Chapter 5:
| Darby
| Geneva
| Gill
| Jamieson Faussett Brown
| Johnson
| Luther
| Matthew Henry
| Matthew Henry Concise
| Wesley
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| Bible Gateway |
Introduction 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 Acts 1 Corinthians
Romans 5
Verse 1. Being justified by faith - This is the sum of the preceding
chapters. We have peace with God - Being enemies to God no
longer, ver. 10; neither fearing his wrath, ver. 9. We have peace,
hope, love, and power over sin, the sum of the fifth, sixth,
seventh, and eighth chapters. These are the fruits of justifying
faith: where these are not, that faith is not.
Verse 2. Into this grace - This state of favour.
Verse 3. We glory in tribulations also - Which we are so far from
esteeming a mark of God's displeasure, that we receive them as
tokens of his fatherly love, whereby we are prepared for a more
exalted happiness. The Jews objected to the persecuted state of the
Christians as inconsistent with the people of the Messiah. It is
therefore with great propriety that the apostle so often mentions
the blessings arising from this very thing.
Verse 4. And patience works more experience of the sincerity of our
grace, and of God's power and faithfulness.
Verse 5. Hope shameth us not - That is, gives us the highest glorying.
We glory in this our hope, because the love of God is shed abroad
in our hearts - The divine conviction of God's love to us, and that
love to God which is both the earnest and the beginning of
heaven. By the Holy Ghost - The efficient cause of all these
present blessings, and the earnest of those to come.
Verse 6. How can we now doubt of God's love? For when we were
without strength - Either to think, will, or do anything good. In
due time - Neither too soon nor too late; but in that very point of
time which the wisdom of God knew to be more proper than any
other. Christ died for the ungodly - Not only to set them a pattern,
or to procure them power to follow it. It does not appear that this
expression, of dying for any one, has any other signification than
that of rescuing the life of another by laying down our own.
Verse 7. A just man - One who gives to all what is strictly their due The
good man - One who is eminently holy; full of love, of
compassion, kindness, mildness, of every heavenly and amiable
temper. Perhaps-one-would-even-dare to die - Every word
increases the strangeness of the thing, and declares even this to be
something great and unusual.
Verse 8. But God recommendeth - A most elegant expression. Those are
wont to be recommended to us, who were before either unknown
to, or alienated from, us. While we were sinners - So far from
being good, that we were not even just.
Verse 9. By his blood - By his bloodshedding. We shall be saved from
wrath through him - That is, from all the effects of the wrath of
God. But is there then wrath in God? Is not wrath a human
passion? And how can this human passion be in God? We may
answer this by another question: Is not love a human passion?
And how can this human passion be in God? But to answer
directly: wrath in man, and so love in man, is a human passion.
But wrath in God is not a human passion; nor is love, as it is in
God. Therefore the inspired writers ascribe both the one and the
other to God only in an analogical sense.
Verse 10. If - As sure as; so the word frequently signifies; particularly in
this and the eighth chapter. We shalt be saved - Sanctified and
glorified. Through his life - Who "ever liveth to make intercession
for us."
Verse 11. And not only so, but we also glory - The whole sentence, from
the third to the eleventh verse, may be taken together thus: We not
only "rejoice in hope of the glory of God," but also in the midst of
tribulations we glory in God himself through our Lord Jesus
Christ, by whom we have now received the reconciliation.
Verse 12. Therefore - This refers to all the preceding discourse; from
which the apostle infers what follows. He does not therefore
properly make a digression, but returns to speak again of sin and
of righteousness. As by one man - Adam; who is mentioned, and
not Eve, as being the representative of mankind. Sin entered into
the world - Actual sin, and its consequence, a sinful nature. And
death - With all its attendants. It entered into the world when it
entered into being; for till then it did not exist. By sin - Therefore
it could not enter before sin. Even so - Namely, by one man. In
that - So the word is used also, 2 Cor. v, 4. All sinned - In Adam.
These words assign the reason why death came upon all men;
infants themselves not excepted, in that all sinned.
Verse 13. For until the law sin was in the world - All, I say, had sinned,
for sin was in the world long before the written law; but, I grant,
sin is not so much imputed, nor so severely punished by God,
where there is no express law to convince men of it. Yet that all
had sinned, even then, appears in that all died.
Verse 14. Death reigned - And how vast is his kingdom! Scarce can we
find any king who has as many subjects, as are the kings whom he
hath conquered. Even over them that had not sinned after the
likeness of Adam's transgression - Even over infants who had
never sinned, as Adam did, in their own persons; and over others
who had not, like him, sinned against an express law. Who is the
figure of him that was to come - Each of them being a public
person, and a federal head of mankind. The one, the fountain of
sin and death to mankind by his offense; the other, of
righteousness and life by his free gift. Thus far the apostle shows
the agreement between the first and second Adam: afterward he
shows the differences between them. The agreement may be
summed up thus: As by one man sin entered into the world, and
death by sin; so by one man righteousness entered into the world,
and life by righteousness. As death passed upon all men, in that
all had sinned; so life passed upon all men, (who are in the second
Adam by faith,) in that all are justified. And as death through the
sin of the first Adam reigned even over them who had not sinned
after the likeness of Adam's transgression; so through the
righteousness of Christ, even those who have not obeyed, after the
likeness of his obedience, shall reign in life. We may add, As the
sin of Adam, without the sins which we afterwards committed,
brought us death; so the righteousness of Christ, without the good
works which we afterwards perform, brings us life: although still
every good, as well as evil, work, will receive its due reward.
Verse 15. Yet not - St. Paul now describes the difference between Adam
and Christ; and that much more directly and expressly than the
agreement between them. Now the fall and the free gift differ,
1. In amplitude, ver. 15.
2. He from whom sin came, and He from whom the free gift
came, termed also "the gift of righteousness," differ in power, ver.
16.
3. The reason of both is subjoined, ver. 17.
4. This premised, the offense and the free gift are compared, with
regard to their effect, ver. 18, and with regard to their cause, ver.
19.
Verse 16. The sentence was by one offense to Adam's condemnation -
Occasioning the sentence of death to pass upon him, which, by
consequence, overwhelmed his posterity. But the free gift is of
many offenses unto justification - Unto the purchasing it for all
men, notwithstanding many offenses.
Verse 17. There is a difference between grace and the gift. Grace is
opposed to the offense; the gift, to death, being the gift of life.
Verse 18. Justification of life - Is that sentence of God, by which a
sinner under sentence of death is adjudged to life.
Verse 19. As by the disobedience of one man many (that is, all men)
were constituted sinners - Being then in the loins of their first
parent, the common head and representative of them all. So by the
obedience of one - By his obedience unto death; by his dying for
us. Many - All that believe. Shall be constituted righteous -
Justified, pardoned.
Verse 20. The law came in between - The offense and the free gift. That
the offense might abound - That is, the consequence (not the
design) of the law's coming in was, not the taking away of sin, but
the increase of it. Yet where sin abounded, grace did much more
abound - Not only in the remission of that sin which Adam
brought on us, but of all our own; not only in remission of sins,
but infusion of holiness; not only in deliverance from death, but
admission to everlasting life, a far more noble and excellent life
than that which we lost by Adam's fall.
Verse 21. That as sin had reigned - so grace also might reign - Which
could not reign before the fall; before man had sinned. Through
righteousness to eternal life by Jesus Christ our Lord - Here is
pointed out the source of all our blessings, the rich and free grace
of God. The meritorious cause; not any works of righteousness of
man, but the alone merits of our Lord Jesus Christ. The effect or
end of all; not only pardon, but life; divine life, leading to glory.
Chapter 5:
| 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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