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Romans 7

Whedon

Romans 7:1

  1. Know the law—Not by the Jewish polity alone, but universally, subjection to law terminates at death. Hence the apostle assumes that his brethren know law; not the law, with the article, as in the English translation. Over a man—Over a person; for the Greek word may imply either sex, and the apostle in fact selects a female for his illustration.

Romans 7:4

  1. Dead to the law—As the deceased husband was physically dead to the wife, so the widow was legally dead to the husband; that is, she was emancipated from all subjection or relation to him. Similarly, by the apostle’s varied and flexible use of the word dead, the new Church was dead to the departed law. They were emancipated according to the measure of their life in Christ, and the spontaneity of their active holiness, from all pressure of the law.

Romans 7:5

  1. When we were in the flesh—When we were unregenerate, before our conversion. Motions of sins—These are spoken of as belonging to a past stage of experience.

Romans 7:6

  1. But now we are delivered from the law—Delivered from it as our source of justification as the actuating power of our attainment in holiness, and as a condemning power. Serve in newness of spirit—As we once served sin with all our heart most freely, so now we serve Christ with all our heart without legal compulsion and freely.

Romans 7:7

First question—Is the law sin? 7-12.7. Is the law sin?—In thus making deliverance from law the Christian principle, do you identify the law as sin? Not only as satisfying the sensitive Jew, but as a neutralizer of all antinomianism, (which abolishes obligation to holiness,) the apostle must honour the divine law. Had not known sin—So far from being sin, the law is the detecter of sin, revealing its existence and odiousness to the moral consciousness of the unreflecting sinner. Sin, like a heinous monster in the dark, lies concealed in the soul; the law comes like the sun and reveals his awful deformity. Shalt not covet—Shalt not entertain the evil desire of the heart.

The sinner knew external crime against human law, against society, against honour. But sin, the motion of the inner man infringing God’s law, he was ignorant of, or unconsciously ignored. We need not go to childhood, as many commentators do, to find this state of darkness and unconsciousness. It is the state of the world. With the busy worldly world the law of God has gone up into invisibility in the skies; and the world-law, that knows only crime and not sin, is solely and persistently known.

Romans 7:8

  1. Wrought… concupiscence—Commentators generally understand that the apostle here describes the reaction that sometimes takes place, with which the fractious soul sins the worse from its very spite against the restraints of law. It will not only sin when it is forbidden, but sin all the more rampantly because it is forbidden. Prohibition provokes transgression, and transgression ramps and rages out of vengeance against prohibition. Now this may be the meaning; and yet the idea seems hardly called for, or relevant to the train of thought. The demanded meaning is that sin, by means of law, brought every variety of concupiscence or unlawful heart-sin into revelation and visible existence; for the apostle more than once vividly describes a bringing into sight as a bringing into existence. Dead—Dead to all visibility or phenomenal existence.

Romans 7:9

  1. Alive—Fanciedly alive—alive in my own conceit; not knowing that I was truly a dead man. Without the law—The law having to me no virtual existence. Commandment came—Like a new arrival front parts unknown. Sin revived—A reversal takes place: sin was dead and I alive; but now, law having come, sin is alive and I am dead. I died—And the question is, Who killed me? The answer is not law; but law waked up sin, and sin killed me.

Romans 7:11

  1. Taking occasion—Law was the occasion, sin the author of the murder. Deceived me—Deluded me, as all temptation does with some false good. So did the serpent Eve. Slew me—As sin and serpent did both Adam and Eve.

Romans 7:12

  1. Wherefore—The conclusion is that the law stands vindicated in its divine perfection. Law—The eternal law universally taken. Commandment—The law manifested in some special requirement, as to Adam, in the ten commandments, and in the details of the Mosaic requirements.

Romans 7:13

  1. Good made death—Blessing is, indeed, by sin often transformed into curse. But the blessing is not thereby to blame. There is a bold truth in saying that the good law was made death, but, the apostle claims, not responsibly so. Sin is the knave and murderer, without which law would be most benign and glorious, “the harmony of the universe.” Might appear sin—Death follows sin in order to unfold the accursedness of sin. The intrinsic, immutable, eternal execrableness of sin is a lesson in theology that God is wisely unfolding to all intelligence. Exceeding sinful—He might have said exceeding bad; but what worse can be ascribed to sin than that it is intensely itself?

Romans 7:14

  1. Spiritual—The law is not only to be vindicated but extolled, and extolled not only by the good, but even by the man whom it condemns. Carnal—That is, in the flesh, (Romans 7:5,) that is, unregenerate. Sold under sin—Not merely under the dominion of sin, (Romans 6:14,) although that is the sure and infallible characteristic of the unregenerate. The low regenerate state has sin rebellious within, the higher life has nature under foot; but though sin may win many masteries, it never holds permanent dominion over the regenerate man, for then he ceases to be regenerate. But this man is worse still, sold under sin, not only a subject but a slave.

And it is not the base I, the lower self, but the higher I that utters this awful plaint. Reducing the hyperbole as much as we reasonably can, it is absolutely inadmissible to predicate this in any case of a regenerate man.Dr.

Hodge expresses the opinion that such is the ordinary language of Christian experience. It is so only, we reply, in accordance with and in consequence of a theological teaching that requires it. No such language, either doctrinal or practical, is found in the Christian writings of the first three centuries. Under such doctrinal instruction language of a hyperbolical “voluntary humility” is sometimes habitually uttered, utterly factitious in its character. This practice of factitious self-invective, both in language and cultivated thought, is repressive of the higher emotions of Christian life, and produces a dry, hard, and ungenial style of piety. it often produces in revivals also not a winning, but a menacing tone of preaching; and in the religious tone that results, much that is severe and unlovely.Dr. Hodge is surprised that Tholuck should approve the declaration of Dr.

Adam Clarke that the Augustinian interpretation of this passage tends to lower the Christian standard. He avers that Calvinists, who prefer this interpretation, may safely claim a superior piety over Socinians and Arminians, who take the reverse view.

The so-called Arminian view, we again reply, was held in the earliest and best days of the Church. Nor do those who coincide with Mr. Wesley in this interpretation shrink from Dr. Hodge’s comparison as to piety; or hesitate the declaration that the spirit in which they read this passage, carried out in all directions, is the source of a large part of their spiritual life, joy, and efficiency. Oblige them to feel that this and cognate passages are a true view of Christian life, and their whole frame of piety would receive a lowering cheek.

Romans 7:15

  1. I do, I allow not—Here begins the battle of the I’s. It is the corrupt I of carnality and indwelling sin asserting its law in the members, and overwhelming the I of conscience, awakened by the Spirit, with the body of death. What I wickedly do, I conscientiously allow not.

Romans 7:17

  1. No more I—So completely nullified and robbed of my moral personality am I that the carnal, self, indwelling sin is the real agent, absorbing for the time being the whole man.

Romans 7:18

  1. For to will—What proves that in the me, which is identical with my flesh, is no good thing, is the fact that it defeats my will to perform the good, and induces me to do the evil which I would not.

Romans 7:20

  1. No more I… sin—(See note on 17.) What proves that it is no more I, but an overmastering I of sin that dwelleth in me, is the fact that I am overborne to do that which in conscience I would not.

Romans 7:22

  1. Delight—Rather, regard with complacency. The ordinary conscience even of the natural man, as all moral philosophers maintain, feels an emotion of gratification in seeing right and justice done. The inward man—the ethical nature.

Romans 7:23

  1. Another law—So uniform and controlling is the mastery of this sin=I, that it has the absoluteness of a law in my members, a law of sin. It is a rebel law warring against the law of my higher mind, namely, the divine law.

Romans 7:24

  1. Oh wretched… I—Down to even this despairing cry, and in it, the duplication of the self appears in the I and the body of this death. The I makes a convulsive effort to fling off this body at once of sin and of death, yet feels the impossibility without help from without. For this body of death is myself! This death—When we interpret the body of this death to be the old man, the carnal self, the noisome carcass of indwelling sin producing this death, we bring out the completion and final point of the answer to the question at Romans 7:13. It was not the law that produced the death herein depicted, but sin.

Romans 7:25

  1. I thank… through Jesus Christ—Of course this verse declares that Christ was the deliverer from this carnal and deadly incubus. We can either insert I am delivered before through, or we may imagine that the deliverance has already taken place as soon as the cry is uttered, and then this verse is the rapturous burst of gratitude.So then—This is the summing up of the discord within the struggling sinner in his convicted law state, and prepares by contrast for the sweet harmony that follows in the next chapter. Two parts of his nature adhered to two different laws. There was once a false harmony by the complete and quiet predominance of carnality; the Spirit, revealing the law, produced the discord; the Spirit, through Christ, subduing sin, bestows a harmony divine, and this harmony peals forth in a paean in the opening of the next chapter.

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