Day 118, Romans 7 
Paul continues to
address Jewish objections to his gospel. Imagine one of his Jewish opponents
arguing, "It was God Himself who gave us the Mosaic Law! How can
you claim that Jews who believe in Jesus need not keep it?" Paul replies with
an analogy derived from the Law itself, which taught that a woman was free to
remarry if her husband died. His death released her from the law that held her.
So Jewish believers who are in Christ are released by His death from the Law
that held them. But this is not a license to sin. Paul expands his analogy to
say that, just as a widow might join herself to another husband, so Jewish
believers are joined to Christ to "bear fruit for God" (7:4). Now
they "serve in newness of the Spirit and not in oldness of the
letter" (7:6). That is, Jewish believers are not absolved from obedience,
but they now follow the indwelling Spirit who leads them in holiness, and have
no real need for a written law. The same is true, of course, for believing
Gentiles.
"But you are
teaching that the Law, given to us by God, was an evil thing, because it only
resulted in evil!" some apparently were saying. So Paul explained that it
was sin against the Law, not the Law itself, that resulted in death. "The
Law is...holy and righteous and good" (7:12).
It is quite obvious
that in 7:4-13, Paul was writing about his (and his fellow Jewish believers')
former experience under the Mosaic Law. When we then arrive at verse 14, should
we conclude, as some do, that Paul began to write about his experience as a Christian
simply because he started using the present tense, especially when the
experience that he describes sounds no different than his experience prior to
his being born again? I don't think so. All of us sometimes use the present
tense to describe past events. I've been doing that in this day's teaching from
the very first sentence: "Paul continues....Paul replies....Paul
expands..." and so on. But I switched to the past tense in the second
paragraph.
If Paul was describing
his experience as a Christian in the last part of chapter 7, affirming that he
was "sold into bondage to sin" so that he practiced the very
evil that he hated (7:15, 19), why then in chapter 6 did he repeatedly
affirm that Christians have "died to sin" (6:2), are no longer
“slaves of sin” (6:6, 17, 20), are “freed from sin” (6:7, 18, 22), are “slaves
of righteousness” (6:18), and are “enslaved to God” (6:22)? Can the man of
chapter 6, set free from sin, be the same wretched man of chapter 7 who is a
prisoner of sin? Can the man of chapter 6, whose old self was crucified with
Christ that his “body of sin might be done away with” (6:6), be the same man of
chapter 7 who longs for someone to set him “free from the body of this death”
(7:24)?
If Paul was
speaking in 7:14-25 of his present condition as a wretched prisoner of sin,
practicing evil, it greatly surprises those of us who have read what he said
about his personal holiness in other places (see 1 Cor. 4:4; 2 Cor.
1:12; 1 Thes. 2:10; 2 Tim. 1:3).
Some say that
Paul must have been speaking of his current Christian experience because he
said that he wanted to do right and "joyfully concurred with the law of
God in the inner man” (7:21- 22). Surely, they say, no depraved unbelievers
would say such a thing, being sinners to the core.
We must remember,
however, that Paul was a very zealous Jewish Pharisee before his salvation. He,
unlike the average unsaved person, was doing everything he could to obey God’s
laws, to the point of even persecuting the church. But he found that no matter
how hard he tried, he remained a slave to sin. Truly, there is no more wretched
person than the one who is trying to live by God’s standards but who is not
born again. Praise God for Jesus!
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