham in this Faith for they which are of Faith they are the Children of Abraham Gal. 3.7 That promise of Justification doth belong absolutely and immediately not to those which are the Children of Jacob or the Children of Abraham according to the Flesh as Such but to those which believe as Such and so are the Children of Jacob and of Abraham according to the Spirit whether they be Jewes or whether
Gospel which is preached by the Servants of God is a powerful instrument for the Salvation of such as believe And they which believe do attain to Salvation by the Gospel The Gospel is called the Power of God not because there is any natural or physical power in the words of the Gospel But because God sheweth his power in those that believe the Gospel in saving them that is in delivering them from all evil both of Sin and Punishment and in bringing them at last to everlasting joy and happiness And well may this be called the Power of God for what created power can save us from our sins who hath power enough to deliver us out of the Claws of the Devil to whom we were captive at his will 2 Tim. 2.26 who hath power to keep us safe from him that goeth about a roaring Lion seeking whom he way devour who hath power to free us from the miseries of this mortall body who can raise us up from the dead after death who hath power to change these vile bodies of ours into glorious bodies and this corruptible of ours into incorruptible who hath power to carry us up into heaven there to enjoy bliss for evermore but God who is Omnipotent and able to subdue all things to himself and to do whatsoever he pleaseth in Heaven and in Earth The Gospel therefore is called the Power of God Metonymically that is to say because the power of God is so joyned with it as that God will so shew his power in saving them that believe it as that he will bring them to everlasting Salvation They therefore which interpret the power of God to Salvation of a powerful instrument to save men must not take it for a Physical instrument but for a Moral instrument as I may so call it that is for such a thing with which God will so go along with his power as that he will save them which believe the Gospel even because they believe it We know that the Power of God did go along in the Primitive times with the preaching of the Gospel in that God did bear the preachers of it witness both with Signs and Wonders and with divers Miracles and gifts of the Holy-ghost according to his own will Heb. 2.4 But this is not the power here spoken of but that which we have already mentioned for signs are not for those which believe but for those which believe not 1 Cor. 14.22 but the Power of God in this place is for them which believe Vnto Salvation 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. e. For Salvation or for this end that it may bring men unto Salvation 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is here a Note of the final cause or of the end The Schools use to distinguish of a double Salvation the one Inchoate the other Consummate Salvation Inchoate consisteth in Remission of sins or Justification c. and may be had in this life In this sence the Apostle saith By Grace ye are saved through faith Ephes 2.8 And again Not by works of Righteousness which we have done but according to his mercy he saved us Titus 3.5 But Salvation Consummate is only to be had in the life to come and consists in Eternal life Now some understand this place only of Salvation Inchoate not Consummate But it is better to take it for our full and whole Salvation To every one that believeth i e. To every one that believeth the Gospel As a Medicine doth not profit how good soever it be except it be taken down So doth not the Gospel profit though it be the Power of God unto Salvation except it be believed and embraced To the Jew first and also to the Greek i. e. To the Jew first and then to the Greek And also is put here for Then or Afterwards The like manner of speech we read the 2 Cor. 8.5 They first gave their own selves to the Lord and unto us i. e. They did first give themselves to the Lord and then to us his Ministers Note that by the Greek is here meant all the Gentiles per Synedochen Species and to is the Greek to be taken so often as he is opposed to the Jew and therefore is the Greek put for all the Gentiles the rather than any other Nation because the Greek tongue was at this time from the time of Alexander the Great most generally used amongst all Nations as also because the Greeks were now of a long time more known to the Jews than any other People were by the Jew therefore and the Greek all the People of the World are here meant There is a Praerogative here given to the Jew above the Gentile which Praerogative consisteth in this that the Gospel was preached and to be preached to the Jew before it was preached or to be preached to the Gentile Acts 13.46 And in that that the Gospel did appertain to the Jew which believed more peculiarly than it did to the Gentile by reason of particular promises thereof made to them But it doth not consist in this that the believing Jew did or should obtain more exuberance of grace or greater salvation than the believing Gentile should Ver. 17. For therein is the Righteousness of God revealed For therein is Justification effectually revealed and thereby performed and wrought That which is here rendred Righteousness is in the Greek 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which cometh from the verb 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 justificare to justifie So that Righteousness may be and is to be taken here for justification and justification signifieth with our Apostle remission of sins or absolution from sins and it is a tearm borrowed from the Law courts and is opposed to condemnation That which is called Righteousness or Justification is also called Redemption Chap. 3.24 Ephes 1.7 c. And it is called Salvation Math. 1.21 c. And both by a metaphor taken from Prisoners or Captives or Slaves which were under hard imprisonment or bondage or slavery and were as men appointed unto death but are delivered and redeemed with a price or saved by might out of that miserable condition and a condition no better than theirs were we in while we were under sin So that the Remission of our sins may be called as Righteousness or justification so Redemtion and Salvation too And note now that Salvation and Righteousness are often put for one and the same thing as Psal 98.2 The Lord hath made known his Salvation his Righteousness hath he openly shewed in the sight of the Heathen and Isaiah 56.1 My Salvation is near to come and my Righteousness to be revealed And Isaih 61.10 He hath clothed me with the garments of Salvation He hath covered me with the robe of Righteousness which I observe that it might seem strange to none that besides the derivation of the Greek word Righteousness should be put or taken for justification or redemption and Salvation from sins The Righteousness of God He calls it the Righteousness of God
escape the judgement of God To wit that judgement which he will execute upon all sinners at the last day Ver. 4. Or despisest thou the riches of his goodness and forbearance and long-suffering Or presuming that thou art without fault and flattering thy self that thou art holy because God doth not poure down some extraordinay judgement upon thee but is long suffering and patient towards thee Despisest thou the riches of his goodness and forbearance and long-suffering not knowing or Considering that the goodness and forbearance and long-suffering of God indeavour to lead thee to Repentance because thou canst not be saved from the wrath to come except thou repentest Despisest thou the riches of his goodness and forbearance and long suffering The Jew is said to dispise the goodness and forbearance and long-suffering of God in that he did not make good use of them but reject them as to that end to which they induced to wit Repentance yea in that that because God was abundant in goodness and forbearance and long-suffering towards him He did reproach God and dishonour him with his sins abusing therein Gods goodness as an encouragement to sin whereas it should have been an inducement to Repentance Whereas the Apostle saith Despisest thou the riches of his goodness c Some conceive that he alludeth to Birds which are affrighted at a Scare crow when they see it move But if they perceive it quiet and still they are not afraid of it but dare at length to sit and play yea to mute upon it For so evil men be afraid of God when he is moved with anger towards them that is they are afraid of his wrath but are not afraid when he is patient and good to them but harden their hearts and reproach him with their sin in which they continue which is to despise his goodness The Riches of his goodness c. That is the Abundance of his goodness c. The word Riches is put here for Abundance or Plentifulness as Chap. 9.23 Ephes 1.18 Colos 1.27 This is the difference between the goodness and forbearance and longsuffering of God here viz. that the goodness of God was seen in the blessings and good things which he bestowed upon the Jew His forbearance was seen in his withholding his punishments from them His long-suffering in his Patience and enduring of his sins Not knowing i. e. Not considering That the goodness of God The goodness of God here includeth the forbearance and long-suffering which he mentioned just before in this verse as well as the goodness of God Leadeth thee to repentance i. e. Endeavoureth to bring thee to repentance or intendeth to lead thee to repentance as aiming at that end and not to encourage thee to sin The Apostle speaks not here of the Event but of the Intent and Counsel of God in being rich in goodness towards sinners And this his Intent and Counsel God did manifest to the Jews in those Sacred Oracles which he committed to them though they considered it not but did so interpret the goodness of God as if God were therefore good unto them because he was well-pleased with them and did see nothing in them for which he could destroy them Which interpretation of theirs encouraged them to continue in their old course of living and to reproach God and dishonour his holy Name with their sins and wicked conversation Ver. 5. But after thy hardness and impenitent heart The Apostle doth break out here into a kind of holy passion chiding the Jew ●r that he knew not or considered not the end why God was so good unto him and for that that the goodness of God did not work upon him to repentance After thy hardness i. e. Through thy hardness The Preposition in the Original is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which here is a sign of the Cause as chap. 4. v. 4 16. chap. 11.5 Ephes 1. v. 5 7 9. Tit. 3.5 1 Pet. 1.3 Thy hardness i. e. The Insensibleness Imperceivableness or Inconsiderateness of thy mind which is such as that thou perceivest not nor doest thou consider that the goodness of God is no encouragement for thee to sin but a Guid to lead thee or an Inducement to draw thee to repentance The hardness here spoken of is contracted by custom in sin and by the proud conceits which they have of themselves And as for the word it self it is Metaphorical taken from that Brawniness or Hardness which useth to be in mans hand who is accustomed to hard labour and from thence transferred to the mind for as such an hardness in the skin of a mans hand dulls or deads his feeling and makes it insensible so that he cannot feel things as they do which have not such hardness or brawniness So doth this hardness of the mind make the mind as it were insensible that it cannot perceive and consider of Divine things as it ought to do Or else it is taken from the hardness of the Tunicles of the eye which through age or by some other accident grow dry and so hard and so cause blindness There are many Creatures as Beetles and the like which are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 hard eyd and so but dim of sight it may be that the Apostle alludes to such I understand this hardness of the imperceivableness and inconsiderateness of the Mind yet many understand it of the Impenitency of the heart and make the subsequent words an Exposition of this q d. And by thy hardness that is by thy impenitent heart c. And Impenitent heart i e. And by thy heart which is not and will not be moved to repentance by the riches of Gods goodness towards thee This impenitent heart of the Jew might cause him also not to consider aright of the goodness and forbearance and long-suffering of God Treasurest up to thy self i e. Thou treasurest up to thy self Note that the Apostle doth not continue here his questioning of the Jew but breaks out as I said into chiding him therefore we must put in here the pronoun Thou though our Translation hath it not Thou Treasurest up to thy self wrath i e. Thou doest heap up for thy self by little and little torments and punishments which will be sure to take hold upon thee at the last day The word Treasurest is a Metaphorical word taken from a treasure which is heaped up and encreased by little and little while there is something added to it every day and which is safely kept till at length it is brought out and made use of To thy self For thy self but to thine own woe and misery Wrath Wrath is put here per Metonymiam efficientis for Punishments and Torments proceeding from Wrath to wit the wrath of God They treasure up unto themselves wrath that is Punishments and Torments who break not off their sins by repentance but go on in sin adding sin to sin for every sin meriteth or purchaseth a new Torment or a new degree of Punishment and Torment As
he did cap. 1. v. 5. That they are all under sin That is that they are all under the guilt of sin and so subject to damnation see ver 19. Sin is put here not for sin it self but for guilt which is the necessary consequent or effect of sin per Metonymiam efficientis Ver. 10. As it is written there is none righteous no not one That which the Apostle asserted in the foregoing verse viz. that all both Jews and Gentiles were under sin and that which he had proved by manifest arguments in the two former chapters he proves here by Scripture and that especially against the Jews and for the Jews sake because they flattered themselves with an opinion of their own righteousness and he does it by Scripture that he might convince the Jews by that whereof they somuch gloried to wit The Law that is the Word of God which was committed to them v. 2. As it is written c. These Testimonies which the Apostle here produceth are not all taken out of one and the same place of holy Scriptures but some out of one place some out of another yet what is here alledged in this and the two following verses is taken out of the fourteenth Psalm And some because they imagined that the Apostle cited all these Testimonies even to the eighteenth verse out of one place have inserted all these Testimonies into that Psalm as will appear by the Greek and Latin and Arabique and Aethiopique Translations There is none righteous no not one This is taken out of Psal 14. ver 1. But note that the Apostle cites not the very words of the Psalmist but only the Sence The words of the Psalm are these There is none that doth good But the words of the Apostle are these there is none righteous no not one Now if there be none that doth good there is none which is righteous and if he which saith there is none that doth good excepteth none no not one as he doth not except any as it appeareth from ver 3. of that Psalm Then is there none righteous no not one There is none righteous i. e. He is called Righteous here which followeth after vertue or Holiness and gives his mind to it or he is called Righteous here which liveth uprightly according to the Law of God Ver. 11. There is none that understandeth and seeketh after God This is also taken out of the fourteenth Psalm yet not word for word For it is not word for word said there There is none that understandeth and seeketh after God But yet there we read That the Lord looked down from Heaven upon the children of Men to see if there were any that did understand and seek God But they are all saith the Psalmist gone aside they are altogether become filthy c. There is none that understandeth Supple What the will of the Lord is that he may yield obedience thereunto And seeketh after God To seek after God is to seek after his favour by well doing 〈◊〉 after his will to do it Or to seek after God is to regard God and to care for him and his Will For note that to seek in the Hebrew phrase signifieth to regard or care for as well as to seek Ver. 12. They are all gone out of the way That is they are all gone out of the p●in of Gods commandments which they should walke in They are altogether become unprofitable The word here rendred unprofitable in the Hebrew signifieth putrified and stinking and it is Metaphorically taken from putrified and stinking meates which are not fit to be eaten and as such meats are putrified and stinking so are wicked men corrupted and even stinking in the nostrils of God And as such meats are not fit for the use of man so these wicked men are not fit for any holy use or fit Instruments of Gods praise or service There is none that doth good i. e. There is none Righteous as the Apostle speaketh Verse 10. It may be asked here of whom the Psalmist speaketh all these words and of whom the fourteenth Psalm from whence these words are taken is to be understood and how the Apostle applies them to his purpose For Answer Many think that the Psalmist speaks of all s●●h men of his time in Generall as were ●ot renewed by the Spirit of God whatsoever they were and that the Apostle may therefore well infer from thence that all men even of his time also were such as they were in the Psalmists time because the same natural corruption was in both and where their corruption as the Tree is alike there their sins as the fruit of that Tree must be alike too until they are born again through faith Others think that the Psalmist speaks only of such people as were at actual enmity with the people of Israel which were the people of God though they cannot determinately say what people they were whether Philistines Midianites Ammonites Moabites or the like and they prove that the fourteenth Psalm is to be understood of such because in the fourth verse of that Psalm God sayes of them that they eat up his people as if they would eat bread And in the fifth verse they are spoken of as men which were against the Generation of the Righteous And verse seventh the Psalmist wishes for the Salvation of Israel to save Israel from these his enemies Others conceive That the Psalmist speaketh here determinately of Absalom and those that took part with him against David his Father And that David made this fourteenth Psalm when he was pursued by Absalom But yet one thing is against this to wit that it is said vers 7. When the Lord bringeth back the Captivity of his people which cannot be said of David and those that fled with him from Absalom and his Conspiritors wherefore to take away this Objection instead of these words When the Lord bringeth back the Captivity of his people they read Cum reduxerit Deus reducem populum suum i. e. When the Lord shall bring back his people again q. d. When the Lord shall bring us back again to Jerusalem which have been fain to flie because of Absalom But whether the words of the Hebrew will bear this Translation let the Learned in that Language judge But now the Question remains how the Apostle can with sound reason bring these Testimonies which he doth out of the fourteenth Psalm according to these two last expositions thereof to prove that all which have not received Christ and his Gospel both Jews and Gentiles are under sin Answ Besides that which hath been said in answer to this Question according to the first exposition given of the fourteenth Psalm which may have place here also for further answer it is said that as many other places of Scripture so doth this Psalm carry a double sence with it one Literal or Historical another Mystical one concerning the enemies of fleshly Israel which were the people of God or
concerning the enemies of David and those which were estranged from him which is the Literal sence And another concerning all such as were Aliens from Spiritual Israel to wit the faithful and were as it were enemies unto them or concerning such as were strangers from Christ and were not with him and therefore against him as it is said Mat. 12.30 which is the Mystical sence Now the Apostle producing these Testimonies according to the Mystical sence of the words to prove that all which have not received Christ both Jews and Gentiles are under sin And he may effectually prove by them that all both Jews and Gen●iles which are Aliens from Christ and strangers to his people are under sin because they are all really intended and spoke of here in the Mystical sence For as the Israelites according to the flesh were a People which God had chosen to himself Deut. 14.2 So were they a Type of the faithful in Christ Jesus whom God hath taken to be to himself as Children by Adoption and as God had made choice of David to be his King and his annointed so did he ordain that David should be an eminent Type of Christ the King of Kings and Lord of Lords And as the Israelites according to the flesh were a Type of the faithful in Jesus Christ so were their enemies a Type of those which were enemies of the faith or of the faithful and of such as were not in communion with them and as David was a Type of Christ so were the enemies of David and those which were estranged in affection from him a Type of the enemies of Christ and those which were strangers from him So that the Holy Ghost when he doth describe the Manners of those which were the enemies of Israel and of David and strangers from them and either of them in the Historical or Literal sence he describes the Manners of them also which are enemies o● the faithful and of Christ and strangers from them or either of them in the Mystical sence Note here that from these and such like Allegations as these are which Saint Paul often useth in his Epistles it doth appear that the Jews did allow of such Mystical sences of the Scriptures as these are although they did err in the Persons or Application and neither acknowledged that Jesus was the Christ nor applied such passages of the Scriptures as these are to themselves Ver. 13. Their throat is an open Sepulchre with their tongues they have used deceit the poyson of Aspes is under their lips whose mouth is full of cursing and bitterness their feet are swift to shed blood These are other Testimonies of Scripture brought to prove that all both Jews and Gentiles are under sin and whereas the former Testimony proved for the most part that they did not do those things which they ought to have done So these Testimonies prove that they did do those things which they ought not to have done But note here that whereas the Ap●stle doth reckon up here in these Testimonies which he brings many sins we must not understand him so as that his meaning were that all these sins which here he reckoneth up were actually in every man whether Iew or Gentile but that some of them were in some others in others yet so as some sin or other was in every one and every one had gone aside and become filthy q. d. The throat of some of them is an open Sepulchre others have used deceit with their tongues and the poison of Aspes is under their lips The mouth of others is full of cursing and bitterness the feet of others is swift to shed blood c. Neither must we understand the Apostle so as if his meaning were that these which he here reckoneth up were the only sins which were in these men but that there were other sins also in them and that if any of these were not in some few of them which yet we can scarcely say yet there were others in them as bad as these or if not as bad yet such as were enough to expose them to Gods wrath and to damn them Their throat is an open Sepulchre with their tongues they have used deceit Those words are taken out of the fifth Psalm verse 9. and are agreable to the Septuagint whereas according to the Hebrew the words run thu● Their throat is an open Sepulchre they flatter with their tongue Where note that the Apostle useth to follow the Septuagint where it little or nothing varies from the Hebrew Their throat is an open Sepulchre That is their throat is As an open Sepulchre for as out of an Open Sepulchre in which a dead body hath been long buried when it is opened there cometh out filthy loathsome stinks and smels So out of their mouth or throat do proceed foul filthy words Note that the note of similtude As is often left to be understood after the Hebrew manner and so it is here This sence will these words bear and yet they will yield another sence too and that 's this q. d. Their throat is as an open Sepulchre because as a Sepulchre is opened that it might receive the dead body to consume it or destroy it so are their throats opened that they may destroy them whom they speak against with their wicked words And this sence is most agreable to the sence of the Place For the fifth Psalm was penned by David either when he fled from the face of Saul or when he was fain to fly because of Absalom at which times respectively there were not wanting those which advised both Saul and Absalom to cut off Davids life if they could The Prophet Jeremy saith of the Babylonians that their Quiver is an open Sepulchre Jerem. 5.16 And therefore doth he say that their Quiver is an open Sepulchre because as a Sepulchre opens its mouth that it may receive and so consume the dead So their Quiver was opened that it might by the Arrows drawn from thence destroy the living And thus is the Throat said to be an open Sepulchre because the words proceeding from them are destroying words words brought forth to take away a mans life With their tongue they have used deceit i. e. They speak deceitfully and guilefully with their tongues for their words are fair but their heart is foul they speak fair with their mouth but bear mischief in their heart and would entrap the Innocent to destroy him The Hebrew translated word for word is They flatter with their tongue but being they flattered for this end that they might entrap with their tongue They as the Septuagint renders it have used deceit Thus did many deal with David to engratiate themselves with Saul and with Absalom They did speak him fair and flatter with him that they might know his secrets and then reveal them to Saul and Absalom that they might take him and so kill him The Poyson of Asps is under their lips They which hurt others with
are left to be made up Who against hope i. e. Against all hope which he could conceive by the course of nature of having a child By the course of Nature there was no ground of hope either in Abraham that he should be a Father being that he was now old his seed cold and without spirits Or in Sarah that she should be a Mother having been all her time barren and being now stricken in years and it having long before this ceased to be with her after the manner of women as the Scripture speaketh Gen. 18.11 Believed in hope i. e. Believed God promising him children which should multiply as the Stars of Heaven for number and did so believe as that he hoped through the power of God that he should become the Father of so numerous an Off-spring The hope here spoken of was founded upon the Omnipotent power of God and his Veracity or Truth apprehended by Faith That he might become the Father of many Nations i. e. To wit That he should be the Father of many Nations This word That is to be taken here 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as specifying the Object or Thing which Abraham believed According to that which is spoken To wit Genes 15.5 So shall thy seed be i. e. Thy seed shall be as the Stars of heaven which cannot be numbred These words contain the promise of God which Abraham believed and they are taken out of Genes 15.5 where it is written that the Lord brought Abraham forth abroad and said Look now towards heaven and tell the Stars if thou be able to number them And he said unto him so shall thy seed be V. 19. And being not weak in faith The Apostle commendeth here the faith of Abraham and he doth it after the manner of the Hebrews by denying the contrary of that which he would strongly affirm which kind of figure the Grammarians call 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 He is said to be weak in faith which doubteth of any thing See Chap. 14.1 And compare it with 1 Cor. 8. v 7 12. He considered not his own body now dead i. e. He considered not that feebleness or disability of his own body so as by reason of that to doubt or despair of the promise of God These words are thus to be understood and with this or the like limitation for otherwise Abraham did consider both his own body now dead and the deadness of Sarah's womb Genes 17.17 Now dead i. e. Now old and feeble and unfit for generation and as it were dead in respect of that See notes ver 17. The deadness of Sarah's womb i. e. The barrenness of Sarah's womb and the indisposition thereof to Conception V. 20. He staggered not at the promise of God i. e. He doubted not of the Promise of God He which doubteth is like a staggering man for as a staggering man reeleth now to one hand and now to another So doth the man that doubteth lean sometimes to one thing and sometimes declins from it again There were two things considerable here in this case of Abraham the Power and Veracity of God on the one side and the deadness of his own Body and of Sarah's Womb on the other Though Abraham might believe the promise of God when he considered the Power and Truth of God yet if he had not been exceeding strong in faith he might have declined and leaned to unbelief when he considered that he himself and Sarah his Wife were both dead that is both unfit he to beget and she to conceive Children by the course of Nature Giving glory to God i. e. Believing God and relying upon his promise He is said to give glory to God which doth or saith or thinketh any thing which is honourable to God or which is sutable to his Majesty and Attributes Therefore because it is honourable to God to say or think that God is true and able to bring to pass whatsoever he will and in consideration and faith thereof to rely upon his promises Abraham is said here to give glory to God when he believed God and relyed upon his word So when Joshua would have Achan to confess his sin he said My Son give I pray thee glory to the Lord God of Israel Josh 7.19 And this he said because by this confession Achan would declare that God saw secret things and that he was not deceived in that he saw Achans sin and singled him out among all the men of Israel as guilty of that sin which was a thing honourable to God V. 21. He was able also to perform Promises are taken for as good as Performances where there is no doubt either of the will or of the power of him which promiseth Now that God had a will to perform what he promiseth is easy to believe But not so easy to believe that he hath a power to perform what he promiseth for many wise men of the world took God to be nothing else but Nature and therefore believed nothing which was promised above Nature But Abraham believed that which was abo ve Nature here and therefore it is said to his praise here that he was fully perswaded that what God promised he was able also to perform Ver. 22. And therefore it was imputed to him for righteousness And because Abraham was thus perswaded and did firmly believe that God was able to make him the Father of a Seed as many as the Stars of Heaven for number therefore was this his faith or this that he was thus perswaded and that he did thus believe imputed or counted to him for righteousness This Illative Therefore doth not signifie that the faith which was here imputed or counted rather to Abraham for righteousness did merit the righteousness for which it was imputed or counted to him but only sheweth the soundness and sincerity of his faith or that that God saw it to be true sound and sincere Imputed to him for righteousness The words in the Original are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which may be rendred Was counted or set upon accounts to him for righteousness 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifieth properly to Enter any thing upon the accounts of a man And it is a word as I have said before borrowed from Merchants which upon their Book of accounts with a man enter the Wares which they have had of him and the price or goods which they are to give in exchange for them Here faith is as it were the Ware Righteousness the Price or Goods to be given for it The Object of this faith which is here said to be imputed or counted rather to Abraham for Righteousness is this as plainly appears by the Context that God promised Abraham to make him a Father of many Nations and to give him a Seed as the Stars of heaven for multitude and that out of his own Body by carnal Propagation The belief of that I say is that which is counted here to Abraham for Righteousness Where note that though never
made partakers of it which hope doth even now joy and rejoice our hearts 3. And not only so but we glory in tribulations also knowing that tribulation worketh patience 3. And not only so but least that any should say surely God is not at peace with us nor can we rejoice in the hope of the glory of God because we are afflicted and suffer more tribulations than any kind of men in the world besides which may seem not to stand with the peace and friendship of God and not to be incident to the Heirs of eternal glory we glory and rejoyce in tribulations also knowing that tribulation though it works impatience in men of the world yet it works patience in us 4. And patience experience and experience hope 4. And patience worketh Experience in us of those gratious gifts and vertues which God out of his love hath given us by the Holy Ghost and experience of these gratious gifts and vertues worketh hope in us of eternal glory 5. And hope maketh not ashamed because the love of God is shed abroad in our hearts by the holy Ghost which is given unto us 5. And this hope which is wrought in us by this experience will not fail us and prove a vain hope so as that we shall be ashamed at the last for missing of what we hope for For the sense and feeling of the love of God who will make all them which he thus loveth partakers of Glory and life everlasting is shed abroad in our hearts in a plentifull measure by those gifts of the Holy Ghost which he hath given unto us which gifts are not only signs and tokens of his love to us but pledges also and earnests of eternal Glory 6. For when we were yet without strength in due time Christ died for the ungodly 6. I said that being we are justified by faith the wrath of God is appeased towards us and that God is at peace with us for our Lord Christ Jesus sake And that we rejoyce in hope of the Glory of God ver 1 2. all which I now prove for when we had no strength to do any good but were as yet ungodly and so sinners Christ in due time died for us 7. For scarcely for a righteous man will one die yet peradventure for a good man some would even dare to die 7. And this sheweth the exceeding love of God towards us in that Christ dyed for us while we yet had no strength to do good but were as yet ungodly and sinners for scarcely for a righteous man will one dy yet perhaps for a man that hath been good to him some will even endure to dy 8. But God commendeth his love towards us in that while we were yet sinners Christ died for us 8. But God commendeth his love towards us in this that while we were yet sinners and ungodly and so enemies to him Christ through his appointment died for us 9. Much more then being now justified by his blood we shall be saved from wrath through him 9. And now if when we were yet sinners Christ died for us much more then shall we being justified from our sins by his blood be saved from the wrath to come through him 10. For if when we were enemies we were reconciled to God by the death of his Son much more being reconciled we shall be saved by his life 10. For if when we were enemies to him as we were when we were sinners we were reconciled by the death of his Son which cost him his deerest blood to reconcile us Much more then being now reconciled shall we be saved from the wrath of God by him when it may be done without the loss of his life 11 And not onely so but we also joy in God through our Lord Jesus Christ by whom we have now received the atonement 11. And we shall not only be saved from the wrath to come but we shall also be advanced to and stated in everlasting glory by reason of which we do through the faith and hope which we have thereof joy even now in God through our Lord Jesus Christ by whom we have already received the Atonement or Reconciliation and divers gracious effects and fruits thereof that is to say divers gifts of the holy Ghost which are as seals and pledges to us of that everlasting glory which we speak off 12. Wherefore as by one man sin entred into the world and death by sin and so death passed upon all men for that all have sinned 12. Wherefore being that we are justified by faith and reconciled to God through our Lord Jesus Christ and have through him peace with God and hope of everlasting glory c. Though we have lost much by Adam yet we have gained far more by Christ than we lost by him For as by one man to wit Adam sin entred into the world and death by sin and so death passed upon all men for that all have sinned that is for that all men have been made sinners by that one Man 13. For until the law sin was in the world but sin is not imputed when there is no law 13. But here I must leave my Speech imperfect which I will take up and perfect ver 18. to answer an Objection For because I said that all have sinned some men will say That that cannot be for they which lived between Adam and Moses sinned not For say they between Adam and Moses there was no law given either by word of mouth as there was given to Adam Gen. 7.2 17. Or by writing as was given by Moses Exod. 20. And as you taught Paul Chap. 4. ver 15. Where there is no such law there is no transgression how therefore can they which lived between Adam and Moses be said to be sinners or to have sinned which had no law given them either by word of mouth or by hand writing But to this I answer That being that at that time there was no law publickly given by word of mouth as that was which was given to Adam or given in outward writing as that was which was afterwards given by Moses there was not indeed any Transgression in that time but yet it doth not follow that though there was no Transgression in that time there was no sin for though every Transgression be a sin yet it doth not follow that every sin is a Transgression I say therefore that though there was no Law given by word of mouth or by writing from Adam until the law was given by Moses yet sin was all the while in the world though indeed sin was not imputed to any as a Transgression all that time 14. Nevertheless death reigned from Adam to Moses even over them that had not sinned after the similitude of Adams transgression who is the figure of him that was to come 14. Yet nevertheless that you may know that sin was in the world from the days of Adam to the time that the law was given death
children in its kind The Apostle sheweth here that Christ in his kind as he was a Saviour to his branches or to his children did far exceed Adam in his kind as he was a destroyer to his branches or to his children And that he did confer more good to them which were his branches or his children than Adam did evil to those which were his so that though Adam may be said to be a type of Christ by a contrary comparison yet in that comparison there is an excess of contrariety on Christs part Not as the offence He speaks of that sin and means that here even Original sin which Adam transmitted or derived to all mankind and which he called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ver 12. He means not that sin of actual disobedience whereby Adam disobeyed God in eating the forbidden fruit Gen. 3 6. Though that actuall disobedience of his was that which brought this Original sin upon his posterity to wit such as were born of him by natural generation For note that that Actual disobedience of Adam is opposed to the actual obedience of Christ as plainly appeareth ver 19. But the offence here is opposed to the free gift which came upon the Children or branches of Christ through his obedience Wherefore as the free gift signifieth something here which came upon the children or branches of Christ by reason of Christs obedience so doth the offence which is opposed to the free gift signifie something here which came upon the children or branches of Adam through his disobedience The free gift The free gift here spoken of is that gift which God doth freely bestow upon those which are ingrafted into Christ by faith and which he cals the gift by grace in this very verse If through the offence of one i. e. If by sin which was caused by one man to wit Adam and by him brought upon or derived to his children or his branches This Genitive case of one is Genitivus Efficientis Note that this particle If doth not here intimate any uncertainty of the thing with which it is joyned But as often elsewhere so here it sheweth the certainty of it rather and signifieth as much as though And note that the Subject of the offence here spoken of is not Adam or Adam alone but Adams children also though the efficient or deficient cause thereof was Adam Many be dead This is that which he said ver 12. to wit Death passed upon all men that is Death hath or shall pass upon all men But how doth he say only Many be dead here when he saith Death passed upon all men ver 12. We may answer with Saint Augustine that it may so fall out sometimes as that by all a very few may be be understood as when few are all To shew therefore that the All here are very many He saith Many be dead yet excluding none of all the Sons or Daughters of Adam born of him by natural generation Again because he was to say in this verse that the grace of God and the gift by grace which is by one man Jesus Christ hath abounded unto many which he will say because it aboundeth not absolutely to all men he might use the word many here in the sence aforesaid that there might be conformity between the former and latter member of his speech in matter of words Much more the grace of God and the gifts by grace which is by one Man Jesus Christ hath abounded unto many i. e. In a much higher degree and more plentiful though contrary manner hath the grace that is the gift of grace which is by one man Jesus Christ abounded unto many Supple that they may live Note that the words much more seem to import an Argumentation à minori as Logicians speak that is from that which is less credible to that which is more credible as it is ver 9. But though they may seem so to do yet they do not indeed For he that will be attentive here to what the Apostle writes he shall find that the Apostles words import not any such thing but do onely shew the dissimilitude which is between Adam and Christ by comparing some particulars in which they disagree and how much Christ in his kind excells Adam in his The reason why Christ in his kind excells Adam in his and why Christ derives greater gifts in his kind to his branches or his children than Adam did in his kind to his branches or his children is because the merits of Christ are greater than were the demerits of Adam The grace of God By the Grace of God is meant the favour of God But the grace or favour of God is to be taken here by a Metonymy for the gift proceeding from Gods favour as the Apostle expounds himself in the next words And the gift by Grace q. d. That is to say the gift which is by grace or by the favour of God or that which God out of his grace and favour bestoweth c. The Conjunction And is a Note of declaration here The gift by Grace doth include and comprehend here both the free and gracious pardon of our sins or the gracious sentence of Absolution by which we are absolved from our sins which the Apostle speaks of ver 16. And also the gift of a life of Glory which we shall enjoy in heaven or the reign in that life of which he speaks verse 17. For what he speaks of in gross here he divides and speaks of in particular or in parts in those two verses Which is by one man Jesus Christ i. e. Which grace is shewed for one mans sake to wit Jesus Christ and purchased by him Hath abounded Supple above what the offence and death did abound to those which were the branches or Children of Adam by natural propagation Vnto many Supple Even those many which are the Branches or Children of Christ by faith Through Adams eating the forbidden fruit did the offence that is sin enter upon many yea so many as were born of Adam the Consequent of which offence or sin as the penalty thereof was death But through the obedience of Christ there came by the favour and grace of God pardon of all sins not Original only but Actual also whereby as many as believed were justified the Consequent of which is through the gift of God Eternal life Here is therefore an opposition of pardon of sins by which we are justified to the offence or sin by which we are condemned And of eternal life to death which being weighed one against the other the pardon of Sins by which we are justified against the offence and Sin by which we are condemned and life eternal against death the pardon of Sins by which we are justified will out weigh the offence by which we are condemned and Life eternal will outweigh death For the offence or Sin is but One but the Sins which are pardoned are many And eternal life is accompanied with an unspeakable
weight of glory far surpassing death and the miseries of death which followed upon Adams sin and the Sins which we our selves have of our selves committed This is that which the Apostle speaks in gross in this verse and now goeth about to divide and lay out in particulars in the two following verses Ver. 16. And not as it was by one that Sinned so was the gift The Conjunction And is a note of Resumption ot repetition here and the s●nce of the words which are Ellipticall is this q. d. And not I say as is the offence which was by one that sinned to wit Adam so is the gift Supple which is by one Jesus Christ but this much exceeds that Note that whereas it is here read By one that sinned and in the Greek 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is to be understood in the Greek from the former verses and so must the word offence in the English So that the words in the Greek which are Ellipticall must be made up thus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 In the English thus And not as the offence which was by one that sinned This is a Repetition of that which the Apostle said v. 15. to wit of that Not as the offence so is also the free gift which the Apostle here resumes or repeats that he may explain or lay out by particulars or parts that which he said there in general and in gross to wit that If through the offence of one many be dead much more the Grace of God and the gift of Grace which is by one man Jesus Christ hath abounded unto many The judgment was by one to condemnation i. e. The Judgment or Sentence of God passed upon all men to their condemnation by reason of one sin or one offence That is God by his just Judgment or Sentence which he passed upon all men which were born of Adam did condemn them all to death by reason of that one only sin which they drew from him By one i. e. By one offence or by reason of one only offence That by one he meaneth here not one Person but one Offence is plain because he opposeth it to many offences This offence is that which is commonly called Original sin as I said before and it is said to be one because though it be in every particular man yet it is but one sin in every one and of one nature in all To condemnation He speaks here of that general condemnation which passed upon all mankind by reason of that one Original sin which they drew from Adam not of the particular condemnation of particular Persons for their Actuall sins But the free gift is of many offences to justification But the free gift Supple by which we are absolved from our sins or have them pardoned is not only of that one sin or offence but of many offences yea so many as they which believe are or were guilty of that they may thereby be justified 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The free gift is put here by a Metaphorical Synechdoche to signifie the free and gracious pardon of sins or the gracious sentence of Absolution pronounced as it were in open Court by which we are out of meer Grace absolved from sins For the Apostle speaks here in allusion to a Court of Justice where the Judgment or Sentence passeth upon some offenders according to their demerits And a pardon of grace or a gracious sentence of absolution from the offences with which they were charged upon others above their deserts The word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which the Apostle useth in this verse signifieth a Judgment or Sentence given upon men accused according to their true desert and the merit of their cause but because the Sentence which passed upon those which are inserted into Christ by faith is not such a Sentence but a Sentence in respect of them of grace and of the favour of God through Christ the Apostle when he speaks of the Sentence which shall or doth pass upon them calls it not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which word sounds grace and favour Of many c. This Particle Of is a Preposition for the Greek is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which we may render De which signifies the matter of this gift or pardon or absolution Vnto Justification i. e. That as many as God bestowed this free gift upon may be justified The word justification is to be taken here in a passive sence Ver. 17. For if by one mans offence death reigned This is to be referred to those words of the sixteenth verse Not as it was by one that sinned so is the gift As a second Reason to shew the truth of that proposition or assertion But though there be a second Reason to prove that proposition or assertion yet may this Particle For be taken here for Moreover as it seemeth sometimes to be taken and so the current of the Text may be the smoother If by one mans offence i. e. If by the offence caused by that one man Adam and which came by him upon all his Children Whereas it is read vulgarly in the Greek 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. which is rendred here If by one mans offence death reigned c Some Greek Copies read 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which may be rendred as it is in the Margin of our Bibles If by one offence death reigned which I conceive by the scope of the place and by looking upon the latter part of this verse to be the best reading Death reigned i. e. Death shewed her power upon all which were condemned to die by reason of the offence of that one man by slaying them By one i. e. By one man to wit Adam It was Adam's eating the forbidden Fruit which brought that which is here called the offence upon himself and by Propagation from him upon his Children too For by the offence is here meant that which he calleth sin ver 12. that is Original sin which is in every natural Child of Adam and which is the cause of death in all the Chilern of Adam Much more they which receive abundance of Grace and of the gift of Righteousness shall reign in life by one Jesus Christ i. e. After a far more bountiful and glorious manner shall they which are delivered and justified from the many sins of which they are guilty reign like Kings in a life of glory by one Jesus Christ Much more These words shew that the life which they that are justified by grace from their many sins which are pardoned to them through Christ do receive doth far exceed in its kind that death which came upon the Children of Adam by his sin in its kind Abundance of Grace and of the gift of Righteousness q. d. Abundance of Grace that is of the gift of Righteousness What he meaneth by Grace he explains by those words The gift of Righteousness wherefore And is to be taken
serve sin and he proves it by an Allegoricall argument drawn from the Servants of Men who are freed by death from their Masters Service And from that that they which are free from the Service of men do not as though they were their Servants still yield them any further Service Ver. 8. Now if we be dead with Christ we believe that we shall also live with him I said ver 6. that the Apostle prevented an Objection there and so he undertook to declare that he knew well enough what he said when he said If we have been planted together with him in the likeness of his death we shall also in the likeness of his Resurrection ver 5. But hitherto he hath declared only that he knew that they which were Planted together with Christ in the likeness of his death that is that they which were crucified or dead to sin with Christ were therefore so planted or so dead that they should serve sin no more He hath not as yet declared that he knew that they which were so planted and so dead should rise or spring up to a new life for it is not enough to shew that a man doth good to shew that he abstains from evil I said moreover that the Apostle spoke somewhat incongruously if we did look not to the sence but to the manner of his Speaking in the sixt verse Therefore the Apostle doth here correct as it were what he said there when he saith But if we be dead with Christ we believe that we shall also live with him And also makes that out to the ful which he undertook 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. But if we be dead with Christ we believe that we shall also live with him q. d. But that I may correct my speech and speak more congruously and bring up that to the full which I undertook If we be dead with Christ we believe that we shall also live with him If we be dead with Christ i. e. If we be dead to sin as Christ was dead to this natural life The preposition With is a note of similitude here also We believe that we shall also live with him i. e. We believe or are perswaded that we shall also live the life of grace to God or to Righteousness as Christ now liveth a life of Glory to the glory of God With him i. e. As he doth Ver. 9. Knowing this that Christ being raised from the dead c. Whereas the Apostle said in the former verse If we be dead with Christ we believe that we shall also live with him that is that we shall live the life of grace and of righteousness as he liveth the life of Glory Some man may say but how canst thou say Paul that we shall live with Christ For art thou sure that Christ is now alive That thou canst not be for though Christ was raised from the dead yet he may be now dead again for many which were raised from the dead dyed again after they were raised This doubt or this objection the Apostle here prevents saying Knowing this that Christ being raised from the dead dieth no more c. q d. I say we shall also live with him for we know this that Christ is now alive For Christ being raised from the dead dieth no more death hath no more dominion over him Knowing this that Christ being raised from c. This he might know being informed thereof by the Spirit of God which knoweth all things and cannot lie but Christ appeared to Paul alive after a glorious manner 1 Cor. 15 8. By which he might certainly know that Christ was now living Death hath no more dominion over him i. e. Death neither hath nor shall have any more dominion over him A Syllepsis as before He speaks of death as of a Person by a Prosopopoeia Death had dominion over Christ after a certain manner when it severed his Soul from his Body upon the Cross and brought him down to the grave But Christ soon cast off this dominion of death and hath so far conquered death as that death shall never have any power of him again Nay death never had had any dominion over him at all had not he himself willingly for mans redemption submitted himself thereto V. 10. He died unto sin i. e. He died to or for this end that he migh abolish and destroy sin in us The word Sin is of the Dative Case and therefore to die to sin is as much as Mori propter peccatum vel ad peccatum in nobis mortificandum abolendum i. e. To die for sin or to die that he might mortifie and abolish sin in us For this efficacy or vertue hath Lamed with a Dative Case with the Hebrews whose Idiotismes Paul often useth Note that Christ and we are both said to die to sin but not both after one and the same manner for we are said to die to sin because we cease to yield to the motions of sin which are in us and after this manner Christ is not said to die to sin for there is no sin in Christ nor did he ever yield to any such motions thereby to be said to have ceased from yielding to the motions of sin but Christ is said to die to sin because he died to put away sin and abolish that sin which is in us and after this manner we cannot be said to die to sin for none can put away sin or abolish sin by his death but he that is both without sin himself and is a Person infinite Once i. e. Once and but once For such was the worth and value of Christs death as that he needed not to die more than once for the abolishing of sin Heb. 9. ver 25 26. But in that he liveth i. e. But in that he is raised again from death to life He liveth unto God i. e. He liveth and that an immortal life to the glory of God who hath exalted him to that life and is thereby glorified in that he hath so exalted him He liveth i. e. He liveth an immortal life Synechdoche Integri Vnto God i. e. Unto Gods glory Ver. 11. Likewise reckon ye also your selves to be dead indeed unto sin q. d. Being therefore ye hear that Christ was dead but is raised from the dead and being raised liveth and shall live for ever And being that Christ by his death and resurrection and life is a Type and Figure to teach us what we should do and should be Now as Christ was dead but was raised again and liveth a life immortal So likewise reckon ye your selves to be dead indeed unto sin but yet alive unto God through Jesus Christ our Lord and so alive as always to continue in that life To be dead indeed unto sin What it is to be dead unto sin See verse 2. Alive unto God To live or to be alive unto God is so to live as that we please God and observe and do his will Through
of Sin we are by a Metaphor said to be freed from sin as Servants from their Lord and Master And then do we receive grace from Christ and strength and ability to withstand the motions and lusts of sin when we believe the Gospel of Christ and obey it For so soon as ever we believe the Gospel as we ought Christ doth justifie us from all our sins And when he justifieth us he sanctifieth us too and pours his grace into our hearts whereby we are inabled to walk according to the Gospel Ye became the servants of Righteousness That grace which strengtheneth us against sin and enableth us to withstand the motions and lusts of sin enableth us to work the works of righteousness Or at least when we receive one we receive the other And when we receive strength and ability to work the works of righteousness we are called the servants of Righteousness by a Metaphor When the Apostle speaks in this treatise of freedom and servitude he alludeth to civil freedom and servitude used among men and especially the Romans to whom he writeth where some were Masters some Servants some Lords some Slaves and where there were divers Laws concerning these Relations The Apostle speaks ver 13. of yielding ourselves servants unto God And ver 16. of being the servants of obedience And ver 17. of obeying as Servants the form of doctrine which was delivered And verse eighteen of being servants of Righteousness A man cannot serve two Masters saith our Saviour Matth. 6.24 much less can he serve many How is it therefore that the Apostle would have us servants to so many Lords or Masters as these are I answer That these are not divers Lords or Masters but all one one in their end and one in the object of our obedience and when we obey one of these we obey all the rest For as it is one and the same thing for a man to obey a King and his Laws a Master and his commands So it is one and the same thing to obey God and to obey the Law or doctrine of obedience to obey the doctrine delivered and to obey righteousness and serve them For this obedience Doctrine and Righteousness are no other thing nor command any other thing than the will of God Ver. 19. I speak after the manner of men The Apostle seemeth to intend no other thing by this form of speech than to signifie that though he discourseth of heavenly and divine matters yet he is willing that he might condescend to their capacities to make use of vulgar similitudes and similitudes of things well known among earthly men and to draw arguments from them I speak after the manner of men By men he meaneth by a Synechdoche such men as are not acquainted with divine heavenly things But such which as in their discourses and disputations they discourse and dispute altogether of earthly things so do they fetch their similitudes and draw their Arguments only from earthly things and go no higher The Subject of the Apostles disco●rse are spirituall and heavenly things But the form of his discourse is humane or after the manner of men which are acquainted only with earthly things and that because they to whom he writes are by reason of the slowness of their understanding more apt to apprehend spiritual things by vulgar and common similitudes and Arguments drawn from earthly things than to understand spiritual things by spiritual and by such Arguments as they in their own nature will afford Because of the infirmitie of your flesh i. e. Because of the slowness or weakness of your understanding in conceiving of spiritual things He takes Infirmity here for the weakness to wit of their understanding in apprehend ng spirituall things as it is also taken 1 Cor. 8.7 And he taketh flesh for the understanding it self and calls it Flesh because it was accustomed to or acquainted onely with fleshly that is to or with Earthly things For as ye yielded c. This particle For cannot be taken for a Causal here For so taken it will not cohere with that which went before I take it therefore for a Note of Illation that is for Therefore q. d. Therefore as ye have yielded your members Servants of uncleanness c. The Apostle should here make a Superstructure upon that ground-work which he laid ver 16 17 and 18. and bring an Illation from thence in Categorical terms to this or the like sence Viz Therefore being that ye are freed from sin ye ought not to serve sin or ye ought not to sin which was that which he said and undertook to prove ver 15. But being become the Servants of Righteousness ye should obey righteousness and live in all holy and righteous conversation This is that I say which the order of speech required But this the Apostle wrapped up in an Exhortation as he useth sometimes to do where he brings an Exhortation instead of a conclusion or a conclusion wrapped up in an Exhortation instead of a Categoricall conclusion As ye have yielded your members servants Concerning these words or this Phrase See ver 13. As ye have yielded your members servants to uncleanness and iniquity By uncleanness are commonly meant such unclean sins as Drunkenness Lasciviousness Wantonness Luxury c. And to iniquity By Iniquity are here meant such sins as tend to the wrong of our Neighbour as Murder Theft False accusation c. Note that the word Iniquity is to be taken here in a more strict sence than it is taken in the words following Vnto iniquity i. e. To do more iniquity or so as that you have gon on from iniquity to iniquity and from one degree thereof to another Note that iniquity is to be taken here for the work or effect done at the command as it were of that which he calls both uncleanness and Iniquity before so that the word Iniquity is of large extent and relates to more sins than the same word was of and did relate to immediately before For it hath relation not to Iniquity onely but both to uncleanness and Iniquity before mentioned To Righteousness This word is to be taken here as it was taken ver 18. Vnto Holiness i. e. To do or perform daily more and more that which is holy as the Gospel prescribeth It is but common reason which the Apostle here requireth to wit That if we are freed from and made the servants of righteousness that is of God we should abandon sin and serve righteousness that is Serve God For is it any more than reason that he should serve his King and that truely and faithfully too who is freed by him out of the hands of his cruel enemies Ver. 20. For when ye were the Servants of Sin ye were free from Righteousness Between this and the former verse we must understand these or the like words And to Righteousness and not at all to sin And between this and the following verse we must understand these words
said of the law and notwithstanding what perverse men would draw from thence the whole law is holy and that commandment of the law to wit Thou shalt not covet is holy and just and good holy in that it forbids that which is injurious to God just in that it forbids that which is injurious to our neighbours and good in that it forbids that which is injurious to and unbeseeming our own selves 13. Was then that which is good made death unto me God forbid But sin that it might appear sin working d●ath in me by that which is good that sin by the commandment might become exceeding sinful 13. Was then the law or was then that commandment of the law which is holy and just and good made to me a genuine cause or author of the spiritual death by which I died to innocency and of that by which I am become guilty of eternal death God forbid But sin was the cause thereof so that sin did appear to be sin indeed in that that it wrought in me a death to innocency and a guilt of everlasting death by the commandment which is good So that sin by the abuse of the commandment became and shewed her self to be what she was indeed exceeding sinful 14. For we know that the law is spiritual but I am carnal sold under sin 14. Far be it therefore from us to think that the law is the cause of our sins for we know that the law is spiritual commanding spiritual things and ordering to a spiritual life and is approved of God who is a pure spirit But I being under the law am at my best estate carnal and as very a slave to sin as he which is sold in a Market is a slave to him which bought him 15. For that which I do I allow not for what I would that do I not but what I hate that do I. 15. For that you may know that I am as very a slave to sin as he which is sold in a Market is a slave to him that bought him that which I do I like not nor do I approve of it For whereas I would do that which the law commands I do it not but what I hate and would not do because the law forbids it that do I. 16. If then I do that which I would not I consent unto the law that it is good 16. And now if I thus do that which I would not I consent to the law that it is good and spiritual for my will and the law concur in the same things 17. Now then it is no more I that do it but sin that dwelleth in me 17. And now also if it be so that I do that which I would not it is not I that do it as I am instructed by the law but sin which dwelleth in me 18 For I know that in me that is in my flesh dwelleth no good thing For to will is present with me but how to perform that which is good I find not 18. For I know by experience that there dwelleth no spiritual good in me that is in my flesh to quell sin For to will that good which I speak of is present with me and that I can do after a weak manner But yet how to perform that good which I would I find not so predominant is sin in me 19. For the good that I would I do not but the evil which I would not that I do 19. For as I said before the good that I would do because the law commands it I do not but the evil which I would not do because the law forbids it that do I. 20. Now if I do that I would not it is no more I that do it but sin that dwelleth in me 20. Now then I say again if I do that which I would not it is not I that do it as I am instructed by the law but it is sin that dwelleth and reigneth in me which doth it 21. I finde then a law that when I would do good evil is present with me 21. Yea I find by Experience not only that no such spiritual good as I speak of dwelleth in me But I find a law that is I find that when I would do good evil is present with me thwarting that my will to do good 22. For I delight in the law of God after the inward-man 22. For I delight in the Law of God after a weak manner according to the dictates of that Inward man to wit my mind 23. But I see another law in my members warring against the law of my mind and bringing me into captivity to the law of sin which is in my members 23. But I find evil affections in my body as another law warring against the law or dictates in my mind and overcoming me and taking me as a Prisoner and bringing me Captive to sin which dwelleth and ruleth in me 24. O wretched man that I am who shall deliver me from the body of this death 24. O wretched and miserable man as I am who shall deliver me from this Company of deadly enemies which do thus war against me and make me a Captive to sin 25. I thank God through Jesus Christ our Lord. So then with the mind I my self serve the law of God but with the flesh the law of sin 25. I Paul that I may speak this in my own person as I am a Servant of Christ thank God that he hath delivered me from these deadly Enemies by Christ Jesus So then that I may bring up what I have said from the fourteenth verse hitherto to a conclusion and speak in the person of one which is under the Law but hath attained to the highest degree of goodness in that estate as I spake before I my self though I am carnal and sold under sin I serve the law of God with my mind in that I approve of with my mind what the law commands and do propound her commands to my will to be followed by her and so I proclaim and acknowledge that the law is spiritual but yet with my flesh that is with the other faculties and powers of my soul I serve sin And thereby acknowledge and proclaim my self to be carnal and as very a slave to sin as he which is sold in a Market is a slave to him which bought him which was the Position which I laid down ver 14. CHAP. VII Ver. 1. Know ye not brethren for I speak to them which know the law how that the law c. The Apostle said Chap. 6. ver 14. ye are not under the law but under Grace And he spoke that as I said particularly to the believing Jews for many Jews lived at Rome as will appear Act. 28. Now because the Jews though they believed were zealous of the Law Act. 21.20 and therefore might doubt of what S. Paul said Chap. 6.14 of their not being under the law but under grace He shews here tha the Jew might lawfully take
Law of my mind and bringing me into captivity to the Law of Sin It seemeth to be most probable under correction that S. Paul speaks not here either in his own person or in the person of a Regenerate man For the Law of the Spirit of life hath made me free from the Law of Sin and of death saith S. Paul while he speaks in the person of a Regenerate man Chap. 8.2 And Chap. 8. ver 9. speaking to those which are in Christ Jesus he saith ye are not in the flesh but in the spirit that is ye are not carnal but spiritual if so be that the Spirit of God dwelleth in you Now if any man have not the Spirit of Christ he is none of his And Chap. 8.13 If ye live after the flesh ye shall die but if through the Spirit ye mortifie the deeds of the flesh ye shall live S. Paul therefore speaks not here in his own person nor in the person of a Regenerate man but in the person of a man that is under the Law and unregenerate and as yet without Christ but yet not far from the Kingdom of God as I said before Ver. 15. For that which I do I allow not c. In this verse he proves that which he said in the latter part of the former verse To wit that he was sold under Sin That is that he was as very a servant or slave to sin as he which is bought in a Market is to him which buys him For a servant or slave which is so bought is not at his own disposal or under his own power to do any thing which he himself likes or would do but is at the disposal of his Lord and Master which bought him and is under his power to do whatsoever he would have him to do That which I do I allow not i. e. That which I do I approve not of in my mind as of a thing well done Note that these words I do extend further than to positive doing for they extend aswel to what he did not as to what he did as will appear by the subsequent words where that which is here spoken in generall and in gross is divided into particulars For what I would that I do not q d. For whereas I have at sometimes some light desire and will to do that which is good and which is c●mmanded by the Law of God I do it not but am drawn away from it by contrary lusts and affections of Sin He speaks here of a light and inefficacious will to do good He proves also here that he was sold under Sin But what I hate that do I But whereas I am unwillng many times to do that which the Law forbids yet I do it being drawn by contrary lusts and affections of Sin to do it The hate here spoken of is not to be understood of a perfect hatred but of some light unwillingness neither is this unwillingness to be thought to be in him at all times when he sins against a Negative Law or Command but at sometimes onely And as this hatred is but a light unwillingness to do that which he doth So is that willingness to do that which he doth not a light and in efficacious willingness and such as takes him only at sometimes The word rendred I hate is in the Greek 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which doth not always signifie a perfect hatred as may be seen Gen. 29 31. Mat. 10 37. John 12. 25 c. Video meliora proboque Deteriora sequor Saith Medea in the Poet. I see better things and allow of them in my judgement but I follow and do those which are worse Such an affection as is in the Poets Medea is in the man which the Apostle here personates or somewhat better Ver. 16. I do that which I would not These words are the same for sence and Latitude with those words of the former verse viz. That which I allow not And the Inference or Conclusion mentioned or collected here in this verse is drawn from thence If then I do that which I would not I consent unto the Law that it is good The Consequence of what the Apostle here says depends upon that which yet is a true supposition that what he would not do he would not do because it was forbidden by the Law Note that from the discourse immediately foregoing the Apostle draws a double conclusion one contained in this verse whereby he proves that the law was good and therefore Spiritual in relation to what he said ver 14 viz. For we know that the law is Spiritual The other in relation to what he said in the same verse viz. But I am carnal sold under sin which conclusion is contained or set down in the verse following in those words Now then it is no more I that do but Sin which dwelleth in me Ver. 17. Now then it is no more I that do it but Sin that dwelleth in me This conclusion is drawn not from the Sixteenth but the fifteenth verse of this Chapter and relates thither q. d. Now then if I do that which I allow not of according to my mind it is no more I that do it to wit as I am under the law and taught and directed thereby but Sin that dwelleth in me and so by Consequence I am as I said I was verse 14. Carnal sold under Sin It is no more I that do it i. e. It is not I that do it viz. as I am taught and directed by the Law Or he may say that he did it not but Sin which dwelleth in to shew that sin swayed him to do what he did when he would not do it For when two causes concur to one effect the effect is oftentimes attributed to the prime and principal cause and denied to that which is less principal though that did act also So S. Paul saith that he laboured more than all the other Apostles yet not he but the Grace of God which was with him 1 Cor. 15.10 Where he attributes his labour to the Grace of God which was the Principal cause of that his labour and denies himself to be cause thereof because though he did labour himself himself was the less principal cause of that his labour No more The Greek is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 doth sometimes redound and become superfluous in a sentence But Sin that dwelleth in me By Sin he means here that Sin or those Sins to which he was accustomed and which reigned in him or had dominion over him which Sins are said to dwell and may be said to reign in him by reason of those habits which they through custom and often repetition had produced in him And as Sin is said to dwell in a man by reason of that vitious habit which she produced in him So on the contrary is the holy Ghost said to dwell in us by reason of the gifts which it infuseth into us 1 Cor. 3.16
Note that the Apostle speaks here of such as had lived long in sin yea from their Infancy as will appear as by many passages of the Text from the Sixth Chapter hitherto so from those words viz. Not in the Oldness of the Letter ver 6. which occasioned the discourse which followeth from thence to the end of this Chapter The Apostle speaks of Sin as of a Person and as he speaks of Sin as of a Person so he speaks of himself as of an house in which this Person dwelleth And by that that he saith that Sin dwelleth in him he shews that she reigned in him and bore rule and swaid there as the Master of a family doth in his own dwelling house for to this the Apostle seems to allude To dwell signifies sometimes to be as a Lord or Master in an house As Psal 84.12 I had rather be a Door-keeper in the house of my God than to dwell that is than to be a Lord or Master in the tents of wickedness Ver. 18. For I know that in me that is in my flesh dwelleth no good thing i e. He proves by this that Sin dwelleth in him For by that which is good he means a spiritual good and such a spiritual good as with which reigning Sin cannot consist For the good which he here speaks of is as opposite to Sin mentioned in the former verse which is reigning sin as light to darkness or heat to cold So that if this good dwelt in him that Sin would not dwell in him and that Sin will dwell in him till this good takes possession in him When therefore he says I know that in me that is in my flesh dwelleth no good thing There is a Synechdoche Generis in the word good And he alludes to a Master or Mistress of an house in the word dwells as he did by the same word in the former verse I know To wit by Experience That in me Those words the Apostle corrects or limits by the words following viz. by those That is in my Flesh that he might exempt his mind from that which he saith of his other parts or faculties in this verse For in them he says there dwelleth no good but in his mind there dwelleth some good in that the mind knoweth the Law of God and assents to it as good and propounds it as good to the will and so serves the Law of God as he speaks ver 25. In my flesh He opposeth the flesh here to the mind which he speaks of ver 23. 25. And which he calls the Inward Man ver 22. And whatsoever is not the Mind he comprehends under the name of Flesh the will it self not excepted by reason of the corruption and vitiousness which is in it For the Apostle calls Idolatry Witchcraft hatred variance emulation strife seditions which are the Acts of a vitious Will the works of the Flesh Gal. 5.19 yet though the Will be vitious and corrupt in such a man he may have sometimes a light and inefficacious Will or desire to do that which is Good For to Will is present with me i. e. For I can yea often do will that which is good and according to the Law and have a light desire to do it This will or desire which he speaks of is a weak and inefficacious will and desire But how to perform that which is good I find not i. e. But I find not any thing to help me or assist me to do or perform that good efficaciously which I would do Ver. 19. For the good that I would I do not See this verse expounded ver 15. This was brought as an Argument ver 15. to prove that it was Sin that made him do what he did Here it is brought as an Argument to prove that he had no spiritual good dwelling in his Flesh or to bear rule there and to reign over sin Ver. 20. Now if I do what I would not it is not I that do it but Sin that dwelleth in me See ver 17. Ver. 21. I find then a Law that when I would do good evil is present with me The word rendred then is in the Greek 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which may be rendred Immo Vtique Profecto yea truly verily I render it therefore thus Yea I find a Law that is I find that when I would do good there is that in my flesh which stirs me up to do that which is evil q. d. I know that in me that is in my flesh dwelleth no good thing yea I find that when I would do good there is that in me that is in my flesh which stirs me up to that which is evil and naught and which I would not do I find a Law that when I would do good evil is present with me There is an Ellypsis in these words leaving therefore their liberties to other I conceive that the whole Sentence must run thus I find a Law that is I find that when I would do good evil is present with me The Apostle breaks off therefore when he had said I find a Law and leaving that abrupt assumes a speech aequivalent to that which he would have said which is this I finde that when I would do good evil is present with me A Law The Apostle takes the word Law by a Catachresis sometime for that which is a motive or incentive to that which is good as ver 23. Where he mentioneth the Law of his mind And sometimes again for that which is a motive or incentive to that which is evil as ver 23. when he saith I see another Law in my members warring c. And this he doth because a Law properly taken doth move and incite those to whom it is given by her promise of rewards to do those things which she commands Here he takes it for a motive or incentive to evil Evil is present with me By evil he means that which incites him and stirs him up to that which is evil by a Metonymy In particular by evil he means here the carnal concupiscence or carnal appetite or carnal desires and aff●ctions which are in him and which stir him up to embrace and follow those things which are naught and sinful for him to do That which he calls 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or Evil here he calls 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or a Law in his members ver 23. Ver. 22. For I delight in the Law of God after the inner man i. e. For I delight in the Law of God or some commands thereof according to what my inward man that is my mind or understanding propounds to me The delight which he here speaks of is but a short and imperfect and an inefficacious delight and such a delight may be in an unregenerate man for our Saviour tels of one who heareth the word and anon with joy receiveth it but hath no root in himself c. Mat. 13.20 21. And surely such a one is not a regenerate man This delight is
who are after the Flesh do mind the things of the Flesh but they that are after the spirit as they are which are in Christ Jesus do mind the things of the spirit He grants that of those which are after the Flesh which he denies of those which are after the spirit to wit that they mind the things of the Flesh By them which are after the Flesh he means those that are Carnal The Greek is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and the Preposition 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 joyned with a noun substantive turns it to the nature sometimes of an adjective and sometime of a participle Do mind the things of the flesh i. e. Do mind those things which the sensual or carnal appetite and affections move them to and delight in them and follow after them Do mind 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is the Greek word here and though 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is properly spoken of the mind or understanding yet here it is spoken of the Will But they that are after the spirit do mind the things of the spirit By the Spirit he meaneth that which he calleth the Law of the Spirit of life ver 2. And by such as are after the spirit he meaneth such as are spiritual and such are they which are in Christ Jesus ver 9. The things of the spirit i. e. The things to which the spirit inclineth or moveth them to Ver. 6 For to be carnally minded is death Betwixt this and the foregoing verse we may understand these or the like words and it is no wonder or and not without reason q. d. And it is no wonder or it is not without reason that they that are after the spirit do mind the things of the Spirit for to be carnally minded is death c. He proves here that which he said ver 5. That they which are after the spirit do mind the things of the spirit To be carnally minded That is to mind the things of the flesh as ver 5. That is to think of follow and delight in the things to which the sensual or carnal appetite and affections move to Is death i. e. Is deadly or that which will certainly bring everlasting death Metonymia effecti He proves here not that they which are after the Flesh do mind the things of the Flesh but that they which are after the Spirit do mind the things of the Spirit He that is after the flesh doth not consider that it is death to be carnally minded therefore he mindes the things of the flesh But he that is after the Spirit he knows it and considers it therefore he mindes not the things of the Flesh but of the Spirit To be spiritually minded That is to mind the things of the Spirit as he spoke ver 5. Is life and peace i. e. Is that which will bring life and peace through the goodness and mercy of God For as the wages of sin is death so the gift of God to those that follow his Spirit is eternal life through Jesus Christ our Lord Chap. 6.23 Is life By life understand eternal life and take it Metonymically for the cause or for that which will procure or bring after it such a life And peace By peace understand first after the Hebrew manner the heap or plenty or plentifull return of all good things and then take it Metonymically for that which will procure or bring after it such an heap or plenty or plentifull return Ver. 7. Because the carnall mind is emnity against God i. e. Because he that is carnally minded is an enemy to God The carnal mind is put here by a Metonymy for the man that hath a carnall mind or for the man that is carnally minded or which mindeth the things of the Flesh And enmity is put here for an enemy An Abstract for a Concrete What it is to be carnally minded or to mind the things of the Flesh See verse 5. He proves here that which he said ver 6. To wit that to be carnally minded is death And certainly if to be carnally minded will make us enemies to God it will bring death upon us for all the enemies of God shall be destroyed For it is not subject to the Law of God He proves here that the carnall minded man is an enemy to God and he proves it by this that such a man as is carnally minded doth not obey the Law of God and do as God would have him do and as he is bound to do See Saint James Chap. 4. ver 4. Neither indeed can it be That is neither indeed can he be Subject to the Law of God or obey it to wit so long as he is such Ver. 8. So then they that are in the flesh cannot please God q. d. So then they indeed that are in the Flesh c. By those which are in the Flesh he meaneth such as he said were after the Flesh that is such as were carnal Cannot please God i. e. Cannot but walk after the Flesh which is a thing displeasing to God He takes here that that they cannot please God for that that they walk after the Flesh or that that they cannot but walk after the Flesh by putting the Consequent for the antecedent This phrase therefore Viz. They cannot please God is the same for the sence with that viz. Who walk after the Flesh and it is occasioned from an objection starting from the first verse though this Corollary or Conclusion be drawn from that which went immediately before If you aske therefore to what end the Apostle drawes this Conclusion and Corollary here for it seemeth that it might have been well spared as not being to the purpose of what he had in hand I answer The Apostle prevented as I said an Objection in the second verse an Objection made against that which he said ver 1. Who walk not after the Flesh but after the spirit for a weak and faint-hearted Christian though he were in Christ Jesus yet might say in opposition to that yea but I cannot but walk after the Flesh now therefore the Apostle saith here in reference to that That it is true indeed and it would appear out of what he had said That they which were in the Flesh cannot but walk after the Flesh But yet though they cannot but walk after the Flesh yet they which were in Christ Jesus might do otherwise than walk after the Flesh for they which are in Christ Jesus are not in the Flesh but in the Spirit and so may walk not after the Flesh but after the Spirit The Apostle therefore doth draw this Conclusion here that he might grant so much to the Objection that by granting so much he may the better induce him to yield to that viz. That they that are in the Spirit or They that are in Christ Jesus walk after the Spirit Cannot please God That is cannot while they are such but walk after the Flesh which is displeasing to God He takes here that viz.
the freedom of those from the guilt and punishment of sin and the dominion thereof which were typified by Jacob that is of the faithful called the Children of the Promise v. 8. Note that Esau may be taken here to signifie a Child of the flesh because he was the Elder brother And men must have a being according to the Flesh before they can be children according to the Spirit that is before they can believe for Nature is before Grace and Jacob may be taken to signifie a child according to the Spirit that is a believer because he was the younger brother For men come to be children according to the Spirit that is men come to believe after they are children according to the flesh So that generally the children of the flesh are elder than the children of the Promise and the children of the Promise younger than the Children of the flesh Note again that servitude under an enemy a Lord a Master or a tyrant is frequently taken in Scripture as a type of Captivity under sin and the guilt and punishment thereof And that the freedom from such an enemy Lord Master or Tyrant is frequently taken as a Type of deliverance from sin and that so frequently as that we need say no more of it Ver. 13. As it is written Jacob have I loved but Esau have I hated i e. Which prophesie or saying accords with that which is written by Malachy Mal. 1.2 Jacob have I loved Esau have I hated At least in a general way That which the Prophet Malachy saith concerning Esau and Jacob did in the History concern only the bodily or wordly estate of those two Brethren or rather of their posterity respectively but we must lift it up to the mystical and spiritual sence wherein God sheweth his love to those which were typified by Jacob and his Sons in remitting their sins and justifying them from their offences and his hatred in those which are typified in Esau and his Posterity in letting them lie in the guilt of their sins without remission Ver. 14. What shall we say then is there unrighteousness with God That is what shall we infer from what I have said shall we infer from what I have said that there is unrighteousness with God because he passeth by so many of the Children of Abraham which are flesh of his flesh yea though they sought justification by their works And pardoneth those which are the Children of promise or Children according to the Spirit that is those which believe though they be Gentiles and not of the Stock of Abraham only because they believe God forbid The Apostle prevents an objection here for whereas he concluded in his last discourse that they which are the children of Abraham or Isaac or Jacob according to the flesh these are not these children which God promised to justifie no nor yet as they were under the Law and sought justification by works But the Children of the promise that is the faithfull whether they be of the Stock of Abraham Isaac and Jacob or whether they be of a Gentile race these are the only children of Abraham to which God made that spiritual promise of justification and which he would justifie A Jew might say Paul if this be so then by thy doctrine God rejecteth those which are of the holy seed of Abraham and Isaac and Jacob yea though they seek justification by the works of the Law which God hath given them if they do not believe and justifieth not only those which are of the holy Stock of Abraham if they believe but also such as are of the unclean Race of the Gentiles But if God shall do so indeed as thou teachest by this thy doctrine then would God be unjust for it would be injustice or unrighteousness in God thus to reject the holy seed of Abraham Isaac and Jacob only for not believing and thus to accept of the unclean Race of the Gentiles only because they believe This objection I say the Appostle prevents here saying What shall we then say is there unrighteousness in God God forbid What shall we say then i. e What shall we infer then or what shall we gather then from that which I have said Is there unrighteousness with God i. e. Shall we infer from thence that God is unjust in these his dealings and dispensasations God forbid i. e. No by no means See Cap. 3.4 Ver. 15. For he saith to Moses I will have mercy on whom I will have mercy c. He gives a reason here why God is not unjust in passing by so many of the children of Abraham or Jacob which were their children only according to the flesh and not justifying them yea though they sought Justification by their works and in justifying all those which were the children of the promise or children according to the Spirit though they were Gentiles and descended not from Abraham or Jacob by lineal Propagation He saith to Moses To wit Exodus 33.19 I will have mercy on whom I will have mercy and I will have compassion on whom I will have compassion These words were spoken by God Exod. 33.19 And they were spoken by occasion of that that the Children of Israel had in the absence of Moses made them a molten Calf and worshipped it saying These are thy Gods O Israel which brought thee up out of the land of Egypt At which the Lord was exceeding angry and would have destroyed them all had not Moses entreated the Lord earnestly to pardon this their sin But the Lord would not pardon them all but some only saying I will have mercy on whom I will have mercy c. By these words God sheweth that he is free and restrained by no Law from shewing mercy and exercising compassion where he pleaseth And therefore he is not unjust or unrighteous in justifying those that are the children of the Promise yea though they be Gentiles most of them Ver. 16. So then it is not of him that willeth nor him that runneth but of God that sheweth mercy This conclusion doth most naturally arise out of what the Apostle alledged out of Exod. 33.19 in the foregoing verse but yet it is not that which he was to prove but that which he was to prove he inferrs from hence and sets down ver 18 But it is a conclusion as it semeth by the by A Question therefore it is and well may be to what end the Apostle makes mention of this Conclusion and why he draws it out and alleadgeth it here Answ This Conclusion is as I said drawn by the by out of the 15. verse and the Apostle often draws conclusions and arguments after this manner as I have observed before ver 11. chap. 7.16 c. But then it is indeed for the most part for the proof of some subject which he had treated of before But he hath not as yet directly treated of such a Subject as this conclusion is hitherto To what end thererefore doth he
31. But is an objection or question which might arise from that which was said ver 31. which question the Apostle here moves and answereth that he might yet more artificially usher in what he hath to say in the beginning of the Tenth Chapter Because they sought it not by faith i. e. Because they sought it not by the faith of Christ or by faith in Christ which is the only way to obtain Justificati●n But as it were by the works of the Law i. e. But because they sought it by the works of the Law thinking thereby to obtain it without the faith of or in Christ As it were by the works of the Law These words as it were do sometimes signifie the truth and reality of a thing as John 7.9 sometimes an appearance of a thing only And I conceive that they are put here to signifie an appearance only though the Jews might think that when they soug●t righteousness by the Law as they did they sought it truly and as they ought to seek it They that truly seek Justification or Righteousness for these two words signifie both one and the same thing by the works of the Law they must so keep the Law as that they never break it at any time no not in the least tittle thereof for if they break it in the least tittle thereof they are cursed by the Law Galath 3.10 And therefore such can never be justified by the works of the Law Now the Jews had sinned every one of them And now having once sinned they could not really and truly and according to knowledge seek for Justification by the works of the Law But being that though they had sinned yet nevertheless they sought for Justification by the works of the Law the Apostle may say not that they sought it by the works of the Law But that they sought it as it were by the works of the Law For they stumbled at the stumbling stone i. e. For they stumbled and were offended at Christ who was to them as a Stumbling-block or stone of Offence in the way to Righteousness This Particle For relates to those words Because they sought it not by faith viz. The faith of Christ And are a Reason why they did not seek after Righteousness by faith The reason why the Jews did not seek after righteousness by faith was that they were offended at Christ by the faith of whom only Justification is to be had and rejected him and evilly entreated him to their own hurt and ruine by bringing a sin upon their head and putting away from them the only means of obtaining Remission of sins The reason why the Jews rejected Christ and were offended at him was because Christ came in such a poor and mean manner without any wordly Pomp being born according to the flesh of poor parentage and having not an house of his own where to lay his head Whereas they looked for a Pompous Messiah to come with all worldly Glory and Lustre mistaking the prophesies concerning Christ which spoke gloriously of him and interpreting them of Earthly Outward or worldly Glory when they were to be taken in a Mystical sence for Heavenly Inward and Spiritual Glory They stumbled at the stumbling stone By this stumbling block or stumbling stone is meant Christ who is here called and likened to a stumbling block or stumbling stone because as a man who in the way which he goes stumbles at a stone or a block which lies in his way comes to hurt So did the Jews stumbling as it were at Christ while they walked after justification get hurt thereby while they were offended at him and rejected him as though he were an Impostor and not the true Christ or Messiah promised by God They stumbled at i. e. They are said to have stumbled at Christ because they rejected Christ and persecuted him and so brought sin upon their head which was hurt to them as a man taketh hurt which stumbleth at a Stone or a Block in the way Ver. 33. As it is written behold I say c. Before these words understand these or the like words viz. For Christ was a stumbling stone to the Jews q. d For Christ was a stumbling Stone to the Jews as it is written Behold I lay in Sion a stumbling stone and Rock of Offence As it is written viz. Isaiah 28.16 But yet the Testimony here alleadged is not to be found there word for word as it is here quoted as they that will compare the places may observe For these words a stumbling block and a Rock of Offence are not there to be found Wherefore most Interpreters do take this Testimony not as a simple testimony taken out of any one place but as a testimony compounded of two parts part whereof is taken out of Isaiah Chap. 28.16 Part out of Isaiah 8.14 Where we have these words A stone of stumbling and a Rock of Offence But yet notwithstanding this we cannot find the whole testimony word for word in or to be made out of those two places conjoyned Yet nevertheless we may find the whole sence of the words even in Isaiah 28.16 mystically expounded and therefore I conceive that the Apostle takes his testimony wholly from thence though to explain the mystical sence thereof he may borrow some words from Isaiah 8.14 The words therefore as they are read in Isaiah Chap. 28.16 are these Behold I the Lord lay in Sion for a foundation a stone a tried stone A pretious corner stone a sure foundation He that believeth shall not make haste Which words in the first and literal sence are spoken of Ez●kiah King of Judah who when the Assyrians were in the Land of Judah wasting and destroying the Land yet did believe the word of the Lord that he notwithstanding would defend and keep Jerusalem and so was saved when most of the Jews which would not b●lieve were destroyed Hezekiah therefore in the literal sence was called here a Foundation in Sion because he dwelt in Sion that is in Hierusalem and was a Foundation that is a cause of safety to them which flew thither for safety for for Hezekiahs sake did God keep Hierusalem safe at that time He might be called also a Foundation because he was the Chiefest of them which believed in Hierusalem that Hierusalem should not be destroyed by the Assyrians but saved by the Lord from being destroyed by them And was by his example and counsel an inducement also to others to believe and to stand fast and strong in their belief For as a company of men knit or combined together in one are likened sometimes to a natural body and the Chief of them to the head of that body So are they sometimes likened to an House and the chief of them to the Foundation of that house And thus might Hezekiah also be likened to the Foundation of an house because he was the Chief of those believers which were in Hierusalem when the Assyrians wasted the Land of Judah
so high as that it doth set a man on work to do those things which God by his new covenant with him requires of him as the case requires and as opportunity serves so that he must be ready at all times in the preparation of his heart to confess with his mouth the Lord Jesus and not only that but to do every good work also and this is that which the Apostle intimates here willing that we should know that Justifying faith is not a dead barren or fruitless faith but an operative faith which will bring forth good works as opportunity offers it self Wherefore by that which he saith of confession with the mouth understand all good works besides as well as that But he seemeth to make mention of this only not to exclude other good works but because the time in which he wrote this might be a time of persecution with the Romans or such as that they might fear a persecution at which time confession of Christ w th the mouth will be most requisite or because he said ver 8. The word is nigh thee even in thy mouth Therefore he may particularly mention the confession of Christ with the mouth And for the same reason also he may say and shalt believe in thy heart expressing those words in thine heart here because he said before and in thine heart verse 8. And shalt believe with the heart i. e. And shalt heartily believe That God hath raised him from the dead That we may be justified it is not only required that we should believe of Jesus that God hath raised him from the dead but we must believe also that he was made man and crucified for us and that he was the Son of God and the Redeemer of the world c. And many things must we believe also concerning the Father and the Holy Ghost Therefore by that that God hath raised up Jesus from the dead we must by a Synechdoche or Syllepsis understand all the misteries of faith and also all that God requireth of us by his new covenant with us to be done and believed by us But the Apostle may in this place make mention only of this that God raised up Jesus from the dead because he mentioned the bringing up of Christ from the dead ver 7. Or because the resurrection of Christ from the dead did praesuppose most other articles of our faith or because that Article was alwayes most difficult to be believed Thou shalt be saved To wit from thy sins Ver. 10. Vnto Righteousness i. e. Unto Justification that is that he may be justified or so that he is justified thereby And with the mouth confession is made unto salvation i. e. And to be alway ready prepared to confess Christ with the mouth And when the case shall require then to confess him actually is that which brings Salvation Thus I understand this confession of the preparation of the heart to confess Christ with the mouth as I did that ver 9. And note here that the Apostle doth not make this confession with their mouth as a thing plainly and really disjoyned from faith But that which followeth naturally and immediately from it as the heat from the fire Therefore in the proof of what he saith here which proof he produceth ver 11. He mentioneth only Belief And saith For the scripture saith whosoever believeth on him shall not be ashamed which would not reach to confession of Christ with the mouth were it not that that were an Effect of faith naturally and immediately flowing from it and so one in a manner with it Ver. 11. For the scripture saith To wit Isaiah Cap. 28. ver 16. Whosoever believeth on him shall not be ashamed i. e. Whosoever believeth on Christ shall truely be justified See what we said of this phrase and words Chap. 9. ver 33. Ver. 12. For there is no difference between the Jew and the Greek Supple In that which concerneth Faith and Salvation This the Apostle inferreth out of the former verse but not out of the word whosoever which we read there for that word is not read in the forenamed place of the prophet Isaiah but out of the Indefinite generality of the Sentence it self recited out of the said prophet by which none is excluded from salvation or Justification whether he be Jew or Gentile if he do but believe The Greek i. e. The Gentile See Rom. 1.16 For the same Lord over all is rich unto all that call upon him It is very congruous to reason that he which is Lord of all will be the same to all be they of what Nation or Stock they will who believe in him And that he will not accept of one and reject the other Especially when he is so rich in mercy as that he hath mercy for thousands yea mercy enough for all Is rich unto all i. e. Is abundant in grace and mercy to all The Apostle often useth Riches for abundance and the riches here spoken of are riches of grace or riches of mercy as Ephes 1.7 That call upon him See verse 13. Ver. 13. Whosoever shall call upon the name of the Lord To call upon the name of the Lord is by an hebrew Periphrasis or Metonymy to call upon the Lord. And to call upon the Lord here is to beseech the Lord and to pray him that he would save him or deliver him from his sins but yet to pray in faith Whosoever Whether he be Jew or Gentile Shall be saved To wit from his sins This which the Apostle here saith is taken out of the Prophet Joel Joel 2.32 And it is there spoken in the literal sence of such Jews as should call upon the name of the Lord for deliverance when they were oppressed by the Assyrians But in the mysticall sence it is to be understood of all such as should pray unto the Lord for deliverance from sins in faith For the miseries and calamities of the Jews under the Assyrians was a Type of our miseries and calamities under Sin and their deliverance from the Assyrians a Type of our deliverance from sin Ver. 14. How then shall they call on him in whom they have not believed c. The Apostle proves from what he said in the former verse viz From that That whosoever shall call upon the name of the Lord and the Gentile as well as the Jew shall be saved That which the Apostle handleth Chap. 9. ver 24 25 26. to wit that God hath called the Gentiles and did intend to call them and send Ministers to them he proveth here as it were by Steps and degrees And he proves it for this end that the Jews should not think that what he preached concerning the Gentiles was from his own head but that God spake as much heretofore even by his Prophets of old The Apostle said out of the Prophet Joel in the former verse that whosoever shall call upon the name of the Lord shall be saved That is that whosoever
whether he be Jew or Gentile c. Now whereas that universal word whosoever and that universal proposition appertained both to Jew and Gentile the Gentile hath cause to look for Salvation as well as the Jew if he call upon God now if it were so that the Gentiles should never be in a capacity to call upon God this would becom a vain assertion and this would be but an empty and idle sound with reverence be it spoken as to them seeing therefore there is no not the least particle of the word of God idle the Apostle may solidely prove from hence that the word of faith was to be sent to the Gentiles saying How then shall they call on him in whom they have not believed and how shall they believe in him of whom they have not heard How then shall they call on him c. i. e. How then shall the Gentiles call for of them he speaks here that is how shall they pray for Salvation to him c. In whom they have not believed Whom they do not believe is able and willing to save them and so on whom they cannot rely upon for Salvation Of whom they have not heard To wit Effectually How shall they hear without a Preacher i. e. How shall they hear to wit Effectually except they have some body of credit to preach the Gospel unto them and such as they may believe came from God Ver. 15. And how shall they preach And how shall the Preachers preach to wit So as that they may be credited of them to whom they preach that that which they preach is from God Except they be sent i. e Except they be sent from God and so sent as that it may appear to them that God sent them The Apostle speaks here chiefly of such as were first sent to the Gentiles to preach the Gospel and Remission of sins to them Such as the Apostles were and therefore it is hapily that he useth the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 here a word alluding to the name of an Apostle And the Scope of the Apostle which is to prove that the calling of the Gentiles is directly from God requireth that we should interpret this place of them or such as they were And now as for them which first preached the Gospel to the Gentiles it was necessary for them that they should be sent immediately from God and so sent as that it might appear to them to whom they were sent that they came from God Otherwise they to whom they came had no reason to believe them nor would they have been blamed for not believing John 15.24 And therefore God when he sent his messengers did shew that they were sent with that doctrine which they preached to them from him by the miracles which he wrought by them For he gave testimony unto the word of his grace which they preached and granted signs and wonders to be done by their hands Acts 14.3 The doctrine which the Apostles the first preachers preached to the Gentiles and confirmed by miracles we have written by some of them and attested by the rest and it is contained in the books of the New Testament And to assure us that this doctrine came by them from God and was attested and confirmed by miracles wrought by them we have the unanimous consent and tradition of all Churches of Christ from time to time since their time So that they which preach no other doctrine but what they taught have no need of new miracles to confirm their doctrine And that man would be a miracle or wonder rather himself who should now disbelieve the doctrine of the New Testament which is and hath been received with such an universal consent from hand to hand as coming from God and which hath been confirmed by him by such works as could not be done but by a Divine power As it is written how beautiful are the feet of them that preach the Gospel of peace c. q. d. Wherefore the Apostles or preachers of the Gospel have been sent to them and they have heard them Effectually and believed For they have received the preachers of the Gospel joyfully and said of them as it is written of them How beautiful are the feet of them which preach the Gospel of peace and bring glad tidings of good things These words viz. wherefore the Apostles or Preachers of the Gospel have been sent to them and they have heard them Effectually And believed For they have received the Preachers of the Gospel joyfully and have said of them c. I say these or some such words as these are are here to be understood For that the Apostle would shew here not only that there were Preachers sent to the Gentiles But also that the Gentiles did joy fully receive them for their message sake and believe what they preached is evident by what is said verse 16 viz. But they have not all believed the Gospel where he denies that of the Jews which he affirms here of the Gentiles And indeed the Apostle when he alledgeth any t●stimony of Scripture he leaves it often to his reader to make the conne●ion of it with the context As it is written Viz. Isa 52 7. How beautiful are the feet of them which preach the Gospel of peace i. e. How wellcome are they which preach the Gospel of peace And how doth the sight of them rejoyce our hearts The feet are put here by a Synechdoche for the whole man And therefore the feet rather then any other part or member of man here because it speaks of coming which is performed by the feet That which is beautiful is delightful to the eyes and therefore they are said of the Hebrews to have beautiful feet which come with joyful news because we are delighted and rejoyce at the coming of such messengers That which the Apostle here saith is taken out of Isa 52.7 where we read thus How beautiful upon the mountains are the feet of him that bringeth good tidings that publisheth peace that bringeth good tidings of good that publisheth salvation And they are spoken there in the person of a man or certain men of Sion or Hierusalem which was a Type of the Church of Christ as if on a sudden he or they saw a messenger hasting over the Mountains which were about Hierusalem with good news of the delivery of the Jews out of the Babylonish captivity by Cyrus But because the delivery of the Jews out of the Babylonish Captivity by Cyrus was a Type of the delivery of the faithful out of the Captivity of sin by Christ and the messengers which brought good news to Hierusalem of the Jews delivery by Cyrus were Types of the Apostles and Ministers of the Gospel which were to bring good news of mans redemption from sin by Christ And the Jews which entertained those Messengers joyfully because of their good news were Types of the faithful which received the Preachers of the word and their word
was to be preached to the Gentiles For it was necessary that the word of God should first have been spoken to you say Paul and Barnabas to the Jews But seeing yee put it from you and judge your selves unworthy of everlasting life lo we turn unto the Gentiles Acts 13.46 And Luke 24. ver 46 47. Our Saviour thus speaketh Thus saith he it is written and thus it behoved Christ to suffer and so rise from the dead the third day And that repentance and remission of sins should be preached in his name among all Nations beginning marke it at Hierusalem Their sound i. e. The voice or preaching of the Apostles whereby they preach the Gospel Went out into all the earth i. e. Is gone out into all the earth among the Gentiles And their words unto the ●nd of the world This is a Repetition of the former sentence but with an Hyperbole Ver. 19. But I say did not Israel know q. d. But that I may return to speak of the calling of the Gentiles did not the Jewes know that God would call the Gentiles and take them into favour Did not Israel i. e. Did not the Jews c. Israel is put here by a Metonymy for the Jewes which are the Children of Israel who was Jacob. Did not Israel know Supple that God would call the Gentiles and take them into favour q. d. Yes he did know it both by what Moses and by what Isaiah wrote First Moses saith He saith first Moses saith because he speaks of Isaiah afterwards who was after Moses Moses saith Viz. Deut. 32.21 of which the People of Israel cannot be ignorant if they heed it I will provoke you to jealousie by them that are not a people i. e. I will make so much of the Gentiles which are not my people and so highly favour them with the choicest of my favours as that I will make you which are my people jealous of my love Jealousie is a sickness or illness of mind in a man proceeding from that that another injoyeth that which he desireth By them that are no people i. e. By them which are not my people or by them which I took not to be my people as I took you O ye children of Jacob. By these he means the Gentiles And by a foolish People I will anger you i. e. And I will do such things for the Gentiles and be so gratious towards them as that it shall anger you to see them so highly favoured by me as I will favour them and make you envious towards them A foolish Nation by this he meaneth the Gentiles who may be called a foolish nation or a foolish people as for other things so especially for that that they worshipped Idols and for this in particular are they branded for folly Isaiah chap. 45.20 and Isaiah chap. 44. v 9 10 11 18 19 c. This testimony is as I said taken out of Deuteronomy 32 21. Where the Lord threatneth the Israelites that if they did provoke him to jealousie by their Sins he would provoke them to jealousie by his love to the Gentiles And the Jews the children of Israel did mightily provoke him by their sins when he sent his only Son to them and they would have none of him but hated him persecuted him and crucified him So far were they from believing in him V. 20. But Isaiah is very bold i. e. But Isaiah is very bold no way fearing the anger of the Jews And saith To wit in the person of God I was found of them that sought mee not i. e. I was found of them as the Object of their worship and faith and as a merciful God in remitting their sins that sought me not in times past That sought me not Supple in times past By these he meaneth the Gentiles who in times past were ignorant of the true God and his way of worship I was made manifest unto them that asked not after me This is a Repetition of the former sentence I was made manif●st To wit as the true God and justifier of them that believe in me This which Isaiah is here said to say is taken out of Isaiah 65 1. And in the first sence it is spoken of Cyrus and the Nations which were under him who lit upon the will of the Lord in destroying the Babylonians and freeing the Jews which were under their Captivity when they sought it not and were made prosperous by the Lord and rewarded for this their doings But in the second and sublime sence it is a prophesie of the Gentiles under the Gospel coming to the Lord and finding him worthy of worship and to be believed in his word and receiving justification at his hands where as in former times they knew not the true God nor enquired after him but lived securely in their sins And in this Cyrus and the Nations which warred under him were by what they did a Type of the Gentiles under the Gospel in what they did Where note that though Cyrus was a type of Christ redeeming man from sin in that he delivered the Jews out of the Babylonish Captivity yet he and the Nations which warred under him might be a type of the Gentiles getting dominion over sin in that they vanquished and overcame their Enemies And these words may be understood of either or both of them 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 though they be diversly interpreted in their divers applications of which see what I said in my preface to my Exposition on the prophesie of Isaiah But to Israel he saith i. e. But to the Jews the Children of Israel he saith by way of prophesie concerning them themselves in the person of the Lord. All the day long have I stretched forth my hands unto a disobedient and gain-saying People i. e. I have for a long time together without ceasing preached unto you by the preachers of my word the Gospel of peace and remission of sins and have been ready to receive you to mercy but ye have not hearkned to my word but have been disobedient to it and spoke against it That which the Apostle alledgeth here is taken out of Isaiah chap. 65.2 This is spoken in the first sence of the Jews which were Captive in Babylon to whom the Lord sent his servants the Prophets to reclaim them and bring them to repentance promising them Redemption out of their Captivity but they would not hear Which Jews were a Type of the Jews in Christ and the Apostles time to whom Remission of sins was preached through Christ but they would not hearken but were disobedient to the word and strove against it These words therefore though they were in the first sence spoken of the Jews which were Captive in Babylon yet in the second sence they are spoken of those Jews which lived in the time of our Saviour and his Apostles I have stretched out my hands i. e. I have been ready to receive you in the arms of my mercy He speaks of God as
will say that this is no good news to you For if they should be provoked thereby and should regain Gods love ye Gentiles which were received into Gods love by reason of the fall of the Jews should be cast out again if the Jews were again received But fear not this for if the fall and diminution of the Jews was the occasion that the Gentiles were enriched by faith and justification and other spiritual blessings How much more will their recovery and their nation being full be the cause of such blessings 13. For I speak to you Gentiles in as much as I am the Apostle of the Gentiles I magnifie mine office 13. But that you may not believe that the Jews stumbled that they should fall without hope of ever rising again I tell you Gentiles in as much as I am the Apostle of the Gentiles That I do labour abundantly in the ministration of my office by preaching the Gospel to you 14. If by any means I may provoke to emulation them which are my flesh and might save of them 14. And I do it for this end that if by any means I can I may provoke the Jews which are my kinsmen according to the flesh to emulation that is to imitate the believing Gentiles in their faith that so I might bring some of them to salvation 15. For if the casting away of them be the reconciling of the world what shall the receiving of them be but life from the dead 15. And think not that if I should bring some of them to salvation that this would be a means to cast you off again For if the casting away of the Jews was an occasion of that that God reconciled the Gentiles to himself What would Gods receiving the Jews to favour again be but a cause or means of bringing more Gentiles yet to the life of grace which are as yet dead in their sins 16. For if the first fruit be holy the lump is also holy and if the root be holy so are the branches 16. Again being that Abraham and Isaac and Jacob which were the first of the Nation of the Jews were holy it is credible that all their Posterity is holy too so holy as not to be utterly deprived of the means of salvation and holiness For Abraham and Isaac and Jacob were as it were the first fruits and the Nations of the Jews are as it were the lump they were also as it were the Root and Bulk and the Nation of the Jews were as it were the branches of the Olive-tree Now if the first-fruit be holy the lump is also holy and if the Root and Bulk be holy so also are the branches 17. And if some of the branches be broken off and thou being a wilde olive tree wert graffed in amongst them and with them partak●st of the root and fatness of the olive tree 17 But now if some of the branches be broken off of this tree and thou O Gentile which wast as a branch or cion of the wild Olive-tree art graffed into this Olive-tree among those branches which yet hold their own and with them partakest of the root and fatness of the Olive-tree that is of all the rich promises which were made to Abraham and Isaac and Jacob and their seed 18. Boast not against the branches but if thou boast thou bearest not the root but the root thee 18. Boast not against the branches that is boast not against the Jews which are the children of Abraham and Isaac and Jacob But if thou boastest remember this that thou bearest not the Root but the Root thee that is remember this that Abraham and Isaac and Jacob and their seed partake not of thy blessings but thou partakest of theirs and this may somewhat allay thy boasting 19. Thou wilt say then the branches were broken off that I might be graffed in 19. But thou wilt say nevertheless in a kind of pride The branches were broken off that I might be graffed in that is the Jews were cast out of the Church of God that thou maist be taken in in their room 20. Well because of unbelief they were broken off and thou standest by faith Be not high minded but fear 20. Well be it so because of unbelief they were broken off from the O●●ve-tree that is for their infidelity they were cast out of the Church and thou because of thy faith art grafted into that ree that is art received as a member into the Church of God and so standest be not therefore high-minded and puffed up against the Jew because of thy high calling for that may make thee lose thy faith by which thou standest but fear least God should cast thee off again that so thou maist hold thy faith the faster 21. For if God spared not the natural branches take heed lest he also spare not thee 21. Fear I say for if God spared not the Jews which were as it were the natural branches take heed lest he also spare not thee 22. Behold therefore the goodness and severity of God on them which fell severity but towards thee goodness if thou continue in his goodness otherwise thou also shalt be cut off 22. That therefore thou maist not boast against the branches that is against the Jews and that thou maist stand fast in the faith which thou hast embraced behold and look on the one side on the goodness and mercy on the otherside on the severty of God On the Jews which fell and were cast out of the Church of God severity but towards thee whom God recieved in their room goodness and mercy which goodness and mercy thou shalt still partake of if thou continuest in the faith which is also an effect of Gods goodness and mercy otherwise thou also shalt be cast of as the Jews were 23. And they also if they bide not still in unbelief shall be graffed in for God is able to graffe them in again 23. And they also even the Jews themselvs which are cast off if they abide not still in unbelief shall be graffed in again into the sweet Olive tree that is they shall be received again as members into the Church of God For God is able to bring them in again 24. For if thou wert cut out of the olive-tree which is wild by nature and went graffed contrary to nature into a good olive tree how much more shall these which be the natural branches be graffed into their own olive-tree 24. For if thou wert cut out of the Olive tree which is wilde by nature and wert graffed contrary to nature into the good Olive-tree how much more easily shall these which be the natural branches be graffed in again into their own Olive tree that is if thou which art taken out of on idolatrous people whose Ancestours alwayes served stocks and stons and wast contrary to thy education and to the Religion of thy Predecessours inserted into the Church of God and made a member thereof How much more easily
happy as they To Emulation Emulation is a grief of mind whereby we grieve for the good of another not because that good is in him but because that good which we see in him is not in us Envy is a grief of mind for the good of another as well as Emulation But here is the difference Envy is joyned with a desire and endeavour to diminish that good which is in an other upon a perswasion that our excellency is thereby obscured But Emulation is not joyned with a desire to diminish his good but with a desire to make our selves as good as he Them which are my flesh i. e. Them which are my Kins-men according to the flesh as he speaks Chap. 9.3 They are said to be the same flesh who are made or who spring from the same flesh by a Metonymie He means the Jews here which were all of the same flesh with him to wit The flesh of Abraham Isaac and Jacob And might save some of them i. e. And might bring some of them at least to Salvation by the Gospel which I preach which is the power of God unto Salvation Cap 1.16 Ver. 15. For if the casting away of them be the reconciling of the world i. e For if the casting away of the Jews be an occasion of the reconciling of the Gentiles unto God The casting away of them i. e The rejecting of the Jews for their unbelief Be the reconciling of the w●rl● i. e. Be an occasion of the reconciling the world to God Metonymia Of the world i. e. Of the Gentiles See ver 12. What shall t●e receiving of them Supple To the savour of God Be Supple To the world or to the Gentiles But life from the dead i. e. But yet a further cause of a spiritual life to righteousness from death in sin or from among those which are dead in sins His meaning is that by this means more Gentiles would be brought to the faith then now are brought By Life is here meant a Spiritual life led by the Faith of God per Synechdochen generis And that is put again for the cause of such a life per Mytonymiam effecti And by the dead are meant such as are dead in sins And this life so taken is to be understood here as a life coming to the Gentiles by the receiving of the Jews to favour For this verse is the very same for sence with the Twelfth verse And prevents the like objection as that doth and yields the like argument or proof to shew that the Jews stumbled not that they should fall as that also doth wherefore between this and the former verse we may understand these or the like words Neither need ye fear that if the Jews should be brought to salvation ye Gentiles would be cast off again q. d. Neither need ye fear that if the Jews should be brought to Salvation the Gentiles will be cast off again for if the casting away of them be the reconciling of the world c. Ver. 16. For if the first fruit be holy the lump is also holy q. d. For seeing that the Patriarchs Abraham Isaac and Jacob which were as it were the first fruits and the Root of the people or Nation of the Jews were holy the people or Nation of the Jews which spring of them shall also be esteemed holy This is to be referred to the first part of the first verse viz. I say then hath God cast away his people God forbid Or which some account the same to the first part of the eleventh verse viz. I say then have they stumbled that they shovld fall God forbid And it may ●ave its immediate reference to the fourteenth verse also As if the Apostle would also shew by this that what he ●here said of magnifying his office as he was the Apostle of the Gentiles for this end that he might provoke the Jews to emulation and save some of them was not a groundless conceit as though there was no hope of bringing the Jewes to Salvation But that what he did in this he did upon good ground being that the whole people of the Jews were holy as their fore-fathers Abraham Isaac and Jacob were holy and therefore might in all probabilities be saved Such is the Apostles skill and artifice that while he brings a proof to prove a thing which is further off he will by the same proof often prove the thing that went immediately before also The Apostle Supposeth here that the Patriarchs or forefathers of the Jews viz Abraham Isaac and Jacob c. were holy and from thence gathereth or concludeth that if they were holy the whole people or Nat●ion of the J●ws where holy also and this his conclusion he proveth or illustrateth rather by two similitudes or comparisons The first from the first fruits with which the lump doth agree in nature The other from the root and the branches of a Tree which naturally follow the condition one of the other If the first fruit be holy By the first fruit is here Metaphorically understood the Patriarchs Abraham Isaac and Jacob c. which were the fore-fathers of the Jews and the holiness here spoken of is not the holiness of Regeneration or the holiness which consists in the conformity of our actions with the Law of God but that holiness whereby God hath separated the fathers of the Jews and by vertue of his promise to them G●n 17.17 Their seed also after them throughout all generations from the common ranke of men to be a God to them So as not utterly to forsake them at any time and to leave them without all means of Salvation which is a blessing peculiar to them above all the Nations of the world For though God doth afford m●ans of Salvation to other people also yet this proceeds not from the promise of God to them or to their Ancestors as it doth to the J●ws neither have they any thing to the contrary but that God will and may forsake them utterly if they should be disobedient to him as the Jews have been But yet he w●ll never leave the whole nation of the Jews without the mea●s of Salvation neither will he but save them if ●hey imbrace the means fo● th●ir unbelief shall not make the faith of God without effect Chap. 3.3 See Cap. 15. ver 8 9. Note that Holiness signifieth a Separation of some things from others or some persons from others by way of Emin●ncy And so the J●ws and their forefathers may be called holy here because God had separated them from all other People by a peculiar blessing the blessing which I have spoken of The first fruit The Apostle a● some say alludes here to the sheaf of the first fruits Lev. 23. ver 9 10 14. where the Lord speaks thus to the poeple of Israel When ye come into the Land which I give unto you and shall reap the harvest thereof then shall ye bring a sheaf of the first fruits of y●ur
believed God c. The Apostle brings a new argument to prove that God hath not cast away his people the Jews as he speaks Ver. 1. or to prove that those Jews which stumbled have not stumbled that they should fall as he speaks ver 11. And therefore thither must this causal particle For relate As ye i. e. As ye Gentiles In times past By times past he meaneth the times before Christs comming in which God suffered all Nations to walk in their own ways Acts 14.16 Have not believed God i. e. Have not beleived God to wit when God declared to you by his works that he ought to be worshiped but ye worshiped not him but served other Gods But have obtained mercy i. e. But have now believed through the grace and mercy of God and are brought into the Church of God and justified from your sins by reason of your belief Through their unbelief i e By reason of the unbelief of the Jews God calling you to the faith of the Gospel because the Jews would not believe it Ver. 31. Even so have these i. e. Even so have these to wit the Jews for the greatest part of them Now not believed Now for a time not believed the Gospel but rejected it That through your mercy i. e. That by reason of the mercy which ye have obtained They also may obtain mercy i e. They also may obtain the like mercy The Jews which would not believe for a while but should afterwards believe shall when they believe believe as it is probable through the faith of the Gentiles as being provoked to jealousie or emulation through their saith and the mercies bestowed upon them by reason thereof See ver 11.14 Ver. 32. For God hath concluded them all in unbelief Those words would be better rendred thus For God hath concluded all in unbelief Leaving out that demonstrative pronoun them for which there is no word to countenance it in the Greek For God hath concluded all in unbelief i. e. For God hath partly heretofore and partly now concluded all in unbelief both Jews and Gentiles Gentiles heretofore and Jews now He confirms here what he said verse 30.31 And yet this may be a new argument to prove what he said in the beginning of the first or in the beginning of the eleventh verse and be referred thither God hath concluded all in unbelief The word rendred here unbelief is in the greek 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which signifieth a pertinacy in unbelief whereby a man is as it were imperswasible or not to be perswaded or induced to believe And to be concluded signifies to be shut up as it were in a prison God is said to conclude men in this unbelief and to imprison them as it were in it by a Metaphor because he doth suffer them to be taken and ensnared in it And suffers difficulties to be laid upon them so that they cannot easily free themselves and get out of this unbelief and break as it were the bolts and open the doors which kept them thus shut up But he concludes or shuts up none after this manner but for their sins Hath concluded This word by a Syllepsis signifies both time past and present yea and time continuing and going on to All Supple Both Jews and Gentiles Yet not all absolutely but far the greatest part of all Hyperbole In unbelief To wit as in a prison That he might have mercy upon all i. e. That he might bring all to believe and to the mercies which he shews them which believe When he saith That he might have mercy upon all it is manifest that by this he cannot mean every singular man There is therefore an other Hyperbole in the speech Ver. 33. O the depth of the Riches both of the wosdom and knowledge of God q. d. O how deep and remote from humane sense is the abundance or greatness of the wisdom and knowledge of God! This Admiration or Exclamation of the Apostle is occasioned especially by what he said ver 30 31 32. For what he saith there makes him admire and admiring to break out into words of Admiration of the wisdom and knowledge of God to think that the Gentiles which in times past believed not should now believe through the unbelief of the Jews and that the Jews which now believe not should hereafter be brought to believe through the faith of the Gentiles which seem to be contrary means and that God should in his due times conclude both Jews and Gentiles in unbelief that he might in his due times bring them both to believe which no creature could ever have dreamed of had not God revealed it to them O the depth of the Riches i. e. O how deep lie the Riches of the wisdom and knowledge of God The Riches i. e. The abundance or greatness The Hebrews call all abundance and greatness by the name of Riches as Cap. 2 4. and Cap. 9.23 The Apostle therefore that he might shew the Abundance and greatness of the wisdom and knowledge of God maketh use of the word Riches here O the depth of the riches c. In an heap of Riches the greater and the more the Riches are the more profound and the deeper is the heap therefore say some to shew the abundance of the Riches and the wisdom and the knowledge of God the Apostle useth this word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or depth here But being that it follows How unsearchable are his judgements and his ways past finding out I conceive that the Apostle useth this word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or depth here to signifie the unsearchableness and difficulty or impossibility of finding out Gods judgements and ways and the Apostle alludeth here to Gold and Silver and other Mettals which lie deep in the bowels of the Earth which the deeper they lie the more remote they are from the sight and more difficult to be found or lit upon A Philosopher said of Truth because she was hard to be found that she lay deep in a pit It is not unusual therefore to say of things difficult to be found that they are deep or lie deep to wit in the earth or the like Of the wisdom To wit by which God ordereth and disposeth in his judgement of the things which he makes or hath made And knowledge of God i. e. And the knowledge of God whereby he knoweth how to effect what he judgeth fit in his wisdom to be done As some do put a difference between the wisdom and knowledge of God here by reason of these distributive particles Both and And So others notwithstanding them take them both to signifie one and the same thing by a Synonymia familiar to the Hebrews How unsearchable are his judgements By the judgements of God are here meant the acts and determinations of his understanding whereby he wisely determins and disposeth of things And his ways past finding out By ways may be here meant the means by which God brings to pass what
Allegory as before Let us therefore cast off the works of darkness i. e. Let us therefore cast off those works which we did while we were in ignorance and knew not God or the mind or things of God Or let us cast off the works which men though they do them yet will do them only in the night or in the dark that they might not be seen that is Let us cast off evil works By the works of darkness he means evil works and such as he speaks of verse 13. which he calls works of darkness because they are such as the Romans committed in the night while they were in darkness that is while they were in ignorance before the light of the Gospel had shined to them And because they are such as they which commit commit in the night or in the dark as loving darkness more than light and night more than day yea as hating the light because their works are evil as our Saviour speaks John 3. v. 19.20 And let us put on the armour of light i e. And let us do the works of light and of the day that is let us do such works as are according to the Law of God and which are beseeming such as have the light of the Gospel and such works as a man will not be ashamed to do in the light or in the day By the armour of light then he meaneth good works and good works as they are sometimes compared to a Vestment or Garment so are they here compared to Armour and they may be compared to armour because they do not only cover us but also defend us from the assault of the Devil and spiritual wickedness in high places See Ephes 6. v. 13. c. where the Apostle sets out the Armour of a Christian Good works are called the Armour to wit of light or of the day not so much in allusion to Armour as in respect of the works signified by Armour which are such as are not ashamed of the light or of the day as evil works are Yet as men will wear such clothes in the night which they would not willingly be seen in in the day So the better sort of Souldiers might wear more foul rusty and unfurbished Armour in the night than they would wear in the day and to this might the Apostle here allude We said verse 11. that the Apostle did use an Allegory there in which he did allude to certain War like or Military passages In pursuance therefore of that Allegory may he use this phrase or manner of speech here saying Let us put on the Armour of light V. 13. Let us walk honestly as in the day c. He doth as it were interpret and shew here in this verse what he meant by that which he said verse 12. in those words Let us cast off the works of darkness and let us put on the armour of light Let us walk honestly as in the day i. e. Let us walk honestly and circumspectly as men use to walk in the day time when their works are seen and their doings taken notice of of all It is not unknown to any which are versed in the Scripture that the life and conversation of a man is often likned in the Scripture to walking Not in rioting and drunkenness These are such works as the Apostle called works of darkness ver 12. For they that are drunken are drunken in the night 1 Thes 5.7 c. These which the Apostle mentioneth here are not all the works of darkness which are but some only And the Apostle seemeth to mention these when he omitteth others because the Romans were more prone to these than they were to others Not in rioting i. e. Not in banqueting and Junqueting and riotous feasting He speaks of such banqueting and feasting and Junqueting as are not for necessity or for honourable and seemly entertainments but for voluptuousness and gluttony only to please the paunch or gullet and to stir up Venery And drunkenness By Drunkenness the Hebrews mean all excessive drinking though it proceeds not to the eclipsing or taking away of the use of reason for the time Not in chambering By Chambering he means all unlawful lying of men with women c. which useth to be practised in Chambers And wantonness By wantonness understand all unchast and lascivious gestures dealings and doings Not in strife i. e. Not in strife of words as reproaches c. nor in strife of deeds as fighting and quarrelings And envying i. e. Envying other men for their riches or honour or the like These two last sins are manifestly hurtfull to our Neighbour and the four other sins are hurtfull to our neighbour too in that they are committed with others and so they with whom they are committed are brought by our means into the guilt of sins with us and loss of their good names and reputation Ver. 14. But put ye on the Lord Jesus Christ By the Lord Jesus Christ is here meant the life and conversation of the Lord Jesus Christ by a Metonymy And then do we put on the Lord Jesus Christ when we imitate his v●rtues and live as he lived It is plain by the foregoing verse that by putting on the Lord Jesus Christ is meant here nothing else but the imitation of his life and conversation The Life therefore or Conversation of Christ is likened here either to a garment or else to Armour as he likned good-works before ver 12. when he sayes Put ye on the Lord Jesus Christ And make no provision for the flesh i. e. And provide not either meat or drink or any other thing for your Bodies By the Flesh is meant the body here by a Synechdoche or for the carnal affections To fulfill the lusts thereof To satisfie the inordinate desires thereof Note that the Apostle doth not simply forbid us to take care or to provide for the body here for there is no man but may lawfully nourish and cherish his own body Ephes 5. ver 29. But he forbids us only to take care and provide for the body for fulfilling the lusts thereof that is to take care for and to provide voluptu●us m●as and drinks and the like which are onely to satisfie or fulfill the inordinate desires and lusts thereof and to stir it up to venery and uncleanness Note that the Apostle useth here an Enallagy of the Person changing the first into the second person For whereas he said ver 13. Let us walk honestly as in the day not in rioting and drunkenness not in chambering and wantonness not in strife and envying He should have said here in order of speech But let us put on the Lord Jesus Christ and not make provision for the flesh to fulfill the lusts thereof But such an Enallagy is frequent CHAP. XIV 1. HIm that is weak in the faith receive you but not to doubtful disputations 1. That Jew which is weak in the faith and is not perswaded of the abrogation of the
the strong bear the infirmity of the weak when they patiently suffer them in things indifferent and do not rashly or unadvisedly contradict them when they avoid all means and occasions of offending them And when as they have opportunity they do meekly instruct them and wisely inform them concerning things indifferent that they may come to the right knowledge thereof and may be confirmed in the faith In these words To bear the infirmity of the weak the Apostle useth a Metaphor taken from fellow travellers where the stronger and best able to travel will help the weakest and less able to carry part of his burden or pack And not to please our selves i. e. And not for our own humour or pleasure sake because we will shew what we may do in things indifferent offend others by doing such things To please our selves therefore signifieth here by a Syllepsis or a Metalepsis so to please our selves in our doings which we may as well not do as to offend another and be an occasion to him of sinning Ver. 2. Let every one of us please his neighbour for his good to edification i. e. Let every one of us whether Jew or Gentile do that which is pleasing to our neighbour whether he be Jew or Gentile and comply with him for his good to edification though by so doing we do contrary to our own humor or phansie The Apostle would have us to please our neighbour as well as our selves that is not to offend him but to comply with him but yet he would not have us to please him and comply with him in any carnal and unseemly matter And therefore he adds here to his good to edification The chief things which he would have us here to please him in are things indifferent in their own nature in the use of which he would not have us to cross him so as to offend him or to make him sin To his good By his good he means his spiritual good To edification i. e. That he may be thereby edified Concerning the meaning of the word Edification See Chap. 14. ver 9. Ver. 3. For even Christ pleased not himself i. e. For even Christ who ought to be our pattern and whom we ought to imitate though he were Lord of all yet did he do that which was grievous to his humane nature and displeasing to that that he might save others and so do that which was wel-pleasing to them But as it is written Viz. Psalm 69. verse 9. The reproaches of them which reproached thee fell on me i. e. The punishment due to them which reproached thee for those their reproaches fell on me Supple and they fell on me not against my will but with my will yea I willingly took them upon my self that I might satisfie thee for those their sins This is the meaning of these words as the Apostle here useth them and it is the end which is here left to be understood and the manner of Christs taking upon him the punishment due to the reproaches of those sinners that reproached God which brings this authority up to his purpose The reproaches i. e. The punishments due to the Reproachers Metonymie Of them which reproached thee i. e. Of those sinners which reproached thee O God by their words and by their actions For every sin whether it be in word or in deed is a reproach to God against whose Law they sin Fell on me i. e. Fell on me who yet was willing to bear them yea who did willingly take them upon me and undergo them that I might satisfie thy Justice for them and so set them free Who sees not here that Christ did that which was not pleasing to his humane nature in it self but that which was pleasing to others For to whom is it not pleasing that Christ should satisfie for his sins that he might escape the punishment due to them and so be saved And how would it be otherwise than grievous to the humane nature of Christ in which he suffered to suffer such pains as he suffered and so be displeasing to that But note here that these words as they lie in Psalm 69.9 are in the first sence spoken of David who complains there to God of his afflictions and how he was grieved to see and hear his enemies so to reproach him the living God as they did And the sence of these words as they are thus spoken by David is this And the reproaches of them which reproached thee fell on me to the wounding of my Soul to think that thou shouldest be so reproached That is And I was grieved at the heart to hear men reproach thee as they did and took it as grieuously as if they had reproached me my self But in the second and sublime sence they are to be understood as the words of Christ and bear the same sence as we at the first gave of them For note that David was a type of Christ and his sufferings of Christs sufferings wherefore many things which are spoken of David in the First and Historical sence are to be understoood of Christ in the Second and Sublime sence and many words which are spoken by David are to be understood as spoken by Christ also but yet not always in one and the same sence the Holy Ghost so fitting the words as that they may be spoken as well by the one as the other in their several sences But of this see what I said in my Preface to my Exposition on the Prophet Isaiah The reproaches of them which reproached thee fell on me It had been more congruous to the context here for the Apostle to have said The reproaches of them that reproached God fell on him But as I have observed before the Apostle when he quotes any authority out of the Psalms or the Prophets or any other part of the Old Testament he quotes it for the most part as it lies there and leaves his Reader to apply it here Some ask the Question here why the Apostle brings this testimony here when he had more plain testimonies for his purpose as that of Isaiah Isa 53.4 He that hath born our griefs and carried our sorrows c. For answer to this I conceive that the Apostle made choice of this testimony here because it mentioneth reproaches expresly and reproaches were the chiefest fault which he had to complain of in the Romans which if they had patiently born at the hands of one another there had not been those contentions and discords among them as were For the weak judged the strong as a sinner in what he did and the str●ng could not bear his censure the strong despised the weak and vilified his weakness and the weak could not bear this and from hence and the like arose reproachful words and from thence discords and contentions among them Ver. 4 For whatsoever things were written c. Between this and the former verse understand these or the l●ke words Neither think that what I cite
which is the wages of sin and which never falls upon any one but for sin reigned over all men from the days of Adam to the days of Moses though they had not sinned as Adam had who transgressed against a law which God gave him to keep with his own mouth which Adam was a Figure of Christ who indeed was then to come but is since come among us And therefore was he a Figure of Christ because as Christ derived something to his children so did Adam before Christ came derive something to his But yet if we come to particulars that which Christ derived to his children was Grace and the free gift of God But that which Adam derived to his was Original sin which I call here the Offence 15. But not as the offence so also is the free gift For if through the offence of one many be dead much more the grace of God and the gift by grace which is by one man Jesus Christ hath abounded unto many 15. But yet not as the offence which Adam derived to his Children so also is the free gift which Christ derived to his for equality but this much exceeds that For if by the offence which was caused by one to wit Adam and by him derived to his Children many to wit so many as are born of him are either already dead or shall surely die In a much higher degree and more plentiful though contrary manner hath the grace of God that is the gift of grace which is by one man Jesus Christ abounded unto many even to so many as are born of Christ that they might live 16. And not as it was by one that sinned so is the gift for the judgment was by one to condemnation but the free gift is of many offences unto justification 16. Not I say as was the offence or sin which was by one to wit Adam So is the gift which is by one to wit Christ Jesus For the Judgement of God passed upon the Children of Adam to their condemnation by reason of that one sin or offence which Adam derived to them But the free gift or pardon which is derived by Christ to his Children is the remission or pardon not of that one only offence but of many other offences to their justification 17. For if by one mans offence death reigned by one much more they which receive abundance of grace and of the gift of righteousness shall reign in life by one Jesus Christ 17. Again if by that one sin or offence death reigned by reason of one man to wit Adam who was the cause of that sin or offence and who derived it to his Children over all the Children of Adam After a far more bountiful and glorious manner shall life reign by one to wit Jesus Christ over all the Children of Christ who receive by him abundance of grace and of the gift of righteousness by the remission and pardon of their many sins and offences 18. Therefore as by the offence of one judgment came upon all men to condemnation even so by the righteousness of one the free gift came upon all men unto justification of life 18. Therefore that I may resume and perfect what I began to say but left unperfect verse 12. As by reason of that original sin or offence which was caused by one and by that one to wit Adam derived to all his Children judgement came upon all men which were born of Adam whereby they were condemned to death Even so by reason of that righteousness or justification which was purchased by one even Jesus Christ and by that one derived to all his Children the pardon or remission of sins which was a free gift from God came upon all men which are born of Jesus Christ so that they are thereby justified and translated from death to life 19. For as by one mans disobedience many were made sinners so by the obedience of one shall many be made righteous 19. I said by reason of the offence which was caused by one to wit Adam and I said by reason of the righteousness or justification which was purchased by one to wit Jesus Christ For as by the disobedience of one man that one man Adam who disobeyed God by eating of the Tree concerning which God had said Thou shalt not eat thereof many yea so many as were born of Adam were made sinners through the offence which was caused by him So by the obedience of one even Jesus Christ who obeyed God unto death even the death of the Cross shall many yea as many as are born of him be justified from their sins through the righteousness which was purchased by him 20 Moreover the Law entred that the offence might abound but where sin abounded grace did much more abound 20. Moreover least any one should say that though sin was in the world untill the Law yet surely when the Law was once entred sin was taken away let me tell you that the Law was so far from taking away sin that sin did abound by the entring in of the Law But yet to our comfort when sin abounded the Grace and Mercy of God through Christ did much more abound 21. That as sin hath reigned unto death even so might grace reign through righteousness unto eternal life by Jesus Christ our Lord. 21. So that as sin hath reigned unto death by Adam even so the grace and favor of God hath reigned through justification and remission of sins unto Eternal life by Jesus Christ our Lord. CHAP. V. Vers 1. Therefore being justified by faith we have peace with The Apostle having shewed in the foregoing part of this Epistle that we are justified not by the works of the Law but by faith cometh here to shew the fruit and excellent effects which follow or come by that Justification Being justified c. Concerning the signification of this word See Chapter 6. ver 7. We have peace with God That is God is at peace with us so that though we have sinned yet God will nor pour out his wrath upon us for our sins as he will upon other sinners because we are justified by Faith These words are not so to be understood as though the meaning thereof were that we were peaceably affected towards God But so as that God is peaceably affected towards us And the word Peace here is opposed to Wrath to wit the Wrath of God of which he speaks ver 9. And not God but we are the Object of this Peace or they to whom this peace is shewed and God is as the Subject so when we say we have favour with God God is the Subject we the Object to whom this favour is shewed Through our Lord Jesus Christ i. e. Through the merits and mediation of our Lord Jesus Christ Jesus Christ is called here our Lord because he bought us with a Price 1 Cor. 6.20 2 Pet. 2.1 which Price was his own blood with which price he redeemed us out of the bondage