Lectionary Calendar
Friday, July 18th, 2025
the Week of Proper 10 / Ordinary 15
the Week of Proper 10 / Ordinary 15
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Bible Commentaries
The Expositor's Greek Testament Expositor's Greek Testament
Copyright Statement
These files are public domain.
Text Courtesy of BibleSupport.com. Used by Permission.
These files are public domain.
Text Courtesy of BibleSupport.com. Used by Permission.
Bibliographical Information
Nicoll, William Robertson, M.A., L.L.D. "Commentary on Romans 7". The Expositor's Greek Testament. https://studylight.org/commentaries/eng/egt/romans-7.html. 1897-1910.
Nicoll, William Robertson, M.A., L.L.D. "Commentary on Romans 7". The Expositor's Greek Testament. https://studylight.org/
Whole Bible (49)New Testament (19)Gospels Only (1)Individual Books (15)
Introduction
CHAPTER 7.
The subject of chap. 6 is continued. The Apostle shows how by death the Christian is freed from the law, which, good as it is in itself and in the Divine intention, nevertheless, owing to the corruption of man’s nature, instead of helping to make him good, perpetually stimulates sin. Romans 7:1-6 describe the liberation from the law; Romans 7:7-13 , the actual working of the law; in Romans 7:14-25 we are shown that this working of the law is due not to anything in itself, but to the power of sin in the flesh.
Verses 1-6
Romans 7:1-6 . For á¼¢ á¼Î³Î½Î¿Îµá¿Ïε , cf. Romans 6:3 . Chap. 6 contains the argument which is illustrated in these verses, and the question alludes to it: not to accept the argument that the Christian is free from all legal obligations leaves no alternative but to suppose the persons to whom it is addressed ignorant of the principle by which the duration of all legal obligations is determined. This they cannot be, for Paul speaks γινÏÏÎºÎ¿Ï Ïι νÏμον = to people who know what law is. Neither Roman nor Mosaic law is specially referred to: the argument rests on the nature of law in general. Even in ὠνÏÎ¼Î¿Ï , though in applying the principle Paul would think first of the Mosaic law, it is not exclusively referred to.
Verse 2
Romans 7:2 f. An illustration of the principle. It is the only illustration in which death liberates a person who yet remains alive and can enter into new relations. Of course there is an inexactness, for in the argument the Christian is freed by his own death, and in the illustration the wife is freed by the husband’s death; but we must discount that. Paul required an illustration in which both death and a new life appeared. καÏήÏγηÏαι á¼ÏÏ : cf. Romans 7:6 , Galatians 5:4 : she is once for all discharged (or as R.V. in Gal. “severed”) from the law of the husband: for the genitive Ïοῦ á¼Î½Î´ÏÏÏ , see Winer, 235. ÏÏημαÏίÏει = she shall be publicly designated: cf. Acts 11:26 . Ïοῦ μὴ εἶναι αá½Ïὴν μοιÏαλίδα κ . Ï . λ .: grammatically this may either mean (1) that she may not be an adulteress, though married to another man; or (2) so that she is not , etc. Meyer prefers the first; and it may be argued that in this place, at all events, the idea of forming another connection is essential: cf. Îµá¼°Ï Ïὸ γενÎÏθαι á½Î¼á¾¶Ï á¼ÏÎÏῳ , Romans 7:4 (Gifford); but it is difficult to conceive of innocent remarriage as being formally the purpose of the law in question, and the second meaning is therefore to be preferred. Cf. Burton, Moods and Tenses , § 398.
Verse 4
Romans 7:4 . á½¥ÏÏε καὶ á½Î¼Îµá¿Ï á¼Î¸Î±Î½Î±ÏÏθηÏε Ïá¿· νÏμῳ : the inference is drawn rather from the principle than from the example, but καὶ á½Î¼Îµá¿Ï means “you as well as the woman in the illustration,” not “you Gentiles as well as I a Jew”. The last, which is Weiss’s interpretation, introduces a violent contrast of which there is not the faintest hint in the context. The meaning of á¼Î¸Î±Î½Î±ÏÏθηÏε is fixed by reference to chap. Romans 6:3-6 . The aorist refers to the definite time at which in their baptism the old life (and with it all its legal obligations) came to an end. διὰ Ïοῦ ÏÏμαÏÎ¿Ï Ïοῦ ΧÏοῦ : Weiss rejects as opposed to the context the “dogmatic” reference to the sacrificial death of Christ as a satisfaction for sin; all the words imply, according to him, is that the Christian, in baptism, experiences a á½Î¼Î¿Î¯Ïμα of Christ’s death, or as it is put in Romans 6:6 is crucified with Him, and so liberated from every relation to the law. But if Christ’s death had no spiritual content if it were not a death “for our sins” (1 Corinthians 15:3 ), a death having the sacrificial character and atoning virtue described in Romans 3:25 f. there would be no reason why a sinful man should be baptised into Christ and His death at all, and in point of fact no one would be baptised. It is because Christ’s death is what it is, a sin-expiating death, that it draws men to Him, and spiritually reproduces in them a reflex or counterpart of His death, with which all their old relations and obligations terminate. The object of this is that they may belong to another, a different person. Paul does not say á¼ÏÎÏῳ á¼Î½Î´Ïί : the marriage metaphor is dropped. He is speaking of the experience of Christians one by one, and though Christ is sometimes spoken of as the husband or bridegroom of the Church, there is no Scripture authority for using this metaphor of His relation to the individual soul. Neither is this interpretation favoured by the use of καÏÏοÏοÏήÏÏμεν ; to interpret this of the fruit of the new marriage is both needless and grotesque. The word is used frequently in the N.T. for the outcome of the Christian life, but never with this association; and a reference to Romans 6:21 shows how natural it is to the Apostle without any such prompting. Even the change from the second person ( á¼Î¸Î±Î½Î±ÏÏθηÏε ) to the first ( καÏÏοÏοÏήÏÏμεν ) shows that he is contemplating the end of the Christian life quite apart from the suggestions of the metaphor. Christ is described as Ïá¿· á¼Îº νεκÏῶν á¼Î³ÎµÏθÎνÏι , because we can only belong to a living person. Ïá¿· θεῷ is dat comm God is the person interested in this result.
Verse 5
Romans 7:5 . Contrast of the earlier life. “ á¼Î½ Ïá¿ ÏαÏκὶ ” is materially the same as “ á½Ïὸ Ïὸν νÏμον ”; the same state of the soul is described more from within and more from without. The opposite would be á¼Î½ Ïá¿· ÏνεÏμαÏι , or á½Ïὸ ÏάÏιν . Ïá½° Ïá½°ÏαθήμαÏα Ïῶν á¼Î¼Î±ÏÏιῶν are the passions from which acts of sin proceed: Galatians 5:24 . Ïá½° διὰ Ïοῦ νÏÎ¼Î¿Ï : it is through the law that these passions become actualised: we would never know them for what they are, if it were not for the law. Îµá¼°Ï Ïὸ καÏÏοÏοÏá¿Ïαι Ïá¿· θανάÏῳ : there is no allusion to marriage here any more than in Romans 7:4 . Death is personified here as in Romans 5:17 : this tyrant of the human race is the only one who profits by the fruits of the sinful life.
Verse 6
Romans 7:6 . Î½Ï Î½á½¶ δὲ as things stand, considering what we are as Christians. καÏηÏγήθημεν : cf. Romans 7:2 . We are discharged from the law, by our death to that in which we were held. But what is this? Most expositors, say the law; Philippi even makes Ïοῦ νÏÎ¼Î¿Ï the antecedent of á¼Î½ á¾§ , rendering, we have been delivered, by dying, from the law in which we were held. This construction is too artificial to be true; and if we supply ÏοÏÏῳ with á¼ÏοθανÏνÏÎµÏ , something vaguer than the law, though involving and involved by it (the old life in the flesh, for instance) must be meant. á½¥ÏÏε Î´Î¿Ï Î»ÎµÏειν κ . Ï . λ .: “enabling us to serve” (S. and H.): for á½¥ÏÏε with inf in N.T., see Blass, Gramm. des N.T. Griech. , § 219. á¼Î½ καινÏÏηÏι ÏνεÏμαÏÎ¿Ï Îº . Ï . λ . = in a new way, which only the possession of the spirit makes possible, not in the old way which alone was possible when we were under the letter of the law. For the Pauline contrast of Ïνεῦμα and γÏάμμα , see 2 Corinthians 3:0 ; for οὠin this expression, see Burton, § 481.
Verses 7-13
Romans 7:7-13 . The actual working of the law. A very close connection between the law and sin is implied in all that has preceded: especially in Romans 6:14 , and in such an expression as Ïá½° ÏαθὴμαÏα Ïῶν á¼Î¼Î±ÏÏιῶν Ïá½° διὰ Ïοῦ νÏÎ¼Î¿Ï in Romans 7:5 . This connection has to be examined more closely. The object of the Apostle, according to Weiss, is not to answer a false inference from his teaching, viz. , that the law is sin, but to conciliate for his own mind the idea of liberation from the law with the recognition of the O.T. revelation. But the difficulty of conciliating these two things is not peculiar to the Apostle; it is because we all feel it in some form that the passage is so real to us. Our experience of law has been as tragic as his, and we too ask how this comports with the idea of its Divine origin. The much discussed question, whether the subject of this passage (Romans 7:7-24 ) is the unregenerate or the regenerate self, or whether in particular Romans 7:7-13 refer to the unregenerate, and Romans 7:14-24 to the regenerate, is hardly real. The distinction in its absolute form belongs to doctrine, not to experience. No one could have written the passage but a Christian: it is the experience of the unregenerate, we may say, but seen through regenerate eyes, interpreted in a regenerate mind. It is the Apostle’s spiritual history, but universalised; a history in which one stage is not extinguished by the next, but which is present as a whole to his consciousness, each stage all the time determining and determined by all the rest. We cannot date the things of the spirit as simply as if they were mere historical incidents. Ïί οá½Î³ á¼Ïοῦμεν , cf. Romans 6:1 : What inference then shall we draw? sc . from the relations of sin and law just suggested. Is the law sin? Paul repels the thought with horror. á¼Î»Î»á½° Ïὴν á¼Î¼Î±ÏÏίαν οá½Îº á¼Î³Î½Ïν : á¼Î»Î»á½° may continue the protest = On the contrary, I should not have known sin, etc.; or it may be restrictive, abating the completeness of the negation involved in the protest. The law is not sin God forbid; but, for all that, there is a connection: I should not have known sin but by the law. The last suits the context better: see Romans 7:21 . On οá½Îº á¼Î³Î½Ïν without á¼Î½ , see Winer, 383: it is possible, however (Gifford), to render simply, I did not know sin except through the law; and so also with οá½Îº á¾Î´ÎµÎ¹Î½ . διὰ νÏÎ¼Î¿Ï : of course he thinks of the Mosaic law, but the absence of the article shows that it is the legal, not the Mosaic, character of it which is in view; and it is this which enables us to understand the experience in question. Ïήν Ïε Î³á½°Ï á¼ÏÎ¹Î¸Ï Î¼Î¯Î±Î½ κ . Ï . λ .: the desire for what is forbidden is the first conscious form of sin. For the force of Ïε here see Winer, p. 561. Simcox, Language of the N.T ., p. 160. In the very similar construction in 2 Corinthians 10:8 Winer suggests an anacoluthon: possibly Paul meant here also to introduce something which would have balanced the Ïε (I should both have been ignorant of lust, unless the law had said, Thou shalt not lust, and ignorant of other forms of sin unless the law had prohibited them). But the one instance, as he works it out, suffices him. It seems impossible to deny the reference to the tenth commandment (Exodus 20:17 ) when the words οá½Îº á¼ÏÎ¹Î¸Ï Î¼Î®ÏÎµÎ¹Ï are quoted from “the law”; but the special modes of á¼ÏÎ¹Î¸Ï Î¼Î¯Î± prohibited are of no consequence, and it is beside the mark to argue that Paul’s escape from pharisaism began with the discovery that a feeling, not an outward act only, might be sinful. All he says is that the consciousness of sin awoke in him in the shape of a conflict with a prohibitive law, and to illustrate this he quotes the tenth commandment. Its generality made it the most appropriate to quote.
Verse 8
Romans 7:8 . á¼ÏοÏμὴν λαβοῦÏα means “having received,” not “having taken” occasion. ἡ á¼Î¼Î±ÏÏία is sin as a power dwelling in man, of the presence of which he is as yet unaware. How it “receives occasion” is not stated; it must be by coming face to face with something which appeals to á¼ÏÎ¹Î¸Ï Î¼Î¯Î± ; but when it has received it, it avails itself of the commandment ( viz. , the one prohibiting á¼ÏÎ¹Î¸Ï Î¼Î¯Î± ) to work in us á¼ÏÎ¹Î¸Ï Î¼Î¯Î± of every sort. It really is the commandment which it uses, for without law sin is dead. Cf. Romans 4:15 , Romans 5:13 : but especially 1 Corinthians 15:56 . Apart from the law we have no experience either of its character or of its vitality.
Verse 9
Romans 7:9 . á¼Î³á½¼ δὲ á¼Î¶Ïν ÏÏÏá½¶Ï Î½ÏÎ¼Î¿Ï ÏοÏÎ : this is ideal biography. There is not really a period in life to which one can look back as the happy time when he had no conscience; the lost paradise in the infancy of men or nations only serves as a foil to the moral conflicts and disorder of maturer years, of which we are clearly conscious. á¼Î»Î¸Î¿ÏÏÎ·Ï Î´á½² Ïá¿Ï á¼Î½Ïολá¿Ï κ . Ï . λ . In these words, on the other hand, the most intensely real experience is vividly reproduced. When the commandment came, sin “came to life again”: its dormant energies woke, and “I died”. “There is a deep tragic pathos in the brief and simple statement; it seems to point to some definite period full of painful recollections” (Gifford). To say that “death” here means the loss of immortality (bodily death without the hope of resurrection), as Lipsius, or that it means only “spiritual” death, is to lose touch with the Apostle’s mode of thought. It is an indivisible thing, all doom and despair, too simply felt to be a subject for analysis.
Verse 10
Romans 7:10 . The result is that the commandment defeats its Own intention; it has life in View, but it ends in death. Here also analysis only misleads. Life and death are indivisible wholes.
Verse 11
Romans 7:11 . Yet this result is not due to the commandment in itself. It is indwelling sin, inherited from Adam, which, when it has found a base of operations, employs the commandment to deceive ( cf. Genesis 3:13 ) and to kill. “Sin here takes the place of the Tempter” in Genesis (S. and H.).
Verse 12
Romans 7:12 . The conclusion is that the law is holy (this is the answer to the question with which the discussion started in Romans 7:7 : ὠνÏÎ¼Î¿Ï á¼Î¼Î±ÏÏία ;), and the commandment, which is the law in operation, holy and just and good. á¼Î³Î¯Î± means that it belongs to God and has a character corresponding; δικαία that its requirements are those which answer to the relations in which man stands to God and his fellow-creatures; á¼Î³Î±Î¸Î® that in its nature and aim it is, beneficent; man’s weal, not his woe, is its natural end. There is no formal contrast to ὠμὲν νÏÎ¼Î¿Ï , such as was perhaps in the Apostle’s mind when he began the sentence, and might have been introduced by ἡ δὲ á¼Î¼Î±ÏÏία ; but a real contrast is given in Romans 7:13 .
Verse 13
Romans 7:13 . The description of the commandment as “good” raises the problem of Romans 7:7 in a new form. Can the good issue in evil? Did that which is good turn out to be death to me? This also is denied, or rather repelled. It was not the good law, but sin, which became death to the Apostle. And in this there was a Divine intention, viz. , that sin might appear sin, might come out in its true colours, by working death for man through that which is good. Sin turns God’s intended blessing into a curse; nothing could more clearly show what it is, or excite a stronger desire for deliverance from it. The second clause with ἵνα ( ἵνα γÎνηÏαι καθʼ á½ÏεÏβολὴν á¼Î¼Î±ÏÏÏÎ»á½¸Ï á¼¡ á¼Î¼Î±ÏÏία ) seems co-ordinate with the first, yet intensifies it: personified sin not only appears, but actually turns out to be, beyond measure sinful through its perversion of the commandment.
Verse 14
Romans 7:14 . ὠνÏÎ¼Î¿Ï ÏÎ½ÎµÏ Î¼Î±ÏικÏÏ : the law comes from God who is Spirit, and it shares His nature: its affinities are Divine, not human, á¼Î³á½¼ δὲ ÏάÏκινÏÏ Îµá¼°Î¼Î¹ , ÏεÏÏαμÎÎ½Î¿Ï á½Î¼á½¸ Ïὴν á¼Î¼Î±ÏÏίαν : I, as opposed to the law, am a creature of flesh, sold under sin, ÏάÏÎºÎ¹Î½Î¿Ï is properly material = carneus , consisting of flesh, as opposed to ÏαÏκικÏÏ , which is ethical= carnalis . Paul uses it because he is thinking of human nature , rather than of human character ; as in opposition to the Divine law. He does not mean that there is no higher element in human nature having affinity to the law (against this see Romans 7:22-25 ), but that such higher elements are so depressed and impotent that no injustice is done in describing human nature as in his own person he describes it here. Flesh has such an exclusive preponderance that man can only be regarded as a being who has no affinity for the spiritual law of God, and necessarily kicks against it. Not that this is to be regarded as his essential nature. It describes him only as ÏεÏÏαμÎÎ½Î¿Ï á½Ïὸ Ïὴν á¼Î¼Î±ÏÏίαν : the slave of sin. To speak of man as “flesh” is to speak of him as distinguished from God who is “Spirit”; but owing to the diffusion of sin in humanity, and the ascendency it has acquired, this mere distinction becomes an antagonism, and the mind of “the flesh” is enmity against God. In ÏάÏÎºÎ¹Î½Î¿Ï there is the sense of man’s weakness, and pity for it; ÏαÏκικÏÏ would only have expressed condemnation, perhaps a shade of disgust or contempt. Weiss rightly remarks that the present tense εἰμι is determined simply by the á¼ÏÏιν preceding. Paul is contrasting the law of God and human nature, of course on the basis of his own experience; but the contrast is worked out ideally, or timelessly, as we might say, all the tenses being present; it is obvious, however, on reflection, that the experience described is essentially that of his pre-Christian days. It is the un-regenerate man’s experience, surviving at least in memory into regenerate days, and read with regenerate eyes.
Verses 14-25
Romans 7:14-25 . The last section of the chapter confirms the argument in which Paul has vindicated the law, by exhibiting the power of sin in the flesh. It is this which makes the law Weak, and defeats its good intention. “Hitherto he had contrasted himself, in respect of his whole being, with the Divine law; now, however, he begins to describe a discord which exists within himself” (Tholuck).
Verse 15
Romans 7:15 . Only the hypothesis of slavery explains his acts. For what I do οὠγινÏÏÎºÏ , i.e. , I do not recognise it as my own, as a thing for which I am responsible and which I can approve: my act is that of a slave who is but the instrument of another’s will. Î¿á½ Î³á½°Ï á½ Î¸ÎÎ»Ï Îº . Ï . λ . There is “an incomprehensible contradiction in his action”. καÏεÏγὰζεÏθαι is to effect, to bring about by one’s own work; ÏÏάÏÏειν is to work at, to busy oneself with, a thing, with or without success, but with purpose; Ïοιεá¿Î½ is simply to make or produce.
Verse 16
Romans 7:16 . ὠοὠθÎÎ»Ï takes up ὠμιÏá¿¶ the negative expression is strong enough for the argument. In doing what he hates, i.e. , in doing evil against his will, his will agrees with the law, that it is good. καλÏÏ suggests the moral beauty or nobility of the law, not like á¼Î³Î±Î¸Î® (Romans 7:12 ) its beneficial purpose.
Verse 17
Romans 7:17 . ÎÏ Î½á½¶ δὲ οá½ÎºÎÏι á¼Î³á½¼ καÏεÏγάζομαι αá½ÏÏ . á¼Î³á½¼ is the true I, and emphatic. As things are, in view of the facts just explained, it is not the true self which is responsible for this line of conduct, but the sin which has its abode in the man: contrast Romans 8:11 Ïὸ á¼Î½Î¿Î¹ÎºÎ¿á¿¦Î½ αá½Ïοῦ Ïνεῦμα á¼Î½ á½Î¼á¿Î½ . “Paul said, ‘It is no more I that do it, but sin that dwelleth in me,’ and ‘I live, yet not I; but Christ that liveth in me’; and both these sayings of his touch on the unsayable” (Dr. John Duncan). To be saved from sin, a man must at the same time own it and disown it; it is this practical paradox which is reflected in this verse. It is safe for a Christian like Paul it is not safe for everybody to explain his failings by the watchword, Not I, but indwelling sin. That might be antinomian, or manichean, as well as evangelical. A true saint may say it in a moment of passion, but a sinner had better not make it a principle.
Verse 18
Romans 7:18 . It is sin, and nothing but sin, that has to be taken account of in this connection, for “I know that in me, that is in my flesh, there dwells no good”. For ÏοῦÏʼ á¼ÏÏιν see on Romans 1:12 . á¼Î½ á¼Î¼Î¿á½¶ = á¼Î½ Ïá¿ ÏαÏκί Î¼Î¿Ï = in me, regarded as a creature of flesh, apart from any relation to or affinity for God and His spirit. This, of course, is not a complete view of what man is at any stage of his life. Ïὸ Î³á½°Ï Î¸Îλειν ÏαÏάκειÏαί μοι : θÎλειν is rather wish than will: the want of will is the very thing lamented. An inclination to the good is at his hand, within the limit of his resources, but not the actual effecting of the good.
Verse 19
Romans 7:19 . In this verse there is a repetition of Romans 7:15 , but what was there an abstract contrast between inclination and action is here sharpened into the moral contrast between good inclination and bad action.
Verse 20
Romans 7:20 . The same conclusion as in Romans 7:17 . If the first á¼Î³á½¼ is right, it must go with οὠθÎÎ»Ï : Paul distinguishes himself sharply, as a person whose inclination is violated by his actions, from the indwelling sin which is really responsible for them.
Verses 21-23
Romans 7:21-23 summarise the argument. εá½ÏίÏÎºÏ á¼Ïα Ïὸν νÏμον ⦠ὠÏι : most commentators hold that the clause introduced by á½ Ïι is the explanation of Ïὸν νÏμον . The law, in short, which Paul has discovered by experience, is the constant fact that when his inclination is to do good, evil is present with him. This sense of law approximates very closely to the modern sense which the word bears in physical science so closely that its very modernness may be made an objection to it. Possibly Paul meant, in using the word, to convey at the same time the idea of an outward compulsion put on him by sin, which expressed itself in this constant incapacity to do the good he inclined to authority or constraint as well as normality being included in his idea of the word. But ὠνÏÎ¼Î¿Ï in Paul always seems to have much more definitely the suggestion of something with legislative authority: it is questionable whether the first meaning given above would have occurred, or would have seemed natural, except to a reader familiar with the phraseology of modern science. Besides, the subject of the whole paragraph is the relation of “the law” to sin, and the form of the sentence is quite analogous to that of Romans 7:10 , in which a preliminary conclusion has been come to on the question. Hence I agree with those who make Ïὸν νÏμον the Mosaic law. The construction is not intolerable, if we observe that εá½ÏίÏÎºÏ á¼Ïα Ïὸν νÏμον Ïá¿· θÎλονÏι á¼Î¼Î¿á½¶ κ . Ï . λ . is equivalent to εá½ÏίÏκεÏαι á¼Ïα ὠνÏÎ¼Î¿Ï Ïá¿· θÎλονÏι á¼Î¼Î¿á½¶ κ . Ï . λ . “This is what I find the law or life under the law to come to in experience: when I wish to do good, evil is present with me.” This is the answer he has already given in Romans 7:7 to the question, Is the law sin? No, it is not sin, but nevertheless sin is most closely connected with it. The repeated á¼Î¼Î¿Î¯ has something tragic in it: me , who am so anxious to do otherwise.
Verse 22
Romans 7:22 f. Further explanation: the incongruity between inclination and action has its roots in a division within man’s nature. The law of God legislates for him, and in the inner man (Ephesians 3:16 ) he delights in it. The inner man is not equivalent to the new or regenerate man; it is that side of every man’s nature which is akin to God, and is the point of attachment, so to speak, for the regenerating spirit. It is called inward because it is not seen. What is seen is described in Romans 7:23 . Here also νÏÎ¼Î¿Ï is not used in the modern physical sense, but imaginatively: “I see that a power to legislate, of a different kind (different from the law of God), asserts itself in my members, making war on the law of my mind”. The law of my mind is practically identical with the law of God in Romans 7:22 : and the Î½Î¿á¿¦Ï itself, if not identical with á½ á¼ÏÏ á¼Î½Î¸ÏÏÏÎ¿Ï , is its chief organ. Paul does not see in his nature two normal modes in which certain forces operate; he sees two authorities saying to him, Do this, and the higher succumbing to the lower. As the lower prevails, it leads him captive to the law of Sin which is in his members, or in other words to itself; “of whom a man is overcome, of the same is he brought in bondage”. The end therefore is that man, as a creature of flesh, living under law, does what Sin enjoins. It is the law of Sin to which he gives obedience.
Verse 24
Romans 7:24 . ÏαλαίÏÏÏÎ¿Ï á¼Î³á½¼ á¼Î½Î¸ÏÏÏÎ¿Ï Â· ÏÎ¯Ï Î¼Îµ á¿¥ÏÏεÏαι ; “a wail of anguish and a cry for help”. The words are not those of the Apostle’s heart as he writes; they are the words which he knows are wrung from the heart of the man who realises that he is himself in the state just described. Paul has reproduced this vividly from his own experience, but ÏαλαίÏÏÏÎ±Ï á¼Î³á½¼ á¼Î½Î¸ÏÏÏÎ¿Ï is not the cry of the Christian Paul, but of the man whom sin and law have brought to despair. á¼Îº Ïοῦ ÏÏμαÏÎ¿Ï Ïοῦ θανάÏÎ¿Ï ÏοÏÏÎ¿Ï : “ This death” is the death of which man is acutely conscious in the condition described: it is the same as the death of Romans 7:9 , but intensely realised through the experience of captivity to sin. “The body of this death” is therefore the same as “the body of sin” in chap. Romans 6:6 : it is the body which, as the instrument if not the seat of sin, is involved in its doom. Salvation must include deliverance from the body so far as the body has this character and destiny.
Verse 25
Romans 7:25 . The exclamation of thanksgiving shows that the longed-for deliverance has actually been achieved. The regenerate man’s ideal contemplation of his pre-Christian state rises with sudden joy into a declaration of his actual emancipation as a Christian. διὰ Ἰ . Χ . Ïοῦ ÎÏ ÏÎ¯Î¿Ï á¼¡Î¼á¿¶Î½ Christ is regarded as the mediator through whom the thanksgiving ascends to God, not as the author of the deliverance for which thanks are given. With á¼Ïα οá½Î½ αá½Ïá½¸Ï á¼Î³Ï the Apostle introduces the conclusion of this whole discussion. “So then I myself that is, I, leaving Jesus Christ our Lord out of the question can get no further than this: with the mind, or in the inner man, I serve a law of God (a Divine law), but with the flesh, or in my actual outward life, a law of sin.” We might say the law of God, or of sin; but the absence of the definite article emphasises the character of law. αá½Ïá½¸Ï á¼Î³á½¼ : see 2 Corinthians 10:1 ; 2 Corinthians 12:13 .