1366 lines
99 KiB
XML
1366 lines
99 KiB
XML
<div2 id="Rom.ix" n="ix" next="Rom.x" prev="Rom.viii" progress="35.20%" title="Chapter VIII">
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<h2 id="Rom.ix-p0.1">R O M A N S.</h2>
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<h3 id="Rom.ix-p0.2">CHAP. VIII.</h3>
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<p class="intro" id="Rom.ix-p1">The apostle, having fully explained the doctrine
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of justification, and pressed the necessity of sanctification, in
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this chapter applies himself to the consolation of the Lord's
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people. Ministers are helpers of the joy of the saints. "Comfort
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ye, comfort ye my people," so runs our commission, <scripRef id="Rom.ix-p1.1" osisRef="Bible:Isa.40.1" parsed="|Isa|40|1|0|0" passage="Isa 40:1">Isa. xl. 1</scripRef>. It is the will of God
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that his people should be a comforted people. And we have here such
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a draught of the gospel charter, such a display of the unspeakable
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privileges of true believers, as may furnish us with abundant
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matter for joy and peace in believing, that by all these immutable
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things, in which it is impossible for God to lie, we might have
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strong consolation. Many of the people of God have, accordingly,
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found this chapter a well-spring of comfort to their souls, living
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and dying, and have sucked and been satisfied from these breasts of
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consolation, and with joy drawn water out of these wells of
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salvation. There are three things in this chapter: I. The
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particular instances of Christians' privileges, <scripRef id="Rom.ix-p1.2" osisRef="Bible:Rom.8.1-Rom.8.28" parsed="|Rom|8|1|8|28" passage="Ro 8:1-28">ver. 1-28</scripRef>. II. The ground thereof laid in
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predestination, <scripRef id="Rom.ix-p1.3" osisRef="Bible:Rom.8.29-Rom.8.30" parsed="|Rom|8|29|8|30" passage="Ro 8:29,30">ver. 29,
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30</scripRef>. III. The apostle's triumph herein, in the name of
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all the saints, <scripRef id="Rom.ix-p1.4" osisRef="Bible:Rom.8.31-Rom.8.39" parsed="|Rom|8|31|8|39" passage="Ro 8:31-39">ver. 31 to the
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end</scripRef>.</p>
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<scripCom id="Rom.ix-p1.5" osisRef="Bible:Rom.8" parsed="|Rom|8|0|0|0" passage="Ro 8" type="Commentary"/>
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<scripCom id="Rom.ix-p1.6" osisRef="Bible:Rom.8.1-Rom.8.9" parsed="|Rom|8|1|8|9" passage="Ro 8:1-9" type="Commentary"/><div class="Commentary" id="Bible:Rom.8.1-Rom.8.9">
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<h4 id="Rom.ix-p1.7">The Believer's Privileges. (<span class="smallcaps" id="Rom.ix-p1.8">a.
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d.</span> 58.)</h4>
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<p class="passage" id="Rom.ix-p2">1 <i>There is</i> therefore now no condemnation
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to them which are in Christ Jesus, who walk not after the flesh,
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but after the Spirit. 2 For the law of the Spirit of life in
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Christ Jesus hath made me free from the law of sin and death.
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3 For what the law could not do, in that it was weak through
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the flesh, God sending his own Son in the likeness of sinful flesh,
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and for sin, condemned sin in the flesh: 4 That the
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righteousness of the law might be fulfilled in us, who walk not
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after the flesh, but after the Spirit. 5 For they that are
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after the flesh do mind the things of the flesh; but they that are
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after the Spirit the things of the Spirit. 6 For to be
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carnally minded <i>is</i> death; but to be spiritually minded
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<i>is</i> life and peace. 7 Because the carnal mind
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<i>is</i> enmity against God: for it is not subject to the law of
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God, neither indeed can be. 8 So then they that are in the
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flesh cannot please God. 9 But ye are not in the flesh, but
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in the Spirit, if so be that the Spirit of God dwell in you. Now if
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any man have not the Spirit of Christ, he is none of his.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Rom.ix-p3">I. The apostle here begins with one signal
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privilege of true Christians, and describes the character of those
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to whom it belongs: <i>There is therefore now no condemnation to
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those that are in Christ Jesus,</i> <scripRef id="Rom.ix-p3.1" osisRef="Bible:Rom.8.1" parsed="|Rom|8|1|0|0" passage="Ro 8:1"><i>v.</i> 1</scripRef>. This is his triumph after that
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melancholy complaint and conflict in the foregoing chapter—sin
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remaining, disturbing, vexing, but, blessed be God, not ruining.
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The complaint he takes to himself, but humbly transfers the comfort
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with himself to all true believers, who are all interested in it.
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1. It is the unspeakable privilege and comfort of all those that
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are in Christ Jesus that there is therefore now no condemnation to
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them. He does not say, "There is no accusation against them," for
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this there is; but the accusation is thrown out, and the indictment
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quashed. He does not say, "There is nothing in them that deserves
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condemnation," for this there is, and they see it, and own it, and
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mourn over it, and condemn themselves for it; but it shall not be
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their ruin. He does not say, "There is no cross, no affliction to
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them or no displeasure in the affliction," for this there may be;
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but <i>no condemnation.</i> They may be chastened of the Lord, but
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not condemned with the world. Now this arises from their being in
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Christ Jesus; by virtue of their union with him through faith they
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are thus secured. They are in Christ Jesus, as in their city of
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refuge, and so are protected from the avenger of blood. He is their
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advocate, and brings them off. There is therefore no condemnation,
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because they are interested in the satisfaction that Christ by
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dying made to the law. In Christ, God does not only not condemn
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them, but is well pleased with them, <scripRef id="Rom.ix-p3.2" osisRef="Bible:Matt.17.5" parsed="|Matt|17|5|0|0" passage="Mt 17:5">Matt. xvii. 5</scripRef>. 2. It is the undoubted
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character of all those who are so in Christ Jesus as to be freed
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from condemnation that <i>they walk not after the flesh but after
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the Spirit.</i> Observe, The character is given from their walk,
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not from any one particular act, but from their course and way. And
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the great question is, What is the principle of the walk, the flesh
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or the spirit, the old or the new nature, corruption or grace?
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Which of these do we mind, for which of these doe we make
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provision, by which of these are we governed, which of these do we
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take part with?</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Rom.ix-p4">II. This great truth, thus laid down, he
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illustrates in the <scripRef id="Rom.ix-p4.1" osisRef="Bible:Rom.8.2-Rom.8.9" parsed="|Rom|8|2|8|9" passage="Ro 8:2-9">following
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verses</scripRef>; and shows how we come by this great privilege,
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and how we may answer this character.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Rom.ix-p5">1. How we come by these privileges—the
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privilege of justification, that <i>there is no condemnation to
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us</i>—the privilege of sanctification, that <i>we walk after the
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Spirit, and not after the flesh,</i> which is no less our privilege
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than it is our duty. How comes it about?</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Rom.ix-p6">(1.) The law could not do it, <scripRef id="Rom.ix-p6.1" osisRef="Bible:Rom.8.3" parsed="|Rom|8|3|0|0" passage="Ro 8:3"><i>v.</i> 3</scripRef>. It could neither justify
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nor sanctify, neither free us from the guilt nor from the power of
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sin, having not the promises either of pardon or grace. The law
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made nothing perfect: <i>It was weak.</i> Some attempt the law made
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towards these blessed ends, but, alas! it was weak, it could not
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accomplish them: yet that weakness was not through any defect in
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the law, but <i>through the flesh,</i> through the corruption of
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human nature, by which we became incapable either of being
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justified or sanctified by the law. We had become unable to keep
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the law, and, in case of failure, the law, as a covenant of works,
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made no provision, and so left us as it found us. Or understand it
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of the ceremonial law; that was a plaster not wide enough for the
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wound, it could never take away sin, <scripRef id="Rom.ix-p6.2" osisRef="Bible:Heb.10.4" parsed="|Heb|10|4|0|0" passage="Heb 10:4">Heb. x. 4</scripRef>.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Rom.ix-p7">(2.) <i>The law of the Spirit of life in
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Christ Jesus</i> does it, <scripRef id="Rom.ix-p7.1" osisRef="Bible:Rom.8.2" parsed="|Rom|8|2|0|0" passage="Ro 8:2"><i>v.</i>
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2</scripRef>. The covenant of grace made with us in Christ is a
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treasury of merit and grace, and thence we receive pardon and a new
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nature, <i>are freed from the law of sin and death,</i> that is,
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both from the guilt and power of sin—from the course of the law,
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and the dominion of the flesh. We are under another covenant,
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another master, another husband, under the <i>law of the
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Spirit,</i> the law that gives the Spirit, spiritual life to
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qualify us for eternal. The foundation of this freedom is laid in
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Christ's undertaking for us, of which he speaks <scripRef id="Rom.ix-p7.2" osisRef="Bible:Rom.8.3" parsed="|Rom|8|3|0|0" passage="Ro 8:3"><i>v.</i> 3</scripRef>, <i>God sending his own Son.</i>
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Observe, When the law failed, God provided another method. Christ
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comes to do that which the law could not do. Moses brought the
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children of Israel to the borders of Canaan, and then died, and
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left them there; but Joshua did that which Moses could not do, and
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put them in possession of Canaan. Thus what the law could not do
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Christ did. The best exposition of this verse we have <scripRef id="Rom.ix-p7.3" osisRef="Bible:Heb.10.1-Heb.10.10" parsed="|Heb|10|1|10|10" passage="Heb 10:1-10">Heb. x. 1-10</scripRef>. To make the sense of
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the words clear, which in our translation is a little intricate, we
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may read it thus, with a little transposition:—<i>God sending his
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own Son in the likeness of sinful flesh, and a sacrifice for sin,
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condemned sin in the flesh, which the law could not do, in that it
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was weak through the flesh,</i> &c., <scripRef id="Rom.ix-p7.4" osisRef="Bible:Rom.8.4" parsed="|Rom|8|4|0|0" passage="Ro 8:4"><i>v.</i> 4</scripRef>. Observe, [1.] How Christ appeared:
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<i>In the likeness of sinful flesh.</i> Not sinful, for he was
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holy, harmless, undefiled; but in the likeness of that flesh which
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was sinful. He took upon him that nature which was corrupt, though
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perfectly abstracted from the corruptions of it. His being
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circumcised, redeemed, baptized with John's baptism, bespeaks the
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likeness of sinful flesh. The bitings of the fiery serpents were
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cured by a serpent of brass, which had the shape, though free from
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the venom, of the serpents that bit them. It was great
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condescension that he who was God should be made in the likeness of
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flesh; but much greater that he who was holy should be made in the
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likeness of sinful flesh. <i>And for sin,</i>—here the best Greek
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copies place the comma. God sent him, <b><i>en homoiomati sarkos
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hamartias, kai peri hamartias</i></b>—<i>in the likeness of sinful
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flesh, and as a sacrifice for sin.</i> The LXX. call a sacrifice
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for sin no more than <b><i>peri hamartias</i></b>—<i>for sin;</i>
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so Christ was a sacrifice; he was sent to be so, <scripRef id="Rom.ix-p7.5" osisRef="Bible:Heb.9.26" parsed="|Heb|9|26|0|0" passage="Heb 9:26">Heb. ix. 26</scripRef>. [2.] What was done by this
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appearance of his: Sin <i>was condemned,</i> that is, God did
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therein more than ever manifest his hatred of sin; and not only so,
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but for all that are Christ's both the damning and the domineering
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power of sin is broken and taken out of the way. He that is
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condemned can neither accuse nor rule; his testimony is null, and
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his authority null. Thus by Christ is sin condemned; though it live
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and remain, its life in the saints is still but like that of a
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condemned malefactor. It was by the condemning of sin that death
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was disarmed, and the devil, who had the power of death, destroyed.
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The condemning of sin saved the sinner from condemnation. Christ
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was made sin for us (<scripRef id="Rom.ix-p7.6" osisRef="Bible:2Cor.5.21" parsed="|2Cor|5|21|0|0" passage="2Co 5:21">2 Cor. v.
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21</scripRef>), and, being so made, when he was condemned sin was
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condemned in the flesh of Christ, condemned in the human nature: So
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was sanctification made to divine justice, and way made for the
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salvation of the sinner. [3.] The happy effect of this upon us
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(<scripRef id="Rom.ix-p7.7" osisRef="Bible:Rom.8.4" parsed="|Rom|8|4|0|0" passage="Ro 8:4"><i>v.</i> 4</scripRef>): <i>That the
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righteousness of the law might be fulfilled in us.</i> Both in our
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justification and in our sanctification, the righteousness of the
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law if fulfilled. A righteousness of satisfaction for the breach of
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the law is fulfilled by the imputation of Christ's complete and
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perfect righteousness, which answers the utmost demands of the law,
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as the mercy-seat was as long and as broad as the ark. A
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righteousness of obedience to the commands of the law is fulfilled
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in us, when by the Spirit the law of love is written upon the
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heart, and that love is the fulfilling of the law, <scripRef id="Rom.ix-p7.8" osisRef="Bible:Rom.13.10" parsed="|Rom|13|10|0|0" passage="Ro 13:10"><i>ch.</i> xiii. 10</scripRef>. Though the
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righteousness of the law is not fulfilled by us, yet, blessed be
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God, it is fulfilled in us; there is that to be found upon and in
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all true believers which answers the intention of the law. <i>Us
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who walk not after the flesh, but after the Spirit.</i> This is the
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description of all those that are interested in this
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privilege—they act from spiritual and not from carnal principles;
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as for others, the righteousness of the law will be fulfilled upon
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them in their ruin. Now,</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Rom.ix-p8">2. Observe how we may answer to this
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character, <scripRef id="Rom.ix-p8.1" osisRef="Bible:Rom.8.5" parsed="|Rom|8|5|0|0" passage="Ro 8:5"><i>v.</i> 5</scripRef>,
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&c.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Rom.ix-p9">(1.) By looking to our minds. How may we
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know whether we are after the flesh or after the Spirit? By
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examining what we mind, the things of the flesh or the things of
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the spirit. Carnal pleasure, worldly profit and honour, the things
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of sense and time, are the things of the flesh, which unregenerate
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people mind. The favour of God, the welfare of the soul, the
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concerns of eternity, are the things of the Spirit, which those
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that are after the Spirit do mind. The man is as the mind is. The
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mind is the forge of thoughts. <i>As he thinketh in his heart, so
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is he,</i> <scripRef id="Rom.ix-p9.1" osisRef="Bible:Prov.23.7" parsed="|Prov|23|7|0|0" passage="Pr 23:7">Prov. xxiii. 7</scripRef>.
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Which way do the thoughts move with most pleasure? On what do they
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dwell with most satisfaction? The mind is the seat of wisdom. Which
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way go the projects and contrivances? whether are we more wise for
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the world or for our souls? <b><i>phronousi ta tes
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sarkos</i></b>—<i>they savour the things of the flesh;</i> so the
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word is rendered, <scripRef id="Rom.ix-p9.2" osisRef="Bible:Matt.16.23" parsed="|Matt|16|23|0|0" passage="Mt 16:23">Matt. xvi.
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23</scripRef>. It is a great matter what our savour is, what
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truths, what tidings, what comforts, we do most relish, and are
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most agreeable to us. Now, to caution us against this
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carnal-mindedness, he shows the great misery and malignity of it,
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and compares it with the unspeakable excellency and comfort of
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spiritual-mindedness. [1.] It is death, <scripRef id="Rom.ix-p9.3" osisRef="Bible:Rom.8.6" parsed="|Rom|8|6|0|0" passage="Ro 8:6"><i>v.</i> 6</scripRef>. It is spiritual death, the certain
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way to eternal death. It is the death of the soul; for it is its
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alienation from God, in union and communion with whom the life of
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the soul consists. A carnal soul is a dead soul, dead as a soul can
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die. She that <i>liveth in pleasure is dead</i> (<scripRef id="Rom.ix-p9.4" osisRef="Bible:1Tim.5.6" parsed="|1Tim|5|6|0|0" passage="1Ti 5:6">1 Tim. v. 6</scripRef>), not only dead in law as guilty,
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but dead in state as carnal. Death includes all misery; carnal
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souls are miserable souls. But to be <i>spiritually minded,</i>
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<b><i>phronema tou pneumatos</i></b>—<i>a spiritual savour</i>
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(the wisdom that is from above, a principle of grace) is <i>life
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and peace;</i> it is the felicity and happiness of the soul. The
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life of the soul consists in its union with spiritual things by the
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mind. A sanctified soul is a living soul, and that life is peace;
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it is a very comfortable life. All the paths of spiritual wisdom
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are paths of peace. It is life and peace in the other world, as
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well as in this. Spiritual-mindedness is eternal life and peace
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begun, and an assuring earnest of the perfection of it. [2.] It is
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enmity to God (<scripRef id="Rom.ix-p9.5" osisRef="Bible:Rom.8.7" parsed="|Rom|8|7|0|0" passage="Ro 8:7"><i>v.</i> 7</scripRef>),
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and this is worse than the former. The former speaks the carnal
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sinner a dead man, which is bad; but this speaks him a devil of a
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man. It is not only an enemy, but enmity itself. It is not only the
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alienation of the soul from God, but the opposition of the soul
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against God; it rebels against his authority, thwarts his design,
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opposes his interest, spits in his face, spurns at his bowels. Can
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there be a greater enmity? An enemy may be reconciled, but enmity
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cannot. How should this humble us for and warn us against,
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carnal-mindedness! Shall we harbour and indulge that which is
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enmity to God our creator, owner, ruler, and benefactor? To prove
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this, he urges that <i>it is not subject to the law of God, neither
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indeed can be.</i> The holiness of the law of God, and the
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unholiness of the carnal mind, are as irreconcilable as light and
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darkness. The carnal man may, by the power of divine grace, be made
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subject to the law of God, but the <i>carnal mind</i> never can;
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this must be broken and expelled. See how wretchedly the corrupt
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will of man is enslaved to sin; as far as the carnal mind prevails,
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there is no inclination to the law of God; therefore wherever there
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is a change wrought it is by the power of God's grace, not by the
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freedom of man's will. Hence he infers (<scripRef id="Rom.ix-p9.6" osisRef="Bible:Rom.8.8" parsed="|Rom|8|8|0|0" passage="Ro 8:8"><i>v.</i> 8</scripRef>), <i>Those that are in the flesh
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cannot please God.</i> Those that are in a carnal unregenerate
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state, under the reigning power of sin, cannot do the things that
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please God, wanting grace, the pleasing principle, and an interest
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in Christ, the pleasing Mediator. The very <i>sacrifice of the
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wicked is an abomination,</i> <scripRef id="Rom.ix-p9.7" osisRef="Bible:Prov.15.8" parsed="|Prov|15|8|0|0" passage="Pr 15:8">Prov. xv.
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8</scripRef>. Pleasing God is our highest end, of which those that
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are in the flesh cannot but fall short; they cannot please him,
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nay, they cannot but displease him. We may know our state and
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character,</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Rom.ix-p10">(2.) By enquiring whether we have the
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Spirit of God and Christ, or not (<scripRef id="Rom.ix-p10.1" osisRef="Bible:Rom.8.9" parsed="|Rom|8|9|0|0" passage="Ro 8:9"><i>v.</i> 9</scripRef>): <i>You are not in the flesh, but
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in the Spirit.</i> This expresses states and conditions of the soul
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vastly different. All the saints have flesh and spirit in them; but
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to be in the flesh and to be in the Spirit are contrary. It denotes
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our being overcome and subdued by one of these principles. As we
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say, A man is <i>in love,</i> or <i>in drink,</i> that is, overcome
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by it. Now the great question is whether we are in the flesh or in
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the Spirit; and how may we come to know it? Why, by enquiring
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whether the Spirit of God dwell in us. The Spirit dwelling in us is
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the best evidence of our being in the Spirit, for the indwelling is
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mutual (<scripRef id="Rom.ix-p10.2" osisRef="Bible:1John.4.16" parsed="|1John|4|16|0|0" passage="1Jo 4:16">1 John iv. 16</scripRef>):
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<i>Dwelleth in God, and God in him.</i> The Spirit visits many that
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are unregenerate with his motions, which they resist and quench;
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but in all that are sanctified he dwells; there he resides and
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rules. He is there as a man at his own house, where he is constant
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and welcome, and has the dominion. Shall we put this question to
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our own hearts, Who dwells, who rules, who keeps house, here? Which
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interest has the ascendant? To this he subjoins a general rule of
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trial: <i>If any man has not the Spirit of Christ, he is none of
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his.</i> To be Christ's (that is, to be a Christian indeed, one of
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his children, his servants, his friends, in union with him) is a
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privilege and honour which many pretend to that have no part nor
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lot in the matter. None are his but those that have his Spirit;
|
||
that is, [1.] That are spirited as he was spirited—are meek, and
|
||
lowly, and humble, and peaceable, and patient, and charitable, as
|
||
he was. We cannot tread in his steps unless we have his spirit; the
|
||
frame and disposition of our souls must be conformable to Christ's
|
||
pattern. [2.] That are actuated and guided by the Holy Spirit of
|
||
God, as a sanctifier, teacher, and comforter. Having the Spirit of
|
||
Christ is the same with having the Spirit of God to dwell in us.
|
||
But those two come much to one; for all that are actuated by the
|
||
Spirit of God as their rule are conformable to the spirit of Christ
|
||
as their pattern. Now this description of the character of those to
|
||
whom belongs this first privilege of freedom from condemnation is
|
||
to be applied to all the other privileges that follow.</p>
|
||
</div><scripCom id="Rom.ix-p10.3" osisRef="Bible:Rom.8.10-Rom.8.16" parsed="|Rom|8|10|8|16" passage="Ro 8:10-16" type="Commentary"/><div class="Commentary" id="Bible:Rom.8.10-Rom.8.16">
|
||
<h4 id="Rom.ix-p10.4">The Believer's Privileges. (<span class="smallcaps" id="Rom.ix-p10.5">a.
|
||
d.</span> 58.)</h4>
|
||
<p class="passage" id="Rom.ix-p11">10 And if Christ <i>be</i> in you, the body
|
||
<i>is</i> dead because of sin; but the Spirit <i>is</i> life
|
||
because of righteousness. 11 But if the Spirit of him that
|
||
raised up Jesus from the dead dwell in you, he that raised up
|
||
Christ from the dead shall also quicken your mortal bodies by his
|
||
Spirit that dwelleth in you. 12 Therefore, brethren, we are
|
||
debtors, not to the flesh, to live after the flesh. 13 For
|
||
if ye live after the flesh, ye shall die: but if ye through the
|
||
Spirit do mortify the deeds of the body, ye shall live. 14
|
||
For as many as are led by the Spirit of God, they are the sons of
|
||
God. 15 For ye have not received the spirit of bondage again
|
||
to fear; but ye have received the Spirit of adoption, whereby we
|
||
cry, Abba, Father. 16 The Spirit itself beareth witness with
|
||
our spirit, that we are the children of God:</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Rom.ix-p12">In these verses the apostle represents two
|
||
more excellent benefits, which belong to true believers.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Rom.ix-p13">I. Life. The happiness is not barely a
|
||
negative happiness, not to be condemned; but it is positive, it is
|
||
an advancement to a life that will be the unspeakable happiness of
|
||
the man (<scripRef id="Rom.ix-p13.1" osisRef="Bible:Rom.8.10-Rom.8.11" parsed="|Rom|8|10|8|11" passage="Ro 8:10,11"><i>v.</i> 10,
|
||
11</scripRef>): <i>If Christ be in you.</i> Observe, If the Spirit
|
||
be in us, Christ is in us. He dwells in the heart by faith,
|
||
<scripRef id="Rom.ix-p13.2" osisRef="Bible:Eph.3.17" parsed="|Eph|3|17|0|0" passage="Eph 3:17">Eph. iii. 17</scripRef>. Now we are
|
||
here told what becomes of the bodies and souls of those in whom
|
||
Christ is.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Rom.ix-p14">1. We cannot say but that <i>the body is
|
||
dead;</i> it is a frail, mortal, dying body, and it will be dead
|
||
shortly; it is a house of clay, whose foundation is in the dust.
|
||
The life purchased and promised does not immortalize the body in
|
||
its present state. It is dead, that is, it is appointed to die, it
|
||
is under a sentence of death: as we say one that is condemned is a
|
||
dead man. In the midst of life we are in death: be our bodies ever
|
||
so strong, and healthful, and handsome, they are as good as dead
|
||
(<scripRef id="Rom.ix-p14.1" osisRef="Bible:Heb.11.12" parsed="|Heb|11|12|0|0" passage="Heb 11:12">Heb. xi. 12</scripRef>), and this
|
||
<i>because of sin.</i> It is sin that kills the body. This effect
|
||
the first threatening has (<scripRef id="Rom.ix-p14.2" osisRef="Bible:Gen.3.19" parsed="|Gen|3|19|0|0" passage="Ge 3:19">Gen. iii.
|
||
19</scripRef>): <i>Dust thou art.</i> Methinks, were there no other
|
||
argument, love to our bodies should make us hate sin, because it is
|
||
such an enemy to our bodies. The death even of the bodies of the
|
||
saints is a remaining token of God's displeasure against sin.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Rom.ix-p15">2. But the spirit, the precious soul, that
|
||
is life; it is now spiritually alive, nay, it is life. Grace in the
|
||
soul is its new nature; the life of the saint lies in the soul,
|
||
while the life of the sinner goes no further than the body. When
|
||
the body dies, and returns to the dust, <i>the spirit if life;</i>
|
||
not only living and immortal, but swallowed up of life. Death to
|
||
the saints is but the freeing of the heaven-born spirit from the
|
||
clog and load of this body, that it may be fit to partake of
|
||
eternal life. When Abraham was dead, yet God was the God of
|
||
Abraham, for even then his spirit was life, <scripRef id="Rom.ix-p15.1" osisRef="Bible:Matt.22.31-Matt.22.32" parsed="|Matt|22|31|22|32" passage="Mt 22:31,32">Matt. xxii. 31, 32</scripRef>. See <scripRef id="Rom.ix-p15.2" osisRef="Bible:Ps.49.15" parsed="|Ps|49|15|0|0" passage="Ps 49:15">Ps. xlix. 15</scripRef>. And this <i>because of
|
||
righteousness.</i> The righteousness of Christ imputed to them
|
||
secures the soul, the better part, from death; the righteousness of
|
||
Christ inherent in them, the renewed image of God upon the soul,
|
||
preserves it, and, by God's ordination, at death elevates it, and
|
||
improves it, and makes it meet to partake of the inheritance of the
|
||
saints in light. The eternal life of the soul consists in the
|
||
vision and fruition of God, and both assimilating, for which the
|
||
soul is qualified by the righteousness of sanctification. I refer
|
||
to <scripRef id="Rom.ix-p15.3" osisRef="Bible:Ps.17.15" parsed="|Ps|17|15|0|0" passage="Ps 17:15">Ps. xvii. 15</scripRef>, <i>I will
|
||
behold thy face in righteousness.</i></p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Rom.ix-p16">3. There is a life reserved too for the
|
||
poor body at last: <i>He shall also quicken your mortal bodies,</i>
|
||
<scripRef id="Rom.ix-p16.1" osisRef="Bible:Rom.8.11" parsed="|Rom|8|11|0|0" passage="Ro 8:11"><i>v.</i> 11</scripRef>. The Lord is
|
||
for the body; and though at death it is cast aside as a despised
|
||
broken vessel, a vessel in which is no pleasure, yet God will have
|
||
a desire to the work of his hands (<scripRef id="Rom.ix-p16.2" osisRef="Bible:Job.14.15" parsed="|Job|14|15|0|0" passage="Job 14:15">Job xiv. 15</scripRef>), will remember his covenant
|
||
with the dust, and will not lose a grain of it; but the body shall
|
||
be reunited to the soul, and clothed with a glory agreeable to it.
|
||
Vile bodies shall be newly fashioned, <scripRef id="Rom.ix-p16.3" osisRef="Bible:Phil.3.21 Bible:1Cor.15.42" parsed="|Phil|3|21|0|0;|1Cor|15|42|0|0" passage="Php 3:21,1Co 15:42">Phil. iii. 21; 1 Cor. xv. 42</scripRef>. Two
|
||
great assurances of the resurrection of the body are mentioned:—
|
||
(1.) The resurrection of Christ: He <i>that raised up Christ from
|
||
the dead shall also quicken.</i> Christ rose as the head, and
|
||
first-fruits, and forerunner of all the saints, <scripRef id="Rom.ix-p16.4" osisRef="Bible:1Cor.15.20" parsed="|1Cor|15|20|0|0" passage="1Co 15:20">1 Cor. xv. 20</scripRef>. The body of Christ lay in the
|
||
grave, under the sin of all the elect imputed, and broke through
|
||
it. O grave, then, where is thy victory? It is in the virtue of
|
||
Christ's resurrection that we shall rise. (2.) The indwelling of
|
||
the Spirit. The same Spirit that raiseth the soul now will raise
|
||
the body shortly: <i>By his Spirit that dwelleth in you.</i> The
|
||
bodies of the saints are the temples of the Holy Ghost, <scripRef id="Rom.ix-p16.5" osisRef="Bible:1Cor.3.16 Bible:1Cor.6.19" parsed="|1Cor|3|16|0|0;|1Cor|6|19|0|0" passage="1Co 3:16,6:19">1 Cor. iii. 16; vi. 19</scripRef>. Now,
|
||
though these temples may be suffered for awhile to lie in ruins,
|
||
yet they shall be rebuilt. The tabernacle of David, which has
|
||
fallen down, shall be repaired, whatever great mountains may be in
|
||
the way. The Spirit, breathing upon dead and dry bones, will make
|
||
them live, and the saints even in their flesh shall see God. Hence
|
||
the apostle by the way infers how much it is our duty to walk not
|
||
after the flesh, but after the Spirit, <scripRef id="Rom.ix-p16.6" osisRef="Bible:Rom.8.12-Rom.8.13" parsed="|Rom|8|12|8|13" passage="Ro 8:12,13"><i>v.</i> 12, 13</scripRef>. Let not our life be after
|
||
the wills and motions of the flesh. Two motives he mentions here:—
|
||
[1.] We are not debtors to the flesh, neither by relation,
|
||
gratitude, nor any other bond or obligation. We owe no suit nor
|
||
service to our carnal desires; we are indeed bound to clothe, and
|
||
feed, and take care of the body, as a servant to the soul in the
|
||
service of God, but no further. We are not debtors to it; the flesh
|
||
never did us so much kindness as to oblige us to serve it. It is
|
||
implied that we are debtors to Christ and to the Spirit: there we
|
||
owe our all, all we have and all we can do, by a thousand bonds and
|
||
obligations. Being delivered from so great a death by so great a
|
||
ransom, we are deeply indebted to our deliverer. See <scripRef id="Rom.ix-p16.7" osisRef="Bible:1Cor.6.19-1Cor.6.20" parsed="|1Cor|6|19|6|20" passage="1Co 6:19,20">1 Cor. vi. 19, 20</scripRef>. [2.] Consider
|
||
the consequences, what will be at the end of the way. Here are life
|
||
and death, blessing and cursing, set before us. <i>If you live
|
||
after the flesh, you shall die;</i> that is, die eternally. It is
|
||
the pleasing, and serving, and gratifying, of the flesh, that are
|
||
the ruin of souls; that is, the second death. Dying indeed is the
|
||
soul's dying: the death of the saints is but a sleep. But, on the
|
||
other hand, <i>You shall live,</i> live and be happy to eternity;
|
||
that is the true life: <i>If you through the Spirit mortify the
|
||
deeds of the body,</i> subdue and keep under all fleshly lusts and
|
||
affections, deny yourselves in the pleasing and humouring of the
|
||
body, and this through the Spirit; we cannot do it without the
|
||
Spirit working it in us, and the Spirit will not do it without our
|
||
doing our endeavour. So that in a word we are put upon this
|
||
dilemma, either to displease the body or destroy the soul.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Rom.ix-p17">II. The <i>Spirit of adoption</i> is
|
||
another privilege belonging to those that are in Christ Jesus,
|
||
<scripRef id="Rom.ix-p17.1" osisRef="Bible:Rom.8.14-Rom.8.16" parsed="|Rom|8|14|8|16" passage="Ro 8:14-16"><i>v.</i> 14-16</scripRef>.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Rom.ix-p18">1. All that are Christ's are taken into the
|
||
relation of Children to God, <scripRef id="Rom.ix-p18.1" osisRef="Bible:Rom.8.14" parsed="|Rom|8|14|0|0" passage="Ro 8:14"><i>v.</i>
|
||
14</scripRef>. Observe, (1.) Their property: They are <i>led by the
|
||
Spirit of God,</i> as a scholar in his learning is led by his
|
||
tutor, as a traveller in his journey is led by his guide, as a
|
||
soldier in his engagements is led by his captain; not driven as
|
||
beasts, but led as rational creatures, drawn with the cords of a
|
||
man and the bands of love. It is the undoubted character of all
|
||
true believers that they are led by the Spirit of God. Having
|
||
submitted themselves in believing to his guidance, they do in their
|
||
obedience follow that guidance, and are sweetly led into all truth
|
||
and all duty. (2.) Their privilege: <i>They are the sons of
|
||
God,</i> received into the number of God's children by adoption,
|
||
owned and loved by him as his children.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Rom.ix-p19">2. And those that are the sons of God have
|
||
the Spirit,</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Rom.ix-p20">(1.) To work in them the disposition of
|
||
children.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Rom.ix-p21">[1.] <i>You have not received the spirit of
|
||
bondage again to fear,</i> <scripRef id="Rom.ix-p21.1" osisRef="Bible:Rom.8.15" parsed="|Rom|8|15|0|0" passage="Ro 8:15"><i>v.</i>
|
||
15</scripRef>. Understand it, <i>First,</i> Of that spirit of
|
||
bondage which the Old-Testament church was under, by reason of the
|
||
darkness and terror of that dispensation. The veil signified
|
||
bondage, <scripRef id="Rom.ix-p21.2" osisRef="Bible:2Cor.3.15" parsed="|2Cor|3|15|0|0" passage="2Co 3:15">2 Cor. iii. 15</scripRef>.
|
||
Compare <scripRef id="Rom.ix-p21.3" osisRef="Bible:Rom.8.17" parsed="|Rom|8|17|0|0" passage="Ro 8:17"><i>v.</i> 17</scripRef>. The
|
||
Spirit of adoption was not then so plentifully poured out as now;
|
||
for the law opened the wound, but little of the remedy. Now you are
|
||
not under that dispensation, you have not received that spirit.
|
||
<i>Secondly,</i> Of that spirit of bondage which many of the saints
|
||
themselves were under at their conversion, under the convictions of
|
||
sin and wrath set home by the Spirit; as those in <scripRef id="Rom.ix-p21.4" osisRef="Bible:Acts.2.37" parsed="|Acts|2|37|0|0" passage="Ac 2:37">Acts ii. 37</scripRef>, the jailer (<scripRef id="Rom.ix-p21.5" osisRef="Bible:Acts.16.30" parsed="|Acts|16|30|0|0" passage="Ac 16:30">Acts xvi. 30</scripRef>), Paul, <scripRef id="Rom.ix-p21.6" osisRef="Bible:Acts.9.6" parsed="|Acts|9|6|0|0" passage="Ac 9:6">Acts ix. 6</scripRef>. Then the Spirit himself was
|
||
to the saints a spirit of bondage: "But," says the apostle, "with
|
||
you this is over." "God as a Judge," says Dr. Manton, "by the
|
||
spirit of bondage, sends us to Christ as Mediator, and Christ as
|
||
Mediator, by the spirit of adoption, sends us back again to God as
|
||
a Father." Though a child of God may come under fear of bondage
|
||
again, and may be questioning his sonship, yet the blessed Spirit
|
||
is not again a spirit of bondage, for then he would witness an
|
||
untruth.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Rom.ix-p22">[2.] But you <i>have received the Spirit of
|
||
adoption.</i> Men may give a charter of adoption; but it is God's
|
||
prerogative, when he adopts, to give a spirit of adoption—the
|
||
nature of children. The Spirit of adoption works in the children of
|
||
God a filial love to God as a Father, a delight in him, and a
|
||
dependence upon him, as a Father. A sanctified soul bears the image
|
||
of God, as the child bears the image of the father. <i>Whereby we
|
||
cry, Abba, Father.</i> Praying is here called <i>crying,</i> which
|
||
is not only an earnest, but a natural expression of desire;
|
||
children that cannot speak vent their desires by crying. Now, the
|
||
Spirit teaches us in prayer to come to God as a Father, with a holy
|
||
humble confidence, emboldening the soul in that duty. <i>Abba,
|
||
Father. Abba</i> is a Syriac word signifying <i>father</i> or <i>my
|
||
father;</i> <b><i>pater,</i></b> a Greek work; and why both,
|
||
<i>Abba, Father?</i> Because Christ said so in prayer (<scripRef id="Rom.ix-p22.1" osisRef="Bible:Mark.14.36" parsed="|Mark|14|36|0|0" passage="Mk 14:36">Mark xiv. 36</scripRef>), <i>Abba, Father:</i>
|
||
and we have received the Spirit of the Son. It denotes an
|
||
affectionate endearing importunity, and a believing stress laid
|
||
upon the relation. Little children, begging of their parents, can
|
||
say little but <i>Father, Father,</i> and that is rhetoric enough.
|
||
It also denotes that the adoption is common both to Jews and
|
||
Gentiles: the Jews call him <i>Abba</i> in their language, the
|
||
Greeks may call him <b><i>pater</i></b> in their language; for in
|
||
Christ Jesus there is neither Greek nor Jew.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Rom.ix-p23">(2.) To witness to the relation of
|
||
children, <scripRef id="Rom.ix-p23.1" osisRef="Bible:Rom.8.16" parsed="|Rom|8|16|0|0" passage="Ro 8:16"><i>v.</i> 16</scripRef>. The
|
||
former is the work of the Spirit as a Sanctifier; this as a
|
||
Comforter. <i>Beareth witness with our spirit.</i> Many a man has
|
||
the witness of his own spirit to the goodness of his state who has
|
||
not the concurring testimony of the Spirit. Many speak peace to
|
||
themselves to whom the God of heaven does not speak peace. But
|
||
those that are sanctified have God's Spirit witnessing with their
|
||
spirits, which is to be understood not of any immediate
|
||
extraordinary revelation, but an ordinary work of the Spirit, in
|
||
and by the means of comfort, speaking peace to the soul. This
|
||
testimony is always agreeable to the written word, and is therefore
|
||
always grounded upon sanctification; for the Spirit in the heart
|
||
cannot contradict the Spirit in the word. The Spirit witnesses to
|
||
none the privileges of children who have not the nature and
|
||
disposition of children.</p>
|
||
</div><scripCom id="Rom.ix-p23.2" osisRef="Bible:Rom.8.17-Rom.8.25" parsed="|Rom|8|17|8|25" passage="Ro 8:17-25" type="Commentary"/><div class="Commentary" id="Bible:Rom.8.17-Rom.8.25">
|
||
<h4 id="Rom.ix-p23.3">The Believer's Privileges. (<span class="smallcaps" id="Rom.ix-p23.4">a.
|
||
d.</span> 58.)</h4>
|
||
<p class="passage" id="Rom.ix-p24">17 And if children, then heirs; heirs of God,
|
||
and joint-heirs with Christ; if so be that we suffer with
|
||
<i>him,</i> that we may be also glorified together. 18 For I
|
||
reckon that the sufferings of this present time <i>are</i> not
|
||
worthy <i>to be compared</i> with the glory which shall be revealed
|
||
in us. 19 For the earnest expectation of the creature
|
||
waiteth for the manifestation of the sons of God. 20 For the
|
||
creature was made subject to vanity, not willingly, but by reason
|
||
of him who hath subjected <i>the same</i> in hope, 21
|
||
Because the creature itself also shall be delivered from the
|
||
bondage of corruption into the glorious liberty of the children of
|
||
God. 22 For we know that the whole creation groaneth and
|
||
travaileth in pain together until now. 23 And not only
|
||
<i>they,</i> but ourselves also, which have the firstfruits of the
|
||
Spirit, even we ourselves groan within ourselves, waiting for the
|
||
adoption, <i>to wit,</i> the redemption of our body. 24 For
|
||
we are saved by hope: but hope that is seen is not hope: for what a
|
||
man seeth, why doth he yet hope for? 25 But if we hope for
|
||
that we see not, <i>then</i> do we with patience wait for
|
||
<i>it.</i></p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Rom.ix-p25">In these words the apostle describes a
|
||
fourth illustrious branch of the happiness of believers, namely, a
|
||
title to the future glory. This is fitly annexed to our sonship;
|
||
for as the adoption of sons entitles us to that glory, so the
|
||
disposition of sons fits and prepares us for it. <i>If children,
|
||
then heirs,</i> <scripRef id="Rom.ix-p25.1" osisRef="Bible:Rom.8.17" parsed="|Rom|8|17|0|0" passage="Ro 8:17"><i>v.</i>
|
||
17</scripRef>. In earthly inheritances this rule does not hold,
|
||
only the first-born are heirs; but the church is a church of
|
||
first-born, for they are all heirs. Heaven is an inheritance that
|
||
all the saints are heirs to. They do not come to it as purchasers
|
||
by any merit or procurement of their own; but as heirs, purely by
|
||
the act of God; for God makes heirs. The saints are heirs though in
|
||
this world they are heirs under age; see <scripRef id="Rom.ix-p25.2" osisRef="Bible:Gal.4.1-Gal.4.2" parsed="|Gal|4|1|4|2" passage="Ga 4:1,2">Gal. iv. 1, 2</scripRef>. Their present state is a state
|
||
of education and preparation for the inheritance. How comfortable
|
||
should this be to all the children of God, how little soever they
|
||
have in possession, that, being heirs, they have enough in
|
||
reversion! But the honour and happiness of an heir lie in the value
|
||
and worth of that which he is heir to: we read of those that
|
||
inherit the wind; and therefore we have here an abstract of the
|
||
premises. 1. <i>Heirs of God.</i> The Lord himself is the portion
|
||
of the saints' inheritance (<scripRef id="Rom.ix-p25.3" osisRef="Bible:Ps.16.5" parsed="|Ps|16|5|0|0" passage="Ps 16:5">Ps. xvi.
|
||
5</scripRef>), a goodly heritage, <scripRef id="Rom.ix-p25.4" osisRef="Bible:Rom.8.6" parsed="|Rom|8|6|0|0" passage="Ro 8:6"><i>v.</i> 6</scripRef>. The saints are spiritual priests,
|
||
that have the Lord for their inheritance, <scripRef id="Rom.ix-p25.5" osisRef="Bible:Num.18.20" parsed="|Num|18|20|0|0" passage="Nu 18:20">Num. xviii. 20</scripRef>. The vision of God and the
|
||
fruition of God make up the inheritance the saints are heirs to.
|
||
God himself will be with them, and will be their God, <scripRef id="Rom.ix-p25.6" osisRef="Bible:Rev.21.3" parsed="|Rev|21|3|0|0" passage="Re 21:3">Rev. xxi. 3</scripRef>. 2. <i>Joint-heirs with
|
||
Christ.</i> Christ, as Mediator, is said to be the heir of all
|
||
things (<scripRef id="Rom.ix-p25.7" osisRef="Bible:Heb.1.2" parsed="|Heb|1|2|0|0" passage="Heb 1:2">Heb. i. 2</scripRef>), and true
|
||
believers, by virtue of their union with him, <i>shall inherit all
|
||
things,</i> <scripRef id="Rom.ix-p25.8" osisRef="Bible:Rev.21.7" parsed="|Rev|21|7|0|0" passage="Re 21:7">Rev. xxi. 7</scripRef>.
|
||
Those that now partake of the Spirit of Christ, as his brethren,
|
||
shall, as his brethren, partake of his glory (<scripRef id="Rom.ix-p25.9" osisRef="Bible:John.17.24" parsed="|John|17|24|0|0" passage="Joh 17:24">John xvii. 24</scripRef>), shall sit down with him upon
|
||
his throne, <scripRef id="Rom.ix-p25.10" osisRef="Bible:Rev.3.21" parsed="|Rev|3|21|0|0" passage="Re 3:21">Rev. iii. 21</scripRef>.
|
||
Lord, what is man, that thou shouldst thus magnify him! Now this
|
||
future glory is further spoken of as the reward of present
|
||
sufferings and as the accomplishment of present hopes.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Rom.ix-p26">I. As the reward of the saints' present
|
||
sufferings; and it is a rich reward: <i>If so be that we suffer
|
||
with him</i> (<scripRef id="Rom.ix-p26.1" osisRef="Bible:Rom.8.17" parsed="|Rom|8|17|0|0" passage="Ro 8:17"><i>v.</i> 17</scripRef>),
|
||
or <i>forasmuch as we suffer with him.</i> The state of the church
|
||
in this world always is, but was then especially, an afflicted
|
||
state; to be a Christian was certainly to be a sufferer. Now, to
|
||
comfort them in reference to those sufferings, he tells them that
|
||
they suffered with Christ—for his sake, for his honour, and for
|
||
the testimony of a good conscience, and should be glorified with
|
||
him. Those that suffered with David in his persecuted state were
|
||
advanced by him and with him when he came to the crown; see
|
||
<scripRef id="Rom.ix-p26.2" osisRef="Bible:2Tim.2.12" parsed="|2Tim|2|12|0|0" passage="2Ti 2:12">2 Tim. ii. 12</scripRef>. See the
|
||
gains of suffering for Christ; though we may be losers for him, we
|
||
shall not, we cannot, be losers by him in the end. This the gospel
|
||
is filled with the assurances of. Now, that suffering saints may
|
||
have strong supports and consolations from their hopes of heaven,
|
||
he holds the balance (<scripRef id="Rom.ix-p26.3" osisRef="Bible:Rom.8.18" parsed="|Rom|8|18|0|0" passage="Ro 8:18"><i>v.</i>
|
||
18</scripRef>), in a comparison between the two, which is
|
||
observable. 1. In one scale he puts the <i>sufferings of this
|
||
present time.</i> The sufferings of the saints are but sufferings
|
||
of this present time, strike no deeper than the things of time,
|
||
last no longer than the present time (<scripRef id="Rom.ix-p26.4" osisRef="Bible:2Cor.4.17" parsed="|2Cor|4|17|0|0" passage="2Co 4:17">2 Cor. iv. 17</scripRef>), light affliction, and but for
|
||
a moment. So that on the sufferings he writes <i>tekel,</i> weighed
|
||
in the balance and found light. 2. In the other scale he puts the
|
||
glory, and finds that a weight, an exceeding and eternal weight:
|
||
<i>Glory that shall be revealed.</i> In our present state we come
|
||
short, not only in the enjoyment, but in the knowledge of that
|
||
glory (<scripRef id="Rom.ix-p26.5" osisRef="Bible:1Cor.2.9 Bible:1John.3.2" parsed="|1Cor|2|9|0|0;|1John|3|2|0|0" passage="1Co 2:9,1Jo 3:2">1 Cor. ii. 9; 1 John
|
||
iii. 2</scripRef>): it shall be revealed. It surpasses all that we
|
||
have yet seen and known: present vouchsafements are sweet and
|
||
precious, very precious, very sweet; but there is something to
|
||
come, something behind the curtain, that will outshine all.
|
||
<i>Shall be revealed in us;</i> not only revealed to us, to be
|
||
seen, but revealed in us, to be enjoyed. The kingdom of God is
|
||
within you, and will be so to eternity. 3. He concludes the
|
||
sufferings <i>not worthy to be compared with the
|
||
glory</i>—<b><i>ouk axia pros ten doxan.</i></b> They cannot merit
|
||
that glory; and, if suffering for Christ will not merit, much less
|
||
will doing. They should not at all deter and frighten us from the
|
||
diligent and earnest pursuit of that glory. The sufferings are
|
||
small and short, and concern the body only; but the glory is rich
|
||
and great, and concerns the soul, and is eternal. This he reckons.
|
||
<i>I reckon</i>—<b><i>logizomai.</i></b> It is not a rash and
|
||
sudden determination, but the product of a very serious and
|
||
deliberate consideration. He had reasoned the case within himself,
|
||
weighed the arguments on both sides, and thus at last resolves the
|
||
point. O how vastly different is the sentence of the word from the
|
||
sentiment of the world concerning the sufferings of this present
|
||
time! <i>I reckon,</i> as an arithmetician that is balancing an
|
||
account. He first sums up what is disbursed for Christ in the
|
||
sufferings of this present time, and finds they come to very
|
||
little; he then sums up what is secured to us by Christ in the
|
||
glory that shall be revealed, and this he finds to be an infinite
|
||
sum, transcending all conception, the disbursement abundantly made
|
||
up and the losses infinitely countervailed. And who would be afraid
|
||
then to suffer for Christ, who as he is before-hand with us in
|
||
suffering, so he will not be behind-hand with us in recompence? Now
|
||
Paul was as competent a judge of this point as ever any mere man
|
||
was. He could reckon not by art only, but by experience; for he
|
||
knew both. He knew what the sufferings of this present time were;
|
||
see <scripRef id="Rom.ix-p26.6" osisRef="Bible:2Cor.11.23-2Cor.11.28" parsed="|2Cor|11|23|11|28" passage="2Co 11:23-28">2 Cor. xi. 23-28</scripRef>.
|
||
He knew what the glory of heaven is; see <scripRef id="Rom.ix-p26.7" osisRef="Bible:2Cor.12.3-2Cor.12.4" parsed="|2Cor|12|3|12|4" passage="2Co 12:3,4">2 Cor. xii. 3, 4</scripRef>. And, upon the view of
|
||
both, he gives this judgment here. There is nothing like a
|
||
believing view of the glory which shall be revealed to support and
|
||
bear up the spirit under all the sufferings of this present time.
|
||
The reproach of Christ appears riches to those who have respect to
|
||
the recompence of reward, <scripRef id="Rom.ix-p26.8" osisRef="Bible:Heb.11.26" parsed="|Heb|11|26|0|0" passage="Heb 11:26">Heb. xi.
|
||
26</scripRef>.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Rom.ix-p27">II. As the accomplishment of the saints'
|
||
present hopes and expectations, <scripRef id="Rom.ix-p27.1" osisRef="Bible:Rom.8.19" parsed="|Rom|8|19|0|0" passage="Ro 8:19"><i>v.</i> 19</scripRef>, &c. As the saints are
|
||
suffering for it, so they are waiting for it. Heaven is therefore
|
||
sure; for God by his Spirit would not raise and encourage those
|
||
hopes only to defeat and disappoint them. He will establish that
|
||
word unto his servants on which he has caused them to hope
|
||
(<scripRef id="Rom.ix-p27.2" osisRef="Bible:Ps.119.49" parsed="|Ps|119|49|0|0" passage="Ps 119:49">Ps. cxix. 49</scripRef>), and heaven
|
||
is therefore sweet; for, if hope deferred makes the heart sick,
|
||
surely when the desire comes it will be a tree of life, <scripRef id="Rom.ix-p27.3" osisRef="Bible:Prov.13.12" parsed="|Prov|13|12|0|0" passage="Pr 13:12">Prov. xiii. 12</scripRef>. Now he observes an
|
||
expectation of this glory,</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Rom.ix-p28">1. In the creatures <scripRef id="Rom.ix-p28.1" osisRef="Bible:Rom.8.19-Rom.8.22" parsed="|Rom|8|19|8|22" passage="Ro 8:19-22"><i>v.</i> 19-22</scripRef>. That must needs be a
|
||
great, a transcendent glory, which all the creatures are so
|
||
earnestly expecting and longing for. This observation in these
|
||
verses has some difficulty in it, which puzzles interpreters a
|
||
little; and the more because it is a remark not made in any other
|
||
scripture, with which it might be compared. By the <i>creature</i>
|
||
here we understand, not as some do the Gentile world, and their
|
||
expectation of Christ and the gospel, which is an exposition very
|
||
foreign and forced, but the whole frame of nature, especially that
|
||
of this lower world—the whole creation, the compages of inanimate
|
||
and sensible creatures, which, because of their harmony and mutual
|
||
dependence, and because they all constitute and make up one world,
|
||
are spoken of in the singular number as the <i>creature.</i> The
|
||
sense of the apostle in these four verses we may take in the
|
||
following observations:—(1.) That there is a present vanity to
|
||
which the creature, by reason of the sin of man, is made subject,
|
||
<scripRef id="Rom.ix-p28.2" osisRef="Bible:Rom.8.20" parsed="|Rom|8|20|0|0" passage="Ro 8:20"><i>v.</i> 20</scripRef>. When man
|
||
sinned, the ground was cursed for man's sake, and with it all the
|
||
creatures (especially of this lower world, where our acquaintance
|
||
lies) became subject to that curse, became mutable and mortal.
|
||
<i>Under the bondage of corruption,</i> <scripRef id="Rom.ix-p28.3" osisRef="Bible:Rom.8.21" parsed="|Rom|8|21|0|0" passage="Ro 8:21"><i>v.</i> 21</scripRef>. There is an impurity, deformity,
|
||
and infirmity, which the creature has contracted by the fall of
|
||
man: the creation is sullied and stained, much of the beauty of the
|
||
world gone. There is an enmity of one creature to another; they are
|
||
all subject to continual alteration and decay of the individuals,
|
||
liable to the strokes of God's judgments upon man. When the world
|
||
was drowned, and almost all the creatures in it, surely then it was
|
||
subject to vanity indeed. The whole species of creatures is
|
||
designed for, and is hastening to, a total dissolution by fire. And
|
||
it is not the least part of their vanity and bondage that they are
|
||
used, or abused rather, by men as instruments of sin. The creatures
|
||
are often abused to the dishonour of their Creator, the hurt of his
|
||
children, or the service of his enemies. When the creatures are
|
||
made the food and fuel of our lusts, they are subject to vanity,
|
||
they are captivated by the law of sin. And this <i>not
|
||
willingly,</i> not of their own choice. All the creatures desire
|
||
their own perfection and consummation; when they are made
|
||
instruments of sin it is not willingly. Or, They are thus
|
||
captivated, not for any sin of their own, which they had committed,
|
||
but for man's sin: <i>By reason of him who hath subjected the
|
||
same.</i> Adam did it meritoriously; the creatures being delivered
|
||
to him, when he by sin delivered himself he delivered them likewise
|
||
into the bondage of corruption. God did it judicially; he passed a
|
||
sentence upon the creatures for the sin of man, by which they
|
||
became subject. And this yoke (poor creatures) they bear in hope
|
||
that it will not be so always. <b><i>Ep elpidi hoti kai,</i></b>
|
||
&c.—<i>in hope that the creature itself;</i> so many Greek
|
||
copies join the words. We have reason to pity the poor creatures
|
||
that for our sin have become subject to vanity. (2.) That the
|
||
creatures <i>groan and travail in pain</i> together under this
|
||
vanity and corruption, <scripRef id="Rom.ix-p28.4" osisRef="Bible:Rom.8.22" parsed="|Rom|8|22|0|0" passage="Ro 8:22"><i>v.</i>
|
||
22</scripRef>. It is a figurative expression. Sin is a burden to
|
||
the whole creation; the sin of the Jews, in crucifying Christ, set
|
||
the earth a quaking under them. The idols were a burden to the
|
||
weary beast, <scripRef id="Rom.ix-p28.5" osisRef="Bible:Isa.46.1" parsed="|Isa|46|1|0|0" passage="Isa 46:1">Isa. xlvi. 1</scripRef>.
|
||
There is a general outcry of the whole creation against the sin of
|
||
man: the stone crieth out of the wall (<scripRef id="Rom.ix-p28.6" osisRef="Bible:Hab.2.11" parsed="|Hab|2|11|0|0" passage="Hab 2:11">Hab. ii. 11</scripRef>), the land cries, <scripRef id="Rom.ix-p28.7" osisRef="Bible:Job.31.38" parsed="|Job|31|38|0|0" passage="Job 31:38">Job xxxi. 38</scripRef>. (3.) That the
|
||
creature, that is now thus burdened, shall, at the time of the
|
||
restitution of all things, be <i>delivered from this bondage into
|
||
the glorious liberty of the children of God</i> (<scripRef id="Rom.ix-p28.8" osisRef="Bible:Rom.8.21" parsed="|Rom|8|21|0|0" passage="Ro 8:21"><i>v.</i> 21</scripRef>)—they shall no more be subject
|
||
to vanity and corruption, and the other fruits of the curse; but,
|
||
on the contrary, this lower world shall be renewed: when there will
|
||
be new heavens there will be a new earth (<scripRef id="Rom.ix-p28.9" osisRef="Bible:2Pet.3.13 Bible:Rev.21.1" parsed="|2Pet|3|13|0|0;|Rev|21|1|0|0" passage="2Pe 3:13,Re 21:1">2 Pet. iii. 13; Rev. xxi. 1</scripRef>); and
|
||
there shall be a glory conferred upon all the creatures, which
|
||
shall be (in the proportion of their natures) as suitable and as
|
||
great an advancement as the glory of the children of God shall be
|
||
to them. The fire at the last day shall be a refining, not a
|
||
destroying annihilating fire. What becomes of the souls of brutes,
|
||
that go downwards, none can tell. But it should seem by the
|
||
scripture that there will be some kind of restoration of them. And
|
||
if it be objected, What use will they be of to glorified saints? we
|
||
may suppose them of as much use as they were to Adam in innocency;
|
||
and if it be only to illustrate the wisdom, power, and goodness of
|
||
their Creator, that is enough. Compare with this <scripRef id="Rom.ix-p28.10" osisRef="Bible:Ps.96.10-Ps.96.13 Bible:Ps.98.7-Ps.98.9" parsed="|Ps|96|10|96|13;|Ps|98|7|98|9" passage="Ps 96:10-13,98:7-9">Ps. xcvi. 10-13; xcviii. 7-9</scripRef>.
|
||
<i>Let the heavens rejoice before the Lord, for he cometh.</i> (4.)
|
||
That the creature doth therefore earnestly expect and wait for the
|
||
<i>manifestation of the children of God,</i> <scripRef id="Rom.ix-p28.11" osisRef="Bible:Rom.8.19" parsed="|Rom|8|19|0|0" passage="Ro 8:19"><i>v.</i> 19</scripRef>. Observe, At the second coming of
|
||
Christ there will be a manifestation of the children of God. Now
|
||
the saints are God's hidden ones, the wheat seems lost in a heap of
|
||
chaff; but then they shall be manifested. It does not yet appear
|
||
what we shall be (<scripRef id="Rom.ix-p28.12" osisRef="Bible:1John.3.2" parsed="|1John|3|2|0|0" passage="1Jo 3:2">1 John iii.
|
||
2</scripRef>), but then the glory shall be revealed. The children
|
||
of God shall appear in their own colours. And this redemption of
|
||
the creature is reserved till then; for, as it was with man and for
|
||
man that they fell under the curse, so with man and for man they
|
||
shall be delivered. All the curse and filth that now adhere to the
|
||
creature shall be done away then when those that have suffered with
|
||
Christ upon earth shall reign with him upon the earth. This the
|
||
whole creation looks and longs for; and it may serve as a reason
|
||
why now a good man should be merciful to his beast.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Rom.ix-p29">2. In the saints, who are new creatures,
|
||
<scripRef id="Rom.ix-p29.1" osisRef="Bible:Rom.8.23-Rom.8.25" parsed="|Rom|8|23|8|25" passage="Ro 8:23-25"><i>v.</i> 23-25</scripRef>. Observe,
|
||
(1.) The grounds of this expectation in the saints. It is our
|
||
having received <i>the first-fruits of the Spirit,</i> which both
|
||
quickens our desires and encourages our hopes, and both ways raises
|
||
our expectations. The first-fruits did both sanctify and ensure the
|
||
lump. Grace is the first-fruits of glory, it is glory begun. We,
|
||
having received such clusters in this wilderness, cannot but long
|
||
for the full vintage in the heavenly Canaan. <i>Not only
|
||
they</i>—not only the creatures which are not capable of such a
|
||
happiness as the first-fruits of the Spirit, but even we, who have
|
||
such present rich receivings, cannot but long for something more
|
||
and greater. In having the first-fruits of the Spirit we have that
|
||
which is very precious, but we have not all we would have. <i>We
|
||
groan within ourselves,</i> which denotes the strength and secrecy
|
||
of these desires; not making a loud noise, as the hypocrites
|
||
howling upon the bed for corn and wine, but with silent groans,
|
||
which pierce heaven soonest of all. Or, <i>We groan among
|
||
ourselves.</i> It is the unanimous vote, the joint desire, of the
|
||
whole church, all agree in this: <i>Come, Lord Jesus, come
|
||
quickly.</i> The groaning denotes a very earnest and importunate
|
||
desire, the soul pained with the delay. Present receivings and
|
||
comforts are consistent with a great many groans; not as the pangs
|
||
of one dying, but as the throes of a woman in travail—groans that
|
||
are symptoms of life, not of death. (2.) The object of this
|
||
expectation. What is it we are thus desiring and waiting for? What
|
||
would we have? <i>The adoption, to wit, the redemption of our
|
||
body.</i> Though the soul be the principal part of the man, yet the
|
||
Lord has declared himself for the body also, and has provided a
|
||
great deal of honour and happiness for the body. The resurrection
|
||
is here called <i>the redemption of the body.</i> It shall then be
|
||
rescued from the power of death and the grave, and the bondage of
|
||
corruption; and, though a vile body, yet it shall be refined and
|
||
beautified, and made like that glorious body of Christ, <scripRef id="Rom.ix-p29.2" osisRef="Bible:Phil.3.21 Bible:1Cor.15.42" parsed="|Phil|3|21|0|0;|1Cor|15|42|0|0" passage="Php 3:21,1Co 15:42">Phil. iii. 21; 1 Cor. xv.
|
||
42</scripRef>. This is called <i>the adoption.</i> [1.] It is the
|
||
adoption manifested before all the world, angels and men. Now are
|
||
we the sons of God, but it does not yet appear, the honour is now
|
||
clouded; but then God will publicly own all his children. The deed
|
||
of adoption, which is now written, signed, and sealed, will then be
|
||
recognized, proclaimed, and published. As Christ was, so the saints
|
||
will be, declared to be the sons of God with power, by the
|
||
resurrection from the dead, <scripRef id="Rom.ix-p29.3" osisRef="Bible:Rom.1.4" parsed="|Rom|1|4|0|0" passage="Ro 1:4"><i>ch.</i>
|
||
i. 4</scripRef>. It will then be put past dispute. [2.] It is the
|
||
adoption perfected and completed. The children of God have bodies
|
||
as well as souls; and, till those bodies are brought into the
|
||
glorious liberty of the children of God, the adoption is not
|
||
perfect. But then it will be complete, when the Captain of our
|
||
salvation shall bring the many sons to glory, <scripRef id="Rom.ix-p29.4" osisRef="Bible:Heb.2.10" parsed="|Heb|2|10|0|0" passage="Heb 2:10">Heb. ii. 10</scripRef>. This is that which we expect, in
|
||
hope of which our flesh rests, <scripRef id="Rom.ix-p29.5" osisRef="Bible:Ps.16.9-Ps.16.10" parsed="|Ps|16|9|16|10" passage="Ps 16:9,10">Ps.
|
||
xvi. 9, 10</scripRef>. All the days of our appointed time we are
|
||
waiting, till this change shall come, when he shall call, and we
|
||
shall answer, and he will have a desire to the work of his hands,
|
||
<scripRef id="Rom.ix-p29.6" osisRef="Bible:Job.14.14-Job.14.15" parsed="|Job|14|14|14|15" passage="Job 14:14,15">Job xiv. 14, 15</scripRef>. (3.)
|
||
The agreeableness of this to our present state, <scripRef id="Rom.ix-p29.7" osisRef="Bible:Rom.8.24-Rom.8.25" parsed="|Rom|8|24|8|25" passage="Ro 8:24,25"><i>v.</i> 24, 25</scripRef>. Our happiness is not in
|
||
present possession: <i>We are saved by hope.</i> In this, as in
|
||
other things, God hath made our present state a state of trial and
|
||
probation—that our reward is out of sight. Those that will deal
|
||
with God must deal upon trust. It is acknowledged that one of the
|
||
principal graces of a Christian is hope (<scripRef id="Rom.ix-p29.8" osisRef="Bible:1Cor.13.13" parsed="|1Cor|13|13|0|0" passage="1Co 13:13">1 Cor. xiii. 13</scripRef>), which necessarily implies
|
||
a good thing to come, which is the object of that hope. Faith
|
||
respects the promise, hope the thing promised. Faith is the
|
||
evidence, hope the expectation, of things not seen. Faith is the
|
||
mother of hope. <i>We do with patience wait.</i> In hoping for this
|
||
glory we have need of patience, to bear the sufferings we meet with
|
||
in the way to it and the delays of it. Our way is rough and long;
|
||
but he that shall come will come, and will not tarry; and
|
||
therefore, though he seem to tarry, it becomes us to wait for
|
||
him.</p>
|
||
</div><scripCom id="Rom.ix-p29.9" osisRef="Bible:Rom.8.26-Rom.8.28" parsed="|Rom|8|26|8|28" passage="Ro 8:26-28" type="Commentary"/><div class="Commentary" id="Bible:Rom.8.26-Rom.8.28">
|
||
<h4 id="Rom.ix-p29.10">The Believer's Privileges. (<span class="smallcaps" id="Rom.ix-p29.11">a.
|
||
d.</span> 58.)</h4>
|
||
<p class="passage" id="Rom.ix-p30">26 Likewise the Spirit also helpeth our
|
||
infirmities: for we know not what we should pray for as we ought:
|
||
but the Spirit itself maketh intercession for us with groanings
|
||
which cannot be uttered. 27 And he that searcheth the hearts
|
||
knoweth what <i>is</i> the mind of the Spirit, because he maketh
|
||
intercession for the saints according to <i>the will of</i> God.
|
||
28 And we know that all things work together for good to
|
||
them that love God, to them who are the called according to
|
||
<i>his</i> purpose.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Rom.ix-p31">The apostle here suggests two privileges
|
||
more to which true Christians are entitled:—</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Rom.ix-p32">I. The help of the Spirit in prayer. While
|
||
we are in this world, hoping and waiting for what we see not, we
|
||
must be praying. Hope supposes desire, and that desire offered up
|
||
to God is prayer; we groan. Now observe,</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Rom.ix-p33">1. Our weakness in prayer: <i>We know not
|
||
what we should pray for as we ought.</i> (1.) As to the matter of
|
||
our requests, we know not what to ask. We are not competent judges
|
||
of our own condition. <i>Who knows what is good for a man in this
|
||
life?</i> <scripRef id="Rom.ix-p33.1" osisRef="Bible:Eccl.6.12" parsed="|Eccl|6|12|0|0" passage="Ec 6:12">Eccl. vi. 12</scripRef>. We
|
||
are short-sighted, and very much biassed in favour of the flesh,
|
||
and apt to separate the end from the way. <i>You know not what you
|
||
ask,</i> <scripRef id="Rom.ix-p33.2" osisRef="Bible:Matt.20.22" parsed="|Matt|20|22|0|0" passage="Mt 20:22">Matt. xx. 22</scripRef>. We
|
||
are like foolish children, that are ready to cry for fruit before
|
||
it is ripe and fit for them; see <scripRef id="Rom.ix-p33.3" osisRef="Bible:Luke.9.54-Luke.9.55" parsed="|Luke|9|54|9|55" passage="Lu 9:54,55">Luke ix. 54, 55</scripRef>. (2.) As to the manner, we
|
||
know not how to pray as we ought. It is not enough that we do that
|
||
which is good, but we must do it well, seek in a due order; and
|
||
here we are often at a loss—graces are weak, affections cold,
|
||
thoughts wandering, and it is not always easy to <i>find the heart
|
||
to pray,</i> <scripRef id="Rom.ix-p33.4" osisRef="Bible:2Sam.7.27" parsed="|2Sam|7|27|0|0" passage="2Sa 7:27">2 Sam. vii.
|
||
27</scripRef>. The apostle speaks of this in the first person:
|
||
<i>We know not.</i> He puts himself among the rest. Folly, and
|
||
weakness, and distraction in prayer, are what all the saints are
|
||
complaining of. If so great a saint as Paul knew not what to pray
|
||
for, what little reason have we to go forth about that duty in our
|
||
own strength!</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Rom.ix-p34">2. The assistances which the Spirit gives
|
||
us in that duty. He <i>helps our infirmities,</i> meant especially
|
||
of our praying infirmities, which most easily beset us in that
|
||
duty, against which the Spirit helps. The Spirit in the world
|
||
helps; many rules and promises there are in the word for our help.
|
||
The Spirit in the heart helps, dwelling in us, working in us, as a
|
||
Spirit of grace and supplication, especially with respect to the
|
||
infirmities we are under when we are in a suffering state, when our
|
||
faith is most apt to fail; for this end the Holy Ghost was poured
|
||
out. <i>Helpeth,</i> <b><i>synantilambanetai</i></b>—<i>heaves
|
||
with us, over against us,</i> helps as we help one that would lift
|
||
up a burden, by lifting over against him at the other end—helps
|
||
with us, that is, with us doing our endeavour, putting forth the
|
||
strength we have. We must not sit still, and expect that the Spirit
|
||
should do all; when the Spirit goes before us we must bestir
|
||
ourselves. We cannot without God, and he will not without us. What
|
||
help? Why, the <i>Spirit itself makes intercession for us,</i>
|
||
dictates our requests, indites our petitions, draws up our plea for
|
||
us. Christ intercedes for us in heaven, the Spirit intercedes for
|
||
us in our hearts; so graciously has God provided for the
|
||
encouragement of the praying remnant. The Spirit, as an
|
||
enlightening Spirit, teaches us what to pray for, as a sanctifying
|
||
Spirit works and excites praying graces, as a comforting Spirit
|
||
silences our fears, and helps us over all our discouragements. The
|
||
Holy Spirit is the spring of all our desires and breathings towards
|
||
God. Now this intercession which the Spirit makes is, (1.) <i>With
|
||
groanings that cannot be uttered.</i> The strength and fervency of
|
||
those desires which the Holy Spirit works are hereby intimated.
|
||
There may be praying in the Spirit where there is not a word
|
||
spoken; as Moses prayed (<scripRef id="Rom.ix-p34.1" osisRef="Bible:Exod.14.15" parsed="|Exod|14|15|0|0" passage="Ex 14:15">Exod. xiv.
|
||
15</scripRef>), and Hannah, <scripRef id="Rom.ix-p34.2" osisRef="Bible:1Sam.1.13" parsed="|1Sam|1|13|0|0" passage="1Sa 1:13">1 Sam. i.
|
||
13</scripRef>. It is not the rhetoric and eloquence, but the faith
|
||
and fervency, of our prayers, that the Spirit works, as an
|
||
intercessor, in us. <i>Cannot be uttered;</i> they are so confused,
|
||
the soul is in such a hurry with temptations and troubles, we know
|
||
not what to say, nor how to express ourselves. Here is the Spirit
|
||
interceding with groans that cannot be uttered. When we can but
|
||
cry, <i>Abba, Father,</i> and refer ourselves to him with a holy
|
||
humble boldness, this is the work of the Spirit. (2.) <i>According
|
||
to the will of God,</i> <scripRef id="Rom.ix-p34.3" osisRef="Bible:Rom.8.27" parsed="|Rom|8|27|0|0" passage="Ro 8:27"><i>v.</i>
|
||
27</scripRef>. The Spirit in the heart never contradicts the Spirit
|
||
in the word. Those desires that are contrary to the will of God do
|
||
not come from the Spirit. The Spirit interceding in us evermore
|
||
melts our wills into the will of God. <i>Not as I will, but as thou
|
||
wilt.</i></p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Rom.ix-p35">3. The sure success of these intercessions:
|
||
<i>He that searches the heart knoweth what is the mind of the
|
||
Spirit,</i> <scripRef id="Rom.ix-p35.1" osisRef="Bible:Rom.8.27" parsed="|Rom|8|27|0|0" passage="Ro 8:27"><i>v.</i> 27</scripRef>. To
|
||
a hypocrite, all whose religion lies in his tongue, nothing is more
|
||
dreadful than that God searches the heart and sees through all his
|
||
disguises. To a sincere Christian, who makes heart-work of his
|
||
duty, nothing is more comfortable than that God searches the heart,
|
||
for then he will hear and answer those desires which we want words
|
||
to express. He knows what we have need of before we ask, <scripRef id="Rom.ix-p35.2" osisRef="Bible:Matt.6.8" parsed="|Matt|6|8|0|0" passage="Mt 6:8">Matt. vi. 8</scripRef>. He knows what is the mind
|
||
of his own Spirit in us. And, as he always hears the Son
|
||
interceding for us, so he always hears the Spirit interceding in
|
||
us, because his intercession is according to the will of God. What
|
||
could have been done more for the comfort of the Lord's people, in
|
||
all their addresses to God? Christ had said, "Whatever you ask the
|
||
Father according to his will he will give it you." But how shall we
|
||
learn to ask according to his will? Why, the Spirit will teach us
|
||
that. Therefore it is that the seed of Jacob never seek in
|
||
vain.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Rom.ix-p36">II. The concurrence of all providences for
|
||
the good of those that are Christ's, <scripRef id="Rom.ix-p36.1" osisRef="Bible:Rom.8.28" parsed="|Rom|8|28|0|0" passage="Ro 8:28"><i>v.</i> 28</scripRef>. It might be objected that,
|
||
notwithstanding all these privileges, we see believers compassed
|
||
about with manifold afflictions; though the Spirit makes
|
||
intercession for them, yet their troubles are continued. It is very
|
||
true; but in this the Spirit's intercession is always effectual,
|
||
that, however it goes with them, all this is working together for
|
||
their good. Observe here.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Rom.ix-p37">1. The character of the saints, who are
|
||
interested in this privilege; they are here described by such
|
||
properties as are common to all that are truly sanctified. (1.)
|
||
<i>They love God.</i> This includes all the out-goings of the
|
||
soul's affections towards God as the chief good and highest end. It
|
||
is our love to God that makes every providence sweet, and therefore
|
||
profitable. Those that love God make the best of all he does, and
|
||
take all in good part. (2.) <i>They are the called according to his
|
||
purpose,</i> effectually called according to the eternal purpose.
|
||
The call is effectual, not according to any merit or desert of
|
||
ours, but according to God's own gracious purpose.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Rom.ix-p38">2. The privilege of the saints, that <i>all
|
||
things work together for good to them,</i> that is, all the
|
||
providences of God that concern them. All that God performs he
|
||
performs for them, <scripRef id="Rom.ix-p38.1" osisRef="Bible:Ps.57.2" parsed="|Ps|57|2|0|0" passage="Ps 57:2">Ps. lvii.
|
||
2</scripRef>. Their sins are not of his performing, therefore not
|
||
intended here, though his permitting sin is made to work for their
|
||
good, <scripRef id="Rom.ix-p38.2" osisRef="Bible:2Chr.32.31" parsed="|2Chr|32|31|0|0" passage="2Ch 32:31">2 Chron. xxxii. 31</scripRef>.
|
||
But all the providences of God are theirs—merciful providences,
|
||
afflicting providences, personal, public. They are all for good;
|
||
perhaps for temporal good, as Joseph's troubles; at least, for
|
||
spiritual and eternal good. That is good for them which does their
|
||
souls good. Either directly or indirectly, every providence has a
|
||
tendency to the spiritual good of those that love God, breaking
|
||
them off from sin, bringing them nearer to God, weaning them from
|
||
the world, fitting them for heaven. <i>Work together.</i> They
|
||
work, as physic works upon the body, various ways, according to the
|
||
intention of the physician; but all for the patient's good. <i>They
|
||
work together,</i> as several ingredients in a medicine concur to
|
||
answer the intention. God hath set the one over against the other
|
||
(<scripRef id="Rom.ix-p38.3" osisRef="Bible:Eccl.7.14" parsed="|Eccl|7|14|0|0" passage="Ec 7:14">Eccl. vii. 14</scripRef>):
|
||
<b><i>synergei,</i></b> a very singular, with a noun plural,
|
||
denoting the harmony of Providence and its uniform designs, all the
|
||
wheels as one wheel, <scripRef id="Rom.ix-p38.4" osisRef="Bible:Ezek.10.13" parsed="|Ezek|10|13|0|0" passage="Eze 10:13">Ezek. x.
|
||
13</scripRef>. <i>He worketh all things together for good;</i> so
|
||
some read it. It is not from any specific quality in the
|
||
providences themselves, but from the power and grace of God working
|
||
in, with, and by, these providences. All this <i>we know</i>—know
|
||
it for a certainty, from the word of God, from our own experience,
|
||
and from the experience of all the saints.</p>
|
||
</div><scripCom id="Rom.ix-p38.5" osisRef="Bible:Rom.8.29-Rom.8.30" parsed="|Rom|8|29|8|30" passage="Ro 8:29-30" type="Commentary"/><div class="Commentary" id="Bible:Rom.8.29-Rom.8.30">
|
||
<h4 id="Rom.ix-p38.6">The Believer's Privileges. (<span class="smallcaps" id="Rom.ix-p38.7">a.
|
||
d.</span> 58.)</h4>
|
||
<p class="passage" id="Rom.ix-p39">29 For whom he did foreknow, he also did
|
||
predestinate <i>to be</i> conformed to the image of his Son, that
|
||
he might be the firstborn among many brethren. 30 Moreover
|
||
whom he did predestinate, them he also called: and whom he called,
|
||
them he also justified: and whom he justified, them he also
|
||
glorified.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Rom.ix-p40">The apostle, having reckoned up so many
|
||
ingredients of the happiness of true believers, comes here to
|
||
represent the ground of them all, which he lays in predestination.
|
||
These precious privileges are conveyed to us by the charter of the
|
||
covenant, but they are founded in the counsel of God, which
|
||
infallibly secures the event. That Jesus Christ, the purchaser,
|
||
might not labour in vain, nor spend his strength and life for
|
||
nought and in vain, there is a remnant given him, a seed that he
|
||
shall see, so that the good pleasure of the Lord shall prosper in
|
||
his hands. For the explication of this he here sets before us the
|
||
order of the causes of our salvation, a golden chain, which cannot
|
||
be broken. There are four links of it:—</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Rom.ix-p41">I. <i>Whom he did foreknow he also did
|
||
predestinate to be conformed to the image of his Son.</i> All that
|
||
God designed for glory and happiness as the end he decreed to grace
|
||
and holiness as the way. Not, whom he did foreknow to be holy those
|
||
he predestinated to be so. The counsels and decrees of God do not
|
||
truckle to the frail and fickle will of men; no, God's
|
||
foreknowledge of the saints is the same with that everlasting love
|
||
wherewith he is said to have loved them, <scripRef id="Rom.ix-p41.1" osisRef="Bible:Jer.31.3" parsed="|Jer|31|3|0|0" passage="Jer 31:3">Jer. xxxi. 3</scripRef>. God's knowing his people is the
|
||
same with his owning them, <scripRef id="Rom.ix-p41.2" osisRef="Bible:Ps.1.6 Bible:John.10.14 Bible:2Tim.2.19" parsed="|Ps|1|6|0|0;|John|10|14|0|0;|2Tim|2|19|0|0" passage="Ps 1:6,Joh 10:14,2Ti 2:19">Ps. i. 6; John x. 14; 2 Tim. ii.
|
||
19</scripRef>. See <scripRef id="Rom.ix-p41.3" osisRef="Bible:Rom.11.2" parsed="|Rom|11|2|0|0" passage="Ro 11:2"><i>ch.</i> xi.
|
||
2</scripRef>. Words of knowledge often in scripture denote
|
||
affection; so here: <i>Elect according to the foreknowledge of
|
||
God,</i> <scripRef id="Rom.ix-p41.4" osisRef="Bible:1Pet.1.2" parsed="|1Pet|1|2|0|0" passage="1Pe 1:2">1 Pet. i. 2</scripRef>. And
|
||
the same word is rendered <i>fore-ordained,</i> <scripRef id="Rom.ix-p41.5" osisRef="Bible:1Pet.1.20" parsed="|1Pet|1|20|0|0" passage="1Pe 1:20">1 Pet. i. 20</scripRef>. <i>Whom he did foreknow,</i>
|
||
that is, whom he designed for his friends and favourites. <i>I know
|
||
thee by name,</i> said God to Moses, <scripRef id="Rom.ix-p41.6" osisRef="Bible:Exod.33.12" parsed="|Exod|33|12|0|0" passage="Ex 33:12">Exod. xxxiii. 12</scripRef>. Now those whom god thus
|
||
foreknew he did predestinate to be conformed to Christ. 1. Holiness
|
||
consists in our conformity to the image of Christ. This takes in
|
||
the whole of sanctification, of which Christ is the great pattern
|
||
and sampler. To be spirited as Christ was, to walk and live as
|
||
Christ did, to bear our sufferings patiently as Christ did. Christ
|
||
is the express image of his Father, and the saints are conformed to
|
||
the image of Christ. Thus it is by the mediation and interposal of
|
||
Christ that we have God's love restored to us and God's likeness
|
||
renewed upon us, in which two things consists the happiness of man.
|
||
2. All that God hath from eternity foreknown with favour he hath
|
||
predestinated to this conformity. It is not we that can conform
|
||
ourselves to Christ. Our giving ourselves to Christ takes rise in
|
||
God's giving us to him; and, in giving us to him, he predestinated
|
||
us to be conformable to his image. It is a mere cavil therefore to
|
||
call the doctrine of election a licentious doctrine, and to argue
|
||
that it gives encouragement to sin, as if the end were separated
|
||
from the way and happiness from holiness. None can know their
|
||
election but by their conformity to the image of Christ; for all
|
||
that are chosen are chosen to sanctification (<scripRef id="Rom.ix-p41.7" osisRef="Bible:2Thess.2.13" parsed="|2Thess|2|13|0|0" passage="2Th 2:13">2 Thess. ii. 13</scripRef>), and surely it cannot be a
|
||
temptation to any to be conformed to the world to believe that they
|
||
were predestinated to be conformed to Christ. 3. That which is
|
||
herein chiefly designed is the honour of Jesus Christ, that he
|
||
might be the <i>first-born among many brethren;</i> that is, that
|
||
Christ might have the honour of being the great pattern, as well as
|
||
the great prince, and in this, as in other things, might have
|
||
pre-eminence. It was in the first-born that all the children were
|
||
dedicated to God under the law. The first-born was the head of the
|
||
family, on whom all the rest did depend: now in the family of the
|
||
saints Christ must have the honour of being the first-born. And
|
||
blessed be God that there are many brethren; though they seem but a
|
||
few in one place at one time, yet, when they come all together,
|
||
they will be a great many. There is, therefore, a certain number
|
||
predestinated, that the end of Christ's undertaking might be
|
||
infallibly secured. Had the event been left at uncertainties in the
|
||
divine counsels, to depend upon the contingent turn of man's will,
|
||
Christ might have been the first-born among but few or no
|
||
brethren—a captain without soldiers and a prince without
|
||
subjects—to prevent which, and to secure to him many brethren, the
|
||
decree is absolute, the thing ascertained, that he might be sure to
|
||
see his seed, there is a remnant predestinated to be conformed to
|
||
his image, which decree will certainly have its accomplishment in
|
||
the holiness and happiness of that chosen race; and so, in spite of
|
||
all the opposition of the powers of darkness, Christ will be the
|
||
first-born among many, very many brethren.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Rom.ix-p42">II. <i>Whom he did predestinate those he
|
||
also called,</i> not only with the external call (so many are
|
||
called that were not chosen, <scripRef id="Rom.ix-p42.1" osisRef="Bible:Matt.20.16 Bible:Matt.22.14" parsed="|Matt|20|16|0|0;|Matt|22|14|0|0" passage="Mt 20:16,22:14">Matt. xx. 16; xxii. 14</scripRef>), but with the
|
||
internal and effectual call. The former comes to the ear only, but
|
||
this to the heart. All that God did from eternity predestinate to
|
||
grace and glory he does, in the fulness of time, effectually call.
|
||
The call is then effectual when we come at the call; and we then
|
||
come at the call when the Spirit draws us, convinces the conscience
|
||
of guilt and wrath, enlightens the understanding, bows the will,
|
||
persuades and enables us to embrace Christ in the promises, makes
|
||
us willing in the day of his power. It is an effectual call from
|
||
self and earth to God, and Christ, and heaven, as our end—from sin
|
||
and vanity to grace, and holiness, and seriousness as our way. This
|
||
is the gospel call. <i>Them he called,</i> that the purpose of God,
|
||
according to election, might stand: we are called to that to which
|
||
we were chosen. So that the only way to make our election sure is
|
||
to make sure our calling, <scripRef id="Rom.ix-p42.2" osisRef="Bible:2Pet.1.10" parsed="|2Pet|1|10|0|0" passage="2Pe 1:10">2 Pet. i.
|
||
10</scripRef>.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Rom.ix-p43">III. <i>Whom he called those he also
|
||
justified.</i> All that are effectually called are justified,
|
||
absolved from guilt, and accepted as righteous through Jesus
|
||
Christ. They are <i>recti in curia—right in court;</i> no sin that
|
||
ever they have been guilty of shall come against them, to condemn
|
||
them. The book is crossed, the bond cancelled, the judgment
|
||
vacated, the attainder reversed; and they are no longer dealt with
|
||
as criminals, but owned and loved as friends and favourites.
|
||
Blessed is the man whose iniquity is thus forgiven. None are thus
|
||
justified but those that are effectually called. Those that stand
|
||
it out against the gospel call abide under guilt and wrath.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Rom.ix-p44">IV. <i>Whom he justified those he also
|
||
glorified.</i> The power of corruption being broken in effectual
|
||
calling, and the guilt of sin removed in justification, all that
|
||
which hinders is taken out of the way, and nothing can come between
|
||
that soul and glory. Observe, It is spoken of as a thing done:
|
||
<i>He glorified,</i> because of the certainty of it; he <i>hath</i>
|
||
saved us, and called us with a holy calling. In the eternal
|
||
glorification of all the elect, God's design of love has its full
|
||
accomplishment. This was what he aimed at all along—to bring them
|
||
to heaven. Nothing less than that glory would make up the fulness
|
||
of his covenant relation to them as God; and therefore, in all he
|
||
does for them, and in them, he has this in his eye. Are they
|
||
chosen? It is to salvation. Called? It is to his kingdom and glory.
|
||
Begotten again? It is to an inheritance incorruptible. Afflicted:
|
||
It is to work for them this exceeding and eternal weight of glory.
|
||
Observe, The author of all these is the same. It is God himself
|
||
that predestinated, calleth, justifieth, glorifieth; so <i>the Lord
|
||
alone did lead him, and there was no strange God with him.</i>
|
||
Created wills are so very fickle, and created powers so very
|
||
feeble, that, if any of these did depend upon the creature, the
|
||
whole would shake. But God himself hath undertaken the doing of it
|
||
from first to last, that we might abide in a constant dependence
|
||
upon him and subjection to him, and ascribe all the praise to
|
||
him—that every crown may be cast before the throne. This is a
|
||
mighty encouragement to our faith and hope; for, as for God, his
|
||
way, his work, is perfect. He that hath laid the foundation will
|
||
build upon it, and the top-stone will at length be brought forth
|
||
with shoutings, and it will be our eternal work to cry, Grace,
|
||
grace to it.</p>
|
||
</div><scripCom id="Rom.ix-p44.1" osisRef="Bible:Rom.8.31-Rom.8.39" parsed="|Rom|8|31|8|39" passage="Ro 8:31-39" type="Commentary"/><div class="Commentary" id="Bible:Rom.8.31-Rom.8.39">
|
||
<h4 id="Rom.ix-p44.2">The Believer's Triumph. (<span class="smallcaps" id="Rom.ix-p44.3">a.
|
||
d.</span> 58.)</h4>
|
||
<p class="passage" id="Rom.ix-p45">31 What shall we then say to these things? If
|
||
God <i>be</i> for us, who <i>can be</i> against us? 32 He
|
||
that spared not his own Son, but delivered him up for us all, how
|
||
shall he not with him also freely give us all things? 33 Who
|
||
shall lay any thing to the charge of God's elect? <i>It is</i> God
|
||
that justifieth. 34 Who <i>is</i> he that condemneth? <i>It
|
||
is</i> Christ that died, yea rather, that is risen again, who is
|
||
even at the right hand of God, who also maketh intercession for us.
|
||
35 Who shall separate us from the love of Christ?
|
||
<i>shall</i> tribulation, or distress, or persecution, or famine,
|
||
or nakedness, or peril, or sword? 36 As it is written, For
|
||
thy sake we are killed all the day long; we are accounted as sheep
|
||
for the slaughter. 37 Nay, in all these things we are more
|
||
than conquerors through him that loved us. 38 For I am
|
||
persuaded, that neither death, nor life, nor angels, nor
|
||
principalities, nor powers, nor things present, nor things to come,
|
||
39 Nor height, nor depth, nor any other creature, shall be
|
||
able to separate us from the love of God, which is in Christ Jesus
|
||
our Lord.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Rom.ix-p46">The apostle closes this excellent discourse
|
||
upon the privileges of believers with a holy triumph, in the name
|
||
of all the saints. Having largely set forth the mystery of God's
|
||
love to us in Christ, and the exceedingly great and precious
|
||
privileges we enjoy by him, he concludes like an orator: <i>What
|
||
shall we then say to these things?</i> What use shall we make of
|
||
all that has been said? He speaks as one amazed and swallowed up
|
||
with the contemplation and admiration of it, wondering at the
|
||
height and depth, and length and breadth, of the love of Christ,
|
||
which passeth knowledge. The more we know of other things the less
|
||
we wonder at them; but the further we are led into an acquaintance
|
||
with gospel mysteries the more we are affected with the admiration
|
||
of them. If Paul was at a loss what to say to these things, no
|
||
marvel if we be. And what does he say? Why, if ever Paul rode in a
|
||
triumphant chariot on this side of heaven, here it was: with such a
|
||
holy height and bravery of spirit, with such a fluency and
|
||
copiousness of expression, does he here comfort himself and all the
|
||
people of God, upon the consideration of these privileges. In
|
||
general, he here makes a challenge, throws down the gauntlet, as it
|
||
were, dares all the enemies of the saints to do their worst: <i>If
|
||
God be for us, who can be against us?</i> The ground of the
|
||
challenge is God's being for us; in this he sums up all our
|
||
privileges. This includes all, that <i>God is for us;</i> not only
|
||
reconciled to us, and so not against us, but in covenant with us,
|
||
and so engaged for us—all his attributes for us, his promises for
|
||
us. All that he is, and has, and does, is for his people. He
|
||
performs all things for them. He is for them, even when he seems to
|
||
act against them. And, if so, <i>who can be against us,</i> so as
|
||
to prevail against us, so as to hinder our happiness? Be they ever
|
||
so great and strong, ever so many, ever so might, ever so
|
||
malicious, what can they do? While God is for us, and we keep in
|
||
his love, we may with a holy boldness defy all the powers of
|
||
darkness. Let Satan do his worst, he is chained; let the world do
|
||
its worst, it is conquered: principalities and powers are spoiled
|
||
and disarmed, and triumphed over, in the cross of Christ. Who then
|
||
dares fight against us, while God himself is fighting for us? And
|
||
this we say to these things, this is the inference we draw from
|
||
these premises. More particularly.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Rom.ix-p47">I. We have supplies ready in all our wants
|
||
(<scripRef id="Rom.ix-p47.1" osisRef="Bible:Rom.8.32" parsed="|Rom|8|32|0|0" passage="Ro 8:32"><i>v.</i> 32</scripRef>): <i>He that
|
||
spared,</i> &c. Who can be against us, to strip us, to deprive
|
||
us of our comforts? Who can cut off our streams, while we have a
|
||
fountain to go to? 1. Observe what God has done for us, on which
|
||
our hopes are built: <i>He spared not his own Son.</i> When he was
|
||
to undertake our salvation, the Father was willing to part with
|
||
him, did not think him too precious a gift to bestow for the
|
||
salvation of poor souls; now we may know that he loves us, in that
|
||
he hath not withheld his Son, his own Son, his only Son, from us,
|
||
as he said of Abraham, <scripRef id="Rom.ix-p47.2" osisRef="Bible:Gen.22.12" parsed="|Gen|22|12|0|0" passage="Ge 22:12">Gen. xxii.
|
||
12</scripRef>. If nothing less will save man, rather than man shall
|
||
perish let him go, though it were out of his bosom. Thus did he
|
||
<i>deliver him up for us all,</i> that is, for all the elect;
|
||
<i>for us all,</i> not only for our good, but in our stead, as a
|
||
sacrifice of atonement to be a propitiation for sin. When he had
|
||
undertaken it, he did not spare him. Though he was his own Son,
|
||
yet, being made sin for us, it pleased the Lord to bruise him.
|
||
<b><i>Ouk epheisato</i></b>—<i>he did not abate</i> him a farthing
|
||
of that great debt, but charged it home. <i>Awake, O sword.</i> He
|
||
did not <i>spare his own Son that served him,</i> that he might
|
||
spare us, though we have done him so much disservice. 2. What we
|
||
may therefore expect he will do: He will <i>with him freely give us
|
||
all things.</i> (1.) It is implied that he will give us Christ, for
|
||
other things are bestowed with him: not only with him given for us,
|
||
but with him given to us. He that put himself to so much charge to
|
||
make the purchase for us surely will not hesitate at making the
|
||
application to us. (2.) He will with him freely give us all things,
|
||
all things that he sees to be needful and necessary for us, all
|
||
good things, and more we should not desire, <scripRef id="Rom.ix-p47.3" osisRef="Bible:Ps.34.10" parsed="|Ps|34|10|0|0" passage="Ps 34:10">Ps. xxxiv. 10</scripRef>. And Infinite Wisdom shall be
|
||
the judge whether it be good for us and needful for us or no.
|
||
<i>Freely give</i>—freely, without reluctancy; he is ready to
|
||
give, meets us with his favours;—and freely, without recompence,
|
||
without money, and without price. <i>How shall he not?</i> Can it
|
||
be imagined that he should do the greater and not do the less? that
|
||
he should give so great a gift for us when we were enemies, and
|
||
should deny us any good thing, now that through him we are friends
|
||
and children? Thus may we by faith argue against our fears of want.
|
||
He that hath prepared a crown and kingdom for us will be sure to
|
||
give us enough to bear our charges in the way to it. He that hath
|
||
designed us for the inheritance of sons when we come to age will
|
||
not let us want necessaries in the mean time.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Rom.ix-p48">II. We have an answer ready to all
|
||
accusations and a security against all condemnations (<scripRef id="Rom.ix-p48.1" osisRef="Bible:Rom.8.33-Rom.8.34" parsed="|Rom|8|33|8|34" passage="Ro 8:33,34"><i>v.</i> 33, 34</scripRef>): <i>Who shall lay
|
||
any thing?</i> Doth the law accuse them? Do their own consciences
|
||
accuse them? Is the devil, the accuser of the brethren, accusing
|
||
them before our God day and night? This is enough to answer all
|
||
those accusations, <i>It is God that justifieth.</i> Men may
|
||
justify themselves, as the Pharisees did, and yet the accusations
|
||
may be in full force against them; but, if God justifies, this
|
||
answers all. He is the judge, the king, the party offended, and his
|
||
judgment is according to truth, and sooner or later all the world
|
||
will be brought to be of his mind; so that we may challenge all our
|
||
accusers to come and put in their charge. This overthrows them all;
|
||
it is God, the righteous faithful God, that justifieth. <i>Who is
|
||
he that condemneth?</i> Though they cannot make good the charge yet
|
||
they will be ready to condemn; but we have a plea ready to move in
|
||
arrest of judgment, a plea which cannot be overruled. <i>It is
|
||
Christ that died,</i> &c. It is by virtue of our interest in
|
||
Christ, our relation to him, and our union with him, that we are
|
||
thus secured. 1. His death: <i>It is Christ that died.</i> By the
|
||
merit of his death he paid our debt; and the surety's payment is a
|
||
good plea to an action of debt. It is Christ, an able
|
||
all-sufficient Saviour. 2. His resurrection: <i>Yea, rather, that
|
||
has risen again.</i> This is a much greater encouragement, for it
|
||
is a convincing evidence that divine justice was satisfied by the
|
||
merit of his death. His resurrection was his acquittance, it was a
|
||
legal discharge. Therefore the apostle mentions it with a <i>yea,
|
||
rather.</i> If he had died, and not risen again, we had been where
|
||
we were. 3. His sitting at the right hand of God: He is <i>even at
|
||
the right hand of God</i>—a further evidence that he has done his
|
||
work, and a mighty encouragement to us in reference to all
|
||
accusations, that we have a friend, such a friend, in court. At
|
||
<i>the right hand of God,</i> which denotes that he is ready
|
||
there—always at hand; and that he is ruling there—all power is
|
||
given to him. Our friend is himself the judge. 4. The intercession
|
||
which he makes there. He is there, not unconcerned about us, not
|
||
forgetful of us, but <i>making intercession.</i> He is agent for us
|
||
there, an advocate for us, to answer all accusations, to put in our
|
||
plea, and to prosecute it with effect, to appear for us and to
|
||
present our petitions. And is not this abundant matter for comfort?
|
||
What shall we say to these things? Is this the manner of men, O
|
||
Lord God? What room is left for doubting and disquietment? Why art
|
||
thou cast down, O my soul? Some understand the accusation and
|
||
condemnation here spoken of of that which the suffering saints met
|
||
with from men. The primitive Christians had many black crimes laid
|
||
to their charge—heresy, sedition, rebellion, and what not? For
|
||
these the ruling powers condemned them: "But no matter for that"
|
||
(says the apostle); "while we stand right at God's bar it is of no
|
||
great moment how we stand at men's. To all the hard censures, the
|
||
malicious calumnies, and the unjust and unrighteous sentences of
|
||
men, we may with comfort oppose our justification before God
|
||
through Christ Jesus as that which doth abundantly countervail,"
|
||
<scripRef id="Rom.ix-p48.2" osisRef="Bible:1Cor.4.3-1Cor.4.4" parsed="|1Cor|4|3|4|4" passage="1Co 4:3,4">1 Cor. iv. 3, 4</scripRef>.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Rom.ix-p49">III. We have good assurance of our
|
||
preservation and continuance in this blessed state, <scripRef id="Rom.ix-p49.1" osisRef="Bible:Rom.8.35-Rom.8.39" parsed="|Rom|8|35|8|39" passage="Ro 8:35-39"><i>v.</i> 35, to the end</scripRef>. The fears
|
||
of the saints lest they should lose their hold of Christ are often
|
||
very discouraging and disquieting, and create them a great deal of
|
||
disturbance; but here is that which may silence their fears, and
|
||
still such storms, that nothing can separate them. We have here
|
||
from the apostle,</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Rom.ix-p50">1. A daring challenge to all the enemies of
|
||
the saints to separate them, if they could, from the love of
|
||
Christ. <i>Who shall?</i> None shall, <scripRef id="Rom.ix-p50.1" osisRef="Bible:Rom.8.35-Rom.8.37" parsed="|Rom|8|35|8|37" passage="Ro 8:35-37"><i>v.</i> 35-37</scripRef>. God having manifested his
|
||
love in giving his own Son for us, and not hesitating at that, can
|
||
we imagine that any thing else should divert or dissolve that love?
|
||
Observe here,</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Rom.ix-p51">(1.) The present calamities of Christ's
|
||
beloved ones supposed—that they meet with <i>tribulation</i> on
|
||
all hands, are in <i>distress,</i> know not which way to look for
|
||
any succour and relief in this world, are followed with
|
||
<i>persecution</i> from an angry malicious world that always hated
|
||
those whom Christ loved, pinched with <i>famine,</i> and starved
|
||
with <i>nakedness,</i> when stripped of all
|
||
<i>creature-comforts,</i> exposed to the greatest <i>perils,</i>
|
||
the <i>sword</i> of the magistrate drawn against them, ready to be
|
||
sheathed in their bowels, bathed in their blood. Can a case be
|
||
supposed more black and dismal? It is illustrated (<scripRef id="Rom.ix-p51.1" osisRef="Bible:Rom.8.36" parsed="|Rom|8|36|0|0" passage="Ro 8:36"><i>v.</i> 36</scripRef>) by a passage quoted from
|
||
<scripRef id="Rom.ix-p51.2" osisRef="Bible:Ps.44.22" parsed="|Ps|44|22|0|0" passage="Ps 44:22">Ps. xliv. 22</scripRef>, <i>For thy
|
||
sake we are killed all the day long,</i> which intimates that we
|
||
are not to think strange, no not concerning the fiery bloody trial.
|
||
We see the Old-Testament saints had the same lot; so persecuted
|
||
they the prophets that were before us. <i>Killed all the day
|
||
long,</i> that is, continually exposed to and expecting the fatal
|
||
stroke. There is still every day, and all the day long, one or
|
||
other of the people of God bleeding and dying under the rage of
|
||
persecuting enemies. <i>Accounted as sheep for the slaughter;</i>
|
||
they make no more of killing a Christian than of butchering a
|
||
sheep. Sheep are killed, not because they are hurtful while they
|
||
live, but because they are useful when they are dead. They kill the
|
||
Christians to please themselves, to be food to their malice.
|
||
<i>They eat up my people as they eat bread,</i> <scripRef id="Rom.ix-p51.3" osisRef="Bible:Ps.14.4" parsed="|Ps|14|4|0|0" passage="Ps 14:4">Ps. xiv. 4</scripRef>.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Rom.ix-p52">(2.) The inability of all these things to
|
||
separate us from the love of Christ. Shall they, can they, do it?
|
||
No, by no means. All this will not cut the bond of love and
|
||
friendship that is between Christ and true believers. [1.] Christ
|
||
doth not, will not, love us the less for all this. All these
|
||
troubles are very consistent with the strong and constant love of
|
||
the Lord Jesus. They are neither a cause nor an evidence of the
|
||
abatement of his love. When Paul was whipped, and beaten, and
|
||
imprisoned, and stoned, did Christ love him ever the less? Were his
|
||
favours intermitted? his smiles any whit suspended? his visits more
|
||
shy? By no means, but the contrary. These things separate us from
|
||
the love of other friends. When Paul was brought before Nero all
|
||
men forsook him, but then the Lord stood by him, <scripRef id="Rom.ix-p52.1" osisRef="Bible:2Tim.4.16-2Tim.4.17" parsed="|2Tim|4|16|4|17" passage="2Ti 4:16,17">2 Tim. iv. 16, 17</scripRef>. Whatever persecuting
|
||
enemies may rob us of, they cannot rob us of the love of Christ,
|
||
they cannot intercept his love-tokens, they cannot interrupt nor
|
||
exclude his visits: and therefore, let them do their worst, they
|
||
cannot make a true believer miserable. [2.] We do not, will not,
|
||
love him the less for this; and that for this reason, because we do
|
||
not think that he loves us the less. Charity thinks no evil,
|
||
entertains no misgiving thoughts, makes no hard conclusions, no
|
||
unkind constructions, takes all in good part that comes from love.
|
||
A true Christian loves Christ never the less though he suffer for
|
||
him, thinks never the worse of Christ through he lose all for
|
||
him.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Rom.ix-p53">(3.) The triumph of believers in this (
|
||
<scripRef id="Rom.ix-p53.1" osisRef="Bible:Rom.8.37" parsed="|Rom|8|37|0|0" passage="Ro 8:37"><i>v.</i> 37</scripRef>): <i>Nay, in
|
||
all these things we are more than conquerors.</i></p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Rom.ix-p54">[1.] We are conquerors: though killed all
|
||
the day long, yet conquerors. A strange way of conquering, but it
|
||
was Christ's way; thus he triumphed over principalities and powers
|
||
in his cross. It is a surer and a nobler way of conquest by faith
|
||
and patience than by fire and sword. The enemies have sometimes
|
||
confessed themselves baffled and overcome by the invincible courage
|
||
and constancy of the martyrs, who thus overcame the most victorious
|
||
princes by not loving their lives to the death, <scripRef id="Rom.ix-p54.1" osisRef="Bible:Rev.12.11" parsed="|Rev|12|11|0|0" passage="Re 12:11">Rev. xii. 11</scripRef>.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Rom.ix-p55">[2.] We are more than conquerors. In our
|
||
patiently bearing these trials we are not only conquerors, but more
|
||
than conquerors, that is, triumphers. Those are more than
|
||
conquerors that conquer, <i>First,</i> With little loss. Many
|
||
conquests are dearly bought; but what do the suffering saints lose?
|
||
Why, they lose that which the gold loses in the furnace, nothing
|
||
but the dross. It is no great loss to lose things which are not—a
|
||
body that is of the earth, earthy. <i>Secondly,</i> With great
|
||
gain. The spoils are exceedingly rich; glory, honour, and peace, a
|
||
crown of righteousness that fades not away. In this the suffering
|
||
saints have triumphed; not only have not been separated from the
|
||
love of Christ, but have been taken into the most sensible
|
||
endearments and embraces of it. As afflictions abound, consolations
|
||
much more abound, <scripRef id="Rom.ix-p55.1" osisRef="Bible:2Cor.1.5" parsed="|2Cor|1|5|0|0" passage="2Co 1:5">2 Cor. i.
|
||
5</scripRef>. There is one more than a conqueror, when pressed
|
||
above measure. He that embraced the stake, and said, "Welcome the
|
||
cross of Christ, welcome everlasting life,"—he that dated his
|
||
letter from the delectable orchard of the Leonine prison,—he that
|
||
said, "In these flames I feel no more pain than if I were upon a
|
||
bed of down,"—she who, a little before her martyrdom, being asked
|
||
how she did, said, "Well and merry, and going to heaven,"—those
|
||
that have gone smiling to the stake, and stood singing in the
|
||
flames—these were more than conquerors.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Rom.ix-p56">[3.] It is only <i>through Christ that
|
||
loved us,</i> the merit of his death taking the sting out of all
|
||
these troubles, the Spirit of his grace strengthening us, and
|
||
enabling us to bear them with holy courage and constancy, and
|
||
coming in with special comforts and supports. Thus we are
|
||
conquerors, not in our own strength, but in the grace that is in
|
||
Christ Jesus. We are conquerors by virtue of our interest in
|
||
Christ's victory. He hath overcome the world for us (<scripRef id="Rom.ix-p56.1" osisRef="Bible:John.16.33" parsed="|John|16|33|0|0" passage="Joh 16:33">John xvi. 33</scripRef>), both the good things
|
||
and the evil things of it; so that we have nothing to do but to
|
||
pursue the victory, and to divide the spoil, and so are more than
|
||
conquerors.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Rom.ix-p57">2. A direct and positive conclusion of the
|
||
whole matter: <i>For I am persuaded,</i> <scripRef id="Rom.ix-p57.1" osisRef="Bible:Rom.8.38-Rom.8.39" parsed="|Rom|8|38|8|39" passage="Ro 8:38,39"><i>v.</i> 38, 39</scripRef>. It denotes a full, and
|
||
strong, and affectionate persuasion, arising from the experience of
|
||
the strength and sweetness of the divine love. And here he
|
||
enumerates all those things which might be supposed likely to
|
||
separate between Christ and believers, and concludes that it could
|
||
not be done. (1.) <i>Neither death nor life</i>—neither the
|
||
terrors of death on the one hand nor the comforts and pleasures of
|
||
life on the other, neither the fear of death nor the hope of life.
|
||
Or, We shall not be separated from that love either in death or in
|
||
life. (2.) <i>Nor angels, nor principalities, nor powers.</i> Both
|
||
the good angels and the bad are called principalities and powers:
|
||
the good, <scripRef id="Rom.ix-p57.2" osisRef="Bible:Eph.1.21 Bible:Col.1.16" parsed="|Eph|1|21|0|0;|Col|1|16|0|0" passage="Eph 1:21,Col 1:16">Eph. i. 21; Col. i.
|
||
16</scripRef>; the bad, <scripRef id="Rom.ix-p57.3" osisRef="Bible:Eph.6.12 Bible:Col.2.15" parsed="|Eph|6|12|0|0;|Col|2|15|0|0" passage="Eph 6:12,Col 2:15">Eph.
|
||
vi. 12; Col. ii. 15</scripRef>. And neither shall do it. The good
|
||
angels will not, the bad shall not; and neither can. The good
|
||
angels are engaged friends, the bad are restrained enemies. (3.)
|
||
<i>Nor things present, nor things to come</i>—neither the sense of
|
||
troubles present nor the fear of troubles to come. Time shall not
|
||
separate us, eternity shall not. Things present separate us from
|
||
things to come, and things to come separate and cut us off from
|
||
things present; but neither from the love of Christ, whose favour
|
||
is twisted in with both present things and things to come. (4.)
|
||
<i>Nor height, nor depth</i>—neither the height of prosperity and
|
||
preferment, nor the depth of adversity and disgrace; nothing from
|
||
heaven above, no storms, no tempests; nothing on earth below, no
|
||
rocks, no seas, no dungeons. (5.) <i>Nor any other
|
||
creature</i>—any thing that can be named or thought of. It will
|
||
not, it cannot, separate us from the love of God, which is in
|
||
Christ Jesus our Lord. It cannot cut off or impair our love to God,
|
||
or God's to us; nothing does it, can do it, but sin. Observe, The
|
||
love that exists between God and true believers is through Christ.
|
||
He is the Mediator of our love: it is in and through him that God
|
||
can love us and that we dare love God. This is the ground of the
|
||
stedfastness of the love; therefore God rests in his love
|
||
(<scripRef id="Rom.ix-p57.4" osisRef="Bible:Zeph.3.17" parsed="|Zeph|3|17|0|0" passage="Zep 3:17">Zeph. iii. 17</scripRef>), because
|
||
Jesus Christ, in whom he loves us, is the same yesterday, to-day,
|
||
and for ever.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Rom.ix-p58">Mr. Hugh Kennedy, an eminent Christian of
|
||
Ayr, in Scotland, when he was dying, called for a Bible; but,
|
||
finding his sight gone, he said, "Turn me to the eighty of the
|
||
Romans, and set my finger at these words, <i>I am persuaded that
|
||
neither death nor life,</i>" &c. "Now," said he, "is my finger
|
||
upon them?" And, when they told him it was, without speaking any
|
||
more, he said, "Now, God be with you, my children; I have
|
||
breakfasted with you, and shall sup with my Lord Jesus Christ this
|
||
night;" and so departed.</p>
|
||
</div></div2> |