By Charles R Erdman
IV. The Conclusion. Chs. 15:14
to 16:27
A. PAUL'S REASONS FOR WRITING.
Ch. 15:14-21
14 And I myself also am
persuaded of you, my brethren,
that ye yourselves are full of
goodness, filled with all
knowledge, able also to admonish
one another. 15 But I write the
more boldly unto you in some
measure, as putting you again in
remembrance, because of the
grace that was given me of God,
16 that I should be a minister
of Christ Jesus unto the
Gentiles, ministering the gospel
of God, that the offering up of
the Gentiles might be made
acceptable, being sanctified by
the Holy Spirit. 17 I have
therefore my glorying in Christ
Jesus in things pertaining
to-God. 18 For I will not dare
to speak of any things save
those which Christ wrought
through me, for the obedience of
the Gentiles, by word and deed,
19 in the power of signs and
wonders, in the power of the
Holy Spirit; so that from
Jerusalem, and round about even
unto Illyricum, I have fully
preached the gospel of Christ;
20 yea, making it my aim so to
preach the gospel, not where
Christ was already named, that I
might not build upon another
man's foundation; 21 but, as it
is written,
They shall see, to whom no
tidings of him came,
And they
who have not heard shall
understand.
In bringing his epistle to a
close, Paul first gives his
reasons for writing to the
Romans. This he does with
notable courtesy and modesty and
tact. He has written not because
of any particular lack on their
part but because of his special
interest in them, since he is
the apostle to the Gentiles and
naturally has upon his heart the
Christians who are living in the
great imperial capital of the
Gentile world. He is persuaded that they are
"full of goodness" and well
instructed in the gospel and so
quite capable of admonishing one
another. Nevertheless he has
written, even with considerable
boldness and frankness, not so
much to tell them new truths as
to remind them of those they had
already received. With such
humility does Paul refer to a
letter which sets forth with
inspired impressiveness the most profound truths
ever entertained by the human
mind. He explains that he has
made bold to write these truths
to them because God has
appointed him to be "a minister
of Jesus Christ unto the
Gentiles." This ministry Paul
describes- in figures borrowed
from the Jewish ritual.
Preaching the gospel is his
priestly service, and its great
purpose is that Gentile
believers will be so transformed
by its power that they will
become an offering which he can
present, acceptable to God,
"being sanctified by the Holy
Spirit." This ministry, as exercised by
Paul, is a just ground of pride,
although he gives all the glory
to Christ. He has been widely
used in bringing Gentiles to
obey God, his "word and deed"
having been attested by
miraculous "signs and wonders"
wrought by the Holy Spirit, so
that he had "fully preached the
gospel of Christ," from
Jerusalem to Illyricum, on the
west of Macedonia. His one great
purpose, his point of honor, his
ambition, ever had been to
preach the gospel where Christ
had not been named, that he
"might not build upon' another
man's foundation"; and he
describes this aim in words
borrowed from Isaiah when
picturing the astonishment of
the nations as they learn of the
suffering Servant of Jehovah:
"They shall see, to whom no
tidings of him came, B. PAUL'S
PERSONAL PLANS, Ch. 15:22-23 22 Wherefore also I was hindered
these many times from coming to
you: 23 but now, having no more
any place in these regions, and
having these many years a
longing to come unto you, 24
whensoever I go unto Spain (for
I hope to see you in my journey,
and to be brought on my way
thitherward by you, if first in
some measure I shall have been
satisfied with your company)"25
but now, I say, I go unto
Jerusalem, ministering unto the
saints. 26 For it hath been the
good pleasure of Macedonia and
Achaia to make a certain
contribution for the poor among
the saints that are at
Jerusalem. 27 Yea, it hath been
their good pleasure; and their
debtors they are. For if the
Gentiles have been made
partakers of their spiritual
things, they owe it to them also
to minister unto them in carnal
things. 28 When therefore I have
accomplished this, and have
sealed to them this fruit, I
will go on by you unto Spain. 29
And I know that, when I come
unto you, I shall come in the fulness of the blessing of
Christ.
30 Now I beseech you, brethren,
by our Lord Jesus Christ, and by
the love of the Spirit, that ye
strive together with me in your
prayers to God for me; 31 that I
may be delivered from them that
are disobedient in Judea, and
that my ministration which
I
have for Jerusalem may be
acceptable to the saints; 32
that I may come unto you in joy
through the will of God, and
together with you find rest. 33
Now the God of peace be with you
all. Amen.
Paul has been glorying in the
ministry which is his as the
chosen apostle to the Gentiles;
but he realizes that, in spite
of its wide scope, its labors
are comparatively unfulfilled;
he always had his eyes fixed on
"the regions beyond," and he
proceeds to tell his friends in
Rome of his wide-reaching plans.
Their city, the great imperial
capital, has for years been the
goal of his ambition. However,
he has been hindered from coming
to them hitherto by his work in
regions farther east; but now
this work is so far completed
that he can carry out a
long-cherished purpose of
preaching the gospel in Spain,
and on the way he will visit
Rome and enjoy the spiritual
refreshment of fellowship with the friends to whom he
is writing, and by them be
helped forward on his journey to
the West. First, however, he must go in
exactly the opposite
direction; he must start eastward
to carry relief to the needy
Christians in Jerusalem. He is
taking a "certain contribution"
from the churches of Macedonia
and Achaia. It had been a
voluntary offering made with
pleasure, yet it was, in a
sense, the payment of a debt,
for the Gentile churches owed to
the Christians in Jerusalem all
their spiritual blessings, and
they could meet this
indebtedness only by ministering
to them in things temporal. In
this offering Paul had shown the
deepest interest, not only
because he had promised such aid
and because it was to relieve
his own fellow countrymen, but
also because such an expression
of charity would help to bind
together Jews and Gentiles into
one sympathetic body. When Paul has fulfilled this
mission, he promises to come to
Rome and to pass onward to
Spain. He feels assured that his
coming will result in a special
manifestation of grace: he will
come "in the fulness of the
blessing of Christ." Paul realizes, however, the
perils and the difficulties
which await him, and therefore
he closes this outline of his
personal plans with an earnest
request that the Roman
Christians will unite in prayers
on his behalf. He beseeches them
by the Lord Jesus Christ, and by
the brotherly love which his
Spirit inspires in believers,
that they will unite with him
"in an intense energy of prayer"
that he may be delivered from
the unbelieving Jews, who were
always his bitterest foes, and
also that the peace offering of
the Gentile churches may prove
acceptable to the Jewish
Christians of whose narrow
prejudices Paul was well aware.
Should these united prayers be
answered, then Paul would come
to his Roman friends with joy
and find rest and refreshment in
their fellowship. To this
request for prayer Paul adds a
petition of his own. In its
mention of " peace' it sounds a
keynote of the epistle, it
voices a deep yearning : every
heart; "Now the God of peace be
with you all. Amen,"
C. THE COMMENDATION OF
PHOEBE.
Ch. 16:1, 2
1 I commend unto you
Phoebe our
sister, who is a servant of the
church that is at Cenchreae: 2
that ye receive her in the Lord,
worthily of the saints, and that
ye assist her in whatsoever
matter she may have need of you:
for she herself also hath been a
helper of many, and of mine own
self.
It has been commonly assumed
that Phoebe was the bearer of
this letter from Corinth to
Rome. There is nothing to prove
this, as no other mention of
Phoebe is made elsewhere; but it
properly has been called "a
supposition which there is
nothing to contradict." Even more uncertain is the
assumption that Phoebe was a
deaconess. It is true that this
office was established in the
Christian Church at a rather
early date, but the word
translated "servant," sometimes
rendered "deaconess,"' may
denote merely the charity and
hospitality which should
characterize the life of every
true Christian and which seem to
have been exhibited by Phoebe in
a marked degree. She was a member of the church
at Cenchreae, the port of
Corinth, nine miles east of that
city. The apostle officially
"commends" or introduces her to
the church at Rome, urging that
she be received "in the Lord"
and in a manner worthy of
Christians, implying not only
that her needs be supplied but
also that she be granted every
spiritual privilege.
Furthermore, Paul bespeaks for
her assistance in whatsoever
matter she may have need,
possibly indicating that she was
going to Rome on business in
which they could afford her
special help. This cordial commendation was
given in view of the fact that
Phoebe had "been a helper' of
many" and of Paul himself. The
term "helper" is almost the
same as "patroness" and
intimates that the one so
designated was possibly a person
of some wealth and social
position. Just how this woman
had befriended Paul and his
fellow Christians is not stated,
but surely his courteous and
gracious commendation has given
to her a place of imperishable
fame. D. PAUL'S GREETINGS TO THE
ROMANS. Ch. 16:3-16
3 Salute Prisca and Aquila my
fellow-workers in Christ Jesus,
4 who for my life laid down
their own necks; unto whom not
only I give thanks, but also all
the churches of the Gentiles: 5
and salute the church that is in
their house. Salute Epznetus my
beloved, who is the first-fruits
of Asia unto Christ. 6 Salute
Mary, "who bestowed much labor
on you. 7 Salute Andronicus and
Junias, my kinsmen, and my
fellow-prisoners, who are of
note among the apostles, who
also have been in Christ before
me. 8 Salute Ampliatus my
beloved in the Lord. 9 Salute
Urbanus our fellow-worker in
Christ, and Stachys my beloved.
10 Salute Apelles the approved
in Christ. Salute them that are
of the household of Aristobulus.
11 Salute Herodion my kinsman.
Salute them of the household of
Narcissus, that are in the Lord.
12 Salute Tryphena and Tryphosa,
who labor in the Lord. Salute
Persis the beloved, who labored
much in the Lord. 13 Salute
Rufus the chosen in the Lord,
and his mother and mine. 14
Salute Asyncritus, Phlegon,
Hermes, Patrobas, Hermas, and
the brethren that are with them.
15 Salute Philologus and Julia,
Nereus and his sister, and
Olympas, and all the saints that
are with them. 16 Salute one
another with a holy kiss. All
the churches of Christ salute
you.
This list of obscure names is of
great value and of true
significance. It gives an aspect
of reality and deep human
interest to the whole epistle,
and its accompanying phrases.
indicate that Christian
doctrines were bearing fruit in
the' lives of those to whom they
had been proclaimed. These greetings reveal the heart
of Paul, showing his tender
affection, his appreciation of
kindness, his warm sympathy, and
his high valuation of human
friendships. They give
instructive glimpses of the life
of the Early Church, enabling us
to form a picture of its close
fellowships, its heroic
sufferings, its generous
sympathies, its purity, its
devotion, its faith, its hope,
its love. Of all these names the only ones
which are familiar are those of
Prisca and Aquila, the friends
with whom Paul had lived in
Corinth, who more recently seem
to have
saved the life of Paul at great
hazard, for his sake having
"laid down their necks." They
were only tentmakers, but their
wide travel and their
intelligent testimony for Christ
made them deserving of thanks
from "all the churches of the
Gentiles." To them Paul sends
his greeting, and also to the
believers in Rome who met at
their home for Christian
worship. The rest of the names here
mentioned appear in no other
place. Most of them seem to be
those of slaves or freedmen; but
these men and women, not
recognized by the world, have
attained glory enough by being
known through all the passing
centuries as friends of Paul and
followers of Christ. The apostle closes his
salutation to the Christians in
Rome by urging them to "salute
one another with a holy kiss."
It was an Oriental and
particularly a Jewish custom to
combine a kiss with a greeting;
here, however, Paul does not
mean merely a token of
friendship: nor yet is he
establishing "the kiss of peace"
as a permanent ordinance or
regular part of the Christian
religious service. He only
intended that, when his letter
had been heard and his
salutations received, they
should greet one another as
fellow members of the Church. When Paul now adds, "All the
churches of Christ salute you,"
he is using a general
expression; however, he
indicates his wide acquaintance
with the churches, and the deep
interest which all felt in the
welfare of the church at Rome.
E. A WARNING AGAINST FALSE
TEACHERS. Ch. 16:17-20
17 Now I beseech you, brethren,
mark them that are causing the
divisions and occasions of
stumbling, contrary to the
doctrine which ye learned: and
turn away from them. 18 For they
that are such serve not our Lord
Christ, but their own belly; and
by their smooth and fair speech
they beguile the hearts of the
innocent. 19 For your obedience
is come abroad unto all men. I
rejoice therefore over you: but
I would have you wise unto that
which is good, and simple unto
that which is evil. 20 And the
God of peace shall bruise Satan
under your feet shortly.
The grace of our Lord Jesus
Christ be with you.
It is not unnatural, as the
epistle is brought to a close,
and just after Paul has referred
to the other Christian churches,
that he should add a solemn
warning against false teachers.
He remembers what subtle and
corrupting heresies have
appeared among other bodies of
believers, and he fears lest
they may cause divisions and
scandals among the Christians at
Rome. He therefore urges his
readers to "mark" and avoid such
as may attempt to teach
doctrines contrary to the gospel
as it has been received by the
Romans and as it has been set
forth with such fullness and
power in this epistle. From such teachers Christians
are to "turn away," because
instead of being servants of
Christ such are servants of
their own appetites and of their
own selfish interests, and by
their plausible and flattering
speech they are able to deceive
the hearts of the guileless and
unwary. From the pestilent
influence of such teachers the
Roman Christians were still
free. The fame of their loyalty
was everywhere reported.
Therefore Paul rejoices over
them; nevertheless he is
anxious, and he is desirous that
"their moral intelligence should
not be impaired in the least by
any dealings with evil,' but
that they might be "experts in
good and innocents in evil." False teachers, whom as the
agents of evil Paul identifies
with Satan, may come and cause
dissensions, but soon, by
the Spirit of God, victory will
be secured and peace restored;
at least, this seems to be the
meaning of Paul's promise, "And
the God of peace shall bruise
Satan under your feet shortly." So Paul closes this warning with
a benediction: "The grace of our
Lord Jesus Christ be with you."
F. GREETINGS FROM PAUL'S
COMPANIONS. Ch, 16:21-23
21 Timothy my fellow-worker
saluteth you; and Lucius and
Jason and Sosipater, my kinsmen.
22 I Tertius, who write the
epistle, salute you in the Lord.
23 Gaius my host, and of the
whole church, saluteth you.
Erastus the treasurer of the
city saluteth you, and Quartus
the brother.
The letter seems to come to a
close with the preceding
paragraph, but now are added
these salutations from Paul's
friends and companions. It has
been suggested that the letter,
before being sent to Rome, was
first read at a Christian
gathering in Corinth, and that
the greetings to the Roman
church were appended at the
request of these who are named. First among them is Timothy,
Paul's beloved "fellowworker,"
his "child in the faith," his
comrade on perilous journeys,
his comfort in long
imprisonments, and his deputy on
difficult missions—a man who, as
few others, knew the fullness
and joy of the apostle's
affection and love, Lucius and Jason and Sosipater
are difficult to identify; but
Paul calls them his kinsmen,
meaning probably his fellow
countrymen, men who were of
Jewish birth. Tertius, the
amanuensis, by whom the letter
is being written, adds his own
greeting. Then Gaius is mentioned, one who
was at the time the host of the
apostle; him Paul describes as
being the host "of the whole
church," meaning either that
the Christians were wont to meet
in his house for worship or that
he extended his hospitality to
all Christians who came as
strangers to Corinth. Erastus, the city treasurer,
sends his greeting, together
with that of Quartus whom Paul
designates "the brother." That
an official holding so important
a position as that of treasurer
in the great city of Corinth was
numbered among the Christian
brotherhood shows that some men
of prominence and power were
members of that Church in which
Paul declared that there were
"not many mighty" and "not many
noble."
G. THE DOXOLOGY. Ch. 16:25-27
25 Now to him that is able to
establish you according to my
gospel and the preaching of
Jesus Christ, according to the
revelation of the mystery which
hath been kept in silence
through times eternal, 26 but
now is manifested, and by the
scriptures of the prophets,
according to the commandment of
the eternal God, is made known
unto all the nations unto
obedience of faith: 27 to the
only wise God, through Jesus
Christ, to whom be the glory for
ever. Amen.
While Paul has given us many
other superb doxologies, they
are found in the body and not at
the conclusion of his letters.
This magnificent ascription of
praise sums up the great
thoughts of the epistle and is
in perfect harmony with its
contents. In particular, it
should be noted how this closing
paragraph reechoes the notes
sounded in the opening verses of
the epistle and repeats their
significant phrases, thus
pointing backward to what has
been written, as the
introduction in so large measure
points forward to all that is to
follow. Paul ascribes praise to God who
"is able to establish" the
Roman Christians. In the opening
of the epistle, ch. 1:11, he
expresses a hope that they may
be established by the imparting
of some spiritual gift through
his proposed ministry in Rome.
Here he expresses the truth that
nothing that man can do, not
even the production of such an
epistle as this, can in itself
effect such a result. Only God
can establish believers in their
faith so that they cannot be
moved. This establishment is to take
place in agreement with the
gospel which Paul preached, a
gospel of grace, a gospel of
free salvation for all men
through faith in Jesus Christ.
The very sum and substance of
this gospel is "the preaching of
Jesus Christ," who is ever
presented as the object of
faith, the source of hope and
life. This preaching of Christ
sets forth the gracious purpose
of God for the redemption of the
world. It is therefore in accordance
with the revelation of that
"mystery" which has been hidden
in silence since the world
began, but now has been
disclosed. It is in perfect
accord with the writings of the
inspired prophets; and now by
God's commandment it is
proclaimed "unto all the
nations" to bring them into the
obedience of faith. To him who
in such a saving purpose and in
all his works of providence and
grace shows himself "the only
wise God," to him be "the glory
for ever," through Jesus Christ.
Amen
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