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Text -- Romans 6:20-23 (NET)
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Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Robertson: Rom 6:20 - -- Free in regard of righteousness ( eleutheroi tēi dikaiosunēi ).
Ye wore no collar of righteousness, but freely did as ye pleased. They were "free...
Free in regard of righteousness (
Ye wore no collar of righteousness, but freely did as ye pleased. They were "free."Note dative case, personal relation, of
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Robertson: Rom 6:21 - -- What fruit then had ye at that time? ( tina oun karpon eichete totė ).
Imperfect active, used to have. A pertinent question. Ashes in their hands n...
What fruit then had ye at that time? (
Imperfect active, used to have. A pertinent question. Ashes in their hands now. They are ashamed now of the memory of them. The end of them is death.
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Robertson: Rom 6:22 - -- Ye have your fruit unto sanctification ( echete ton karpon humōn eis hagiasmon ).
Freedom from sin and slavery to God bring permanent fruit that le...
Ye have your fruit unto sanctification (
Freedom from sin and slavery to God bring permanent fruit that leads to sanctification.
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Robertson: Rom 6:22 - -- And the end eternal life ( to de telos zōēn aiōnion ).
Note accusative case zōēn aiōnion , object of echete (ye have), though thanatos ...
And the end eternal life (
Note accusative case
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Robertson: Rom 6:23 - -- Wages ( opsōnia ).
Late Greek for wages of soldier, here of sin. See note on Luk 3:14; note on 1Co 9:7 and note on 2Co 11:8. Sin pays its wages in ...
Vincent: Rom 6:20 - -- Free from righteousness ( ἐλεύθεροι τῇ δικαιοσύνῃ )
An ambiguous translation. Better, Rev., free in regard ...
Free from righteousness (
An ambiguous translation. Better, Rev., free in regard of righteousness . Disengaged (Morison), practically independent of its demands, having offered their service to the opposing power. They could not serve two masters.
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Vincent: Rom 6:21 - -- Had ye ( εἴχετε )
Imperfect tense, denoting continuance. What fruit were ye having during your service of sin?
Had ye (
Imperfect tense, denoting continuance. What fruit were ye having during your service of sin?
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Vincent: Rom 6:21 - -- In the things whereof ( ἐφ ' οἷς )
Some change the punctuation, and read " What fruit had ye at that time? Things whereof ye are now a...
In the things whereof (
Some change the punctuation, and read " What fruit had ye at that time? Things whereof ye are now ashamed." But the majority of the best texts reject this, and besides, the question is of having fruit , not of the quality of the fruit.
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Vincent: Rom 6:23 - -- Wages ( ὀψώνια )
From ὄψον cooked meat , and later, generally, provisions . At Athens especially fish . Hence ὀψών...
Wages (
From
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Vincent: Rom 6:23 - -- Death
" Sin pays its serfs by punishing them. Its wages is death, and the death for which its counters are available is the destruction of the we...
Death
" Sin pays its serfs by punishing them. Its wages is death, and the death for which its counters are available is the destruction of the weal of the soul" (Morison).
Wesley: Rom 6:20 - -- In all reason, therefore, ye ought now to be free from unrighteousness; to be as uniform and zealous in serving God as ye were in serving the devil.
In all reason, therefore, ye ought now to be free from unrighteousness; to be as uniform and zealous in serving God as ye were in serving the devil.
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Wesley: Rom 6:23 - -- The difference is remarkable. Evil works merit the reward they receive: good works do not. The former demand wages: the latter accept a free gift.
The difference is remarkable. Evil works merit the reward they receive: good works do not. The former demand wages: the latter accept a free gift.
"were servants"
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JFB: Rom 6:20 - -- Difficulties have been made about this clause where none exist. The import of it seems clearly to be this:--"Since no servant can serve two masters, m...
Difficulties have been made about this clause where none exist. The import of it seems clearly to be this:--"Since no servant can serve two masters, much less where their interests come into deadly collision, and each demands the whole man, so, while ye were in the service of Sin ye were in no proper sense the servants of Righteousness, and never did it one act of real service: whatever might be your conviction of the claims of Righteousness, your real services were all and always given to Sin: Thus had ye full proof of the nature and advantages of Sin's service." The searching question with which this is followed up, shows that this is the meaning.
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JFB: Rom 6:21 - -- What permanent advantage, and what abiding satisfaction, have those things yielded? The apostle answers his own question:--"Abiding satisfaction, did ...
What permanent advantage, and what abiding satisfaction, have those things yielded? The apostle answers his own question:--"Abiding satisfaction, did I ask? They have left only a sense of 'shame.' Permanent advantage? 'The end of them is death.'" By saying they were "now ashamed," he makes it plain that he is not referring to that disgust at themselves, and remorse of conscience by which those who are the most helplessly "sold under sin" are often stung to the quick; but that ingenuous feeling of self-reproach, which pierces and weighs down the children of God, as they think of the dishonor which their past life did to His name, the ingratitude it displayed, the violence it did to their own conscience, its deadening and degrading effects, and the death--"the second death"--to which it was dragging them down, when mere Grace arrested them. (On the sense of "death" here, see on Rom 5:12-21, Note 3, and Rom 6:16 : see also Rev 21:8 --The change proposed in the pointing of this verse: "What fruit had ye then? things whereof ye are now ashamed" [LUTHER, THOLUCK, DE WETTE, PHILIPPI, ALFORD, &c.], seems unnatural and uncalled for. The ordinary pointing has at least powerful support [CHRYSOSTOM, CALVIN, BEZA, GROTIUS, BENGEL, STUART, FRITZSCHE]).
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As if to get away from such a subject were unspeakable relief.
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In the absolute sense intended throughout all this passage.
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Not "ought to have," but "do have," in point of fact.
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JFB: Rom 6:22 - -- "sanctification," as in Rom 6:19; meaning that permanently holy state and character which is built up out of the whole "fruits of righteousness," whic...
"sanctification," as in Rom 6:19; meaning that permanently holy state and character which is built up out of the whole "fruits of righteousness," which believers successively bring forth. They "have their fruit" unto this, that is, all going towards this blessed result.
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JFB: Rom 6:22 - -- As the final state of the justified believer; the beatific experience not only of complete exemption from the fall with all its effects, but of the pe...
As the final state of the justified believer; the beatific experience not only of complete exemption from the fall with all its effects, but of the perfect life of acceptance with God, and conformity to His likeness, of unveiled access to Him, and ineffable fellowship with Him through all duration.
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JFB: Rom 6:23 - -- This concluding verse--as pointed as it is brief--contains the marrow, the most fine gold, of the Gospel. As the laborer is worthy of his hire, and fe...
This concluding verse--as pointed as it is brief--contains the marrow, the most fine gold, of the Gospel. As the laborer is worthy of his hire, and feels it to be his due--his own of right--so is death the due of sin, the wages the sinner has well wrought for, his own. But "eternal life" is in no sense or degree the wages of our righteousness; we do nothing whatever to earn or become entitled to it, and never can: it is therefore, in the most absolute sense, "THE GIFT OF GOD." Grace reigns in the bestowal of it in every case, and that "in Jesus Christ our Lord," as the righteous Channel of it. In view of this, who that hath tasted that the Lord is gracious can refrain from saying, "Unto Him that loved us, and washed us from our sins in His own blood, and hath made us kings and priests unto God and His Father, to Him be glory and dominion for ever and ever. Amen!" (Rev 1:5-6).
Note, (1) As the most effectual refutation of the oft-repeated calumny, that the doctrine of Salvation by grace encourages to continue in sin, is the holy life of those who profess it, let such ever feel that the highest service they can render to that Grace which is all their hope, is to "yield themselves unto God, as those that are alive from the dead, and their members instruments of righteousness unto God" (Rom 6:12-13). By so doing they will "put to silence the ignorance of foolish men," secure their own peace, carry out the end of their calling, and give substantial glory to Him that loved them. (2) The fundamental principle of Gospel obedience is as original as it is divinely rational; that "we are set free from the law in order to keep it, and are brought graciously under servitude to the law in order to be free" (Rom 6:14-15, Rom 6:18). So long as we know no principle of obedience but the terrors of the law, which condemns all the breakers of it, and knows nothing whatever of grace, either to pardon the guilty or to purify the stained, we are shut up under a moral impossibility of genuine and acceptable obedience: whereas when Grace lifts us out of this state, and through union to a righteous Surety, brings us into a state of conscious reconciliation, and loving surrender of heart to a God of salvation, we immediately feel the glorious liberty to be holy, and the assurance that "Sin shall not have dominion over us" is as sweet to our renewed tastes and aspirations as the ground of it is felt to be firm, "because we are not under the Law, but under Grace." (3) As this most momentous of all transitions in the history of a man is wholly of God's free grace, the change should never be thought, spoken, or written of but with lively thanksgiving to Him who so loved us (Rom 6:17). (4) Christians, in the service of God, should emulate their former selves in the zeal and steadiness with which they served sin, and the length to which they went in it (Rom 6:19). (5) To stimulate this holy rivalry, let us often "look back to the rock whence we were hewn, the hole of the pit whence we were digged," in search of the enduring advantages and permanent satisfactions which the service of Sin yielded; and when we find to our "shame" only gall and wormwood, let us follow a godless life to its proper "end," until, finding ourselves in the territories of "death," we are fain to hasten back to survey the service of Righteousness, that new Master of all believers, and find Him leading us sweetly into abiding "holiness," and landing us at length in "everlasting life" (Rom 6:20-22). (6) Death and life are before all men who hear the Gospel: the one, the natural issue and proper reward of sin; the other, the absolutely free "GIFT OF GOD" to sinners, "in Jesus Christ our Lord." And as the one is the conscious sense of the hopeless loss of all blissful existence, so the other is the conscious possession and enjoyment of all that constitutes a rational creature's highest "life" for evermore (Rom 6:23). Ye that read or hear these words, "I call heaven and earth to record this day against you, that I have set before you life and death, blessing and cursing, therefore choose life, that both thou and thy seed may live!" (Deu 30:19).
Clarke: Rom 6:20 - -- Ye were free from righteousness - These two servitudes are incompatible; if we cannot serve God and Mammon, surely we cannot serve Christ and Satan....
Ye were free from righteousness - These two servitudes are incompatible; if we cannot serve God and Mammon, surely we cannot serve Christ and Satan. We must be either sinners or saints; God’ s servants or the devil’ s slaves. It cannot be as a good mistaken man has endeavored to sing: -
"To good and evil equal bent
I’ m both a devil and a saint.
I know not whether it be possible to paint the utter prevalence of sin in stronger colors than the apostle does here, by saying they were Free from righteousness. It seems tantamount to that expression in Genesis, Gen 6:5, where, speaking of the total degeneracy of the human race, the writer says, Every imagination of the thoughts of his heart was only evil continually. They were all corrupt; they were altogether abominable: there was none that did good; no, not one.
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Clarke: Rom 6:21 - -- What fruit had ye then in those things - God designs that every man shall reap benefit by his service. What benefit have ye derived from the service...
What fruit had ye then in those things - God designs that every man shall reap benefit by his service. What benefit have ye derived from the service of sin
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Clarke: Rom 6:21 - -- Whereof ye are now ashamed? - Ye blush to remember your former life. It was scandalous to yourselves, injurious to others, and highly provoking to G...
Whereof ye are now ashamed? - Ye blush to remember your former life. It was scandalous to yourselves, injurious to others, and highly provoking to God
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Clarke: Rom 6:21 - -- The end of those things is death - Whatever sin may promise of pleasure or advantage, the end to which it necessarily tends is the destruction of bo...
The end of those things is death - Whatever sin may promise of pleasure or advantage, the end to which it necessarily tends is the destruction of body and soul.
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Clarke: Rom 6:22 - -- But now being made free from sin - As being free from righteousness is the finished character of a sinner, so being made free from sin is the finish...
But now being made free from sin - As being free from righteousness is the finished character of a sinner, so being made free from sin is the finished character of a genuine Christian
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Clarke: Rom 6:22 - -- And become servants to God - They were transferred from the service of one master to that of another: they were freed from the slavery of sin, and e...
And become servants to God - They were transferred from the service of one master to that of another: they were freed from the slavery of sin, and engaged in the service of God
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Clarke: Rom 6:22 - -- Fruit unto holiness - Holiness of heart was the principle; and righteousness of life the fruit.
Fruit unto holiness - Holiness of heart was the principle; and righteousness of life the fruit.
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Clarke: Rom 6:23 - -- For the wages of sin is death - The second death, everlasting perdition. Every sinner earns this by long, sore, and painful service. O! what pains d...
For the wages of sin is death - The second death, everlasting perdition. Every sinner earns this by long, sore, and painful service. O! what pains do men take to get to hell! Early and late they toil at sin; and would not Divine justice be in their debt, if it did not pay them their due wages
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Clarke: Rom 6:23 - -- But the gift of God is eternal life - A man may Merit hell, but he cannot Merit heaven. The apostle does not say that the wages of righteousness is ...
But the gift of God is eternal life - A man may Merit hell, but he cannot Merit heaven. The apostle does not say that the wages of righteousness is eternal life: no, but that this eternal life, even to the righteous, is
1. In the preceding chapter we see the connection that subsists between the doctrines of the Gospel and the practice of Christianity. A doctrine is a teaching, instruction, or information concerning some truth that is to be believed, as essential to our salvation. But all teaching that comes from God, necessarily leads to him. That Christ died for our sins and rose again for our justification, is a glorious doctrine of the Gospel. But this is of no use to him who does not die to sin, rise in the likeness of his resurrection, and walk in newness of life: this is the use that should be made of the doctrine. Every doctrine has its use, and the use of it consists in the practice founded on it. We hear there is a free pardon - we go to God and receive it; we hear that we may be made holy - we apply for the sanctifying Spirit; we hear there is a heaven of glory, into which the righteous alone shall enter - we watch and pray, believe, love, and obey, in order that, when he doth appear, we may be found of him in peace, without spot and blameless. Those are the doctrines; these are the uses or practice founded on those doctrines
2. It is strange that there should be found a person believing the whole Gospel system, and yet living in sin! Salvation From Sin is the long-continued sound, as it is the spirit and design, of the Gospel. Our Christian name, our baptismal covenant, our profession of faith in Christ, and avowed belief in his word, all call us to this: can it be said that we have any louder calls than these? Our self-interest, as it respects the happiness of a godly life, and the glories of eternal blessedness; the pains and wretchedness of a life of sin, leading to the worm that never dies and the fire that is not quenched; second most powerfully the above calls. Reader, lay these things to heart, and: answer this question to God; How shall I escape, if I neglect so great salvation? And then, as thy conscience shall answer, let thy mind and thy hands begin to act.
Calvin: Rom 6:20 - -- 20.=== For when ye were, === etc. He still repeats the difference, which he had before mentioned, between the yoke of righteousness and that of sin;...
20.=== For when ye were, === etc. He still repeats the difference, which he had before mentioned, between the yoke of righteousness and that of sin; for these two things, sin and righteousness, are so contrary, that he who devotes himself to the one, necessarily departs from the other. And he thus represents both, that by viewing them apart we may see more clearly what is to be expected from each; for to set things thus apart enables us to understand better their distinctive character. He then sets sin on one side, and righteousness on the other; and having stated this distinction, he afterwards shows what results from each of them.
Let us then remember that the Apostle still reasons on the principle of contraries, and in this manner, “While ye were the servants of sin, ye were freed from righteousness; but now a change having taken place, it behoves you to serve righteousness; for you have been liberated from the yoke of sin. He calls those free from righteousness who are held by no bridle to obey righteousness. This is the liberty of the flesh, which so frees us from obedience to God, that it makes us slaves to the devil. Wretched then and accursed is this liberty, which with unbridled or rather mad frenzy, leads us exultingly to our destruction.
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Calvin: Rom 6:21 - -- 21.What fruit, then, etc. He could not more strikingly express what he intended than by appealing to their conscience, and by confessing shame as i...
21.What fruit, then, etc. He could not more strikingly express what he intended than by appealing to their conscience, and by confessing shame as it were in their person. Indeed the godly, as soon as they begin to be illuminated by the Spirit of Christ and the preaching of the gospel, do freely acknowledge their past life, which they have lived without Christ, to have been worthy of condemnation; and so far are they from endeavouring to excuse it, that, on the contrary, they feel ashamed of themselves. Yea, further, they call to mind the remembrance of their own disgrace, that being thus ashamed, they may more truly and more readily be humbled before God.
Nor is what he says insignificant, Of which ye are now ashamed; for he intimates that we are possessed with extreme blind love for ourselves, when we are involved in the darkness of our sins, and think not that there is so much filth in us. The light of the Lord alone can open our eyes to behold the filthiness which lies hid in our flesh. He only then is imbued with the principles of Christian philosophy, who has well learnt to be really displeased with himself, and to be confounded with shame for his own wretchedness. He shows at last still more plainly from what was to follow, how much they ought to have been ashamed, that is, when they came to understand that they had been standing on the very precipice of death, and had been nigh destruction; yea, that they would have already entered the gates of death, had they not been reclaimed by God’s mercy.
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Calvin: Rom 6:22 - -- 22.Ye have your fruit unto holiness, etc. As he had before mentioned a twofold end of sin, so he does now as to righteousness. Sin in this life bri...
22.Ye have your fruit unto holiness, etc. As he had before mentioned a twofold end of sin, so he does now as to righteousness. Sin in this life brings the torments of an accusing conscience, and in the next eternal death. We now gather the fruit of righteousness, even holiness; we hope in future to gain eternal life. These things, unless we are beyond measure stupid, ought to generate in our minds a hatred and horror of sin, and also a love and desire for righteousness. Some render
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Calvin: Rom 6:23 - -- 23.For the wages of sin, etc. There are those who think that, Paul, by comparing death to allowances of meat, ( obsoniis ,) points out in a dispa...
23.For the wages of sin, etc. There are those who think that, Paul, by comparing death to allowances of meat, ( obsoniis ,) points out in a disparaging manner the kind of wretched reward that is allotted to sinners, as this word is taken by the Greeks sometimes for portions allowed to soldiers. But he seems rather indirectly to condemn the blind appetites of those who are ruinously allured by the enticements of sin, as the fish are by the hook. It will however be more simple to render the word “wages,” for surely death is a sufficiently ample reward to the wicked. This verse is a conclusion to the former, and as it were an epilogue to it. He does not, however, in vain repeat the same thing again; but by doubling the terror, he intended to render sin an object of still greater hatred.
But the gift of God They are mistaken who thus render the sentence, “Eternal life is the gift of God,” as though eternal life were the subject, and the gift of God the predicate; for this does not preserve the contrast. But as he has already taught us, that sin produces nothing but death; so now he subjoins, that this gift of God, even our justification and sanctification, brings to us the happiness of eternal life. Or, if you prefer, it may be thus stated, — “As the cause of death is sin, so righteousness, which we obtain through Christ, restores to us eternal life.”
It may however be hence inferred with certainty, that our salvation is altogether through the grace and mere beneficence of God. He might indeed have used other words — that the wages of righteousness is eternal life; and then the two clauses would correspond: but he knew that it is through God’s gift we obtain it, and not through our own merits; and that it is not one or a single gift; for being clothed with the righteousness of the Son, we are reconciled to God, and we are by the power of the Spirit renewed unto holiness. And he adds, in Christ Jesus, and for this reason, that he might call us away from every conceit respecting our own worthiness.
Defender: Rom 6:23 - -- Again the apostle emphasizes that the coming of death into the world resulted directly from the coming of sin into the world (Rom 5:12). God warned Ad...
Again the apostle emphasizes that the coming of death into the world resulted directly from the coming of sin into the world (Rom 5:12). God warned Adam that this would happen, and it did (Gen 2:17; Gen 3:17-20). There was thus no death in the world before Adam; otherwise, it would be meaningless to say that death is the price of sin. It would also be pointless for Christ to die for the sin of the world if death were already pervasive throughout God's creation before sin. Those who accept the geologic-age system, with its supposed characteristic of billions of dead and fossilized animals in a groaning world of suffering and decay, are in effect accepting the concept of a sadistic God (or else no God at all), for the loving and wise God of the Bible would never create such a world. Evolutionists claim that some such system of suffering and death brought man into the world, but God has made it clear that man brought suffering and death into the world by his sin. He has also made it clear that Christ's suffering and death were accepted by God in payment for the sin of the world, a marvelous act of love whereby all suffering and death will eventually be eliminated from the world (Rev 21:4, Rev 21:5).
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Defender: Rom 6:23 - -- The "gift" is better rendered "free gift." Although the death of His Son cost both Father and Son infinite pain, it is all offered to us as a free gif...
The "gift" is better rendered "free gift." Although the death of His Son cost both Father and Son infinite pain, it is all offered to us as a free gift by His grace. Of course, it only becomes a gift in reality if it is accepted, and the tragedy is that most people will never accept it."
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TSK: Rom 6:21 - -- What : Rom 7:5; Pro 1:31, Pro 5:10-13, Pro 9:17, Pro 9:18; Isa 3:10; Jer 17:10, Jer 44:20-24; Gal 6:7, Gal 6:8
whereof : Ezr 9:6; Job 40:4, Job 42:6; ...
What : Rom 7:5; Pro 1:31, Pro 5:10-13, Pro 9:17, Pro 9:18; Isa 3:10; Jer 17:10, Jer 44:20-24; Gal 6:7, Gal 6:8
whereof : Ezr 9:6; Job 40:4, Job 42:6; Jer 3:3, Jer 8:12, Jer 31:19; Eze 16:61-63; Eze 36:31, Eze 36:32, Eze 43:11; Dan 9:7, Dan 9:8, Dan 12:2; Luk 15:17-21; 2Co 7:11; 1Jo 2:28
for the : Rom 6:23, Rom 1:32; Deu 17:6, Deu 21:22; 2Sa 12:5-7; 1Ki 2:26; Psa 73:17; Pro 14:12; Pro 16:25; Phi 3:19; Heb 6:8, Heb 10:29; Jam 1:15, Jam 5:20; 1Pe 4:17; Rev 16:6; Rev 20:14
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TSK: Rom 6:22 - -- But now : Rom 6:14, Rom 6:18, Rom 8:2; Joh 8:32; 2Co 3:17; Gal 5:13
become : Rom 7:25; Gen 50:17; Job 1:8; Psa 86:2, Psa 143:12; Isa 54:17; Dan 3:26, ...
But now : Rom 6:14, Rom 6:18, Rom 8:2; Joh 8:32; 2Co 3:17; Gal 5:13
become : Rom 7:25; Gen 50:17; Job 1:8; Psa 86:2, Psa 143:12; Isa 54:17; Dan 3:26, Dan 6:20; Gal 1:10; Col 4:12; Tit 1:1; Jam 1:1; 1Pe 2:16; Rev 7:13
ye have : Psa 92:14; Joh 15:2, Joh 15:16; Gal 5:22; Eph 5:9; Phi 1:11, Phi 4:17; Col 1:10
and the end : Rom 6:21; Num 23:10; Psa 37:37, Psa 37:38; Mat 13:40,Mat 13:43, Mat 19:29, Mat 25:46; Joh 4:36
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TSK: Rom 6:23 - -- For the wages : Rom 5:12; Gen 2:17, Gen 3:19; Isa 3:11; Eze 18:4, Eze 18:20; 1Co 6:9, 1Co 6:10; Gal 3:10; Gal 6:7, Gal 6:8; Jam 1:15; Rev 21:8
but the...
For the wages : Rom 5:12; Gen 2:17, Gen 3:19; Isa 3:11; Eze 18:4, Eze 18:20; 1Co 6:9, 1Co 6:10; Gal 3:10; Gal 6:7, Gal 6:8; Jam 1:15; Rev 21:8
but the : Rom 2:7, Rom 5:17, Rom 5:21; Joh 3:14-17, Joh 3:36, Joh 4:14, Joh 5:24, Joh 5:39, Joh 5:40, Joh 6:27, Joh 6:32, Joh 6:33, Joh 6:40,Joh 6:50-58; Joh 6:68, Joh 10:28, Joh 17:2; Tit 1:2; 1Pe 1:3, 1Pe 1:4; 1Jo 2:25, 1Jo 5:11, 1Jo 5:12
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes: Rom 6:20 - -- Ye were free from righteousness - That is, in your former state, you were not at all under the influence of righteousness. You were entirely de...
Ye were free from righteousness - That is, in your former state, you were not at all under the influence of righteousness. You were entirely devoted to sin; a strong expression of total depravity. It settles the question; and proves that they had no native goodness. The argument which is implied here rather than expressed is, that now they ought to be equally free from sin, since they had become released from their former bondage, and had become the servants of another master.
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Barnes: Rom 6:21 - -- What fruit, then ... - What reward, or what advantage. This is an argument drawn from the experience of Christians respecting the indulgence of...
What fruit, then ... - What reward, or what advantage. This is an argument drawn from the experience of Christians respecting the indulgence of sinful passions. The question discussed throughout this chapter is, whether the gospel plan of justification by faith leads to indulgence in sin? The argument here is drawn from the past experience which Christians have had in the ways of transgression. They have tried it; they know its effects; they have tasted its bitterness; they have reaped its fruits. It is implied here that having once experienced these effects, and knowing the tendency of sin, they will not indulge in it now; compare Rom 7:5.
Whereof ye are now ashamed - Having seen their nature and tendency, you are now ashamed of them; compare Rom. 1; Eph 5:12, "For it is a shame to speak of those things which are done of them in secret,"2Co 4:2; Jud 1:13; Phi 3:19.
For the end - The tendency; the result. Those things lead to death.
Is death - Note, Rom 6:22.
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Barnes: Rom 6:22 - -- But now - Under the Christian plan of justification. Being made free from sin - Being delivered from its dominion, and from bondage; in t...
But now - Under the Christian plan of justification.
Being made free from sin - Being delivered from its dominion, and from bondage; in the same manner as before conversion they were free from righteousness, Rom 6:20.
Ye have your fruit unto holiness - The fruit or result is holiness. This service produces holiness, as the other did sin. It is implied here, though not expressly affirmed, that in this service which leads to holiness, they received important benefits, as in the service of sin they had experienced many evils.
And the end - The final result - the ultimate consequence will be. At present this service produces holiness; hereafter it will terminate in everlasting life. By this consideration the apostle states the tendency of the plan of justification, and urges on them the duty of striving after holiness.
Everlasting life - Note, Joh 3:36. This stands in contrast with the word "death"in Rom 6:21, and shows its meaning. "One is just as long in duration as the other;"and if the one is limited, the other is. If those who obey shall be blessed with life forever, those who disobey will be cursed with death forever. Never was there an antithesis more manifest and more clear. And there could not be a stronger proof that the word "death"in Rom 6:21, refers not to temporal death, but to eternal punishment. For what force would there be in the argument on the supposition that temporal death only is meant? The argument would stand thus: "The end of those sins is to produce temporal death; the end of holiness is to produce eternal life!"Will not temporal death be inflicted, it would be immediately asked, at any rate? Are Christians exempt from it? And do not people suffer this, whether they become Christians or not? How then could this be an argument bearing on the tenor of the apostle’ s reasoning? But admit the fair and obvious construction of the passage to be the true one, and it becomes plain. They were pursuing a course tending to everlasting ruin; they are now in a path that shall terminate in eternal life. By this weighty consideration, therefore, they are urged to be holy.
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Barnes: Rom 6:23 - -- For the wages of sin - The word translated here "wages" ὀψώνια opsōnia properly denotes what is purchased to be eaten with bre...
For the wages of sin - The word translated here "wages"
(1) Because it is its proper desert. Not a pain will be inflicted on the sinner which he does not deserve. Not a sinner will die who ought not to die. Sinners even in hell will be treated just as they deserve to be treated; and there is not to man a more fearful and terrible consideration than this. No man can conceive a more dreadful doom than for himself to be treated forever just as he deserves to be. But,
(2) This is the wages of sin, because, like the pay of the soldier, it is just what was threatened, Eze 18:4, "The soul that sinneth, it shall die."God will not inflict anything more than was threatened, and therefore it is just.
Is death - This stands opposed here to eternal life, and proves that one is just as enduring as the other.
But the gift of God - Not the wages of man; not what is due to him; but the mere gift and mercy of God. The apostle is careful to distinguish, and to specify thai this is not what man deserves, but what is gratuitously conferred on him; Note, Rom 6:15.
Eternal life - The same words which in Rom 6:22 are rendered "everlasting life."The phrase is opposed to death; and proves incontestably that that means eternal death. We may remark, therefore,
(1) That the one will be as long as the other.
\caps1 (2) a\caps0 s there is no doubt about the duration of life, so there can be none about the duration of death. The one will be rich, blessed, everlasting; the other sad, gloomy, lingering, awful, eternal.
\caps1 (3) i\caps0 f the sinner is lost, he will deserve to die. He will have his reward. He will suffer only what shall be the just due of sin. He will not be a martyr in the cause of injured innocence. He will not have the compassion of the universe in his favor. He will have no one to take his part against God. He will suffer just as much, and just as long, as he ought to suffer. He will suffer as the culprit pines in the dungeon, or as the murderer dies on the gibbet, because this is the proper reward of sin.
\caps1 (4) t\caps0 hey who are saved will be raised to heaven, not because they merit it, but by the rich and sovereign grace of God. All their salvation will be ascribed to him; and they will celebrate his mercy and grace forever.
\caps1 (5) i\caps0 t becomes us, therefore, to flee from the wrath to come. No man is so foolish and so wicked as he who is willing to reap the proper wages of sin. None so blessed as he who has part in the mercy of God, and who lays hold on eternal life.
Poole: Rom 6:20 - -- q.d. When you served sin, you knew that God and righteousness had no whit of your service; why then should sin have any of your service now, when ye...
q.d. When you served sin, you knew that God and righteousness had no whit of your service; why then should sin have any of your service now, when ye have delivered up yourselves to righteousness, or godliness, to be the observant followers thereof? Why should not ye now abstain as strictly from all sin, as then ye did from all good?
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Poole: Rom 6:21 - -- q.d. And this will be much more equal and reasonable, if you consider these three things:
1. How little fruit and satisfaction your former sins hav...
q.d. And this will be much more equal and reasonable, if you consider these three things:
1. How little fruit and satisfaction your former sins have afforded you in the very time of committing them.
2. How nothing but shame and sorrow doth follow upon the remembrance of them.
3. How death, yea, eternal death and damnation, (unless pardoning grace and mercy prevent it), will be the certain conclusion of them. And whether these things are true or not, I appeal to yourselves.
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Poole: Rom 6:22 - -- q.d. But now, on the contrary, being set at liberty from the service of sin, and admitted to be the servants of God, you plainly perceive a differen...
q.d. But now, on the contrary, being set at liberty from the service of sin, and admitted to be the servants of God, you plainly perceive a difference: for:
1. In your lifetime you increase in grace and holiness, and that is no small fruit or advantage; and then,
2. At your death you shall have everlasting life.
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Poole: Rom 6:23 - -- q.d. Now therefore compare the office of both these services together, and you shall easily see which master is best to serve and obey; the wages th...
q.d. Now therefore compare the office of both these services together, and you shall easily see which master is best to serve and obey; the wages that sin will pay you, in the end is death; but the reward that God will freely bestow upon you (if you be his servants)
is eternal life through Jesus Christ our Lord
Wages the word properly signifies victuals. The Romans of old paid their soldiers with provision and victuals in recompence of their service; afterward they gave them money, but still the old term was retained, and now it is used to signify any reward or stipend whatsoever.
Is death: by death here we must understand not only temporal, but also and more especially eternal death, as appears by the opposition it hath to eternal life: this is the just and true hire of sin.
The gift of God is eternal life he doth not say that eternal life is the wages of righteousness, but that it is the gracious or free gift of God. He varies the phrase on purpose, to show that we attain not eternal life by our own merits, our own works or worthiness, but by the gift or grace of God; for which cause he also addeth,
through Jesus Christ our Lord See Aug. lib. de Gratia et Libero Arbitrio, c. 9. Let the papists (if they can) reconcile this text to their distinction of mortal and venial sins, and to their doctrine of the meritoriousness of good works.
Haydock -> Rom 6:20-22; Rom 6:23
Haydock: Rom 6:20-22 - -- You were free from justice; that is, says St. John Chrysostom, you lived as no ways subject to justice, nor obedient to the law and precepts of God: ...
You were free from justice; that is, says St. John Chrysostom, you lived as no ways subject to justice, nor obedient to the law and precepts of God: an unhappy freedom, a miserable liberty, worse than the greatest slavery, the end of which is death, eternal death: of which sins with great reason you are now ashamed, when you are become the servants of God, and obedient to him, for which you will receive the fruit and reward of everlasting life in heaven. (Witham)
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Haydock: Rom 6:23 - -- For the wages, which the tyrant sin gives to his soldiers and slaves, is eternal death; but the wages, the pay, the reward, which God gives to thos...
For the wages, which the tyrant sin gives to his soldiers and slaves, is eternal death; but the wages, the pay, the reward, which God gives to those that fight under him, is everlasting life; which, though a reward of our past labours, as it is often called in the Scriptures, is still a grace, [3] or free gift; because if our works are good, or deserve a reward in heaven, it is God's grace that makes them deserve it. For, as St. Augustine says, when God crowns our works, he crowns his own gifts. (Witham)
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[BIBLIOGRAPHY]
Gratia Dei, vita æterna; that is, in construction, vita æterna, est gratia Dei.
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Gill: Rom 6:20 - -- For when ye were the servants of sin,.... This is an argument used, or a reason given, why regenerate persons should be diligent in the service of rig...
For when ye were the servants of sin,.... This is an argument used, or a reason given, why regenerate persons should be diligent in the service of righteousness; because when they were employed in the drudgery of sin, they
were free from righteousness; they had no righteousness, nor were they desirous of any; yea, averse to it, threw off the yoke of the law of righteousness, and lived in a very unrighteous manner: hence may be observed what is the free will of man in an unregenerate state; not free to, but "from" righteousness; free enough to evil, but from all that is good; and also what obligation lies upon believers, who are delivered from the bondage of corruption, and the servitude of sin, to a life and service of righteousness; inasmuch as they were before free from it, and unconcerned about it, but are now made by the grace of God free to it, they ought therefore cheerfully to pursue it, and neglect no opportunity of performing it.
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Gill: Rom 6:21 - -- What fruit had ye then in those things?.... That is, what profit, pleasure, satisfaction, or comfort, had ye in the commission of sin? Sin yields no r...
What fruit had ye then in those things?.... That is, what profit, pleasure, satisfaction, or comfort, had ye in the commission of sin? Sin yields no real profit to the servants of it. If a man, by sinful practices, could amass together the riches of the Indies, or gain the whole world, yet if his soul is lost thereby, what advantage would it be to him? he would be infinitely the loser by it; nor would all his wealth and riches profit him in the day of God's wrath and righteous judgment: nor is there any true pleasure in sin; persons may imagine within themselves they enjoy a real pleasure whilst they are serving divers lusts; but this is but imaginary, it is not real; and this imaginary pleasure is but for a season; it issues in bitterness and death: nor is there any satisfaction in it; when men have endeavoured to gratify their carnal lusts and sensual appetites in every way that can be devised, they still remain as they were; nor can they reflect with real satisfaction, and without some slinging remorse, upon the methods they have pursued to gain it: nor is there any true honour in sin, nothing but what is scandalous and disgraceful to human nature; shame, sooner or later, is the fruit of sin:
whereof ye are now ashamed; some men may be indeed for the present so hardened as not to blush and be ashamed at the commission of the vilest sins; such are they who have no sense of sin, have no fear of God, or regard to men; and so sin openly, and without any guise, glory in it, and make their boast of it: but when persons are wrought upon by the Spirit of God, they are ashamed of sin; which might be exemplified in the case of Adam and Eve, of Ephraim, of the prodigal son, and of the poor publican; the reason is, because light is struck into their hearts; and this makes manifest the odious and detestable nature of sin; sin is hereby seen in its own proper colours, as exceeding sinful, loathsome, and abominable: besides, the grace and goodness of God are discovered in the forgiveness of it; and the glory of God's purity and holiness, and the beauty and loveliness of Christ, are discerned by such persons; all which have a tendency to make them ashamed of sin, out of love with it, and to abhor it: and a good thing it is to be brought to be ashamed of sin here; for such who are not ashamed of it here, shall be brought to everlasting shame and confusion hereafter. Nay, this is not all; not only shame will be the fruit of sin, but it will also issue in death:
for the, end of those things is death: the profit, the reward, and wages of them is death: sin not only brings a spiritual or moral death on persons, on all the powers and faculties of their souls, and is followed with a corporeal death; but if grace prevent not, it will end in an eternal one; for however right and good the ways of sin may seem to the carnal mind, "the end thereof are the ways of death" (#Pr 14:12 16:25).
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Gill: Rom 6:22 - -- But now being made free from sin, and become servants to God,.... In what sense regenerate persons are free from sin, and are become the servants of G...
But now being made free from sin, and become servants to God,.... In what sense regenerate persons are free from sin, and are become the servants of God, has been observed already; the consequence of which is, that such have their
fruit unto holiness, and the end everlasting life: holiness is a fruit of freedom from the bondage of sin, and of serving God; holiness begun in regeneration, calling, and conversion, is a fruit of the Spirit; a course of living righteously is a fruit of holiness, as a principle implanted; a gradual increase in holiness is carried on by the Spirit of God in a course of righteousness; and a course of righteousness, from a principle of grace, issues in perfect holiness; "without which no man shall see the Lord" Heb 12:14: here it seems to design, that holiness is fruit, or that which is gain and profit to persons, in opposition to sin, in which there is no profit: it is not indeed profitable to God in point of merit; yet holiness, as a principle of grace, is profitable to the saints in point of meetness for glory; and holiness, as it denotes an external course of life, is useful and profitable on many accounts; hereby God is glorified, the doctrine of Christ is adorned, religion is honoured and recommended, our own credit, reputation, and peace, are preserved, and our neighbour's good promoted.
And the end is everlasting life: as sin issues, if grace prevent not, in everlasting death; holiness issues in eternal life, not by way of merit, but of free gift.
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Gill: Rom 6:23 - -- For the wages of sin is death,.... By sin, is meant every sin, original sin, actual sin, every kind of sin, lesser and greater: the "death" which sin ...
For the wages of sin is death,.... By sin, is meant every sin, original sin, actual sin, every kind of sin, lesser and greater: the "death" which sin deserves, is a corporeal death; which is not owing to the original nature and constitution of men; nor merely to the divine appointment; but to sin, and the decree of God, on account of it; which is inflicted on Christless sinners, as a punishment for sin, though not on believers as such, because Christ has took away the sting and curse of it: a death of diseases and afflictions also follows upon sin, as its proper demerit; which are properly punishments to wicked men, and are occasioned by sin in believers: there is a death of the soul, which comes by sin, which lies in an alienation from God, in a loss of the image of God, and in a servitude to sin; and there is an eternal death, the just wages of sin, which lies in a separation of soul and body from God, and in a sense of divine wrath to all eternity; and which is here meant, as is clear from its antithesis, "eternal life", in the next clause. Now this is "the wages" of sin; sin does in its own nature produce it, and excludes from life; it is the natural issue of it; sin is committed against an infinite God, and righteously deserves such a death; it is its just wages by law. The Greek word
"At which time Simon rose up, and fought for his nation, and spent much of his own substance, and armed the valiant men of his nation and gave them wages,'' (1 Maccabees 14:32)
Sin is represented as a king, a mighty monarch, a tyrannical prince; sinners are his subjects and vassals, his servants and soldiers, who fight under him, and for him, and all the wages they must expect from him is death. So the word is interpreted in the Glossary,
but the gift of God is eternal life, through Jesus Christ our Lord. These words, at first sight, look as if the sense of them was, that eternal life is the gift of God through Christ, which is a great and glorious truth of the Gospel; but their standing in opposition to the preceding words require another sense, namely, that God's gift of grace issues in eternal life, through Christ: wherefore by "the gift of God" is not meant eternal life, but either the gift of a justifying righteousness, or the grace of God in regeneration and sanctification, or both, which issue in eternal life; the one is the saints' right and title, the other their meetness for it: so that as death is the wages of sin, and is what that issues in, and brings unto, eternal life is the effect of grace, or what the grace of God in justifying and sanctifying his people issues in; even a life free from all sorrow and imperfection; a life of the utmost perfection and pleasure, and which will last for ever: and as the grace of God, which justifies and sanctifies them, is "through Christ", so is the eternal life itself which it brings unto: this is in Christ, comes through his righteousness, sufferings, and death; is bestowed by him, and will greatly consist in the enjoyment of him. All grace is the gift of God, and is freely given, or otherwise it would not be grace; particularly the justifying righteousness of Christ is the gift of God; and the rather this may be meant here, since the apostle had been treating of it so largely before, and had so often, in the preceding chapter, called it the gift of righteousness, the free gift, and gift by grace, and justification by it, the justification of life, because it entitles to eternal life, as here: it may be said to issue in it; for between justification and glorification there is a sure and close connection; they that are justified by the righteousness of Christ, are certainly glorified, or enjoy eternal life; and though this may be principally intended here, yet is not to be understood to the exclusion of other gifts of grace, which have the same connection and issue: thus, for instance, faith is the gift of God, and not of a man's self, and he that has it, has eternal life, and shall, Or ever possess it; repentance is a free grace gift, it is a grant from the Lord, and it is unto life and salvation; and on whomsoever the grace of God is bestowed, so as to believe in Christ for righteousness, and truly repent of sin, these shall partake of eternal glory. It may be observed, that there is a just proportion between sin, and the wages of it, yet there is none between eternal life, and the obedience of men; and therefore though the apostle had been pressing so much obedience to God, and to righteousness, he does not make eternal life to be the fruit and effect of obedience, but of the gift of the grace of God.
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expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
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NET Notes: Rom 6:23 A figurative extension of ὀψώνιον (oywnion), which refers to a soldier’s pay or wages. Here it refers to th...
Geneva Bible: Rom 6:20 For when ye were the servants of sin, ye were ( t ) free from righteousness.
( t ) Righteousness had no rule over you.
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Geneva Bible: Rom 6:21 ( 10 ) What fruit had ye then in those things whereof ye are now ashamed? for the ( u ) end of those things [is] death.
( 10 ) An exhortation to the ...
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Geneva Bible: Rom 6:23 ( 11 ) For the wages of sin [is] death; but the gift of God [is] eternal life through Jesus Christ our Lord.
( 11 ) Death is the punishment due to si...
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expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Rom 6:1-23
TSK Synopsis: Rom 6:1-23 - --1 We may not live in sin;2 for we are dead unto it;3 as appears by our baptism.12 Let not sin reign any more;18 because we have yielded ourselves to t...
MHCC -> Rom 6:16-20; Rom 6:21-23
MHCC: Rom 6:16-20 - --Every man is the servant of the master to whose commands he yields himself; whether it be the sinful dispositions of his heart, in actions which lead ...
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MHCC: Rom 6:21-23 - --The pleasure and profit of sin do not deserve to be called fruit. Sinners are but ploughing iniquity, sowing vanity, and reaping the same. Shame came ...
Matthew Henry -> Rom 6:1-23
Matthew Henry: Rom 6:1-23 - -- The apostle's transition, which joins this discourse with the former, is observable: " What shall we say then? Rom 6:1. What use shall we make of t...
Barclay -> Rom 6:15-23
Barclay: Rom 6:15-23 - --To a certain type of mind the doctrine of free grace is always a temptation to say, "If forgiveness is as easy and as inevitable as all that, if God...
Constable: Rom 6:1--8:39 - --IV. THE IMPARTATION OF GOD'S RIGHTEOUSNESS chs. 6--8
The apostle moved on from questions about why people need s...
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Constable: Rom 6:1-23 - --A. The believer's relationship to sin ch. 6
"Subduing the power of sin is the topic of Rom. 6."172
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Constable: Rom 6:15-23 - --2. Slavery to righteousness 6:15-23
In the first part of this chapter Paul explained that Christ has broken the bonds of sin that enslave the Christia...
College -> Rom 6:1-23
College: Rom 6:1-23 - --6:1-8:39 - PART THREE
THE ALL-SUFFICIENCY OF GRACE
GIVES VICTORY OVER SIN
Though some divide Paul's argument between chs. 4 and 5, with 5-8 forming...
McGarvey: Rom 6:20 - --For when ye were servants of sin, ye were free in regard of righteousness . [Whole-hearted service to God is now no more than you, by your past conduc...
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McGarvey: Rom 6:21 - --What fruit then had ye at that time in the things whereof ye are now ashamed? for the end of those things is death .
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McGarvey: Rom 6:22 - --But now being made free from sin and become servants to God, ye have your fruit unto sanctification, and the end eternal life .
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