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CHAPTER 7
1. The apostle continues the comparison between the former and the present state of a believer, and at the same time endeavors to wean the Jewish believers from their fondness for the Mosaic law. I speak to them that know the law To the Jews chiefly here. As long So long, and no longer. As it liveth The law is here spoken of, by a common figure, as a person, to which, as to an husband, life and death are ascribed. But he speaks indifferently of the law being dead to us, or we to it, the sense being the same.
2. She is freed from the law of her husband From that law which gave him a peculiar property in her.
4. Thus ye also Are now as free from the Mosaic law as an husband is, when his wife is dead. By the body of Christ Offered up; that is, by the merits of his death, that law expiring with him.
5. When ye were in the flesh Carnally minded, in a state of nature; before we believed in Christ. Our sins which were by the law Accidentally occasioned, or irritated thereby. Wrought in our members Spread themselves all over the whole man.
6. Being dead to that whereby we were held To our old husband, the law. That we might serve in newness of spirit In a new, spiritual manner. And not in the oldness of the letter Not in a bare literal, external way, as we did before.
7. What shall we say then This is a kind of a digression, to the beginning of the next chapter, 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, concerning the misery of one under the law. This St. Paul frequently does, when he is not speaking of his own person, but only assuming another character, Romans 3:5, 1 Corinthians 10:30, 1 Corinthians 4:6. The character here assumed is that of a man, first ignorant of the law, then under it and sincerely, but ineffectually, striving to serve God. To have spoken this of himself, or 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 Sinful in itself, or a promoter of sin. I had not known lust That is, evil desire. I had not known it to be a sin; nay, perhaps I should not have known that any such desire was in me: it did not appear, till it was stirred up by the prohibition.
8. But sin My inbred corruption. Taking occasion by the commandment Forbidding, but not subduing it, was only fretted, and wrought in me so much the more all manner of evil desire. For while I was without the knowledge of the law, sin was dead Neither so apparent, nor so active; nor was I under the least apprehensions of any danger from it.
9. And I was once alive without the law Without the close application of it. I had much life, wisdom, virtue, strength: so I thought. But when the commandment That is, the law, a part put for the whole; but this expression particularly intimates its compulsive force, which restrains, enjoins, urges, forbids, threatens. Came In its spiritual meaning, to my heart, with the power of God. Sin revived, and I died My inbred sin took fire, and all my virtue and strength died away; and I then saw myself to be dead in sin, and liable to death eternal.
10. The commandment which was intended for life Doubtless it was originally intended by God as a grand means of preserving and increasing spiritual life, and leading to life everlasting.
11. Deceived me While I expected life by the law, sin came upon me unawares and slew all my hopes.
12. The commandment That is, every branch of the law. Is holy, and just, and good It springs from, and partakes of, the holy nature of God; it is every way just and right in itself; it is designed wholly for the good of man.
13. Was then that which is good made the cause of evil to me; yea, of death, which is the greatest of evil? 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 By the good law. So that sin by the commandment became exceeding sinful The consequence of which was, that inbred sin, thus driving furiously in spite of the commandment, became exceeding sinful; the guilt thereof being greatly aggravated.
14. I am carnal St. Paul, 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,) 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 this chapter. Sold under sin Totally enslaved; slaves bought with money were absolutely at their masters disposal.
16. It is good This single word implies all the three that were used before, Romans 7:12, "holy, just, and good."
17. It is no more I that can properly be said to do it, but rather sin that dwelleth in me That makes, as it were, another person, and tyrannizes over me.
18. In my flesh The flesh here signifies the whole man as he is by nature.
21. I find then a law An inward constraining power, flowing from the dictate of corrupt nature.
22. For I delight in the law of God This is more than "I consent to," Romans 7:16. The day of liberty draws near. The inward man Called the mind, Romans 7:23, 25.
23. But I see another law in my members Another inward constraining power of evil inclinations and bodily appetites. Warring against the law of my mind The dictate of my mind, which delights in the law of God. And captivating me In spite of all my resistance
24. Wretched man that I am The struggle is now come to the height; and the man, finding there is no help in himself, begins almost unawares to pray, Who shall deliver me? He then seeks and looks for deliverance, till God in Christ appears to answer his question. The word which we translate deliver, implies force. And indeed without this there can be no deliverance. The body of this death That is, this body of death; this mass of sin, leading to death eternal, and cleaving as close to me as my body to my soul. We may observe, the deliverance is not wrought yet.
25. I thank God through Jesus Christ our Lord That is, God will deliver me through Christ. But the apostle, as his frequent manner is, beautifully interweaves his assertion with thanksgiving; the hymn of praise answering in a manner to the voice of sorrow, "Wretched man that I am!" So then He here sums up the whole, and concludes what he began, Romans 7:7. I myself Or rather that I, the person whom I am personating, till this deliverance is wrought. Serve the law of God with my mind My reason and conscience declare for God. But with my flesh the law of sin But my corrupt passions and appetites still rebel. The man is now utterly weary of his bondage, and upon the brink of liberty.