| 
												
												Verse 1Romans 5:1. Therefore being 
												justified — In the way shown in 
												the preceding chapter, we 
												receive many blessed privileges 
												and advantages in consequence 
												thereof. Here, to comfort the 
												believers at Rome, and 
												elsewhere, under the sufferings 
												which the profession of the 
												gospel brought upon them, the 
												apostle proceeds to enumerate 
												the privileges which belong to 
												true believers in general. And 
												from his account it appears, 
												that the privileges of Abraham’s 
												seed by faith, are far greater 
												than those which belong to such 
												as were his seed by natural 
												descent, and which are 
												described, Romans 2:17-20. The 
												first privilege of this 
												spiritual seed is, that, being 
												justified by faith, we have 
												peace with God — Being alienated 
												from God and exposed to 
												condemnation and wrath no 
												longer, but brought into a state 
												of reconciliation and peace with 
												him. “Our guilty fears are 
												silenced, and we are taught to 
												look up to him with sweet 
												serenity of soul, while we no 
												longer conceive of him as an 
												enemy, but under the endearing 
												character of a Friend and a 
												Father.” Through our Lord Jesus 
												Christ — Through his mediation 
												and grace. They have also divers 
												other privileges and blessings 
												here enumerated, which are all 
												the fruits of justifying faith; 
												so that where they are not, that 
												faith is not. “It seems very 
												unreasonable,” says Dr. 
												Doddridge, “that when the 
												apostle wrote such passages as 
												this, and Ephesians 1:1-3, he 
												should mean to exclude himself, 
												who was no Gentile; they are not 
												therefore to be expounded as 
												spoken particularly of the 
												Gentiles; nor could he surely 
												intend by these grand 
												descriptions, and pathetic 
												representations, to speak only 
												of such external privileges as 
												might have been common to Simon 
												Magus, or any other hypocritical 
												and wicked professor of 
												Christianity. And if he did not 
												intend this, he must speak of 
												all true Christians as such, and 
												as taking it for granted that 
												those to whom he addressed this 
												and his other epistles were, in 
												the general, such, though there 
												might be some few excepted 
												cases, which he did not think it 
												necessary often to touch upon. 
												And this is the true key to such 
												passages in his epistles as I 
												have more particularly stated 
												and vindicated in the postscript 
												which I have added to the 
												preface of my Sermons on 
												Regeneration, to which I must 
												beg leave to refer my reader, 
												and hope I shall be excused from 
												a more particular examination of 
												that very different scheme of 
												interpretation which Dr. Taylor 
												has so laboriously attempted to 
												revive. The main principles of 
												it are, I think, well confuted 
												by my pious and worthy friend, 
												Dr. Guyse, in the preface to his 
												Paraphrase on this epistle.
 
 Verse 2
 Romans 5:2. By whom also we have 
												access — Greek, την προσαγωγην, 
												admittance, entrance, or 
												introduction. The word, as 
												Raphelius has shown from the 
												heathen historian, Herodotus, is 
												often used as a sacerdotal 
												phrase, and signifies, “being 
												with great solemnity introduced 
												as into the more immediate 
												presence of a deity in his 
												temple, so as (by a supposed 
												interpreter, from thence called 
												προσαγωγευς, the introducer) to 
												have a kind of conference with 
												such a deity.” By faith into 
												this grace — Into this state of 
												favour, and a state in which we 
												receive, or may receive, grace 
												to help in every time of need. 
												The word also shows that the 
												blessing here spoken of is 
												different from and superior to 
												the peace with God, mentioned in 
												the preceding verse. Wherein we 
												stand — Remain, abide; or 
												rather, stand firm, as the word 
												εστηκαμεν signifies. “As the 
												apostle often compares the 
												conflicts which the first 
												Christians maintained, against 
												persecutors and false teachers, 
												to the Grecian combats, perhaps, 
												by standing firm, he meant that, 
												as stout wrestlers, they 
												successfully maintained their 
												faith in the gospel, in 
												opposition both to the Jews and 
												heathen, notwithstanding the 
												sufferings which the profession 
												of their faith had brought on 
												them.” And rejoice in hope of 
												the glory of God — Here two 
												other blessings are mentioned, 
												rising in degree above both the 
												preceding; a hope of the glory 
												of God, and joy arising 
												therefrom. By the glory of God 
												is meant the vision and 
												enjoyment of the God of glory in 
												a future state, particularly 
												after the resurrection and the 
												general judgment; including a 
												full conformity to Jesus Christ, 
												the Lord of glory, in soul and 
												body; (to whom we shall be made 
												like, because we shall see him 
												as he is, 1 John 3:2;) also the 
												glorious society of saints and 
												angels, and a glorious world, 
												the place of our eternal abode. 
												Of this, those that are 
												justified by faith have a lively 
												and well-grounded hope, being 
												heirs of it in consequence of 
												their justification, Titus 3:7; 
												and of their adoption, Romans 
												8:14-17; Galatians 4:6-7; and 
												through this hope, to which they 
												are begotten again by faith in 
												the resurrection of Christ, who 
												rose the first-fruits of them 
												that sleep, and by pardoning and 
												renewing grace, communicated in 
												and through him, they rejoice 
												frequently with joy unspeakable 
												and full of glory, 1 Peter 
												1:3-8; being sealed to the day 
												of redemption and having an 
												earnest of their future 
												inheritance by God’s Spirit in 
												their hearts.
 
 Verse 3-4
 Romans 5:3-4. And not only so — 
												Not only do we possess the four 
												fore- mentioned inestimable 
												blessings; but we glory in 
												tribulations also — Which we are 
												so far from esteeming a mark of 
												God’s displeasure, that we 
												receive them as tokens of his 
												fatherly love, whereby we may be 
												enabled to do him more singular 
												honour, and be prepared for a 
												more exalted happiness. The Jews 
												often objected the persecuted 
												state of the Christians as 
												inconsistent with what they 
												concluded would be the condition 
												of the people of the Messiah. It 
												is therefore with great 
												propriety that the apostle so 
												often discourses on the benefit 
												arising from this very thing. 
												The apostles and first 
												Christians gloried in 
												tribulations: 1st, Because 
												hereby their state was made to 
												resemble that of Christ, with 
												whom they died, that they might 
												live; suffered, that they might 
												reign, Romans 8:17; 2 Timothy 
												2:11-12. 2d, Because their 
												graces were hereby exercised, 
												and therefore increased. And, 
												3d, They were hereby purified 
												and refined, as gold and silver 
												in the furnace. See Isaiah 
												1:4-5; Zechariah 13:9. Knowing 
												that tribulation — Under the 
												influence of divine grace, 
												without which it could produce 
												no such effect; worketh patience 
												— Calls into exercise, and so 
												gradually increases our 
												patience; even an humble, 
												resigned, quiet, contented state 
												of mind: suggesting those 
												considerations which at once 
												show the reasonableness of that 
												duty, and lay a solid foundation 
												for it. And patience, experience 
												— The patient enduring of 
												tribulation gives us more 
												experience of the truth and 
												degree of our grace, of God’s 
												care of us, and of his power, 
												and love, and faithfulness, 
												engaged in supporting us under 
												our sufferings, and causing them 
												to work for our good. The 
												original expression, δοκιμη, 
												rendered experience, signifies 
												being approved on trial. Before 
												we are brought into tribulation, 
												knowing God’s power, we may 
												believe he can deliver; and 
												knowing his love and 
												faithfulness to his word, we may 
												believe he will deliver: but 
												after we have been actually 
												brought into tribulation, and 
												have been supported under it, 
												and delivered out of it, we can 
												say, from experience, he hath 
												delivered; and are thus 
												encouraged to trust in him in 
												time to come. Thus Shadrach and 
												his companions, before they were 
												cast into the furnace, could say 
												(Daniel 3:17) to Nebuchadnezzar, 
												Our God: whom we serve, is able 
												to deliver us from the burning 
												fiery furnace; and they could 
												also add, He will deliver us. 
												But after they had been cast 
												into the furnace, and their 
												faith in, and obedience to, 
												their God had been put to that 
												fiery trial, their patience 
												wrought experience; and they 
												could say, from experience, He 
												hath delivered us, as was 
												acknowledged by the haughty 
												monarch himself, saying, Blessed 
												be the God of Shadrach, &c., who 
												hath delivered his servants that 
												trusted in him. And experience, 
												hope — That is, an increased and 
												more confirmed hope than is 
												possessed before experience is 
												attained; namely, 1st, Of 
												continued help, support, and 
												deliverance. 2d, Of a 
												comfortable issue of our trials 
												in due time. 3d, Of eternal 
												salvation at last, Matthew 5:12, 
												John 16:20-22. Observe, reader, 
												as soon as we are justified, and 
												made the children and heirs of 
												God, chap. Romans 8:17, we hope, 
												on good grounds, for the glory 
												of God; but our faith and other 
												graces not having then been 
												tried, our hope of eternal life 
												must be mixed with doubts and 
												fears respecting our 
												steadfastness when exposed to 
												trials, (which we are taught in 
												the word of God to expect,) and 
												our enduring to the end. But 
												when we have been brought into 
												and have passed through various 
												and long-continued trials, and 
												in the midst of them have been 
												so supported by divine grace as 
												to be enabled to continue in the 
												faith, grounded and settled, and 
												not to be moved away from the 
												hope of the gospel, our 
												expectation of persevering in 
												the good way, and being finally 
												saved, attains a confirmation 
												and establishment: and our 
												gratitude and joy, 1 Peter 1:3, 
												our patience, purity, and 
												diligence in all the works of 
												piety and virtue, 1 
												Thessalonians 1:3, 1 John 3:3; 1 
												Corinthians 15:58, are increased 
												and confirmed in proportion 
												thereto.
 
 Verse 5
 Romans 5:5. And hope — Such hope 
												as is the fruit of faith, 
												patience, and experience, 
												namely, the full assurance of 
												hope; maketh not ashamed — Does 
												not shame and confound us with 
												disappointment, but we shall 
												certainly obtain the good things 
												hoped for; yea, we know it 
												cannot shame or disappoint us, 
												because we have already within 
												ourselves the very beginning of 
												that heaven at which it aspires. 
												For the love of God — That is, 
												love to God, arising from a 
												manifestation of his love to us, 
												even that love which constitutes 
												us at once both holy and happy, 
												and is therefore an earnest of 
												our future inheritance in our 
												hearts; that love, in the 
												perfection of which the 
												blessedness of that celestial 
												world consists; is shed abroad — 
												Greek, εκκεχυται, is poured out; 
												into our hearts, by the Holy 
												Ghost which is given unto us — 
												The efficient cause of all these 
												present blessings, and the 
												earnest of those to come. As a 
												Spirit of wisdom and revelation, 
												the Holy Ghost enables us to 
												discern God’s love to us; and as 
												a Spirit of holiness and 
												consolation, he enables us to 
												delight ourselves daily in him, 
												though for the present he 
												appoint us trials which may seem 
												rigorous and severe.
 
 Verses 6-8
 Romans 5:6-8. For — How can we 
												now doubt of God’s love, since 
												when we were without strength — 
												Either to think, will, or do any 
												thing good; were utterly 
												incapable of making any 
												atonement for our 
												transgressions, or of delivering 
												ourselves from the depth of 
												guilt and misery into which we 
												were plunged; in due time — 
												Neither too soon nor too late, 
												but in that very point of time 
												which the wisdom of God knew to 
												be more proper than any other; 
												Christ died for the ungodly — 
												For the sake, and instead of, 
												such as were enemies to God, 
												(Romans 5:10,) and could not 
												merit any favour from him: that 
												is, for Jews and Gentiles, when 
												they were, as has been proved in 
												the first three chapters, all 
												under sin. Observe, reader, 
												Christ not only died to set us 
												an example, or to procure us 
												power to follow it, but to atone 
												for our sins; for it does not 
												appear that this expression, of 
												dying for any one, has any other 
												signification than that of 
												rescuing his life by laying down 
												our own. “By the ungodly here, 
												Mr. Locke understands Gentiles, 
												as also by weak, sinners, 
												enemies, &c. They are 
												undoubtedly included; but it 
												seems very inconsistent with the 
												whole strain of the apostle’s 
												argument in the preceding 
												chapters, to confine it to them. 
												Compare Romans 3:9-20; Romans 
												3:22-23; Romans 4:5; Romans 
												5:20. I therefore,” says Dr. 
												Doddridge, “all along explain 
												such passages in the most 
												extensive sense; and think 
												nothing in the whole New 
												Testament plainer, than that the 
												gospel supposes every human 
												creature, to whom it is 
												addressed, to be in a state of 
												guilt and condemnation, and 
												incapable of being accepted with 
												God, any otherwise than through 
												the grace and mercy which it 
												proclaims. Compare John 3:16; 
												John 3:36; John 5:24; 1 John 
												3:14; Mark 16:15-16; Luke 24:47; 
												and especially 1 John 1:10, than 
												which no assertion can be more 
												positive and express.” For 
												scarcely for a righteous, or 
												rather, honest, just, and 
												unblameable man — One who gives 
												to all what is strictly their 
												due; would one be willing to die 
												— Though apprehended to be in 
												the most immediate danger: yet 
												for a good man — A kind, 
												merciful, compassionate, 
												bountiful man; peradventure some 
												would even dare to die — Every 
												word increases the strangeness 
												of the thing, and declares even 
												this to be something great and 
												unusual. But God commendeth — 
												Greek, συνιστησι, recommendeth. 
												A most elegant and proper 
												expression; for those are wont 
												to be recommended to us who were 
												before either unknown to, or 
												alienated from us. In that while 
												we were yet sinners — So far 
												from being good, that we were 
												not even just; and were not only 
												undeserving of his favour, but 
												obnoxious to wrath and 
												punishment; Christ died for us — 
												Died in our stead, that our 
												guilt might be cancelled, and we 
												brought into a state of 
												acceptance with God.
 
 Verses 9-11
 Romans 5:9-11. Much more then — 
												Since, therefore, it hath 
												pleased the blessed God to give 
												us such an unexampled display of 
												his love as this, how high may 
												our expectations rise, and how 
												confidently may we conclude, 
												that much more, being now 
												justified by his blood — Shed 
												for us: that is, by his death, 
												which is the meritorious cause 
												of our justification, while 
												faith in that blood is the 
												instrumental cause; we shall be 
												saved from wrath — From future 
												punishment, from the vengeance 
												of eternal fire; through him — 
												If he so loved us as to give his 
												Son to die for us, when we were 
												mere guilty sinners, we may 
												assure ourselves that, having 
												now constituted us righteous, 
												and accepted us as such, 
												pardoning all our sins for the 
												sake of the sacrifice of 
												Christ’s blood, he will 
												certainly save us from eternal 
												damnation; us who continue in 
												the faith, grounded and settled, 
												and are not moved away from the 
												hope of the gospel. For if when 
												we were enemies — Through the 
												perverseness of our minds, and 
												the rebellion of our lives, (see 
												Colossians 1:21;) we were 
												reconciled to God by the death 
												of his Son — Which expiated our 
												sins, and rendered God 
												reconcileable, and which 
												procured for us the Holy Spirit, 
												to remove the enmity from our 
												minds, giving us, at the same 
												time, such a display of the love 
												of God to us, as won our 
												affections over to him; much 
												more, being thus reconciled, we 
												shall be saved — Sanctified and 
												glorified; by his life — 
												Restored in order to our being 
												thus saved: that is, by his ever 
												living to make intercession, and 
												his thereby receiving for us, 
												and communicating to us, 
												continual supplies of grace. He 
												that has done the greater thing, 
												which is, of enemies to make us 
												friends, will certainly do the 
												lesser, which is, when we are 
												friends to treat us as such, and 
												be kind and gracious to us. But 
												the opposition is not only 
												between reconciling enemies, and 
												preserving friends, the latter 
												being less difficult than the 
												former, but also between 
												Christ’s death and life; his 
												life here spoken of, being not 
												his life in the flesh, but his 
												life in heaven, that life which 
												ensued after his death. See 
												Romans 14:9. Now if his death, 
												when he was crucified in 
												weakness, performed the harder 
												work, that is, reconciled his 
												enemies, shall not his life, 
												which is stronger, (for he 
												liveth by his divine power as 
												the Prince of life, that could 
												not be held in death,) effect 
												the easier work, and preserve 
												and save to the uttermost, those 
												that are already made his 
												friends? For, we are reconciled 
												by Christ humbled, and finally 
												saved by Christ exalted, it 
												being in consequence of his 
												exaltation to the right hand of 
												God, and his being invested with 
												all power in heaven and on 
												earth, and made head over all 
												things to his church, that he 
												completes and consummates our 
												salvation. And not only so — 
												Namely, that we should be 
												reconciled and saved; but we 
												also joy, Greek, καυχωμενοι, 
												glory, in God — In the relation 
												in which he stands to us as our 
												God, and in all his glorious and 
												boundless perfections, which we 
												see are engaged for us; through 
												our Lord Jesus Christ — By whom 
												we are introduced into this 
												happy state, who is our peace, 
												and hath made God and us one; by 
												whom we have now — That we are 
												believers; received the 
												atonement — Greek, την 
												καταλλαγην, the reconciliation. 
												So the word signifies, and in 
												all other passages where it 
												occurs is so translated, being 
												derived from the verb 
												καταλλασσω, which is twice 
												rendered reconcile in the 
												preceding verse, and to which it 
												has so apparent a reference, 
												that it is surprising it should 
												have been here rendered by so 
												different a word as atonement, 
												especially as it is quite 
												improper to speak of our 
												receiving an atonement which God 
												receives as made for our sins. 
												But, when we are made true 
												believers in Christ, we receive 
												the reconciliation, and that not 
												only averts the terrors of God’s 
												wrath, but opens upon us all the 
												blessings of his perpetual 
												friendship and love; so that the 
												Father and the Son come unto us, 
												and make their abode with us, 
												John 14:23; and we know and 
												believe the love that he hath to 
												us, and in consequence thereof 
												dwell in love, and therefore 
												dwell in God, and God in us. The 
												whole paragraph from Romans 
												5:3-11 may be taken together 
												thus: We not only rejoice in 
												hope of the glory of God, but 
												also in the midst of 
												tribulations, we glory in God 
												himself through our Lord Jesus 
												Christ, by whom we have received 
												the reconciliation.
 
 Verse 12-13
 Romans 5:12-13. Wherefore — This 
												refers to all the preceding 
												discourse, from which the 
												apostle infers what follows: he 
												does not therefore make a 
												digression, but returns to speak 
												again of sin and righteousness; 
												as if he had said, “We may from 
												these premises infer, that the 
												benefit which we believers 
												receive from Christ is equal to 
												the detriment we derive from 
												Adam; yea, is on the whole 
												greater than that.” For, as by 
												one man — That is, Adam, the 
												common father of the human 
												species; (he is mentioned, and 
												not Eve, as being the 
												representative of mankind;) sin 
												entered into the world — Actual 
												sin, namely, the transgression 
												of Adam and its consequence, a 
												sinful nature, which took place 
												in him, through his first sin, 
												and which he conveyed to all his 
												posterity; and death — With all 
												its attendants. It entered into 
												the world when it entered into 
												being; for till then it did not 
												exist; by sin — Therefore it 
												could not enter in before sin; 
												and so — Namely, by one man; 
												death passed — From one 
												generation to another; upon all 
												men, for that all have sinned — 
												Namely, in Adam, their 
												representative, and as being in 
												his loins. That is, they are so 
												far involved in his first 
												transgression and its 
												consequences, and so certainly 
												derive a sinful nature from him, 
												that they become obnoxious to 
												death. Instead of, for that, Dr. 
												Doddridge renders εφ’ ω, unto 
												which, (namely, unto death, 
												mentioned in the preceding 
												clause,) all have sinned. In 
												which ever way the expression is 
												rendered, the words are 
												evidently intended to assign the 
												reason why death came upon all 
												men, infants themselves not 
												excepted. For until the law — 
												For, from the fall of Adam, unto 
												the time when God gave the law 
												by Moses, as well as after it; 
												sin was in the world — As 
												appeared by the continual 
												execution of its punishment; 
												that is, death: but — It is a 
												self- evident principle that sin 
												is not, and cannot be, imputed 
												where there is no law — Since 
												the very essence of sin consists 
												in the violation of a law. And 
												consequently, since we see, in 
												fact, that sin was imputed, we 
												must conclude that the persons, 
												to whose account it was charged, 
												were under some law. Now this, 
												with respect to infants, could 
												not be the law of nature, (any 
												more than the law of Moses,) for 
												infants could not transgress 
												that; it must therefore have 
												been the law given to Adam, the 
												transgression whereof is, in 
												some sense, imputed to all, even 
												to infants, he being the 
												representative of all his 
												posterity, and they all being in 
												his loins. In other words, they 
												do not die for any actual sins 
												of their own, being incapable, 
												while in infancy, of committing 
												any, but through Adam’s sin 
												alone.
 
 Verse 14
 Romans 5:14. Nevertheless — 
												Though the law was not yet given 
												by Moses, yet sin was in the 
												world, and was imputed, as 
												appears by this, that death, 
												which is the punishment of sin, 
												was in the world at that time, 
												and reigned — Brought all under 
												its power, from Adam to Moses — 
												As Romans 5:21, and Romans 6:12, 
												even over them, &c. — Not only 
												over them that had sinned after 
												the similitude of Adam’s 
												transgression, but also over 
												infants that had not committed 
												actual sin, as Adam had done, 
												and over others who had not, 
												like him, sinned against an 
												express law. Who is the figure 
												of him that was to come — A 
												lively type of Christ in his 
												public capacity, each of them 
												being a public person, and a 
												federal head of mankind: the one 
												the fountain of sin and death to 
												mankind by his offence, the 
												other of righteousness and life 
												by his free gift. Thus far the 
												apostle shows the agreement 
												between the first and second 
												Adam: afterward he shows the 
												difference between them. The 
												agreement may be summed up thus: 
												As by one man sin entered into 
												the world, and death by sin; so 
												by one man righteousness entered 
												into the world, and life by 
												righteousness. As death passed 
												upon all men, in that all had 
												sinned; so life passed upon all 
												men, (who are in the second Adam 
												by faith,) in that all are 
												justified. And as death, through 
												the sin of the first Adam, 
												reigned even over them who had 
												not sinned after the likeness of 
												Adam’s transgression: so through 
												the righteousness of Christ, 
												even those who have not obeyed 
												after the likeness of his 
												obedience, shall reign in life. 
												We may add, as the sin of Adam, 
												without the sins which we 
												afterward committed, brought us 
												death: so the righteousness of 
												Christ, without the good works 
												which we afterward perform, 
												brings us life, although still 
												every good as well as evil work 
												will receive its due reward.
 
 Verse 15-16
 Romans 5:15-16. But not as the 
												offence, &c. — The apostle now 
												describes the difference between 
												Adam and Christ, and that much 
												more directly and expressly than 
												the agreement between them. Now, 
												the fall and the free gift 
												differ, 1st, In amplitude, 
												Romans 5:15; Romans 2 d, He, 
												from whom sin came, and He from 
												whom the free gift came, (termed 
												also the gift of righteousness,) 
												differ in power, Romans 5:16; 
												Romans 3 d, The reason of both 
												is subjoined, Romans 5:17; 
												Romans 4 th, This premised, the 
												offence and the free gift are 
												compared with regard to their 
												effect, Romans 5:18. And with 
												regard to their cause, Romans 
												5:19. Not as the offence — The 
												sin of Adam, and the misery that 
												follows upon it; so also is the 
												free gift — The benefit that 
												arises to us from the obedience 
												of Christ; that is, there is not 
												a perfect equality and 
												proportion between the evil that 
												comes through Adam, and the 
												benefit that comes by Christ: 
												they are not equal in their 
												influence and efficacy. For if 
												through the offence of one many 
												be dead — If the transgression 
												of one mere man was effectual to 
												bring down death, condemnation, 
												and wrath upon all his 
												posterity, or natural seed; much 
												more the grace of God — His love 
												and favour; and the gift — The 
												salvation; by grace, which is by 
												one man — Who, however, is God 
												as well as man; even Jesus 
												Christ — The 
												divinely-commissioned and 
												anointed Saviour; hath abounded 
												unto many — Is more abundantly 
												efficacious to procure 
												reconciliation, pardon, 
												righteousness, and life, for all 
												that will accept them, and 
												become his spiritual seed. The 
												apostle’s design here is to 
												compare Adam’s sin and Christ’s 
												obedience, in respect of their 
												virtue and efficacy, and to show 
												that the efficacy of Christ’s 
												obedience must needs be much 
												more abundant than that of 
												Adam’s sin. And not, &c. — As 
												there is a difference in respect 
												of the persons from whom these 
												effects are derived, and the 
												advantage is on the side of 
												Christ; so there is a difference 
												also in respect of the extent of 
												the efficacy of their acts: 
												thus, one sin brought 
												condemnation; the mischief arose 
												from one offence: here not only 
												that one sin, but also many 
												sins, — yea, all the sins of 
												believers, — are pardoned, and 
												their nature is renewed: so that 
												the benefit exceeds the 
												mischief. For the judgment — The 
												guilt which exposed to judgment; 
												was by one — Namely, by one 
												offence; to Adam’s condemnation 
												— Occasioning the sentence of 
												death to be passed upon him, 
												which, by consequence, 
												overwhelmed his posterity: but 
												the free gift — To χαρισμα, the 
												gift of grace, is of many 
												offences — Extends to the pardon 
												not only of that original sin, 
												but of all other personal and 
												actual sins; unto justification 
												— Unto the purchasing of it for 
												all men, notwithstanding their 
												many offences, and the 
												conferring of it upon all the 
												truly penitent that believe in 
												Christ.
 
 Verse 17
 Romans 5:17. For, &c. — Here he 
												shows the difference in respect 
												of the consequence of those 
												acts, or the different nature of 
												the effects, that death came 
												from one, life from the other; 
												as if he had said, Moreover, 
												there is another important 
												article, in which the grace of 
												the gospel exceeds the seeming 
												severity which attended the 
												imputation of guilt from our 
												first father, Adam, namely, 
												that, if by one man’s offence 
												death reigned by one — Over all 
												his posterity, as we observed 
												above; they who receive — By 
												faith, John 1:12; abundance of 
												grace — An abundant measure of 
												God’s love, of the influences of 
												his Spirit, and the gift of 
												righteousness, exhibited in the 
												gospel; namely, those benefits 
												which Christ, by his obedience 
												unto death, has purchased for 
												us; shall much more reign in 
												life, by one — The great 
												restorer and recoverer of his 
												seed; Jesus Christ — That is, 
												believers shall by him be 
												brought to a much nobler and 
												more excellent life than that 
												from which Adam fell, and which 
												they lost in him.
 
 Verse 18-19
 Romans 5:18-19. Therefore, &c. — 
												Here the apostle compares Christ 
												and Adam together again, as he 
												began to do Romans 5:12, with 
												which this verse seems to be 
												connected, (all the intermediate 
												verses coming in as a 
												parenthesis,) and he makes the 
												comparison full in both members; 
												which there, by reason of 
												intervening matter, was left off 
												imperfect. As if he had said, On 
												the whole you see, as I began to 
												observe to you before, that as 
												by the offence of one, judgment 
												came upon all men to 
												condemnation — Or, the 
												condemnatory sentence was passed 
												upon all men; even so, by the 
												righteousness of one — The 
												obedience of Christ, the free 
												gift — Or gift of grace; came 
												upon all men — Is provided for, 
												and offered to, the whole human 
												race, and is actually conferred 
												on all the spiritual seed of the 
												second Adam, on all true 
												believers; unto justification of 
												life — Unto that justification 
												by grace through faith, whereby 
												we have a right and title to 
												eternal life. Or, leaving out 
												the words in Italics, which are 
												not in the original, the verse 
												may be paraphrased thus: “As the 
												consequence of one offence on 
												the one hand extended to all 
												men, to bring condemnation upon 
												them; so also, on the other 
												side, the consequence of one 
												grand act of righteousness 
												extended to all men, who receive 
												and embrace it; securing to them 
												that justification which will be 
												crowned with the enjoyment of 
												eternal life.” For, as by one 
												man’s disobedience many — That 
												is, all men; were made, or 
												constituted sinners — Being then 
												in the loins of their first 
												parent, the common head and 
												representative of them all, and 
												became obnoxious to death; so by 
												the obedience of one — By his 
												obedience unto death, by his 
												dying for us; many — Namely, all 
												that believe with a faith 
												working by love; shall be, or 
												are, constituted righteous — 
												That is, pardoned, justified, 
												and sanctified, and shall be 
												treated as such in the day of 
												God’s final account; though they 
												have no perfect righteousness of 
												their own to plead, in 
												consequence of which they should 
												stand before God and claim the 
												reward. With respect to Dr. 
												Taylor’s scheme of 
												interpretation, it is justly 
												observed here by Dr. Doddridge, 
												that although “to become liable 
												to death for the offence of 
												another is indeed being thereby 
												constituted, or rather treated, 
												as a sinner, since death is in 
												its primary view to be 
												considered as the wages of sin, 
												or the animadversion of a 
												righteous God upon it;” yet, 
												“simply to be raised from the 
												dead is not being made 
												righteous, or treated as a 
												righteous person; since it is a 
												very supposable case, and will 
												in fact be the case of millions, 
												that a sinner may be raised in 
												order to more condign and 
												dreadful punishment. The whole 
												interpretation, therefore, which 
												Dr. Taylor has given of this 
												text, in this view, appears to 
												me destitute of a sufficient 
												foundation.”
 
 Romans 5:20-21, Moreover the law 
												entered — Made a little 
												entrance, as Dr. Doddridge 
												translates παρε ισηλθεν; the 
												sense also given it by the 
												Vulgate, sub intravit. Thus the 
												partial and limited entrance of 
												the law is distinguished from 
												that universal entrance of sin 
												which passed on all. Others, 
												however, as L’Enfant and Wesley, 
												render it, The law intervened, 
												or came between Adam and Christ, 
												the offence and the free gift; 
												that the offence might abound — 
												That is, the consequence (not 
												the design) of the law’s coming 
												in, was not the taking away of 
												sin, but the increase of it; yet 
												where sin abounded, grace did 
												much more abound — Not only in 
												the remission of that sin which 
												Adam brought on us, but of all 
												our own sins; not only in 
												remission of sins, but infusion 
												of holiness; not only in 
												deliverance from death, but 
												admission to everlasting life; a 
												far more noble and excellent 
												life than that which we lost by 
												Adam’s fall. That as sin hath 
												reigned unto death — In the wide 
												and universal destruction made 
												of those whom it had brought 
												under that fatal sentence; so 
												grace might reign — Which could 
												not reign before the fall, 
												before man had sinned; through 
												righteousness — Imputed, 
												implanted, and practised; 
												through the justification of 
												men’s persons, the renovation of 
												their nature, and their 
												practical obedience to God’s 
												holy law; unto eternal life by 
												Jesus Christ our Lord — Here is 
												pointed out, 1st, The source of 
												all our blessings, the rich and 
												free grace of God. 2d, The 
												meritorious cause; not any works 
												or righteousness of man, but the 
												alone merits of our Lord Jesus 
												Christ. 3d, The effect or end of 
												all; not only pardon, but life, 
												divine life, leading to glory.
 |