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Text -- Romans 7:1-22 (NET)

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The Believer’s Relationship to the Law
7:1 Or do you not know, brothers and sisters (for I am speaking to those who know the law), that the law is lord over a person as long as he lives? 7:2 For a married woman is bound by law to her husband as long as he lives, but if her husband dies, she is released from the law of the marriage. 7:3 So then, if she is joined to another man while her husband is alive, she will be called an adulteress. But if her husband dies, she is free from that law, and if she is joined to another man, she is not an adulteress. 7:4 So, my brothers and sisters, you also died to the law through the body of Christ, so that you could be joined to another, to the one who was raised from the dead, to bear fruit to God. 7:5 For when we were in the flesh, the sinful desires, aroused by the law, were active in the members of our body to bear fruit for death. 7:6 But now we have been released from the law, because we have died to what controlled us, so that we may serve in the new life of the Spirit and not under the old written code. 7:7 What shall we say then? Is the law sin? Absolutely not! Certainly, I would not have known sin except through the law. For indeed I would not have known what it means to desire something belonging to someone else if the law had not said, “Do not covet.” 7:8 But sin, seizing the opportunity through the commandment, produced in me all kinds of wrong desires. For apart from the law, sin is dead. 7:9 And I was once alive apart from the law, but with the coming of the commandment sin became alive 7:10 and I died. So I found that the very commandment that was intended to bring life brought death! 7:11 For sin, seizing the opportunity through the commandment, deceived me and through it I died. 7:12 So then, the law is holy, and the commandment is holy, righteous, and good. 7:13 Did that which is good, then, become death to me? Absolutely not! But sin, so that it would be shown to be sin, produced death in me through what is good, so that through the commandment sin would become utterly sinful. 7:14 For we know that the law is spiritual– but I am unspiritual, sold into slavery to sin. 7:15 For I don’t understand what I am doing. For I do not do what I want– instead, I do what I hate. 7:16 But if I do what I don’t want, I agree that the law is good. 7:17 But now it is no longer me doing it, but sin that lives in me. 7:18 For I know that nothing good lives in me, that is, in my flesh. For I want to do the good, but I cannot do it. 7:19 For I do not do the good I want, but I do the very evil I do not want! 7:20 Now if I do what I do not want, it is no longer me doing it but sin that lives in me. 7:21 So, I find the law that when I want to do good, evil is present with me. 7:22 For I delight in the law of God in my inner being.
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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)

Robertson: Rom 7:1 - -- To men that know the law ( ginōskousin nomon ). Dative plural of present active participle of ginōskō . The Romans, whether Jews or Gentiles, k...

To men that know the law ( ginōskousin nomon ).

Dative plural of present active participle of ginōskō . The Romans, whether Jews or Gentiles, knew the principle of law.

Robertson: Rom 7:1 - -- A man ( tou anthrōpou ). "The person,"generic term anthrōpos , not anēr .

A man ( tou anthrōpou ).

"The person,"generic term anthrōpos , not anēr .

Robertson: Rom 7:2 - -- The wife that hath a husband ( hē hupandros gunē ). Late word, under (in subjection to) a husband. Here only in N.T.

The wife that hath a husband ( hē hupandros gunē ).

Late word, under (in subjection to) a husband. Here only in N.T.

Robertson: Rom 7:2 - -- Is bound ( dedetai ). Perfect passive indicative, stands bound.

Is bound ( dedetai ).

Perfect passive indicative, stands bound.

Robertson: Rom 7:2 - -- By law ( nomōi ). Instrumental case.

By law ( nomōi ).

Instrumental case.

Robertson: Rom 7:2 - -- To the husband while he liveth ( tōi zōnti andri ). "To the living husband,"literally.

To the husband while he liveth ( tōi zōnti andri ).

"To the living husband,"literally.

Robertson: Rom 7:2 - -- But if the husband die ( ean de apothanēi ho anēr ). Third class condition, a supposable case (ean and the second aorist active subjunctive).

But if the husband die ( ean de apothanēi ho anēr ).

Third class condition, a supposable case (ean and the second aorist active subjunctive).

Robertson: Rom 7:2 - -- She is discharged ( katērgētai ). Perfect passive indicative of katargeō , to make void. She stands free from the law of the husband. Cf. Rom 6...

She is discharged ( katērgētai ).

Perfect passive indicative of katargeō , to make void. She stands free from the law of the husband. Cf. Rom 6:6.

Robertson: Rom 7:3 - -- While the husband liveth ( zōntos tou andros ). Genitive absolute of present active participle of zaō .

While the husband liveth ( zōntos tou andros ).

Genitive absolute of present active participle of zaō .

Robertson: Rom 7:3 - -- She shall be called ( chrēmatisei ). Future active indicative of chrēmatizō , old verb, to receive a name as in Act 11:26, from chrēma , busi...

She shall be called ( chrēmatisei ).

Future active indicative of chrēmatizō , old verb, to receive a name as in Act 11:26, from chrēma , business, from chraomai , to use, then to give an oracle, etc.

Robertson: Rom 7:3 - -- An adulteress ( moichalis ). Late word, in Plutarch, lxx. See note on Mat 12:39.

An adulteress ( moichalis ).

Late word, in Plutarch, lxx. See note on Mat 12:39.

Robertson: Rom 7:3 - -- If she be joined ( ean genētai ). Third class condition, "if she come to."

If she be joined ( ean genētai ).

Third class condition, "if she come to."

Robertson: Rom 7:3 - -- So that she is no adulteress ( tou mē einai autēn moichalida ). It is a fact that tou and the infinitive is used for result as we saw in Rom 1:...

So that she is no adulteress ( tou mē einai autēn moichalida ).

It is a fact that tou and the infinitive is used for result as we saw in Rom 1:24. Conceived result may explain the idiom here.

Robertson: Rom 7:4 - -- Ye also were made dead to the law ( kai humeis ethanatōthēte ). First aorist indicative passive of thanatoō , old verb, to put to death (Mat 10...

Ye also were made dead to the law ( kai humeis ethanatōthēte ).

First aorist indicative passive of thanatoō , old verb, to put to death (Mat 10:21) or to make to die (extinct) as here and Rom 8:13. The analogy calls for the death of the law, but Paul refuses to say that. He changes the structure and makes them dead to the law as the husband (Rom 6:3-6). The relation of marriage is killed "through the body of Christ"as the "propitiation"(Rom 3:25) for us. Cf. Col 1:22.

Robertson: Rom 7:4 - -- That we should be joined to another ( eis to genesthai heterōi ). Purpose clause with eis to and the infinitive. First mention of the saints as w...

That we should be joined to another ( eis to genesthai heterōi ).

Purpose clause with eis to and the infinitive. First mention of the saints as wedded to Christ as their Husband occurs in 1Co 6:13; Gal 4:26. See further Eph 5:22-33.

Robertson: Rom 7:4 - -- That we might bring forth fruit unto God ( hina karpophorēsōmen tōi theōi ). He changes the metaphor to that of the tree used in Rom 6:22.

That we might bring forth fruit unto God ( hina karpophorēsōmen tōi theōi ).

He changes the metaphor to that of the tree used in Rom 6:22.

Robertson: Rom 7:5 - -- In the flesh ( en tēi sarki ). Same sense as in Rom 6:19 and Rom 7:18, Rom 7:25. The "flesh"is not inherently sinful, but is subject to sin. It is ...

In the flesh ( en tēi sarki ).

Same sense as in Rom 6:19 and Rom 7:18, Rom 7:25. The "flesh"is not inherently sinful, but is subject to sin. It is what Paul means by being "under the law."He uses sarx in a good many senses.

Robertson: Rom 7:5 - -- Sinful passions ( ta pathēmata tōn hamartiōn ). "Passions of sins"or marked by sins.

Sinful passions ( ta pathēmata tōn hamartiōn ).

"Passions of sins"or marked by sins.

Robertson: Rom 7:5 - -- Wrought ( energeito ). Imperfect middle of energeō , "were active."

Wrought ( energeito ).

Imperfect middle of energeō , "were active."

Robertson: Rom 7:5 - -- To bring forth fruit unto death ( eis to karpophorēsai tōi thanatōi ). Purpose clause again. Vivid picture of the seeds of sin working for deat...

To bring forth fruit unto death ( eis to karpophorēsai tōi thanatōi ).

Purpose clause again. Vivid picture of the seeds of sin working for death.

Robertson: Rom 7:6 - -- But now ( nuni de ). In the new condition.

But now ( nuni de ).

In the new condition.

Robertson: Rom 7:6 - -- Wherein we were holden ( en hōi kateichometha ). Imperfect passive of katechō , picture of our former state (same verb in Rom 1:18).

Wherein we were holden ( en hōi kateichometha ).

Imperfect passive of katechō , picture of our former state (same verb in Rom 1:18).

Robertson: Rom 7:6 - -- In newness of spirit ( en kainotēti pneumatos ). The death to the letter of the law (the old husband) has set us free to the new life in Christ. So...

In newness of spirit ( en kainotēti pneumatos ).

The death to the letter of the law (the old husband) has set us free to the new life in Christ. So Paul has shown again the obligation on us to live for Christ.

Robertson: Rom 7:7 - -- Is the law sin? ( ho nomos hamartiȧ ). A pertinent query in view of what he had said. Some people today oppose all inhibitions and prohibitions bec...

Is the law sin? ( ho nomos hamartiȧ ).

A pertinent query in view of what he had said. Some people today oppose all inhibitions and prohibitions because they stimulate violations. That is half-baked thinking.

Robertson: Rom 7:7 - -- I had not known sin ( tēn hamartian ouk egnōn ). Second aorist indicative of ginōskō , to know. It is a conclusion of a second class conditio...

I had not known sin ( tēn hamartian ouk egnōn ).

Second aorist indicative of ginōskō , to know. It is a conclusion of a second class condition, determined as unfulfilled. Usually an is used in the conclusion to make it plain that it is second class condition instead of first class, but occasionally it is not employed when it is plain enough without as here (Joh 16:22, Joh 16:24). See note on Gal 4:15. So as to I had not known coveting (lust), epithumian ouk ēidein . But all the same the law is not itself sin nor the cause of sin. Men with their sinful natures turn law into an occasion for sinful acts.

Robertson: Rom 7:8 - -- Finding occasion ( aphormēn labousa ). See note on 2Co 5:12; 2Co 11:12; Gal 5:13 for aphormēn , a starting place from which to rush into acts of ...

Finding occasion ( aphormēn labousa ).

See note on 2Co 5:12; 2Co 11:12; Gal 5:13 for aphormēn , a starting place from which to rush into acts of sin, excuses for doing what they want to do. Just so drinking men use the prohibition laws as "occasions"for violating them.

Robertson: Rom 7:8 - -- Wrought in me ( kateirgasato en emoi ). First aorist active middle indicative of the intensive verb katergazomai , to work out (to the finish), effec...

Wrought in me ( kateirgasato en emoi ).

First aorist active middle indicative of the intensive verb katergazomai , to work out (to the finish), effective aorist. The command not to lust made me lust more.

Robertson: Rom 7:8 - -- Dead ( nekra ). Inactive, not non-existent. Sin in reality was there in a dormant state.

Dead ( nekra ).

Inactive, not non-existent. Sin in reality was there in a dormant state.

Robertson: Rom 7:9 - -- I was alive ( ezōn ). Imperfect active. Apparently, "the lost paradise in the infancy of men"(Denney), before the conscience awoke and moral respon...

I was alive ( ezōn ).

Imperfect active. Apparently, "the lost paradise in the infancy of men"(Denney), before the conscience awoke and moral responsibility came, "a seeming life"(Shedd).

Robertson: Rom 7:9 - -- Sin revived ( hē hamartia anezēsen ). Sin came back to life, waked up, the blissful innocent stage was over, "the commandment having come"(elthou...

Sin revived ( hē hamartia anezēsen ).

Sin came back to life, waked up, the blissful innocent stage was over, "the commandment having come"(elthousēs tēs entolēs , genitive absolute).

Robertson: Rom 7:9 - -- But I died ( egō de apethanon ). My seeming life was over for I was conscious of sin, of violation of law. I was dead before, but I did not know. N...

But I died ( egō de apethanon ).

My seeming life was over for I was conscious of sin, of violation of law. I was dead before, but I did not know. Now I found out that I was spiritually dead.

Robertson: Rom 7:10 - -- This I found unto death ( heurethē moi̇̇hautē eis thanaton ). Literally, "the commandment the one for (meant for) life, this was found for me u...

This I found unto death ( heurethē moi̇̇hautē eis thanaton ).

Literally, "the commandment the one for (meant for) life, this was found for me unto death."First aorist (effective) passive indicative of heuriskō , to find, not active as the English has it. It turned out so for me (ethical dative).

Robertson: Rom 7:11 - -- Beguiled me ( exēpatēsen me ). First aorist active indicative of exapataō , old verb, completely (ex ) made me lose my way (a privative, pat...

Beguiled me ( exēpatēsen me ).

First aorist active indicative of exapataō , old verb, completely (ex ) made me lose my way (a privative, pateō , to walk). See note on 1Co 3:18; 2Co 11:3. Only in Paul in N.T.

Robertson: Rom 7:11 - -- Slew me ( apekteinen ). First aorist active indicative of apokteinō , old verb. "Killed me off,"made a clean job of it. Sin here is personified as ...

Slew me ( apekteinen ).

First aorist active indicative of apokteinō , old verb. "Killed me off,"made a clean job of it. Sin here is personified as the tempter (Gen 3:13).

Robertson: Rom 7:12 - -- Holy, and righteous, and good ( hagia kai dikaia kai agathē ). This is the conclusion (wherefore, hōste ) to the query in Rom 7:7. The commandme...

Holy, and righteous, and good ( hagia kai dikaia kai agathē ).

This is the conclusion (wherefore, hōste ) to the query in Rom 7:7. The commandment is God’ s and so holy like Him, just in its requirements and designed for our good. The modern revolt against law needs these words.

Robertson: Rom 7:13 - -- Become death unto me? ( emoi egeneto thanatoṡ ). Ethical dative emoi again. New turn to the problem. Admitting the goodness of God’ s law, d...

Become death unto me? ( emoi egeneto thanatoṡ ).

Ethical dative emoi again. New turn to the problem. Admitting the goodness of God’ s law, did it issue in death for me? Paul repels (mē genoito ) this suggestion. It was sin that (But sin, alla hē hamartia ) "became death for me."

Robertson: Rom 7:13 - -- That it might be shown ( hina phanēi ). Final clause, hina and second aorist passive subjunctive of phainō , to show. The sinfulness of sin is ...

That it might be shown ( hina phanēi ).

Final clause, hina and second aorist passive subjunctive of phainō , to show. The sinfulness of sin is revealed in its violations of God’ s law.

Robertson: Rom 7:13 - -- By working death to me ( moi katergazomenē thanaton ). Present middle participle, as an incidental result.

By working death to me ( moi katergazomenē thanaton ).

Present middle participle, as an incidental result.

Robertson: Rom 7:13 - -- Might become exceedingly sinful ( genētai kath' huperbolēn hamartōlos ). Second aorist middle subjunctive of ginomai with hina in final cla...

Might become exceedingly sinful ( genētai kath' huperbolēn hamartōlos ).

Second aorist middle subjunctive of ginomai with hina in final clause. On kath' huperbolēn , see note on 1Co 12:31. Our hyperbole is the Greek huperbolē . The excesses of sin reveal its real nature. Only then do some people get their eyes opened.

Robertson: Rom 7:14 - -- Spiritual ( pneumatikos ). Spirit-caused and spirit-given and like the Holy Spirit. See note on 1Co 10:3.

Spiritual ( pneumatikos ).

Spirit-caused and spirit-given and like the Holy Spirit. See note on 1Co 10:3.

Robertson: Rom 7:14 - -- But I am carnal ( egō de sarkinos eimi ). "Fleshen"as in 1Co 3:1 which see, more emphatic even than sarkikos ,"a creature of flesh."

But I am carnal ( egō de sarkinos eimi ).

"Fleshen"as in 1Co 3:1 which see, more emphatic even than sarkikos ,"a creature of flesh."

Robertson: Rom 7:14 - -- Sold under sin ( pepramenos hupo tēn hamartian ). Perfect passive participle of pipraskō , old verb, to sell. See note on Mat 13:46 and note on A...

Sold under sin ( pepramenos hupo tēn hamartian ).

Perfect passive participle of pipraskō , old verb, to sell. See note on Mat 13:46 and note on Act 2:45, state of completion. Sin has closed the mortgage and owns its slave.

Robertson: Rom 7:15 - -- I know not ( ou ginōskō ). "I do not recognize"in its true nature. My spiritual perceptions are dulled, blinded by sin (2Co 4:4). The dual life p...

I know not ( ou ginōskō ).

"I do not recognize"in its true nature. My spiritual perceptions are dulled, blinded by sin (2Co 4:4). The dual life pictured here by Paul finds an echo in us all, the struggle after the highest in us ("what I really wish,"ho thelō , to practise it steadily, prassō ) and the slipping into doing (poiō ) "what I really hate"(ho misō ) and yet sometimes do. There is a deal of controversy as to whether Paul is describing his struggle with sin before conversion or after it. The words "sold under sin"in Rom 7:14 seem to turn the scale for the pre-conversion period. "It is the unregenerate man’ s experience, surviving at least in memory into regenerate days, and read with regenerate eyes"(Denney).

Robertson: Rom 7:16 - -- I consent unto the law ( sunphēmi tōi nomōi ). Old verb, here only in N.T., with associative instrumental case. "I speak with."My wanting (thel...

I consent unto the law ( sunphēmi tōi nomōi ).

Old verb, here only in N.T., with associative instrumental case. "I speak with."My wanting (thelō ) to do the opposite of what I do proves my acceptance of God’ s law as good (kalos ).

Robertson: Rom 7:17 - -- So now ( nuni de ). A logical contrast, "as the case really stands."

So now ( nuni de ).

A logical contrast, "as the case really stands."

Robertson: Rom 7:17 - -- But sin that dwelleth in me ( all' hē enoikousa en emoi hamartia ). "But the dwelling in me sin."Not my true self, my higher personality, but my lo...

But sin that dwelleth in me ( all' hē enoikousa en emoi hamartia ).

"But the dwelling in me sin."Not my true self, my higher personality, but my lower self due to my slavery to indwelling sin. Paul does not mean to say that his whole self has no moral responsibility by using this paradox. "To be saved from sin, a man must at the same time own it and disown it"(Denney).

Robertson: Rom 7:18 - -- In me ( en emoi ). Paul explains this by "in my flesh"(en tēi sarki mou ), the unregenerate man "sold under sin"of Rom 7:14.

In me ( en emoi ).

Paul explains this by "in my flesh"(en tēi sarki mou ), the unregenerate man "sold under sin"of Rom 7:14.

Robertson: Rom 7:18 - -- No good thing ( ouk̇̇agathon ). "Not absolutely good."This is not a complete view of man even in his unregenerate state as Paul at once shows.

No good thing ( ouk̇̇agathon ).

"Not absolutely good."This is not a complete view of man even in his unregenerate state as Paul at once shows.

Robertson: Rom 7:18 - -- For to will is present with me ( to gar thelein parakeitai moi ). Present middle indicative of parakeimai , old verb, to lie beside, at hand, with da...

For to will is present with me ( to gar thelein parakeitai moi ).

Present middle indicative of parakeimai , old verb, to lie beside, at hand, with dative moi . Only here in N.T.

Robertson: Rom 7:18 - -- The wishing is the better self, the doing not the lower self.

The wishing

is the better self, the doing not the lower self.

Robertson: Rom 7:19 - -- But the evil which I would not ( alla ho ou thelō kakon ). Incorporation of the antecedent into the relative clause, "what evil I do not wish."An e...

But the evil which I would not ( alla ho ou thelō kakon ).

Incorporation of the antecedent into the relative clause, "what evil I do not wish."An extreme case of this practise of evil is seen in the drunkard or the dope-fiend.

Robertson: Rom 7:20 - -- It is no more I that do it ( ouketi egō katergazomai auto ). Just as in Rom 7:17, "no longer do I do it"(the real Ego , my better self), and yet th...

It is no more I that do it ( ouketi egō katergazomai auto ).

Just as in Rom 7:17, "no longer do I do it"(the real Ego , my better self), and yet there is responsibility and guilt for the struggle goes on.

Robertson: Rom 7:21 - -- The law ( ton nomon ). The principle already set forth (ara , accordingly) in Rom 7:18, Rom 7:19. This is the way it works, but there is no surcease ...

The law ( ton nomon ).

The principle already set forth (ara , accordingly) in Rom 7:18, Rom 7:19. This is the way it works, but there is no surcease for the stings of conscience.

Robertson: Rom 7:22 - -- For I delight in ( sunēdomai gar ). Old verb, here alone in N.T., with associative instrumental case, "I rejoice with the law of God,"my real self ...

For I delight in ( sunēdomai gar ).

Old verb, here alone in N.T., with associative instrumental case, "I rejoice with the law of God,"my real self "after the inward man"(kata ton esō anthrōpon ) of the conscience as opposed to "the outward man"(2Co 4:16; Eph 3:16).

Vincent: Rom 7:1 - -- Brethren All Christians, not only Jews but Gentiles who are assumed to be acquainted with the Old Testament.

Brethren

All Christians, not only Jews but Gentiles who are assumed to be acquainted with the Old Testament.

Vincent: Rom 7:2 - -- That hath a husband ( ὕπανδρος ) Lit., under or subject to a husband. The illustration is selected to bring forward the union w...

That hath a husband ( ὕπανδρος )

Lit., under or subject to a husband. The illustration is selected to bring forward the union with Christ after the release from the law, as analogous to a new marriage (Rom 7:4).

Vincent: Rom 7:2 - -- Is loosed ( κατήργηται ) Rev., discharged . See on Rom 3:3, Lit., she has been brought to nought as respects the ...

Is loosed ( κατήργηται )

Rev., discharged . See on Rom 3:3, Lit., she has been brought to nought as respects the law of the husband .

Vincent: Rom 7:2 - -- The law of the husband Her legal connection with him She dies to that law with the husband's death. There is an apparent awkwardness in carrying ...

The law of the husband

Her legal connection with him She dies to that law with the husband's death. There is an apparent awkwardness in carrying out the figure. The law, in Rom 7:1, Rom 7:2, is represented by the husband who rules ( hath dominion ). On the death of the husband the woman is released. In Rom 7:4, the wife (figuratively) dies. " Ye are become dead to the law that ye should be married to another." But as the law is previously represented by the husband , and the woman is released by the husband's death, so, to make the figure consistent, the law should be represented as dying in order to effect the believer's release. The awkwardness is relieved by taking as the middle term of comparison the idea of dead in a marriage relation . When the husband dies the wife dies ( is brought to nought ) so far as the marriage relation is concerned. The husband is represented as the party who dies because the figure of a second marriage is introduced with its application to believers (Rom 7:4). Believers are made dead to the law as the wife is maritally dead - killed in respect of the marriage relation by her husband's death.

Vincent: Rom 7:3 - -- She shall be called ( χρηματίσει ) See on Act 11:26.

She shall be called ( χρηματίσει )

See on Act 11:26.

Vincent: Rom 7:4 - -- Are become dead ( ἐθανατώθητε ) Rev., more accurately, ye were made dead , put to death ; because this ethical death i...

Are become dead ( ἐθανατώθητε )

Rev., more accurately, ye were made dead , put to death ; because this ethical death is fellowship with Christ's death, which was by violence .

Vincent: Rom 7:4 - -- Who was raised An important addition, because it refers to the newness of life which issues from the rising with Christ. See Rom 6:3, Rom...

Who was raised

An important addition, because it refers to the newness of life which issues from the rising with Christ. See Rom 6:3, Rom 6:11, Rom 6:13, Rom 6:22.

Vincent: Rom 7:4 - -- Bring forth fruit The figure of marriage is continued, but the reference is not to be pressed. The real point of analogy is the termination of re...

Bring forth fruit

The figure of marriage is continued, but the reference is not to be pressed. The real point of analogy is the termination of relations to the old state.

Vincent: Rom 7:5 - -- In the flesh ( ἐν τῇ σαρκί ) Σάρξ flesh , occurs in the classics in the physical sense only. Homer commonly uses it in th...

In the flesh ( ἐν τῇ σαρκί )

Σάρξ flesh , occurs in the classics in the physical sense only. Homer commonly uses it in the plural as denoting all the flesh or muscles of the body. Later the singular occurs in the same sense. Paul's use of this and other psychological terms must be determined largely by the Old-Testament usage as it appears in the Septuagint.

1. In the physical sense . The literal flesh. In the Septuagint τὰ κρέα flesh (plural) is used where the reference is to the parts of animals slain, and αἱ σάρκες , flesh (plural) where the reference is to flesh as the covering of the living body. Hence Paul uses κρέα in Rom 14:21; 1Co 8:13, of the flesh of sacrificed animals. Compare also the adjective σάρκιμος fleshy 2Co 3:3; and Eze 11:19; Eze 36:26, Sept.

2. Kindred . Denoting natural or physical relationship, Rom 1:3; Rom 9:3-8; Rom 11:14; Gal 4:23, Gal 4:29; 1Co 10:18; Phm 1:16. This usage forms a transition to the following sense: the whole human body . Flesh is the medium in and through which the natural relationship of man manifests itself. Kindred is conceived as based on community of bodily substance. Therefore:

3. The body itself . The whole being designated by the part, as being its main substance and characteristic, 1Co 6:16; 1Co 7:28; 2Co 4:11; 2Co 7:5; 2Co 10:3; 2Co 12:7. Rom 2:28; Gal 6:13, etc. Paul follows the Septuagint in sometimes using σῶμα body , and sometimes σάρξ flesh , in this sense, so that the terms occasionally seem to be practically synonymous. Thus 1Co 6:16, 1Co 6:17, where the phrase one body is illustrated and confirmed by one flesh . See Gen 2:24; Eph 5:28, Eph 5:31, where the two are apparently interchanged. Compare 2Co 4:10, 2Co 4:11; 1Co 5:3, and Col 2:5. Σάρξ , however, differs from σῶμα in that it can only signify the organism of an earthly, living being consisting of flesh and bones, and cannot denote " either an earthly organism that is not living, or a living organism that is not earthly" (Wendt, in Dickson). Σῶμα not thus limited. Thus it may denote the organism of the plant (1Co 15:37, 1Co 15:38) or the celestial bodies (1Co 15:40). Hence the two conceptions are related as general and special: σῶμα body , being the material organism apart from any definite matter (not from any sort of matter), σάρξ , flesh , the definite, earthly, animal organism. The two are synonymons when σῶμα is used, from the context, of an earthly, animal body. Compare Phi 1:22; 2Co 5:1-8.

Σῶμα body , and not σάρξ flesh , is used when the reference is to a metaphorical organism, as the church, Rom 12:4 sqq.; 1Co 10:16; 12:12-27; Eph 1:23; Eph 2:16; Col 1:18, etc.

The σάρξ is described as mortal (2Co 4:11); subject to infirmity (Gal 4:13; 2Co 12:7); locally limited (Col 2:15); an object of fostering care (Eph 5:29).

4. Living beings generally , including their mental nature , and with a correlated notion of weakness and perishableness . Thus the phrase πᾶσα σάρξ all flesh (Gen 6:12; Isa 49:26; Isa 49:23). This accessory notion of weakness stands in contrast with God. In Paul the phrase all flesh is cited from the Old Testament (Rom 3:20; Gal 2:16) and is used independently (1Co 1:29). In all these instances before God is added. So in Gal 1:16, flesh and blood implies a contrast of human with divine wisdom. Compare 1Co 15:50; Eph 6:12. This leads up to

5. Man " either as a creature in his natural state apart from Christ , or the creaturely side or aspect of the man in Christ ." Hence it is correlated with ἄνθρωπος man , 1Co 3:3; Rom 6:19; 2Co 5:17. Compare Rom 6:6; Eph 4:22; Col 3:9; Gal 5:24. Thus the flesh would seem to be interchangeable with the old man .

It has affections and lusts (Gal 5:24); willings (Eph 2:3; Rom 8:6, Rom 8:7); a mind (Col 2:18); a body (Col 2:11).

It is in sharp contrast with πνεῦμα spirit (Gal 3:3, Gal 3:19; Gal 5:16, Gal 5:17, Gal 5:19-24; Gal 6:8; Rom 8:4). The flesh and the spirit are thus antagonistic. Σάρξ flesh , before or in contrast with his reception of the divine element whereby he becomes a new creature in Christ: the whole being of man as it exists and acts apart from the influence of the Spirit. It properly characterizes, therefore, not merely the lower forms of sensual gratification, but all - the highest developments of the life estranged from God, whether physical, intellectual, or aesthetic.

It must be carefully noted:

1. That Paul does not identify flesh and sin . Compare, flesh of sin , Rom 8:3. See Rom 7:17, Rom 7:18; 2Co 7:1; Gal 2:20.

2. That Paul does not identify σάρξ with the material body nor associate sin exclusively and predominantly with the body . The flesh is the flesh of the living man animated by the soul (ψυχή ) as its principle of life, and is distinctly used as coordinate with ἄνθρωπος man . As in the Old Testament, " it embraces in an emphatic manner the nature of man, mental and corporeal, with its internal distinctions." The spirit as well as the flesh is capable of defilement (2Co 7:1; compare 1Co 7:34). Christian life is to be transformed by the renewing of the mind (Rom 12:2; compare Eph 4:23).

3. That Paul does not identify the material side of man with evil . The flesh is not the native seat and source of sin. It is only its organ, and the seat of sin's manifestation. Matter is not essentially evil. The logical consequence of this would be that no service of God is possible while the material organism remains. See Rom 12:1. The flesh is not necessarily sinful in itself; but as it has existed from the time of the introduction of sin through Adam, it is recognized by Paul as tainted with sin. Jesus appeared in the flesh , and yet was sinless (2Co 5:21).

Vincent: Rom 7:5 - -- The motions of sins ( τὰ παθήματα τῶν ἁμαρτιῶν ) Motions used in earlier English for emotions or impulses . T...

The motions of sins ( τὰ παθήματα τῶν ἁμαρτιῶν )

Motions used in earlier English for emotions or impulses . Thus Bacon: " He that standeth at a stay where others rise, can hardly avoid motions of envy" (" Essay" xiv.). The word is nearly synonymous with πάθος passion (Rom 1:26, note). From πάθειν to suffer ; a feeling which the mind undergoes, a passion , desire . Rev., sinful passions: which led to sins.

Vincent: Rom 7:5 - -- Did work ( ἐνηργεῖτο ) Rev., wrought . See 2Co 1:6; 2Co 4:12; Eph 3:20; Gal 5:6; Phi 2:13; Col 1:29. Compare Mar 6:14, and see on ...

Did work ( ἐνηργεῖτο )

Rev., wrought . See 2Co 1:6; 2Co 4:12; Eph 3:20; Gal 5:6; Phi 2:13; Col 1:29. Compare Mar 6:14, and see on power , Joh 1:12.

Vincent: Rom 7:6 - -- We are delivered ( κατηργήθημεν ) Rev., have been discharged , as the woman, Rom 7:2. See on Rom 3:3.

We are delivered ( κατηργήθημεν )

Rev., have been discharged , as the woman, Rom 7:2. See on Rom 3:3.

Vincent: Rom 7:6 - -- We were held Lit., held down . See on Rom 1:18.

We were held

Lit., held down . See on Rom 1:18.

Vincent: Rom 7:7 - -- I had not known ( οὐκ ἔγνων ) Rev., correctly, I did not know . See on Joh 2:24. The I refers to Paul himself. He speaks i...

I had not known ( οὐκ ἔγνων )

Rev., correctly, I did not know . See on Joh 2:24. The I refers to Paul himself. He speaks in the first person, declaring concerning himself what is meant to apply to every man placed under the Mosaic law, as respects his relation to that law, before and after the revolution in his inner life brought about through his connection with that law. His personal experience is not excluded, but represents the universal experience.

Vincent: Rom 7:7 - -- Lust ( ἐπιθυμίαν ) Rev., coveting . See on Mar 4:19.

Lust ( ἐπιθυμίαν )

Rev., coveting . See on Mar 4:19.

Vincent: Rom 7:8 - -- Sin Personified.

Sin

Personified.

Vincent: Rom 7:8 - -- Occasion ( ἀφορμὴν ) Emphatic, expressing the relation of the law to sin. The law is not sin, but sin found occasion in the law. Use...

Occasion ( ἀφορμὴν )

Emphatic, expressing the relation of the law to sin. The law is not sin, but sin found occasion in the law. Used only by Paul. See 2Co 5:12; Gal 5:13; 1Ti 5:14. The verb ἀφορμάω means to make a start from a place . Ἁφορμή is therefore primarily a starting-point , a base of operations . The Lacedaemonians agreed that Peloponnesus would be ἀφορμὴν ἱκανὴν a good base of operations (Thucydides, i., 90). Thus, the origin , cause , occasion , or pretext of a thing; the means with which one begins . Generally, resources, as means of war, capital in business. Here the law is represented as furnishing sin with the material or ground of assault, " the fulcrum for the energy of the evil principle." Sin took the law as a base of operations.

Vincent: Rom 7:8 - -- Wrought ( κατειργάσατο ) The compound verb with κατά down through always signifies the bringing to pass or accom...

Wrought ( κατειργάσατο )

The compound verb with κατά down through always signifies the bringing to pass or accomplishment . See 1Ti 2:9; 1Co 5:3; 2Co 7:10. It is used both of evil and good. See especially Rom 7:15, Rom 7:17, Rom 7:18, Rom 7:20. " To man everything forbidden appears as a desirable blessing; but yet, as it is forbidden, he feels that his freedom is limited, and now his lust rages more violently, like the waves against the dyke" (Tholuck).

Vincent: Rom 7:8 - -- Dead Not active.

Dead

Not active.

Vincent: Rom 7:9 - -- I was alive - once ( ἔζων ποτέ ) Referring to the time of childlike innocence previous to the stimulus imparted to the inactive pri...

I was alive - once ( ἔζων ποτέ )

Referring to the time of childlike innocence previous to the stimulus imparted to the inactive principle of sin by the coming of the law; when the moral self-determination with respect to the law had not taken place, and the sin-principle was therefore practically dead.

Vincent: Rom 7:9 - -- The commandment ( ἐντολῆς ) The specific injunction " thou shalt not covet." See on Jam 2:8; see Joh 13:34.

The commandment ( ἐντολῆς )

The specific injunction " thou shalt not covet." See on Jam 2:8; see Joh 13:34.

Vincent: Rom 7:9 - -- Revived ( ἀνέζησεν ) Not came to life , but lived again . See Luk 15:24, Luk 15:32. The power of sin is originally and in ...

Revived ( ἀνέζησεν )

Not came to life , but lived again . See Luk 15:24, Luk 15:32. The power of sin is originally and in its nature living; but before the coming of the commandment its life is not expressed. When the commandment comes, it becomes alive again. It lies dormant, like the beast at the door (Gen 4:7), until the law stirs it up.

The tendency of prohibitory law to provoke the will to resistance is frequently recognized in the classics. Thus, Horace: " The human race, presumptuous to endure all things, rushes on through forbidden wickedness" (Ode, i., 3, 25). Ovid: " The permitted is unpleasing; the forbidden consumes us fiercely" (" Amores," i., 19, 3). " We strive against the forbidden and ever desire what is denied" (Id., i., 4, 17). Seneca: " Parricides began with the law, and the punishment showed them the crime" (" De Clementia," i., 23). Cato, in his speech on the Oppian law; says: " It is safer that a wicked man should even never be accused than that he should be acquitted; and luxury, if it had never been meddled with, would he more tolerable than it will be now, like a wild beast, irritated by having been chained and then let loose" (Livy, xxxiv., 4).

Vincent: Rom 7:9 - -- I found to be unto death The A.V. omits the significant αὕτη this . This very commandment, the aim of which was life , I found unto d...

I found to be unto death

The A.V. omits the significant αὕτη this . This very commandment, the aim of which was life , I found unto death. Meyer remarks: " It has tragic emphasis." So Rev., this I found. The surprise at such an unexpected result is expressed by I found , literally, was found (ἑυρέθη )

Vincent: Rom 7:11 - -- Deceived ( ἐξηπάτησεν ) Rev., beguiled Only in Paul. Compare 2Co 11:3; 2Th 2:3.

Deceived ( ἐξηπάτησεν )

Rev., beguiled Only in Paul. Compare 2Co 11:3; 2Th 2:3.

Vincent: Rom 7:12 - -- Holy, just, good Holy as God's revelation of Himself; just (Rev., righteous ) in its requirements, which correspond to God's holiness; good...

Holy, just, good

Holy as God's revelation of Himself; just (Rev., righteous ) in its requirements, which correspond to God's holiness; good , salutary, because of its end.

Vincent: Rom 7:13 - -- Exceeding ( καθ ' ὑπερβολὴν ) An adverbial phrase. Lit., according to excess . The noun ὑπερβολή means a cas...

Exceeding ( καθ ' ὑπερβολὴν )

An adverbial phrase. Lit., according to excess . The noun ὑπερβολή means a casting beyond . The English hyperbole is a transcription.

Vincent: Rom 7:14 - -- We know ( οἴδαμεν ) Denoting something generally conceded.

We know ( οἴδαμεν )

Denoting something generally conceded.

Vincent: Rom 7:14 - -- Spiritual ( πνευματικός ) The expression of the Holy Spirit.

Spiritual ( πνευματικός )

The expression of the Holy Spirit.

Vincent: Rom 7:14 - -- Carnal ( σάρκινος ) Lit., made of flesh . A very strong expression. " This unspiritual, material, phenomenal nature" so dominates...

Carnal ( σάρκινος )

Lit., made of flesh . A very strong expression. " This unspiritual, material, phenomenal nature" so dominates the unrenewed man that he is described as consisting of flesh . Others read σαρκικός having the nature of flesh .

Vincent: Rom 7:14 - -- Sold under sin As a slave. The preposition ὑπό under , with the accusative, implies direction ; so as to be under the power of...

Sold under sin

As a slave. The preposition ὑπό under , with the accusative, implies direction ; so as to be under the power of.

Vincent: Rom 7:15 - -- I do ( κατεργάζομαι ) See on Rom 7:8. Accomplish , achieve . Here appropriately used of carrying out another's will. I do not per...

I do ( κατεργάζομαι )

See on Rom 7:8. Accomplish , achieve . Here appropriately used of carrying out another's will. I do not perceive the outcome of my sinful life.

Vincent: Rom 7:15 - -- I allow not ( οὐ γινώσκω ) Allow is used by A.V. in the earlier English sense of approve . Compare Luk 11:48; Rom 14:22; 1Th 2:4. S...

I allow not ( οὐ γινώσκω )

Allow is used by A.V. in the earlier English sense of approve . Compare Luk 11:48; Rom 14:22; 1Th 2:4. Shakespeare: " Thou shalt hold the opinion of Pythagoras as I will allow of thy wits" (" Twelfth Night," iv., 2). But the meaning of γινώσκω is not approve , but recognize , come to know , perceive . Hence Rev., I know not . Paul says: " What I carry out I do not recognize in its true nature, as a slave who ignorantly performs his master's behest without knowing its tendency or result."

Vincent: Rom 7:15 - -- I would ( θέλω ) See on Mat 1:19. Rather desire than will in the sense of full determination, as is shown by I consent (Rom 7:16), ...

I would ( θέλω )

See on Mat 1:19. Rather desire than will in the sense of full determination, as is shown by I consent (Rom 7:16), and I delight in (Rom 7:22).

Vincent: Rom 7:15 - -- Do I not ( πράσσω ) See on Joh 3:21. Rev., correctly, practice : the daily doing which issues in accomplishment (κατεργάζο...

Do I not ( πράσσω )

See on Joh 3:21. Rev., correctly, practice : the daily doing which issues in accomplishment (κατεργάζομαι ).

Vincent: Rom 7:15 - -- Do I ( ποιῶ ) See on Joh 3:21. More nearly akin to κατεργάζομαι I accomplish , realize . " When I have acted (πράσ...

Do I ( ποιῶ )

See on Joh 3:21. More nearly akin to κατεργάζομαι I accomplish , realize . " When I have acted (πράσσω ) I find myself face to face with a result which my moral instinct condemns" (Godet). I do not practice what I would, and the outcome is what I hate.

Vincent: Rom 7:16 - -- I consent ( σύμφημι ) Lit., speak together with ; concur with , since the law also does not desire what I do. Only here in the N...

I consent ( σύμφημι )

Lit., speak together with ; concur with , since the law also does not desire what I do. Only here in the New Testament.

Vincent: Rom 7:16 - -- Good ( καλός ) See on Joh 10:11, Joh 10:32; see on Mat 26:10; see on Jam 2:7. Morally excellent.

Good ( καλός )

See on Joh 10:11, Joh 10:32; see on Mat 26:10; see on Jam 2:7. Morally excellent.

Vincent: Rom 7:17 - -- Now - no more ( νυνὶ - οὐκέτι ) Not temporal , pointing back to a time when it was otherwise, but logical , pointing to an in...

Now - no more ( νυνὶ - οὐκέτι )

Not temporal , pointing back to a time when it was otherwise, but logical , pointing to an inference. After this statement you can no more maintain that, etc.

Vincent: Rom 7:17 - -- I ( ἐγὼ ) My personality proper; my moral self-consciousness which has approved the law (Rom 7:16) and has developed vague desires for som...

I ( ἐγὼ )

My personality proper; my moral self-consciousness which has approved the law (Rom 7:16) and has developed vague desires for something better.

Vincent: Rom 7:18 - -- In me The entire man in whom sin and righteousness struggle, in whose unregenerate condition sin is the victor, having its domain in the flesh. H...

In me

The entire man in whom sin and righteousness struggle, in whose unregenerate condition sin is the victor, having its domain in the flesh. Hence in me considered as carnal (Rom 7:14). That another element is present appears from " to will is present with me;" but it is the flesh which determines his activity as an unregenerate man. There is good in the I , but not in the I considered as carnal . This is brought out in Rom 7:25, " With the flesh (I serve) the law of sin." Hence there is added that is , in my flesh .

Vincent: Rom 7:18 - -- Is present ( παράκειται ) Lit., lies beside or before .

Is present ( παράκειται )

Lit., lies beside or before .

Vincent: Rom 7:18 - -- Perform ( κατεργάζεσθαι ) Carry the desire into effect.

Perform ( κατεργάζεσθαι )

Carry the desire into effect.

Vincent: Rom 7:18 - -- I find not ( οὐχ εὑρίσκω ) The best texts omit find , and read simply οὐ not . So Rev., " To do that which is good is not (...

I find not ( οὐχ εὑρίσκω )

The best texts omit find , and read simply οὐ not . So Rev., " To do that which is good is not (present)."

Vincent: Rom 7:19 - -- Do not - do. ( ποιῶ - πράσσω ) See on Rom 7:15.

Do not - do. ( ποιῶ - πράσσω )

See on Rom 7:15.

Vincent: Rom 7:21 - -- A law With the article, the law. The constant rule of experience imposing itself on the will. Thus in the phrases law of faith , works , ...

A law

With the article, the law. The constant rule of experience imposing itself on the will. Thus in the phrases law of faith , works , the spirit . Here the law of moral contradiction.

Vincent: Rom 7:21 - -- When I would ( τῷ θέλοντι ἐμοὶ ) Lit., as Rev., to me who would , or to the wishing me , thus emphasizing th...

When I would ( τῷ θέλοντι ἐμοὶ )

Lit., as Rev., to me who would , or to the wishing me , thus emphasizing the I whose characteristic it is to wish , but not to do .

Vincent: Rom 7:22 - -- I delight in ( συνήδομαι ) Lit., I rejoice with . Stronger than I consent unto (Rom 7:16). It is the agreement of moral sy...

I delight in ( συνήδομαι )

Lit., I rejoice with . Stronger than I consent unto (Rom 7:16). It is the agreement of moral sympathy .

Vincent: Rom 7:22 - -- The inward man ( τὸν ἔσω ἄνθρωπον ) The rational and moral I , the essence of the man which is conscious of itself as an...

The inward man ( τὸν ἔσω ἄνθρωπον )

The rational and moral I , the essence of the man which is conscious of itself as an ethical personality. Not to be confounded with the new man (Eph 4:24; Col 3:10). It is substantially the same with the mind (Rom 7:23).

Wesley: Rom 7:1 - -- The apostle continues the comparison between the former and the present state of a believer, and at the same time endeavours to wean the Jewish believ...

The apostle continues the comparison between the former and the present state of a believer, and at the same time endeavours to wean the Jewish believers from their fondness for the Mosaic law.

Wesley: Rom 7:1 - -- To the Jews chiefly here.

To the Jews chiefly here.

Wesley: Rom 7:1 - -- So long, and no longer.

So long, and no longer.

Wesley: Rom 7:1 - -- The law is here spoken of, by a common figure, as a person, to which, as to an husband, life and death are ascribed. But he speaks indifferently of th...

The law is here spoken of, by a common figure, as a person, to which, as to an husband, life and death are ascribed. But he speaks indifferently of the law being dead to us, or we to it, the sense being the same.

Wesley: Rom 7:2 - -- From that law which gave him a peculiar property in her.

From that law which gave him a peculiar property in her.

Wesley: Rom 7:4 - -- Are now as free from the Mosaic law as an husband is, when his wife is dead.

Are now as free from the Mosaic law as an husband is, when his wife is dead.

Wesley: Rom 7:4 - -- Offered up; that is, by the merits of his death, that law expiring with him.

Offered up; that is, by the merits of his death, that law expiring with him.

Wesley: Rom 7:5 - -- Carnally minded, in a state of nature; before we believed in Christ.

Carnally minded, in a state of nature; before we believed in Christ.

Wesley: Rom 7:5 - -- Accidentally occasioned, or irritated thereby.

Accidentally occasioned, or irritated thereby.

Wesley: Rom 7:5 - -- Spread themselves all over the whole man.

Spread themselves all over the whole man.

Wesley: Rom 7:6 - -- To our old husband, the law.

To our old husband, the law.

Wesley: Rom 7:6 - -- In a new, spiritual manner.

In a new, spiritual manner.

Wesley: Rom 7:6 - -- Not in a bare literal, external way, as we did before.

Not in a bare literal, external way, as we did before.

Wesley: Rom 7:7 - -- This is a kind of a digression, to the beginning of the next chapter, wherein the apostle, in order to show in the most lively manner the weakness and...

This is a kind of a digression, to the beginning of the next chapter, wherein the apostle, in order to show in the most lively manner the weakness and inefficacy of the law, changes the person and speaks as of himself, concerning the misery of one under the law. This St. Paul frequently does, when he is not speaking of his own person, but only assuming another character, Rom 3:5, 1Co 10:30, 1Co 4:6. The character here assumed is that of a man, first ignorant of the law, then under it and sincerely, but ineffectually, striving to serve God. To have spoken this of himself, or any true believer, would have been foreign to the whole scope of his discourse; nay, utterly contrary thereto, as well as to what is expressly asserted, Rom 8:2.

Wesley: Rom 7:7 - -- Sinful in itself, or a promoter of sin.

Sinful in itself, or a promoter of sin.

Wesley: Rom 7:7 - -- That is, evil desire. I had not known it to be a sin; nay, perhaps I should not have known that any such desire was in me: it did not appear, till it ...

That is, evil desire. I had not known it to be a sin; nay, perhaps I should not have known that any such desire was in me: it did not appear, till it was stirred up by the prohibition.

Wesley: Rom 7:8 - -- My inbred corruption.

My inbred corruption.

Wesley: Rom 7:8 - -- Forbidding, but not subduing it, was only fretted, and wrought in me so much the more all manner of evil desire. For while I was without the knowledge...

Forbidding, but not subduing it, was only fretted, and wrought in me so much the more all manner of evil desire. For while I was without the knowledge of the law, sin was dead - Neither so apparent, nor so active; nor was I under the least apprehensions of any danger from it.

Wesley: Rom 7:9 - -- Without the close application of it. I had much life, wisdom, virtue, strength: so I thought.

Without the close application of it. I had much life, wisdom, virtue, strength: so I thought.

Wesley: Rom 7:9 - -- That is, the law, a part put for the whole; but this expression particularly intimates its compulsive force, which restrains, enjoins, urges, forbids,...

That is, the law, a part put for the whole; but this expression particularly intimates its compulsive force, which restrains, enjoins, urges, forbids, threatens.

Wesley: Rom 7:9 - -- In its spiritual meaning, to my heart, with the power of God. Sin revived, and I died - My inbred sin took fire, and all my virtue and strength died a...

In its spiritual meaning, to my heart, with the power of God. Sin revived, and I died - My inbred sin took fire, and all my virtue and strength died away; and I then saw myself to be dead in sin, and liable to death eternal.

Wesley: Rom 7:10 - -- Doubtless it was originally intended by God as a grand means of preserving and increasing spiritual life, and leading to life everlasting.

Doubtless it was originally intended by God as a grand means of preserving and increasing spiritual life, and leading to life everlasting.

Wesley: Rom 7:11 - -- While I expected life by the law, sin came upon me unawares and slew all my hopes.

While I expected life by the law, sin came upon me unawares and slew all my hopes.

Wesley: Rom 7:12 - -- That is, every branch of the law. Is holy, and just, and good - It springs from, and partakes of, the holy nature of God; it is every way just and rig...

That is, every branch of the law. Is holy, and just, and good - It springs from, and partakes of, the holy nature of God; it is every way just and right in itself; it is designed wholly for the good of man.

Wesley: Rom 7:13 - -- Was then that which is good made the cause of evil to me; yea, of death, which is the greatest of evil? Not so. But it was sin, which was made death t...

Was then that which is good made the cause of evil to me; yea, of death, which is the greatest of evil? Not so. But it was sin, which was made death to me, inasmuch as it wrought death in me even by that which is good - By the good law.

Wesley: Rom 7:13 - -- The consequence of which was, that inbred sin, thus driving furiously in spite of the commandment, became exceeding sinful; the guilt thereof being gr...

The consequence of which was, that inbred sin, thus driving furiously in spite of the commandment, became exceeding sinful; the guilt thereof being greatly aggravated.

Wesley: Rom 7:14 - -- St. Paul, having compared together the past and present state of believers, that "in the flesh," Rom 7:5, and that "in the spirit," Rom 7:6, in answer...

St. Paul, having compared together the past and present state of believers, that "in the flesh," Rom 7:5, and that "in the spirit," Rom 7:6, in answering two objections, (Is then the law sin? Rom 7:7, and, Is the law death? Rom 7:13,) interweaves the whole process of a man reasoning, groaning, striving, and escaping from the legal to the evangelical state. This he does from Rom 7:7, to the end of this chapter.

Wesley: Rom 7:14 - -- Totally enslaved; slaves bought with money were absolutely at their master's disposal.

Totally enslaved; slaves bought with money were absolutely at their master's disposal.

Wesley: Rom 7:16 - -- This single word implies all the three that were used before, Rom 7:12, "holy, just, and good."

This single word implies all the three that were used before, Rom 7:12, "holy, just, and good."

Wesley: Rom 7:17 - -- That makes, as it were, another person, and tyrannizes over me.

That makes, as it were, another person, and tyrannizes over me.

Wesley: Rom 7:18 - -- The flesh here signifies the whole man as he is by nature.

The flesh here signifies the whole man as he is by nature.

Wesley: Rom 7:21 - -- An inward constraining power, flowing from the dictate of corrupt nature.

An inward constraining power, flowing from the dictate of corrupt nature.

Wesley: Rom 7:22 - -- This is more than "I consent to," Rom 7:16. The day of liberty draws near.

This is more than "I consent to," Rom 7:16. The day of liberty draws near.

Wesley: Rom 7:22 - -- Called the mind, Rom 7:23, Rom 7:25.

Called the mind, Rom 7:23, Rom 7:25.

JFB: Rom 7:1 - -- Of Moses to whom, though not themselves Jews (see on Rom 1:13), the Old Testament was familiar.

Of Moses to whom, though not themselves Jews (see on Rom 1:13), the Old Testament was familiar.

JFB: Rom 7:2-3 - -- "die." So Rom 7:3.

"die." So Rom 7:3.

JFB: Rom 7:3 - -- "joined." So Rom 7:4.

"joined." So Rom 7:4.

JFB: Rom 7:4 - -- Rather, "were slain."

Rather, "were slain."

JFB: Rom 7:4 - -- Through His slain body. The apostle here departs from his usual word "died," using the more expressive phrase "were slain," to make it clear that he m...

Through His slain body. The apostle here departs from his usual word "died," using the more expressive phrase "were slain," to make it clear that he meant their being "crucified with Christ" (as expressed in Rom 6:3-6, and Gal 2:20).

JFB: Rom 7:4 - -- "was."

"was."

JFB: Rom 7:4 - -- To the intent.

To the intent.

JFB: Rom 7:4 - -- It has been thought that the apostle should here have said that "the law died to us," not "we to the law," but that purposely inverted the figure, to ...

It has been thought that the apostle should here have said that "the law died to us," not "we to the law," but that purposely inverted the figure, to avoid the harshness to Jewish ears of the death of the law [CHRYSOSTOM, CALVIN, HODGE, PHILIPPI, &c.]. But this is to mistake the apostle's design in employing this figure, which was merely to illustrate the general principle that "death dissolves legal obligation." It was essential to his argument that we, not the law, should be the dying party, since it is we that are "crucified with Christ," and not the law. This death dissolves our marriage obligation to the law, leaving us at liberty to contract a new relation--to be joined to the Risen One, in order to spiritual fruitfulness, to the glory of God [BEZA, OLSHAUSEN, MEYER, ALFORD, &c.]. The confusion, then, is in the expositors, not the text; and it has arisen from not observing that, like Jesus Himself, believers are here viewed as having a double life--the old sin-condemned life, which they lay down with Christ, and the new life of acceptance and holiness to which they rise with their Surety and Head; and all the issues of this new life, in Christian obedience, are regarded as the "fruit" of this blessed union to the Risen One. How such holy fruitfulness was impossible before our union to Christ, is next declared.

JFB: Rom 7:5 - -- In our unregenerate state, as we came into the world. See on Joh 3:6 and Rom 8:5-9.

In our unregenerate state, as we came into the world. See on Joh 3:6 and Rom 8:5-9.

JFB: Rom 7:5 - -- "passions" (Margin), "affections" (as in Gal 5:24), or "stirrings."

"passions" (Margin), "affections" (as in Gal 5:24), or "stirrings."

JFB: Rom 7:5 - -- That is, "prompting to the commission of sins."

That is, "prompting to the commission of sins."

JFB: Rom 7:5 - -- By occasion of the law, which fretted, irritated our inward corruption by its prohibitions. See on Rom 7:7-9.

By occasion of the law, which fretted, irritated our inward corruption by its prohibitions. See on Rom 7:7-9.

JFB: Rom 7:5 - -- The members of the body, as the instruments by which these inward stirrings find vent in action, and become facts of the life. See on Rom 6:6.

The members of the body, as the instruments by which these inward stirrings find vent in action, and become facts of the life. See on Rom 6:6.

JFB: Rom 7:5 - -- Death in the sense of Rom 6:21. Thus hopeless is all holy fruit before union to Christ.

Death in the sense of Rom 6:21. Thus hopeless is all holy fruit before union to Christ.

JFB: Rom 7:6 - -- On the same expression, see on Rom 6:22, and compare Jam 1:15.

On the same expression, see on Rom 6:22, and compare Jam 1:15.

JFB: Rom 7:6 - -- The word is the same which, in Rom 6:6 and elsewhere, is rendered "destroyed," and is but another way of saying (as in Rom 7:4) that "we were slain to...

The word is the same which, in Rom 6:6 and elsewhere, is rendered "destroyed," and is but another way of saying (as in Rom 7:4) that "we were slain to the law by the body of Christ"; language which, though harsh to the ear, is designed and fitted to impress upon the reader the violence of that death of the Cross, by which, as by a deadly wrench, we are "delivered from the law."

JFB: Rom 7:6 - -- It is now universally agreed that the true reading here is, "being dead to that wherein we were held." The received reading has no authority whatever,...

It is now universally agreed that the true reading here is, "being dead to that wherein we were held." The received reading has no authority whatever, and is inconsistent with the strain of the argument; for the death spoken of, as we have seen, is not the law's, but ours, through union with the crucified Saviour.

JFB: Rom 7:6 - -- "so as to" or "so that we."

"so as to" or "so that we."

JFB: Rom 7:6 - -- "in the newness of the spirit."

"in the newness of the spirit."

JFB: Rom 7:6 - -- Not in our old way of literal, mechanical obedience to the divine law, as a set of external rules of conduct, and without any reference to the state o...

Not in our old way of literal, mechanical obedience to the divine law, as a set of external rules of conduct, and without any reference to the state of our hearts; but in that new way of spiritual obedience which, through union to the risen Saviour, we have learned to render (compare Rom 2:29; 2Co 3:6).

False Inferences regarding the Law Repelled (Rom. 7:7-25).

And first, Rom 7:7-13, in the case of the UNREGENERATE.

JFB: Rom 7:7-8 - -- "I have said that when we were in the flesh the law stirred our inward corruption, and was thus the occasion of deadly fruit: Is then the law to blame...

"I have said that when we were in the flesh the law stirred our inward corruption, and was thus the occasion of deadly fruit: Is then the law to blame for this? Far from us be such a thought."

JFB: Rom 7:7-8 - -- "On the contrary" (as in Rom 8:37; 1Co 12:22; Greek).

"On the contrary" (as in Rom 8:37; 1Co 12:22; Greek).

JFB: Rom 7:7-8 - -- It is important to fix what is meant by "sin" here. It certainly is not "the general nature of sin" [ALFORD, &c.], though it be true that this is lear...

It is important to fix what is meant by "sin" here. It certainly is not "the general nature of sin" [ALFORD, &c.], though it be true that this is learned from the law; for such a sense will not suit what is said of it in the following verses, where the meaning is the same as here. The only meaning which suits all that is said of it in this place is "the principle of sin in the heart of fallen man." The sense, then, is this: "It was by means of the law that I came to know what a virulence and strength of sinful propensity I had within me." The existence of this it did not need the law to reveal to him; for even the heathens recognized and wrote of it. But the dreadful nature and desperate power of it the law alone discovered--in the way now to be described.

JFB: Rom 7:7-8 - -- Here the same Greek word is unfortunately rendered by three different English ones--"lust"; "covet"; "concupiscence" (Rom 7:8) --which obscures the me...

Here the same Greek word is unfortunately rendered by three different English ones--"lust"; "covet"; "concupiscence" (Rom 7:8) --which obscures the meaning. By using the word "lust" only, in the wide sense of all "irregular desire," or every outgoing of the heart towards anything forbidden, the sense will best be brought out; thus, "For I had not known lust, except the law had said, Thou shalt not lust; But sin, taking ('having taken') occasion by the commandment (that one which forbids it), wrought in me all manner of lusting." This gives a deeper view of the tenth commandment than the mere words suggest. The apostle saw in it the prohibition not only of desire after certain things there specified, but of "desire after everything divinely forbidden"; in other words, all "lusting" or "irregular desire." It was this which "he had not known but by the law." The law forbidding all such desire so stirred his corruption that it wrought in him "all manner of lusting"--desire of every sort after what was forbidden.

JFB: Rom 7:8 - -- That is, before its extensive demands and prohibitions come to operate upon our corrupt nature.

That is, before its extensive demands and prohibitions come to operate upon our corrupt nature.

JFB: Rom 7:8 - -- Rather, "is"

Rather, "is"

JFB: Rom 7:8 - -- That is, the sinful principle of our nature lies so dormant, so torpid, that its virulence and power are unknown, and to our feeling it is as good as ...

That is, the sinful principle of our nature lies so dormant, so torpid, that its virulence and power are unknown, and to our feeling it is as good as "dead."

JFB: Rom 7:9 - -- "In the days of my ignorance, when, in this sense, a stranger to the law, I deemed myself a righteous man, and, as such, entitled to life at the hand ...

"In the days of my ignorance, when, in this sense, a stranger to the law, I deemed myself a righteous man, and, as such, entitled to life at the hand of God."

JFB: Rom 7:9 - -- Forbidding all irregular desire; for the apostle sees in this the spirit of the whole law.

Forbidding all irregular desire; for the apostle sees in this the spirit of the whole law.

JFB: Rom 7:9 - -- "came to life"; in its malignity and strength it unexpectedly revealed itself, as if sprung from the dead.

"came to life"; in its malignity and strength it unexpectedly revealed itself, as if sprung from the dead.

JFB: Rom 7:9 - -- "saw myself, in the eye of a law never kept and not to be kept, a dead man."

"saw myself, in the eye of a law never kept and not to be kept, a dead man."

JFB: Rom 7:10-11 - -- Thus.

Thus.

JFB: Rom 7:10-11 - -- Designed

Designed

JFB: Rom 7:10-11 - -- Give

Give

JFB: Rom 7:10-11 - -- Through the keeping of it.

Through the keeping of it.

JFB: Rom 7:10-11 - -- Through breaking it.

Through breaking it.

JFB: Rom 7:10-11 - -- My sinful nature.

My sinful nature.

JFB: Rom 7:10-11 - -- Or "seduced me"--drew me aside into the very thing which the commandment forbade.

Or "seduced me"--drew me aside into the very thing which the commandment forbade.

JFB: Rom 7:10-11 - -- "discovered me to myself to be a condemned and gone man" (compare Rom 7:9, "I died").

"discovered me to myself to be a condemned and gone man" (compare Rom 7:9, "I died").

JFB: Rom 7:12-13 - -- "So that."

"So that."

JFB: Rom 7:12-13 - -- "is indeed"

"is indeed"

JFB: Rom 7:12-13 - -- That one so often referred to, which forbids all lusting. holy, and just, and good.

That one so often referred to, which forbids all lusting.

holy, and just, and good.

JFB: Rom 7:13 - -- "Hath then that which is good become"

"Hath then that which is good become"

JFB: Rom 7:13 - -- That is, "Does the blame of my death lie with the good law? Away with such a thought."

That is, "Does the blame of my death lie with the good law? Away with such a thought."

JFB: Rom 7:13 - -- Became death unto me, to the end.

Became death unto me, to the end.

JFB: Rom 7:13 - -- That it might be seen in its true light.

That it might be seen in its true light.

JFB: Rom 7:13 - -- Rather, "to"

Rather, "to"

JFB: Rom 7:13 - -- "that its enormous turpitude might stand out to view, through its turning God's holy, just, and good law into a provocative to the very things which i...

"that its enormous turpitude might stand out to view, through its turning God's holy, just, and good law into a provocative to the very things which is forbids." So much for the law in relation to the unregenerate, of whom the apostle takes himself as the example; first, in his ignorant, self-satisfied condition; next, under humbling discoveries of his inability to keep the law, through inward contrariety to it; finally, as self-condemned, and already, in law, a dead man. Some inquire to what period of his recorded history these circumstances relate. But there is no reason to think they were wrought into such conscious and explicit discovery at any period of his history before he "met the Lord in the way"; and though, "amidst the multitude of his thoughts within him" during his memorable three day's blindness immediately after that, such views of the law and of himself would doubtless be tossed up and down till they took shape much as they are here described (see on Act 9:9) we regard this whole description of his inward struggles and progress rather as the finished result of all his past recollections and subsequent reflections on his unregenerate state, which he throws into historical form only for greater vividness. But now the apostle proceeds to repel false inferences regarding the law, secondly: Rom 7:14-25, in the case of the REGENERATE; taking himself here also as the example.

JFB: Rom 7:14 - -- In its demands.

In its demands.

JFB: Rom 7:14 - -- Fleshly (see on Rom 7:5), and as such, incapable of yielding spiritual obedience.

Fleshly (see on Rom 7:5), and as such, incapable of yielding spiritual obedience.

JFB: Rom 7:14 - -- Enslaved to it. The "I" here, though of course not the regenerate, is neither the unregenerate, but the sinful principle of the renewed man, as is exp...

Enslaved to it. The "I" here, though of course not the regenerate, is neither the unregenerate, but the sinful principle of the renewed man, as is expressly stated in Rom 7:18.

JFB: Rom 7:15-16 - -- Better, "For that which I do I know not"; that is, "In obeying the impulses of my carnal nature I act the slave of another will than my own as a renew...

Better, "For that which I do I know not"; that is, "In obeying the impulses of my carnal nature I act the slave of another will than my own as a renewed man?"

JFB: Rom 7:15-16 - -- Rather, "for not what I would (wish, desire) that do I, but what I hate that I do."

Rather, "for not what I would (wish, desire) that do I, but what I hate that I do."

JFB: Rom 7:16 - -- "But if what I would not that I do,"

"But if what I would not that I do,"

JFB: Rom 7:16 - -- "the judgment of my inner man going along with the law."

"the judgment of my inner man going along with the law."

JFB: Rom 7:17 - -- My renewed self.

My renewed self.

JFB: Rom 7:17 - -- "that work it."

"that work it."

JFB: Rom 7:17 - -- That principle of sin that still has its abode in me. To explain this and the following statements, as many do (even BENGEL and THOLUCK), of the sins ...

That principle of sin that still has its abode in me. To explain this and the following statements, as many do (even BENGEL and THOLUCK), of the sins of unrenewed men against their better convictions, is to do painful violence to the apostle's language, and to affirm of the unregenerate what is untrue. That coexistence and mutual hostility of "flesh" and "spirit" in the same renewed man, which is so clearly taught in Rom 8:4, &c., and in Gal 5:16, &c., is the true and only key to the language of this and the following verses. (It is hardly necessary to say that the apostle means not to disown the blame of yielding to his corruptions, by saying, "it is not he that does it, but sin that dwelleth in him." Early heretics thus abused his language; but the whole strain of the passage shows that his sole object in thus expressing himself was to bring more vividly before his readers the conflict of two opposite principles, and how entirely, as a new man--honoring from his inmost soul the law of God--he condemned and renounced his corrupt nature, with its affections and lusts, its stirrings and its outgoings, root and branch).

JFB: Rom 7:18 - -- Better, "For I know that there dwelleth not in me, that is in my flesh, any good."

Better, "For I know that there dwelleth not in me, that is in my flesh, any good."

JFB: Rom 7:18 - -- "desire."

"desire."

JFB: Rom 7:18 - -- The supplement "how," in our version, weakens the statement.

The supplement "how," in our version, weakens the statement.

JFB: Rom 7:18 - -- Here, again, we have the double self of the renewed man; "In me dwelleth no good; but this corrupt self is not my true self; it is but sin dwelling in...

Here, again, we have the double self of the renewed man; "In me dwelleth no good; but this corrupt self is not my true self; it is but sin dwelling in my real self, as a renewed man."

JFB: Rom 7:19-21 - -- The conflict here graphically described between a self that "desires" to do good and a self that in spite of this does evil, cannot be the struggles b...

The conflict here graphically described between a self that "desires" to do good and a self that in spite of this does evil, cannot be the struggles between conscience and passion in the unregenerate, because the description given of this "desire to do good" in Rom 7:22 is such as cannot be ascribed, with the least show of truth, to any but the renewed.

JFB: Rom 7:22 - -- "from the bottom of my heart." The word here rendered "delight" is indeed stronger than "consent" in Rom 7:16; but both express a state of mind and he...

"from the bottom of my heart." The word here rendered "delight" is indeed stronger than "consent" in Rom 7:16; but both express a state of mind and heart to which the unregenerate man is a stranger.

Clarke: Rom 7:1 - -- For I speak to them that know the law - This is a proof that the apostle directs this part of his discourse to the Jews

For I speak to them that know the law - This is a proof that the apostle directs this part of his discourse to the Jews

Clarke: Rom 7:1 - -- As long as he liveth? - Or, as long as It liveth; law does not extend its influence to the dead, nor do abrogated laws bind. It is all the same whet...

As long as he liveth? - Or, as long as It liveth; law does not extend its influence to the dead, nor do abrogated laws bind. It is all the same whether we understand these words as speaking of a law abrogated, so that it cannot command; or of its objects being dead, so that it has none to bind. In either case the law has no force.

Clarke: Rom 7:2 - -- For the woman which hath a husband - The apostle illustrates his meaning by a familiar instance. A married woman is bound to her husband while he li...

For the woman which hath a husband - The apostle illustrates his meaning by a familiar instance. A married woman is bound to her husband while he lives; but when her husband is dead she is discharged from the law by which she was bound to him alone.

Clarke: Rom 7:3 - -- So then, if, while her husband liveth - The object of the apostle’ s similitude is to show that each party is equally bound to the other; but t...

So then, if, while her husband liveth - The object of the apostle’ s similitude is to show that each party is equally bound to the other; but that the death of either dissolves the engagement

Clarke: Rom 7:3 - -- So - she is no adulteress, though she be married to another - And do not imagine that this change would argue any disloyalty in you to your Maker; f...

So - she is no adulteress, though she be married to another - And do not imagine that this change would argue any disloyalty in you to your Maker; for, as he has determined that this law of ordinances shall cease, you are no more bound to it than a woman is to a deceased husband, and are as free to receive the Gospel of Christ as a woman in such circumstances would be to remarry.

Clarke: Rom 7:4 - -- Wherefore, my brethren - This is a parallel case. You were once under the law of Moses, and were bound by its injunctions; but now ye are become dea...

Wherefore, my brethren - This is a parallel case. You were once under the law of Moses, and were bound by its injunctions; but now ye are become dead to that law - a modest, inoffensive mode of speech, for, The law, which was once your husband, is dead; God has determined that it shall be no longer in force; so that now, as a woman whose husband is dead is freed from the law of that husband, or from her conjugal vow, and may legally be married to another, so God, who gave the law under which ye have hitherto lived, designed that it should be in force only till the advent of the Messiah; that advent has taken place, the law has consequently ceased, and now ye are called to take on you the yoke of the Gospel, and lay down the yoke of the law; and it is the design of God that you should do so

Clarke: Rom 7:4 - -- That ye should be married to another - who is raised from the dead - As Christ is the end of the law for righteousness to every one that believeth, ...

That ye should be married to another - who is raised from the dead - As Christ is the end of the law for righteousness to every one that believeth, the object of God in giving the law was to unite you to Christ; and, as he has died, he has not only abolished that law which condemns every transgressor to death, without any hope of a revival, but he has also made that atonement for sin, by his own death, which is represented in the sacrifices prescribed by the law. And as Jesus Christ is risen again from the dead, he has thereby given the fullest proof that by his death he has procured the resurrection of mankind, and made that atonement required by the law. That we should bring forth fruit unto God - we, Jews, who believe in Christ, have, in consequence of our union with him, received the gifts and graces of the Holy Spirit; so that we bring forth that fruit of holiness unto God which, without this union, it would be impossible for us to produce. Here is a delicate allusion to the case of a promising and numerous progeny from a legitimate and happy marriage.

Clarke: Rom 7:5 - -- For, when we were in the flesh - When we were without the Gospel, in our carnal and unregenerated state, though believing in the law of Moses, and p...

For, when we were in the flesh - When we were without the Gospel, in our carnal and unregenerated state, though believing in the law of Moses, and performing the rites and offices of our religion

Clarke: Rom 7:5 - -- The motions of sins, which were by the law - Τα παθηματα των ἁμαρτιων, the passions of sins, the evil propensities to sins...

The motions of sins, which were by the law - Τα παθηματα των ἁμαρτιων, the passions of sins, the evil propensities to sins; to every particular sin there is a propensity: one propensity does not excite to all kinds of sinful acts; hence the apostle uses the plural number, the Passions or propensities of Sins; sins being not more various than their propensities in the unregenerate heart, which excite to them. These παθηματα, propensities, constitute the fallen nature; they are the disease of the heart, the pollution and corruption of the soul

Clarke: Rom 7:5 - -- Did work in our members - The evil propensity acts εν τοις μελεσιν, in the whole nervous and muscular system, applying that stimulus...

Did work in our members - The evil propensity acts εν τοις μελεσιν, in the whole nervous and muscular system, applying that stimulus to every part which is necessary to excite them to action

Clarke: Rom 7:5 - -- To bring forth fruit unto death - To produce those acts of transgression which subject the sinner to death, temporal and eternal. When the apostle s...

To bring forth fruit unto death - To produce those acts of transgression which subject the sinner to death, temporal and eternal. When the apostle says, the motion of sin which were by the law, he points out a most striking and invariable characteristic of sin, viz. its rebellious nature; it ever acts against law, and the most powerfully against known law. Because the law requires obedience, therefore it will transgress. The law is equally against evil passions and evil actions, and both these exert themselves against it. So, these motions which were by the law, became roused into the most powerful activity by the prohibitions of the law. They were comparatively dormant till the law said, thou shalt Not do this, thou shalt Do that; then the rebellious principle in the evil propensity became roused, and acts of transgression and omissions of duty were the immediate consequences.

Clarke: Rom 7:6 - -- But now we are delivered from the law - We, who have believed in Christ Jesus, are delivered from that yoke by which we were bound, which sentenced ...

But now we are delivered from the law - We, who have believed in Christ Jesus, are delivered from that yoke by which we were bound, which sentenced every transgressor to perdition, but provided no pardon even for the penitent, and no sanctification for those who are weary of their inbred corruptions

Clarke: Rom 7:6 - -- That being dead wherein we were held - To us believers in Christ this commandment is abrogated; we are transferred to another constitution; that law...

That being dead wherein we were held - To us believers in Christ this commandment is abrogated; we are transferred to another constitution; that law which kills ceases to bind us; it is dead to us who have believed in Christ Jesus, who is the end of the law for justification and salvation to every one that believes

Clarke: Rom 7:6 - -- That we should serve in newness of spirit - We are now brought under a more spiritual dispensation; now we know the spiritual import of all the Mosa...

That we should serve in newness of spirit - We are now brought under a more spiritual dispensation; now we know the spiritual import of all the Mosaic precepts. We see that the law referred to the Gospel, and can only be fulfilled by the Gospel

Clarke: Rom 7:6 - -- The oldness of the letter - The merely literal rites, ceremonies, and sacrifices are now done away; and the newness of the spirit, the true intent a...

The oldness of the letter - The merely literal rites, ceremonies, and sacrifices are now done away; and the newness of the spirit, the true intent and meaning of all are now fully disclosed; so that we are got from an imperfect state into a state of perfection and excellence. We sought justification and sanctification, pardon and holiness, by the law, and have found that the law could not give them: we have sought these in the Gospel scheme, and we have found them. We serve God now, not according to the old literal sense, but in the true spiritual meaning.

Clarke: Rom 7:7 - -- Is the law sin? - The apostle had said, Rom 7:6 : The motions of sins, which were by the law, did bring forth fruit unto death; and now he anticipat...

Is the law sin? - The apostle had said, Rom 7:6 : The motions of sins, which were by the law, did bring forth fruit unto death; and now he anticipates an objection, "Is therefore the law sin?"To which he answers, as usual, μη γενοιτο, by no means. Law is only the means of disclosing; this sinful propensity, not of producing it; as a bright beam of the sun introduced into a room shows; millions of motes which appear to be dancing in it in all directions; but these were not introduced by the light: they were there before, only there was not light enough to make them manifest; so the evil propensity was there before, but there was not light sufficient to discover it

Clarke: Rom 7:7 - -- I had not known sin, but by the law - Mr. Locke and Dr. Taylor have properly remarked the skill used by St. Paul in dexterously avoiding, as much as...

I had not known sin, but by the law - Mr. Locke and Dr. Taylor have properly remarked the skill used by St. Paul in dexterously avoiding, as much as possible, the giving offense to the Jews: and this is particularly evident in his use of the word I in this place. In the beginning of the chapter, where he mentions their knowledge of the law, he says Ye; in the 4th verse he joins himself with them, and says we; but here, and so to the end of the chapter, where he represents the power of sin and the inability of the law to subdue it, he appears to leave them out, and speaks altogether in the first person, though it is plain he means all those who are under the law. So, Rom 3:7, he uses the singular pronoun, why am I judged a sinner? when he evidently means the whole body of unbelieving Jews

There is another circumstance in which his address is peculiarly evident; his demonstrating the insufficiency of the law under color of vindicating it. He knew that the Jew would take fire at the least reflection on the law, which he held in the highest veneration; and therefore he very naturally introduces him catching at that expression, Rom 7:5, the motions of sins, which were by the law, or, notwithstanding the law. "What!"says this Jew, "do you vilify the law, by charging it with favoring sin?"By no means, says the apostle; I am very far from charging the law with favoring sin. The law is holy, and the commandment is holy, just, and good, Rom 7:12. Thus he writes in vindication of the law; and yet at the same time shows

1.    That the law requires the most extensive obedience, discovering and condemning sin in all its most secret and remote branches, Rom 7:7

2.    That it gives sin a deadly force, subjecting every transgression to the penalty of death, Rom 7:8-14. And yet

3.    supplies neither help nor hope to the sinner, but leaves him under the power of sin, and the sentence of death, Rom 7:14, etc. This, says Dr. Taylor, is the most ingenious turn of writing I ever met with. We have another instance of the same sort, Rom 13:1-7

It is not likely that a dark, corrupt human heart can discern the will of God. His law is his will. It recommends what is just, and right, and good and forbids what is improper, unjust, and injurious. If God had not revealed himself by this law, we should have done precisely what many nations of the earth have done, who have not had this revelation - put darkness for light, and sin for acts of holiness. While the human heart is its own measure it will rate its workings according to its own propensities; for itself is its highest rule. But when God gives a true insight of his own perfections, to be applied as a rule both of passion and practice, then sin is discovered, and discovered too, to be exceedingly sinful. So strong propensities, because they appear to be inherent in our nature, would have passed for natural and necessary operations; and their sinfulness would not have been discovered, if the law had not said, Thou shalt not covet; and thus determined that the propensity itself, as well as its outward operations, is sinful. The law is the straight edge which determines the quantum of obliquity in the crooked line to which it is applied

It is natural for man to do what is unlawful, and to desire especially to do that which is forbidden. The heathens have remarked this propensity in man

Thus Livy, xxxiv. 4: -

Luxuria - ipsis vinculis, sicut fera bestia, irtitata

"Luxury, like a wild beast, is irritated by its very bonds.

Audax omnia perpet

Gens humana ruit per vetitun; nefas

"The presumptuous human race obstinately rush into prohibited acts of wickedness.

Hor. Carm. lib. i. Od. iii. ver. 25

And Ovid, Amor. lib. ii. Eleg. xix. ver. 3: -

Quod licet, ingratum est; quod non licet, acrius urit

"What is lawful is insipid; the strongest propensity is excited towards that which is prohibited.

And again, Ib. lib. iii. E. iv. ver. 17: -

Nitimur in vetitum semper, cupimusque negata

"Vice is provoked by every strong restraint

Sick men long most to drink, who know they mayn’ t.

The same poet delivers the same sentiment it another place: -

Acrior admonitu est, irritaturque retent

Et crescit rabies: remoraminaque ipsa nocebant

Metam. lib. iii. ver. 566

"Being admonished, he becomes the more obstinate; and his fierceness is irritated by restraints. Prohibitions become incentives to greater acts of vice.

But it is needless to multiply examples; this most wicked principle of a sinful, fallen nature, has been felt and acknowledged by All mankind.

Clarke: Rom 7:8 - -- Sin, taking occasion by the commandment - I think the pointing, both in this and in the 11th verse, to be wrong: the comma should be after occasion,...

Sin, taking occasion by the commandment - I think the pointing, both in this and in the 11th verse, to be wrong: the comma should be after occasion, and not after commandment. But sin taking occasion, wrought in me by this commandment all manner of concupiscence. There are different opinions concerning the meaning of the word αφορμη, which we here translate occasion. Dr. Waterland translates the clause, Sin, taking Advantage. Dr. Taylor contends that all commentators have mistaken the meaning of it, and that it should be rendered having received Force. For this acceptation of the word I can find no adequate authority except in its etymology - απο, from, and ὁρμη, impetus. The word appears to signify, in general, whatsoever is necessary for the completion or accomplishment of any particular purpose. Xenophon uses αφορμαι εις τον βιον to signify whatever is necessary for the support of life. There is a personification in the text: sin is, represented as a murderer watching for life, and snatching at every means and embracing every opportunity to carry his fell purpose into effect. The miserable sinner has a murderer, sin, within him; this murderer can only destroy life in certain circumstances; finding that the law condemns the object of his cruelty to death, he takes occasion from this to work in the soul all manner of concupiscence, evil and irregular desires and appetites of every kind, and, by thus increasing the evil, exposes the soul to more condemnation; and thus it is represented as being slain, Rom 7:11. That is, the law, on the evidence of those sinful dispositions, and their corresponding practices, condemns the sinner to death: so that he is dead in law. Thus the very prohibition, as we have already seen in the preceding verse, becomes the instrument of exciting the evil propensity; for, although a sinner has the general propensity to do what is evil, yet he seems to feel most delight in transgressing known law: stat pro ratione voluntas ; "I will do it, because I will.

Clarke: Rom 7:8 - -- For without the law, sin was dead - Where there is no law there is no transgression; for sin is the transgression of the law; and no fault can be im...

For without the law, sin was dead - Where there is no law there is no transgression; for sin is the transgression of the law; and no fault can be imputed unto death, where there is no statute by which such a fault is made a capital offense

Dr. Taylor thinks that χωρις νομου, without the law, means the time before the giving of the law from Mount Sinai, which took in the space of 430 years, during which time the people were under the Abrahamic covenant of grace; and without the law that was given on Mount Sinai, the sting of death, which is sin, had not power to slay the sinner; for, from the time that Adam sinned, the law was not re-enacted till it was given by Moses, Rom 5:13. The Jew was then alive, because he was not under the law subjecting him to death for his transgressions; but when the commandment came, with the penalty of death annexed, sin revived, and the Jew died. Then the sting of death acquired life; and the Jew, upon the first transgression, was dead in law. Thus sin, the sting of death, received force or advantage to destroy by the commandment, Rom 7:8, Rom 7:11

Clarke: Rom 7:8 - -- All manner of concupiscence - It showed what was evil and forbade it; and then the principle of rebellion, which seems essential to the very nature ...

All manner of concupiscence - It showed what was evil and forbade it; and then the principle of rebellion, which seems essential to the very nature of sins rose up against the prohibition; and he was the more strongly incited to disobey in proportion as obedience was enjoined. Thus the apostle shows that the law had authority to prohibit, condemn, and destroy; but no power to pardon sin, root out enmity, or save the soul

The word επιθυμια, which we render concupiscence, signifies simply strong desire of any kind; but in the New Testament, it is generally taken to signify irregular and unholy desires. Sin in the mind is the desire to do, or to be, what is contrary to the holiness and authority of God

Clarke: Rom 7:8 - -- For without the law, sin was dead - This means, according to Dr. Taylor’ s hypothesis, the time previous to the giving of the law. See before. ...

For without the law, sin was dead - This means, according to Dr. Taylor’ s hypothesis, the time previous to the giving of the law. See before. But it seems also consistent with the apostle’ s meaning, to interpret the place as implying the time in which Paul, in his unconverted Jewish state, had not the proper knowledge of the law - while he was unacquainted with its spirituality. He felt evil desire, but he did not know the evil of it; he did not consider that the law tried the heart and its workings, as well as outward actions. This is farther explained in the next verse.

Clarke: Rom 7:9 - -- I was alive without the law once - Dr. Whitby paraphrases the verse thus: - "For the seed of Abraham was alive without the law once, before the law ...

I was alive without the law once - Dr. Whitby paraphrases the verse thus: - "For the seed of Abraham was alive without the law once, before the law was given, I being not obnoxious to death for that to which the law had not threatened death; but when the commandment came, forbidding it under that penalty, sin revived, and I died; i.e. it got strength to draw me to sin, and to condemn me to death. Sin is, in Scripture, represented as an enemy that seeks our ruin and destruction; and takes all occasions to effect it. It is here said to war against the mind, Rom 7:23; elsewhere, to war against the soul, 1Pe 2:11; to surround and beset us, Heb 12:1; to bring us into bondage and subjection, and get the dominion over us, Rom 6:12; to entice us, and so to work our death, Jam 1:14-16; and to do all that Satan, the grand enemy of mankind, doth, by tempting us to the commission of it. Whence Chrysostom, upon those words, Heb 12:4 : Ye have not yet resisted unto blood, προς την ἁμαρτιαν ανταγωνιζομενοι, striving against sin; represents sin as an armed and flagrant adversary. When, therefore, it finds a law which threatens death to the violator of it, it takes occasion thence more earnestly to tempt and allure to the violation of it, that so it may more effectually subject us to death and condemnation on that account; for the sting of death is sin, and the strength of sin is the law, condemning us to death for transgressing it. Thus, when God had forbidden, on pain of death, the eating the fruit of the tree of knowledge, Satan thence took occasion to tempt our first parents to transgress, and so slew them, or made them subject to death; εξηπατησε, he deceived them, Gen 3:13; 1Ti 2:14; which is the word used Rom 7:11. The phrase, without the law, sin was dead, means, that sin was then (before the law was given) comparatively dead, as to its power of condemning to death; and this sense the antithesis requires; without the law, ἁμαρτια νεκρα, εγω δε εζων, sin was dead, but I was living; but when the commandment came, (i.e. the law), sin revived, and I died. How were men living before the law, but because then no law condemned them? Sin, therefore, must be then dead, as to its condemning power. How did they die when the law came but by the law condemning them to death? Sin therefore revived, then, as to its power of condemning, which it received first from the sin of Adam, which brought death into the world; and next, from the law of Moses, which entered that the offense might abound, and reign more unto death, Rom 5:20, Rom 5:21. For though sin was in the world from Adam to Moses, or until the law was given, yet it was not imputed unto death, when there was no law that did threaten death; so that death reigned from that interval by virtue of Adam’ s sin alone; even over them who had not sinned after the similitude of Adam’ s transgression, i.e. against a positive law, forbidding it under the penalty of death; which law being delivered by Moses, sin revived; i.e. it had again its force to condemn men as before to death, by virtue of a law which threatened death. And in this sense the apostle seems to say, Gal 3:19, the law was added because of transgressions, to convince us of the wrath and punishment due to them; and that the law, therefore, worketh wrath, because where no law is there is no transgression, Rom 4:15, subjecting us to wrath; or no such sense of the Divine wrath as where a plain Divine law, threatening death and condemnation, is violated."See Whitby, in loco.

Clarke: Rom 7:10 - -- And the commandment - Meaning the law in general, which was ordained to life; the rule of righteousness teaching those statutes which if a man do he...

And the commandment - Meaning the law in general, which was ordained to life; the rule of righteousness teaching those statutes which if a man do he shall live in them, Lev 18:5, I found, by transgressing it, to be unto death; for it only presented the duty and laid down the penalty, without affording any strength to resist sin or subdue evil propensities.

Clarke: Rom 7:11 - -- Sin, taking occasion - Sin, deriving strength from the law, threatening death to the transgressor, (see Clarke’ s note on Rom 7:8), deceived me...

Sin, taking occasion - Sin, deriving strength from the law, threatening death to the transgressor, (see Clarke’ s note on Rom 7:8), deceived me, drew me aside to disobedience, promising me gratification honor, independence, etc., as it promised to Eve; for to her history the apostle evidently alludes, and uses the very same expression, deceived me, εξηπατησε με· See the preceding note; and see the Septuagint, Genesis 3:13

Clarke: Rom 7:11 - -- And by it slew me - Subjected me to that death which the law denounced against transgressors; and rendered me miserable during the course of life it...

And by it slew me - Subjected me to that death which the law denounced against transgressors; and rendered me miserable during the course of life itself. It is well known to scholars that the verb αποκτεινειν signifies not only to slay or kill, but also to make wretched. Every sinner is not only exposed to death because he has sinned, and must, sooner or later, die; but he is miserable in both body and mind by the influence and the effects of sin. He lives a dying life, or a living death.

Clarke: Rom 7:12 - -- Wherefore the law is holy - As if he had said, to soothe his countrymen, to whom he had been showing the absolute insufficiency of the law either to...

Wherefore the law is holy - As if he had said, to soothe his countrymen, to whom he had been showing the absolute insufficiency of the law either to justify or save from sin: I do not intimate that there is any thing improper or imperfect in the law as a rule of life: it prescribes what is holy, just, and good; for it comes from a holy, just, and good God. The Law, which is to regulate the whole of the outward conduct, is holy; and the Commandment, Thou shalt not covet, which is to regulate the heart, is not less so. All is excellent and pure; but it neither pardons sin nor purifies the heart; and it is because it is holy, just, and good, that it condemns transgressors to death.

Clarke: Rom 7:13 - -- Was then that which is good made death unto me? - This is the question of the Jew, with whom the apostle appears to be disputing "Do you allow the l...

Was then that which is good made death unto me? - This is the question of the Jew, with whom the apostle appears to be disputing

"Do you allow the law to be good, and yet say it is the cause of our death?"The apostle answers: - God forbid! μη γενοιτο, by no means: it is not the law that is the cause of your death, but sin; it was sin which subjected us to death by the law, justly threatening sin with death: which law was given that sin might appear - might be set forth in its own colors; when we saw it subjected us to death by a law perfectly holy, just, and good; that sin, by the law, might be represented what it really is: - καθ ὑπερβολην ἁμαρτωλος, an Exceeding Great and deadly evil

Thus it appears that man cannot have a true notion of sin but by means of the law of God. For this I have already given sufficient reasons in the preceding notes. And it was one design of the law to show the abominable and destructive nature of sin, as well as to be a rule of life. It would be almost impossible for a man to have that just notion of the demerit of sin so as to produce repentance, or to see the nature and necessity of the death of Christ, if the law were not applied to his conscience by the light of the Holy Spirit; it is then alone that he sees himself to be carnal, and sold under sin; and that the law and the commandment are holy, just, and good. And let it be observed, that the law did not answer this end merely among the Jews in the days of the apostle; it is just as necessary to the Gentiles to the present hour. Nor do we find that true repentance takes place where the moral law is not preached and enforced. Those who preach only the Gospel to sinners, at best only heal the hurt of the daughter of my people slightly. The law, therefore, is the grand instrument in the hands of a faithful minister, to alarm and awaken sinners; and he may safely show that every sinner is under the law, and consequently under the curse, who has not fled for refuge to the hope held out by the Gospel: for, in this sense also, Jesus Christ is the End of the Law for justification to them that believe.

Clarke: Rom 7:14 - -- For, we know that the law is spiritual - This is a general proposition, and probably, in the apostle’ s autograph, concluded the above sentence...

For, we know that the law is spiritual - This is a general proposition, and probably, in the apostle’ s autograph, concluded the above sentence. The law is not to be considered as a system of external rites and ceremonies; nor even as a rule of moral action: it is a spiritual system; it reaches to the most hidden purposes, thoughts, dispositions, and desires of the heart and soul; and it reproves and condemns every thing, without hope of reprieve or pardon, that is contrary to eternal truth and rectitude

Clarke: Rom 7:14 - -- But I am carnal, sold under sin - This was probably, in the apostle’ s letter, the beginning of a new paragraph. I believe it is agreed, on all...

But I am carnal, sold under sin - This was probably, in the apostle’ s letter, the beginning of a new paragraph. I believe it is agreed, on all hands, that the apostle is here demonstrating the insufficiency of the law in opposition to the Gospel. That by the former is the knowledge, by the latter the cure, of sin. Therefore by I here he cannot mean himself, nor any Christian believer: if the contrary could be proved, the argument of the apostle would go to demonstrate the insufficiency of the Gospel as well as the law

It is difficult to conceive how the opinion could have crept into the Church, or prevailed there, that "the apostle speaks here of his regenerate state; and that what was, in such a state, true of himself, must be true of all others in the same state."This opinion has, most pitifully and most shamefully, not only lowered the standard of Christianity, but destroyed its influence and disgraced its character. It requires but little knowledge of the spirit of the Gospel, and of the scope of this epistle, to see that the apostle is, here, either personating a Jew under the law and without the Gospel, or showing what his own state was when he was deeply convinced that by the deeds of the law no man could be justified, and had not as yet heard those blessed words: Brother Saul, the Lord Jesus, that appeared unto thee in the way, hath sent me that thou mightest receive thy sight, and be filled with the Holy Ghost, Act 9:17

In this and the following verses he states the contrariety between himself, or any Jew while without Christ, and the law of God. Of the latter he says, it is spiritual; of the former, l am carnal, sold under sin. Of the carnal man, in opposition to the spiritual, never was a more complete or accurate description given. The expressions, in the flesh, and after the flesh, in Rom 7:5, and in Rom 8:5, Rom 8:8, Rom 8:9, etc., are of the same import with the word carnal in this verse. To be in the flesh, or to be carnally minded, solely respects the unregenerate. While unregenerate, a man is in a state of death and enmity against God, Rom 8:6-9. This is St. Paul’ s own account of a carnal man. The soul of such a man has no authority over the appetites of the body and the lusts of the flesh: reason has not the government of passion. The work of such a person is to make provision for the flesh, to fulfill the lusts thereof, Rom 13:14. He minds the things of the flesh, Rom 8:5; he is at enmity with God. In all these things the spiritual man is the reverse; he lives in a state of friendship with God in Christ, and the Spirit of God dwells in him; his soul has dominion over the appetites of the body and the lusts of the flesh; his passions submit to the government of reason, and he, by the Spirit, mortifies the deeds of the flesh; he mindeth the things of the Spirit, Rom 8:5. The Scriptures, therefore, place these two characters in direct opposition to each other. Now the apostle begins this passage by informing us that it is his carnal state that he is about to describe, in opposition to the spirituality of God’ s holy law, saying, But I am carnal

Those who are of another opinion maintain that by the word carnal here the apostle meant that corruption which dwelt in him after his conversion; but this opinion is founded on a very great mistake; for, although there may be, after justification, the remains of the carnal mind, which will be less or more felt till the soul is completely sanctified, yet the man is never denominated from the inferior principle, which is under control, but from the superior principle which habitually prevails. Whatever epithets are given to corruption or sin in Scripture, opposite epithets are given to grace or holiness. By these different epithets are the unregenerate and regenerate denominated. From all this it follows that the epithet carnal, which is the characteristic designation of an unregenerate man, cannot be applied to St. Paul after his conversion; nor, indeed, to any Christian in that state

But the word carnal, though used by the apostle to signify a state of death and enmity against God, is not sufficient to denote all the evil of the state which he is describing; hence he adds, sold under sin. This is one of the strongest expressions which the Spirit of God uses in Scripture, to describe the full depravity of fallen man. It implies a willing slavery: Ahab had sold himself to work evil, 1Ki 21:20. And of the Jews it is said, in their utmost depravity, Behold, for your iniquities have ye sold yourselves, Isa 50:1. They forsook the holy covenant, and joined themselves to the heathen, and Were Sold to do mischief, 1 Maccabees 1:15. Now, if the word carnal, in its strongest sense, had been sufficiently significant of all he meant, why add to this charge another expression still stronger? We must therefore understand the phrase, sold under sin, as implying that the soul was employed in the drudgery of sin; that it was sold over to this service, and had no power to disobey this tyrant, until it was redeemed by another. And if a man be actually sold to another, and he acquiesce in the deed, then he becomes the legal property of that other person. This state of bondage was well known to the Romans. The sale of slaves they saw daily, and could not misunderstand the emphatical sense of this expression. Sin is here represented as a person; and the apostle compares the dominion which sin has over the man in question to that of a master over his legal slave. Universally through the Scriptures man is said to be in a state of bondage to sin until the Son of God make him free: but in no part of the sacred writings is it ever said that the children of God are sold under sin. Christ came to deliver the lawful captive, and take away the prey from the mighty. Whom the Son maketh free, they are free indeed. Then, they yield not up their members as instruments of unrighteousness unto sin; for sin shall not have the dominion over them, because the law of the Spirit of life in Christ Jesus has made them free from the law of sin and death, Rom 6:13, Rom 6:14; Rom 8:2. Anciently, when regular cartels were not known, the captives became the slaves of their victors, and by them were sold to any purchaser; their slavery was as complete and perpetual as if the slave had resigned his own liberty, and sold himself: the laws of the land secured him to his master; he could not redeem himself, because he had nothing that was his own, and nothing could rescue him from that state but a stipulated redemption. The apostle speaks here, not of the manner in which the person in question became a slave; he only asserts the fact, that sin had a full and permanent dominion over him. - Smith, on the carnal man’ s character

Clarke: Rom 7:14 - -- I am carnal, sold under sin - I have been the more particular in ascertaining the genuine sense of this verse, because it determines the general sco...

I am carnal, sold under sin - I have been the more particular in ascertaining the genuine sense of this verse, because it determines the general scope of the whole passage.

Clarke: Rom 7:15 - -- For, that which I do, I allow not, etc. - The first clause of this verse is a general assertion concerning the employment of the person in question ...

For, that which I do, I allow not, etc. - The first clause of this verse is a general assertion concerning the employment of the person in question in the state which the apostle calls carnal, and sold under sin. The Greek word κατεργαξομαι which is here translated I do, means a work which the agent continues to perform till it is finished, and is used by the apostle, Phi 2:12, to denote the continued employment of God’ s saints in his service to the end of their lives. Work Out your own salvation; the word here denotes an employment of a different kind; and therefore the man who now feels the galling dominion of sin says, What I am continually labouring at I allow not, ου γινωσκω, I do not acknowledge to be right, just, holy, or profitable

Clarke: Rom 7:15 - -- But what I hate, that do I - I am a slave, and under the absolute control of my tyrannical master: I hate his service, but am obliged to work his wi...

But what I hate, that do I - I am a slave, and under the absolute control of my tyrannical master: I hate his service, but am obliged to work his will. Who, without blaspheming, can assert that the apostle is speaking this of a man in whom the Spirit of the Lord dwells? From Rom 7:7 to this one the apostle, says Dr. Taylor, denotes the Jew in the flesh by a single I; here, he divides that I into two I’ s, or figurative persons; representing two different and opposite principles which were in him. The one I, or principle, assents to the law that it is good, and wills and chooses what the other does not practice, Rom 7:16. This principle he expressly tells us, Rom 7:22, is the inward man; the law of the mind, Rom 7:23; the mind, or rational faculty, Rom 7:25; for he could find no other inward man, or law of the mind, but the rational faculty, in a person who was carnal and sold under sin. The other I, or principle, transgresses the law, Rom 7:23, and does those things which the former principle allows not. This principle he expressly tells us, Rom 7:18, is the flesh, the law in the members, or sensual appetite, Rom 7:23; and he concludes in the last verse, that these two principles were opposite to each other; therefore it is evident that those two principles, residing and counteracting each other in the same person; are reason and lust, or sin that dwells in us. And it is very easy to distinguish these two I’ s, or principles, in every part of this elegant description of iniquity, domineering over the light and remonstrances of reason. For instance, Rom 7:17 : Now then, it is no more I that do it, but Sin that dwelleth in me. The I he speaks of here is opposed to indwelling or governing sin; and therefore plainly denotes the principle of reason, the inward man, or law of the mind; in which, I add, a measure of the light of the Spirit of God shines, in order to show the sinfulness of sin. These two different principles he calls, one flesh, and the other spirit, Gal 5:17; where he speaks of their contrariety in the same manner that he does here

And we may give a probable reason why the apostle dwells so long upon the struggle and opposition between these two principles; it appears intended to answer a tacit but very obvious objection. The Jew might allege: "But the law is holy and spiritual; and I assent to it as good, as a right rule of action, which ought to be observed; yea, I esteem it highly, I glory and rest in it, convinced of its truth and excellency. And is not this enough to constitute the law a sufficient principle of sanctification?"The apostle answers, "No; wickedness is consistent with a sense of truth. A man may assent to the best rule of action, and yet still be under the dominion of lust and sin; from which nothing can deliver him but a principle and power proceeding from the fountain of life."The sentiment in this verse may be illustrated by quotations from the ancient heathens; many of whom felt themselves in precisely the same state, (and expressed it in nearly the same language), which some most monstrously tell us was the state of this heavenly apostle, when vindicating the claims of the Gospel against those of the Jewish ritual! Thus Ovid describes the conduct of a depraved man: -

Sed trahit invitam nova vis; aliudque cupido

Mens aliud suadet. Video meliora, proboque

Deteriora sequor

Ovid, Met. lib. vii. ver. 19

My reason this, my passion that persuades

I see the right, and I approve it too

Condemn the wrong, and yet the wrong pursue

indignum facinus! nunc ego e

Illam scelestam esse, et me miserum sentio

Et taedet: et amore ardeo: et prudens, sciens

Vivus, vidensque pereo: nec quid agam scio

- Terent. Eun. ver. 70

An unworthy act! Now I perceive that she is wicked, and I am wretched. I burn with love, and am vexed at it. Although prudent, and intelligent, and active, and seeing, I perish; neither do I know what to do

Sed quia mente minus validus, quam corpore toto,

Quae nocuere, sequar; fugiam, quae profore credam

Hor. Ep. lib. i. E. 8, ver. 7

More in my mind than body lie my pains

Whate’ er may hurt me, I with joy pursue

Whate’ er may do me good, with horror view

Francis

Επει γαρ ὁ ἁμαρτανων ου θελει ἁμαρτανειν, αλλα κατορθωσαι δηλον ὁτι, ὁ μεν θελει, ου ποιει, και ὁμη θελει, ποιει

Arrian. Epist. ii. 26

For, truly, he who sins does not will sin, but wishes to walk uprightly: yet it is manifest that what he wills he doth not; and what he wills not he doth

- αλλα νικωμαι κακοις,

Και μανθανω μεν, οἱα τολμησω κακα

Θυμος δε κρεισσῳν των εμων βουλευματων,

Ὁσπερ μεγιστων αιτος κακων βροτοις.

- Eurip. Med. v. 1077

- But I am overcome by sin

And I well understand the evil which I presume to commit

Passion, however, is more powerful than my reason

Which is the cause of the greatest evils to mortal men

Thus we find that enlightened heathens, both among the Greeks and Romans, had that same kind of religious experience which some suppose to be, not only the experience of St. Paul in his best state, but to be even the standard of Christian attainments! See more examples in Wetstein

The whole spirit of the sentiment is well summed up and expressed by St. Chrysostom: ὁταν τινος επιθυμωμεν, ειτε κωλυωμεθα, αιρεται μαλλον της επιθυμιας ἡ φλοξ . If we lust after any thing which is afterwards prohibited, the flame of this desire burns the more fiercely.

Clarke: Rom 7:16 - -- If then I do that which I would not, etc. - Knowing that the law condemns it, and that therefore it must be evil. I consent unto the law; I show by ...

If then I do that which I would not, etc. - Knowing that the law condemns it, and that therefore it must be evil. I consent unto the law; I show by this circumstance that I acknowledge the law to be good.

Clarke: Rom 7:17 - -- Now then it is no more I - It is not that I which constitutes reason and conscience, but sin-corrupt and sensual inclinations, that dwelleth in me -...

Now then it is no more I - It is not that I which constitutes reason and conscience, but sin-corrupt and sensual inclinations, that dwelleth in me - that has the entire domination over my reason, darkening my understanding, and perverting my judgment; for which there is condemnation in the law, but no cure. So we find here that there is a principle in the unregenerate man stronger than reason itself; a principle which is, properly speaking, not of the essence of the soul, but acts in it, as its lord, or as a tyrant. This is inbred and indwelling sin - the seed of the serpent; by which the whole soul is darkened, confused, perverted, and excited to rebellion against God.

Clarke: Rom 7:18 - -- For I know that in me, etc. - I have learned by experience that in an unregenerate man there is no good. There is no principle by which the soul can...

For I know that in me, etc. - I have learned by experience that in an unregenerate man there is no good. There is no principle by which the soul can be brought into the light; no principle by which it can be restored to purity: fleshly appetites alone prevail; and the brute runs away with the man

Clarke: Rom 7:18 - -- For to will is present with me - Though the whole soul has suffered indescribably by the Fall, yet there are some faculties that appear to have suff...

For to will is present with me - Though the whole soul has suffered indescribably by the Fall, yet there are some faculties that appear to have suffered less than others; or rather have received larger measures of the supernatural light, because their concurrence with the Divine principle is so necessary to the salvation of the soul. Even the most unconcerned about spiritual things have understanding, judgment, reason, and will. And by means of these we have seen even scoffers at Divine revelation become very eminent in arts and sciences; some of our best metaphysicians, physicians, mathematicians, astronomers, chemists, etc., have been known - to their reproach be it spoken and published - to be without religion; nay, some of them have blasphemed it, by leaving God out of his own work, and ascribing to an idol of their own, whom they call nature, the operations of the wisdom, power, and goodness of the Most High. It is true that many of the most eminent in all the above branches of knowledge have been conscientious believers in Divine revelation; but the case of the others proves that, fallen as man is, he yet possesses extra-ordinary powers, which are capable of very high cultivation and improvement. In short, the soul seems capable of any thing but knowing, fearing, loving, and serving God. And it is not only incapable, of itself, for any truly religious acts; but what shows its fall in the most indisputable manner is its enmity to sacred things. Let an unregenerate man pretend what he pleases, his conscience knows that he hates religion; his soul revolts against it; his carnal mind is not subject to the law of God, neither indeed can it be. There is no reducing this fell principle to subjection; it is Sin, and sin is rebellion against God; therefore sin must be destroyed, not subjected; if subjected, it would cease to be sin, because sin is in opposition to God: hence the apostle says, most conclusively, it cannot be subjected, i.e. it must be destroyed, or it will destroy the soul for ever. When the apostle says, to will is present with me, he shows that the will is on the side of God and truth, so far that it consents to the propriety and necessity of obedience. There has been a strange clamor raised up against this faculty of the soul, as if the very essence of evil dwelt in it; whereas the apostle shows, throughout this chapter, that the will was regularly on God’ s side, while every other faculty appears to have been in hostility to him. The truth is, men have confounded the will with the passions, and laid to the charge of the former what properly belongs to the latter. The will is right, but the passions are wrong. It discerns and approves, but is without ability to perform: it has no power over sensual appetites; in these the principle of rebellion dwells: it nills evil, it wills good, but can only command through the power of Divine grace: but this the person in question, the unregenerate man, has not received.

Clarke: Rom 7:19 - -- For the good that I would I do not - Here again is the most decisive proof that the will is on the side of God and truth

For the good that I would I do not - Here again is the most decisive proof that the will is on the side of God and truth

Clarke: Rom 7:19 - -- But the evil which I would not - And here is equally decisive proof that the will is against, or opposed to evil. There is not a man in ten millions...

But the evil which I would not - And here is equally decisive proof that the will is against, or opposed to evil. There is not a man in ten millions, who will carefully watch the operations of this faculty, that will find it opposed to good and obstinately attached to evil, as is generally supposed. Nay, it is found almost uniformly on God’ s side, while the whole sensual system is against him. - It is not the Will that leads men astray; but the corrupt Passions which oppose and oppress the will. It is truly astonishing into what endless mistakes men have fallen on this point, and what systems of divinity have been built on these mistakes. The will, this almost only friend to God in the human soul, has been slandered as God’ s worst enemy, and even by those who had the seventh chapter to the Romans before their eyes! Nay, it has been considered so fell a foe to God and goodness that it is bound in the adamantine chains of a dire necessity to do evil only; and the doctrine of will (absurdly called free will, as if will did not essentially imply what is free) has been considered one of the most destructive heresies. Let such persons put themselves to school to their Bibles and to common sense

The plain state of the case is this: the soul is so completely fallen, that it has no power to do good till it receive that power from on high. But it has power to see good, to distinguish between that and evil; to acknowledge the excellence of this good, and to will it, from a conviction of that excellence; but farther it cannot go. Yet, in various cases, it is solicited and consents to sin; and because it is will, that is, because it is a free principle, it must necessarily possess this power; and although it can do no good unless it receive grace from God, yet it is impossible to force it to sin. Even Satan himself cannot do this; and before he can get it to sin, he must gain its consent. Thus God in his endless mercy has endued this faculty with a power in which, humanly speaking, resides the salvability of the soul; and without this the soul must have eternally continued under the power of sin, or been saved as an inert, absolutely passive machine; which supposition would go as nearly to prove that it was as incapable of vice as it were of virtue

"But does not this arguing destroy the doctrine of free grace?"No! it establishes that doctrine

1.    It is through the grace, the unmerited kindness, of God, that the soul has such a faculty, and that it has not been extinguished by sin

2.    This will, though a free principle, as it respects its nilling of evil and choosing good, yet, properly speaking, has no power by which it can subjugate the evil or perform the good

We know that the eye has a power to discern objects, but without light this power is perfectly useless, and no object can be discerned by it. So, of the person represented here by the apostle, it is said, To will is present with me, το γαρ θελειν παρακειται μοι . To will is ever in readiness, it is ever at hand, it lies constantly before me; but how to perform that which is good, I find not; that is, the man is unregenerate, and he is seeking justification and holiness from the law. The law was never designed to give these - it gives the knowledge, not the cure of sin; therefore, though he nills evil and wills good, yet he can neither conquer the one nor perform the other till he receives the grace of Christ, till he seeks and finds redemption in his blood

Here, then, the free agency of man is preserved, without which he could not be in a salvable state; and the honor of the grace of Christ is maintained, without which there can be no actual salvation. There is a good sentiment on this subject in the following words of an eminent poet: -

Thou great first Cause, least understood

Who all my sense confine

To know but this, that thou art good

And that myself am blind

Yet gave me in this dark estat

To see the good from ill

And binding nature fast in fate

Left free the human will

Pope’ s Universal Prayer.

||&&$

Clarke: Rom 7:20 - -- It is no more I - My will is against it; my reason and conscience condemn it. But sin that dwelleth in me - the principle of sin, which has possesse...

It is no more I - My will is against it; my reason and conscience condemn it. But sin that dwelleth in me - the principle of sin, which has possessed itself of all my carnal appetites and passions, and thus subjects my reason and domineers over my soul. Thus I am in perpetual contradiction to myself. Two principles are continually contending in me for the mastery: my reason, on which the light of God shines, to show what is evil; and my passions, in which the principle of sin works, to bring forth fruit unto death

This strange self-contradictory propensity led some of the ancient philosophers to imagine that man has two souls, a good and a bad one; and it is on this principle that Xenophon, in his life of Cyrus, causes Araspes, a Persian nobleman, to account for some misconduct of his relative to Panthea, a beautiful female captive, whom Cyrus had entrusted to his care: - "O Cyrus, I am convinced that I have two souls; if I had but one soul, it could not at the same time pant after vice and virtue; wish and abhor the same thing. It is certain, therefore, that we have two souls; when the good soul rules, I undertake noble and virtuous actions; but when the bad soul predominates, I am constrained to do evil. All I can say at present is that I find my good soul, encouraged by thy presence, has got the better of my bad soul."See Spectator, vol. viii. No. 564. Thus, not only the ancients, but also many moderns, have trifled, and all will continue to do so who do not acknowledge the Scriptural account of the fall of man, and the lively comment upon that doctrine contained in the seventh chapter of the Epistle to the Romans.

Clarke: Rom 7:21 - -- I find then a law - I am in such a condition and state of soul, under the power of such habits and sinful propensities, that when I would do good - ...

I find then a law - I am in such a condition and state of soul, under the power of such habits and sinful propensities, that when I would do good - when my will and reason are strongly bent on obedience to the law of God and opposition to the principle of sin, evil is present with me, κακον παρακειται, evil is at hand, it lies constantly before me. That, as the will to do good is constantly at hand, Rom 7:18, so the principle of rebellion exciting me to sin is equally present; but, as the one is only will, wish, and desire, without power to do what is willed, to obtain what is wished, or to perform what is desired, sin continually prevails

The word νομος, law, in this verse, must be taken as implying any strong or confirmed habit, συνηθεια, as Hesychius renders it, under the influence of which the man generally acts; and in this sense the apostle most evidently uses it in Rom 7:23.

Clarke: Rom 7:22 - -- I delight in the law of God after the inward man - Every Jew, and every unregenerate man, who receives the Old Testament as a revelation from God, m...

I delight in the law of God after the inward man - Every Jew, and every unregenerate man, who receives the Old Testament as a revelation from God, must acknowledge the great purity, excellence and utility of its maxims, etc., though he will ever find that without the grace of our Lord Jesus he can never act according to those heavenly maxims; and without the mercy of God, can never be redeemed from the curse entailed upon him for his past transgressions. To say that the inward man means the regenerate part of the soul, is supportable by no argument. Ὁ εσω ανθρωπος, and ὁ εντος ανθρωπος, especially the latter, are expressions frequently in use among the purest Greek ethic writers, to signify the soul or rational part of man, in opposition to the body of flesh. See the quotations in Wetstein from Plato and Plotinus. The Jews have the same form of expression; so in Yalcut Rubeni, fol. 10, 3, it is said: The flesh is the inward garment of the man; but the Spirit is the Inward man, the garment of which is the body; and St. Paul uses the phrase in precisely the same sense in 2Co 4:16, and Eph 3:16. If it be said that it is impossible for an unregenerate man to delight in the law of God, the experience of millions contradicts the assertion. Every true penitent admires the moral law, longs most earnestly for a conformity to it, and feels that he can never be satisfied till he awakes up after this Divine likeness; and he hates himself, because he feels that he has broken it, and that his evil passions are still in a state of hostility to it

The following observations of a pious and sensible writer on this subject cannot be unacceptable: "The inward man always signifies the mind; which either may, or may not, be the subject of grace. That which is asserted of either the inward or outward man is often performed by one member or power, and not with the whole. If any member of the body perform an action, we are said to do it with the body, although the other members be not employed. In like manner, if any power or faculty of the mind be employed about any action, the soul is said to act. This expression, therefore, I delight in the law of God after the inward man, can mean no more than this, that there are some inward faculties in the soul which delight in the law of God. This expression is particularly adapted to the principles of the Pharisees, of whom St. Paul was one before his conversion. They received the law as the oracles of God, and confessed that it deserved the most serious regard. Their veneration was inspired by a sense of its original, and a full conviction that it was true. To some parts of it they paid the most superstitious regard. They had it written upon their phylacteries, which they carried about with them at all times. It was often read and expounded in their synagogues: and they took delight in studying its precepts. On that account, both the prophets and our Lord agree in saying that they delighted in the law of God, though they regarded not its chief and most essential precepts."See farther observations on this point at the end of the chapter, (Rom 7:22-25 (note))

So far, then, is it from being true that none but a Regenerate man can delight in the law of God, we find that even a proud, unhumbled Pharisee can do it; and much more a poor sinner, who is humbled under a sense of his sin, and sees, in the light of God, not only the spirituality, but the excellence of the Divine law.

Calvin: Rom 7:1 - -- Though he had, in a brief manner, sufficiently explained the question respecting the abrogation of the law; yet as it was a difficult one, and might ...

Though he had, in a brief manner, sufficiently explained the question respecting the abrogation of the law; yet as it was a difficult one, and might have given rise to many other questions, he now shows more at large how the law, with regard to us, is become abrogated; and then he sets forth what good is thereby done to us: for while it holds us separated from Christ and bound to itself, it can do nothing but condemn us. And lest any one should on this account blame the law itself, he takes up and confutes the objections of the flesh, and handles, in a striking manner, the great question respecting the use of the law. 201

1.Know ye not, === etc. Let the general proposition be that the law was given to men for no other end but to regulate the present life, and that it belongs not to those who are dead: to this he afterwards subjoins this truth — that we are dead to it through the body of Christ. Some understand, that the dominion of the law continues so long to bind us as it remains in force. But as this view is rather obscure, and does not harmonize so well with the proposition which immediately follows, I prefer to follow those who regard what is said as referring to the life of man, and not to the law. The question has indeed a peculiar force, as it affirms the certainty of what is spoken; for it shows that it was not a thing new or unknown to any of them, but acknowledged equally by them all.

===(For to those who know the law I speak.) This parenthesis is to be taken in the same sense with the question, as though he had said — that he knew that they were not so unskilful in the law as to entertain any doubt on the subject. And though both sentences might be understood of all laws, it is yet better to take them as referring to the law of God, which is the subject that is discussed. There are some who think that he ascribes knowledge of the law to the Romans, because the largest part of the world was under their power and government; but this is puerile: for he addressed in part the Jews or other strangers, and in part common and obscure individuals; nay, he mainly regarded the Jews, with whom he had to do respecting the abrogation of the law: and lest they should think that he was dealing captiously with them, he declares that he took up a common principle, known to them all, of which they could by no means be ignorant, who had from their childhood been brought up in the teaching of the law.

Calvin: Rom 7:2 - -- 2.For a woman subject to a man, === etc. He brings a similitude, by which he proves, that we are so loosed from the law, that it does not any longer...

2.For a woman subject to a man, === etc. He brings a similitude, by which he proves, that we are so loosed from the law, that it does not any longer, properly and by its own right, retain over us any authority: and though he could have proved this by other reasons, yet as the example of marriage was very suitable to illustrate the subject, he introduced this comparison instead of evidence to prove his point. But that no one may be puzzled, because the different parts of the comparison do not altogether correspond, we are to be reminded, that the Apostle designedly intended, by a little change, to avoid the invidiousness of a stronger expression. He might have said, in order to make the comparison complete, “A woman after the death of her husband is loosed from the bond of marriage: the law, which is in the place of a husband to us, is to us dead; then we are freed from its power.” But that he might not offend the Jews by the asperity of his expressions, had he said that the law was dead, he adopted a digression, and said, that we are dead to the law 202 To some indeed he appears to reason from the less to the greater: however, as I fear that this is too strained, I approve more of the first meaning, which is simpler. The whole argument then is formed in this manner “The woman is bound to her living husband by the law, so that she cannot be the wife of another; but after the death of her husband she is loosed from the bond of his law so, that she is free to marry whom she pleases.”

===Then follows the application,
The law was, as it were our husband,
under whose yoke we were kept until it became dead to us:
After the death of the law Christ received us, that is, he joined us,
when loosed from the law, to himself:
Then being united to Christ risen from the dead,
we ought to cleave to him alone:
And as the life of Christ after the resurrection is eternal,
so hereafter there shall be no divorce.

But further, the word law is not mentioned here in every part in the same sense: for in one place it means the bond of marriage; in another, the authority of a husband over his wife; and in another, the law of Moses: but we must remember, that Paul refers here only to that office of the law which was peculiar to the dispensation of Moses; for as far as God has in the ten commandments taught what is just and right, and given directions for guiding our life, no abrogation of the law is to be dreamt of; for the will of God must stand the same forever. We ought carefully to remember that this is not a release from the righteousness which is taught in the law, but from its rigid requirements, and from the curse which thence follows. The law, then, as a rule of life, is not abrogated; but what belongs to it as opposed to the liberty obtained through Christ, that is, as it requires absolute perfection: for as we render not this perfection, it binds us under the sentence of eternal death. But as it was not his purpose to decide here the character of the bond of marriage, he was not anxious to mention the causes which releases a woman from her husband. It is therefore unreasonable that anything decisive on this point should be sought here.

Calvin: Rom 7:4 - -- 4.Through the body of Christ Christ, by the glorious victory of the cross, first triumphed over sin; and that he might do this, it was necessary that...

4.Through the body of Christ Christ, by the glorious victory of the cross, first triumphed over sin; and that he might do this, it was necessary that the handwriting, by which we were held bound, should be cancelled. This handwriting was the law, which, while it continued in force, rendered us bound to serve 203 sin; and hence it is called the power of sin. It was then by cancelling this handwriting that we were delivered through the body of Christ — through his body as fixed to the cross. 204 But the Apostle goes farther, and says, that the bond of the law was destroyed; not that we may live according to our own will, like a widow, who lives as she pleases while single; but that we may be now bound to another husband; nay, that we may pass from hand to hand, as they say, that is, from the law to Christ. He at the same time softens the asperity of the expression, by saying that Christ, in order to join us to his own body, made us free from the yoke of the law. For though Christ subjected himself for a time of his own accord to the law, it is not yet right to say that the law ruled over him. Moreover, he conveys to his own members the liberty which he himself possesses. It is then no wonder that he exempts those from the yoke of the law, whom he unites by a sacred bond to himself, that they may be one body in him.

Even his who has been raised, etc. We have already said, that Christ is substituted for the law, lest any freedom should be pretended without him, or lest any, being not yet dead to the law, should dare to divorce himself from it. But he adopts here a periphrastic sentence to denote the eternity of that life which Christ attained by his resurrection, that Christians might know that this connection is to be perpetual. But of the spiritual marriage between Christ and his Church he speaks more fully in Eph 6:0

That we may bring forth fruit to God He ever annexes the final cause, lest any should indulge the liberty of their flesh and their own lusts, under the pretense that Christ has delivered them from the bondage of the law; for he has offered us, together with himself, as a sacrifice to the Father, and he regenerates us for this end — that by newness of life we may bring forth fruit unto God: and we know that the fruits which our heavenly Father requires from us are those of holiness and righteousness. It is indeed no abatement to our liberty that we serve God; nay, if we desire to enjoy so great a benefit as there is in Christ, it will not henceforth be right in us to entertain any other thought but that of promoting the glory of God; for which purpose Christ has connected us with himself. We shall otherwise remain the bond-slaves, not only of the law, but also of sin and of death.

Calvin: Rom 7:5 - -- 5.For when we were, === etc. He shows still more clearly by stating the contrary effect, how unreasonably the zealots of the law acted, who would st...

5.For when we were, === etc. He shows still more clearly by stating the contrary effect, how unreasonably the zealots of the law acted, who would still detain the faithful under its dominion; for as long as the literal teaching of the law, unconnected with the Spirit of Christ, rules and bears sway, the wantonness of the flesh is not restrained, but, on the contrary, breaks out and prevails. It hence follows, that the kingdom of righteousness is not established, except when Christ emancipates us from the law. Paul at the same time reminds us of the works which it becomes us to do, when set free from the law. As long, then, as man is kept under the yoke of the law, he can, as he is sinning continually, procure nothing for himself but death. Since bondage to the law produces sin only, then freedom, its opposite, must tend to righteousness; if the former leads to death, then the latter leads to life. But let us consider the very words of Paul.

In describing our condition during the time we were subject to the dominion of the law, he says, that we were in the flesh. We hence understand, that all those who are under the law attain nothing else but this — that their ears are struck by its external sound without any fruit or effect, while they are inwardly destitute of the Spirit of God. They must therefore necessarily remain altogether sinful and perverse, until a better remedy succeeds to heal their diseases. Observe also this usual phrase of Scripture, to be in the flesh; it means to be endued only with the gifts of nature, without that peculiar grace with which God favors his chosen people. But if this state of life is altogether sinful, it is evident that no part of our soul is naturally sound, and that the power of free will is no other than the power of casting evil emotions as darts into all the faculties of the soul. 205

===The emotions of sins, 206 which are through the law, etc.; that is, the law excited in us evil emotions, which exerted their influence through all our faculties; for there is no part which is not subject to these depraved passions. What the law does, in the absence of the inward teacher, the Spirit, is increasingly to inflame our hearts, so that they boil up with lusts. But observe here, that the law is connected with the vicious nature of man, the perversity of which, and its lusts, break forth with greater fury, the more they are checked by the restraints of righteousness. He further adds, that as long as the emotions of the flesh were under the dominion of the law they brought forth fruit to death; and he adds this to show that the law by itself is destructive. It hence follows, that they are infatuated, who so much desire this bondage which issues in death.

Calvin: Rom 7:6 - -- 6.But now we have been loosed from the law, etc. He pursues the argument derived from the opposite effect of things, — “If the restraint of the...

6.But now we have been loosed from the law, etc. He pursues the argument derived from the opposite effect of things, — “If the restraint of the law availed so little to bridle the flesh, that it became rather the exciter of sin; then, that we may cease from sin, we must necessarily be freed from the law.” Again, “If we are freed from the bondage of the law for this end, that we may serve God; then, perversely do they act who hence take the liberty to indulge in sin; and falsely do they speak who teach, that by this means loose reins are given to lusts.” Observe, then, that we are then freed from the law, when God emancipates us from its rigid exactions and curse, and endues us with his Spirit, through whom we walk in his ways. 207

Having died to that, etc This part contains a reason, or rather, indicates the manner in which we are made free; for the law is so far abrogated with regard to us, that we are not pressed down by its intolerable burden, and that its inexorable rigor does not overwhelm us with a curse. 208 In newness of spirit; He sets the spirit in opposition to the letter; for before our will is formed according to the will of God by the Holy Spirit, we have in the law nothing but the outward letter, which indeed bridles our external actions, but does not in the least restrain the fury of our lusts. And he ascribes newness to the Spirit, because it succeeds the old man; as the letter is called old, because it perishes through the regeneration of the Spirit.

Calvin: Rom 7:7 - -- 7.What then shall we say? Since it has been said that we must be freed from the law, in order that we may serve God in newness of spirit, it seemed a...

7.What then shall we say? Since it has been said that we must be freed from the law, in order that we may serve God in newness of spirit, it seemed as though this evil belonged to the law, — that it leads us to sin. But as this would be above measure inconsistent, the Apostle rightly undertook to disprove it. Now when he adds, Is the law sin? what he means is, “Does it so produce sin that its guilt ought to be imputed to the law?” — But sin I knew not, except through the law; sin then dwells in us, and not in the law; for the cause of it is the depraved lust of our flesh, and we come to know it by the knowledge of God’s righteousness, which is revealed to us in the law. 210 You are not indeed to understand, that no difference whatever can be known between right and wrong without the law; but that without the law we are either too dull of apprehension to discern our depravity, or that we are made wholly insensible through self-flattery, according to what follows, —

For coveting I had not known, === etc. This is then an explanation of the former sentence, by which he proves that ignorance of sin, of which he had spoken, consisted in this — that he perceived not his own coveting. And he designedly referred to this one kind of sin, in which hypocrisy especially prevails, which has ever connected with itself supine self-indulgence and false assurance. For men are never so destitute of judgment, but that they retain a distinction in external works; nay, they are constrained even to condemn wicked counsels and sinister purposes: and this they cannot do, without ascribing to a right object its own praise. But coveting is more hidden and lies deeper; hence no account is made of it, as long as men judge according to their perceptions of what is outward. He does not indeed boast that he was free from it; but he so flattered himself, that he did not think that this sin was lurking in his heart. For though for a time he was deceived, and believed not that righteousness would be violated by coveting, he yet, at length, understood that he was a sinner, when he saw that coveting, from which no one is free, was prohibited by the law.

[Augustine] says, that Paul included in this expression the whole law; which, when rightly understood, is true: for when Moses had stated the things from which we must abstain, that we may not wrong our neighbor, he subjoined this prohibition as to coveting, which must be referred to all the things previously forbidden. There is no doubt but that he had in the former precepts condemned all the evil desires which our hearts conceive; but there is much difference between a deliberate purpose, and the desires by which we are tempted. God then, in this last command, requires so much integrity from us, that no vicious lust is to move us to evil, even when no consent succeeds. Hence it was, that I have said, that Paul here ascends higher than where the understanding of men can carry them. But civil laws do indeed declare, that intentions and not issues are to be punished. Philosophers also, with greater refinement, place vices as well as virtues in the soul. But God, by this precept, goes deeper and notices coveting, which is more hidden than the will; and this is not deemed a vice. It was pardoned not only by philosophers, but at this day the Papists fiercely contend, that it is no sin in the regenerate. 211 But Paul says, that he had found out his guilt from this hidden disease: it hence follows, that all those who labor under it, are by no means free from guilt, except God pardons their sin. We ought, at the same time, to remember the difference between evil lustings or covetings which gain consent, and the lusting which tempts and moves our hearts, but stops in the midst of its course.

8.=== But an occasion being taken, etc. From sin, then, and the corruption of the flesh, proceeds every evil; the law is only the occasion. And though he may seem to speak only of that excitement, by which our lusting is instigated through the law, so that it boils out with greater fury; yet I refer this chiefly to the knowledge the law conveys; as though he had said, “It has discovered to me every lust or coveting which, being hid, seemed somehow to have no existence.” I do not yet deny, but that the flesh is more sharply stimulated to lusting by the law, and also by this means more clearly shows itself; which may have been also the case with Paul: but what I have said of the knowledge it brings, seems to harmonize better with the context; 212 for he immediately subjoins —

Calvin: Rom 7:8 - -- 8.=== For without the law, === etc. He expresses most clearly the meaning of his former words; for it is the same as though he had said, that the kn...

8.=== For without the law, === etc. He expresses most clearly the meaning of his former words; for it is the same as though he had said, that the knowledge of sin without the law is buried. It is a general truth, which he presently applies to his own case. I hence wonder what could have come into the minds of interpreters to render the passage in the preterimperfect tense, as though Paul was speaking of himself; for it is easy to see that his purpose was to begin with a general proposition, and then to explain the subject by his own example.

Calvin: Rom 7:9 - -- 9.=== For I was alive, === etc. He means to intimate that there had been a time when sin was dead to him or in him. But he is not to be understood a...

9.=== For I was alive, === etc. He means to intimate that there had been a time when sin was dead to him or in him. But he is not to be understood as though he had been without law at any time, but this word I was alive has a peculiar import; for it was the absence of the law that was the reason why he was alive; that is, why he being inflated with a conceit as to his own righteousness, claimed life to himself while he was yet dead. That the sentence may be more clear, state it thus, “When I was formerly without the law, I was alive.” But I have said that this expression is emphatic; for by imagining himself great, he also laid claim to life. The meaning then is this, “When I sinned, having not the knowledge of the law, the sin, which I did not observe, was so laid to sleep, that it seemed to be dead; on the other hand, as I seemed not to myself to be a sinner, I was satisfied with myself, thinking that I had a life of mine own.” But the death of sin is the life of man, and again the life of sin is the death of man.

It may be here asked, what time was that when through his ignorance of the law, or as he himself says, through the absence of it, he confidently laid claim to life. It is indeed certain, that he had been taught the doctrine of the law from his childhood; but it was the theology of the letter, which does not humble its disciples, for as he says elsewhere, the veil interposed so that the Jews could not see the light of life in the law; so also he himself, while he had his eyes veiled, being destitute of the Spirit of Christ, was satisfied with the outward mask of righteousness. Hence he represents the law as absent, though before his eyes, while it did not really impress him with the consciousness of God’s judgment. Thus the eyes of hypocrites are covered with a veil, that they see not how much that command requires, in which we are forbidden to lust or covet.

===But when the commandment came, === etc. So now, on the other hand, he sets forth the law as coming when it began to be really understood. It then raised sin as it were from be dead; for it discovered to Paul how great depravity abounded in the recesses of his heart, and at the same time it slew him. We must ever remember that he speaks of that inebriating confidence in which hypocrites settle, while they flatter themselves, because they overlook their sins.

Calvin: Rom 7:10 - -- 10.=== Was found by me, === etc. Two things are stated here — that the commandment shows to us a way of life in the righteousness of God, and that...

10.=== Was found by me, === etc. Two things are stated here — that the commandment shows to us a way of life in the righteousness of God, and that it was given in order that we by keeping the law of the Lord might obtain eternal life, except our corruption stood in the way. But as none of us obey the law, but, on the contrary, are carried headlong on our feet and hands into that kind of life from which it recalls us, it can bring us nothing but death. We must thus distinguish between the character of the law and our own wickedness. It hence follows, that it is incidental that the law inflicts on us a deadly wound, as when an incurable disease is more exasperated by a healing remedy. I indeed allow that it is an inseparable incident, and hence the law, as compared with the gospel, is called in another place the ministration of death; but still this remains unaltered, that it is not in its own nature hurtful to us, but it is so because our corruption provokes and draws upon us its curse.

Calvin: Rom 7:11 - -- 11.=== Led me out of the way, === etc. It is indeed true, that while the will of God is hid from us, and no truth shines on us, the life of men goes...

11.=== Led me out of the way, === etc. It is indeed true, that while the will of God is hid from us, and no truth shines on us, the life of men goes wholly astray and is full of errors; nay, we do nothing but wander from the right course, until the law shows to us the way of living rightly: but as we begin then only to perceive our erroneous course, when the Lord loudly reproves us, Paul says rightly, that we are led out of the way, when sin is made evident by the law. Hence the verb, ἐξαπατᾷν, must be understood, not of the thing itself, but of our knowledge; that is, that it is made manifest by the law how much we have departed from the right course. It must then be necessarily rendered, led me out of the way; for hence sinners, who before went on heedlessly, loathe and abominate themselves, when they perceive, through the light which the law throws on the turpitude of sin, that they had been hastening to death. But he away introduces the word occasion, and for this purpose — that we may know that the law of itself does not bring death, but that this happens through something else, and that this is as it were adventitious. 215

Calvin: Rom 7:12 - -- 12.So then the law is indeed holy, etc. Some think that the words law and commandment is a repetition of the same thing; with whom I agree; 216...

12.So then the law is indeed holy, etc. Some think that the words law and commandment is a repetition of the same thing; with whom I agree; 216 and I consider that there is a peculiar force in the words, when he says, that the law itself and whatever is commanded in the law, is holy, and therefore to be regarded with the highest reverence, — that it is just, and cannot therefore be charged with anything wrong, — that it is good, and hence pure and free from everything that can do harm. He thus defends the law against every charge of blame, that no one should ascribe to it what is contrary to goodness, justice, and holiness.

Calvin: Rom 7:13 - -- 13.Has then what is good, etc. He had hitherto defended the law from calumnies, but in such a manner, that it still remained doubtful whether it wa...

13.Has then what is good, etc. He had hitherto defended the law from calumnies, but in such a manner, that it still remained doubtful whether it was the cause of death; nay, the minds of men were on this point perplexed, — how could it be that nothing but death was gained from so singular a gift of God. To this objection then he now gives an answer; and he denies, that death proceeds from the law, though death through its means is brought on us by sin. And though this answer seems to militate in appearance against what he had said before — that he had found the commandment, which was given for life, to be unto death, there is yet no contrariety. He had indeed said before, that it is through our wickedness that the law is turned to our destruction, and that contrary to its own character; but here he denies, that it is in such a sense the cause of death, that death is to be imputed to it. In 2Co 3:0 he treats more fully of the law. He there calls it the ministration of death; but he so calls it according to what is commonly done in a dispute, and represents, not the real character of the law, but the false opinion of his opponents. 217

===But sin, === etc. With no intention to offend others, I must state it as my opinion, that this passage ought to be read as I have rendered it, and the meaning is this, — “Sin is in a manner regarded as just before it is discovered by the law; but when it is by the law made known, then it really obtains its own name of sin; and hence it appears the more wicked, and, so to speak, the more sinful, because it turns the goodness of the law, by perverting it, to our destruction; for that must be very pestiferous, which makes what is in its own nature salutary to be hurtful to us.” The import of the whole is — that it was necessary for the atrocity of sin to be discovered by the law; for except sin had burst forth into outrageous, or, as they say, into enormous excess, it would not have been acknowledged as sin; and the more outrageous does its enormity appear, when it converts life into death; and thus every excuse is taken away from it. 218

Calvin: Rom 7:14 - -- 14.For we know that the law, === etc. He now begins more closely to compare the law with what man is, that it may be more clearly understood whence ...

14.For we know that the law, === etc. He now begins more closely to compare the law with what man is, that it may be more clearly understood whence the evil of death proceeds. He then sets before us an example in a regenerate man, in whom the remnants of the flesh are wholly contrary to the law of the Lord, while the spirit would gladly obey it. But first, as we have said, he makes only a comparison between nature and the law. Since in human things there is no greater discord than between spirit and flesh, the law being spiritual and man carnal, what agreement can there be between the natural man and the law? Even the same as between darkness and light. But by calling the law spiritual, he not only means, as some expound the passage, that it requires the inward affections of the heart; but that, by way of contrast, it has a contrary import to the word carnal 219 These interpreters give this explanation, “The law is spiritual, that is, it binds not only the feet and hands as to external works, but regards the feelings of the heart, and requires the real fear of God.”

But here a contrast is evidently set forth between the flesh and the spirit. And further, it is sufficiently clear from the context, and it has been in fact already shown, that under the term flesh is included whatever men bring from the womb; and flesh is what men are called, as they are born, and as long as they retain their natural character; for as they are corrupt, so they neither taste nor desire anything but what is gross and earthly. Spirit, on the contrary, is renewed nature, which God forms anew after his own image. And this mode of speaking is adopted on this account — because the newness which is wrought in us is the gift of the Spirit.

The perfection then of the doctrine of the law is opposed here to the corrupt nature of man: hence the meaning is as follows, “The law requires a celestial and an angelic righteousness, in which no spot is to appear, to whose clearness nothing is to be wanting: but I am a carnal man, who can do nothing but oppose it.” 220 But the exposition of [Origen], which indeed has been approved by many before our time, is not worthy of being refuted; he says, that the law is called spiritual by Paul, because the Scripture is not to be understood literally. What has this to do with the present subject?

===Sold under sin By this clause he shows what flesh is in itself; for man by nature is no less the slave of sin, than those bondmen, bought with money, whom their masters ill treat at their pleasure, as they do their oxen and their asses. We are so entirely controlled by the power of sin, that the whole mind, the whole heart, and all our actions are under its influence. Compulsion I always except, for we sin spontaneously, as it would be no sin, were it not voluntary. But we are so given up to sin, that we can do willingly nothing but sin; for the corruption which bears rule within us thus drives us onward. Hence this comparison does not import, as they say, a forced service, but a voluntary obedience, which an inbred bondage inclines us to render.

Calvin: Rom 7:15 - -- 15.For what I do I know not, etc. He now comes to a more particular case, that of a man already regenerated; 221 in whom both the things which he h...

15.For what I do I know not, etc. He now comes to a more particular case, that of a man already regenerated; 221 in whom both the things which he had in view appear more clearly; and these were, — the great discord there is between the Law of God and the natural man, — and how the law does not of itself produce death. For since the carnal man rushes into sin with the whole propensity of his mind, he seems to sin with such a free choice, as though it were in his power to govern himself; so that a most pernicious opinion has prevailed almost among all men — that man, by his own natural strength, without the aid of Divine grace, can choose what he pleases. But though the will of a faithful man is led to good by the Spirit of God, yet in him the corruption of nature appears conspicuously; for it obstinately resists and leads to what is contrary. Hence the case of a regenerated man is the most suitable; for by this you may know how much is the contrariety between our nature and the righteousness of the law. From this case, also, a proof as to the other clause may more fitly be sought, than from the mere consideration of human nature; for the law, as it produces only death in a man wholly carnal, is in him more easily impeached, for it is doubtful whence the evil proceeds. In a regenerate man it brings forth salutary fruits; and hence it appears, that it is the flesh only that prevents it from giving life: so far it is from producing death of itself.

That the whole, then, of this reasoning may be more fully and more distinctly understood, we must observe, that this conflict, of which the Apostle speaks, does not exist in man before he is renewed by the Spirit of God: for man, left to his own nature, is wholly borne along by his lusts without any resistance; for though the ungodly are tormented by the stings of conscience, and cannot take such delight in their vices, but that they have some taste of bitterness; yet you cannot hence conclude, either that evil is hated, or that good is loved by them; only the Lord permits them to be thus tormented, in order to show to them in a measure his judgment; but not to imbue them either with the love of righteousness or with the hatred of sin.

There is then this difference between them and the faithful — that they are never so blinded and hardened, but that when they are reminded of their crimes, they condemn them in their own conscience; for knowledge is not so utterly extinguished in them, but that they still retain the difference between right and wrong; and sometimes they are shaken with such dread under a sense of their sin, that they bear a kind of condemnation even in this life: nevertheless they approve of sin with all their heart, and hence give themselves up to it without any feeling of genuine repugnance; for those stings of conscience, by which they are harassed, proceed from opposition in the judgment, rather than from any contrary inclination in the will. The godly, on the other hand, in whom the regeneration of God is begun, are so divided, that with the chief desire of the heart they aspire to God, seek celestial righteousness, hate sin, and yet they are drawn down to the earth by the relics of their flesh: and thus, while pulled in two ways, they fight against their own nature, and nature fights against them; and they condemn their sins, not only as being constrained by the judgment of reason, but because they really in their hearts abominate them, and on their account loathe themselves. This is the Christian conflict between the flesh and the spirit of which Paul speaks in Gal 5:17.

It has therefore been justly said, that the carnal man runs headlong into sin with the approbation and consent of the whole soul; but that a division then immediately begins for the first time, when he is called by the Lord and renewed by the Spirit. For regeneration only begins in this life; the relics of the flesh which remain, always follow their own corrupt propensities, and thus carry on a contest against the Spirit.

The inexperienced, who consider not the subject which the Apostle handles, nor the plan which he pursues, imagine, that the character of man by nature is here described; and indeed there is a similar description of human nature given to us by the Philosophers: but Scripture philosophizes much deeper; for it finds that nothing has remained in the heart of man but corruption, since the time in which Adam lost the image of God. So when the Sophisters wish to define free-will, or to form an estimate of what the power of nature can do, they fix on this passage. But Paul, as I have said already, does not here set before us simply the natural man, but in his own person describes what is the weakness of the faithful, and how great it is. [Augustine] was for a time involved in the common error; but after having more clearly examined the passage, he not only retracted what he had falsely taught, but in his first book to Boniface, he proves, by many strong reasons, that what is said cannot be applied to any but to the regenerate. And we shall now endeavor to make our readers clearly to see that such is the case.

I know not He means that he acknowledges not as his own the works which he did through the weakness of the flesh, for he hated them. And so [Erasmus] has not unsuitably given this rendering, “I approve not,” ( non probo .) 222 We hence conclude, that the doctrine of the law is so consentaneous to right judgment, that the faithful repudiate the transgression of it as a thing wholly unreasonable. But as Paul seems to allow that he teaches otherwise than what the law prescribes, many interpreters have been led astray, and have thought that he had assumed the person of another; hence has arisen the common error, that the character of an unregenerate man is described throughout this portion of the chapter. But Paul, under the idea of transgressing the law, includes all the defects of the godly, which are not inconsistent with the fear of God or with the endeavor of acting uprightly. And he denies that he did what the law demanded, for this reason, because he did not perfectly fulfil it, but somewhat failed in his effort.

===For not what I desire, === etc. You must not understand that it was always the case with him, that he could not do good; but what he complains of is only this — that he could not perform what he wished, so that he pursued not what was good with that alacrity which was meet, because he was held in a manner bound, and that he also failed in what he wished to do, because he halted through the weakness of the flesh. Hence the pious mind performs not the good it desires to do, because it proceeds not with due activity, and doeth the evil which it would not; for while it desires to stand, it falls, or at least it staggers. But the expressions to will and not to will must be applied to the Spirit, which ought to hold the first place in all the faithful. The flesh indeed has also its own will, but Paul calls that the will which is the chief desire of the heart; and that which militates with it he represents as being contrary to his will.

We may hence learn the truth of what we have stated — that Paul speaks here of the faithful, 223 in whom the grace of the Spirit exists, which brings an agreement between the mind and the righteousness of the law; for no hatred of sin is to be found in the flesh.

Calvin: Rom 7:16 - -- 16.=== But if what I desire not, I do, I consent to the law, === etc.; that is, “When my heart acquiesces in the law, and is delighted with its rig...

16.=== But if what I desire not, I do, I consent to the law, === etc.; that is, “When my heart acquiesces in the law, and is delighted with its righteousness, (which certainly is the case when it hates the transgression of it,) it then perceives and acknowledges the goodness of the law, so that we are fully convinced, experience itself being our teacher, that no evil ought to be imputed to the law; nay, that it would be salutary to men, were it to meet with upright and pure hearts.” But this consent is not to be understood to be the same with what we have heard exists in the ungodly, who have expressed words of this kind, “I see better things and approve of them; I follow the worse.” Again, “What is hurtful I follow; I shun what I believe would be profitable.” For these act under a constraint when they subscribe to the righteousness of God, as their will is wholly alienated from it, but the godly man consents to the law with the real and most cheerful desire of his heart; for he wishes nothing more than to mount up to heaven. 224

Calvin: Rom 7:17 - -- 17.Now it is no more I who do it, etc. This is not the pleading of one excusing himself, as though he was blameless, as the case is with many trifl...

17.Now it is no more I who do it, etc. This is not the pleading of one excusing himself, as though he was blameless, as the case is with many triflers who think that they have a sufficient defense to cover all their wickedness, when they cast the blame on the flesh; but it is a declaration, by which he shows how very far he dissented from his own flesh in his spiritual feeling; for the faithful are carried along in their obedience to God with such fervour of spirit that they deny the flesh.

This passage also clearly shows, that Paul speaks here of none but of the godly, who have been already born again; for as long as man remains like himself, whatsoever he may be, he is justly deemed corrupt; but Paul here denies that he is wholly possessed by sin; nay, he declares himself to be exempt from its bondage, as though he had said, that sin only dwelt in some part of his soul, while with an earnest feeling of heart he strove for and aspired after the righteousness of God, and clearly proved that he had the law of God engraven within him. 225

Calvin: Rom 7:18 - -- 18.For I know, etc. He says that no good by nature dwelt in him. Then in me, means the same as though he had said, “So far as it regards myself....

18.For I know, etc. He says that no good by nature dwelt in him. Then in me, means the same as though he had said, “So far as it regards myself.” In the first part he indeed arraigns himself as being wholly depraved, for he confesses that no good dwelt in him; and then he subjoins a modification, lest he should slight the grace of God which also dwelt in him, but was no part of his flesh. And here again he confirms the fact, that he did not speak of men in general, but of the faithful, who are divided into two parts — the relics of the flesh, and grace. For why was the modification made, except some part was exempt from depravity, and therefore not flesh? Under the term flesh, he ever includes all that human nature is, everything in man, except the sanctification of the Spirit. In the same manner, by the term spirit, which is commonly opposed to the flesh, he means that part of the soul which the Spirit of God has so re-formed, and purified from corruption, that God’s image shines forth in it. Then both terms, flesh as well as spirit, belong to the soul; but the latter to that part which is renewed, and the former to that which still retains its natural character. 227

To will is present, etc. He does not mean that he had nothing but an ineffectual desire, but his meaning is, that the work really done did not correspond to his will; for the flesh hindered him from doing perfectly what he did. So also understand what follows, The evil I desire not, that I do: for the flesh not only impedes the faithful, so that they can not run swiftly, but it sets also before them many obstacles at which they stumble. Hence they do not, because they accomplish not, what they would, with the alacrity that is meet. This, to will, then, which he mentions, is the readiness of faith, when the Holy Spirit so prepares the godly that they are ready and strive to render obedience to God; but as their ability is not equal to what they wish, Paul says, that he found not what he desired, even the accomplishment of the good he aimed at.

Calvin: Rom 7:19 - -- 19. The same view is to be taken of the expression which next follows, — that he did not the good which he desired, but, on the contrary, the ...

19. The same view is to be taken of the expression which next follows, — that he did not the good which he desired, but, on the contrary, the evil which he desired not: for the faithful, however rightly they may be influenced, are yet so conscious of their own infirmity, that they can deem no work proceeding from them as blameless. For as Paul does not here treat of some of the faults of the godly, but delineates in general the whole course of their life, we conclude that their best works are always stained with some blots of sin, so that no reward can be hoped, unless God pardons them.

He at last repeats the sentiment, — that, as far as he was endued with celestial light, he was a true witness and subscriber to the righteousness of the law. It hence follows, that had the pure integrity of our nature remained, the law would not have brought death on us, and that it is not adverse to the man who is endued with a sound and right mind and abhors sin. But to restore health is the work of our heavenly Physician.

Calvin: Rom 7:21 - -- 21.I find then, etc. Here Paul supposes a fourfold law. The first is the law of God, which alone is properly so called, which is the rule of righte...

21.I find then, etc. Here Paul supposes a fourfold law. The first is the law of God, which alone is properly so called, which is the rule of righteousness, by which our life is rightly formed. To this he joins the law of the mind, and by this he means the prompt readiness of the faithful mind to render obedience to the divine law, it being a certain conformity on our part with the law of God. On the other hand, he sets in opposition to this the law of unrighteousness; and according to a certain kind of similarity, he gives this name to that dominion which iniquity exercises over a man not yet regenerated, as well as over the flesh of a regenerated man; for the laws even of tyrants, however iniquitous they may be, are called laws, though not properly. To correspond with this law of sin he makes the law of the members, that is, the lust which is in the members, on account of the concord it has with iniquity.

As to the first clause, many interpreters take the word law in its proper sense, and consider κατὰ or διὰ to be understood; and so [Erasmus] renders it, “by the law;” as though Paul had said, that he, by the law of God as his teacher and guide, had found out that his sin was innate. But without supplying anything, the sentence would run better thus, “While the faithful strive after what is good, they find in themselves a certain law which exercises a tyrannical power; for a vicious propensity, adverse to and resisting the law of God, is implanted in their very marrow and bones.”

Calvin: Rom 7:22 - -- 22.For I consent 230 to the law of God, etc. Here then you see what sort of division there is in pious souls, from which arises that contest betwe...

22.For I consent 230 to the law of God, etc. Here then you see what sort of division there is in pious souls, from which arises that contest between the spirit and the flesh, which [Augustine] in some place calls the Christian struggle ( luctam Christianam .) The law calls man to the rule of righteousness; iniquity, which is, as it were, the tyrannical law of Satan, instigates him to wickedness: the Spirit leads him to render obedience to the divine law; the flesh draws him back to what is of an opposite character. Man, thus impelled by contrary desires, is now in a manner a twofold being; but as the Spirit ought to possess the sovereignty, he deems and judges himself to be especially on that side. Paul says, that he was bound a captive by his flesh for this reason, because as he was still tempted and incited by evil lusts; he deemed this a coercion with respect to the spiritual desire, which was wholly opposed to them. 231

But we ought to notice carefully the meaning of the inner man and of the members; which many have not rightly understood, and have therefore stumbled at this stone. The inner man then is not simply the soul, but that spiritual part which has been regenerated by God; and the members signify the other remaining part; for as the soul is the superior, and the body the inferior part of man, so the spirit is superior to the flesh. Then as the spirit takes the place of the soul in man, and the flesh, which is the corrupt and polluted soul, that of the body, the former has the name of the inner man, and the latter has the name of members. The inner man has indeed a different meaning in 2Co 4:16; but the circumstances of this passage require the interpretation which I have given: and it is called the inner by way of excellency; for it possesses the heart and the secret feelings, while the desires of the flesh are vagrant, and are, as it were, on the outside of man. Doubtless it is the same thing as though one compared heaven to earth; for Paul by way of contempt designates whatever appears to be in man by the term members, that he might clearly show that the hidden renovation is concealed from and escapes our observation, except it be apprehended by faith.

Now since the law of the mind undoubtedly means a principle rightly formed, it is evident that this passage is very absurdly applied to men not yet regenerated; for such, as Paul teaches us, are destitute of mind, inasmuch as their soul has become degenerated from reason.

Defender: Rom 7:4 - -- Note that the law has not died; rather, we have died to the law. As a woman could marry a new husband only after her first husband had died, so we hav...

Note that the law has not died; rather, we have died to the law. As a woman could marry a new husband only after her first husband had died, so we have been married, as it were, to our great Bridegroom after the law died or we died to the law."

Defender: Rom 7:5 - -- "Motions" is an Old English term for "impulses," which is the meaning of the Greek text. Paul is saying that the law itself, by its very prohibitions,...

"Motions" is an Old English term for "impulses," which is the meaning of the Greek text. Paul is saying that the law itself, by its very prohibitions, generates sinful impulses which lead to breaking the law."

Defender: Rom 7:6 - -- Here "the letter" is synonymous with "the law." In Christ we can serve the Lord, even keeping the law - not because of the law's bondage, but because ...

Here "the letter" is synonymous with "the law." In Christ we can serve the Lord, even keeping the law - not because of the law's bondage, but because of the Spirit's freedom (Rom 6:18)."

Defender: Rom 7:9 - -- The passage from Rom 7:7 through the end of the chapter describes the internal conflict in Paul (as in believers generally) between the old and new na...

The passage from Rom 7:7 through the end of the chapter describes the internal conflict in Paul (as in believers generally) between the old and new natures. Rom 7:22, for example "I delight in the law of God after the inward man," could not be the sincere testimony of an unsaved man, but it does reflect the attitude of a true Christian who loves God's law (Psa 119:7) but struggles with its temptations because of his still-active old sin-nature."

Defender: Rom 7:12 - -- God's law is perfect (Psa 19:7) and believers should honor it as representing perfectly the holiness and justice of God. But as sinners condemned by t...

God's law is perfect (Psa 19:7) and believers should honor it as representing perfectly the holiness and justice of God. But as sinners condemned by the law, our need is not justice but grace and mercy."

Defender: Rom 7:15 - -- Note the excessive use of the first person pronoun in this passage - no less than thirty-five times in Rom 7:15-24. The old nature, with which Paul wa...

Note the excessive use of the first person pronoun in this passage - no less than thirty-five times in Rom 7:15-24. The old nature, with which Paul was struggling, and with which every believer must struggle, is self-centered instead of Christ-centered. As long as the measure of things is "I-me-mine," instead of the will of God, then Paul's cry must soon be ours - "O wretched man that I am" (Rom 7:24)."

Defender: Rom 7:18 - -- Paul, before his conversion, could boast that he was, as "touching the righteousness which is in the law, blameless" (Phi 3:6). But then he came to se...

Paul, before his conversion, could boast that he was, as "touching the righteousness which is in the law, blameless" (Phi 3:6). But then he came to see that all his "righteousnesses [were] as filthy rags" (Isa 64:6), and accepted "eternal life through Jesus Christ" (Rom 6:23). If such a man as Paul would have to confess that in his flesh there was nothing good at all, then surely every Christian must say the same."

Defender: Rom 7:22 - -- The "inward man" here is evidently the same as the "new man," for the "old man" (Rom 6:6) could never "delight in the law of God.""

The "inward man" here is evidently the same as the "new man," for the "old man" (Rom 6:6) could never "delight in the law of God.""

TSK: Rom 7:1 - -- Know : Rom 6:3 brethren : Rom 9:3, Rom 10:1 them that : Rom 2:17, Rom 2:18; Ezr 7:25; Pro 6:23; 1Co 9:8; Gal 4:21 the law : Rom 7:6, Rom 6:14 a man : ...

Know : Rom 6:3

brethren : Rom 9:3, Rom 10:1

them that : Rom 2:17, Rom 2:18; Ezr 7:25; Pro 6:23; 1Co 9:8; Gal 4:21

the law : Rom 7:6, Rom 6:14

a man : Or, person, either man or woman; ανθρωπος [Strong’ s G444] and homo having this extent of signification.

TSK: Rom 7:2 - -- the woman : Rather, a woman. The apostle here illustrates the position laid down in the preceding verse by a familiar instance. Gen 2:23, Gen 2:24; N...

the woman : Rather, a woman. The apostle here illustrates the position laid down in the preceding verse by a familiar instance. Gen 2:23, Gen 2:24; Num 30:7, Num 30:8; 1Co 7:4, 1Co 7:39

TSK: Rom 7:3 - -- So then : Exo 20:14; Lev 20:10; Num. 5:13-31; Deu 22:22-24; Mat 5:32; Mar 10:6-12; Joh 8:3-5 though : Rth 2:13; 1Sa 25:39-42; 1Ti 5:11-14

TSK: Rom 7:4 - -- ye also : Rom 7:6, Rom 6:14, Rom 8:2; Gal 2:19, Gal 2:20, Gal 3:13, Gal 5:18; Eph 2:15; Col 2:14, Col 2:20 the body : Mat 26:26; Joh 6:51; 1Co 10:16; ...

TSK: Rom 7:5 - -- in the flesh : Rom 8:8, Rom 8:9; Joh 3:6; Gal 5:16, Gal 5:17, Gal 5:24; Eph 2:3, Eph 2:11; Tit 3:3 motions : Gr. passions, Rom 1:26 *Gr. which : Rom 3...

TSK: Rom 7:6 - -- But : Rom 7:4, Rom 6:14, Rom 6:15; Gal 3:13, Gal 3:23-25, Gal 4:4, Gal 4:5 that being dead : or, being dead to that, Rom 7:1, Rom 7:4, Rom 6:2 serve :...

TSK: Rom 7:7 - -- What : Rom 3:5, Rom 4:1, Rom 6:15 is the law : Rom 7:8, Rom 7:11, Rom 7:13; 1Co 15:56 I had : Rom 7:5, Rom 3:20; Psa 19:7-12, Psa 119:96 lust : or, co...

TSK: Rom 7:8 - -- sin : Rom 7:11, Rom 7:13, Rom 7:17, Rom 4:15, Rom 5:20 wrought : Jam 1:14, Jam 1:15 For without : etc. Rather, ""For without a law sin is dead.""Where...

sin : Rom 7:11, Rom 7:13, Rom 7:17, Rom 4:15, Rom 5:20

wrought : Jam 1:14, Jam 1:15

For without : etc. Rather, ""For without a law sin is dead.""Where there is no law, there is no transgression; for sin is the transgression of the lawcaps1 . tcaps0 he very essence of sin consists in the violation of some positive law. Rom 4:15; Joh 15:22, Joh 15:24; 1Co 15:56

TSK: Rom 7:9 - -- For I : Mat 19:20; Luk 10:25-29, Luk 15:29, Luk 18:9-12, Luk 18:21; Phi 3:5, Phi 3:6 without : Mat 5:21-26, Mat 15:4-6; Mar 7:8-13 but : Rom 3:19, Rom...

TSK: Rom 7:10 - -- Rom 10:5; Lev 18:5; Eze 20:11, Eze 20:13, Eze 20:21; Luk 10:27-29; 2Co 3:7

TSK: Rom 7:11 - -- sin : Rom 7:8, Rom 7:13 deceived : Isa 44:20; Jer 17:9, Jer 49:16; Oba 1:3; Eph 4:22; Heb 3:13; Jam 1:22, Jam 1:26

TSK: Rom 7:12 - -- the law : Rom 7:14, Rom 3:31, Rom 12:2; Deu 4:8, Deu 10:12; Neh 9:13; Psa 19:7-12, Psa 119:38, Psa 119:86, Psa 119:127, Psa 119:137; Psa 119:140,Psa 1...

TSK: Rom 7:13 - -- then : Rom 8:3; Gal 3:21 But sin : Rom 7:8-11, Rom 5:20; Jam 1:13-15

TSK: Rom 7:14 - -- the law : Lev 19:18; Deu 6:5; Psa 51:6; Mat 5:22, Mat 5:28, Mat 22:37-40; Heb 4:12 but : Rom 7:18, Rom 7:22, Rom 7:23; Job 42:6; Psa 119:25; Pro 30:2,...

TSK: Rom 7:15 - -- For that : Rom 14:22; Luk 11:48 allow : or, know, Psa 1:6; Nah 1:7; 2Ti 2:19 what : Rom 7:16, Rom 7:19, Rom 7:20; 1Ki 8:46; Psa 19:12, Psa 65:3, Psa 1...

TSK: Rom 7:16 - -- I consent : Rom 7:12, Rom 7:14, Rom 7:22; Psa 119:127, Psa 119:128

TSK: Rom 7:17 - -- it is no more : Rom 7:20, Rom 4:7, Rom 4:8; 2Co 8:12; Phi 3:8, Phi 3:9 sin : Rom 7:18, Rom 7:20,Rom 7:23; Jam 4:5, Jam 4:6

TSK: Rom 7:18 - -- that in me : Gen 6:5, Gen 8:21; Job 14:4, Job 15:14-16, Job 25:4; Psa 51:5; Isa 64:6; Mat 15:19; Mar 7:21-23; Luk 11:13; Eph 2:1-5; Tit 3:3; 1Pe 4:2 i...

TSK: Rom 7:20 - -- it is no : Rom 7:17

it is no : Rom 7:17

TSK: Rom 7:21 - -- a law : Rom 7:23, Rom 6:12, Rom 6:14, Rom 8:2; Psa 19:13, Psa 119:133; Joh 8:34; Eph 6:11-13; 2Pe 2:19 evil : 2Ch 30:18, 2Ch 30:19; Psa 19:12, Psa 40:...

TSK: Rom 7:22 - -- I delight : Rom 8:7; Job 23:12; Psa 1:2, Psa 19:8-10, Psa 40:8, Psa 119:16, Psa 119:24, Psa 119:35, Psa 119:47, Psa 119:48, Psa 119:72, Psa 119:92; Ps...

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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)

Barnes: Rom 7:1 - -- Know ye not - This is an appeal to their own observation respecting the relation between husband and wife. The illustration Rom 7:2-3 is design...

Know ye not - This is an appeal to their own observation respecting the relation between husband and wife. The illustration Rom 7:2-3 is designed simply to show that as when a man dies, and the connection between him and his wife is dissolved, his Law ceases to be binding on her, so also a separation has taken place between Christians and the Law, in which they have become dead to it, and they are not now to attempt to draw their life and peace from it, but from that new source with which they are connected by the gospel, Rom 7:4.

For I speak to them ... - Probably the apostle refers here more particularly to the Jewish members of the Roman church, who were qualified particularly to understand the nature of the Law, and to appreciate the argument. That there were many Jews in the church at Rome has been shown (see Introduction); but the illustration has no exclusive reference to them. The Law to which he appeals is sufficiently general to make the illustration intelligible to all people.

That the law - The immediate reference here is probably to the Mosaic Law. But what is here affirmed is equally true of all laws.

Hath dominion - Greek, Rules; exercises lordship. The Law is here personified, and represented as setting up a lordship over a man, and exacting obedience.

Over a man - Over the man who is under it.

As long as he liveth - The Greek here may mean either "as he liveth,"or"as it liveth,"that is, the law. But our translation has evidently expressed the sense. The sense is, that death releases a man from the laws by which he was bound in life. It is a general principle, relating to the laws of the land, the law of a parent, the law of a contract, etc. This general principle the apostle proceeds to apply in regard to the Law of God.

Barnes: Rom 7:2 - -- For the woman - This verse is a specific illustration of the general principle in Rom 7:1, that death dissolves those connections and relations...

For the woman - This verse is a specific illustration of the general principle in Rom 7:1, that death dissolves those connections and relations which make law binding in life. It is a simple illustration; and if this had been kept in mind, it would have saved much of the perplexity which has been felt by many commentators, and much of their wild vagaries in endeavoring to show that "men are the wife, the law of the former husband, and Christ the new one;"or that "the old man is the wife, sinful desires the husband, sins the children."Beza. (See Stuart.) Such expositions are sufficient to humble us, and to make us mourn over the puerile and fanciful interpretations which even wise and good people often give to the Bible.

Is bound by the law ... - See the same sentiment in 1Co 7:39.

To her husband - She is united to him; and is under his authority as the head of the household. To him is particularly committed the headship of the family, and the wife is subject to his law, in the Lord, Eph 5:23, Eph 5:33.

She is loosed ... - The husband has no more authority. The connection from which obligation resulted is dissolved.

Barnes: Rom 7:3 - -- So then if ... - compare Mat 5:32. She shall be called - She will be. The word used here χρηματίσει chrēmatisei is of...

So then if ... - compare Mat 5:32.

She shall be called - She will be. The word used here χρηματίσει chrēmatisei is often used to denote being called by an oracle or by divine revelation. But it is here employed in the simple sense of being commonly called, or of being so regarded.

Barnes: Rom 7:4 - -- Wherefore - This verse contains an application of the illustration in the two preceding. The idea there is, that death dissolves a connection f...

Wherefore - This verse contains an application of the illustration in the two preceding. The idea there is, that death dissolves a connection from which obligation resulted. This is the single point of the illustration, and consequently there is no need of inquiring whether by the wife the apostle meant to denote the old man, or the Christian, etc. The meaning is, as death dissolves the connection between a wife and her husband, and of course the obligation of the law resulting from that connection, so the death of the Christian to the Law dissolves that connection, so far as the scope of the argument here is concerned, and prepares the way for another union, a union with Christ, from which a new and more efficient obligation results. The design is to show that the new connection would accomplish more important effects than the old.

Ye also are become dead to the law - Notes, Rom 6:3-4, Rom 6:8. The connection between us and the Law is dissolved, so far as the scope of the apostle’ s argument is concerned. He does not say that we are dead to it, or released from it as a rule of duty, or as a matter of obligation to obey it; for there neither is, nor can be, any such release, but we are dead to it as a way of justification and sanctification. In the great matter of acceptance with God, we have ceased to rely on the Law, having become dead to it, and having embraced another plan.

By the body of Christ - That is, by his body crucified; or in other words, by his death; compare Eph 2:15, "Having abolished in his flesh the enmity,"etc. that is, by his death. Col 1:22, "in the body of his flesh through death,"etc. Col 2:14; 1Pe 2:24, "who bare our sins in his own body on the tree."The sense, is, therefore, that by the death of Christ as an atoning sacrifice; by his suffering for us what would be sufficient to meet the demands of the Law; by his taking our place, he has released us from the Law as a way of justification; freed us from its penalty; and saved us from its curse. Thus released, we are at liberty to be united to the law of him who has thus bought us with his blood.

That ye should be married to another - That you might be united to another, and come under his law. This is the completion of the illustration in Rom 7:2-3. As the woman that is freed from the law of her husband by his death, when married again comes under the authority of another, so we who are made free from the Law and its curse by the death of Christ, are brought under the new law of fidelity and obedience to him with whom we are thus united. The union of Christ and his people is not unfrequently illustrated by the most tender of all earthly connections, that of a husband and wife, Eph 5:23-30; Rev 21:9. "I will show thee the bride, the Lamb’ s wife,"Rev 19:7.

Even to him who is raised ... - See the force of this explained, Rom 6:8.

That we should bring forth fruit unto God - That we should live a holy life. This is the point and scope of all this illustration. The new connection is such as will make us holy. It is also implied that the tendency of the Law was only to bring forth fruit unto death Rom 7:5, and that the tendency of the gospel is to make man holy and pure; compare Gal 5:22-23.

Barnes: Rom 7:5 - -- For when ... - The illustration in this verse and the following is designed to show more at length the effect of the Law, whenever and whereeve...

For when ... - The illustration in this verse and the following is designed to show more at length the effect of the Law, whenever and whereever applied; whether in a state of nature or of grace. It was always the same. It was the occasion of agitation and conflict in a man’ s own mind. This was true when a sinner was under conviction; and it was true when a man was a Christian. In all circumstances where the Law was applied to the corrupt mind of man, it produced this agitation and conflict. Even in the Christian’ s mind it produced this agitation Rom 7:14-24, as it had done and would do in the mind of a sinner under conviction Rom 7:7-12, and consequently there was no hope of release but in the delivering and sanctifying power of the gospel Rom 7:25; Rom 8:1-3.

In the flesh - Unconverted; subject to the controlling passions and propensities of a corrupt nature; compare Rom 8:8-9. The connection shows that this must be the meaning here, and the design of this illustration is to show the effect of the Law before a man is converted, Rom 7:5-12. This is the obvious meaning, and all the laws of interpretation require us so to understand it.

The motions of sins - ( τα παθήματα ta pathēmata .) This translation is unhappy. The expression "motions of sins"conveys no idea. The original means simply the passions, the evil affections, the corrupt desires; see the margin. The expression, passions of sins, is a Hebraism meaning sinful passions, and refers here to the corrupt propensities and inclinations of the unrenewed heart.

Which were by the law - Not that they were originated or created by the Law; for a law does not originate evil propensities, and a holy law would not cause sinful passions; but they were excited, called up, inflamed by the Law, which forbids their indulgence.

Did work in our members - In our body; that is, in us. Those sinful propensities made use of our members as instruments, to secure gratification; Note, Rom 6:12-13; compare Rom 6:23.

To bring forth fruit unto death - To produce crime, agitation, conflict, distress, and to lead to death. We were brought under the dominion of death; and the consequence of the indulgence of those passions would be fatal; compare the note at Rom 6:21.

Barnes: Rom 7:6 - -- But now - Under the gospel. This verse states the consequences of the gospel, in distinction from the effects of the Law. The way in which this...

But now - Under the gospel. This verse states the consequences of the gospel, in distinction from the effects of the Law. The way in which this is accomplished, the apostle illustrates more at length in Rom. 8 with which this verse is properly connected. The remainder of Rom. 7 is occupied in illustrating the statement in Rom 7:5, of the effects of the Law; and after having shown that its effects always were to increase crime and distress, he is prepared in Rom. 8 to take up the proposition in this verse, and to show the superiority of the gospel in producing peace.

We are delivered - We who are Christians. Delivered from it as a means of justification, as a source of sanctification, as a bondage to which we were subjected, and which tended to produce pain and death. It does not mean that Christians are freed from it as a rule of duty.

That being dead - Margin, "Being dead to that."There is a variation here in the manuscripts. Some read it, as in the text, as if the Law was dead; others, as in the margin. as if we were dead. The majority is in favor of the reading as in the margin; and the connection requires us to understand it in this sense. So the Syriac, the Arabic, the Vulgate, AEthiopic. The sentiment here, that we are dead to the Law, is what is expressed in Rom 7:4.

Wherein we were held - That is, as captives, or as slaves. We were held in bondage to it; Rom 7:1.

That we should serve - That we may now serve or obey God.

In newness of spirit - In a new spirit; or in a new and spiritual manner. This is a form of expression implying,

(1)    That their service under the gospel was to be of a new kind, differing from that under the former dispensation.

(2)\caps1     t\caps0 hat it was to be of a spiritual nature, as distinguished from that practiced by the Jews; compare 2Co 3:6; Note, Rom 2:28-29.

The worship required under the gospel is uniformly described as that of the spirit and the heart, rather than that of form and ceremony; Joh 4:23, "The true worshippers shall worship the Father in spirit and in truth; Phi 3:3.

And not in the oldness of the letter - Not in the old letter. It is implied here in this,

(1)    That the form of worship here described pertained to an old dispensation that had now passed away; and,

(2)    That that was a worship that was in the letter.

To understand this, it is necessary to remember that the Law which prescribed the forms of worship among the Jews, was regarded by the apostle as destitute of that efficacy and power in renewing the heart which he attributed to the gospel. It was a service consisting in external forms and ceremonies; in the offering of sacrifices and of incense, according to the literal requirements of the Law rather than the sincere offering of the heart; 2Co 3:6, "The letter killeth; the spirit giveth life;"Joh 6:63; Heb 10:1-4; Heb 9:9-10. It is not to be denied that there were many holy persons under the Law, and that there were many spiritual offerings presented, but it is at the same time true that the great mass of the people rested in the mere form; and that the service offered was the mere service of the letter, and not of the heart. The main idea is, that the services under the gospel are purely and entirely spiritual, the offering of the heart, and not the service rendered by external forms and rites.

(But the contrast here is not between services required under the legal and gospel dispensations respectively, but between service yielded in the opposite states of nature and grace. In the former state, we are "under the law"though we live in gospel times, and in the latter, we are "delivered from the law"as a covenant of works, or of life, just as pious Jews might be though they lived under the dispensation of Moses. The design of God in delivering us from the Law, is, that we might "serve him in newness of spirit, and not in the oldness of the letter,"that is, in such a spiritual way as the new state requires, and from such spiritual motives and aids as it furnishes; and not in the manner we were accustomed to do, under our old condition of subjection to the Law, in which we could yield only an external and forced obedience. "It is evident,"says Prof. Hodge that the clause "in the oldness of the letter is substituted by the apostle, for ‘ under the law’ and ‘ in the flesh;’ all which he uses to describe the legal and corrupt condition of people, prior to the believing reception of the gospel.")

Barnes: Rom 7:7 - -- What shall we say then? - The objection which is here urged is one that would very naturally rise, and which we may suppose would be urged with...

What shall we say then? - The objection which is here urged is one that would very naturally rise, and which we may suppose would be urged with no slight indignation. The Jew would ask, "Are we then to suppose that the holy Law of God is not only insufficient to sanctify us, but that it is the mere occasion of increased sin? Is its tendency to produce sinful passions, and to make people worse than they were before?"To this objection the apostle replies with great wisdom, by showing that the evil was not in the Law, but in man; that though these effects often followed, yet that the Law itself was good and pure.

Is the law sin? - Is it sinful? Is it evil? For if, as it is said in Rom 7:5, the sinful passions were "by the law,"it might naturally be asked whether the Law itself was not an evil thing?

God forbid - Note, Rom 3:4.

Nay, I had not known sin - The word translated "nay" ἀλλὰ alla means more properly but; and this would have more correctly expressed the sense, "I deny that the Law is sin. My doctrine does not lead to that; nor do I affirm that it is evil. I strongly repel the charge; but, notwithstanding this, I still maintain that it had an effect in exciting sins, yet so as that I perceived that the Law itself was good;"Rom 7:8-12. At the same time, therefore, that the Law must be admitted to be the occasion of exciting sinful feelings, by crossing the inclinations of the mind, yet the fault was not to be traced to the Law. The apostle in these verses refers, doubtless, to the state of his mind before he found that peace which the gospel furnishes by the pardon of sins.

But by the law - Rom 3:20. By "the law"here, the apostle has evidently in his eye every law of God, however made known. He means to say that the effect which he describes attends all law, and this effect he illustrates by a single instance drawn from the Tenth Commandment. When he says that he should not have known sin, he evidently means to affirm, that he had not understood that certain things were sinful, unless they had been forbidden; and having stated this, he proceeds to another thing, to show the effect of their being thus forbidden on his mind. He was not merely acquainted abstractly with the nature and existence of sin, with what constituted crime because it was forbidden, but he was conscious of a certain effect on his mind resulting from this knowledge, and from the effect of strong, raging desires when thus restrained, Rom 7:8-9.

For I had not known lust - I should not have been acquainted with the nature of the sin of covetousness. The desire might have existed, but he would not have known it to be sinful, and he would not have experienced that raging, impetuous, and ungoverned propensity which he did when he found it to be forbidden. Man without law might have the strong feelings of desire He might covet what others possessed. He might take property, or be disobedient to parents; but he would not know it to be evil. The Law fixes bounds to his desires, and teaches him what is right and what is wrong. It teaches him where lawful indulgence ends, and where sin begins. The word "lust"here is not limited as it is with us. It refers to all covetous desires; to all wishes for what is forbidden us.

Except the law had said - In the tenth commandment; Exo 20:17.

Thou shalt not covet - This is the beginning of the command, and all the rest is implied. The apostle knew that it would be understood without repeating the whole. This particular commandment he selected because it was more pertinent than the others to his purpose. The others referred particularly to external actions. But his object was to show the effect of sin on the mind and conscience. He therefore chose one that referred particularly to the desires of the heart.

Barnes: Rom 7:8 - -- But sin - To illustrate the effect of the Law on the mind, the apostle in this verse depicts its influence in exciting to evil desires and purp...

But sin - To illustrate the effect of the Law on the mind, the apostle in this verse depicts its influence in exciting to evil desires and purposes. Perhaps no where has he evinced more consummate knowledge of the human heart than here. He brings an illustration that might have escaped most persons, but which goes directly to establish his position that the Law is insufficient to promote the salvation of man. Sin here is personified. It means not a real entity; not a physical subsistence; not something independent of the mind, having a separate existence, and lodged in the soul, but it means the corrupt passions, inclinations, and desires of the mind itself. Thus, we say that lust burns, and ambition rages, and envy corrodes the mind, without meaning that lust, ambition, or envy are any independent physical subsistences, but meaning that the mind that is ambitious, or envious, is thus excited.

Taking occasion - The word "occasion" ἀφορμὴν aphormēn properly denotes any material, or preparation for accomplishing anything; then any opportunity, occasion, etc. of doing it. Here it means that the Law was the exciting cause of sin; or was what called the sinful principle of the heart into exercise. But for this, the effect here described would not have existed. Thus, we say that a tempting object of desire presented is the exciting cause of covetousness. Thus, an object of ambition is the exciting cause of the principle of ambition. Thus, the presentation of wealth, or of advantages possessed by others which we have not, may excite covetousness or envy. Thus, the fruit presented to Eve was the exciting cause of sin; the wedge of gold to Achan excited his covetousness. Had not these objects been presented, the evil principles of the heart might have slumbered, and never have been called forth. And hence, no one understand the full force of their native propensities until some object is presented that calls them forth into decided action. The occasion which called these forth in the mind of Paul was the Law crossing his path, and irritating and exciting the native strong inclinations of the mind.

By the commandment - By all law appointed to restrain and control the mind.

Wrought in me - Produced or worked in me. The word used here means often to operate in a powerful and efficacious manner. (Doddridge.)

All manner of - Greek, "All desire."Every species of unlawful desire. It was not confined to one single desire, but extended to everything which the Law declared to be wrong.

Concupiscence - Unlawful or irregular desire. Inclination for unlawful enjoyments. The word is the same which in Rom 7:7 is rendered "lust."If it be asked in what way the Law led to this, we may reply, that the main idea here is, that opposition by law to the desires and passions of wicked men only tends to inflame and exasperate them. This is the case with regard to sin in every form. An attempt to restrain it by force; to denounce it by laws and penalties; to cross the path of wickedness; only tends to irritate, and to excite into living energy, what otherwise would be dormant in the bosom. This it does, because,

(1) It crosses the path of the sinner, and opposes his intention, and the current of his feelings and his life.

\caps1 (2) t\caps0 he Law acts the part of a detector, and lays open to view that which was in the bosom, but was concealed.

\caps1 (3) s\caps0 uch is the depth and obstinacy of sin in man, that the very attempt to restrain often only serves to exasperate, and to urge to greater deeds of wickedness. Restraint by law rouses the mad passions; urges to greater deeds of depravity; makes the sinner stubborn, obstinate, and more desperate. The very attempt to set up authority over him throws him into a posture of resistance, and makes him a party, and excites all the feelings of party rage. Anyone may have witnessed this effect often on the mind of a wicked and obstinate child.

\caps1 (4) t\caps0 his is particularly true in regard to a sinner. He is calm often, and apparently tranquil. But let the Law of God be brought home to his conscience, and he becomes maddened and enraged. He spurns its authority, yet his conscience tells him it is right; he attempts to throw it off, yet trembles at its power; and to show his independence, or his purpose to sin, he plunges into iniquity, and becomes a more dreadful and obstinate sinner. It becomes a struggle for victory; in the controversy with God he re solves not to be overcome. It accordingly happens that many a man is more profane, blasphemous, and desperate when under conviction for sin than at other times. In revivals of religion it often happens that people evince violence, and rage, and cursing, which they do not in a state of spiritual death in the church; and it is often a very certain indication that a man is under conviction for sin when he becomes particularly violent, and abusive, and outrageous in his opposition to God.

\caps1 (5) t\caps0 he effect here noticed by the apostle is one that has been observed at all times, and by all classes of writers. Thus, Cato says (Livy, xxxiv. 4,) "Do not think, Romans, that it will be hereafter as it was before the Law was enacted. It is more safe that a bad man should not be accused, than that he should be absolved; and luxury not excited would be more tolerable than it will be now by the very chains irritated and excited as a wild beast."Thus, Seneca says (de Clementia, i. 23,) "Parricides began with the law."Thus, Horace ( Odes , i. 3,) "The human race, bold to endure all things, rushes through forbidden crime."Thus, Ovid ( Amor . iii. 4,) "We always endeavour to obtain what is forbidden, and desire what is denied."(These passages are quoted from Tholuck.) See also Pro 9:17, "Stolen waters are sweet, and bread eaten in secret is pleasant."If such be the effect of the Law, then the inference of the apostle is unavoidable, that it is not adapted to save and sanctify man.

For without the law - Before it was given; or where it was not applied to the mind.

Sin was dead - It was inoperative, inactive, unexcited. This is evidently in a comparative sense. The connection requires us to under stand it only so far as it was excited by the Law. People’ s passions would exist; but without law they would not be known to be evil, and they would not be excited into wild and tumultuous raging.

Barnes: Rom 7:9 - -- For I - There seems to be no doubt that the apostle here refers to his own past experience. Yet in this he speaks the sentiment of all who are ...

For I - There seems to be no doubt that the apostle here refers to his own past experience. Yet in this he speaks the sentiment of all who are unconverted, and who are depending on their own righteousness.

Was alive - This is opposed to what he immediately adds respecting another state, in which he was when he died. It must mean, therefore, that he had a certain kind of peace; he deemed himself secure; he was free from the convictions of conscience and the agitations of alarm. The state to which he refers here must be doubtless that to which he himself alludes elsewhere, when he deemed himself to be righteous, depending on his own works, and esteeming himself to be blameless, Phi 3:4-6; Act 23:1; Act 26:4-5. It means that he was then free from those agitations and alarms which he afterward experienced when he was brought under conviction for sin. At that time, though he had the Law, and was attempting to obey it, yet he was unacquainted with its spiritual and holy nature. He aimed at external conformity. Its claims on the heart were unfelt. This is the condition of every self-confident sinner, and of everyone who is unawakened.

Without the law - Not that Paul was ever really without the Law, that is, without the Law of Moses; but he means before the Law was applied to his heart in its spiritual meaning, and with power.

But when the commandment came - When it was applied to the heart and conscience. This is the only intelligible sense of the expression; for it cannot refer to the time when the Law was given. When this was, the apostle does not say. But the expression denotes whenever it was so applied; when it was urged with power and efficacy on his conscience, to control, restrain, and threaten him, it produced this effect. We are unacquainted with the early operations of his mind, and with his struggles against conscience and duty. We know enough of him before conversion, however, to be assured that he was proud, impetuous, and unwilling to be restrained; see Acts 8; 9. In the state of his self-confident righteousness and impetuosity of feeling, we may easily suppose that the holy Law of God, which is designed to restrain the passions, to humble the heart, and to rebuke pride, would produce only irritation, and impatience of restraint, and revolt.

Sin revived - Lived again. This means that it was before dormant Rom 7:8, but was now quickened into new life. The word is usually applied to a renewal of life, Rom 14:19; Luk 15:24, Luk 15:32, but here it means substantially the same as the expression in Rom 7:8, "Sin ...wrought in me all manner of concupiscence."The power of sin, which was before dormant, became quickened and active.

I died - That is, I was by it involved in additional guilt and misery. It stands opposed to "I was alive,"and must mean the opposite of that; and evidently denotes that the effect of the commandment was to bring him under what he calls death, (compare Rom 5:12, Rom 5:14-15;) that is, sin reigned, and raged, and produced its withering and condemning effects; it led to aggravated guilt and misery. It may also include this idea, that before, he was self-confident and secure, but that by the commandment he was stricken down and humbled, his self-confidence was blasted, and his hopes were prostrated in the dust. Perhaps no words would better express the humble, subdued, melancholy, and helpless state of a converted sinner than the expressive phrase "I died."The essential idea here is, that the Law did not answer the purpose which the Jew would claim for it, to sanctify the soul and to give comfort, but that all its influence on the heart was to produce aggravated, unpardoned guilt and woe.

Barnes: Rom 7:10 - -- And the commandment - The Law to which he had referred before. Which was ordained to life - Which was intended to produce life, or happin...

And the commandment - The Law to which he had referred before.

Which was ordained to life - Which was intended to produce life, or happiness. Life here stands opposed to death, and means felicity, peace, eternal bliss; Note, Joh 3:36. When the apostle says that it was ordained to life, he probably has reference to the numerous passages in the Old Testament which speak of the Law in this manner, Lev 18:5, "Ye shall keep my statutes and my judgments; which if a man do, he shall live in them,"Eze 20:11, Eze 20:13, Eze 20:21; Eze 18:9, Eze 18:21. The meaning of these passages, in connection with this declaration of Paul, may be thus expressed:

(1)    The Law is good; it has no evil, and is itself suited to produce no evil.

(2)\caps1     i\caps0 f man was pure, and it was obeyed perfectly, it would produce life and happiness only. On those who have obeyed it in heaven, it has produced only happiness.

(3)\caps1     f\caps0 or this it was ordained; it is adapted to it; and when perfectly obeyed, it produces no other effect. But,

(4)    Man is a sinner; he has not obeyed it; and in such a case the Law threatens woe.

It crosses the inclination of man, and instead of producing peace and life, as it would on a being perfectly holy, it produces only woe and crime. The law of a parent may be good, and may be appointed to promote the happiness of his children; it may be admirably suited to it if all were obedient; yet in the family there may be one obstinate, self-willed, and stubborn child, resolved to indulge his evil passions, and the results to him would be woe and despair. The commandment, which was ordained for the good of the family, and which would be adapted to promote their welfare, he alone, of all the number, would find to be unto death.

I found - It was to me. It produced this effect.

Unto death - Producing aggravated guilt and condemnation, Rom 7:9.

Barnes: Rom 7:11 - -- For sin - This verse is a repetition, with a little variation of the sentiment in Rom 7:8. Deceived me - The word used here properly mean...

For sin - This verse is a repetition, with a little variation of the sentiment in Rom 7:8.

Deceived me - The word used here properly means to lead or seduce from the right way; and then to deceive, solicit to sin, cause to err from the way of virtue, Rom 16:18; 1Co 3:18; 2Co 11:3, "The serpent beguiled Eve through his subtilty,"2Th 2:3. The meaning here seems to be, that his corrupt and rebellious propensities, excited by the Law, led him astray; caused him more and more to sin; practiced a species of deception on him by urging him on headlong, and without deliberation, into aggravated transgression. In this sense, all sinners are deceived. Their passions urge them on, deluding them, and leading them further and further from happiness, and involving them, before they are aware, in crime and death. No being in the universe is more deladed than a sinner in the indulgence of evil passions. The description of Solomon in a particular case will apply to all, Pro 7:21-23.

"With much fair speech she caused him to yield,

With the flattering of her lips she forced him.

He goeth after her straightway,

As an ox goeth to the slaughter,

Or as a fool to the correction of the stocks;

Till a dart strike through his liver,

As a bird hasteth to the snare."

By it - By the Law, Rom 7:8.

Slew me - Meaning the same as "I died,"Rom 7:8.

Barnes: Rom 7:12 - -- Wherefore - So that. The conclusion to which we come is, that the Law is not to be blamed, though these are its effects under existing circumst...

Wherefore - So that. The conclusion to which we come is, that the Law is not to be blamed, though these are its effects under existing circumstances. The source of all this is not the Law, but the corrupt nature of man. The Law is good; and yet the position of the apostle is true, that it is not adapted to purify the heart of fallen man. Its tendency is to excite increased guilt, conflict, alarm, and despair. This verse contains an answer to the question in Rom 7:7, "Is the law sin?"

Is holy - Is not sin; compare Rom 7:7. It is pure in its nature.

And the commandment - The word "commandment"is here synonymous with the Law. It properly means what is enjoined.

Holy - Pure.

Just - Righteous in its claims and penalties. It is not unequal in its exactions.

Good - In itself good; and in its own nature tending to produce happiness. The sin and condemnation of the guilty is not the fault of the Law. If obeyed, it would produce happiness everywhere. See a most beautiful description of the law of God in Psa 19:7-11.

Barnes: Rom 7:13 - -- Was then that which is good ... - This is another objection which the apostle proceeds to answer. The objection is this, "Can it be possible th...

Was then that which is good ... - This is another objection which the apostle proceeds to answer. The objection is this, "Can it be possible that what is admitted to be good and pure, should be changed into evil? Can what tends to life, be made death to a man?"In answer to this, the apostle repeats that the fault was not in the Law, but was in himself, and in his sinful propensities.

Made death - Rom 7:8, Rom 7:10.

God forbid - Note, Rom 3:4.

But sin - This is a personification of sin as in Rom 7:8.

That it might appear sin - That it might develope its true nature, and no longer be dormant in the mind. The Law of God is often applied to a man’ s conscience, that he may see how deep and desperate is his depravity. No man knows his own heart until the Law thus crosses his path, and shows him what he is.

By the commandment - Note, Rom 7:8.

Might become exceeding sinful - In the original this is a very strong expression, and is one of those used by Paul to express strong emphasis, or intensity καθ ̓ ὑπερβολὴν kath huperbolēn by hyperboles. In an excessive degree; to the utmost possible extent, 1Co 12:31; 2Co 1:8; 2Co 4:7; 2Co 12:7; Gal 1:13. The phrase occurs in each of these places. The sense here is, that by the giving of the command, and its application to the mind, sin was completely developed; it was excited, inflamed, aggravated, and showed to be excessively malignant and deadly. It was not a dormant, slumbering principle; but it was awfully opposed to God and His Law. Calvin has well expressed the sense: "It was proper that the enormity of sin should be revealed by the Law; because unless sin should break forth by some dreadful and enormous excess (as they say,) it would not be known to be sin. This excess exhibits itself the more violently, while it turns life into death."The sentiment of the whole is, that the tendency of the Law is to excite the dormant sin of the bosom into active existence, and to reveal its true nature. It is desirable that that should be done, and as that is all that the Law accomplishes, it is not adapted to sanctify the soul. To show that this was the design of the apostle, it is desirable that sin should be thus seen in its true nature, because,

(1)    Man should be acquainted with his true character. He should not deceive himself.

(2)\caps1     b\caps0 ecause it is one part of God’ s plan to develope the secret feelings of the heart, and to show to all creatures what they are.

(3)\caps1     b\caps0 ecause only by knowing this, will the sinner be induced to take a remedy, and strive to be saved. So God often allows people to plunge into sin; to act out their nature, so that they may see themselves, and be alarmed at the consequences of their own crimes.

Barnes: Rom 7:14 - -- The remainder of this chapter has been the subject of no small degree of controversy. The question has been whether it describes the state of Paul b...

The remainder of this chapter has been the subject of no small degree of controversy. The question has been whether it describes the state of Paul before his conversion, or afterward. It is not the purpose of these notes to enter into controversy, or into extended discussion. But after all the attention which I have been able to give to this passage, I regard it as describing the state of a man under the gospel, as descriptive of the operations of the mind of Paul subsequent to his conversion. This interpretation is adopted for the following reasons:

(1) Because it seems to me to be the most obvious. It is what will strike plain people as being the natural meaning; people who do not have a theory to support, and who understand language in its usual sense.

\caps1 (2) b\caps0 ecause it agrees with the design of the apostle, which is to show that the Law is not adapted to produce sanctification and peace. This he had done in regard to a man before he was converted. If this relates to the same period, then it is a useless discussion of a point already discussed, If it relates to that period also, then there is a large field of action, including the whole period after a man’ s conversion to Christianity, in which the question might still be unsettled, whether the Law there might not be adapted to sanctify. The apostle therefore makes thorough work with the argument, and shows that the operation of the Law is everywhere the same.

\caps1 (3) b\caps0 ecause the expressions which occur are such as cannot be understood of an impenitent sinner; see the notes at Rom 7:15, Rom 7:21.

\caps1 (4) b\caps0 ecause it accords with parallel expressions in regard to the state of the conflict in a Christian’ s mind.

\caps1 (5) b\caps0 ecause there is a change made here from the past tense to the present. In Rom 7:7, etc. he had used the past tense, evidently describing some former state. In Rom 7:14 there is a change to the present, a change inexplicable, except on the supposition that he meant to describe some state different from that before described. That could be no other than to carry his illustration forward in showing the inefficacy of the Law on a man in his renewed state; or to show that such was the remaining depravity of the man, that it produced substantially the same effects as in the former condition.

\caps1 (6) b\caps0 ecause it accords with the experience of Christians, and not with sinners. It is just such language as plain Christians, who are acquainted with their own hearts, use to express their feelings. I admit that this last consideration is not by itself conclusive; but if the language did not accord with the experience of the Christian world, it would be a strong circumstance against any proposed interpretation. The view which is here expressed of this chapter, as supposing that the previous part Rom 7:7-13 refers to a man in his unregenerate state, and that the remainder describes the effect of the Law on the mind of a renewed man, was adopted by studying the chapter itself, without aid from any writer. I am happy, however, to find that the views thus expressed are in accordance with those of the late Dr. John P. Wilson, than whom, perhaps, no man was ever better quailfled to interpret the Scriptures. He says, "In the fourth verse, he (Paul) changes to the first person plural, because he intended to speak of the former experience of Christians, who had been Jews. In the seventh verse, he uses the first person singular, but speaks in the past tense, because he describes his own experience when he was an uncoverted Pharisee. In the fourteenth verse, and unto the end of the chapter, he uses the first person singular, and the present tense, because he exhibits his own experience since he became a Christian and an apostle."

We know - We admit. It is a conceded, well understood point.

That the law is spiritual - This does not mean that the Law is designed to control the spirit, in contradistinction from the body, but it is a declaration showing that the evils of which he was speaking were not the fault of the Law. That was not, in its nature, sensual, corrupt, earthly, carnal; but was pure and spiritual. The effect described was not the fault of the Law, but of the man, who was sold under sin. The word "spiritual"is often thus used to denote what is pure and hoy, in opposition to that which is fleshly or carnal; Rom 8:5-6; Gal 5:16-23. The flesh is described as the source of evil passions and desires; The spirit as the source of purity; or as what is agreeable to the proper influences of the Holy Spirit.

But I am - The present tense shows that he is describing himself as he was at the time of writing. This is the natural and obvious construction, and if this be not the meaning, it is impossible to account for his having changed the past tense Rom 7:7 to the present.

Carnal - Fleshly; sensual; opposed to spiritual. This word is used because in the Scriptures the flesh is spoken of as the source of sensual passions and propensities, Gal 5:19-21. The sense is, that these corrupt passions still retained a strong and withering and distressing influence over the mind. The renewed man is exposed to temptations from his strong native appetites; and the power of these passions, strengthened by long habit before he was converted, has traveled over into religion, and they continue still to influence and distress him. It does not mean that he is wholly under their influence; but that the tendency of his natural inclinations is to indulgence.

Sold under sin - This expression is often adduced to show that it cannot be of a renewed man that the apostle is speaking. The argument is, that it cannot be affirmed of a Christian that he is sold under sin. A sufficient answer to this might be, that in fact, this is the very language which Christians often now adopt to express the strength of that native depravity against which they struggle, and that no language would better express it. It does not, mean that they choose or prefer sins. It strongly implies that the prevailing bent of their mind is against it, but that such is its strength that it brings them into slavery to it. The expression used here, "sold under sin,"is "borrowed from the practice of selling captives taken in war, as slaves."(Stuart.) It hence, means to deliver into the power of anyone, so that he shall be dependent on his will and control. (Schleusner.) The emphasis is not on the word "sold,"as if any act of selling had taken place, but the effect was as if he had been sold; that is, he was subject to it, and under its control, and it means that sin, contrary to the prevailing inclination of his mind Rom 7:15-17, had such an influence over him as to lead him to commit it, and thus to produce a state of conflict and grief; Rom 7:19-24. The verses which follow this are an explanation of the sense, and of the manner in which he was "sold under sin."

Barnes: Rom 7:15 - -- For that which I do - That is, the evil which I do, the sin of which I am conscious, and which troubles me. I allow not - I do not approv...

For that which I do - That is, the evil which I do, the sin of which I am conscious, and which troubles me.

I allow not - I do not approve; I do not wish it; the prevailing bent of my inclinations and purposes is against it. Greek, "I know not;"see the margin. The word "know,"however, is sometimes used in the sense of approving, Rev 2:24, "Which have not known (approved) the depths of Satan;"compare Psa 101:4, I will not know a wicked person."Jer 1:5.

For what I would - That which I approve; and which is my prevailing and established desire. What I would wish always to do.

But what I hate - What I disapprove of: what is contrary to my judgment; my prevailing inclination; my established principles of conduct.

That do I - Under the influence of sinful propensities, and carnal inclinations and desires. This represents the strong native propensity to sin; and even the power of corrupt propensity under the restraining influence of the gospel. On this remarkable and important passage we may observe,

(1) That the prevailing propensity; the habitual fixed inclination of the mind of the Christian, is to do right. The evil course is hated, the right course is loved. This is the characteristic of a pious mind. It distinguishes a holy man from a sinner.

\caps1 (2) t\caps0 he evil which is done is disapproved; is a source of grief; and the habitual desire of the mind is to avoid it, and be pure. This also distinguishes the Christian from the sinner.

\caps1 (3) t\caps0 here is no need of being embarrassed here with any metaphysical difficulties or inquiries how this can be; for.

(a) it is in fact the experience of all Christians. The habitual, fixed inclination and desire of their minds is to serve God. They have a fixed abhorrence of sin; and yet they are conscious of imperfection, and error, and sin, that is the source of uneasiness and trouble. The strength of natural passion may in an unguarded moment overcome them. The power of long habits of previous thoughts may annoy them. A man who was an infidel before his conversion, and whose mind was filled with scepticism, and cavils, and blasphemy, will find the effect of his former habits of thinking lingering in his mind, and annoying his peace for years. These thoughts will start up with the rapidity of lightning. Thus, it is with every vice and every opinion. It is one of the effects of habit. "The very passage of an impure thought through the mind leaves pollution behind it,"and where sin has been long indulged, it leaves its withering, desolating effect on the soul long after conversion, and produces that state of conflict with which every Christian is familiar.

(b) An effect somewhat similar is felt by all people. All are conscious of doing that, under the excitement of passion and prejudice, which their conscience and better judgment disapprove. A conflict thus exists, which is attended with as much metaphysical difficulty as the struggle in the Christian’ s mind referred to here.

© The same thing was observed and described in the writings of the heathen. Thus, Xenophon (Cyrop. vi. 1), Araspes, the Persian, says, in order to excuse his treasonable designs,"Certainly I must have two souls; for plainly it is not one and the same which is both evil and good; and at the same time wishes to do a thing and not to do it. Plainly then, there are two souls; and when the good one prevails, then it does good; and when the evil one predominates, then it does evil."So also Epictetus ( Enchixid . ii. 26) says, "He that sins does not do what he would, but what he would not, that he does."With this passage it would almost seem that Paul was familiar, and had his eye on it when he wrote. So also the well-known passage from Ovid, Meta . vii. 9.

Aliudque Cupido,

Mens aliud suadet. Video meliora, proboque,

Deteriora sequor .

"Desire prompts to one thing, but the mind persuades to another. I see the good, and approve it, and yet pursue the wrong."- See other passages of similar import quoted in Grotius and Tholuck.

Barnes: Rom 7:16 - -- I consent unto the law - The very struggle with evil shows that it is not loved, or approved, but that the Law which condemns it is really love...

I consent unto the law - The very struggle with evil shows that it is not loved, or approved, but that the Law which condemns it is really loved. Christians may here find a test of their piety. The fact of struggling against evil, the desire to be free from it, and to overcome it, the anxiety and grief which it causes, is an evidence that we do not love it, and that there. fore we are the friends of God. Perhaps nothing can be a more decisive test of piety than a long-continued and painful struggle against evil passions and desires in every form, and a panting of the soul to be delivered from the power and dominion of sin.

Barnes: Rom 7:17 - -- It is no more I that do it - This is evidently figurative language, for it is really the man that sins when evil is committed. But the apostle ...

It is no more I that do it - This is evidently figurative language, for it is really the man that sins when evil is committed. But the apostle makes a distinction between sin and what he intends by the pronoun "I". By the former he evidently means his corrupt nature. By the latter he refers to his renewed nature, his Christian principles. He means to say that he does not approve or love it in his present state, but that it is the result of his native propensities and passions. In his heart, and conscience, and habitual feeling, he did not choose to commit sin, but abhorred it. Thus, every Christian can say that he does not choose to do evil, but would wish to be perfect; that he hates sin, and yet that his corrupt passions lead him astray.

But sin - My corrupt passions and native propensities.

That dwelleth in me - Dwelling in me as its home. This is a strong expression, denoting that sin had taken up its habitation in the mind, and abode there. It had not been yet wholly dislodged. This expression stands in contrast with another that occurs, where it is said that "the Spirit of God dwells"in the Christian, Rom 8:9; 1Co 3:16. The sense is, that he is strongly influenced by sin on the one hand, and by the Spirit on the other. From this expression has arisen the phrase so common among Christians, in-dwelling sin.

Barnes: Rom 7:18 - -- For I know - This is designed as an illustration of what he had just said, that sin dwelt in him. That is, in my flesh - In my unrenewed ...

For I know - This is designed as an illustration of what he had just said, that sin dwelt in him.

That is, in my flesh - In my unrenewed nature; in my propensities and inclinations before conversion. Does not this qualifying expression show that in this discussion he was speaking of himself as a renewed man? Hence, he is careful to imply that there was at that time in him something that was right or acceptable with God, but that that did not pertain to him by nature.

Dwelleth - His soul was wholly occupied by what was evil. It had taken entire possession.

No good thing - There could not be possibly a stronger expression of belief of the doctrine of total depravity. It is Paul’ s own representation of himself. It proves that his heart was wholly evil. And if this was true of him, it is true of all others. It is a good way to examine ourselves, to inquire whether we have such a view of our own native character as to say that we know that in our flesh there dwelleth no good thing. The sense here is, that so far as the flesh was concerned, that is, in regard to his natural inclinations and desires, there was nothing good; all was evil. This was true in his entire conduct before conversion, where the desires of the flesh reigned and rioted without control; and it was true after conversion, so far as the natural inclinations and propensities of the flesh were concerned. All those operations in every stake were evil, and not the less evil because they are experienced under the light and amidst the influences of the gospel.

To will - To purpose or intend to do good.

Is present with me - I can do that. It is possible; it is in my power. The expression may also imply that it was near to him παράκειται parakeitai , that is, it was constantly before him; it was now his habitual inclination and purpose of mind. It is the uniform, regular, habitual purpose of the Christian’ s mind to do right.

But how - The sense would have been better retained here if the translators had not introduced the word "how."The difficulty was not in the mode of performing it, but to do the thing itself.

I find not - I do not find it in my power; or I find strong, constant obstacles, so that I fail of doing it. The obstacles are not natural, but such as arise from long indulgence in sin; the strong native propensity to evil.

Barnes: Rom 7:19 - -- For the good ... - This is substantially a repetition of what is said in Rom 7:15. The repetition shows how full the mind of the apostle was of...

For the good ... - This is substantially a repetition of what is said in Rom 7:15. The repetition shows how full the mind of the apostle was of the subject; and how much inclined he was to dwell upon it, and to place it in every variety of form. It is not uncommon for Paul thus to express his intense interest in a subject, by placing it in a great variety of aspects, even at the hazard of much repetition.

Barnes: Rom 7:20 - -- Now if I do ... - This verse is also a repetition of what was said in Rom 7:16-17.

Now if I do ... - This verse is also a repetition of what was said in Rom 7:16-17.

Barnes: Rom 7:21 - -- I find then a law - There is a law whose operation I experience whenever I attempt to do good. There have been various opinions about the meani...

I find then a law - There is a law whose operation I experience whenever I attempt to do good. There have been various opinions about the meaning of the word "law"in this place. It is evident that it is used here in a sense somewhat unusual. But it retains the notion which commonly attaches to it of what binds, or controls. And though this to which he refers differs from a law, inasmuch as it is not imposed by a superior, which is the usual idea of a law, yet it has so far the sense of law that it binds, controls, influences, or is that to which he was subject. There can be no doubt that he refers here to his carnal and corrupt nature; to the evil propensities and dispositions which were leading him astray. His representing this as a law is in accordance with all that he says of it, that it is servitude, that he is in bondage to it, and that it impedes his efforts to be holy and pure. The meaning is this, "I find a habit, a propensity, an influence of corrupt passions and desires, which, when I would do right, impedes my progress, and prevents my accomplishing what I would."Compare Gal 5:17. Every Christian is as much acquainted with this as was the apostle Paul.

Do good - Do right. Be perfect.

Evil - Some corrupt desire, or improper feeling, or evil propensity.

Is present with me - Is near; is at hand. It starts up unbidden, and undesired. It is in the path, and never leaves us, but is always ready to impede our going, and to turn us from our good designs; compare Psa 65:3, "Iniquities prevail against me.’ The sense is, that to do evil is agreeable to our strong natural inclinations and passions.

Barnes: Rom 7:22 - -- For I delight - The word used here Συνήδομαι Sunēdomai , occurs no where else in the New Testament. It properly means to rejo...

For I delight - The word used here Συνήδομαι Sunēdomai , occurs no where else in the New Testament. It properly means to rejoice with anyone; and expresses not only approbation of the understanding, as the expression, "I consent unto the law,"in Rom 7:16, but more than that it denotes sensible pleasure in the heart. It indicates not only intellectual assent, but emotion, an emotion of pleasure in the contemplation of the Law. And this shows that the apostle is not speaking of an unrenewed man. Of such a man it might be said that his conscience approved the Law; that his understanding was convinced that the Law was good; but never yet did it occur that an impenitent sinner found emotions of pleasure in the contemplation of the pure and spiritual Law of God. If this expression can be applied to an unrenewed man, there is, perhaps, not a single mark of a pious mind which may not with equal propriety be so applied. It is the natural, obvious, and usual mode of denoting the feelings of piety, an assent to the divine Law followed with emotions of sensible delight in the contemplation. Compare Psa 119:97, "O how love I thy law; it is my meditation all the day."Psa 1:2, "but his delight is in the law of the Lord."Psa 19:7-11; Job 23:12.

In the law of God - The word "law"here is used in a large sense, to denote all the communications which God had made to control man. The sense is, that the apostle was pleased with the whole. One mark of genuine piety is to be pleased with the whole of the divine requirements.

After the inward man - In respect to the inward man. The expression "the inward man"is used sometimes to denote the rational part of man as opposed to the sensual; sometimes the mind as opposed to the body (compare 2Co 4:16; 1Pe 3:4). It is thus used by the Greek classic writers. Here it is used evidently in opposition to a carnal and corrupt nature; to the evil passions and desires of the soul in an unrenewed state; to what is called elsewhere "the old man which is corrupt according to the deceitful lusts."Eph 4:22. The "inward man"is called elsewhere "the new man"Eph 4:24; and denotes not the mere intellect, or conscience, but is a personification of the principles of action by which a Christian is governed; the new nature; the holy disposition; the inclination of the heart that is renewed.

Poole: Rom 7:1 - -- Rom 7:1-3 No law having power over a person longer than he lives, Rom 7:4 we therefore, being become dead to the law by the body of Christ, ar...

Rom 7:1-3 No law having power over a person longer than he lives,

Rom 7:4 we therefore, being become dead to the law by the body

of Christ, are left free to place ourselves under a

happier dispensation.

Rom 7:5-13 For the law, through the prevalency of corrupt passions,

could only serve as an instrument of sin unto death;

although it be in itself holy, and just, and good.

Rom 7:14-23 As is manifest by our reason approving the precepts of

it, whilst our depraved nature is unable to put them

in practice.

Rom 7:24,25 The wretchedness of man in such a situation, and God’ s

mercy in his deliverance from it through Christ.

The apostle, having showed in a former chapter how believers are freed from the dominion of sin, proceeds in this chapter to declare, that they are free also from the yoke of the Mosaical law, because that was dead to them, and they to it. This he illustrates, and proceeds by the familiar allegory of a husband and his wife: Look, as a wife is free from her husband when he is dead, and may then marry another, and be no adulteress; so believers are dead to the law, and are free to be married to another, even to Christ, that is raised from the dead, that upon their marriage they may bring forth fruit unto God.

By the law here he means the law of wedlock, or the law of Moses about that matter, as appears by the instance given in the next verse.

The word man here is common to both sexes, and may be applied to either, for both are subject to the aforementioned law.

Poole: Rom 7:2 - -- He here exemplifies and illustrates the foregoing assertion. The woman is bound by the law to her husband so long as he liveth: see a parallel pla...

He here exemplifies and illustrates the foregoing assertion.

The woman is bound by the law to her husband so long as he liveth: see a parallel place, 1Co 7:39 . This is the general rule, yet there is an exception in the case of fornication or desertion: see Mat 5:32 1Co 7:15 .

From the law of her husband from the obligation of the law of marriage.

Poole: Rom 7:3-4 - -- Ver. 3,4. Ye also are become dead to the law i.e. ye are taken off from all hopes of justification by it, and from your confidence in obedience to i...

Ver. 3,4. Ye also are become dead to the law i.e. ye are taken off from all hopes of justification by it, and from your confidence in obedience to it, Gal 2:19 . The opposition seems to require that he should have said, the law is dead to us; but these two phrases are much the same.

Question. What law does he mean?

Answer. Not only the ceremonial, but the moral law, for in that he instances, Rom 7:7 . The moral law is in force still; Christ came to confirm, and not to destroy it; but believers are freed from the malediction, from the rigid exaction, and from the irritation thereof. Of this last he speaks, Rom 7:8,9 , and from it we are freed but in part.

By the body of Christ i.e. by the sacrifice of Christ’ s body upon the cross; thereby he delivered us from the law, in the sense before mentioned.

Fruit unto God i.e. fruits of holiness and good works, to the glory and praise of God.

Poole: Rom 7:5 - -- For: q.d. For bringing forth of which fruit unto God, we have now better helps than formerly we had; or we are in much better circumstances than form...

For: q.d. For bringing forth of which fruit unto God, we have now better helps than formerly we had; or we are in much better circumstances than formerly we were: and so he proceeds to show how our present state does differ from the former.

When we were in the flesh i.e. in our carnal, fleshly state, before we were regenerated, or under the carnal pedagogy of the law; for in the next verse he speaks of our being now delivered from the law.

The motions of sins which were by the law; i.e. the corrupt inclinations to sin, which are drawn forth by the law, as ill vapours are raised out of a dunghill by the sun; or which are irritated by the law; of which by and by.

Did work in, our members: see Rom 6:13,16 .

To bring forth fruit unto death; i.e. such ill fruit as ends in death, Rom 6:21 .

Poole: Rom 7:6 - -- But now i.e. being brought out of our fleshly state. We are delivered from the law: see the notes on Rom 7:4 . That being dead wherein we were hel...

But now i.e. being brought out of our fleshly state.

We are delivered from the law: see the notes on Rom 7:4 .

That being dead wherein we were held the relative is not in the Greek text, but it is well supplied to fill up the sense. The antecedent must be either sin or the law; by both of these we were held or detained whilst unregenerate; but now neither of these have any power to hold us with. Some read it, he being dead; the old man, of which he spake in the foregoing chapter.

That we should serve in newness of spirit i.e. that we should serve God, or Jesus Christ, our new husband, in true holiness, which is wrought in us by the renewing of the spirit; or serve him in a new spiritual manner.

And not in the oldness of the letter i.e. not in an outward and ceremonial manner, according to the letter of the law; which service, or way of worship, is now antiquated, and grown out of date. The word oldness insinuates the abolishing thereof, because of insufficiency, Heb 8:13 .

Poole: Rom 7:7 - -- Is the law sin? God forbid: here is another anticipation of an objection, which might arise from what the apostle had said, Rom 7:5 , that sin was po...

Is the law sin? God forbid: here is another anticipation of an objection, which might arise from what the apostle had said, Rom 7:5 , that sin was powerful in us by the law. Some might object and say, that the law then was sin, i.e. that it was the cause of it, and a factor for it. To this he answers, by his usual note of detestation, God forbid.

Nay, I had not known sin, but by the law i.e. I had not known it so clearly and effectually, so as to humble and drive me to Christ; for otherwise, nature itself teachs a difference of good and evil in many things. He adds this as a reason why the law cannot be the cause of sin, because it discovers and reproves sin, it detects and damns it; and that it so doth, he proves from his own experience.

For I had not known lust i.e. I had not known it to be sin. By lust here some understand that concupiscence which the school men call unformed concupiscence, which hath not the consent of the will: for the concupiscence to which we consent, the heathens themselves know to be sinful; but that which hath not the consent of the will, or the first motions to sin, they held to be no sin; as neither did the Pharisees, amongst whom Paul lived; nor do the papists to this very day. Some by lust understand original sin, which is the fountain from whence all particular lusts flow; the hot furnace from which all sinful motions, as so many sparks, continually arise: this is called lust, likewise, in Jam 1:14 ; and this is forbidden in every commandment; for where any of sin is prohibited, there the root also is prohibited; but more particularly it is forbidden in the tenth commandment.

Except the law that said, Thou shalt not covet: some understand the law in general; but the article used in the Greek seems to restrain it to a particular precept. Besides, they are the very words of the tenth commandment. But why doth he not mention the objects that are specified in that commandment, as, thy neighbour’ s house, wife, & c.? The answer is: That that was not material; for the apostle speaking of inward concupiscence, which without the law is latent and undiscovered, it was enough to name the sin itself, seeing the objects about which it is conversant are of all sorts, and can hardly be numbered.

Poole: Rom 7:8 - -- But sin i.e. the corruption of our nature, the depraved bent and bias of the soul, called before lust. Taking occassion by the commandment i.e. b...

But sin i.e. the corruption of our nature, the depraved bent and bias of the soul, called before lust.

Taking occassion by the commandment i.e. being stirred up or drawn forth by the prohibition of the law. The law did not properly give occasion, but sin took it. The law (as before) is not the cause of sin, though by accident it is the occasion of it. In a dropsy, it is not the drink that is to be blamed for increasing the disease, but the ill habit of body. Such is the depravedness of man’ s nature, that the things which are forbidden are the more desired: the more the law would dam up the torrent of sinful lusts, the higher do they swell. The law was given to restrain sin, but through our corruption it falls out contrarily. The law inhibiting sin, and not giving power to avoid it, our impetuous lusts take occasion or advantage from thence, the more eagerly to pursue it.

Wrought in me all manner of concupiscence i.e. inordinate affections and inclinations of all sorts.

For without the law i.e. without the knowledge of the law.

Sin was dead; i.e. comparatively dead. Sin hath not so much power, either to terrify the conscience, or to stir up inordinate affections; it is like a sleepy lion, that stirs not.

Poole: Rom 7:9 - -- For I was alive without the law once: q.d. Take me, if you please, for an instance. Before I knew the law aright, and understood the Divine and spiri...

For I was alive without the law once: q.d. Take me, if you please, for an instance. Before I knew the law aright, and understood the Divine and spiritual meaning of it, or whilst the law stood afar off, and was not brought home to my conscience, I was alive, that is, in my own conceit; I thought myself in as good condition as any man living; my conscience never gave me any trouble. So it was with me once, or heretofore, when I was a Pharisee, or in an unregenerate state.

But when the commandment came i.e. when it came nearer to my conscience; when I came to know and understand the spiritual meaning and extent of it, that it condemned sinful lusts, affections, and inclinations.

Sin revived i.e. its sinfulness and guilt appeared, and I had a lively sense thereof imprinted upon my soul; or my corruptions began to gather head, and seemed, as it were, to receive new vigour and life.

And I died i.e. in my own opinion and feeling. I felt my conscience deadly wounded. I was convinced I was in a state of death and damnation. I lost the confidence I formerly had of my good estate.

Poole: Rom 7:10 - -- q.d. So it came to pass, that the commandment, which was ordained to be a rule of life, and, if I could have kept it, a means of life also, Rom 10:5...

q.d. So it came to pass, that the commandment, which was ordained to be a rule of life, and, if I could have kept it, a means of life also, Rom 10:5 Gal 3:12 , I found it to be to me (through my corruption and transgression) an occasion of death; it bound me over to punishment; and so, by accident, it tendeth to death. Some by life and death here, understand peace and perturbation of spirit.

Poole: Rom 7:11 - -- For sin, taking occasion by the commandment: see the notes on Rom 7:8 . Deceived me i.e. seduced and drew me aside, Heb 3:13 Jam 1:14 . And by it ...

For sin, taking occasion by the commandment: see the notes on Rom 7:8 .

Deceived me i.e. seduced and drew me aside, Heb 3:13 Jam 1:14 .

And by it slew me i.e. it drove me into despair, or delivered me over to death and damnation, and made me obnoxious thereunto.

Poole: Rom 7:12 - -- Wherefore the law is holy and so the objection, Rom 7:7 , was a groundless objection: for though the law were the occasion of sin, or were made advan...

Wherefore the law is holy and so the objection, Rom 7:7 , was a groundless objection: for though the law were the occasion of sin, or were made advantage of by sin, as Rom 7:8 , yet it was not the cause of it; that, on all hands, is acknowledged to be holy, &c.

The law the law in all the branches of it.

The commandment particularly the preceptire part of the law, and every particular precept.

Holy, and just, and good: the three epithets here given the law of God may be thus distinguished; it is holy in respect of the ceremonial part, it is just in respect of the judicial part, and good in respect of the moral part of it. Or else the law is holy, as it teacheth us our duty unto God; just, as it showeth us our duty to our neighbour; good, in regard of the effect and end, as it works goodness in the observer thereof, and is conducive to his temporal and eternal good.

Poole: Rom 7:13 - -- Was then that which is good made death unto me? God forbid: another anticipation. The apostle denies that the holy law was in its own nature deadly, ...

Was then that which is good made death unto me? God forbid: another anticipation. The apostle denies that the holy law was in its own nature deadly, or the cause of death to him; the fault was not in the law, but in his own depraved nature: but the plain case is this that follows.

But sin, that it might appear sin, working death in me by that which is good that sin, that so it might appear every way like itself, wrought death in him, by occasion of that law, which yet itself is holy, just, and good.

That sin by the commandment might become exceeding sinful so as hereupon sin, which in the time of his ignorance and unregeneracy seemed not worthy of any notice, appeared to be exceeding foul and sinful. Sin is so evil, that he cannot call it by a worse name than its own. Jerome thinks, that the apostle here commits a solecism, by joining an adjective of the masculine gender with a substantive of the feminine; but Beza and Erasmus have observed, that this is usual in the Attic dialect. See the like, Rom 1:20 . Some read sinner for sinful, and make the apostle to speak of sin as of a certain person; and therefore all along the context sin is said to work, to be dead, to revive, to deceive, to kill, &c., which is properly attributed to persons, and not to things.

Poole: Rom 7:14 - -- He goes on to clear the law, and excuse it, giving it another commendation, that it is spiritual; i.e. it requires such obedience as is not only ...

He goes on to clear the law, and excuse it, giving it another commendation, that it is spiritual; i.e. it requires such obedience as is not only outward, but inward and spiritual; it forbids spiritual as well as fleshly sins. Read Christ’ s exposition of it, in Mat 5:1-48 .

I am carnal i.e. in part, because of the remainders of sin and of the flesh that are still in me; in respect of which, those who are regenerated are said to be carnal. Compare 1Co 1:2 , with 1Co 3:1 .

Sold under sin: he did not actively sell himself to sin, or to commit sin, which is said of Ahab, 1Ki 21:20,25 , and of the idolatrous Israelites, 2Ki 17:17 . He was not sin’ s servant or slave; but many times he was sin’ s captive against his will; see Rom 7:23 . Against his will and consent, he was still subject to the violent lusts and assaults of sin, and not able wholly to free himself: though he always made stout resistance, yet many times he was overcome. Hitherto the apostle hath spoken of the power of the law and sin in unregenerate persons, even as he himself had experienced whilst he was yet in such a state; but now he cometh to speak of himself as he then was, and to declare what power the remainders of sinful flesh had still in him, though regenerated, and in part renewed. That the following part of this chapter is to be applied to a regenerate person, is evident, because the apostle (speaking of himself in the former verses) uses the preter-perfect tense, or speaks of that which was past; but here he changeth the tense, and speaks of the present time. From Rom 7:7-14 , he tells us how it had been with him formerly; and then from Rom 7:14-25 , he relates how it was with him now; I was so and so, I am thus and thus. The changing of the tense and time doth plainly argue a change in the person. They that list to be further satisfied in this point, may find it fully discussed in our own language, by Mr. Anthony Burgess, in his excellent discourse of Original Sin, part iv. c. 3, and by Dr. Willet, in his Hexalta in locum; and they that understand the Latin tongue, may find it argued pro and con, in Synops. Critic. &c., and by Aug. Retractat. lib. i. c. 23; Contra Julian. lib. v. c. 11.

Poole: Rom 7:15 - -- For that which I do i.e. what I do contrary to the command of God. I allow not: in the Greek it is, I know not: q.d. Many times I am surprised and ...

For that which I do i.e. what I do contrary to the command of God.

I allow not: in the Greek it is, I know not: q.d. Many times I am surprised and overtaken, not knowing or considering what I do. Or when he says, I know not, his meaning is, (as our translation renders it), I allow or approve not. So the word is used, Mat 7:23 , and elsewhere: q.d. Even now, in my converted and regenerate state, I am many times greatly divided, and feel a strife or combat in myself; so that the good I would do upon the motions of God’ s Spirit in me, I do not; and the evil that I hate, and am utterly averse to, so far as I am regenerated, that I do. See a parallel place, Gal 5:17 .

But what I hate, that do I: he doth not speak here so much of outward actions, as of inward motions and affections: he doth not speak of gross sins, as drunkenness, uncleanness, &c., but of such infirmities as flow from the polluted nature, and from which we can never be thoroughly cleansed in this life.

Poole: Rom 7:16 - -- This very thing is an argument, that the law is such as I have before asserted, Rom 7:12,14 . This shows my consent to the holiness and goodness of ...

This very thing is an argument, that the law is such as I have before asserted, Rom 7:12,14 . This shows my consent to the holiness and goodness of the law; I vote with it, and for it, as the only rule of right or righteousness.

Poole: Rom 7:17 - -- It is no more I that do it i.e. it is not I as spiritual or renewed, it is not my whole self, but it is sin that dwelleth in me that inhabits in me...

It is no more I that do it i.e. it is not I as spiritual or renewed, it is not my whole self, but it is sin that dwelleth in me that inhabits in me as a troublesome inmate, that I cannot get rid of, that will not out so long as the house stands; as the fretting leprosy in the walls of a house would not out till the house itself were demolished. It is such an inhabitant as is never from home; it is not in us as a stranger for a season, but it makes its constant abode with us.

Poole: Rom 7:18 - -- In my flesh i.e. in my fleshly part, or my nature in and of itself. No good thing no goodness at all, or no spiritual good. For to will is present...

In my flesh i.e. in my fleshly part, or my nature in and of itself.

No good thing no goodness at all, or no spiritual good.

For to will is present with me i.e. I can, so long and so far as I follow the motions of God’ s Spirit, will that which is good;

but how to perform the good that I would, I find no power or might, at least to perform it in that manner that I desire: the meaning is not that he never did the good he desired; but it often so fell out, he began many good things, but he could not go thorough-stitch with them.

Poole: Rom 7:19-20 - -- Ver. 19,20. These two verses are a repetition of what he had said, Rom 7:15,17 . Every new man is two men; there is in him an I and an I. The apostle...

Ver. 19,20. These two verses are a repetition of what he had said, Rom 7:15,17 . Every new man is two men; there is in him an I and an I. The apostle in his unregenerate state, could make no such distinction as now he doth.

Poole: Rom 7:21 - -- This verse hath greatly vexed interpreters. The apostle speaking simply and abstractly of a law the question is: What law he means? Some take the ...

This verse hath greatly vexed interpreters. The apostle speaking simply and abstractly of

a law the question is: What law he means? Some take the word improperly, for a decree or condition, which was imposed upon him, and to which he was necessarily subject, that when he would do good, evil should be present with him. Others by law here do understand the law of sin; of which he speaks afterwards, Rom 7:23,25 . Sin is like a law, and so powerful and imperious in its commands and dictates, that we have much ado, the best of us, to resist it, and shake off its yoke. q.d. I find by sad experience such a forcible power in sin, that when I would do good, I am hindered, and cannot do it so freely and fully as I desire. Others by law here do understand the law of God; and those that so understand it, have given no less than eight interpretations, to make the grammatical connexion: the best is of those that say the preposition kata is understood, a frequent ellipsis in the Greek tongue, see Jam 1:26and then the sense is this; I find that when, according to the law or command of God, I would do good, evil is present with me.

Evil is present with me another periphrasis of original sin, of which there are many in this chapter. Just now it was the sin that dwelleth in us, and here it is the evil that is present with us: it inheres and adheres, or hangs upon us continually. It is adjacent, so the Greek word signifies, and always at hand; we carry it about with us at all times, and into all places; whithersoever we go, it follows us; or, as it is here, in our doing of good it is a very great impediment to us.

Poole: Rom 7:22 - -- This shows yet more expressly that the apostle speaketh in the person of a regenerate man, or of himself as regenerate. Certainly, to delight in th...

This shows yet more expressly that the apostle speaketh in the person of a regenerate man, or of himself as regenerate. Certainly, to

delight in the law of God is an inseparable property of such a one: see Psa 1:2 , and Psa 119:77,111 .

The inward man i.e. the new man, or regenerate part within me: this is called

the hidden man of the heart 1Pe 3:4 : see Rom 2:29 2Co 4:16 .

PBC: Rom 7:9 - -- SEE Philpot: I WAS ALIVE WITHOUT THE LAW ONCE...

SEE Philpot: I WAS ALIVE WITHOUT THE LAW ONCE...

Haydock: Rom 7:1 - -- As long as it liveth; or, as long as he liveth. (Challoner) --- This seems the literal construction, rather than as long as he, the man, liveth. ...

As long as it liveth; or, as long as he liveth. (Challoner) ---

This seems the literal construction, rather than as long as he, the man, liveth. For St. Paul here compares the law (which in the Greek is in the masculine gender) to the husband, whom a wife cannot quit, nor be married to another, as long as the husband liveth, without being an adulteress: but if the husband be dead, (as the law of Moses is now dead, and no longer obligatory after the publishing of the new law of Christ) the people that were Jews, and under the Jewish law, are now free from that former husband, to wit, the written law of Moses. Nay, this people also are become dead to the law, (ver. 4.) because the law itself is dead by the body of Christ, or, as in the Greek, by reason of the body of Christ offered and sacrificed for you, and for all on the cross: so that now you must look upon yourselves as spiritually married to him: which agrees with what follows, that you may belong to another, (in the Greek, to another husband ) to Christ, who is risen from the dead, and is now the spouse of your souls. (Witham)

Haydock: Rom 7:5 - -- For when we were in the flesh; i.e. lived according to the flesh, the passions of sins, which were by the law: he does not say, as St. John Chryso...

For when we were in the flesh; i.e. lived according to the flesh, the passions of sins, which were by the law: he does not say, as St. John Chrysostom observes, that they were caused by the law, but only were by it, meaning that they were occasioned by the knowledge of the law, but properly caused by ourselves, and our corrupt inclinations, that were wrought in our members, rather than did work. (Witham)

Haydock: Rom 7:6 - -- But now are loosed from the law of death, by which many understand from the law of Moses; so called, because it could not of itself give the life of ...

But now are loosed from the law of death, by which many understand from the law of Moses; so called, because it could not of itself give the life of grace, and occasioned death. Others expound these words, free from the law of death, that is, from sins, which before they had been guilty of, and which made them deserve eternal death. (Witham)

Haydock: Rom 7:7 - -- Is the law (of Moses) sin? God forbid. The apostle declares, that the law itself was far from being sinful; on the contrary, that it was good, s...

Is the law (of Moses) sin? God forbid. The apostle declares, that the law itself was far from being sinful; on the contrary, that it was good, spiritual, holy: but, saith he, I should not know concupiscence to be sinful, unless the law said: thou shalt not covet: by which it is made known to every one, that sins of thought consented to, and evil desires, are sins. (Witham)

Haydock: Rom 7:8 - -- Sin, taking occasion. Sin, or concupiscence, which is called sin, because it is from sin, and leads to sin, which was asleep before, was awakened ...

Sin, taking occasion. Sin, or concupiscence, which is called sin, because it is from sin, and leads to sin, which was asleep before, was awakened by the prohibition; the law not being the cause thereof, nor properly giving occasion to it: but occasion being taken by our corrupt nature to resist the commandment laid upon us. (Challoner) ---

Sin. The apostle here calls concupiscence by the name of sin; because it is the consequence and punishment of it, and drags us along to sin. This takes occasion from the precept of the law to induce us to transgress it; for we are naturally inclined to do what is forbidden. ---

Nitmur in vetitum ---

which is the offspring of a disorderly love of liberty and independence. Without the law sin was dead, because concupiscence had nothing to rouse and trouble it. It was like a torrent which rolled rapidly, without resistance in its channel, but as soon as the law came and put an obstacle, it began to spread itself far and wide, and commit the strangest ravages. Or it may be explained thus: without the law sin was dead; not being known to the world, and not imputed to us as a transgression. He speaks here of the transgressions of the written law, not the law of nature, of which each one has a sufficient knowledge to render him inexcusable, whenever he transgresses it. (Calmet) ---

Without the law sin was dead; that is, many sins were so little known, that before the written law they seemed no sins; not but that, at all times, reason and conscience shewed many things to be sinful and ill done, so that whosoever acted against these lights could not be excused. See what St. Paul says of the heathen philosophers, chap. i. (Witham)

Haydock: Rom 7:9 - -- I lived some time without the law; i.e. without the knowledge of the law. This some understand St. Paul in the time of his childhood, before he came...

I lived some time without the law; i.e. without the knowledge of the law. This some understand St. Paul in the time of his childhood, before he came to the knowledge of what was forbidden by any law. But the exposition, which agrees with the rest of this chapter, is this; that St. Paul, though he seems to speak of himself, yet represents the condition of any person that lived before the written law was given: but when the commandment came, after that the written law was given, and its precepts came to my knowledge, then sin revived, by giving me a perfect knowledge: and by transgressing those precepts, I became more guilty and without excuse. ---

I died: i.e. became guilty by transgression of the known law, and guilty of eternal death: and the commandments or precepts, which were unto life, which were good in themselves, and designed to direct me what I was to do, and what I was to avoid in order to obtain eternal life, were found to be unto death to me, but by my own fault; and occasionally only, from the commandments of the law and the knowledge of them, when with full knowledge I transgressed them. Thus I was seduced by sin, which with it brought death, though the law and the commandment (ver. 12) were in themselves holy, and just, and good. They could not but be good, as St. John Chrysostom says, their author being the true God, and not any evil principle or cause, that was the author of evils, as the impious Manicheans pretended. We might as well, says St. John Chrysostom, find fault with the tree of life [the tree of knowledge of good and evil?] and the forbidden fruit in Paradise, which was not the cause, but only the occasion of our misery, when Adam ate of it. It cannot then be said, that that which was good, (to wit, the law ) was made death to me, or the cause of my death; but sin, and my unresisted sinful inclinations, that it might appear sin, or that it might evidently appear how great an evil sin is, by that which is good, (i.e. by the transgression of the precepts given and known, sin might become sinful above measure. He speaks of sin as it were of a certain person; and the sense is, that sin, which was in my corrupt nature, might become sinful above measure, when it led me into all manner of disorders and excess, which I yielded to. (Witham)

Haydock: Rom 7:13 - -- That it may appear sin, or that sin may appear; viz. to be the monster it is, which is even capable to take occasion from that which is good to wor...

That it may appear sin, or that sin may appear; viz. to be the monster it is, which is even capable to take occasion from that which is good to work death. (Challoner)

Haydock: Rom 7:14 - -- I am carnal, sold under sin, a slave subject to sinful inclinations, which are only properly sins when they are consented to by our free-will. There...

I am carnal, sold under sin, a slave subject to sinful inclinations, which are only properly sins when they are consented to by our free-will. There has been a great dispute both among the ancient and later interpreters, whether St. Paul from this verse to the end of the chapter speaks of a person remaining in sin, either under the law of nature or of the written law, (which was once the opinion of St. Augustine) or whether he speaks of a person regenerated by baptism, and in the state of grace in the new law, and even of himself when he was a faithful servant of God. This is the opinion of St. Augustine in many of his later writings against the Pelagians, for which he also cites St. Hilary, St. Gregory of Nazianzus, and St. Ambrose. It is also the opinion of St. Jerome, (Ep. ad Eustochium de custod. Virg.) of St. Gregory the great, of Ven. Bede, and the more approved opinion, according to which the apostle here by sin does not understand that which is properly speaking a sin, or sinful, but only speaks of sin improperly such, that is of a corrupt inclination, or a rebellious nature corrupted by original sin, of a strife betwixt the spirit and the flesh, which remains for a trial in the most virtuous persons: of which see again St. Paul, Galatians v. 17. We may take notice that the apostle before spoke of what he was and what he had been, but now speaks in the present time of what he is, and what he doth. (Witham) ---

The law is styled spiritual: 1st, because it prescribes what appertains to the spirit, and to the spiritual man: i.e. to follow virtue and shun vice: 2nd, because it directs man to the worship of God, which is spirit and truth: 3rd, because it cannot be fulfilled by spiritual men, unless by spirit and grace: 4th, because it directs the spirit of man and disposes him properly towards God, towards his neighbour, and towards himself: and lastly, because the law, which is the law of grace and spirit. (Menochius)

Haydock: Rom 7:15 - -- For that which I work, I understand not. To know, or understand is often, in the style of the Scriptures, the same as to approve or love: so the...

For that which I work, I understand not. To know, or understand is often, in the style of the Scriptures, the same as to approve or love: so the sense here is: I approve not what I do, that is, what happens to me in my sensitive part, in my imagination, or in the members of my body, which indeed the just man rather suffers than does; and this is the sense, by what immediately follows, the evil which I hate, that I do, i.e. that I suffer, being against my will; and I do that which I would not. (Witham) ---

I do not that good which I will, &c. The apostle here describes the disorderly motions of passion and concupiscence; which oftentimes in us get the start of reason, and by means of which even good men suffer in the inferior appetite what their will abhors: and are much hindered in the accomplishment of the desires of their spirit and mind. But these evil motions, (though they are called the law of sin, because they come from original sin, and violently tempt and incline to sin) as long as the will does not consent to them, are not sins, because they are not voluntary. (Challoner)

Haydock: Rom 7:17-18 - -- Now then it is no more I that do it: To will good is present with me. These expressions all shew that he speaks of temptations that affect the sense...

Now then it is no more I that do it: To will good is present with me. These expressions all shew that he speaks of temptations that affect the sense only, the imagination, or the members of the body, but to which the mind and the will give no consent, but retain an aversion to them; and so long they never can be truly and properly sins, which must be with full deliberation and consent. (Witham) ---

The apostle here means to say, that he knew by experience that evil and not good dwelt within him, according to the flesh. He does not contradict this passage when he says elsewhere, that our members are the temples of the Holy Ghost: (1 Corinthians iii. 6. &c.) for good cannot be found in our flesh, inasmuch as it is corrupted by sin;; whence our Saviour says, "What is born of flesh, is flesh." (John iii.) But good is in our body, when our members under the influence of the soul, renewed by the Holy Ghost residing in it, are employed in good works. The meaning of this passage is, that although now healed and renewed by grace, he could have a perfect desire of doing good; yet still on account of the evil of concupiscence dwelling in his flesh, he found not himself able to perform all the good he wished, because concupiscence was always urging him on to evil against his will. (Estius)

Haydock: Rom 7:22 - -- I am delighted with the law of God according to the inward man. As long as the inward man, or man's interior, is right, all is right. --- (I percei...

I am delighted with the law of God according to the inward man. As long as the inward man, or man's interior, is right, all is right. ---

(I perceive another law in my members, fighting, and different from the law of my mind: this is true in any man just striving against and resisting temptations, but not of the sinner, whose mind also and will consent to them. A man can never lose God's favour and grace, unless his mind and interior consent. ---

These hold me as it were captive in the law of sin, or sinful inclinations, but which are in the members only. I cry out, who shall deliver me from the body of this death, from this mortal body with its sinful lusts, which if consented to would bring death to the soul? Nothing but the grace of Jesus Christ can secure me from such temptations, and by freeing me from this body, can make me perfectly happy; which cannot be hoped for in this life. But I have still this greatest of consolations, that I myself, with my mind and will, still serve God, and remain firm in obedience to his laws; but with the flesh, or in the flesh, I am subject to the law of sin, i.e. of sinful inclinations. ---

We must avoid here two heretical errors; that of those late pretended reformers, who denying man's free will, hold the commandments of God impossible, even to a just man. See also the first heretical proposition of Jansenius. Next we must detest the late abominable error of those called Quietists, who blushed not to say that a man might yield and abandon himself to the most shameful disorders of the flesh, pretending that it was not they themselves, but sin and the devil that caused the abominations in their flesh. St. Augustine foresaw this frivolous excuse: (lib. i. de. nup. and Concup. chap. xxviii.) "That man (saith he) is in a grievous mistake, who, consenting to the concupiscence of the flesh, and to do what the flesh prompts him to, thinks he can still say: it is not I that do that," &c. (Witham)

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Gill: Rom 7:1 - -- Know ye not, brethren,.... The apostle having asserted, Rom 6:14, that the believing Romans were "not under the law"; which he knew would be displeasi...

Know ye not, brethren,.... The apostle having asserted, Rom 6:14, that the believing Romans were "not under the law"; which he knew would be displeasing to many, and excepted to by them, especially the Jews that were among them, who though they believed in Christ, yet were zealous of the law, takes it up again, and explains and defends it. That they were the Jewish converts at Rome he here particularly addresses, appears partly from his calling them "brethren", for they were so according to the flesh, as well as in a spiritual relation, and this he rather mentions to soften their resentments, and conciliate their minds to him; and partly from the words included in a parenthesis,

for I speak to them that know the law; not the law of nature, but the law of Moses, as the Jews did, being trained up in the knowledge of it; to these he appeals, saying, "know ye not", for the truth of a principle or maxim he afterwards improves, which they could not be ignorant of,

how that the law hath dominion over a man as long as he, or "it",

liveth; for the word "liveth" may refer either to man or to the law. The law may be said to live, when it is in full force, and to be dead, when it is abrogated and disannulled; now whilst it lives, or is in force, it has dominion over a man; it can require and command obedience of him, and in case of disobedience can condemn him, and inflict punishment on him: and this power it has also as long as the man lives who is under it, but when he is dead it has no more dominion over him; then "the servant is free from his master", Job 3:19; that is, from the law of his master; and children are free from the law of their parents, the wife from the law of her husband, and subjects from the law of their prince. This is so clear a point that none can doubt of it. The Jews have a saying d, that

"when a man is dead, he becomes חפשי מן תורה ומן המצות, free from the law, and from the commands.''

Gill: Rom 7:2 - -- For the woman which hath an husband,.... The former general rule is here illustrated by a particular instance and example in the law of marriage; a wo...

For the woman which hath an husband,.... The former general rule is here illustrated by a particular instance and example in the law of marriage; a woman that is married to a man,

is bound by the law to her husband; to live with him, in subjection and obedience to him,

so long as he liveth; except in the cases of adultery, Mat 19:9, and desertion, 1Co 7:15, by which the bond of marriage is loosed, and for which a divorce or separation may be made, which are equal to death:

but if the husband be dead, she is loosed from the law of her husband; the bond of marriage is dissolved, the law of it is abolished, and she is at entire liberty to marry whom she will, 1Co 7:39.

Gill: Rom 7:3 - -- So then if while her husband liveth,.... True indeed it is, that whilst her husband is alive, if she be married to another man, she shall be called...

So then if while her husband liveth,.... True indeed it is, that whilst her husband is alive, if

she be married to another man, she shall be called an adulteress; she will be noted and accounted of as such everybody, except in the above mentioned cases:

but if her husband be dead; then there can be no exception to her marriage:

she is free from the law; of marriage, by which she was before bound:

so that she is no adulteress; nor will any reckon her such; she is clear from any such imputation:

though she be married to another man; hence it appears that second marriages are lawful.

Gill: Rom 7:4 - -- Wherefore, my brethren, ye also,.... Here the apostle accommodates the foregoing instance and example to the case in hand, showing, that the saints we...

Wherefore, my brethren, ye also,.... Here the apostle accommodates the foregoing instance and example to the case in hand, showing, that the saints were not under the law, the power and dominion of it; since that, as when a man is dead, the woman is loosed from that law by which she was bound whilst he lived, that she may lawfully marry another man, and bear children to him without the imputation of adultery; so believers being dead to the law, and the law dead to them, which is all one, they are loosed from it, and may be, and are lawfully married to Christ, that they may bring forth the genuine fruits of good works, not in order to obtain righteousness and life by them, but for the honour and glory of God; in which account may be observed, an assertion that the saints and children of God

are become dead to the law, and that to them, as in Rom 7:6, and can have no more power over them than a law can have over dead persons, or a dead abrogated law can have over living ones. They are represented as "dead to sin", and "dead with Christ", Rom 6:2; and here, "dead to the law", as in Gal 2:19, and consequently cannot be under it; are out of the reach of its power and government, since that only has dominion over a man as long as be lives the law is dead to them; it has no power over them, to threaten and terrify them into obedience to it; nor even rigorously to exact it, or command it in a compulsory way; nor is there any need of all this, since believers delight in it after the inward man, and serve it with their minds freely and willingly; the love of Christ, and not the terrors of the law, constrains them to yield a cheerful obedience to it; it has no power to charge and accuse them, curse or condemn them, or minister death unto them, no, not a corporeal one, as a penal evil, and much less an eternal one. And the way and means by which they become dead to the law, and that to them is,

by the body of Christ; not by Christ, as the body or substance of the ceremonial law; see Col 2:17; since that is not singly designed, but the whole law of Moses; but by "the body of Christ", is either meant Christ himself, Heb 10:10, or rather the human nature of Christ, Heb 10:5, in which the law meets with every thing it can require and demand, as holiness of nature, which is the saints' sanctification in Christ; obedience of life, which is their righteousness; and sufferings of death, which is the penalty the law enjoins, whereby full expiation of sin is made, complete pardon is procured, and eternal redemption obtained; so that the law has nothing more to demand; its mouth is stopped, it is not in its power to curse and damn believers, they are dead to that, and that to them: the reason why the law is become so to them, and they to that, is,

that ye should be married to another; or "that ye should be to another", or "be another's"; that is, that ye should appear to be so in a just and legal way; for they were another's, they were Christ's before by the Father's gift, and were secretly married to him in the everlasting covenant, before he assumed their nature, and in the body of his flesh bore their sins, satisfied law and justice, paid their debts, and so freed them from the power of the law, its curse and condemnation, or any obligation to punishment; all which was done in consequence of his interest in them, and their marriage relation to him; but here respect is had to their open marriage to him in time, the day of their espousals in conversion; to make way for which, the law, their former husband, must be dead, and they dead to that, that so their marriage to Christ might appear lawful and justifiable; who is very fitly described by him,

who is raised from the dead; and is a living husband, and will ever continue so, will never die more; and therefore as the saints can never be loosed from the marriage bond of union between Christ and them, so they can never be loosed from the law of this husband; wherefore though they are dead to the law as a covenant of works, and as ministered by Moses, and are free from any obligation to it, as so considered, yet they are "under the law to Christ", 1Co 9:21; under obligation, by the ties of love, to obedience to it, and shall never be loosed from it. The end of being dead to the law, and of being married to Christ, is,

that we should bring forth fruit unto God. The allusion is to children being called "the fruit of the womb", Psa 127:3, and here designs good works, the fruits of righteousness, which are brought forth by persons espoused to Christ, under the influence of the Spirit and grace of God; and they are "unto God", that is, for the honour and glory of God; meaning either Christ the husband of believers, who is God over all blessed for ever; or God the Father, to whose praise and glory they are by Christ; and which is a reason and argument which strongly excites and encourages the saints to the performance of them: and let it be observed, that as children begotten and born in lawful marriage are only true and legitimate, and all before marriage are spurious and illegitimate; so such works only are the true and genuine fruits of righteousness, which are in consequence of a marriage relation to Christ; are done in faith, spring from love, and are directed to the glory of God; and all others, which are done before marriage to Christ, and without faith in him, are like spurious and illegitimate children.

Gill: Rom 7:5 - -- For when we were in the flesh,.... This respects not their being under the legal dispensation, the Mosaic economy; which lay greatly in meats and drin...

For when we were in the flesh,.... This respects not their being under the legal dispensation, the Mosaic economy; which lay greatly in meats and drinks, and divers washings, and carnal ordinances, such as regarded the flesh chiefly; so their meats and drinks concerned the body; their ablutions and washings sanctified to the purifying of the flesh; their circumcision was outward in the flesh; the several rituals of the law consisted in outward things, though typical of internal and spiritual ones; hence those that trusted in them trusted in the flesh: but to be "in the flesh" stands opposed, Rom 7:8; to a being "in the spirit"; whereas there were many under that legal and carnal dispensation who were in the spirit, and had the Spirit of God, as David and others; besides, the apostle must be thought to use the phrase in such a sense, as to include all the persons he is speaking of and writing to, who were both Jews and Gentiles, for of such the church at Rome consisted; and the sense is this, "for when we", Jews and Gentiles, who are now believers in Christ, "were" formerly, before our conversion to, and faith in Christ, "in the flesh", that is, in a corrupt, carnal, and unregenerate state and condition; in which sense the word "flesh" is frequently used in the next chapter: now not all such who have flesh, sin, or corrupt nature in them, must be reckoned to be in the flesh, for there is a difference between flesh being in persons, from which none are free in this life, and their being in the flesh; nor all such who commit sin, or do carnal things at times, for there is not a just man that doth good and sinneth not; but such who are as they were born, without any alteration made in them by the Spirit and grace of God; who have nothing but flesh in them, no fear of God, nor love to and faith in Christ, nor any experience of the work of the Spirit of God upon their souls; no true sight and sense of sin, nor any spiritual knowledge of salvation by Christ; in whom flesh is the governing principle, whose minds and principles are carnal, and their conversation wholly so; yea, persons may be in the flesh, in an unregenerate state, who may abstain from the grosser immoralities of life, and even make a profession of religion: now such these had been the apostle is speaking of and to, and tells how it was with them when in this state;

the motions of sins which were by the law, did work in our members to bring forth fruit unto death: by "the motions of sin" are meant, the evil passions and affections of the mind, the lusts of the heart, sinful desires, evil thoughts, the imaginations of the thoughts of the heart, the first motions of the mind to sin: these "were by the law"; not as the efficient cause of them, that neither produces nor encourages them; it is holy, just, and good, requires truth in the inward parts, and not only forbids the outward acts of sin, but even covetous desires, and lustful thoughts: no, these inward motions of sin arise from a corrupt heart and nature; are encouraged and cherished by the old man that dwells there; and men are enticed by Satan to a compliance with them. Some think that the meaning of the phrase is, that these secret lusts of the heart are made known by the law, as in Rom 7:7, so they are, but not whilst a man is in the flesh, or in an unregenerate state, but when he comes to be wrought upon powerfully by the Spirit of God, who makes use of the law to such a purpose: but the true sense of it is, that these motions of sin are irritated, provoked, and increased, through the law's prohibition of them; which is not to be charged as a fault on the law, but to be imputed to the depravity and corruption of man; who is like to one in a burning fever, very desirous of drink, who the more it is forbid, the more eager is he of it; or like a mighty torrent of water, which rises, rages, flows, and overflows, the more any methods are taken to stop its current; or like a filthy dunghill, which when the sun strikes powerfully on it, it exhales and draws out its filthy stench; which nauseous smell is not to be imputed to the pure rays of the sun, but to the filthiness of the dunghill: these motions of sin are said to "work in our members"; in the members of our bodies, which these sinful affections of the soul make use of to put them into action, and so they bring forth fruit; very evil fruit indeed, for nothing else can be expected from such an evil tree as the corrupt nature of man is: and this fruit is "unto death": deadly fruit, worthy of death, and would issue in eternal death, if grace did not prevent: the rise, beginning, motion, progress, and issue of sin, are most exactly and beautifully described, agreeably to this account here, by the Apostle James, Jam 1:13.

Gill: Rom 7:6 - -- But now we are delivered from the law,.... From the ministration of it, by Moses; from it, as a covenant of works; from its rigorous exaction; from it...

But now we are delivered from the law,.... From the ministration of it, by Moses; from it, as a covenant of works; from its rigorous exaction; from its curse and condemnation, all this by Christ; and from its being an irritating, provoking law to sin, through the corruption of nature, by the Spirit and grace of Christ; but not from obedience to it, as in the hands of Christ. The Vulgate Latin version, and some copies read, "from the law of death"; and the Ethiopic version renders it, "we are loosed from the law, and are delivered from the former doctrine"; the doctrine of the legal dispensation.

That being dead; not sin, but the law: in what sense believers are dead to the law, and that to them; see Gill on Rom 7:4.

Wherein we were held: as a woman is by the law to her husband, or as persons guilty, who are detained prisoners; so we were "kept under the law, shut up unto the faith", as in a prison, Gal 3:23; Now the saints deliverance from the law through the abrogation of it, that losing its former life, vigour, power, and dominion, is not that they may live a loose licentious life and conversation, but that they

should serve the Lord their God without slavish fear, and with a godly one, acceptably, in righteousness and holiness, all the days of their lives; and their Lord and Master Jesus Christ, who is King of saints, lawgiver in his church, and whose commandments are to be observed from a principle of love, in faith, and to his glory; yea, even the law itself, as held forth by him, as the apostle says in the close of this chapter, "with the mind I myself serve the law of God", Rom 7:25, the manner in which this service is to be, and is performed, is,

in newness of Spirit; under the influences of the Spirit of God, the author of renovation, of the new creature, or new man created in us, in righteousness and true holiness; and from a new heart, and new Spirit, and new principles of life, light, love, and grace, formed in the soul; and by walking in "newness of life", Rom 6:4, or by a new life, walk, and conversation:

and not in the oldness of the letter; not in the outward observance of the law of Moses, which is the "letter"; not indulging the old man, or walking after the dictates of corrupt nature; nor behaving according to the old former course of living: on the whole it may be observed, that a believer without the law, being delivered from it, that being dead to him, and he to that, lives a better life and conversation under the influence of the Spirit of God, than one that is under the law, and the works of it, destitute of the grace of God; the one brings forth "fruit unto death", Rom 7:5, the other serves the Lord, "in newness of spirit, and not in the oldness of the letter".

Gill: Rom 7:7 - -- What shall we say then? is the law sin?.... The apostle having said, that "the motions of sins were by the law", Rom 7:5, meets with an objection, or ...

What shall we say then? is the law sin?.... The apostle having said, that "the motions of sins were by the law", Rom 7:5, meets with an objection, or rather an ill natured cavil, "is the law sin?" if the motions sins are by it, then it instigates and prompts men to sin; it cherishes it in them; it leads them and impels them to the commission of it, and therefore must be the cause of sin; and if the cause of sin, then it must be sin, or sinful itself: "what shall we say then?" how shall we remove this difficulty, answer this objection, and silence this cavil? To this it is replied by way of detestation and abhorrence,

God forbid! a way of speaking often made use of by the apostle, when any dreadful consequence was drawn from, or any shocking objection was made to his doctrine, and which was so monstrous as scarcely to deserve any other manner of refutation; see Rom 3:3; and next by observing the use of the law to discover sin; which it does by forbidding it, and threatening it with death; by accusing for it, convincing of it, and representing it in its proper colours, it being as a glass in which it may be beheld just as it is, neither greater nor less; which must be understood as attended with a divine power and light, otherwise as a glass is of no use to a blind man, so neither is the law in this sense, to a man in a state of darkness, until the Spirit of God opens his eyes to behold in this glass what manner of man he is: now since the law is so useful to discover, and so to discountenance sin, that itself cannot be sin, or sinful. The apostle exemplifies this in his own case, and says,

nay, I had not known sin, but by the law; which he says not in the person of another, there is no room nor reason for such a fancy; but in his own person, and of himself: not of himself at that present time, as is evident from his way of speaking; nor of himself in his childhood, before he came to years of discretion to discern between good and evil; but as, and when he was a grown person, and whilst a Pharisee, Phi 3:5; he did not know sin during his being in that state till the law came, and entered into his conscience, and then, and by it, he knew sin, Rom 7:7, the exceeding sinfulness of it, Rom 7:13, and that he himself was the chief of sinners, 1Ti 1:15. Nay he goes on to observe, that by the law he came to know, not only the sinfulness of outward actions, but also of inward lusts; says he,

for I had not known lust, except the law had said, thou shall not covet: as it does in Exo 20:17. This is a way of speaking used by the Jews, when they produce any passage out of the law, thus e, התורה אמרה, "the law says", if anyone comes to kill thee; referring either to 1Sa 24:11 or Exo 22:1; and a little after, "the law says", namely, in Exo 3:5, "put off thy shoes from off thy feet", &c. By "lust" is meant the inward motions of sin in the heart, any and every desire of the mind after it; not only studied and concerted schemes, how to bring about and compass an evil action; but every loose vagrant thought of sin, and inclination to it; yea, every imagination of the thought of the heart, before the imagination is well formed into a thought; and not only a dallying with sin in the mind, dwelling upon it with pleasure in thought, but even such sudden motions and starts of the mind to sin, to which we give no assent; such as are involuntary, yea, contrary to the will, being "the evil we would not", Rom 7:19, and are displeasing and hateful to us; these are meant by lust, and which by the law of God are known to be sinful, and only by that. These were not known to be so by the Gentiles, who only had the law and light of nature; nor are they condemned, nor any provision made against them, nor can there be any made, by the laws of men: and though these inward lusts are condemned by the law of God, yet inasmuch as they were not punishable by men, and could be covered with the guise of an external righteousness, multitudes who were born under, and brought up in that law, were secure and indolent about them, did not look upon them as sins, or as at all affecting their righteousness; but imagined that, "touching the righteousness of the law", they were "blameless", Phi 3:6; which was the case of all the Pharisees, and of the apostle whilst such: but when the law came and entered his conscience with power and light attending it, then he saw, such innumerable swarms of lusts in his heart, and these to be sinful, which he never saw and knew before: just as in a sunbeam we behold those numerous little bits of dust, which otherwise are indiscernible by us. Now since the law is of such use, not only to discover the sinfulness of outward actions, but also of inward lusts and desires, that itself cannot be sinful.

Gill: Rom 7:8 - -- But sin taking occasion by the commandment,.... By "the commandment" is meant, either the whole moral law, or that particular commandment, "thou shalt...

But sin taking occasion by the commandment,.... By "the commandment" is meant, either the whole moral law, or that particular commandment, "thou shalt not covet", Exo 20:17, which, the Jews say, comprehends all;

"God, (say they f,) caused them (the Israelites) to hear the ten words, which he concluded with this word, "thou shalt not covet"; שכולם תלוים בו, "for all of them depend on that": and to intimate, that whoever keeps this commandment, it is as if he kept the whole law, and whoever transgresses this, it is all one as if he transgressed the whole law;''

and no doubt but it does refer to any unlawful thought of, desire after, and inclination to anything forbidden in the other commandments. By "sin" is meant, not the devil, as some of the ancients thought; but the vitiosity and corruption of nature, indwelling sin, the law in the members that took "occasion" by the law of God; so that the law at most could only be an occasion, not the cause of sin, and besides, this was an occasion not given by the law, but taken by sin; so that it was sin, and not the law, which

wrought in him all manner of concupiscence. The law forbidding every unclean thought, and covetous desire of unlawful objects, sin took an occasion through these prohibitions to work in him, stir up and excite concupiscence, evil desire after all manner of things forbidden by the law; hence it is clear that not the law, but sin, is exceeding sinful:

for without the law sin was dead; not that, before the law of Moses was given, sin lay dead and unexerted, for during that interval between Adam and Moses sin was, and lived and reigned, and death by it, as much as at any other time; but when the apostle was without the law, that is, without the knowledge of the spirituality of it, before it came with power and light into his heart and conscience, sin lay as though it was dead; it was so in his apprehension, he fancied himself free from it, and that he was perfectly righteous.

Gill: Rom 7:9 - -- For I was alive without the law once,.... The apostle says this, not in the person of Adam, as some have thought; who lived indeed, in a state of inno...

For I was alive without the law once,.... The apostle says this, not in the person of Adam, as some have thought; who lived indeed, in a state of innocence, a perfectly holy and righteous life, but not without the law, which was the rule of his actions, and the measure of his obedience; he had the law of nature written upon his heart, and a positive law respecting the forbidden fruit given him, as a trial of his obedience; and though when he transgressed he became mortal, yet sin could not be said to revive in him, which never lived before; nor does the apostle speak in the person of a Jew, or the whole body of the people of Israel before the law was given on Mount Sinai; before that time the sons of Abraham did not live without a law; for besides the law of nature, which they had in common with others, they were acquainted with other laws of God, as the laws of circumcision, sacrifices, and the several duties of religion; see Gen 18:19; and when the law did come from Mount Sinai, it had not such effects upon them as are here expressed: but the apostle is speaking of himself, and that not as in his state of infancy before he could discern between good and evil, but when grown up, and whilst a Pharisee; who, though he was born under the law, was brought up and more perfectly instructed in it than the common people were, and was a strict observer of it, yet was without the knowledge of the spirituality of it; he, as the rest of the Pharisees, thought it only regarded the outward actions, and did not reach to the spirits or souls of men, the inward thoughts and affections of the mind; the law was as it were at a distance from him, it had not as yet entered into his heart and conscience; and whilst this was his case he was "alive", he did not know that he "was dead in trespasses and sins", Eph 2:1, a truth he afterwards was acquainted with; nor that he was so much as disordered by sin; he thought himself healthful, sound, and whole, when he was diseased and full of wounds, bruises, and sores, from head to foot; he lived in the utmost peace and tranquillity, without the least ruffle and uneasiness, free from any terror or despondency, and in perfect security, being in sure and certain hope of eternal life; and concluded if ever any man went to heaven he certainly should, since, as he imagined, he lived a holy and righteous life, free of all blame, and even to perfection;

but when the commandment came; not to Adam in the garden of Eden; nor to the Israelites on Mount Sinai; but into the heart and conscience of the apostle, with power and light from above:

sin revived; it lift up its monstrous head, and appeared in its ugly shape, exceeding sinful indeed; it grew strong and exerted itself; its strugglings and opposition, its rebellion and corruption were seen and felt, which show that it was not dead before, only seemed to be so; it was in being, and it lived and acted before as now; the difference was not in that, but in the apostle's sense and apprehension of it, who upon sight of it died away:

and I died; he now saw himself a dead man, dead in sin, dead in law, under a sentence of death which he now had within himself; he saw he was deserving of eternal death, and all his hopes of eternal life by his obedience to the law of works died at once; he now experimentally learnt that doctrine he so much insisted afterwards in his ministry, and to the last maintained, that there can be no justification of a sinner by the deeds of the law, since by it is the knowledge of sin.

Gill: Rom 7:10 - -- And the commandment which was ordained to life,.... The law which promised a continuance of an immortal life to Adam, in case of perfect obedience to ...

And the commandment which was ordained to life,.... The law which promised a continuance of an immortal life to Adam, in case of perfect obedience to it; and which was appointed to the Israelites, that by the observation of it they might live in the land of Canaan, and in the quiet and full possession of their privileges and enjoyments; but was never ordained to eternal life, or that men should obtain that by their obedience to it; since eternal life is the free gift of God, without respect to any works of men; see Gal 3:21; This same law, the apostle says,

I found to be unto death; as it was an occasion, through the vitiosity of nature, of stirring up sin in him, which brought forth fruit unto death; as it convinced him that he was a dead man and worthy of death; as it threatened him with it, and struck all his hopes of eternal life dead, and left him in this condition without giving him the least direction or assistance whereby to obtain life.

Gill: Rom 7:11 - -- For sin taking occasion by the commandment,.... As in Rom 7:8, deceived me; either by promising pleasure or impunity: the same effect is ascribed b...

For sin taking occasion by the commandment,.... As in Rom 7:8,

deceived me; either by promising pleasure or impunity: the same effect is ascribed by the Jews to the evil imagination or corruption of nature, which they say is called an enticer, שמפתה אדם, "that deceives man" g:

and by it slew me; mortally wounded me: not the law, but sin by the law, deceived and slew him; so that as before, the law is cleared from being the cause of sin, so here, from being the cause of death; for though the law is a killing letter, the ministration of condemnation and death, yet it is not the cause of it; but sin, which is a transgression of the law, is that which deceives or leads out of the way, as the word signifies, and then kills. The metaphor is taken from a thief or a robber, who leads a man out of the way into some bypath, and then murders him.

Gill: Rom 7:12 - -- Therefore the law is holy,.... This is a conclusion or inference drawn from the preceding discourse, in commendation of the law; that standing clear o...

Therefore the law is holy,.... This is a conclusion or inference drawn from the preceding discourse, in commendation of the law; that standing clear of any charge or imputation of sin, as being the cause of it. This epithet the apostle gives to the law is what the Jews frequently give it; worthy are the Israelites, say they h,

"to whom is given אורייתא קדישא "the holy law"; in which they study day and night.''

By "the law" is meant the whole body of the precepts of it in general; and by

the commandment, either the same, or everyone of the commandments in particular, and especially that which is cited, "thou shall not covet". Some have thought that the three properties of it design the threefold division of the law; and suppose that by that which is "holy" is meant the ceremonial law, which sanctified to the purifying of the flesh; by that which is "just", the judicial law, which pointed out to the Jewish commonwealth what was right and wrong; and by that which is "good", the moral law in all its precepts: but nothing is more certain, than that the moral law is only spoken of in this context, which may be said to be

holy, because of its author, the holy God, from whom nothing can come but what is holy; and because of the matter of it, it is a transcript of the holy nature of God, a declaration of his holy will; it requires holiness both of heart and life; it forbids whatever is unholy, and commands nothing but what is holy; it teaches men to live holy, sober, righteous, and godly lives. It may be truly called

just, or righteous, as it demands perfect obedience to all its precepts, or it will not admit of it as a righteousness; as it pronounces guilty, curses and condemns for every disobedience of it; as it deals impartially with persons the transgressors of it; and as it acquits believers upon the foot of the righteousness of Christ, the fulfilling end of it. It is rightly called

good, from the author of it, God, from whom every good thing comes, and nothing else; from the matter of it, and from the use of it both to saints and sinners.

Gill: Rom 7:13 - -- Was then that which is good, made death unto me?.... An objection is started upon the last epithet in commendation of the law; and it is as if the obj...

Was then that which is good, made death unto me?.... An objection is started upon the last epithet in commendation of the law; and it is as if the objector should say, if the law is good, as you say, how comes it to pass that it is made death, or is the cause of death to you? can that be good, which is deadly, or the cause of death? or can that be the cause of death which is good? This objection taken out of the mouth of another person proceeds upon a mistake of the apostle's meaning; for though he had said that he died when the commandment came, and found by experience that it was unto death, yet does not give the least intimation that the law was the cause of his death; at most, that it was only an occasion, and that was not given by the law, but taken by sin, which, and not the law, deceived him and slew him. Nor is it any objection to the goodness of the law, that it is a ministration of condemnation and death to sinners; for "lex non damnans, non est lex", a law without a sanction or penalty, which has no power to condemn and punish, is no law, or at least a law of no use and service; nor is the judge, or the sentence which he according to law pronounces upon a malefactor, the cause of his death, but the crime which he is guilty of; and the case is the same here, wherefore the apostle answers to this objection with abhorrence and detestation of fixing any such charge upon the law, as being the cause of death to him, saying,

God forbid; a way of speaking used by him, as has been observed, when anything is greatly disliked by him, and is far from his thoughts. Moreover, he goes on to open the true end and reason of sin, by the law working death in his conscience;

but sin, that it might appear sin, working death in me by that which is good; that is, the vitiosity and corruption of nature, which is designed by sin, took an occasion, "by that which is good", that is, the law, through its prohibition of lust, to work in me all maimer of concupiscence, which brought forth fruit unto death; wherefore, upon the law's entrance into my heart and conscience, I received the sentence of death in myself, that so sin by it, "working death in me, might appear sin" to me, which I never knew before. This end was to be, and is answered by it, yea,

that sin by the commandment might become exceeding sinful; that the corruption of nature might not only be seen and known to be sin, but exceeding sinful; as being not only contrary to the pure and holy nature of God, but as taking occasion by the pure and holy law of God to exert itself the more, and so appear to be as the words καθ υπερβολην αμαρτωλος, may be rendered, "exceedingly a sinner", or "an exceeding great sinner"; that being the source and parent of all actual sins and transgressions; wherefore not the law, but sin, was the cause of death, which by the law is discovered to be so very sinful.

Gill: Rom 7:14 - -- For we know that the law is spiritual,.... We who have a spiritual understanding of the law, who have been led into the true nature of it by the Spiri...

For we know that the law is spiritual,.... We who have a spiritual understanding of the law, who have been led into the true nature of it by the Spirit of God, know by experience that that itself is "spiritual"; and therefore can never be the cause of sin or death: the law may be said to be "spiritual", because it comes from the Spirit of God; and reaches to the spirit of man; it requires truth in the inward parts; spiritual service and obedience; a serving of it with our minds; a worshipping of God in spirit and truth; a loving of him with all our hearts and souls, as well as a performance of all the outward acts of religion and duty; and because it cannot be truly obeyed and conformed to without the assistance of the Spirit of God. To this spirituality of the law the apostle opposes himself,

but I am carnal, sold under sin: from hence to the end of the chapter many are of opinion, that the apostle speaks in the person of an unregenerate man, or of himself as unregenerate; but nothing is more clear, than that he speaks all along of himself in the first person, "I am carnal":, &c. αυτος εγω, "I myself", as in Rom 7:25, and in the present tense of what he then was and found; whereas, when he speaks of his unregenerate state, and how it was with him under the first convictions of sin, he speaks of them as things past, Rom 7:5; besides, several things which are said by the apostle can neither agree with him, nor any other, but as regenerate; such as to "hate evil", "delight in the law of God", and "serve it with the mind", Rom 7:15. Moreover, the distinctions between flesh and spirit, the inward and the outward man, and the struggle there is between them, are to be found in none but regenerate persons; and to say no more, the thanksgiving for deliverance from sin by Christ can only come from such; nor are any of the things said inapplicable to men that are born again, as will appear by the consideration of them as they follow: for when the apostle says, "I am carnal"; his meaning is, either that he was so by nature, and as he saw himself when sin through the law became exceeding sinful to him; or as he might be denominated from the flesh or corruption of nature which was still in him, and from the infirmities of the flesh he was attended with; just as the Corinthians, though sanctified in Christ Jesus, and called to be saints, are said to be "carnal" on account of their envying, strife, and divisions, 1Co 3:1, or in comparison of the "spiritual" law of God, which was now before him, and in which he was beholding his face as in a glass, and with which when compared, the holiest man in the world must be reckoned carnal. He adds, "sold under sin"; he did not "sell himself" to work wickedness, as Ahab, 1Ki 21:25, and others; he was passive and not active in it; and when at any time he with his flesh served the law of sin, he was not a voluntary, but an involuntary servant; besides, this may be understood of his other I, his carnal I, his unrenewed self, the old man which is always under sin, when the spiritual I, the new man, is never under the law of sin, but under the governing influence of the grace of God.

Gill: Rom 7:15 - -- For that which I do, I allow not,.... The apostle having cleared the law from the charge of being the cause either of sin or death, and taken the blam...

For that which I do, I allow not,.... The apostle having cleared the law from the charge of being the cause either of sin or death, and taken the blame to himself, proceeds to give an account of the struggle and combat he found in himself between the flesh and spirit; "that which I do, I allow not". That which he did was evil, since he allowed not of it; but this is to be understood not of any notorious crime committed by him, and repeated again and again; nor of a sinful course of life, for before his conversion he was not a profane man, but externally moral; and after his conversion, had his conversation in the world by the grace of God in righteousness and holiness; a vicious course of life being contrary to the grace of God implanted in him, and the doctrines of grace professed by him; but of internal lusts, the workings of corruptions in his heart, and which are real actions of the mind, together with the various frailties and infirmities of life: when that apostle says that what he did, γινωσκω, "I know not": his meaning is, not that he was utterly ignorant of them, of their nature and operations; that he was insensible of their motions, and unconcerned about them; for his sense of them, and concern for them, are expressed by him in the strongest terms, "I know", "I find", "I see", "O wretched man", &c. Rom 7:18; but either that the efforts and effects of sin in him were so sadden, and at an unawares, that he was sometimes overtaken and held captive, before he knew well where he was, or, what he was doing; or the sense is, that he had not a full knowledge of the evil of his heart, the corruptions of his nature, nor did he understand all his infirmities and the errors of his life; or else the meaning is, I own it not as right, but confess it to be wrong, I do not acknowledge these actions as the productions of the new man, they are alien to him, but as the deeds of the old man; or rather, "I do not approve" of them, I dislike, abhor, and detest them; I cannot excuse or palliate them, but must condemn them; so words of knowledge in the Hebrew language are expressive of love, liking, and approbation; see Psa 1:6; on which last text, "I know him", says Jarchi, לשון חבה, "it is the language of love", or a phrase expressive of strong affection; and so here, I know not, I do not like, love, and approve of these things, or I do not "allow" of them, and indulge myself in them, I loathe them and myself for them; and is this talking like an unregenerate man? can it be thought that the apostle speaks of himself as unregenerate, or represents such a man?

for what I would, that do I not; what he desired and willed was good, though he did it not; and so the Vulgate Latin version reads, "for not the good which I would, I do": and so the next clause, "but the evil which I hate, I do": and what was that? he would have had his thoughts always employed about the best things; he would have had his affections continually and alone set on God, Christ, and the things of another world; he would he was desirous to keep the whole law of God, and do the whole will of God, and live without sin, and as the angels do in heaven: now such a will as this is never to be found in unregenerate persons; this is from God, and the power of his grace: when he says he did not what he willed, what he was desirous of, and bent upon, his sense is, not that he never did any good thing he willed; for he did many good things, as every good man does, but he did not always do the good he willed, and never perfectly, nor anything without grace and strength from Christ: he adds,

but what I hate, that do I; sin was what he hated; it being contrary to the pure and holy nature of God, to the good and righteous law of God, and was in itself, to his view, exceeding sinful: he hated vain thoughts, unclean desires, revengeful lusts, the secret motions of all sin in his heart, and the various evil actions of life; which can never be said of an unregenerate man; who loves sin, delights in iniquity, and takes pleasure in them that do it; and yet what the apostle hated he did; he wrought with his carnal I, his flesh, and through the power of it, and force of temptation, though not without reluctance, remorse, and repentance. The Karaite Jews, which were the better sort of them, say and hold some things, not much unlike to what is here delivered;

"though a man (say they i) should transgress some of the commandments, or the commandments in part, לתגבורת תאוה לא על צד החפץ, "through the strength of lust, and not on account of, or with pleasure not delight", he shall be one of those that shall enter into paradise.''

Gill: Rom 7:16 - -- If then I do that which I would not,.... This is a corollary, or an inference from what he had related of his own experience; that since what he did, ...

If then I do that which I would not,.... This is a corollary, or an inference from what he had related of his own experience; that since what he did, though it was contrary to the law of God, yet was what he did not will nor allow of, but hated, it must be a clear point, that he

consented to the law, that it was good; lovely and amiable; that it forbad those things which were hateful, and commanded those things which were desirable to a good man; and so is acknowledged to be a very beautiful rule of obedience, walk, and conversation.

Gill: Rom 7:17 - -- Now then, it is no more I that do it,.... This is another inference, deduced from what is before said, that since he did not approve, but hated what h...

Now then, it is no more I that do it,.... This is another inference, deduced from what is before said, that since he did not approve, but hated what he did, and willed the contrary, it was not he as spiritual, as born again, as a new man, a new creature, that did it; see 1Jo 3:9. He says,

But sin that dwelleth in me; the old man, the carnal I, the evil present with him, the law in his members; which not only existed in him, and wrought in him, and that at times very strongly, but dwelt in him, had its abode in him, as it has in all regenerate persons, and will have, as long as they are in the body.

Gill: Rom 7:18 - -- For I know that in me, that is, in my flesh,.... The apostle goes on to give some further account of himself, what he knew, and was fully assured of b...

For I know that in me, that is, in my flesh,.... The apostle goes on to give some further account of himself, what he knew, and was fully assured of by long experience; as that

dwelleth no good thing in him, that is, in his flesh, or carnal self; for otherwise there were many good things dwelt in him; there was the good work of grace, and the good word of God in him, and even Father, Son, and Spirit, dwelt in him; but his meaning is, that there was no good thing naturally in him; no good thing of his own putting there; nothing but what God had put there; no good thing, but what was owing to Christ, to the grace of God, and influence of the Spirit; or as he himself explains it, there was no good thing in his "flesh"; in the old man that was in him, which has nothing in his nature good; no good thing comes out of him, nor is any good thing done by him: and this explanative and limiting clause, "that is, in my flesh", clearly proves, that the apostle speaks of himself, and as regenerate; for had he spoke in the person of an unregenerate man, there would have been no room nor reason for such a restriction, seeing an unregenerate man is nothing else but flesh, and has nothing but flesh, or corrupt nature in him; and who does not know, that no good thing dwells in such persons? whereas the apostle intimates by this explication, that he had something else in him beside flesh, and which is opposed to it; and that is spirit, or the new man, which is of a spiritual nature, and is seated in the spirit, or soul, and comes from the Spirit of God; and in this spiritual man dwell good things, for "the fruit of the Spirit is in all goodness, righteousness, and truth"; so that though there was no good thing dwelling in his flesh, in the old than, yet there were good things dwelling in his spirit, in the new and spiritual man, the hidden man of the heart: and he adds,

to will is present with me; which must be understood, not of the power and faculty of the will, with respect to things natural and civil, which is common to all men; nor of a will to that which is evil, which is in wicked men; but of a will to that which was good, which he had not of himself, but from God, and is only to be found in regenerate persons; and denotes the readiness of his mind and will to that which is spiritually good, like that which Christ observes of his disciples, when he says, "the spirit is willing, but the flesh is weak", Mat 26:41, which may serve much to illustrate the passage before us: since it follows,

but how to perform that which is good, I find not; he found he had no strength of himself to do what he willed; and that he could do nothing without Christ; and that what he did by the strength and grace of Christ, he did not do perfectly. To will to live without sin, not to have a lustful or a revengeful thought in his breast, was present with him, but how to perform, how to live in this manner, which was so desirable to him, being born again, he found not. It may be asked, how does this agree with what the apostle says, "it is God which worketh in you both to will and to do of his good pleasure?" Phi 2:13. To this it may be replied, that when God does work in his people both to will and to do, he does not work both equally alike, or to the same degree, so that the work answers to the will; God never works in them so to do, as to will, for when they are wrought in, acted upon, and influenced to do the most, and that in the best manner, they never do all that they would; and sometimes God works in them to will, when he does not work in them to do; as in the case of the disciples of Christ, in whom he worked to will to watch with Christ an hour, but did not work in them to do, Mat 26:40; and whenever he works in the saints, whether to will or to do, or both, it is always of his own good pleasure.

Gill: Rom 7:19 - -- For the good that I would, I do not,.... The apostle here repeats what he had delivered in Rom 7:15 to strengthen and confirm this part of his experie...

For the good that I would, I do not,.... The apostle here repeats what he had delivered in Rom 7:15 to strengthen and confirm this part of his experience; that though he had a will to that which was good, yet he wanted power, and had none of himself to perform; and therefore often did what he would not, and what he would he did not.

Gill: Rom 7:20 - -- Now if I do that I would not,.... The same conclusion is formed here, as in Rom 7:17, not with any view to excuse himself from blame in sinning, but t...

Now if I do that I would not,.... The same conclusion is formed here, as in Rom 7:17, not with any view to excuse himself from blame in sinning, but to trace the lusts of his heart, and the sins of his life, to the source and fountain of them, the corruption of his nature; and to ascribe them to the proper cause of them, which was not the law of God, nor the new man, but sin that dwelt in him.

Gill: Rom 7:21 - -- I find then a law,.... This is to be understood either of the corruption of nature, which he found by experience to be in him; and which, because of i...

I find then a law,.... This is to be understood either of the corruption of nature, which he found by experience to be in him; and which, because of its force, power, and prevalence it sometimes had in him, he calls "a law"; it forcibly demanding compliance with its lusts; and is the same with what he calls "evil", and which the Jews so frequently style יצר הרע "the evil imagination", by which they mean the corruption of nature; and one of the seven names, and the first of them, by which it is called, they tell us k, is, רע, "evil"; the very name it goes by here, and which they say God calls it, Gen 6:5; and well may it be so called, since it is originally, naturally, and continually evil; it is evil in its nature and consequences; it is the source and spring of all evil:

that when I would do good; says the apostle, as soon as any good thought arises in me, any good resolution is entered into by me, or I am about to do anything that is good,

evil, the vitiosity of nature,

is present with me, and hinders me; it came into the world with me, and it has continued with me ever since; it cleaves close unto me, it lies very nigh me, and whenever there is any motion to that which is good, it starts up, which seemed to lie asleep before, and exerts itself, so that I cannot do the good I would. The Jews say l, there are שתי לבבות, "two hearts" in man, the good imagination, and the evil imagination. The apostle here speaks as of two wills in regenerate men, one to good, and another to evil: or this may be understood of the law of God, which he found agreed with his mind, willing that which is good, though sin lay so near to him; or he found that willing that which was good was the law of God, very agreeable to it; and that the law was on his side, favouring him, encouraging him to that which is good, though sin kept so close to him; to which sense agree the following words.

Gill: Rom 7:22 - -- For I delight in the law of God,.... This an unregenerate man cannot do; he does not like its commands, they are disagreeable to his corrupt nature; a...

For I delight in the law of God,.... This an unregenerate man cannot do; he does not like its commands, they are disagreeable to his corrupt nature; and as it is a threatening, cursing, damning law, it can never be delighted in by him: the moralist, the Pharisee, who obeys it externally, do not love it, nor delight in it; he obeys it not from love to its precepts, but from fear of its threatenings; from a desire of popular esteem, and from low, mercenary, selfish views, in order to gain the applause of men, and favour of God: only a regenerate man delights in the law of God; which he does, as it is fulfilled by Christ, who has answered all the demands of it: and as it is in the hands of Christ, held forth by him as a rule of holy walk and conversation; and as it is written upon his heart by the Spirit of God, to which he yields a voluntary and cheerful obedience: he serves it with his mind, of a ready mind freely, and without any constraint but that of love; he delights together with the law, as the word here used signifies; the delight is mutual and reciprocal, the law delights in him, and he delights in the law; and they both delight in the selfsame things, and particularly in the perfect obedience which the Son of God has yielded to it. The apostle adds,

after the inward man; by which he means the renewed man, the new man, or new nature, formed in his soul; which had its seat in the inward part, is an internal principle, oil in the vessel of the heart, a seed under ground, the kingdom within us, the hidden man of the heart, which is not obvious to everyone's view, it being not anything that is external, though never so good: this in its nature is agreeable to the law of God, and according to this a regenerate man delights in it: but then this restrictive limiting clause supposes another man, the old man, the carnal I, according to which the apostle did not delight in the law of God; and proves, that he speaks of himself as regenerate, and not as unregenerate, or as representing an unregenerate man, because no such distinction is to be found in such a person; nor does such a person delight at all, in any sense, upon any consideration in the law of God, but is enmity against it, and not subjected to it; nor can he be otherwise, without the grace of God.

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Commentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

NET Notes: Rom 7:1 Here person refers to a human being.

NET Notes: Rom 7:2 Paul’s example of the married woman and the law of the marriage illustrates that death frees a person from obligation to the law. Thus, in spiri...

NET Notes: Rom 7:3 Grk “the,” with the article used as a possessive pronoun (ExSyn 215).

NET Notes: Rom 7:4 Grk “that we might bear fruit to God.”

NET Notes: Rom 7:5 Grk “our members”; the words “of our body” have been supplied to clarify the meaning.

NET Notes: Rom 7:6 Grk “in the newness of the Spirit and not in the oldness of the letter.”

NET Notes: Rom 7:7 A quotation from Exod 20:17 and Deut 5:21.

NET Notes: Rom 7:8 Or “covetousness.”

NET Notes: Rom 7:10 Grk “and there was found in/for me the commandment which was for life – this was for death.”

NET Notes: Rom 7:11 Or “and through it killed me.”

NET Notes: Rom 7:14 Grk “under sin.”

NET Notes: Rom 7:15 Grk “but what I hate, this I do.”

NET Notes: Rom 7:16 Grk “I agree with the law that it is good.”

NET Notes: Rom 7:18 Grk “For to wish is present in/with me, but not to do it.”

Geneva Bible: Rom 7:1 Know ( 1 ) 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 ) By expoun...

Geneva Bible: Rom 7:3 So then if, while [her] husband liveth, she be married to another man, she shall be ( a ) called an adulteress: but if her husband be dead, she is fre...

Geneva Bible: Rom 7:4 ( 2 ) Wherefore, my brethren, ye also are become dead to the law by the ( b ) body of Christ; that ye should be married to another, [even] to him who ...

Geneva Bible: Rom 7:5 ( 3 ) For when we ( e ) were in the flesh, the ( f ) motions of sins, which were by the ( g ) law, did ( h ) work in our members to bring forth fruit ...

Geneva Bible: Rom 7:6 But now we are delivered from the law, that ( i ) being dead ( k ) wherein we were ( l ) held; that we should serve in ( m ) newness of spirit, and no...

Geneva Bible: Rom 7:7 ( 4 ) What shall we say then? [Is] the law sin? God forbid. Nay, I had not known sin, but by the law: for I had not known ( o ) lust, except the law h...

Geneva Bible: Rom 7:8 But sin, taking occasion by the commandment, wrought in me all manner of concupiscence. For without the law sin [was] ( p ) dead. ( p ) Though sin is...

Geneva Bible: Rom 7:9 ( 5 ) For I was alive without the ( q ) law once: but when the commandment ( r ) came, sin revived, and I ( s ) died. ( 5 ) He sets himself before us...

Geneva Bible: Rom 7:12 ( 6 ) Wherefore the law [is] holy, and the ( t ) commandment holy, and just, and good. ( 6 ) The conclusion: that the law is holy in itself, and that...

Geneva Bible: Rom 7:13 ( 7 ) Was then that which is good ( u ) made death unto me? God forbid. But sin, that it might ( x ) appear sin, working death in me by that which is ...

Geneva Bible: Rom 7:14 ( 8 ) For we know that the law is spiritual: but I am carnal, sold under sin. ( 8 ) The law is the cause of this matter because the it requires a hea...

Geneva Bible: Rom 7:15 ( 9 ) For that which I do I ( 10 ) allow not: for what I ( 11 ) would, that do I not; but what I hate, that do I. ( 9 ) He sets himself before us as ...

Geneva Bible: Rom 7:17 Now then it is no more I that do it, but ( z ) sin that dwelleth in me. ( z ) That natural corruption, which adheres strongly even to those that are ...

Geneva Bible: Rom 7:18 ( 12 ) For I know that in me (that is, in my flesh,) dwelleth no good thing: for to will is present with me; but ( a ) [how] to perform that which is ...

Geneva Bible: Rom 7:21 ( 13 ) I find then a law, that, when I would do good, evil is present with me. ( 13 ) The conclusion: as the law of God exhorts to goodness, so does ...

Geneva Bible: Rom 7:22 For I delight in the law of God after the ( b ) inward man: ( b ) The inner man and the new man are the same, and are compared and contrasted with th...

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Commentary -- Verse Range Notes

TSK Synopsis: Rom 7:1-25 - --1 No law hath power over a man longer than he lives.4 But we are dead to the law.7 Yet is not the law sin;12 but holy, just and good;16 as I acknowled...

MHCC: Rom 7:1-6 - --So long as a man continues under the law as a covenant, and seeks justification by his own obedience, he continues the slave of sin in some form. Noth...

MHCC: Rom 7:7-13 - --There is no way of coming to that knowledge of sin, which is necessary to repentance, and therefore to peace and pardon, but by trying our hearts and ...

MHCC: Rom 7:14-17 - --Compared with the holy rule of conduct in the law of God, the apostle found himself so very far short of perfection, that he seemed to be carnal; like...

MHCC: Rom 7:18-22 - --The more pure and holy the heart is, it will have the more quick feeling as to the sin that remains in it. The believer sees more of the beauty of hol...

Matthew Henry: Rom 7:1-6 - -- Among other arguments used in the foregoing chapter to persuade us against sin, and to holiness, this was one (Rom 7:14), that we are not under the...

Matthew Henry: Rom 7:7-14 - -- To what he had said in the former paragraph, the apostle here raises an objection, which he answers very fully: What shall we say then? Is the law ...

Matthew Henry: Rom 7:14-25 - -- Here is a description of the conflict between grace and corruption in the heart, between the law of God and the law of sin. And it is applicable two...

Barclay: Rom 7:1-6 - --Seldom did Paul write so difficult and so complicated a passage as this. C. H. Dodd has said that when we are studying it we should try to forget w...

Barclay: Rom 7:7-13 - --Here begins one of the greatest of all passages in the New Testament; and one of the most moving; because here Paul is giving us his own spiritual a...

Barclay: Rom 7:14-25 - --Paul is baring his very soul; and he is telling us of an experience which is of the very essence of the human situation. He knew what was right and ...

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...

Constable: Rom 7:1-25 - --B. The believer's relationship to the law ch. 7 Paul followed a similar pattern as he unpacked his revel...

Constable: Rom 7:1-6 - --1. The law's authority 7:1-6 7:1 "Those who know law"--the article "the" before "law" is absent in the Greek text--were Paul's Roman readers. They liv...

Constable: Rom 7:7-12 - --2. The law's activity 7:7-12 Paul wrote that the believer is dead to both sin (6:2) and the Law (7:4). Are they in some sense the same? The answer is ...

Constable: Rom 7:13-25 - --3. The law's inability 7:13-25 In verses 13-25 Paul continued to describe his personal struggle with sin but with mounting intensity. The forces of ex...

College: Rom 7:1-25 - --2. We Obey God from Our Hearts (7:1-6) Are we free from the law? Yes, we are under grace instead (6:14). Does this mean sin is irrelevant, that we ca...

McGarvey: Rom 7:1 - --[In Rom 6:14 Paul laid down the principle that sin does not have dominion over Christians, because they are not under law, but under grace. The sectio...

McGarvey: Rom 7:2 - --For the woman that hath a husband is bound by law to the husband while he liveth; but if the husband die, she is discharged from the law of the husban...

McGarvey: Rom 7:3 - --So then if, while the husband liveth, she be joined to another man, she shall be called an adulteress: but if the husband die, she is free from the la...

McGarvey: Rom 7:4 - --Wherefore, my brethren, ye also were made dead to the law through the body of Christ; that ye should be joined to another, even to him who was raised ...

McGarvey: Rom 7:5 - --For when we were in the flesh, the sinful passions, which were through the law, wrought in our members to bring forth fruit unto death .

McGarvey: Rom 7:6 - --But now we have been discharged from the law, having died to that wherein we were held; so that we serve in newness of the spirit, and not in oldness ...

McGarvey: Rom 7:7 - --What shall we say then? Is the law sin? God forbid. Howbeit, I had not known sin, except through the law: for I had not known coveting, except the law...

McGarvey: Rom 7:8 - --but sin, finding occasion, wrought in me through the commandment all manner of coveting: for apart from law sin is dead . [Those following the apostle...

McGarvey: Rom 7:9 - --And I was alive apart from the law once: but when the commandment came, sin revived, and I died ;

McGarvey: Rom 7:10 - --and the commandment, which was unto life, this I found to be unto death :

McGarvey: Rom 7:11 - --for sin, finding occasion, through the commandment beguiled me, and through it slew me .

McGarvey: Rom 7:12 - --So that the law is holy, and the commandment holy, and righteous, and good . [In the days of his youth (and perhaps also even in his young manhood -- ...

McGarvey: Rom 7:13 - --Did then that which is good become death unto me? God forbid. But sin, that it might be shown to be sin, by working death to me through that which is ...

McGarvey: Rom 7:14 - --For we know that the law is spiritual: but I am carnal, sold under sin .

McGarvey: Rom 7:15 - --For that which I do I know not: for not what I would, that do I practise; but what I hate, that I do .

McGarvey: Rom 7:16 - --But if what I would not, that I do, I consent unto the law that it is good . [But the law can not be sin, for it is spiritual; i. e., it is of divine ...

McGarvey: Rom 7:17 - --So now it is no more I that do it, but sin which dwelleth in me . [From what I have said it is apparent that it is not my spiritual or better self, un...

McGarvey: Rom 7:18 - --For I know that in me, that is, in my flesh, dwelleth no good thing: for to will is present with me, but to do that which is good is not .

McGarvey: Rom 7:19 - --For the good which I would I do not: but the evil which I would not, that I practise . [I am not surprised that part of me rebels against God's law, f...

McGarvey: Rom 7:20 - --But if what I would not, that I do, it is no more I that do it, but sin which dwelleth in me .

McGarvey: Rom 7:21 - --I find then the law, that, to me who would do good, evil is present . [So then, I say again that I, in my own conscience, endorse the goodness of the ...

McGarvey: Rom 7:22 - --For I delight in the law of God after the inward man :

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Commentary -- Other

Evidence: Rom 7:7 " Even with the light of nature, and the light of conscience, and the light of tradition, there are some things we should never have believed to be si...

Evidence: Rom 7:9 " It is right for a preacher of the gospel first, by a revelation of the Law and of sin, to rebuke everything and make sin of everything that is not t...

Evidence: Rom 7:10 " The Law is not in fault, but our evil and wicked nature; even as a heap of lime is still and quiet until water be poured thereon, but then it begins...

Evidence: Rom 7:11 THE FUNCTION OF THE LAW " To slay the sinner is then the the life and strength wherein first use of the Law, to destroy he trusts and convince him t...

Evidence: Rom 7:18 There is disagreement about whether Paul is speaking of his pre-conversion experience or the battle the Christian has with sin. It would seem that bot...

Evidence: Rom 7:22 " Never, never let us despise [the Law]. It is the symptom of an ignorant ministry, and unhealthy state of religion, when the Law is reckoned unimport...

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Introduction / Outline

Robertson: Romans (Book Introduction) The Epistle to the Romans Spring of a.d. 57 By Way of Introduction Integrity of the Epistle The genuineness of the Epistle is so generally adm...

JFB: Romans (Book Introduction) THE GENUINENESS of the Epistle to the Romans has never been questioned. It has the unbroken testimony of all antiquity, up to CLEMENT OF ROME, the apo...

JFB: Romans (Outline) INTRODUCTION. (Rom. 1:1-17) THE JEW UNDER LIKE CONDEMNATION WITH THE GENTILE. (Rom. 2:1-29) JEWISH OBJECTIONS ANSWERED. (Rom 3:1-8) THAT THE JEW IS S...

TSK: Romans (Book Introduction) The Epistle to the Romans is " a writing," says Dr. Macknight, " which, for sublimity and truth of sentiment, for brevity and strength of expression,...

TSK: Romans 7 (Chapter Introduction) Overview Rom 7:1, No law hath power over a man longer than he lives; Rom 7:4, But we are dead to the law; Rom 7:7, Yet is not the law sin; Rom 7:1...

Poole: Romans 7 (Chapter Introduction) CHAPTER 7

MHCC: Romans (Book Introduction) The scope or design of the apostle in writing to the Romans appears to have been, to answer the unbelieving, and to teach the believing Jew; to confir...

MHCC: Romans 7 (Chapter Introduction) (Rom 7:1-6) Believers are united to Christ, that they may bring forth fruit unto God. (Rom 7:7-13) The use and excellence of the law. (Rom 7:14-25) ...

Matthew Henry: Romans (Book Introduction) An Exposition, with Practical Observations, of The Epistle of St. Paul to the Romans If we may compare scripture with scripture, and take the opinion ...

Matthew Henry: Romans 7 (Chapter Introduction) We may observe in this chapter, I. Our freedom from the law further urged as an argument to press upon us sanctification (Rom 7:1-6). II. The exc...

Barclay: Romans (Book Introduction) A GENERAL INTRODUCTION TO THE LETTERS OF PAUL The Letters Of Paul There is no more interesting body of documents in the New Testament than the letter...

Barclay: Romans 7 (Chapter Introduction) The New Allegiance (Rom_7:1-6) The Exceeding Sinfulness Of Sin (Rom_7:7-13) The Human Situation (Rom_7:14-25)

Constable: Romans (Book Introduction) Introduction Historical Background Throughout the history of the church, from postapos...

Constable: Romans (Outline) Outline I. Introduction 1:1-17 A. Salutation 1:1-7 1. The writer 1:1 ...

Constable: Romans Romans Bibliography Alford, Henry. The Greek Testament. 4 vols. New ed. Cambridge: Rivingtons, 1881. ...

Haydock: Romans (Book Introduction) THE EPISTLE OF ST. PAUL, THE APOSTLE, TO THE ROMANS. INTRODUCTION. After the Gospels, which contain the history of Christ, and the Acts of...

Gill: Romans (Book Introduction) INTRODUCTION TO ROMANS Though this epistle is in order placed the first of the epistles, yet it was not first written: there were several epistles ...

Gill: Romans 7 (Chapter Introduction) INTRODUCTION TO ROMANS 7 The Apostle, in this chapter, discourses concerning the freedom of justified and regenerated persons from the law, and con...

College: Romans (Book Introduction) INTRODUCTION I. ROMANS: ITS INFLUENCE AND IMPORTANCE God's Word is a lamp to our feet and a light for our path (Ps 119:105), and no part of it shine...

College: Romans (Outline) VIII. OUTLINE PROLOGUE - 1:1-17 I. EPISTOLARY GREETING - 1:1-7 A. The Author Introduces Himself - 1:1 1. A Slave of Christ Jesus 2. Call...

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