<h2>CHAPTER II</h2>
<p class="center"><i>THE WRITER AND HIS READERS</i></p>
<p class="center small"><span class="smcap">Romans</span> i. 1-7</p>
<div class="sidenote">Ver. 1.</div>
<p class="nodent"><b>Paul, a bondservant of Jesus Christ.</b> So the
man opens his Lord's message with his own
name. We may, if we please, leave it and pass on, for
to the letter-writer of that day it was as much a matter
of course to prefix the personal name to the letter as
it is to us to append it. But then, as now, the name
was not a mere word of routine; certainly not in the
communications of a religious leader. It avowed responsibility;
it put in evidence a person. In a letter
of public destination it set the man in the light and
glare of publicity, as truly as when he spoke in the
Christian assembly, or on the Areopagus, or from
the steps of the castle at Jerusalem. It tells us here,
on the threshold, that the messages we are about to
read are given to us as "truth through personality";
they come through the mental and spiritual being of
this wonderful and most real man. If we read his
character aright in his letters, we see in him a fineness
and dignity of thought which would not make the
publication of himself a light and easy thing. But his
sensibilities, with all else he has, have been given to
Christ (who never either slights or spoils such gifts,
while He accepts them); and if it will the better
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_11" id="Page_11">{11}</SPAN></span>
win attention to the Lord that the servant should
stand out conspicuously, to point to Him, it shall be
done.</p>
<p>For he is indeed "<i>Jesus Christ's bondservant</i>"; not
His ally merely, or His subject, or His friend. Recently,
writing to the Galatian converts, he has been vindicating
the glorious liberty of the Christian, set free
at once from "the curse of the law" and from the
mastery of self. But there too, at the close (vi. 17),
he has dwelt on his own sacred bondage; "the brand of
his Master, Jesus." The liberty of the Gospel is the
silver side of the same shield whose side of gold is an
unconditional vassalage to the liberating Lord. Our
freedom is "in the Lord" alone; and to be "in the
Lord" is to belong to Him, as wholly as a healthy hand
belongs, in its freedom, to the physical centre of life and
will. To be a bondservant is terrible in the abstract.
To be "Jesus Christ's bondservant" is Paradise, in the
concrete. Self-surrender, taken alone, is a plunge into
a cold void. When it is surrender to "the Son of
God, who loved me and gave Himself for me" (Gal. ii. 20),
it is the bright home-coming of the soul to the seat
and sphere of life and power.</p>
<p>This bondservant of His now before us, dictating, is
<b>called to be an Apostle.</b> Such is his particular department
of servitude in the "great house." It is a rare
commission—to be a chosen witness of the Resurrection,
a divinely authorized "bearer" of the holy Name, a
first founder and guide of the universal Church, a
<i>legatus a latere</i> of the Lord Himself. Yet the apostleship,
to St Paul, is but a species of the one genus,
bondservice. "To every man is his work," given by the
one sovereign will. In a Roman household one slave
would water the garden, another keep accounts, another
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_12" id="Page_12">{12}</SPAN></span>
in the library would do skilled literary work; yet all
equally would be "not their own, but bought with a
price." So in the Gospel, then, and now. All functions
of Christians are alike expressions of the one will of
Him who has purchased, and who "calls."</p>
<p>Meanwhile, this bondservant-apostle, because "under
authority," carries authority. His <span class="smcap">Master</span> has spoken
to him, that he may speak. He writes to the Romans
as man, as friend, but also as the "vessel of choice, to
bear the Name" (Acts ix. 15) of Jesus Christ.</p>
<p>Such is the sole essential work and purpose of his
life. He is <b>separated to the Gospel of God;</b> isolated
from all other ruling aims to this. In some respects
he is the least isolated of men; he is in contact all
round with human life. Yet he is "<i>separated</i>." In
Christ, and for Christ, he lives apart from even the
worthiest personal ambitions. Richer than ever, since
he "was in Christ" (xvi. 7), in all that makes man's
nature wealthy, in power to know, to will, to love, he
uses all his riches always for "this one thing," to make
men understand "<i>the Gospel of God</i>." Such isolation,
behind a thousand contacts, is the Lord's call for His
true followers still.</p>
<p>"<i>The Gospel</i>": word almost too familiar now, till
the thing is too little understood. What is it? In its
native meaning, its eternally proper meaning, it is the
divine "Good Tidings." It is the announcement of
Jesus Christ, Son of God, Saviour of men, in whom
God and man meet with joy. That announcement
stands in living relation to a bright chain of precepts,
and also to the sacred darkness of convictions and
warnings; we shall see this amply illustrated in this
Epistle. But neither precepts nor threatenings are
properly <i>the Gospel</i>. The Gospel saves from sin, and
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_13" id="Page_13">{13}</SPAN></span>
enables for holy conduct. But in itself it is the pure,
mere message of redeeming Love.</p>
<p>It is "<i>the Gospel of God</i>"; that is, as the neighbouring
sentences shew it, the Gospel of the blessed <span class="smcap">Father</span>.
Its origin is in the Father's love, the eternal hill whence
runs the eternal stream of the work of the Son and the
power of the Spirit. "God loved the world"; "The
Father sent the Son." The stream leads us up to
the mount. "Hereby perceive we the love of God."
In the Gospel, and in it alone, we have that certainty,
"God <i>is</i> Love."</p>
<div class="sidenote">Ver. 2.</div>
<p>Now he dilates a little in passing on this dear theme,
the Gospel of God. He whom it reveals as eternal
Love was true to Himself in the preparation as in the
event; He <b>promised</b> His Gospel <b>beforehand
through His prophets in (the) holy Scriptures.</b>
The sunrise of Christ was no abrupt, insulated phenomenon,
unintelligible because out of relation. "Since
the world began" (Luke i. 70), from the dawn of human
history, predictive word and manifold preparing work had
gone before. To think now only of the prediction, more
or less articulate, and not of the preparation through
general divine dealings with man—such had the prophecy
been that, as the pagan histories tell us,<span class="fnanchor"><SPAN name="Ref_4" id="Ref_4" href="#Foot_4">[4]</SPAN></span>
"the whole East" heaved with expectations of a Judæan
world-rule about the time when, as a fact, Jesus came.
He came, alike to disappoint every merely popular hope
and to satisfy at once the concrete details and the
spiritual significance of the long forecast. And He sent
His messengers out to the world carrying as their text
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_14" id="Page_14">{14}</SPAN></span>
and their voucher that old and multifold literature which
is yet one Book; those "holy writings," (our own Old
Testament, from end to end,) which were to them
nothing less than the voice of the Holy Spirit. They
always put the Lord, in their preaching, in contact with
that prediction.</p>
<p>In this, as in other things, His glorious Figure is
unique. There is no other personage in human history,
himself a moral miracle, heralded by a verifiable foreshadowing
in a complex literature of previous centuries.</p>
<p>"The hope of Israel" was, and is, a thing <i>sui
generis</i>. Other preparations for the Coming were, as it
were, sidelong and altogether by means of nature. In
the Holy Scriptures the supernatural led directly and in
its own way to the supreme supernatural Event; the
Sacred Way to the Sanctuary.</p>
<div class="sidenote">Ver. 3.</div>
<p>What was the burthen of the vast prophecy, with its
converging elements? It was <b>concerning His
Son, Jesus Christ our Lord.</b> Whatever the
prophets themselves knew, or did not know, of the
inmost import of their records and utterances, the
import was this. The Lord and the Apostles do not
commit us to believe that the old seers ever had a <i>full</i>
conscious foresight, or even that in all they "wrote of
Him" they knew that it was of Him they wrote;
though they <i>had</i> insights above nature, and knew
it, as when David "in the Spirit called Him Lord,"
and Abraham "saw His day." But they do amply
commit us to believe, if we are indeed their disciples,
that the whole revelation through Israel did, in a way
quite of its own kind, "concern the Son of God."
See this in such leading places as Luke xxiv. 25-27;
John v. 39, 46; Acts iii. 21-25, x. 43, xxviii. 23.</p>
<p>A Mahometan in Southern India, not long ago, was
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_15" id="Page_15">{15}</SPAN></span>
first drawn to faith in Jesus Christ by reading the
genealogy with which St Matthew begins his narrative.
Such a procession, he thought, must lead up a mighty
name; and he approached with reverence the story of
the Nativity. That genealogy is, in a certain sense, the
prophecies in compendium. Its avenue is the miniature
of theirs. Let us sometimes go back, as it were, and
approach the Lord again through the ranks of His holy
foretellers, to get a new impression of His majesty.</p>
<p>"<i>Concerning His Son.</i>" Around that radiant word,
full of light and heat, the cold mists of many speculations
have rolled themselves, as man has tried to analyse a
divine and boundless fact. For St Paul, and for us, the
fact is everything, for peace and life. This Jesus Christ
is true Man; that is certain. He is also, if we trust
His life and word, true Son of God. He is on the one
hand personally distinct from Him whom He calls
Father, and whom He loves, and who loves Him with
infinite love. On the other hand He is so related to
Him that He fully possesses His Nature, while He has
that Nature wholly from Him. This is the teaching of
Gospels and Epistles; this is the Catholic Faith. Jesus
Christ is God, is Divine, truly and fully. He is implicitly
called by the incommunicable Name (compare John
xii. 41 with Isa. vi. 7). He is openly called God in
His own presence on earth (John xx. 28). But what is,
if possible, even mere significant, because deeper below
the surface—He is regarded as the eternally satisfying
Object of man's trust and love (<i>e.g.</i> Phil. iii. 21,
Eph. iii. 19). Yet Jesus Christ is always preached as
related Son-wise to Another, so truly that the mutual
love of the Two is freely adduced as type and motive
for our love.</p>
<p>We can hardly make too much, in thought and
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_16" id="Page_16">{16}</SPAN></span>
teaching, of this Divine Sonship, this Filial Godhead.
It is the very "Secret of God" (Col. ii. 2), both as a
light to guide our reason to the foot of the Throne,
and as a power upon the heart. "He that hath the
Son hath the Father"; "He that hath seen Me hath
seen the Father"; "He hath translated us into the
kingdom of the Son of His Love."</p>
<p><b>Who was born of the seed of David, according to the
flesh.</b> So the New Testament begins (Matt. i. 1); so
it almost closes (Rev. xxii. 6). St Paul, in later years,
recalls the Lord's human pedigree again (2 Tim. ii. 8):
"Remember that Jesus Christ, <i>of the seed of David</i>,
is risen from the dead." The old Apostle in that last
passage, has entered the shadow of death; he feels with
one hand for the rock of history, with the other for
the pulse of eternal love. Here was the rock; the
Lord of life was the Child of history, Son and Heir
of a historical king, and then, as such, the Child of
prophecy too. And this, against all surface appearances
beforehand. The Davidic "ground" (Isa. liii. 2) had
seemed to be dry as dust for generations, when the
Root of endless life sprang up in it.</p>
<p>"<i>He was born</i>" of David's seed. Literally, the
Greek may be rendered, "<i>He became, He came to
be</i>." Under either rendering we have the wonderful
fact that He who in His higher Nature eternally <i>is</i>,
above time and including it, did in His other Nature,
by the door of <i>becoming</i>, enter time, and thus indeed
"fill all things." This He did, and thus He is,
"<i>according to the flesh</i>." "Flesh" is, indeed, but a
part of Manhood. But a part can represent the whole;
and "flesh" is the part most antithetical to the Divine
Nature, with which here Manhood is collocated and
in a sense contrasted. So it is again below, ix. 5.</p>
<div class="sidenote">Ver. 4.</div>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_17" id="Page_17">{17}</SPAN></span>
And now, of this blessed Son of David, we hear
further:—<b>who was designated to be Son of God;</b>
literally, "<i>defined as Son of God</i>" betokened
to be such by "infallible proof." Never for an hour
had he ceased to be, in fact, Son of God. To the man
healed of birth-blindness He had said (John ix. 35),
"Dost thou believe on the Son of God?" But there
was an hour when He became openly and so to speak
officially what He always is naturally; somewhat as a
born king is "made" king by coronation. Historical act
then affirmed independent fact, and as it were gathered
it into a point for use. This affirmation took place
<b>in power, according to the Spirit of Holiness, as a result
of resurrection from the dead.</b> "Sown in weakness,"
Jesus was indeed "raised in" majestic, tranquil "power."
Without an effort He stepped from out of the depth of
death, from under the load of sin. It was no flickering
life, crucified but not quite killed, creeping back in a
convalescence mis-called resurrection; it was the rising
of the sun. That it was indeed day-light, and not day-dream,
was shown not only in His mastery of matter,
but in the transfiguration of His followers. No moral
change was ever at once more complete and more
perfectly healthful than what His return wrought in
that large and various group, when they learnt to say,
"We have seen the Lord." The man who wrote this
Epistle had "seen Him last of all" (1 Cor. xv. 8).
That was indeed a sight "in power," and working a
transfiguration.</p>
<p>So was the Son of the Father affirmed to be what He
is; so was He "made" to be, for us His Church, the
Son, in whom we are sons. And all this was, "<i>according
to the Spirit of holiness</i>"; answerably to the foreshadowing
and foretelling of that Holy Spirit who, in the
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_18" id="Page_18">{18}</SPAN></span>
prophets, "testified of the sufferings destined for the
Christ, and of the glories that should follow" (1 Pet. i. 11).</p>
<p>Now lastly, in the Greek of the sentence, as if
pausing for a solemn entrance, comes in the whole
blessed Name; <b>even Jesus Christ our Lord.</b> Word by
word the Apostle dictates, and the scribe obeys. <span class="smcap">Jesus</span>,
the human Name; <span class="smcap">Christ</span>, the mystic Title; <span class="smcap">our Lord</span>,
the term of royalty and loyalty which binds us to Him,
and Him to us. Let those four words be ours for ever.
If everything else falls in ruins from the memory, let
this remain, "the strength of our heart, and our
portion for ever."</p>
<div class="sidenote">Ver. 5.</div>
<p><b>Through whom,</b> the Apostle's voice goes on,
<b>we received grace and apostleship.</b> The Son was
the Channel "through" which the Father's choice and
call took effect. He "grasped" Paul (Phil. iii. 12), and,
joined him to Himself, and in Himself to the Father;
and now through that Union the motions of the Eternal
will move Paul. They move him, to give him "<i>grace
and apostleship</i>"; that is, in effect, grace for apostleship,
and apostleship as grace; the boon of the Lord's
presence in him for the work, and the Lord's work as a
spiritual boon. He often thus links the word "<i>grace</i>"
with his great mission; for example, in Gal. ii. 9, Eph.
iii. 2, 8, and perhaps Phil. i. 7. Alike the enabling
peace and power for service, and then the service
itself, are to the Christian a free, loving, beatifying gift.</p>
<p><b>Unto obedience of faith among all the Nations.</b> This
"<i>obedience of faith</i>" is in fact faith in its aspect as submission.
What is faith? It is personal trust, personal
self-entrustment to a person. It "gives up the case"
to the Lord, as the one only possible Giver of pardon
and of purity. It is "<i>submission</i> to the righteousness
of God" (ch. x. 3). Blessed the man who so
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_19" id="Page_19">{19}</SPAN></span>
obeys, stretching out arms empty and submissive to
receive, in the void between them, Jesus Christ.</p>
<p>"<i>Among all the Nations</i>," "all the Gentiles." The
words read easy to us, and pass perhaps half unnoticed,
as a phrase of routine. Not so to the ex-Pharisee who
dictated them here. A few years before he would have
held it highly "unlawful to keep company with, or
come unto, one of another nation" (Acts x. 28). Now,
in Christ, it is as if he had almost forgotten that it had
been so. His whole heart, in Christ, is blent in personal
love with hearts belonging to many nations; in spiritual
affection he is ready for contact with all hearts. And
now he, of all the Apostles, is the teacher who by life
and word is to bring this glorious catholicity home
for ever to all believing souls, our own included. It
is St Paul pre-eminently who has taught man, as
man, in Christ, to love man; who has made Hebrew,
European, Hindoo, Chinese, Caffre, Esquimaux, actually
one in the conscious brotherhood of eternal life.</p>
<p><b>For His Name's sake;</b> for the sake of the Lord Jesus
Christ revealed. The Name is the self-unfolded Person,
known and understood. Paul had indeed come to know
that Name, and to pass it on was now his very life.
He existed only to win for it more insight, more adoration,
more love. "The Name" deserved that great
soul's entire devotion. Does it not deserve our equally
entire devotion now? Our lives shall be transfigured, in
their measure, by taking for their motto also, "For His
Name's sake."</p>
<div class="sidenote">Ver. 6.</div>
<p>Now he speaks direct of his Roman friends. <b>Among
whom,</b> among these multifarious "Nations," <b>you too are
Jesus Christ's called ones;</b> men who belong to
Him, because "<i>called</i>" by Him. And what is
"<i>called</i>"? Compare the places where the word is used—or
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_20" id="Page_20">{20}</SPAN></span>
where its kindred words are used—in the Epistles,
and you will find a certain holy speciality of meaning.
"Invited" is no adequate paraphrase. The "called"
man is the man who has been invited <i>and has come</i>;
who has obeyed the eternal welcome; to whom the
voice of the Lord has been effectual. See the word in
the opening paragraphs of 1 Corinthians. There the
Gospel is heard, externally, by a host of indifferent or
hostile hearts, who think it "folly," or "a stumbling
block." But among them are those who hear, and understand,
and believe indeed. To them "Christ is God's
power, and God's wisdom." And they are "the called."</p>
<p>In the Gospels, the words "chosen" and "called"
are in antithesis; the called are many, the chosen few;
the external hearers are many, the hearers inwardly are
few. In the Epistles a developed use shews the change
indicated here, and it is consistently maintained.</p>
<div class="sidenote">Ver. 7.</div>
<p><b>To all who in Rome are God's beloved ones.</b>
Wonderful collocation, wonderful possibility!
"<i>Beloved ones of God</i>," as close to the eternal heart
as it is possible to be, because "in the Beloved"; that
is one side. "<i>In Rome</i>," in the capital of universal
paganism, material power, iron empire, immeasurable
worldliness, flagrant and indescribable sin; that is the
other side. "I know where thou dwellest," said the
glorified Saviour to much tried disciples at a later day;
"even where Satan has his throne" (Rev. ii. 13).
That throne was conspicuously present in the Rome
of Nero. Yet faith, hope, and love could breathe there,
when the Lord "called." They could much more than
breathe. This whole Epistle shows that a deep and
developed faith, a glorious hope, and the mighty love
of a holy life were matters of fact in men and women
who every day of the year saw the world as it went
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_21" id="Page_21">{21}</SPAN></span>
by in forum and basilica, in Suburra and Velabrum, in
slave-chambers and in the halls of pleasure where they
had to serve or to meet company. The atmosphere of
heaven was carried down into that dark pool by the
believing souls who were bidden to live there. They
lived the heavenly life in Rome; as the creature of the
air in our stagnant waters weaves and fills its silver
diving-bell, and works and thrives in peace far down.</p>
<p>Read some vivid picture of Roman life, and think of
this. See it as it is shown by Tacitus, Suetonius,
Juvenal, Martial; or as modern hands, Becker's or
Farrar's, have restored it from their materials. What a
deadly air for the regenerate soul—deadly not only in
its vice, but in its magnificence, and in its thought!
But nothing is deadly to the Lord Jesus Christ. The
soul's regeneration means not only new ideas and
likings, but an eternal Presence, the indwelling of the
Life itself. That Life could live at Rome; and therefore
"<i>God's beloved ones in Rome</i>" could live there
also, while it was His will they should be there. The
argument comes <i>a fortiori</i> to ourselves.</p>
<p><b>(His) called holy ones;</b> they were "<i>called</i>," in the sense
we have seen, and now, by that effectual Voice, drawing
them into Christ, they were constituted "<i>holy ones</i>,"
"<i>saints</i>." What does that word mean? Whatever its
etymology may be,<span class="fnanchor"><SPAN name="Ref_5" id="Ref_5" href="#Foot_5">[5]</SPAN></span>
its usage gives us the thought of
dedication to God, connexion with Him, separation to
His service, His will. <i>The saints</i> are those who belong
to Him, His personal property, for His ends. Thus it
is used habitually in the Scriptures for <i>all Christians,
supposed to be true to their name</i>. Not an inner circle,
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_22" id="Page_22">{22}</SPAN></span>
but all, bear the title. It is not only a glorified aristocracy,
but the believing commonalty; not the stars
of the eternal sky but the flowers sown by the Lord
in the common field; even in such a tract of that field
as "Cæsar's household" was (Phil. iv. 22).</p>
<p>Habitually therefore the Apostle gives the term
"<i>saints</i>" to whole communities; as if baptism always
gave, or sealed, saintship. In a sense it did, and does.
But then, this was, and is, on the assumption of the
concurrence of possession with title. The title left the
individual still bound to "examine himself, whether <i>he
was</i> in the faith" (2 Cor. xiii. 5).</p>
<p>These happy residents at Rome are now greeted and
blessed in their Father's and Saviour's Name; <b>Grace to
you and peace, from God our Father and the Lord Jesus
Christ.</b> "<i>Grace</i>"; what is it? Two ideas lie there
together; favour and gratuity. The grace of God is His
favouring will and work for us, and in us; gratuitous,
utterly and to the end unearned. Put otherwise, (and
with the remembrance that His great gifts are but
modes of Himself, are in fact Himself in will and
action,) grace is God for us, grace is God in us,
sovereign, willing, kind. "<i>Peace</i>"; what is it? The
holy repose within, and so around, which comes of the
man's acceptance with God and abode in God; an "all
is well" in the heart, and in the believer's contact with
circumstances, as he rests in his Father and his Redeemer.
"Peace, perfect peace"; under the sense of demerit,
and amidst the crush of duties, and on the crossing
currents of human joy and sorrow, and in the mystery
of death; because of the God of Peace, who has made
peace for us through the Cross of His Son, and is peace
in us, "by the Spirit which He hath given us."</p>
<div class="footnote">
<p class="nodent"><SPAN name="Foot_4" id="Foot_4" href="#Ref_4">[4]</SPAN>
Percrebuerat Oriente toto vetus et constans opinio, esse in fatis
ut eo tempore (cir. <span class="smcap">A.D.</span> 70) profecti Judæa rerum potirentur.—Suetonius,
<i>Vesp.</i>, c. 4. Tacitus (<i>Hist.</i>, v. 13) says the same, and that the
hope was based on the <i>antiqui sacerdotum libri</i>.</p>
<p class="nodent"><SPAN name="Foot_5" id="Foot_5" href="#Ref_5">[5]</SPAN>
The <i>linguistic root</i> seems to point directly not to separation (as
often said) but to worship, reverence.</p>
</div>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_23" id="Page_23">{23}</SPAN></span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />