Chapter 1:
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Introduction 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 Acts 1 Corinthians
Romans 1
Verse 1. Paul, a servant of Jesus Christ -To this introduction the
conclusion answers, chap. xv, 15, &c. Called to be an apostle -
And made an apostle by that calling. While God calls, he makes
what he calls. As the Judaizing teachers disputed his claim to the
apostolical office, it is with great propriety that he asserts it in the
very entrance of an epistle wherein their principles are entirely
overthrown. And various other proper and important thoughts are
suggested in this short introduction; particularly the prophecies
concerning the gospel, the descent of Jesus from David, the great
doctrines of his Godhead and resurrection, the sending the gospel
to the gentiles, the privileges of Christians, and the obedience and
holiness to which they were obliged in virtue of their profession.
Separated - By God, not only from the bulk of other men, from
other Jews, from other disciples, but even from other Christian
teachers, to be a peculiar instrument of God in spreading the
gospel.
Verse 2. Which he promised before - Of old time, frequently, solemnly.
And the promise and accomplishment confirm each other. Deut.
xviii, 18; Isa. ix, 6, 7; Chapter liii; lxi; Jer. xxiii, 5.
Verse 3. Who was of the seed of David according to the flesh - That is,
with regard to his human nature. Both the natures of our saviour
are here mentioned; but the human is mentioned first, because the
divine was not manifested in its full evidence till after his
resurrection.
Verse 4. But powerfully declared to be the Son of God, according to the
Spirit of Holiness - That is, according to his divine nature. By the
resurrection from the dead - For this is both the fountain and the
object of our faith; and the preaching of the apostles was the
consequence of Christ's resurrection.
Verse 5. By whom we have received - I and the other apostles. Grace
and apostleship - The favour to be an apostle, and qualifications
for it. For obedience to the faith in all nations - That is, that all
nations may embrace the faith of Christ. For his name - For his
sake; out of regard to him.
Verse 6. Among whom - The nations brought to the obedience of faith.
Are ye also - But St. Paul gives them no preeminence above
others.
Verse 7. To all that are in Rome - Most of these were heathens by birth,
ver. 13, though with Jews mixed among them. They were
scattered up and down in that large city, and not yet reduced into
the form of a church. Only some had begun to meet in the house
of Aquila and Priscilla. Beloved of God - And from his free love,
not from any merit of yours, called by his word and his Spirit to
believe in him, and now through faith holy as he is holy. Grace -
The peculiar favour of God. And peace - All manner of blessings,
temporal, spiritual, and eternal. This is both a Christian salutation
and an apostolic benediction. From God our Father, and the Lord
Jesus Christ - This is the usual way wherein the apostles speak,
"God the Father," "God our Father." Nor do they often, in
speaking of him, use the word Lord, as it implies the proper name
of God, Jehovah. In the Old Testament, indeed, the holy men
generally said, "The Lord our God;" for they were then, as it were,
servants; whereas now they are sons: and sons so well know their
father, that they need not frequently mention his proper name. It is
one and the same peace, and one and the same grace, which is
from God and from Jesus Christ. Our trust and prayer fix on God,
as he is the Father of Christ; and on Christ, as he presents us to the
Father.
Verse 8. I thank - In the very entrance of this one epistle are the traces of
all spiritual affections; but of thankfulness above all, with the
expression of which almost all St. Paul's epistles begin. He here
particularly thanks God, that what otherwise himself should have
done, was done at Rome already. My God - This very word
expresses faith, hope, love, and consequently all true religion.
Through Jesus Christ - The gifts of God all pass through Christ to
us; and all our petitions and thanksgivings pass through Christ to
God. That your faith is spoken of - In this kind of congratulations
St. Paul describes either the whole of Christianity, as Colossians i,
3, &c.; or some part of it, as 1 Cor. i, 5. Accordingly here he
mentions the faith of the Romans, suitably to his design, ver. 12,
Verse 17. Through the whole world - This joyful news spreading
everywhere, that there were Christians also in the imperial city.
And the goodness and wisdom of God established faith in the
chief cities; in Jerusalem and Rome particularly; that from thence
it might be diffused to all nations.
Verse 9. God, whom I serve - As an apostle. In my spirit - Not only with
my body, but with my inmost soul. In the gospel - By preaching
it.
Verse 10. Always - In all my solemn addresses to God. If by any means
now at length - This accumulation of particles declares the
strength of his desire.
Verse 11. That I may impart to you - Face to face, by laying on of hands,
prayer, preaching the gospel, private conversation. Some spiritual
gift - With such gifts the Corinthians, who had enjoyed the
presence of St. Paul, abounded, 1 Cor. i, 7; xii, 1; xiv, 1. So did
the Galatians likewise, Gal. iii, 5; and, indeed, all those churches
which had had the presence of any of the apostles had peculiar
advantages in this kind, from the laying on of their hands, Acts
xix, 6; viii, 17, &c., 2 Tim. i, 6. But as yet the Roman were greatly
inferior to them in this respect; for which reason the apostle, in the
twelfth chapter also, says little, if any thing, of their spiritual gifts.
He therefore desires to impart some, that they might be
established; for by these was the testimony of Christ confirmed
among them. That St. Peter had no more been at Rome than St.
Paul, at the time when this epistle was wrote, appears from the
general tenor thereof, and from this place in particular: for,
otherwise, what St. Paul wishes to impart to the Roman would
have been imparted already by St. Peter.
Verse 12. That is, I long to be comforted by the mutual faith both of you
and me - He not only associates the Roman with, but even prefers
them before, himself. How different is this style of the apostle
from that of the modern court of Rome!
Verse 13. Brethren - A frequent, holy, simple, sweet, and yet grand,
appellation. The apostles but rarely address persons by their
names; 'O ye Corinthians," "O Timotheus." St. Paul generally uses
this appellation, " Brethren;" sometimes in exhortation, " My
beloved," or, " My beloved brethren;" St. James, "Brethren," "My
brethren," My beloved brethren;" St. Peter and Jude always, "
Beloved;" St. John frequently, " Beloved;" once, " Brethren;"
oftener than once, My little children." Though I have been
hindered hitherto - Either by business, see chap. xv, 22; or
persecution, 1 Thess. ii, 2; or the Spirit, Acts xvi, 7. That I might
have some fruit - Of my ministerial labours. Even as I have
already had from the many churches I have planted and watered
among the other gentiles.
Verse 14. To the Greeks and the barbarians - He includes the Roman
under the Greeks; so that this division comprises all nations. Both
to the wise, and the unwise - For there were unwise even among
the Greeks, and wise even among the barbarians. I am a debtor to
all - I am bound by my divine mission to preach the gospel to
them.
Verse 16. For I am not ashamed of the gospel - To the world, indeed, it
is folly and weakness, 1 Cor. i, 18; therefore, in the judgment of
the world, he ought to be ashamed of it; especially at Rome, the
head and theatre of the world. But Paul is not ashamed, knowing
it is the power of God unto salvation to every one that believeth -
The great and gloriously powerful means of saving all who accept
salvation in God's own way. As St. Paul comprises the sum of the
gospel in this epistle, so he does the sum of the epistle in this and
the following verse. Both to the Jew, and to the gentile - There is
a noble frankness, as well as a comprehensive sense, in these
words, by which he, on the one hand, shows the Jews their
absolute need of the gospel; and, on the other, tells the politest
and greatest nation in the world both that their salvation depended
on receiving it, and that the first offers of it were in every place to
be made to the despised Jews.
Verse 17. The righteousness of God - This expression sometimes means
God's eternal, essential righteousness, which includes both justice
and mercy, and is eminently shown in condemning sin, and yet
justifying the sinner. Sometimes it means that righteousness by
which a man, through the gift of God, is made and is righteous;
and that, both by receiving Christ through faith, and by a
conformity to the essential righteousness of God. St. Paul, when
treating of justification, means hereby the righteousness of faith;
therefore called the righteousness of God, because God found out
and prepared, reveals and gives, approves and crowns it. In this
verse the expression means, the whole benefit of God through
Christ for the salvation of a sinner. Is revealed - Mention is made
here, and ver. 18, of a twofold Revelation, - of wrath and of
righteousness: the former, little known to nature, is revealed by
the law; the latter, wholly unknown to nature, by the gospel. That
goes before, and prepares the way; this follows. Each, the apostle
says, is revealed at the present time, in opposition to the times of
ignorance. From faith to faith - By a gradual series of still clearer
and clearer promises. As it is written - St. Paul had just laid down
three propositions:
1. Righteousness is by faith, ver. xvii,
2. Salvation is by righteousness, ver. xvi,
3. Both to the Jews and to the gentiles, ver. 16. Now all these are
confirmed by that single sentence, The just shall live by faith -
Which was primarily spoken of those who preserved their lives,
when the Chaldeans besieged Jerusalem, by believing the
declarations of God, and acting according to them. Here it means,
He shall obtain the favour of God, and continue therein by
believing. Hab. ii, 4
Verse 18. For - There is no other way of obtaining life and salvation.
Having laid down his proposition, the apostle now enters upon the
proof of it. His first argument is, The law condemns all men, as
being under sin. None therefore is justified by the works of the
law. This is treated of chap. iii, 20. And hence he infers, Therefore
justification is by faith. The wrath of God is revealed - Not only
by frequent and signal interpositions of divine providence, but
likewise in the sacred oracles, and by us, his messengers. From
heaven - This speaks the majesty of Him whose wrath is revealed,
his all-seeing eye, and the extent of his wrath: whatever is under
heaven is under the effects of his wrath, believers in Christ
excepted. Against all ungodliness and unrighteousness - These
two are treated of, ver. 23, &c. Of men - He is speaking here of
the gentiles, and chiefly the wisest of them. Who detain the truth -
For it struggles against their wickedness. In unrighteousness - The
word here includes ungodliness also.
Verse 19. For what is to be known of God - Those great principles
which are indispensably necessary to be known. Is manifest in
them; for God hath showed it to them - By the light which
enlightens every man that cometh into the world.
Verse 20. For those things of him which are invisible, are seen - By the
eye of the mind. Being understood - They are seen by them, and
them only, who use their understanding
Verse 21. Because, knowing God - For the wiser heathens did know that
there was one supreme God; yet from low and base considerations
they conformed to the idolatry of the vulgar. They did not glorify
him as God, neither were thankful - They neither thanked him for
his benefits, nor glorified him for his divine perfection. But
became vain - Like the idols they worshipped. In their reasonings
- Various, uncertain, foolish. What a terrible instance have we of
this in the writings of Lucretius! What vain reasonings, and how
dark a heart, amidst so pompous professions of wisdom!
Verse 23. And changed - With the utmost folly. Here are three degrees
of ungodliness and of punishment: the first is described, ver. 21-
24; the second, ver. 25-27; the third, in ver. 28, and following
verses. The punishment in each case is expressed by God gave
them up. If a man will not worship God as God, he is so left to
himself that he throws away his very manhood. Reptiles - Or
creeping things; as beetles, and various kinds of serpents.
Verse 24. Wherefore - One punishment of sin is from the very nature of
it, as ver. 27; another, as here, is from vindictive justice.
Uncleanness - Ungodliness and uncleanness are frequently joined,
1 Thess. iv, 5 as are the knowledge of God and purity. God gave
them up - By withdrawing his restraining grace.
Verse 25. Who changed the truth - The true worship of God. Into a lie -
False, abominable idolatries. And worshipped - Inwardly. And
served - Outwardly.
Verse 26. Therefore God gave them up to vile affections - To which the
heathen Roman were then abandoned to the last degree; and none
more than the emperors themselves.
Verse 27. Receiving the just recompense of their error - Their idolatry
being punished with that unnatural lust, which was as horrible a
dishonour to the body, as their idolatry was to God.
Verse 28. God gave them up to an undiscerning mind - Treated of, ver.
Verse 32. To do things not expedient - Even the vilest abominations,
treated of verses ver. 29-31.
Verse 29. Filled with all injustice - This stands in the first place;
unmercifulness, in the last. Fornication - Includes here every
species of uncleanness. Maliciousness - The Greek word properly
implies a temper which delights in hurting another, even without
any advantage to itself.
Verse 30. Whisperers - Such as secretly defame others. Backbiters -
Such as speak against others behind their back. Haters of God -
That is, rebels against him, deniers of his providence, or accusers
of his justice in their adversities; yea, having an inward heart-
enmity to his justice and holiness. Inventors of evil things - Of
new pleasures, new ways of gain, new arts of hurting, particularly
in war.
Verse 31. Covenant-breakers - It is well known, the Romans, as a nation,
from the very beginning of their commonwealth, never made any
scruple of vacating altogether the most solemn engagement, if
they did not like it, though made by their supreme magistrate, in
the name of the whole people. They only gave up the general who
had made it, and then supposed themselves to be at full liberty.
Without natural affection - The custom of exposing their own new
- born children to perish by cold, hunger, or wild beasts, which so
generally prevailed in the heathen world, particularly among the
Greeks and Romans, was an amazing instance of this; as is also
that of killing their aged and helpless parents, now common
among the American heathens.
Verse 32. Not only do the same, but have pleasure in those that practice
them - This is the highest degree of wickedness. A man may be
hurried by his passions to do the thing he hates; but he that has
pleasure in those that do evil, loves wickedness for wickedness'
sake. And hereby he encourages them in sin, and heaps the guilt
of others upon his own head.
Chapter 1:
| Darby
| Geneva
| Gill
| Jamieson Faussett Brown
| Johnson
| Luther
| Matthew Henry
| Matthew Henry Concise
| Wesley
| Index
| Bible Gateway |
Introduction 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 Acts 1 Corinthians
This version of Wesley's Notes on the Bible is a derivative of an electronic version, Copyright 1997, by Sulu D. Kelley. All rights reserved. Used by permission. It may not be modified or used commercially without permission of Wesleyan Heritage Publishing and Sulu Kelley. A special thanks to Mr. Kelley and Wesleyan Heritage Publishing for permission to create and post this version of Wesley's Notes on the Bible.
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