Romans 12-16 [practical commandments] |
Romans 1-11 [exposition of
the Gospel] |
12:1 We must live the practical life
of obedience " by the mercies of God" |
This Greek word occurs only in 9:15:
" I will have compassion on whom I will" .
The mercy / compassion of God is shown to us by grace, by some
kind of predestination, and not because we deserve it. In view
of these " mercies" , therefore we ought to live the
life Paul now outlines. Our understanding of the grace of predestination
isn't something academic or philosophical- the mercy and grace
shown in it beseech us to live a better life. And according
to Eph. 15,6,11,12 RV, predestination is not something that should
merely confuse us, but rather it is there " to the end that…"
we might praise God in lives of gratitude. |
12:1 Present your bodies
(12:1) occurs later in 14:10 [we will stand before the
judgment seat] and in 16:2 [assist] Phoebe- yield yourselves
to her in helpful support. |
Baptism is a promise to yield
[s.w.] our bodies to God's service (6:12,13,19). This
means the Romans were to assist / yield to Phoebe and
present themselves in practical service (12:1); we will
present ourselves / yield ourselves before the Lord when we come
before His final judgment (14:10), and so we ought to now, as
we vowed at baptism. |
12:1 Offer your body as a living
sacrifice |
Through baptism we show that we have
died, the body of sin has been destroyed (6:6), we were
crucified with Christ. So therefore, 12:1 is saying, don't be
frightened to sacrifice / give up the things of this life. The
appeal to present ourselves as “living men” after baptism (6:13)
is surely to be connected with the appeal to present ourselves
as living sacrifices in 12:1. |
12:2 be not conformed to this world
/ age |
Only three verses earlier in 11:36 the
same word is used about how Christ will be glorified " for
ever" (AV), the world / age [to come]. Live for
that age, live the Kingdom life of glorifying Christ now,
if you do that you can't be conformed to this age, but
to the future one. |
12:4,5 We are each members of His
body, each of us must play our part in the body / ecclesia
of Christ; we each have an office / deed in it. |
6:13,19; 7:5,23 the members of our own
personal bodies, every part of our physical and spiritual / emotional
life, must be given to the service of Christ; we died with Him.
By doing this, we will have our part in the body of Christ; we
will be members of His body, if each of our own members has been
submitted to Him.We must mortify the deeds of the body
(8:3)- and then we will have part in the office / deeds of the
body of Christ. This is why personal spirituality is a condition
for ecclesial office. |
12:6 We each have gifts of serving |
But the gift emphasized earlier
in Romans is that of forgiveness, justification, salvation (5:15,16;
6:23). The response to this gift is to serve practically; therefore
the gift of God's salvation and grace is thereby also a gift /
ability to serve His people (as in 1 Pet. 4:10). |
12:8 He that sheweth mercy;
the Greek can mean both to shew mercy (as here; 9:16; Jude 22)
and to obtain mercy (11:30,31; 1 Cor. 7:25; 2 Cor. 4:1; 1 Tim.
1:13,16). To obtain mercy, to really believe it, means we will
shew it. |
The same phrase 'to shew mercy' is used
in 9:15,16,18; 11:3-32 re. our obtaining mercy on the basis of
God's pure and predestined grace rather than our works. Rooted
in this experience, we must likewise show mercy to others on the
basis of grace rather than their behaviour towards us. |
12:10 give honour to each other |
9:21 God gives honour on the
basis of grace rather than works; He decides to honour one rather
than another. In this sense we must honour all of our brethren,
for who they are before God rather than for their works. |
12:11; 14:18; 16:18 serve Christ |
6:6; 7:6,25 On account of your baptism
don't serve sin but serve Christ |
12:12 rejoice in hope as you
go about your service of others in the ecclesia |
Rejoice in hope because of the
atonement, because of the death of Christ for you (5:2), after
the pattern of Abraham's joyful hope, thanks to having been given
the same promises which we have been (4:18 cp. Jn. 8:56). Such
service in joy is difficult when the work we do for our brethren
is repetitious- stamping envelopes or cooking food, e.g. Joy in
service will only come froma conscious holding in our minds of
the personal wonder of the promises, and the fact that the Lord
died for us and really has given us such great salvation…and that
we are doing what we are doing purely as response to that. |
12:12 Patient in tribulation |
Tribulation works patience because of
our experience of the atonement (5:3). The love of Christ in the
cross was so great that no amount of tribulation [poverty or sick
and crying children, e.g.] should separate us from it; and therefore
we can be patient whilst experiencing it (8:35). |
12:16 Mind not high things but be like-minded
towards each other. Be not wise in your own conceits, because
of your own possibility of failure. |
11:20 Be not high-minded but fear- if
God rejected the Jews, you are only a Gentile, and of the same
sin and failure-prone nature. Consideration of God's dealings
with Israel and their failures should lead us to an appropriate
attitude of mind. |
12:17 recompense to no man evil
for evil; if we want to be judged by grace then we must show it.
If we give evil for evil then this is how our sins will be judged
at the last day. |
2:6 God will render [s.w.] to
each man according to his ways. If we want judgment by grace,
then we must shew it now. If we do and show evil, we will receive
it (2:9). And we all do evil at times (7:19). If we are to receive
grace rather than evil for that evil, we must show it to others
in our judgment of them. |
12:19 Give place to God's wrath-
don't avenge yourselves. |
The wrath of God is really against sin
right now, and it will be at the judgment (1:18; 2:5,8; 3:5; 4:15;
9:22). The more we believe this, the less likely we will be to
avenge sin against ourselves. Likewise the more we understand
how God justifies us, and the wonder of it, the less
likely we will be to justify ourselves and to be sensitive
to what others may or may not imply about us. |
12:20 Feed your enemy, love him- if he
doesn't respond, your love of him will heap coals of fire [condemnation]
upon him |
5:10 We were enemies but reconciled by
God's love; and yet we face condemnation if we refuse that reconciliation.
From that experience we must be moved to love our enemies, to
ever seek reconciliation; indeed we will be compelled to do this
almost unconsciously, if we truly believe we were enemies and
alienated, and yet by grace have been reconciled. |
13:2 Don't resist God through resisting
/ objecting to the powers of Government |
9:19 Who hath resisted His will? Pharaoh
tried to but was brought to destruction because of this. We must
learn the lesson, and show it in submission to the powers of Government
in that they are manifesting the will of God towards us- even
if it means persecution. |
13:2 Otherwise you will receive damnation |
2:2,3; 3:8; 5:16- which must
come against sin, because of Adam's sin (5:16). Understanding
the need for damnation of sin means we will not commit it so quickly. |
13:7 render to all their duesGive "
custom" |
2:6 God renders to all according to their
works, and we are to manifest God's judgment in little things
like paying our taxes fairly; we must think of the future judgment,
the way all will receive their dues (although ours will be ameliorated
by grace), and be influenced by God's judgment in the way we give
others their dues. As God gives an " end" [s.w. 'custom']
to sin and righteousness (6:21,22). |
13:8 Loving our neighbour fulfils the
law |
8:3,4 Christ died that we might fulfill
the Law; He fulfilled it in His death, and in that we have a part
in that death through baptism, we also must fulfill it in spirit.
To fulfill the law is to love each other; Christ died that the
law might be fulfilled, i.e. that we might love each other. This
is why the remembrance of the Lord's death is in the agape,
the love-feast, where we discern His body, our brethren, and resolve
to love them to the end. John saw the same link when he wrote
of how because Christ lay down His life for us, we ought also
to lay down our lives for each other (1 Jn. 3:16; 4:9-11). |
13:11 Awake out of sleep |
This phrase is used in Romans only of
the resurrection of the Lord (4:24,25; 6:4,9; 7:4; 8:11,34; 10:9).
Because He rose and we are in Him and share in His resurrection
and newness of life by baptism, therefore we shouldn't be apathetic
in our service. This is the power of His resurrection and our
association with it in baptism (6:4,9). |
13:12 Put on the armour of light-
as we put on Christ by baptism. Live the spirit of baptism in
an ongoing sense. |
At baptism we yield our members as instruments
[s.w. 'armour'] of righteousness (6:13). Keep on doing this, keeping
on and on arming yourself, clothing yourself, yielding yourself,
just as you did at baptism. " Walk…" (13:13) as you
began walking at baptism " in newness of life" (6:4). |
13:13 Live with no strife or envy |
1:29 there was strife and envy amongst
the condemned Israel who walked through the wilderness. By having
these things we show ourselves to be condemned. |
13:14 Don't fulfill the lusts of the
flesh but put on Christ |
6:12 Put on Christ by baptism, and therefore
don't obey the flesh " in the lusts thereof" . The language
is so similar that surely Paul is teaching that baptism is an
ongoing experience, in essence. Consider how the fire and water
baptized Israel in the Red Sea, and yet continued over them throughout
the Wilderness journey. |
14:1 Receive the weak in faith |
Abraham was not weak in faith (4:19)
and we should seek to be like him; but receive those who are in
his seed by baptism, but don't make it to his level of personal
faith |
14:5 Let yourselves be fully persuaded |
As Abraham was " fully persuaded"
(4:21) |
14:23 He who doubts is damned |
Abraham didn't stagger [s.w.]
(4:20); ultimately, he must be our example, even if some in the
ecclesia will take time to rise up to his standard, and unlike
him are " weak in faith" . |
14:7,8 No man lives or dies to himself |
6:11,13,16 we share in the life and death
of Christ, and therefore we ourselves are given to Him
[s.w. himself in 14:7,8]. We are dead with Him. Because
we are baptized into Christ, our own death and life are now not
for ourselves. Therefore what we eat and drink is part of a life
lived for the Lord, and therefore these things are irrelevant.
The physicalities of life are necessary; but these shouldn't be
of any major importance because our life is given over to Christ.
This is a fundamental challenge, repeated in 2 Cor. 5:15: because
of Christ's death and resurrection for us, we don't live to ourselves
but to Him. The argument in Romans 14 is that therefore, .all
the physical things of our lives are merely incidental. This is
an unusual yet powerful way of telling the Romans not to get distracted
by the issue of what some ate or drunk: we are dead with Christ,
our lives are only for Him, therefore what we physically eat to
keep ourselves going, along with all the more material
issues of life, are incidental to the main purpose of life. We
live in a world which increasingly glorifies the frittering away
of time and economy on the incidentals of life; yet the Gospel
should make us see these things for what they are. Rom. 14:17
seems to have the same idea: " [the gospel of] the Kingdom
of God is not meat and drink, but righteousness [a word used 33
times in the doctrinal section, regarding the righteousness of
God imputed through the Gospel] , peace [cp. 2:10; 3:17; 5:1;
8:6] and joy [5:2] in the Holy Spirit. He who in these things
serveth Christ…" . Note how the Gospel is paralleled with
the service of Christ; to believe it is to live a life of service. |
14:13 Let us not judge one another any
more |
6:6 henceforth we should not
serve sin. One example of this is that after baptism, living the
life of Christ, we no longer judge each other. To do so is to
serve sin. |
14:18 we " serve Christ" by
the life of righteousness, joy and peace. By being factious we
no longer serve Christ (16:18)- we are no longer living out the
baptism vow of serving Christ. |
6:6; 7:6 we serve Christ after baptism-
not so much in works but in attitudes. |
15:4 By the comfort of " the scriptures"
we have hope |
Paul quotes " the scriptures"
to support his exposition of the Gospel: 4:3; 9:17; 10:11; 11:2.
His argument in practice gives comfort and hope. |
15:9 The believing Gentiles will "
sing unto thy name" |
10:13; 9:17 The believer calls upon himself
the name of the Lord in baptism; through God's work with the gentiles,
His Name is declared through all the earth. The believer, baptized
into the Name, will praise that Name and declare it in song and
witness throughout the earth. |
15:13 abound in hope |
5:15 the grace of God abounds
to us [s.w.]; but grace is something purely abstract unless it
is really felt. In this case our abounding in hope will
reflect the abounding of grace which we perceive. Romans 5 almost
plays logical games in order to show just how abounding that grace
is. |
15:21 Paul preached because he wanted
to take the Gospel to those " who have not heard" |
10:14-18 argues that men will only hear
the Gospel if there is a preacher; but it is prophesied that they
have all heard, because Psalm 19 prophesies that the message has
gone into all the earth. Yet the connection with 15:21 suggests
that Paul saw that prophecy, which he so confidently quotes in
the past tense, as if it has already happened, as dependent upon
his own effort in witness. In this we see the limitation of God
within human effort to witness. |
15:28 Paul speaks of sealing unto the
Gentile believers the " fruit" of their generosity. |
6:22 After baptism we are to bring forth
fruit to God. But we can help others do this, as Paul helped the
Gentiles to be generous. |
16:2 " assist" Phebe |
6:13,16,19 We must yield ourselves
[s.w.] to the service of God. But this is shown by yielding our
services to His servants. It is a strange way of describing assistance
to Phebe if this is not an intentional allusion [bear in mind
how many other references there are to Rom. 6 in the practical
section of the letter]. |
16:17 " the doctrine which ye have
learned" |
6:17 the form of doctrine delivered to
them before baptism. Anyone who teaches anything which affects
the basic Gospel is to be avoided. This is because the doctrines
of the Gospel affect the way of life we lead, not because
the intellectual tradition of the church has been insulted
(1). |
16:26 Making the Gospel known |
9:22,23 as the power and riches of God
were made known [s.w.] to the world of Egypt. He is likewise manifesting
Himself through us in the work of witness. |