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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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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
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
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
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
here as a Note of Declaration Of Righteousness Of Justification or Remission of sins See Chap. 1. verse 17. They which receive abundance of Grace and of the gift of Righteousness This grace that is to say this gift of Righteousness is said to be abundant in regard of the many sins which are thereby remitted or from which they which believe are justified And they are said to receive abundance of Grace that is of the gift of Righteousness which are delivered or justified from abundance of sins or offences or who have abundance of sins pardoned For the Apostle relates or alludes here to what he said ver 16. Viz. The free gift is of many offences Shall reign in life i. e. Shall reign in Life everlasting in the Kingdome of Heaven Whomsoever God justifies if he retains his state he glorifieth for he doth not only deliver him from punishment due to his sins But sets a Crown of Life upon his head He opposeth the life here to the death which he speaks of a little before By one Jesus Christ Jesus Christ hath merited for us not only remission of sins or pardon thereof but also glory and life everlasting which although it be merit in regard of him yet in regard of us it is meer grace and favour Note here that whereas the Apostle said If by one mans offence death reigned by one he should have said in congruence of speech Much more shall life reign by Righteousness by one Jesus Christ but he said not so but saith Much more they which receive abundance of grace and of the gift of Righteousness shall reign in Life by one Jesus Christ And this he doth because it sounds more pleasantly to say That men themselves shall reign in life than that life shall reign in men the Scriptures also having promised them a knigdome Matth. 25.34 And because he would by so speaking intimate a certain dissimilitude or unlikeness which is between Death and Life for death so reigns over men as that it destroyeth those over whom it reigneth But life doth so reign in us as that it makes us Kings that is partakers of the heavenly Kingdom by Christ V. 18. Therefore as by the offence of one judgement came upon all men to condemnation even so c. The Apostle resumes here though in other words that which he left unperfect ver 12. viz. 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 And this he doth that he may compleat and perfect that here which he left imperfect there Yet such is his Artifice as that this may seem a Corollary or Conclusion drawn out of that which he said immediately before in the former verses By the offence of one c. i. e. By the offence which was caused by one This is that which he said ver 12. As by one man sin entred into the world The offence By the offence is here meant that which is commonly called Orignal sin See ver 15. This offence therefore is not that Actual disobedience of Adam whereby he did eat of the forbidden fruit but an effect of that disobedience and that by which we are made formally sinners And by reason of which we are called Sinners Of one This one is Adam Note that this Genitive is Genitivus causae efficientis Judgement came upon all men to condemnation i e. q. d. Gods judgement or sentence passed upon all which were born of Adam by natural Generation whereby they were condemned Supple to death which was to follow upon their condemnation To condemnation To wit of death By the righteousness of one i. e. By the righteousness of one or by reason of that righteousness which proceeds from one or which is purchased by one to be conferred by him upon his children which are the faithful This one is Christ Jesus and the righteousness here spoken of is that which he spoke of ver 17. to wit Remission of sins or Absolution from all offences which remission of sins or absolution was purchased by Christ Jesus with his blood And it is here opposed to the offence of one as that which blots out or takes away the guilt of that offence yea and of all other offences too is opposed to the offence or blot it self Of one This one is Christ Jesus and note that this Genitive is Genitivus Efficientis The free gift came upon all men to justification of life i. e. The free gift came upon all men that they might be justified and that with such a justification as is followed or attended with life everlasting The free gift The free gift is to be taken here in the very same sence as it is ver 16. That is for the free pardon or absolution by which we are pardoned or absolved from our sins by Christ Vpon all men Supple that are born of Christ and so are his children or which are ingraff●d into Christ by faith and so are his branches Note here that the abundance of the grace and gifts of Christ consists not in this that all they which died in Adam whatsoever they were shall be saved by Chri●t for then there would be but an equality by that not an abundance in the benefits and graces which are by Christ But it consists in that that Christ is the Authour of far greater good to his chidren and branches than Adam of evil to his Vnto justification of life i. e. So that they are justified thereby which justification through the grace and favour of God produceth or bringeth after it life everlasting Life is put here by a Synechdoche for life everlasting And this Genitive case is Genitivus Effecti V. 19. For as by one mans disobedience many were made sinners so by the obedience of one shall many be made righteous He gives a reason here why he said in the former verse By the offence of one and why he said there By the righteousness of one He said by the offence of one that is by the sin which was derived by one because by one mans to wit Adams disobedience many were made sinners And he said by the righteousness of one because by the obedience of one many shall be made righteous Note here that whereas the Apostle said All and All ver 18. and saith Many and Many here ver 19. he meaneth in both places one and the same men and number of men But why he saith Many here and not All as he did ver 18. you may find a reason given ver 15. By one mans disobedience i. e. By the disobedience of one man to wit Adam who disobeyed God and did eat of the Tree of Knowledge of good and evil concerning which God said Thou shall not eat thereof Gen. 2.17 Many were made sinners That is so many as were born of Adam by natural generation were made Sinners Supple by the offence or sin viz. Original Sin which that his disobedience caused
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
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
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
to whom he wrote a little before Not to let sin reign in their mortal body c. least any should shew himself faint-hearted and because before the time of his belief while he was under the Law he was continually drawn by sin to consent to her motions and fulfil her lusts and so to yield himself her Servant should say that he was not able to withstand the power of sin but must needs yield to her as to her which hath dominion over him for so strong was sin in him as that the Law could not strengthen him sufficiently against her motions He prevents him here with a word of comfort and encouragement saying For sin shall not have dominion over you for ye are not under the Law but under grace For ye are not under the Law but under Grace i. e. For ye are none of you under the Law which gave you little or no assistance against sin but you are under the Gospel which giveth you strength to resist sin and work righteousness He gives a reason here why sin should not have dominion over them Note that the Apostle directs this his speech to the believing Jews in a particular manner Note also that by the Law is here meant the Law of Moses as it was given by Moses and as it is in it self precisely considered in which regard it had but little power to keep a sinner from yielding to the motions of sin And indeed when the word Law is put absolutely in opposition to grace it always so signifieth So that the sence of these words may be this q. d. For ye are not under the Law which had not power enough to keep you from the dominion of sin But ye are under grace which giveth you strength to free your selves from sin that she domineer not over you Ye are not under the Law To be under the Law signifieth two things to wit to be under the obligation of the Law And to be under the imperfection of the Law that is to be under the Law as it was given by Moses and as it is precisely considered without the grace of the Gospel In which last sence the Law though it did impose commands upon men it did not either of it self or by any thing joyned with it afford strength enough to a sinner to resist sin and to perform those her commands For the Law was given by Moses but Grace and Truth came by Jesus Christ John 1.17 Now to be under the Law signifieth here not only to be under the obligation of the Law so that a man is bound to do what the Law requires But also and that especially to be under the imperfection of the Law as it commandeth men to do these and these things but doth not help them as the Gospel doth to perform those her commands It is not to be doubted but that in the time of the Law that is in the time of the Old Testament there were many Jews which were free from the dominion of sin through faith These though they were under the obligation of the Law of Moses because they were bound to do all the commands thereof yet they were not under the imperfection of the Law for through faith they obtained that strength by Christ to resist sin which the Law could not afford for Christ was the same yesterday and to day and for ever Heb. 13.8 But now the believing Jews are free not only from the imperfection but also from the obligation of the Law of Moses to wit as the Law was given by Moses the Law being quite abrogated as it was by him given So that they are not bound to keep the Moral Law as it was given by Moses but as it is the Law of Nature and that which Christ would have men observe by his Gospel and to the observation of which he gives them strength and ability But under Grace By Grace understand the Gospel here The Gospel may be called Grace by a Metonymie because it is the word of grace Acts 14.3 And it is called the grace of God Acts 13.43 And 1 Pet. 5 12. because the grace of God is joyned with it They are said to be under the Gospel who have received the Gospel and believed it or do obey it And over such sin hath no dominion For the Gospel containeth most heavenly and unspeakable promises which being embraced by faith do animate the believer to stop his ears against sin And it conferreth the gifts of the holy Ghost upon the believer by which he mortifies sin in his members which hath her full sway in other men and by which he is enabled to work the works of Righteousness The Gospel is the power of God to salvation as the Apostle speaks Chap. 1.16 No wonder therefore that he should say here that sin shall have no dominion ov●r them which are under Grace that is which are under the Gospel V. 15. What then shall we sin because we are not under the Law but under Grace q. d. What then shall we take to our selves a liberty to sin as though because I said we are not under the Law of Moses we were not under any law at all Or shall we take to our selves a liberty to sin because I said we are under Grace as though because we were under Grace God would wink at our sins though we sinned never so freely and never so greedily This objection which the Apostle here prevents ariseth out of a miss-understanding of the words which he used in the former verse viz. ye are not under the Law but under Grace through the ambiguity thereof And he therefore prevents this objection that weak Christians might not take occasion from hence to think that Christianity gave liberty to sin as many which were not friends to Christians would make the world believe it did and that Christians so taught as appeareth Chap. 3.8 Ver. 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 These words thus rendred are for the latter part of them defective which defect is thus made up q. d. Know ye not that to whom ye yield your selves 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 Servants unto the Law or doctrine of obedience to obey that and so ye become the Servants of the Law or doctrine of obedience which brings to righteousness the end whereof is everlasting life The words in the Greek are these 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Now some take the particle 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which is here repeated twice after the manner of a Latine Ablative and construe it not Cui to whom as most do but render it Hoc ipso quòd that is in as much as And then are these words
life in Christ Jesus hath made me free from sin and death But he saith the Law of the Spirit of life and the Law of sin for the like reason as he said the Law of works and the Law of faith Chap. 3. ver 27 and as he saith the Law of righteousness Chap. 9.31 Note also that when he saith The Law of the Spirit of life hath made me free from the Law of sin and of death he useth a Metaphor drawn from men Enfranchesing slaves and freeing them from that slavery which before time they underwent Note thirdly that the Apostle speaks here in the person of such as were justied by faith and were ingraffed into Christ Jesus as living branches into the living Vine Ver. 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 i. e. For what the Law could not do in that it was weak in comparison of the flesh that God did who sending his own Son in the likeness of a sinful man though he was without sin and for the destruction of sin destroyed sin which reigned in us by his Flesh that is by his Body which was Crucified for us There is an Ellipsis in these words of the Apostle as they are here translated But the words in the Original are these 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. which may be thus interpreted For by reason of the weakness and imbecillity of the Law in that it was weak in comparison of the flesh God sending his own Son c. The Apostle prevents an Objection here For whereas he said ver 2. The Law of the spririt of life in Christ Jesus hath made me free from the Law of sin and of death a man might object and say But what needst thou Paul to say The Law of the Spirit of life in Christ Jesus hath made me free from the Law of sin and of death when as the Law which was given by Moses can do this To this the Apostle answers after this manner q. d. I said that the Law of the Spirit of life which is by Christ Jesus hath made me free from the Law of sin and of death I said not that the Law which was given by Moses hath done this because the Law which was given by Moses was weak in comparison of the flesh and not so able to draw men after it as the flesh was after it and therefore by reason of the impotency and imbecillity of the Law of Moses in that it was weak in comparison of the flesh God sending forth his own Son in the likeness of sinful flesh and for this end that he might be a Sacrifice for sin and destroy sin hath destroyed sin by his flesh that is by his Body which was made a Scrifice for us For what the Law could not do That which is said of the Law here that it could not do is this viz. That it could not destroy sin The words in the Original are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 where first we may understand the Preposition 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 propter then take 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 impotentiam or imbecillitatem and then interpret 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of the Law of Moses thus For by reason of the impotency and weakness of the Law of Moses c. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 doth not only signifie Impossibilis Impossible but Impotens and Imbecillis also Imperfect and Weak and in the Neuter gender with a Prepositive Article Impotentia and Imbecillitas Impotencie and Weakness For that it was weak through the Flesh The words in the Original are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Where the Preposition 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which is here rendred Through is to be taken in a sence of Comparison as I conceive q. d. In that it was weak in comparison of the flesh And the Law of Moses was weak in comparison of the flesh in that the flesh had more power to draw men after it from the Law than the Law had to draw men after it from following the flesh Through the flesh By Flesh understand here the fleshly that is the carnal appetite of a man God sending his own Son Supple into the World This sets forth the love of God in that he would send a Son and that his own Son into the World for such a purpose In the likeness of sinful flesh Flesh is to be taken here by a Synechdoche for the Body that other part of Man and that again by a further Synechdoche for the whole man q d. In the likeness of sinful man Note that the word Likeness doth not relate here to the word Flesh but to the word Sinful For Christ Jesus was true and real Flesh that is true and real Man but yet not truly and really sinful man he was only like such a man for he himself was without sin Christ was made like to sinful man in that he was made subject to infirmities and miseries as sinful man was for his sin Condemned sin i. e. Destroyed or slew sin To Condemn is taken here for to Kill Per metonymiam Antecedentis or Causae For those Malefactors which are condemned to die are put to death after the Sentence of Condemnation is passed on them to which the Apostle here alludes One way by which Christ is said to kill or slay sin is by purchasing and procuring for us by his death and sacrifice the Holy Ghost or such spiritual gifts by which we are able to crucifie or slay sin which reigned in us and after this way may the Apostle seem to be particularly understood in this place if we consider what he saith of the Law of the Spirit of life in the foregoing verse In the flesh i. e. By his Flesh that is by his Body which was made a sacrifice for us In is put here for By and the Flesh is taken here for his Body by a Metonymie and that as sacrificed and offered upon the Cross as Chap. 7.4 Ephes 2.5 Ver. 4. That the righteousness of the Law might be fulfilled in us i. e. That we might perform those righteous Commandments which are contained in the Moral Law which was given by Moses so far forth at the least and in such manner as they are necessary to Salvation to which a most exact and a most perfect keeping of the Commandments is not required In us To wit which are in Christ Jesus Who walk not after the flesh but after the spirit See verse 1. This the Apostle repeats here that he may shew the truth of it and press it home upon them to whom he wrote Ver. 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 q. d. I say who walk not after the Flesh but after the spirit for they indeed
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