Romans 8

Romans 8

Epistle to the Romans 8:12-22 in the bigger of two fragments forming Papyrus 27 (recto side), written in the 3rd century.
Book Epistle to the Romans
Bible part New Testament
Order in the Bible part 6
Category Pauline epistles

Romans 8 is the eighth chapter of the Epistle to the Romans in the New Testament of the Christian Bible. It is authored by Paul the Apostle, but written by an amanuensis, Tertius, while Paul was in Corinth, in winter of AD 57-58.[1] Paul wrote to the Roman Christians in order to give them a substantial resume of his theology.[2] Chapter 8 concerns "the Christian's spiritual life".[3] The reformer Martin Luther stated that this chapter is where Paul "comforts fighters" involved in an inner struggle between spirit and flesh:

The Holy Spirit assures us that we are God's children no matter how furiously sin may rage within us, so long as we follow the Spirit and struggle against sin in order to kill it.[4]

Text

Structure

The New King James Version organises this chapter as follows:

Cross references

Introduction

New King James Version

There is therefore now no condemnation to those who are in Christ Jesus, who do not walk according to the flesh, but according to the Spirit.[5]

The discourse continues in Romans 8:1 from the preceding text with the illative word Greek: ἄρα (ara), generally translated as so or therefore,[6] or consequently in Thayer's Greek Lexicon.[7]

Methodist founder John Wesley suggested that Paul "resumes the thread of his discourse" from Romans 7:1-7, following a digression (in Romans 7:8-25) regarding sin and the Mosaic Law:[8]

By dying to what once bound us, we have been released from the law so that we serve in the new way of the Spirit (Romans 7:7)

whereas theologians Heinrich Meyer and Harold Buls are content to link the inference with the immediately preceding text:

Greek: αυτος εγω τω μεν νοι δουλευω νομω θεου τη δε σαρκι νομω αμαρτιας":
I myself serve the law of God, but with the flesh the law of sin (Romans 7:25).[9]

Buls explains that Paul's "real self" serving God is his mind and not his flesh.[10]

Meyer goes on to distinguish between two alternative readings of There is ... now no condemnation to those who are in Christ Jesus:

or

He prefers the former reading "as a matter of fact that has become historical" rather than the latter reading, attributed to Lutheran theologian Johann Hofmann.[11]

God's everlasting love

Anglican Bishop Charles Ellicott describes the final section of this chapter (Romans 8:31-39) as "a sublime and triumphant conclusion" and Erasmus of Rotterdam remarks that "Cicero never said anything grander".[12]

Greek: τί οὖν ἐροῦμεν πρὸς ταῦτα (Ti oun eroumen pros tauta ) - What then shall we say to (or about) these things? (Romans 8:31)

The Living Bible translates as "these wonderful things".[13]

By "these things", according to William Reed Newell, "Paul evidently indicates not only the whole process of our salvation by Christ, from chapter three onward, with that great deliverance by the help of the Holy Spirit set forth in this eighth chapter ... but also ... what he has been telling us of the purpose of God: "Whom He foreknew, foreordained, called, justified, glorified!"[14]

More than conquerors

New King James Version

Yet in all these things we are more than conquerors through Him who loved us.[15]

A hymn to God's love

New King James Version

For I am persuaded that neither death nor life, nor angels nor principalities nor powers, nor things present nor things to come, nor height nor depth, nor any other created thing, shall be able to separate us from the love of God which is in Christ Jesus our Lord.[16]

The Jerusalem Bible suggests that the "powers", "heights" and "depths" were "probably the mysterious cosmic forces which to the mind of antiquity were in general hostile to mankind".[17]

See also

References

  1. Halley, Henry H. Halley's Bible Handbook: an Abbreviated Bible Commentary. 23rd edition. Zondervan Publishing House. 1962.
  2. Holman Illustrated Bible Handbook. Holman Bible Publishers, Nashville, Tennessee. 2012.
  3. Jerusalem Bible sub-heading for Romans 8
  4. Luther, M., Preface to the Letter of St. Paul to the Romans, translated by Andrew Thornton, OSB
  5. Romans 8:1
  6. Majority of translations at BibleGateway.com
  7. Stong's Concordance: ἄρα, accessed 19 September 2016
  8. Wesley's Notes on the Bible on Romans 8, accessed 18 September 2016
  9. Buls, H. H., Romans 8:1-11 and Meyer's NT Commentary, accessed 20 September 2016
  10. Buls, H. H., Romans 8:1-11
  11. Meyer's NT Commentary, accessed 20 September 2016
  12. Ellicott's Commentary for Modern Readers on Romans 8, accessed 21 September 2016
  13. Living Bible, Romans 8:31
  14. Newell, William R., Romans, Revelation on Romans 8, accessed 21 September 2016
  15. Romans 8:37
  16. Romans 8:38-39
  17. Jerusalem Bible, footnote at Romans 8:39
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