Ro 6:1–11. The Bearing
of Justification by Grace upon a Holy Life.
1.
What, &c.—The subject of this third
division of our Epistle announces itself at once in the opening question,
“Shall we (or, as the true reading is, “May we,” “Are we to”) continue in sin,
that grace may abound?” Had the apostle’s doctrine been that salvation depends in
any degree upon our good works, no such objection to it could have been
made. Against the doctrine of a purely gratuitous justification, the objection
is plausible; nor has there ever been an age in which it has not been urged.
That it was brought against the apostles, we know from Ro 3:8; and we
gather from Ga 5:13; 1Pe 2:16; Jud 1:4, that some did give occasion to the
charge; but that it was a total perversion of the doctrine of Grace the apostle
here proceeds to show.
2.
God forbid—“That be far from us”; the
instincts of the new creature revolting at the thought.
How
shall we, that are dead,
&c.—literally, and more forcibly, “We who died to sin (as presently to be
explained), how shall we live any longer therein?”
3.
Know ye not, that so many of us as were baptized into Jesus Christ—compare 1Co 10:2.
were
baptized into his death?—sealed
with the seal of heaven, and as it were formally entered and articled, to all
the benefits and all the obligations of Christian discipleship in
general, and of His death in particular. And since He was “made sin” and
“a curse for us” (2Co 5:21; Ga 5:13), “bearing our sins in His own body on the
tree,” and “rising again for our justification” (Ro 4:25; 1Pe 2:24), our whole
sinful case and condition, thus taken up into His Person, has been brought to
an end in His death. Whoso, then, has been baptized into Christ’s death has
formally surrendered the whole state and life of sin, as in Christ a dead
thing. He has sealed himself to be not only “the righteousness of God in Him,”
but “a new creature”; and as he cannot be in Christ to the one effect and not
to the other, for they are one thing, he has bidden farewell, by baptism into
Christ’s death, to his entire connection with sin. “How,” then, “can he live
any longer therein?” The two things are as contradictory in the fact as they
are in the terms.
4.
Therefore we are—rather, “were” (it being a past
act, completed at once).
buried
with him, by baptism into death—(The
comma we have placed after “him” will show what the sense is. It is not,
“By baptism we are buried with Him into death,” which makes no sense at all;
but, “By baptism with Him into death we are buried with Him”; in other
words, “By the same baptism which publicly enters us into His death, we
are made partakers of His burial also”). To leave a dead body unburied
is represented, alike in heathen authors as in Scripture, as the greatest
indignity (Rev 11:8, 9). It was fitting, therefore, that Christ, after “dying
for our sins according to the Scriptures,” should “descend into the lower parts
of the earth” (Eph 4:9). As this was the last and lowest step of His
humiliation, so it was the honorable dissolution of His last link of connection
with that life which He laid down for us; and we, in being “buried with Him by
our baptism into His death,” have by this public act severed our last link of
connection with that whole sinful condition and life which Christ brought to an
end in His death.
that
like as Christ was raised from the dead by the glory of the Father—that is, by such a forth-putting of the Father’s power
as was the effulgence of His whole glory.
even
so we also—as risen to a new life with Him.
should
walk in newness of life—But what
is that “newness?” Surely if our old life, now dead and buried with
Christ, was wholly sinful, the new, to which we rise with the risen
Saviour, must be altogether a holy life; so that every time we go back to
“those things whereof we are now ashamed” (Ro 6:21), we belie our resurrection
with Christ to newness of life, and “forget that we have been purged from our
old sins” (2Pe 1:9). (Whether the mode of baptism by immersion be alluded to in
this verse, as a kind of symbolical burial and resurrection, does not seem to
us of much consequence. Many interpreters think it is, and it may be so. But as
it is not clear that baptism in apostolic times was exclusively by immersion
[see on Ac 2:41], so sprinkling and washing are indifferently
used in the New Testament to express the cleansing efficacy of the blood of
Jesus. And just as the woman with the issue of blood got virtue out of Christ
by simply touching Him, so the essence of baptism seems to lie in the
simple contact of the element with the body, symbolizing living contact
with Christ crucified; the mode and extent of suffusion being indifferent and
variable with climate and circumstances).
5.
For if we have been planted together—literally,
“have become formed together.” (The word is used here only).
in
the likeness of his death, we shall be also in the likeness of his resurrection—that is, “Since Christ’s death and resurrection are
inseparable in their efficacy, union with Him in the one carries with it
participation in the other, for privilege and for duty alike.” The future
tense is used of participation in His resurrection, because this is but
partially realized in the present state. (See on Ro 5:19).
6,
7. Knowing this, &c.—The apostle now grows more
definite and vivid in expressing the sin-destroying efficacy of our union with
the crucified Saviour.
that
our old man—“our old selves”; that is, “all
that we were in our old unregenerate condition, before union with Christ”
(compare Col 3:9, 10; Eph 4:22–24; Ga 2:20; 5:24; 6:14).
is—rather, “was.”
crucified
with him—in order.
that
the body of sin—not a figure for “the mass
of sin”; nor the “material body,” considered as the seat of sin, which
it is not; but (as we judge) for “sin as it dwells in us in our present embodied
state, under the law of the fall.”
might
be destroyed—(in Christ’s death)—to the end.
that
henceforth we should not serve sin—“be
in bondage to sin.”
7.
For he that is dead—rather, “hath died.”
is
freed—“hath been set free.”
from
sin—literally, “justified,”
“acquitted,” “got his discharge from sin.” As death dissolves all claims, so
the whole claim of sin, not only to “reign unto death,” but to keep its victims
in sinful bondage, has been discharged once for all, by the believer’s penal
death in the death of Christ; so that he is no longer a “debtor to the
flesh to live after the flesh” (Ro 8:12).
8.
Now if we be dead—“if we died.”
with
Christ, &c.—See on Ro 6:5.
9–11.
Christ being raised from the dead dieth no more; death hath no more dominion
over him—Though Christ’s death was in the
most absolute sense a voluntary act (Jn 10:17, 18; Ac 2:24), that voluntary
surrender gave death such rightful “dominion over Him” as dissolved its
dominion over us. But this once past, “death hath,” even in that sense,
“dominion over Him no more.”
10.
For in that he died, he died unto—that
is, in obedience to the claims of
sin
once—for all.
but
in that he liveth, he liveth unto—in
obedience to the claims of God.
God—There never, indeed, was a time when Christ did not “live
unto God.” But in the days of His flesh He did so under the continual burden of
sin “laid on Him” (Is 53:6; 2Co 5:21); whereas, now that He has “put away sin
by the sacrifice of Himself,” He “liveth unto God,” the acquitted and accepted
Surety, unchallenged and unclouded by the claims of sin.
11.
Likewise—even as your Lord Himself.
reckon
ye also yourselves to be dead indeed—“dead
on the one hand”
unto
sin, but alive unto God through Jesus Christ our Lord—(The words, “our Lord,” at the close of this verse, are
wanting in the best manuscripts.)
Note, (1) “Antinomianism is not only an error; it is a falsehood
and a slander” [Hodge]. That “we should
continue in sin that grace may abound,” not only is never the deliberate
sentiment of any real believer in the doctrine of Grace, but is abhorrent to
every Christian mind, as a monstrous abuse of the most glorious of all truths
(Ro 6:1). (2) As the death of Christ is not only the expiation of guilt, but
the death of sin itself in all who are vitally united to Him; so the
resurrection of Christ is the resurrection of believers, not only to acceptance
with God, but to newness of life (Ro 6:2–11). (3) In the light of these two
truths, let all who name the name of Christ “examine themselves whether they be
in the faith.”
Ro 6:12–23. What
Practical Use Believers Should Make of Their Death to Sin and Life to God
through Union to the Crucified Saviour.
Not
content with showing that his doctrine has no tendency to relax the obligations
to a holy life, the apostle here proceeds to enforce these obligations.
12.
Let not sin therefore—as a Master
reign—(The reader will observe that wherever in this section the words
“Sin,” “Obedience,” “Righteousness,” “Uncleanness,” “Iniquity,” are
figuratively used, to represent a Master, they are here printed in
capitals, to make this manifest to the eye, and so save explanation).
in
your mortal body, that ye should obey it—sin.
in
the lusts thereof—“the lusts of the body,” as the Greek
makes evident. (The other reading, perhaps the true one, “that ye should obey
the lusts thereof,” comes to the same thing). The “body” is here viewed as the
instrument by which all the sins of the heart become facts of the outward life,
and as itself the seat of the lower appetites; and it is called “our mortal
body,” probably to remind us how unsuitable is this reign of sin in those who
are “alive from the dead.” But the reign here meant is the unchecked dominion
of sin within us. Its outward acts are next referred to.
13.
Neither yield ye your members instruments of unrighteousness unto Sin, but
yield yourselves—this is the great surrender.
unto
God as those that are alive from the dead, and—as the fruit of this.
your
members—till now prostituted to sin.
instruments
of righteousness unto God—But what
if indwelling sin should prove too strong for us? The reply is: But it will
not.
14.
For Sin shall not have dominion over you—as
the slaves of a tyrant lord.
for
ye are not under the law, but under grace—The
force of this glorious assurance can only be felt by observing the grounds on
which it rests. To be “under the law” is, first, to be under its claim to
entire obedience; and so, next under its curse for the breach of these. And as
all power to obey can reach the sinner only through Grace, of which the
law knows nothing, it follows that to be “under the law” is, finally, to be
shut up under an inability to keep it, and consequently to be the helpless
slave of sin. On the other hand, to be “under grace,” is to be under the
glorious canopy and saving effects of that “grace which reigns through
righteousness unto eternal life through Jesus Christ our Lord” (see on Ro
5:20,21). The curse of the law has been completely lifted from off them; they
are made “the righteousness of God in Him”; and they are “alive unto God
through Jesus Christ.” So that, as when they were “under the law,” Sin could
not but have dominion over them, so now that they are “under grace,” Sin cannot
but be subdued under them. If before, Sin resistlessly triumphed, Grace will
now be more than conqueror.
15,
16. What then? … Know ye not—it
is a dictate of common sense.
16.
that to whom ye yield yourselves servants to obey—with the view of obeying him.
his
servants ye are to whom ye obey—to
whom ye yield that obedience.
whether
of Sin unto death—that is, “issuing in death,” in the
awful sense of Ro 8:6, as the sinner’s final condition.
or
of Obedience unto righteousness—that
is, obedience resulting in a righteous character, as the enduring condition of
the servant of new Obedience (1Jn 2:17; Jn 8:34; 2Pe 2:19; Mt 6:24).
17.
But God be thanked, that ye were the servants of Sin—that is, that this is a state of things now past and gone.
but
ye have obeyed from the heart that form of doctrine which was delivered you—rather, “whereunto ye were delivered” (Margin), or
cast, as in a mould. The idea is, that the teaching to which they had heartily
yielded themselves had stamped its own impress upon them.
18.
Being then—“And being”; it is the continuation
and conclusion of the preceding sentence; not a new one.
made
free from Sin, ye became the servants of—“servants
to”
Righteousness—The case is one of emancipation from entire servitude to one
Master to entire servitude to another, whose property we are (see on Ro 1:1).
There is no middle state of personal independence; for which we were never
made, and to which we have no claim. When we would not that God should reign
over us, we were in righteous judgment “sold under Sin”; now being through
grace “made free from Sin,” it is only to become “servants to Righteousness,”
which is our true freedom.
19.
I speak after the manner of men—descending,
for illustration, to the level of common affairs.
because
of the infirmity of your flesh—the
weakness of your spiritual apprehension.
for
as ye have yielded—“as ye yielded,” the thing being
viewed as now past.
your
members servants to Uncleanness and to Iniquity unto—the practice of
iniquity;
even so now yield your members servants to Righteousness unto holiness—rather, “unto (the attainment of) sanctification,” as the
same word is rendered in 2Th 2:13; 1Co 1:30; 1Pe 1:2:—that is, “Looking back
upon the heartiness with which ye served Sin, and the lengths ye
went to be stimulated now to like zeal and like exuberance in the service of a
better Master.”
20.
For when ye were the servants—“were
servants”
of
Sin, ye were free from—rather,
“in respect of”
Righteousness—Difficulties have been made about this clause where none
exist. The import of it seems clearly to be this:—“Since no servant can serve
two masters, much less where their interests come into deadly collision, and
each demands the whole man, so, while ye were in the service of Sin ye were in
no proper sense the servants of Righteousness, and never did it one act of real
service: whatever might be your conviction of the claims of Righteousness, your
real services were all and always given to Sin: Thus had ye full proof of the
nature and advantages of Sin’s service.” The searching question with which this
is followed up, shows that this is the meaning.
21.
What fruit had ye then in those things whereof ye are now ashamed? for the end
of those things is death—What
permanent advantage, and what abiding satisfaction, have those
things yielded? The apostle answers his own question:—“Abiding satisfaction,
did I ask? They have left only a sense of ‘shame.’ Permanent advantage?
‘The end of them is death.’ ” By saying they were “now ashamed,”
he makes it plain that he is not referring to that disgust at themselves, and
remorse of conscience by which those who are the most helplessly “sold under
sin” are often stung to the quick; but that ingenuous feeling of self-reproach,
which pierces and weighs down the children of God, as they think of the
dishonor which their past life did to His name, the ingratitude it displayed,
the violence it did to their own conscience, its deadening and degrading
effects, and the death—“the second death”—to which it was dragging them down,
when mere Grace arrested them. (On the sense of “death” here, see on Ro
5:12–21, Note 3, and Ro 6:16: see also Rev 21:8—The change proposed in
the pointing of this verse: “What fruit had ye then? things whereof ye are now
ashamed” [Luther, Tholuck, De
Wette, Philippi, Alford, &c.], seems unnatural and
uncalled for. The ordinary pointing has at least powerful support [Chrysostom, Calvin, Beza, Grotius, Bengel,
Stuart, Fritzsche]).
22.
But now—as if to get away from such a
subject were unspeakable relief.
being
made free from Sin, and become servants to God—in the absolute sense intended throughout all this passage.
ye
have—not “ought to have,” but “do have,”
in point of fact.
your
fruit unto holiness—“sanctification,” as in Ro 6:19;
meaning that permanently holy state and character which is built up out
of the whole “fruits of righteousness,” which believers successively bring
forth. They “have their fruit” unto this, that is, all going towards
this blessed result.
and
the end everlasting life—as the final
state of the justified believer; the beatific experience not only of complete
exemption from the fall with all its effects, but of the perfect life of
acceptance with God, and conformity to His likeness, of unveiled access to Him,
and ineffable fellowship with Him through all duration.
23.
For the wages of sin is death; but the gift of God is eternal life through—“in”
Jesus
Christ our Lord—This concluding verse—as pointed as
it is brief—contains the marrow, the most fine gold, of the Gospel. As the laborer
is worthy of his hire, and feels it to be his due—his own of right—so is death
the due of sin, the wages the sinner has well wrought for, his own. But
“eternal life” is in no sense or degree the wages of our righteousness; we do
nothing whatever to earn or become entitled to it, and never can: it is
therefore, in the most absolute sense, “the
gift of God.” Grace reigns in the bestowal of it in every case, and that
“in Jesus Christ our Lord,” as the righteous Channel of it. In view of this,
who that hath tasted that the Lord is gracious can refrain from saying, “Unto
Him that loved us, and washed us from our sins in His own blood, and hath made
us kings and priests unto God and His Father, to Him be glory and dominion for
ever and ever. Amen!” (Rev 1:5, 6).
Note, (1) As the most effectual refutation of the oft-repeated
calumny, that the doctrine of Salvation by grace encourages to continue in sin,
is the holy life of those who profess it, let such ever feel that the highest
service they can render to that Grace which is all their hope, is to “yield
themselves unto God, as those that are alive from the dead, and their members
instruments of righteousness unto God” (Ro 6:12, 13). By so doing they will
“put to silence the ignorance of foolish men,” secure their own peace, carry
out the end of their calling, and give substantial glory to Him that loved
them. (2) The fundamental principle of Gospel obedience is as original as it is
divinely rational; that “we are set free from the law in order to keep it, and
are brought graciously under servitude to the law in order to be free” (Ro
6:14, 15, 18). So long as we know no principle of obedience but the terrors of
the law, which condemns all the breakers of it, and knows nothing whatever of
grace, either to pardon the guilty or to purify the stained, we are shut up
under a moral impossibility of genuine and acceptable obedience: whereas when
Grace lifts us out of this state, and through union to a righteous Surety,
brings us into a state of conscious reconciliation, and loving surrender of
heart to a God of salvation, we immediately feel the glorious liberty to be
holy, and the assurance that “Sin shall not have dominion over us” is as
sweet to our renewed tastes and aspirations as the ground of it is felt to be
firm, “because we are not under the Law, but under Grace.” (3) As this most
momentous of all transitions in the history of a man is wholly of God’s free
grace, the change should never be thought, spoken, or written of but with
lively thanksgiving to Him who so loved us (Ro 6:17). (4) Christians, in the
service of God, should emulate their former selves in the zeal and steadiness
with which they served sin, and the length to which they went in it (Ro 6:19).
(5) To stimulate this holy rivalry, let us often “look back to the rock whence
we were hewn, the hole of the pit whence we were digged,” in search of the
enduring advantages and permanent satisfactions which the service of Sin
yielded; and when we find to our “shame” only gall and wormwood, let us follow
a godless life to its proper “end,” until, finding ourselves in the territories
of “death,” we are fain to hasten back to survey the service of Righteousness,
that new Master of all believers, and find Him leading us sweetly into abiding
“holiness,” and landing us at length in “everlasting life” (Ro 6:20–22). (6)
Death and life are before all men who hear the Gospel: the one, the natural
issue and proper reward of sin; the other, the absolutely free “gift of God” to sinners, “in Jesus
Christ our Lord.” And as the one is the conscious sense of the hopeless
loss of all blissful existence, so the other is the conscious possession and
enjoyment of all that constitutes a rational creature’s highest “life” for
evermore (Ro 6:23). Ye that read or hear these words, “I call heaven and earth
to record this day against you, that I have set before you life and death,
blessing and cursing, therefore choose life, that both thou and thy seed may
live!” (De 30:19).
Excerpt from:
A Commentary on the Old and New Testaments
by Robert Jamieson, A. R. Fausset and David Brown
Rick Meyers.
e-Sword ®: www.e-sword.net