<h2>CHAPTER V</h2>
<p class="center"><i>MAN GIVEN UP TO HIS OWN WAY: THE HEATHEN</i></p>
<p class="center small"><span class="smcap">Romans</span> i. 24-32</p>
<div class="sidenote">Ver. 24.</div>
<p class="nodent"><b>Wherefore God gave them up, in the desires of
their hearts, to uncleanness, so as to dishonour
their bodies among themselves.</b></p>
<p>There is a dark sequence, in the logic of facts, between
unworthy thoughts of God and the development of the
basest forms of human wrong. "The fool hath said in
his heart, There is no God:—they are corrupt, and have
done abominable works" (Psal. xiv. 1). And the folly
which does not indeed deny God but degrades His Idea,
always gives its sure contribution to such corruption.
It is so in the nature of the case. The individual
atheist, or polytheist, may conceivably be a virtuous
person, on the human standard; but if he is so it is
not because of his creed. Let his creed become a real
formative power in human society, and it will tend
inevitably to moral disease and death. Is man indeed
a moral personality, made in the image of a holy and
almighty Maker? Then the vital air of his moral life
must be fidelity, correspondence, to his God. Let man
think of Him as less than All, and he will think of
himself less worthily; not less proudly perhaps, but less
worthily, because not in his true and wonderful relation
to the Eternal Good. Wrong in himself will tend surely
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_49" id="Page_49">{49}</SPAN></span>
to seem less awful, and right less necessary and great.
And nothing, literally nothing, from any region higher
than himself—himself already lowered in his own
thought from his true idea—can ever come in to supply
the blank where God should be, but is not. Man may
worship himself, or may despise himself, when he has
ceased to "glorify God and thank Him"; but he
cannot for one hour be what he was made to be, the
son of God in the universe of God. To know God
indeed is to be secured from self-worship, and to be
taught self-reverence; and it is the only way to those
two secrets in their pure fulness.</p>
<p>"<i>God gave them up.</i>" So the Scripture says elsewhere.
"So I gave them up unto their own hearts'
lusts" (Psal. lxxxi. 12); "God turned, and gave them
up to worship the host of heaven" (Acts vii. 42);
"God gave them up to passions of degradation"; "God
gave them over to an abandoned mind"; (below,
verses 26, 28). It is a dire thought; but the inmost
conscience, once awake, affirms the righteousness of
the thing. From one point of view it is just the
working out of a natural process, in which sin is at once
exposed and punished by its proper results, without
the slightest injection, so to speak, of any force beyond
its own terrible gravitation towards the sinner's misery.
But from another point it is the personally allotted,
and personally inflicted, retribution of Him who hates
iniquity with the antagonism of infinite Personality.
<i>He</i> has so constituted natural process that wrong gravitates
to wretchedness; and <i>He</i> is in that process, and
above it, always and for ever.</p>
<p>So He "<i>gave them up, in their desires of their hearts</i>";
He left them there where they had placed themselves,
"in" the fatal region of self-will, self-indulgence; "<i>unto
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_50" id="Page_50">{50}</SPAN></span>
uncleanness</i>" described now with terrible explicitness
in its full outcome, "<i>to dishonour their bodies</i>" the intended
temples of the Creator's presence, "<i>among themselves</i>,"
or "<i>in themselves</i>"; for the possible dishonour
might be done either in a foul solitude, or in a fouler
society and mutuality: <span class="sni"><span class="hidev">|</span>Ver. 25.<span class="hidev">|</span></span><b>Seeing that they perverted the
truth of God,</b> the eternal fact of His glory and
claim, <b>in their</b> (<span title="tô">τῷ</span>) <b>lie,</b> so that it was travestied,
misrepresented, lost, "in" the falsehood of polytheism
and idols; <b>and worshipped and served the creature rather
than the Creator, who is blessed for ever. Amen.</b> He casts
this strong Doxology into the thick air of false worship
and foul life, as if to clear it with its holy reverberation.
For he is writing no mere discussion, no lecture on the
genesis and evolution of paganism. It is the story of a
vast rebellion, told by one who, once himself a rebel, is
now altogether and for ever the absolute vassal of the
King whom he has "seen in His beauty," and whom it
is his joy to bless, and to claim blessing for Him from
His whole world for ever.</p>
<div class="sidenote">Ver. 26.</div>
<p>As if animated by the word of benediction, he
returns to denounce "the abominable thing which God
hateth" with still more terrible explicitness.
<b>For this reason,</b> because of their preference of
the worse to the infinite Good, <b>God gave them up to
passions of degradation;</b> He handed them over, self-bound,
to the helpless slavery of lust; to "<i>passions</i>,"
eloquent word, which indicates how the man who <i>will</i>
have his own way is all the while a "sufferer," though
by his own fault; <i>the victim</i> of a mastery which he
has conjured from the deep of sin.</p>
<p>Shall we shun to read, to render, the words which
follow? We will not comment and expound. May
the presence of God in our hearts, hearts otherwise as
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_51" id="Page_51">{51}</SPAN></span>
vulnerable as those of the old pagan sinners, sweep from
the springs of thought and will all horrible curiosity. But
if it does so it will leave us the more able, in humility,
in tears, in fear, to hear the facts of this stern indictment.
It will bid us listen as those who are not sitting
in judgment on paganism, but standing beside the
accused and sentenced, to confess that we too share
the fall, and stand, if we stand, by grace alone. Aye,
and we shall remember that if an Apostle thus tore
the rags from the spots of the Black Death of ancient
morals, he would have been even less merciful, if
possible, over the like symptoms lurking still in modern
Christendom, and found sometimes upon its surface.</p>
<p>Terrible, indeed, is the prosaic coolness with which
vices now called unnameable are named and narrated in
classical literature; and we ask in vain for one of even
the noblest of the pagan moralists who has spoken of
such sins with anything like adequate horror. Such
speech, and such silence, has been almost impossible
since the Gospel was felt in civilization. "Paganism,"
says Dr F. W. Farrar, in a powerful passage,<span class="fnanchor"><SPAN name="Ref_15" id="Ref_15" href="#Foot_15">[15]</SPAN></span>
with this paragraph of Romans in his view, "is protected from
complete exposure by the enormity of its own vices.
To shew the divine reformation wrought by Christianity
it must suffice that once for all the Apostle of the
Gentiles seized heathenism by the hair, and branded
indelibly on her forehead the stigma of her shame." Yet
the vices of the old time are not altogether an antiquarian's
wonder. Now as truly as then man is awfully
accessible to the worst solicitations the moment he trusts
himself away from God. And this needs indeed to be
remembered in a stage of thought and of society whose
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_52" id="Page_52">{52}</SPAN></span>
cynicism, and whose materialism, show gloomy signs of
likeness to those last days of the old degenerate world
in which St Paul looked round him, and spoke out the
things he saw.</p>
<div class="sidenote">Ver. 27.</div>
<p><b>For their females perverted the natural use to the
unnatural. So too the males, leaving the natural use
of the female, burst out aflame in their craving
towards one another, males in males working out
their unseemliness—and duly getting</b> (<span title="apolambanontes">ἀπολαμβάνοντες</span>)
<b>in themselves that recompense of their error which was
owed them.</b></p>
<div class="sidenote">Ver. 28.</div>
<p><b>And as they did not approve of keeping God in their moral knowledge,<span class="fnanchor"><SPAN name="Ref_16" id="Ref_16" href="#Foot_16">[16]</SPAN></span>
God gave them up to an abandoned mind,</b> "<i>a reprobate, God-rejected,
mind</i>"; meeting their <i>disapprobation</i> with His just and
fatal <i>reprobation</i> (<span title="dokimazein, adokimos">δοκιμάζειν, ἀδόκιμος</span>). That <i>mind</i>,
taking the false premisses of the Tempter, and reasoning
from them to establish the autocracy of self, led with terrible
certainty and success through evil thinking to evil
doing; <b>to do the deeds which are not becoming,</b> to <i>expose</i>
the being made for God, in a naked and foul <i>unseemliness</i>,
to its friends and its foes;<span class="sni"><span class="hidev">|</span>Ver. 29.<br/> to<br/>Ver. 31.<span class="hidev">|</span></span> <b>filled full of all unrighteousness,
wickedness, viciousness, greed;
brimming with envy, murder, guile, ill-nature;
whisperers, defamers, repulsive to God, outragers,
prideful, boastful, inventors of evil, disobedient
to parents,senseless, faithless, loveless, truceless, pitiless;
people who</b> (<span title="hoitines">οἵτινες</span>) <b>morally aware of</b>
(<span title="epygnontes">ἐπυγνόντες</span>) <b>God's ordinance, that they who
practise such things are worthy of death, not only do them,
but assent and consent with those who practise them.</b></p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_53" id="Page_53">{53}</SPAN></span>
Here is a terrible accusation of human life, and of the
human heart; the more terrible because it is plainly
meant to be, in a certain sense, inclusive, universal.
We are not indeed compelled to think that the Apostle
charges every human being with sins against nature,
as if the whole earth were actually one vast City of the
Plain. We need not take him to mean that every
descendant of Adam is actually an undutiful child, or
actually untrustworthy in a compact, or even actually
a boaster, an <span title="alazôn">ἀλαζὼν</span>, a pretentious claimant of praise
or credit which he knows he does not deserve. We
may be sure that on the whole, in this lurid passage,
charged less with condemnation than with "lamentation,
and mourning, and woe," he is thinking mainly of the
then state of heathen society in its worst developments.
Yet we shall see, as the Epistle goes on, that all the
while he is thinking not only of the sins of some men,
but of the sin of man. He describes with this tremendous
particularity the variegated symptoms of one
disease—the corruption of man's heart; a disease
everywhere present, everywhere deadly; limited in its
manifestations by many circumstances and conditions,
outward or within the man, but <i>in itself</i> quite unlimited
in its dreadful possibilities. What man is, as fallen,
corrupted, gone from God, is shewn, in the teaching
of St Paul, by what bad men are.</p>
<p>Do we rebel against the inference? Quite possibly
we do. Almost for certain, at one time or another, we
have done so. We look round us on one estimable
life and another, which we cannot reasonably think of
as regenerate, if we take the strict Scriptural tests of
regeneration into account, yet which asks and wins our
respect, our confidence, it may be even our admiration;
and we say, openly or tacitly, consciously or unconsciously,
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_54" id="Page_54">{54}</SPAN></span>
that <i>that</i> life stands clear outside this first
chapter of Romans. Well, be it so in our thoughts;
and let nothing, no nothing, make us otherwise than
ready to recognize and honour right doing wherever we
see it, alike in the saints of God and in those who deny
His very Being. But just now let us withdraw from
all such looks outward, and calmly and in a silent hour
look in. Do we, do you, do I, stand outside this
chapter? Are we definitely prepared to say that the
heart which we carry in our breast, whatever our
friend's heart may be, is such that under no change
of circumstances could it, being what it is, conceivably
develop the forms of evil branded in this passage?
Ah, who, that knows himself, does not know that there
lies in him indefinitely more than he can know of
possible evil? "Who can understand his errors?"
Who has so encountered temptation in all its typical
forms that he can say, with even approximate truth,
that he knows his own strength, and his own weakness,
exactly as they are?</p>
<p>It was not for nothing that the question was discussed
of old, whether there was any man who would
always be virtuous if he were given the ring of Gyges,
and the power to be invisible to all eyes. Nor was
it lightly, or as a piece of pious rhetoric, that the
saintliest of the chiefs of our Reformation, seeing a
murderer carried off to die, exclaimed that there went
John Bradford but for the grace of God. It is just
when a man is nearest God for himself that he sees
what, but for God, he would be; what, taken apart
from God, he is, potentially if not in act. And it is in
just such a mood that, reading this paragraph of the
great Epistle, he will smite upon his breast, and say,
"God, be merciful to me the sinner" (Luke xviii. 13).</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_55" id="Page_55">{55}</SPAN></span>
So doing he will be meeting the very purpose of the
Writer of this passage. St Paul is full of the message of
peace, holiness, and the Spirit. He is intent and eager to
bring his reader into sight and possession of the fulness
of the eternal mercy, revealed and secured in the Lord
Jesus Christ, our Sacrifice and Life. But for this very
purpose he labours first to expose man to himself; to
awaken him to the fact that he is before everything
else a sinner; to reverse the Tempter's spell, and to
let him see the fact of his guilt with open eyes.</p>
<p>"The Gospel," some one has said, "can never be
proved except to a bad conscience." If "bad" means
"awakened," the saying is profoundly true. With a
conscience sound asleep we may discuss Christianity,
whether to condemn it, or to applaud. We may see in
it an elevating programme for the race. We may affirm,
a thousand times, that from the creed that God became
flesh there result boundless possibilities for Humanity.
But the Gospel, "the power of God unto salvation,"
will hardly be seen in its own prevailing self-evidence,
as it is presented in this wonderful Epistle, till the
student is first and with all else a penitent. The man
must know for himself something of sin as condemnable
guilt, and something of self as a thing in helpless yet
responsible bondage, before he can so see Christ given
for us, and risen for us, and seated at the right hand of
God for us, as to say, "There is now no condemnation;
Who shall separate us from the love of God? I know
whom I have believed."</p>
<p>To the full sight of Christ there needs a true sight of
self, that is to say, of sin.</p>
<div class="footnote">
<p class="nodent"><SPAN name="Foot_15" id="Foot_15" href="#Ref_15">[15]</SPAN>
<i>Darkness and Dawn</i>, p. 112.</p>
<p class="nodent"><SPAN name="Foot_16" id="Foot_16" href="#Ref_16">[16]</SPAN>
So we venture here to render <span title="epignôsis">ἐπίγνωσις</span>, a knowledge deeper
than that of merely logical conclusion.</p>
</div>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_56" id="Page_56">{56}</SPAN></span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />