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												Verses 1-3Romans 7:1-3. Know ye not, 
												brethren — The apostle, having 
												shown that justified and 
												regenerated persons are free 
												from the dominion of sin, shows 
												here that they are also free 
												from the yoke of the Mosaic law, 
												it being dead to them, Romans 
												7:6; and they to it, Romans 7:4 
												: for I speak to them that know 
												the law — To the Jews or 
												proselytes chiefly here; that 
												the law — The Mosaic 
												dispensation in general, to 
												which you were espoused by 
												Moses; hath dominion over a man 
												— Over a Jew married to it, and 
												engaged to observe it; as long 
												as he — Rather, as long as it 
												liveth; that is, abideth in 
												force, and no longer. For it 
												would be contrary to the 
												apostle’s design, to suppose the 
												sense of this to be as our 
												translation renders it, as long 
												as he, that is, the man in 
												question, liveth; for he 
												professedly endeavours to prove 
												that they had outlived their 
												obligations to the law. But the 
												rendering here proposed is 
												natural, and suits the 
												connection with the following 
												verses, in which the law is 
												represented as their first 
												husband, whose decease left them 
												free to be married to Christ. 
												The law is here spoken of, by a 
												common figure, as a person to 
												which, as to a husband, life and 
												death are ascribed. It is as if 
												he had said, The dominion of the 
												law over particular persons can, 
												at the utmost, last no longer 
												than till it is itself 
												abrogated; for that is, as it 
												were, its death; since the 
												divine authority going along 
												with it was the very life and 
												soul of it. Suppose that to 
												cease, and the letter of the 
												precept becomes but a dead 
												thing, and with respect to its 
												obligations, as if it had never 
												been. But he speaks 
												indifferently of the law being 
												dead to us, or us to it, the 
												sense being the same. For the 
												woman, &c. — Just as it is, 
												according to the law itself, 
												with respect to the power of a 
												husband over his wife, who is 
												bound by the law to be subject 
												to her husband so long as he 
												liveth —
 
 The law here referred to is not 
												merely that particular branch of 
												the law of Moses which respected 
												marriage, but also and 
												especially the law of marriage 
												promulgated in paradise, Genesis 
												2:24; whereby our Lord declared 
												marriages were appointed to 
												continue for life, except in the 
												case of adultery, Matthew 19:6. 
												This argument was peculiarly 
												adapted to the Jews, whose 
												connection with God, as their 
												king, was represented by God 
												himself under the idea of a 
												marriage, solemnized with them 
												at Sinai. But if the husband — 
												To whom she was bound, be dead, 
												she is loosed —
 
 From that law, which gave him a 
												peculiar property in her. So 
												then, if while her husband 
												liveth, γενηται ανδρι ετερω, she 
												become the property of another 
												man, &c. — The apostle, says 
												Theodoret, “does not consider 
												here the permission given by the 
												law of Moses to the woman 
												divorced to be married to 
												another, as being taught by 
												Christ not to approve of such 
												divorces; but he seems only to 
												intimate that she had no power 
												to dissolve this bond by putting 
												away her husband, or that this 
												divorce rendered her husband 
												dead in law to her, she being 
												not to return to him again. 
												Deuteronomy 24:4.” Perhaps we 
												ought rather to say, he speaks 
												in the general, not entering 
												exactly into every excepted case 
												that might be imagined. To 
												infer, therefore, hence, as some 
												have done, that adultery is not 
												a sufficient foundation for 
												divorce, is very unreasonable. 
												But if her husband be dead, she 
												is free from that law — Which 
												bound her to be in subjection, 
												and yield conjugal affection to 
												her husband only; so that she is 
												no more an adulteress — Subject 
												to the shame and punishment of 
												one; though she be married, 
												γενομενην ανδοι ετερω, becoming 
												the property of another man; for 
												death, having interposed between 
												them, hath dissolved the former 
												relation. He is dead to her, and 
												she to him.
 
 Verse 4
 Romans 7:4. Wherefore, my 
												brethren — Hence it follows, or 
												by this comparison it appears; 
												ye also — Believing Jews, and 
												much more believing Gentiles; 
												are become dead to the law — 
												Taken off from all hopes of 
												justification by it, and 
												confidence in your obedience to 
												it: and so likewise it has 
												become dead to you, and has no 
												life or efficacy in these 
												respects; by the body of Christ 
												— By the offering up of Christ’s 
												body on the cross; that is, by 
												the merit of his death, by which 
												it evidently appears, that there 
												is no other way of making 
												reconciliation for sin, or of 
												obtaining deliverance from wrath 
												but by that; his death and 
												sufferings having now 
												accomplished the design of the 
												law, and abrogated its 
												authority; and it, therefore, 
												expiring with him. That ye 
												should be married to another — 
												(2 Corinthians 11:2;) so that 
												you must now give up yourselves 
												to Christ, as your second 
												husband, that you may be 
												justified by faith in him. The 
												apostle speaks of Christ as the 
												husband of the believing Jews, 
												because he was now become their 
												Lord and head; and he calls him 
												another husband, because they 
												had been formerly, as it were, 
												married to the Mosaic law, and 
												relied on that alone for 
												salvation. And the crucifixion 
												of their old man, or corrupt 
												nature, and their obtaining a 
												new nature, through the death of 
												Christ, was a fit preparation of 
												them for being espoused to 
												Christ. Who is raised from the 
												dead — Who is alive himself, and 
												will bestow spiritual life on 
												those that believe on him, and 
												give up themselves to him; that 
												we should bring forth fruit — 
												Namely, of holiness and good 
												works, Galatians 5:22; unto God 
												— To his glory, Matthew 5:16; 
												John 15:8; Philippians 1:11. In 
												this passage the union of Christ 
												with his people is represented 
												as a marriage, as it is also 
												Ephesians 5:31-32; Revelation 
												21:9; Revelation 22:17. The 
												apostles probably took that idea 
												from the ancient phraseology 
												concerning the Jews. See on 
												Romans 7:2. But from whatever 
												source it was derived, it is a 
												strong representation of the 
												friendship and endearment which 
												subsists, and to all eternity 
												will subsist, between Christ and 
												believers, and of the happiness 
												which they will derive from his 
												love to them, and from their 
												entire subjection to him.
 
 Verse 5-6
 Romans 7:5-6. For — We ought now 
												to be fruitful in good works, 
												because we were formerly 
												fruitful in evil: when we were 
												in the flesh — Under the 
												comparatively carnal 
												dispensation of Moses, and in 
												our natural corrupt state, 
												before we believed on Christ and 
												were regenerated. Thus, οι οντες 
												εν σαρκι, they that are in the 
												flesh, and οι κατα σαρκα οντες, 
												they that are after the flesh, 
												(Romans 8:5; Romans 8:8,) 
												signify those that are 
												influenced and governed by the 
												fleshly principle, in opposition 
												to the guidance and influences 
												of the Holy Spirit; and ειναι εν 
												σαρκι, to be in the flesh,
 
 (Romans 7:9,) ζην περιπατειν 
												κατα σαρκα, to live, to walk 
												according to the flesh, (Romans 
												7:12-13,) bear the same sense. 
												It is evident, therefore, as Dr. 
												Whitby justly observes, that 
												this expression, when we were in 
												the flesh, not only signifies to 
												be under the carnal ordinances 
												of the law, for so were all the 
												pious Jews, who lived from Moses 
												to gospel times; but that it 
												more especially relates to them 
												who, living under these 
												ordinances, were themselves 
												carnal, and so had the law of 
												the flesh still warring against 
												the law of their minds, and 
												bringing them into captivity to 
												the law of sin, which could not 
												be the state of Zacharias and 
												Elisabeth, or any other of those 
												persons who were righteous 
												before God, and walked in all 
												the commandments of the Lord 
												blameless. And if of such 
												[unregenerate persons] only, we 
												understand the apostle’s 
												following discourse in this 
												chapter, the sense will be 
												clear. The motions of sins — τα 
												παθηματα των αμαρτιων, sinful 
												passions; which were by the law 
												— Accidentally occasioned or 
												irritated thereby; did work in 
												our members — Spread themselves 
												all over the whole man; to bring 
												forth fruit — Very different 
												from that which has just been 
												mentioned, even such as would 
												have been unto death, Romans 
												6:21; Romans 6:23; that is, 
												would have exposed us to, and 
												have issued in, eternal death, 
												if God in his mercy had not 
												interposed, and brought us 
												acquainted with the gospel. But 
												now — Being brought out of that 
												carnal state; we are delivered 
												from the law — Set at liberty 
												from our subjection to it as a 
												law, and our obligation to 
												observe it, and from the 
												condemning, irritating power 
												thereof, and therefore from the 
												sinful passions occasioned by 
												it; that being dead wherein we 
												were held — In subjection, as 
												the wife to her living husband; 
												that law being now made void, 
												and having no further power to 
												condemn us. It may be proper to 
												observe here, that the Syriac 
												and Arabic versions, Origen, 
												Theodoret, Œcumenius, and 
												Theophylact, (with whom agree 
												Bengelius, Mill, Macknight, and 
												others,) read αποθανοντες, we 
												being dead to that by which we 
												were held: which, says Origen, 
												is undoubtedly the best reading, 
												agreeing with Romans 7:4, ye are 
												become dead to the law. That we 
												should serve — God and our 
												generation; in newness of spirit 
												— In a new and spiritual manner; 
												and not in the oldness of the 
												letter — Not in a bare, literal, 
												external way, as we did before. 
												The new service here enjoined 
												implies, 1st, A freedom from the 
												dominion of the flesh, by the 
												power of the Spirit enabling us 
												to mortify the deeds and lusts 
												of the flesh, Romans 8:13. 2d, 
												The serving God, not chiefly 
												with bodily services and carnal 
												ordinances, but in the spirit of 
												our minds, Romans 12:2; 
												Philippians 3:3; having our 
												minds renewed and transformed 
												after the image of God, in 
												righteousness and true holiness, 
												which are the fruits of the 
												Spirit. 3d, The serving him by 
												the continual aid of his Spirit, 
												strengthening us with might in 
												the inner man, Ephesians 3:16, 
												so as to live and walk in the 
												Spirit, or to live as those who 
												are renewed by the Spirit, and 
												possessed of his various graces. 
												With regard to the believing 
												Jews in particular, it implies, 
												that being loosed from the 
												Mosaic law, they were no longer 
												to worship and serve God with 
												rites and ceremonies pertaining 
												to their flesh, but with 
												services of their spirit, 
												consisting in faith, love, and 
												new obedience. From this, 
												however, we must not infer that 
												the pious Jews under the law did 
												not serve God with spiritual 
												services: all the services in 
												which true piety and morality 
												consist, were enjoined in the 
												covenant with Abraham, and were 
												practised by the pious 
												Israelites. But to these the law 
												of Moses added numberless 
												services pertaining to the body, 
												from which the converted Jews 
												were freed since their embracing 
												the gospel.
 
 Verse 7-8
 Romans 7:7-8. What shall we say 
												then? — This, to the beginning 
												of the next chapter, is a kind 
												of digression, wherein the 
												apostle, in order to show, in 
												the most lively manner, the 
												weakness and inefficacy of the 
												law, changes the person, and 
												speaks as of himself. This he 
												frequently does when he is not 
												speaking of his own person, but 
												only assuming another character. 
												See Romans 3:7; 1 Corinthians 
												10:30; 1 Corinthians 4:6. The 
												character here assumed is that 
												of an unrenewed, unregenerated 
												man; first, ignorant of the 
												spirituality and holiness of the 
												law, then acquainted therewith, 
												and convinced of his depravity 
												and weakness thereby, and 
												sincerely but ineffectually 
												striving to serve God. To have 
												spoken this of himself, or of 
												any true believer, would have 
												been foreign to the whole scope 
												of his discourse; nay, utterly 
												contrary thereto, as well as to 
												what is expressly asserted 
												Romans 8:2. Is the law sin? — 
												Macknight connects this with the 
												preceding words thus: What then, 
												do we say that the law is sin? 
												is a bad institution, that 
												causes or encourages sin? that 
												there is any moral evil in it, 
												or that it is intended by God, 
												or adapted in its own nature, to 
												lead men into sin? That this is 
												the apostle’s meaning is plain 
												from Romans 7:12, where he 
												mentions, by way of inference, 
												the proposition which his 
												reasoning was designed to prove, 
												namely, the law is holy, &c. God 
												forbid — We revere the high 
												authority by which it was given 
												too much to insinuate any thing 
												of that kind. Nay, I had not 
												known sin — Either not at all, 
												or not clearly and fully: I had 
												not known its evil nature and 
												destructive consequences; nor, 
												in many instances, what really 
												was sin; but by the law — As the 
												apostle is speaking of the law 
												of Moses, and, as appears from 
												the last clause of the verse, of 
												the moral law, the quotation 
												there being from the tenth 
												commandment, his words must not 
												be understood universally. “For 
												it is not to be supposed that 
												the reason and conscience of the 
												heathen gave them no knowledge 
												at all of their sins; the 
												contrary is affirmed by the 
												apostle, Romans 2:14. 
												Nevertheless, the most 
												enlightened among them had but 
												an imperfect knowledge of the 
												nature and demerit of sin in 
												general, and of the number and 
												aggravations of their own sins 
												in particular, compared with the 
												knowledge of these things which 
												they would have derived from 
												revelation. The truth is, they 
												fancied many things to be 
												innocent which were real 
												enormities; and many things 
												trivial sins which were very 
												heinous, as is evident from 
												their writings. The inference to 
												be drawn, therefore, is, that 
												since the law discovers, or 
												forbids and condemns sin, in 
												order that it may be avoided, it 
												does not directly promote it, 
												but only by accident, by reason 
												of the corruption of our nature. 
												For I had not known lust — To be 
												sin; επιθυμιαν, desire — That 
												is, the desire of an unlawful 
												thing, or the inordinate desire 
												of what is lawful. The word 
												signifies desire, or, as Dr. 
												Macknight renders it, strong 
												desire, whether good or bad. 
												Here it is used in the bad 
												sense, as it is likewise 1 John 
												2:16; επιθυμια της σαρκος, the 
												lust of the flesh. “But it 
												signifies strong desire of a 
												good kind also, Luke 22:15 : 
												επιθυμια επεθυμησα, I have 
												strongly desired to eat this 
												passover. 1 Thessalonians 2:17, 
												Endeavoured the more abundantly, 
												πολλη επιθυμια, with great 
												desire, to see your face. Except 
												the law had said, Thou shalt not 
												covet — In this commandment, the 
												desire that is forbidden is of 
												what belongs to others. Now, as 
												the operation of such a desire 
												is to prompt men to acts of 
												injustice, the existence of it 
												in the mind is obviously sin, 
												because it could not hold its 
												place there for any length of 
												time, unless it were indulged. 
												However, the knowledge that 
												strong desire, not exerted in 
												outward actions, is sin, is not 
												very obvious; and therefore the 
												apostle ascribes it to the 
												information given us by the 
												revealed law of God.” But sin — 
												But what I say is, not that the 
												law is sin, but that sin, 
												namely, the corrupt inclination 
												of fallen nature; taking 
												occasion by the commandment — 
												Forbidding but not subduing it, 
												and being excited, quickened, 
												and drawn forth into action by 
												it; wrought in me — While 
												unrenewed; all manner of 
												concupiscence — Every kind of 
												evil desire; inclinations to 
												sins of all sorts. This evil 
												principle in human nature is 
												acknowledged even by heathen, 
												whose words are frequently 
												quoted in illustration of it:
 
 Gens humana ruit per vetitum 
												nefas: Nitimur in vetitum 
												semper, cupimusque negata.
 
 “Mankind rush into wickedness, 
												and always desire what is 
												forbidden.”
 
 The reader will observe, that 
												this, which appears to be the 
												true sense of the words, namely, 
												that the prohibitions of the law 
												awaken and irritate men’s evil 
												desires, supposes such desires 
												to exist in the mind previous to 
												these prohibitions, and that 
												these desires, with other evil 
												dispositions, prompt men to make 
												trial of things forbidden, the 
												inclination of human nature 
												being too generally like that of 
												a froward child, who will do a 
												thing because it was forbidden; 
												and perhaps is, as it were, 
												reminded of an evil, on hearing 
												it mentioned in a prohibition. 
												It must not, however, be 
												supposed, that all evil desire 
												arises from hence; for fleshly 
												appetites, and other strong 
												desires, which prevail in men’s 
												minds, do not owe either their 
												existence or their operation to 
												the prohibitions and penalties 
												of the law, or to the knowledge 
												thereof; but only their power to 
												kill, of which, therefore, 
												Macknight interprets the words. 
												For without the law sin was dead 
												— Neither so apparent nor so 
												active; nor was I under the 
												least apprehension of any danger 
												from it. Sin, which he still 
												represents as a person, would 
												have had no being, or at least 
												no strength to kill men, had not 
												the law, revealed or natural, 
												existed; for the essence of sin 
												consists in its being a 
												violation of law. Though the 
												apostle speaks this primarily 
												and directly of the law of 
												Moses, it is equally true of the 
												law of nature, and may be 
												applied to the state of mankind 
												before the law of Moses was 
												given. For unless there had been 
												a law written in men’s hearts, 
												sin would have been dead, or 
												have had neither existence nor 
												power to kill.
 
 Verses 9-11
 Romans 7:9-11. For I was alive — 
												In my own conceit; without the 
												law — Without the proper 
												knowledge of its spirituality, 
												extent, and obligation. I 
												apprehended myself to be 
												righteous, and in the way to 
												life eternal; but when the 
												commandment came — That is, the 
												law; (a part being put for the 
												whole;) but this expression 
												particularly intimates its 
												compulsive force, which 
												restrains, enjoins, urges, 
												forbids, threatens; — when, in 
												its spiritual meaning, it came 
												to my heart: or, when the 
												spiritual meaning and full 
												extent of the law, condemning 
												desires of evil, was brought 
												home, and closely applied to my 
												conscience by the Spirit of God; 
												sin revived — My conscience was 
												awakened and convinced, and I 
												found myself guilty of many 
												sins, which before I perceived 
												not, and a lively sense of the 
												guilt of them was imprinted on 
												my soul; and I died — My virtue 
												and strength died away, and my 
												former persuasions vanished: for 
												I saw myself to be dead in sin, 
												in a state of condemnation, and 
												liable to death eternal. And the 
												commandment — The law; which was 
												ordained to life — Which 
												promised life to them that kept 
												it, saying, The man that doeth 
												these things shall live in, or 
												by them; and which, if rightly 
												used, would have been a means of 
												increasing spiritual life, and 
												leading to life everlasting. 
												“The law of nature, and its 
												transcript in the moral precepts 
												of the law of Moses, were 
												intended for life; because the 
												threatening of death for every 
												offence, is virtually a promise 
												of life to those who obey 
												perfectly. This appears from the 
												law given to Adam in paradise.” 
												I found to be unto death — To be 
												attended with deadly 
												consequences, both as it 
												consigned me over to destruction 
												for past sin, and occasionally, 
												though not intentionally, proved 
												productive of new guilt and 
												misery. Perfect obedience being 
												impossible, according to the 
												present state of human nature, 
												the law, which threatens death 
												for every offence, necessarily 
												ends in death to the sinner, 
												although it was originally 
												intended to give life to the 
												obedient. For sin, as I said 
												before, (see on Romans 7:8,) 
												taking occasion by the 
												commandment — Prohibiting it 
												under the severest penalties, 
												but affording me no help against 
												it; deceived me — Came upon me 
												unawares, while I was expecting 
												life by the law; and by it slew 
												me — Slew all my hopes, by 
												bringing me under guilt, 
												condemnation, and wrath. In 
												other words, Satan, the grand 
												enemy of mankind, and author of 
												sin, finding a law which 
												threatened death to the 
												transgression of it, takes 
												occasion thence more earnestly 
												to tempt and allure us to the 
												violation of it, that so he may 
												more effectually subject us to 
												condemnation and death upon that 
												account. Thus, when God had 
												forbidden, under the pain of 
												death, the eating of the 
												forbidden fruit, Satan thence 
												took occasion to tempt our first 
												parents to the breach of it, and 
												so slew them, or made them 
												subject to death. Dr. Doddridge 
												paraphrases the verse rather 
												differently, thus: “Sin, taking 
												occasion by the terror and curse 
												of the violated commandment, and 
												representing the great Lawgiver 
												as now become my irreconcileable 
												enemy, deceived me into a 
												persuasion that I could be no 
												worse than I was, and thereby it 
												slew me; it multiplied my mortal 
												wounds, and rendered my case 
												still more desperate.” Instead 
												of sin taking occasion, Dr. 
												Macknight renders αφορμην 
												λαβουσα, taking the opportunity, 
												an expression which he thinks 
												less likely to countenance the 
												idea, that men’s evil desires 
												are owing to the prohibitions of 
												the law; to suppose which, would 
												be to make God the author of sin 
												by his law. “The apostle’s 
												meaning,” says he, “is, that sin 
												took the opportunity of men 
												being under the commandment, 
												first to deceive, and then to 
												kill them.” According to 
												Bengelius, the most approved 
												copies read, not, sin taking 
												occasion or opportunity by the 
												commandment, but, by the 
												commandment deceived and slew 
												me; connecting the commandment, 
												not with the former, but with 
												the latter clause of the verse. 
												In the words, deceived me, there 
												seems to be an allusion to the 
												excuse which Eve made for eating 
												the forbidden fruit. The serpent 
												deceived me, by assuring me that 
												I should not die. “The apostle 
												speaks of a two-fold opportunity 
												taken by sin, while men are 
												under the commandment. The first 
												is, sinful dispositions, 
												deceiving men into the belief 
												that the prohibitions of the law 
												are unreasonable, that the thing 
												forbidden is pleasant or 
												profitable, and that it will not 
												be followed with punishment, 
												persuade them to do it. This was 
												the serpent’s discourse to Eve; 
												and it is what men’s sinful 
												inclinations always suggest to 
												them. The second opportunity 
												which sin takes under the 
												commandment, is that of killing 
												the sinner by the curse annexed 
												to the commandment which he hath 
												broken.”
 
 Verse 12-13
 Romans 7:12-13. Wherefore — 
												Since then, by what has been 
												said, it appears that the law is 
												not the cause of sin or death, 
												except indirectly and by 
												accident, it must be acquitted 
												from this charge, and 
												acknowledged to be holy; and the 
												commandment — The preceptive 
												part of the moral law, and every 
												particular precept of it; is 
												holy, just, and good — It 
												springs from and partakes of the 
												holy nature of God; tends only 
												to promote holiness and a 
												conformity to God, and 
												prescribes our duty to God in 
												his worship and service. It is 
												every way just and right in 
												itself, and commands nothing but 
												what is agreeable to those 
												common apprehensions of right 
												and equity which are imprinted 
												in our natures: it is designed 
												wholly for the good of man, 1 
												Timothy 1:8, and is really 
												profitable and conducive to our 
												good, both temporal and eternal, 
												and subservient to the common 
												interest of mankind. Was then 
												that which is good made the 
												cause of evil to me? — Yea, of 
												death, which is the greatest of 
												evils? Was it made the proper 
												and direct cause of death? Not 
												so: But it was sin, which was 
												made death to me, inasmuch as it 
												wrought death in me, even by 
												that which is good. Here the 
												apostle clearly distinguishes 
												between a proper cause and an 
												occasion, or cause by accident. 
												The law is the occasion of death 
												to sinners; but sin is the 
												proper or efficient cause of 
												that evil. That it might appear 
												sin — Might appear superlatively 
												vile; working death in me by 
												that which is good — By the good 
												law: that sin by the commandment 
												— Manifesting and forbidding it, 
												and thereby awakening and 
												irritating it; might become 
												exceeding sinful — That, being 
												quickened and excited by so 
												innocent and holy a thing as the 
												commandment, it might thereby 
												show its horrid and vile nature; 
												the guilt of it being hereby 
												greatly aggravated. “Our 
												translators suppose that 
												αμαρτωλος [rendered sinful] is 
												put here for the adjective. But, 
												as Beza observes, it is used as 
												a substantive, and signifies a 
												sinner. For the apostle carries 
												on the personification of sin, 
												begun chap. Romans 6:6, by 
												showing its exceeding sinfulness 
												in this respect, that it makes 
												the law, which was intended for 
												life, the occasion of men’s 
												death.” — Macknight.
 
 Verse 14
 Romans 7:14. For we know that 
												the law is spiritual — Extending 
												to the spirit of man; forbidding 
												even the sins of the spirit; 
												sins internal, committed merely 
												in men’s minds, such as vain 
												thoughts, foolish imaginations, 
												carnal inclinations, pride, 
												self-will, discontent, 
												impatience, anger, malice, envy, 
												revenge, and all other spiritual 
												evils, in the commission of 
												which the body has no concern: 
												enjoining, at the same time, all 
												spiritual graces and virtues, 
												such as humility, resignation, 
												patience, contentment, meekness, 
												gentleness, long-suffering, 
												benevolence; with all holy 
												intentions, affections, and 
												dispositions, included in loving 
												God with all our heart, and our 
												neighbour as ourselves, which 
												the law especially enjoins: 
												being intended, at the same 
												time, to purify and exalt the 
												spirit, and assert its 
												superiority over the meaner part 
												of our nature. But I am carnal — 
												That is, man, considered in 
												himself, as in a state of 
												nature, and destitute of the 
												regenerating grace of God, is 
												carnal. See note on Romans 7:5, 
												where to be in the flesh is 
												evidently of the same import 
												with the word carnal here, as 
												are also similar expressions, 
												Romans 8:5; Romans 8:8-9, &c., 
												expressions which, all are 
												agreed, solely respect the 
												unregenerate; and in which the 
												person that is in the flesh, or 
												carnally minded, is represented 
												as being in a state of death, 
												and enmity against God. Very 
												different, surely, from the 
												spiritual man, whom this same 
												apostle represents as living in 
												a state of favour and friendship 
												with God; minding chiefly the 
												things of the Spirit; yea, 
												having the Spirit of God 
												dwelling in him, and giving him 
												dominion over all fleshly lusts, 
												which, through that Spirit, he 
												is enabled to mortify; whose 
												passions submit to the 
												government of reason, and whose 
												reason is itself under the 
												influence of grace; whose 
												enjoyments are chiefly of a 
												spiritual nature, and his great 
												employment to work out his 
												salvation with fear and 
												trembling. The Scriptures, 
												therefore, place these two 
												characters in direct opposition 
												the one to the other; and the 
												apostle begins this paragraph by 
												informing us that it is his 
												carnal state which he is about 
												to describe, in opposition to 
												the spirituality of God’s holy 
												law, saying, But I am carnal; 
												and adding, as a still more 
												decisive proof that his meaning 
												is as is here stated, sold under 
												sin — That is, sold as a slave, 
												to remain under the dominion of 
												sin, and to be compelled to do 
												those evil actions to which 
												sinful inclinations prompt men. 
												“In peccati potestatem, 
												libidinis et concupiscentiæ 
												predio redactus,” says Origen; 
												brought under the power of sin 
												by the enticement of lust and 
												concupiscence. “So enslaved to 
												it,” says Theophylact, ωστε μη 
												αναβλεψαι δυνασθαι, as not to be 
												able to look up: “a willing 
												slave, who had sold himself to 
												it,” says Theodoret. The meaning 
												is, totally enslaved: slaves 
												bought with money being 
												absolutely at their master’s 
												disposal. In this sense, the 
												phrase is continually used in 
												the Old Testament, as the reader 
												may see by consulting the texts 
												referred to in the margin. By 
												the addition of this clause, 
												therefore, the apostle evidently 
												shows that he does not here use 
												the word carnal in the sense in 
												which it is taken 1 Corinthians 
												3:1, namely, to denote only such 
												a state of imperfection in 
												knowledge and holiness, as 
												persons may be in who are newly 
												converted; but that he uses it 
												in the worst sense, namely, in 
												the same sense in which the 
												expression, to be in the flesh, 
												and carnally minded, is used; 
												that is, to signify a state of 
												death and enmity against God. 
												Those commentators, therefore, 
												who suppose that in this and 
												what follows, to the end of the 
												chapter, the apostle describes 
												his own state, at the time he 
												wrote this epistle, and 
												consequently the state of every 
												regenerated person, must be 
												under a great mistake. 
												Universally, indeed, in the 
												Scriptures, man is said to be in 
												this state of bondage to sin 
												until the Son of God make him 
												free; but in no part of the 
												sacred writings is it ever said 
												of the children of God, that 
												they are sold under sin, or 
												enslaved to it. The very reverse 
												is the Holy Spirit’s description 
												of Christians, for the Son of 
												God makes them free, and 
												therefore they are free indeed; 
												free especially from the power 
												of sin, which has no longer 
												dominion over them. See notes on 
												Romans 6:13-22; Romans 8:2. The 
												truth is, through this whole 
												paragraph the apostle, to wean 
												the Jews from their attachment 
												to the Mosaic law, is showing 
												how little that dispensation, 
												even the moral part of it, 
												considered as a covenant of 
												justice, independent of the 
												covenant of grace, could do for 
												them, or for any of the fallen 
												offspring of Adam. It could 
												convince them of sin, but not 
												constitute them righteous. It 
												could show them their guilt, 
												depravity, and weakness, but 
												could neither justify their 
												persons, nor renew their nature, 
												nor furnish them with power to 
												do the will of God. As he 
												expresses himself, Romans 8:3, 
												It was weak through the flesh, 
												or through the corruption and 
												infirmity of human nature. In 
												pursuance of his design, having 
												compared together the past and 
												present state of believers, that 
												in the flesh, Romans 7:5, and 
												that in the spirit, Romans 7:6. 
												in answering two objections, (Is 
												then the law sin? Romans 7:7, 
												and, Is the law death? Romans 
												7:13,) he interweaves the whole 
												process of a man reasoning, 
												groaning, striving, and escaping 
												from the legal to the 
												evangelical state. This he does, 
												from Romans 7:7 to the end of 
												the chapter.
 
 
 Verse 15
 Romans 7:15. For that which I do 
												— Greek, κατεργαζομαι, what I 
												thoroughly work, the word 
												signifying earnestness and 
												perseverance in working till the 
												work in which the agent is 
												employed is finished. It is 
												therefore used by the apostle to 
												denote the continued employment 
												of God’s people in his service 
												unto the end of their lives; 
												Philippians 2:12, Work out your 
												own salvation. That is, as you 
												have, in time past, laboured to 
												serve God in all things, so 
												persevere in that service to the 
												end. The word here denotes a 
												continued employment of a very 
												different nature. Therefore he 
												says, What I work, I allow not, 
												or, approve not; for the word,
 
 γινωσκω, which literally 
												signifies I know, is used in the 
												sense of approving, Matthew 
												7:21. For what I would — That 
												is, incline to, or desire, as 
												Macknight renders θελω, which, 
												he observes, cannot here signify 
												the last determination of the 
												will, “actions always following 
												that determination; but such a 
												faint ineffectual desire as 
												reason and conscience, opposed 
												by strong passions, and not 
												strengthened by the Spirit of 
												God, often produce.” These 
												corrupt passions frequently 
												darken the understanding, 
												mislead the judgment, and 
												stupify the conscience; in 
												consequence whereof the will, 
												strongly impelled by criminal 
												desires, in the place of being 
												governed by these higher powers 
												of the mind, governs them 
												herself. But, “when order is 
												restored to the soul by 
												regeneration, then the 
												enlightened understanding 
												determines the judgment, and the 
												decisions thereof, enforced by 
												the voice of conscience, 
												determine the will, whose 
												volitions, thus excited, become 
												the spring of action; so that 
												the good the regenerated man 
												would, he doth, — and the evil 
												he hates, he doth not. But, in 
												the unregenerate, those 
												volitions neither obey the 
												directions of reason nor 
												conscience; hence there is a 
												continual conflict in his 
												breast, between appetites and 
												passions on the one side, and 
												reason and conscience on the 
												other. The latter, however, are 
												generally overcome; and in this 
												state the person, with 
												propriety, may say, What I 
												would, that do I not; but what I 
												hate, that I do: or, as it is 
												expressed, Romans 7:19, The 
												good, that I would I do not; but 
												the evil which I would not, that 
												I do. Ovid, a heathen, describes 
												the conduct of depraved men in 
												words very similar to these:
 
 Sed trahit invitam nova vis, 
												aliudque cupido, Mens aliud 
												suadet. Video meliora, proboque; 
												Deteriora sequor. OVID, Metam., 
												lib. 7. Romans 7:19. ‘My reason 
												this, my passion that persuades; 
												I see the right, and I approve 
												it too; Condemn the wrong, and 
												yet the wrong pursue.’
 
 The apostle does not say that 
												this took place in his conduct 
												on some particular occasions 
												merely, but he gives us this 
												account of himself as his 
												general conduct, while he was 
												carnal and sold under sin, as 
												appears from Romans 7:21. where 
												see the note.” — Smith, On the 
												Carnal Man’s Character.
 
 Verse 16-17
 Romans 7:16-17. If then I do 
												that which I would not, &c. — In 
												willing not to do it, I do so 
												far, though to my own 
												condemnation, consent to the 
												law, and bear my testimony to it 
												that it is good — And do indeed 
												desire to fulfil it; though when 
												temptations assault me, contrary 
												to my resolution, I fail in my 
												practice. This is an inference 
												from the former verse, the 
												obvious sense of which is, that 
												men, even in an unconverted 
												state, approve of the law of 
												God: they see its propriety and 
												equity, consequently their 
												judgment approves of it as good, 
												though their passions and 
												inclinations oppose it. It is 
												not supposed here that the 
												person spoken of consents at all 
												times to the whole of God’s law 
												as good: this inference is 
												limited by what he said in the 
												former verse. Nor is it every 
												evil which he hates, that he 
												does; nor does he always feel 
												that hatred which he mentions 
												against the sins which he 
												commits. He only mentions it as 
												a thing which frequently 
												happened, that the evils which 
												he hated, and was inclined to 
												avoid, were actually committed 
												by him; and the good deeds which 
												his conscience inclined him to 
												do, were not performed. From 
												this he infers, that this 
												inclination implied the consent 
												of his judgment unto the 
												goodness of those laws, which 
												under these circumstances he was 
												in the habit of breaking. And, 
												that the minds even of wicked 
												men consent to the law of God as 
												good, is obvious from their 
												approbation of good actions in 
												others. Now then it is no more I 
												that can properly be said to do 
												it, but rather sin that dwelleth 
												in me — Which makes, as it were, 
												another person, and tyrannises 
												over me. “Here the apostle 
												considers man as composed of two 
												parts, flesh and spirit, each of 
												which has distinct volitions, 
												affections, and passions. And, 
												because the influence of these 
												on men’s actions is very 
												powerful, he calls the one the 
												law of the members, and the 
												other, the law of the mind; 
												(Romans 7:23;) and, like the 
												ancient philosophers, he 
												considers these two principles 
												as distinct persons. And as in 
												this discourse he personates 
												mankind, he speaks of the 
												former, which (Romans 7:22) he 
												terms, ο εσω ανθρωπος, the 
												inward man, or spiritual part of 
												human nature, as his real self, 
												and calls it, εγο, I, (Romans 
												7:17; Romans 7:19,) and αυτος 
												εγω, I myself (Romans 7:25,) 
												because it is the part in which 
												man was made after the image of 
												God. The other person he calls 
												his flesh, or carnal part; and, 
												ο εξω ανθρωπος, the outward man; 
												(2 Corinthians 4:16;) and sin 
												dwelling in him, in this verse; 
												and the body of sin; (Romans 
												6:6;) and the body of death; 
												(Romans 7:24;) and the old man; 
												(Romans 6:6; Ephesians 4:21; 
												Colossians 3:9;) and denies that 
												this part is his self; (Romans 
												7:17;) and to prevent our 
												confounding this with his real 
												self, having said, (Romans 
												7:18,) I know that in me 
												dwelleth no good thing, he 
												immediately corrects himself by 
												adding, that is, in my flesh. 
												But notwithstanding the apostle 
												considered the flesh and spirit 
												as distinct persons, who have 
												different affections and 
												members, and though he ascribes 
												to those persons different 
												volitions and actions, and 
												denies that the actions of the 
												outward man, or flesh, are his 
												actions, it does not follow that 
												he thought himself no way 
												concerned in, or accountable 
												for, the actions of his flesh. 
												For he told the very persons to 
												whom he said those things, 
												(Romans 8:13,) If ye live after 
												the flesh ye shall die. But he 
												thus spake to give a more lively 
												idea of the struggle between 
												reason and passion, [or rather, 
												between grace and nature,] which 
												subsists in the minds of those 
												whose conscience is awakened by 
												the operation of the law, but 
												who are not completely 
												converted.” Perhaps, as 
												Doddridge conjectures, he might 
												have read the passage in 
												Xenophon’s Cyropedia, lib. 6., 
												where Araspes complains of two 
												souls contending within him.
 
 But sin that dwelleth in me — 
												“As the apostle had personified 
												sin, he very properly represents 
												it as dwelling in him; because 
												this suggests to us the absolute 
												and continued influence which 
												sin hath in controlling the 
												reason and conscience of the 
												unregenerated, and in directing 
												all their actions. By 
												distinguishing his real self, 
												that is, his spiritual part, 
												from the self, or flesh, in 
												which sin dwelt, and by 
												observing that the evil actions 
												which he committed were done, 
												not by him, but by sin dwelling 
												in him, the apostle did not mean 
												to teach that wicked men are not 
												accountable for their sins, but 
												to make them sensible of the 
												evil of their sins, by showing 
												them that they are all committed 
												in direct opposition to reason 
												and conscience, the superior 
												part of their nature, at the 
												instigation of passion and lust, 
												the lower part. Further, by 
												appealing to the opposition 
												which reason and conscience make 
												to evil actions, he hath 
												overturned the grand argument, 
												by which the wicked justify 
												themselves in indulging their 
												lusts. Say they, since God hath 
												given us passions and appetites, 
												he certainly meant that we 
												should gratify them. True, says 
												the apostle; but God hath also 
												given you reason and conscience, 
												which oppose the excesses of 
												lust, and condemn its 
												gratification: and as reason and 
												conscience are the superior part 
												of man’s nature, a more certain 
												indication of the will of God 
												may be gathered from their 
												operation, than from the 
												impulses of the other.” — 
												Macknight.
 
 Verses 18-20
 Romans 7:18-20. For I know that 
												in me, that is, in my flesh — 
												The corrupt and degenerate self, 
												my animal appetites and 
												passions, debased and enslaved 
												as they are by sin through the 
												fall; or in me, while I was in 
												the flesh, chap. Romans 8:8, and 
												not in the spirit, Romans 7:9; 
												dwelleth no good thing — ουκ 
												οικει αγαθον, good dwelleth not. 
												Hence he asserts, in the place 
												just referred to, that they who 
												are in the flesh, whose reason 
												and conscience are under the 
												government of passion and 
												appetite, or who are in their 
												natural unrenewed state, cannot 
												please God. For to will — To 
												incline, desire, and even 
												purpose; is present with me — 
												παρακειται μοι, lies near me, 
												or, is easy for me; but how to 
												perform — κατεργαζεσθαι, 
												statedly to practise, or, 
												habitually work, (see on Romans 
												7:15;) that which is good — 
												καλον, excellent, I find not — 
												Have not sufficient ability. For 
												the good that I would, &c. — See 
												on Romans 7:15; Romans 7:17, for 
												an explanation of this and the 
												next verse.
 
 Verse 21
 Romans 7:21. I find then a law — 
												An inward constraining power, 
												flowing from my depraved nature; 
												that when I would — When I 
												incline and purpose to do good, 
												evil is present with me — To 
												prevent the execution of such a 
												purpose. The expression, when I 
												would do good, intimates that 
												this inclination to do good was 
												not permanent; it only arose on 
												particular occasions. This is 
												another feature of an 
												unregenerate man; his 
												inclinations and purposes to do 
												good, and live to the glory of 
												God, are only temporary. “They,” 
												says Macknight, “who think the 
												apostle is here describing his 
												own case, and the case of other 
												regenerated persons, should 
												consider that he does not speak 
												of single instances of omission 
												of duty, and commission of sin; 
												for the words which he uses all 
												denote a continuation or habit 
												of acting. Now how such a habit 
												of doing evil and neglecting 
												good can be attributed to any 
												regenerated person, and 
												especially to the Apostle Paul, 
												who, before this Epistle to the 
												Romans was written, told the 
												Thessalonians, Ye are witnesses, 
												and God also, how holily, and 
												righteously, and unblameably we 
												behaved among you, I confess I 
												do not comprehend. See also 2 
												Corinthians 1:12; 2 Corinthians 
												7:1-2; 2 Corinthians 10:2-3. To 
												elude the force of this 
												argument, Augustine affirms that 
												the apostle does not speak of 
												his outward actions, but of the 
												inward motions of his 
												concupiscence, by which he 
												means, evil desire in general: 
												and that for the reason 
												mentioned in the note on Romans 
												7:17, he expresses these motions 
												by the pronoun I. Be it so. On 
												this supposition, Romans 7:15 
												will mean, ‘What I, my 
												concupiscence, thoroughly 
												worketh, in my mind, I do not 
												approve. For I, my 
												concupiscence, practiseth not, 
												in my mind, that to which I 
												incline; but what I hate, that 
												I, my concupiscence, doth.’ Now, 
												not to insist on the impropriety 
												of applying words which denote 
												outward actions, to motions of 
												evil desire in the mind, I ask, 
												what sense is there in the 
												apostle’s telling us, that his 
												concupiscence did not practise 
												in his mind what he inclined to? 
												For if what he inclined to was 
												good, it could not possibly be 
												practised by concupiscence, if 
												concupiscence be evil desire; 
												consequently, it was foolishness 
												in him either to expect it from 
												concupiscence, or to complain of 
												the want of it, as he does 
												Romans 7:19. He might complain 
												of the existence of 
												concupiscence in his mind; but 
												if it were suffered to remain 
												there uncontrolled, and if it 
												hindered the actings of his 
												sanctified will so effectually 
												that he never did that to which 
												he inclined, but always did the 
												evil to which his sanctified 
												will did not incline, is not 
												this the clearest proof that 
												concupiscence, or evil desire, 
												was the prevailing principle in 
												his mind, and that his 
												sanctified will had no power to 
												restrain its workings? Now could 
												the apostle give any plainer 
												description of an unregenerate 
												person than this?”
 
 Verse 22
 Romans 7:22. For I delight in 
												the law of God — On this verse, 
												chiefly, rests the opinion that 
												the apostle, in the latter part 
												of this chapter, is describing 
												the character of a regenerate 
												man. Its votaries think they 
												find in this verse all the marks 
												of a Christian. In general they 
												assert, “to have our inward man, 
												our mind and heart, delighted in 
												the law of God, is to have our 
												souls delighted in a conformity 
												to him; it is to love God 
												himself, to love to be like him 
												in the inward man, having his 
												law written on our hearts, which 
												they say is the sum of all 
												religion.” This is not 
												reasoning, it is mere assertion; 
												it is not to be inferred from 
												this passage, and is plainly 
												contradicted by the context. All 
												judicious commentators will 
												allow, that if any passage of 
												the Scriptures appears obscure 
												or susceptible of two senses, it 
												must be explained in a 
												consistency with what precedes 
												and follows, and that 
												interpretation must be chosen 
												which agrees best therewith. 
												Therefore, though it be true, in 
												the fullest sense, that 
												regenerated persons delight in 
												the law of God after the inward 
												man; yet, since the general 
												scope of the paragraph, and the 
												connection of this sentence with 
												the context, show that Paul is 
												here speaking of his unconverted 
												state, our interpretation of it 
												must be regulated by its 
												connection with the whole 
												passage. Those who maintain that 
												Paul is here speaking of his 
												state after his conversion, 
												assert, that by the inward man 
												is meant, the new man, or man of 
												grace, spoken of Ephesians 4:24; 
												Colossians 3:10. Did the context 
												lead to that sense, it might be 
												admitted. But the general sense 
												of the whole passage leads us to 
												understand the expression of the 
												rational part of man, in 
												opposition to the animal, which 
												is its usual signification, as 
												has been shown by several 
												authors. The phrase occurs in 
												two other passages of the New 
												Testament, namely, 2 Corinthians 
												4:16; Ephesians 3:16; in the 
												former, the apostle’s words are, 
												We faint not, though our outward 
												man perish, yet the inward man 
												is renewed day by day; where the 
												inward man must signify the mind 
												or soul, which is renewed, or 
												created anew in its faculties, 
												in proportion as it grows in 
												grace. In the other passage the 
												apostle prays for the Ephesians 
												that they might be strengthened 
												with might, not in the outward 
												man, the body, which was not a 
												matter of much importance, but 
												in the inward man, the soul; 
												that it might become strong in 
												faith, fervent in love, and 
												conformed to the divine image; 
												and that Christ, by his Spirit, 
												might dwell in it. “The inward 
												man, therefore, always signifies 
												the mind, which either may or 
												may not be the subject of grace. 
												That which is asserted of either 
												the inward or outward man, is 
												often performed by one member or 
												power, and not with the whole 
												man. If any member of the body 
												perform an action, we are said 
												to do it with the body, although 
												the other members be not 
												employed. In like manner, if any 
												power or faculty of the mind be 
												employed about any action, the 
												soul is said to act: [and with 
												still greater propriety, as] our 
												souls are not, like our bodies, 
												made of many members; they are 
												pure spirits, and indivisible. 
												If the mind wills, it is the 
												spirit willing; if it hates, it 
												is the soul hating; if it loves, 
												it is the soul loving; if 
												conscience reprove or excuse, it 
												is the inward man accusing or 
												excusing. This expression, 
												therefore, I delight in the law 
												of God after the inward man, can 
												mean no more than this, that 
												there are some inward faculties 
												in the soul which delight in the 
												law of God. The expression is 
												particularly adapted to the 
												principles of the Pharisees, of 
												whom Paul was one before his 
												conversion. They received the 
												law as the oracles of God, and 
												confessed that it deserved the 
												most serious regard. Their 
												veneration was inspired by a 
												sense of its original, and a 
												full conviction that it was 
												right. To some parts of it they 
												paid the most superstitious 
												regard. They had it written upon 
												their phylacteries, and carried 
												these about with them at all 
												times. It was often read and 
												expounded in their synagogues, 
												and they took some degree of 
												pleasure in studying its 
												precepts. On that account, the 
												prophets and our Saviour agree 
												in saying, that they delighted 
												in the law of God, though they 
												regarded not its chief and most 
												essential precepts.” — Smith, On 
												the Carnal Man’s Character.
 
 Verse 23-24
 Romans 7:23-24. But I see 
												another law — Another 
												commanding, constraining power 
												of evil inclinations and fleshly 
												appetites, whose influence is so 
												strong and constant, that it may 
												be fitly called another law; in 
												my members — In my animal part; 
												(of the members, see note on 
												Romans 6:13;) warring against 
												the law of my mind — Against the 
												dictates of my judgment and 
												conscience, which conflict is 
												spoken of Galatians 5:17; The 
												flesh lusteth against the 
												spirit, &c.; and bringing me 
												into captivity to the law of 
												sin: As if he had said, The 
												issue of which conflict is not 
												dubious, for passion continually 
												prevails over reason, the flesh 
												over the spirit, and I am led 
												captive in spite of all my 
												efforts to resist. O wretched 
												man — Namely, in this respect, 
												as to this particular; who shall 
												deliver me — Miserable captive 
												as I am; from the body of this 
												death? — Some prefer translating 
												the clause, from this body of 
												death; joining τουτου, this, 
												with σωματος, body, as is done 
												in the Vulgate version. But it 
												seems more proper to consider it 
												as an emphatical Hebraism, 
												signifying the body, that is, 
												the passions and appetites, or 
												the lusts of the body, which 
												cause this death, the death 
												threatened in the curse of the 
												law. Or, as Mr. Smith, in the 
												discourse above mentioned, 
												observes, The body of death may 
												signify death in all its vigour, 
												even that death which is the 
												penalty of a broken law, just as 
												the body of sin signifies the 
												strength of sin. The greatness 
												and insupportable weight of 
												death is its body; and the man 
												here described is represented as 
												exposed to that death, which is 
												the wages of sin. This is the 
												object which chiefly alarms the 
												guilty. Though the remonstrances 
												of conscience are not heard, 
												perhaps, against sin at first, 
												yet after it is committed, 
												conscience raises her voice in 
												more awful accents, and 
												proclaims God’s wrath through 
												the whole soul, which produces a 
												fearful looking for of judgment 
												and fiery indignation from God, 
												which is precisely the state of 
												mind expressed in this passage, 
												namely, the state of a man 
												labouring under the spirit of 
												bondage to fear, or the state 
												described Romans 7:5; when being 
												in the flesh, that is, 
												unregenerate and under the law, 
												sinful passions, manifested and 
												condemned, but not removed by 
												that dispensation, wrought in 
												his members to bring forth fruit 
												unto death.
 
 Verse 25
 Romans 7:25. I thank God, &c. — 
												As if he had said, I bemoan 
												myself as above, when I think 
												only of the Mosaic law, the 
												discoveries it makes, the 
												motives it suggests, and the 
												circumstances in which it leaves 
												the offender: but in the midst 
												of this gloom of distress and 
												anguish, a sight of the gospel 
												revives my heart, and I cry out, 
												as in a kind of rapture, as soon 
												as I turn my eyes, and behold 
												the display of mercy and grace 
												made in it, I thank God through 
												Jesus Christ our Lord — The 
												Clermont and some other copies, 
												with the Vulgate, read here, 
												χαρις του θεου, the grace of 
												God, namely, will deliver me. 
												But the common reading, being 
												supported by almost all the 
												ancient manuscripts, and the 
												Syriac version, is to be 
												preferred; especially as it 
												contains an ellipsis, which, if 
												supplied, according to the 
												apostle’s manner, from the 
												foregoing sentence, will give 
												even a better sense than the 
												Clermont reading, thus: Who will 
												deliver me? I thank God, who 
												will deliver me, through Jesus 
												Christ. See on Romans 8:2. Thus 
												the apostle beautifully 
												interweaves his complaints with 
												thanksgiving; the hymn of praise 
												answering to the voice of 
												sorrow, Wretched man that I am! 
												So then — He here sums up the 
												whole, and concludes what he had 
												begun, Romans 7:7. I myself — Or 
												rather, that I, (the man whom I 
												am personating,) serve the law 
												of God — The moral law; with my 
												mind — With my reason and 
												conscience, which declare for 
												God; but with my flesh the law 
												of sin — But my corrupt passions 
												and appetites still rebel, and, 
												prevailing, employ the outward 
												man in gratifying them, in 
												opposition to the remonstrances 
												of my higher powers.
 
 On the whole of this passage we 
												may observe, in the words of Mr. 
												Fletcher, “To take a scripture 
												out of the context, is often 
												like taking the stone which 
												binds an arch out of its place: 
												you know not what to make of it. 
												Nay, you may put it to a use 
												quite contrary to that for which 
												it was intended. This those do 
												who so take Romans 7. out of its 
												connection with Romans 6:8., as 
												to make it mean the very reverse 
												of what the apostle designed. In 
												Romans 5:6., and in the 
												beginning of the seventh 
												chapter, he describes the 
												glorious liberty of the children 
												of God under the Christian 
												dispensation. And as a skilful 
												painter puts shades in his 
												pictures, to heighten the effect 
												of the lights; so the judicious 
												apostle introduces, in the 
												latter part of chap. 7., a 
												lively description of the 
												domineering power of sin, and of 
												the intolerable burden of guilt; 
												a burden this which he had so 
												severely felt, when the 
												convincing Spirit charged sin 
												home upon his conscience, after 
												he had broken his good 
												resolutions; but especially 
												during the three days of his 
												blindness and fasting at 
												Damascus. Then he groaned, O 
												wretched man that I am, &c., 
												hanging night and day between 
												despair and hope, between 
												unbelief and faith, between 
												bondage and freedom, till God 
												brought him into Christian 
												liberty by the ministry of 
												Ananias; — of this liberty the 
												apostle gives us a further and 
												fuller account in chapter eight. 
												Therefore the description of the 
												man who [unacquainted with the 
												gospel] groans under the galling 
												yoke of sin, is brought in 
												merely by contrast, to set off 
												the amazing difference there is 
												between the bondage of sin, and 
												the liberty of gospel holiness: 
												just as the generals who entered 
												Rome in triumph, used to make a 
												show of the prince whom they had 
												conquered. On such occasions, 
												the conqueror rode in a 
												triumphal chariot crowned with 
												laurel; while the captive king 
												followed him on foot, loaded 
												with chains, and making, next to 
												the conqueror, the most striking 
												part of the show. Now, if, in a 
												Roman triumph, some of the 
												spectators had taken the chained 
												king on foot, for the victorious 
												general in the chariot, because 
												the one immediately followed the 
												other, they would have been 
												guilty of a mistake not unlike 
												that of those who take the 
												carnal Jew, sold under sin, and 
												groaning as he goes along, for 
												the Christian believer, who 
												walks in the Spirit, exults in 
												the liberty of God’s children, 
												and always triumphs in Christ. 
												See Fletcher’s Works, vol. 4., 
												Amer. edit, pp. 336, 337.
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