body, on the common platform of faith in Christ.
He first shows that the Gentiles are under the dominion
of sin (chap. 1:18-32), and the Jews also (chap. 2),
so that both alike are shut up to salvation by grace.
Chap. 3. He connects the gospel plan of salvation
immediately with the Old Testament by showing that
Abraham, the father of the Israelitish people, was
justified by faith, not by the works of the law or
any outward rite; so that he is the father of all
who walk in the steps of his faith, whether Jews or
Gentiles. Chap. 4. He then sets forth the
love of God in Christ, who is the second Adam, sent
to restore the race from the ruin into which it was
brought by the sin of the first Adam (chap. 5); and
shows that to fallen sinful men the law cannot give
deliverance from either its condemnatory sentence or
the reigning power of sin, so that its only effect
is to work wrath, while the righteousness which God
gives through faith in Christ sets men free from both
the curse of the law and the inward power of sin, thus
bringing them into a blessed state of justification,
sanctification, and holy communion with God here,
with the hope of eternal glory hereafter. Chaps.
6-8. Since the doctrine of the admission of the
Gentiles to equal privileges with the Jews, and the
rejection of the unbelieving part of the Jewish nation,
was exceedingly offensive to his countrymen, the apostle
devotes three entire chapters to the discussion of
this momentous theme. Chaps. 9-11. He then
proceeds to draw from the whole subject, as he has
unfolded it, such practical exhortations in respect
to daily life and conduct as were adapted to the particular
wants of the Roman Christians—entire consecration
of soul and body to God in each believer’s particular
sphere (chap. 12); obedience to magistrates (chap.
13:1-7); love and purity (chap. 13:8-14); mutual respect
and forbearance (chaps. 14:1-15:7). He then returns
to the great theme with which he began, that Christ
is the common Saviour of Jews and Gentiles, in connection
with which he refers to his office and labors as “the
minister of Jesus Christ to the Gentiles” (chap.
15:8-21), and closes with miscellaneous notices and
salutations (chaps. 15:22-16:27).
10. From the above brief survey the special office
of the epistle to the Romans is manifest. In
no book of the New Testament is the great doctrine
of justification by faith so fully unfolded. The
apostle sets it in vivid contrast with the Pharisaical
idea of justification by the Mosaic law, and, by parity
of reason, of justification by every other system
of legalism; showing that it is only by grace through
Christ that men can be delivered from either the guilt
of sin or its reigning power in the soul, while the
effect of the law is only to excite and irritate men’s
corrupt passions without the power to subdue them.
The place, therefore, which this epistle holds in
the understandings and affections of believers must
be a good measure of their progress in the Christian
life.