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Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Romans 4:9

Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Romans 4:9

[Cometh] this blessedness then upon the circumcision [only,] or upon the uncircumcision also? for we say that faith was reckoned to Abraham for righteousness.

9. Cometh this blessedness, &c.] Here the reference to David’s words merges again into the main argument from Abraham’s case. This is indicated by the word “then.” The literal rendering of this verse is, This assertion of blessedness therefore does it concern the circumcision, or the uncircumcision as well? For we say that to Abraham his faith was reckoned for righteousness. This may be paraphrased: “Can it then be applied only to the circumcised? (for it may be urged that David was a circumcised Hebrew); or can we extend it to the uncircumcised? We ask this; for Abraham’s is the case now in hand; and we may look to that case for an answer.”

Fuente: The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges

Cometh … – The apostle has now prepared the way for an examination of the inquiry whether this came in consequence of obedience to the Law? or whether it was without obedience to the Law? Having shown that Abraham was justified by faith in accordance with the doctrine which he was defending, the only remaining inquiry was whether it was after he was circumcised or before; whether in consequence of his circumcision or not. If it was after his circumcision. the Jew might still maintain that it was by complying with the works of the Law; but if it was before, the point of the apostle would be established, that it was without the works of the Law. Still further, if he was justified by faith before he was circumcised. then here was an instance of justification and acceptance without conformity to the Jewish Law; and if the father of the Jewish nation was so justified, and reckoned as a friend of God, without being circumcised, that is, in the condition in which the pagan world then was, then it would follow that the Gentiles might be justified in a similar way now. It would not be departing, therefore, from the spirit of the Old Testament itself, to maintain, as the apostle had done Rom. 3, that the Gentiles who had not been circumcised might obtain the favor of God as well as the Jew; that is, that it was independent of circumcision, and might be extended to all.

This blessedness – This happy state or condition. This state of being justified by God, and of being regarded as his friends. This is the sum of all blessedness; the only state that can be truly pronounced happy.

Upon the circumcision only – The Jews alone, as they pretended.

Or upon the uncircumcision also – The Gentiles who believed, as the apostle maintained.

For we say – We all admit. It is a conceded point. It was the doctrine of the apostle, as well as of the Jews; and as much theirs as his. With this, then, as a conceded point, what is the fair inference to be drawn from it?

Fuente: Albert Barnes’ Notes on the Bible

Rom 4:9-12

Cometh this blessedness then upon the circumcision only?

Abraham received the sign of circumcision, a seal of the righteousness of the faith which he had yet being uncircumcised.

Circumcision–sacramental efficacy and infant baptism

Rightly have all Protestant churches maintained, as against Romanist, that there are only two sacraments, symbolic acts, instituted by Christ Himself, and enjoined upon all His followers to the end of time. Baptism takes the place of circumcision as the rite of initiation into the Church–it is the circumcision of Christ (Col 2:11-12). And the eucharist succeeds to the passover, in connection with that redemptive act to typify which the passover was instituted (1Co 5:7-8). The eucharist itself has become a sacrifice to be offered up by priestly hands. Note–


I.
The significance and efficacy of Christian baptism as it stands related to circumcision.

1. Circumcision did not confer on Abraham the righteousness of faith, nor was it a pre-required condition of it; it was simply given as a sign and for a seal of a righteousness which was already in possession. And so of baptism. This does not itself wash away sin; it is not a condition pre-required in order to this; but it is given as a sign and for a Divine seal of the fact that, for all believers, sin has been put away by the sacrifice of Christ.

2. But the following texts may be cited in opposition: Tit 3:5; 1Co 12:13; Rom 6:3; Joh 3:5. All this is quite true. But the water referred to is the water of which the water in baptism is but the outward sign; which really washes away sin, and secures the answer of a good conscience towards God. What this water is, of which that in baptism is but a type (1Pe 3:21); of which the prophet Ezekiel declared that by the sprinkling thereof Jehovah would cleanse His people from all their filthiness and from all their idols (Eze 36:25); in respect to which David made earnest request (Psa 51:7); may be sought for in that water of purification which was provided by mixing with clear water from a running brook the ashes of the burnt red heifer. The great reality will be found in that mingled stream of blood and water which flowed on Calvary (Joh 19:34; 1Jn 5:6-8). That fountain opened for sin and for uncleanness was the atonement completed. To be born of water is to have the atonement effectually applied. We maintain that the water and the Spirit, in regeneration, are distinct, and produce distinct results; that the water in baptism is significant, not of the renewing of the Holy Ghost, but of the forgiveness and purgation of sin; and moreover that the purgation always precedes the renewing. And so baptism with water is always associated with the remission of sins, as that which shall remove out of the way the fatal obstruction to the incoming of the quickening Spirit (cf. Mar 1:4; Act 2:38; Act 22:16)

.

3. Baptism does not itself wash away the sin. It is not the medium through which the real Divine washing is imparted. But it is a sign that the washing is needed, and has been provided for; and, to all believers, it is a seal, given by Christ Himself, that the iniquity is purged. As circumcision was to Abraham, so is baptism to the believer in Jesus–he received the sign of circumcision, a seal of the righteousness of the faith which he already had before he was circumcised.


II.
The bearing of this on infant baptism.

1. It is maintained that the Lord Jesus gave no authority for the baptism of any but actual adult believers. It is at once admitted that, when an assembly of adult Jews or Gentiles heard the preached gospel for the first time, the rite of baptism was only to be administered to those amongst them who were prepared intelligently to make this confession of faith. But it does not follow that the children of such individuals were not to be admitted with them to this sacred rite. We know that children were so admitted into the kingdom of God amongst the Jews; as we know also that all Hebrew-born male infants were required, by Divine command, to be circumcised when eight days old. And the apostles, being Jews, would doubtless continue to act as Jews, unless expressly forbidden so to act by the Master. We know of no such prohibition. Jesus encourages the little ones to be brought to Him, for that of such is the kingdom of God. St. Paul addresses children in the church assemblies as if they, as a matter of course, constituted part of such assemblies (Eph 6:1-3; Col 3:20). And when we read of the apostles baptizing whole households, we are not told that the infants were excluded.

2. But is not this the word of the Master, He that believeth, and is baptized, shall be saved? Truly. And is it not manifest that tender infants cannot believe? Certainly. But what follows? That infants ought not to be baptized, because they cannot believe? Must it then also follow that infants, dying in infancy, cannot be saved, because that they cannot believe, and because it is written, He that believeth not shall be damned? But in whose right, then, do they come to inherit eternal life? In their own? What then did Jesus mean when He said, That which is born of the flesh is flesh, etc., Ye must be born again? According to that teaching, not even infants can enter into the kingdom of God, except they be born of water and of the Spirit. But if they need the thing signified by baptism; if that thing has been provided for them through the great Mediator; if, though they cannot personally believe, they are graciously susceptible of that thing; and if all who die in infancy do really become participators in it, then who is he that shall forbid water, that they should not be baptized?

3. But they ought not to be baptized, because they cannot make a personal profession of faith. Could then the infant children of Abraham and his descendants make a personal profession of faith? Clearly not. And yet, by Gods own appointment, the sign and seal of the righteousness of faith was to be put upon every one of them when eight days old. Yet the children of Christian parents are as capable of the righteousness of faith as were the children of Hebrew parents.

4. The principle on which some Christians proceed is to exclude as many as possible from the Church. That of the Lord and His apostles was to include as many as possible. The former said, in respect to the little children, of such is the kingdom of God; and in respect to earnest adult workers in the cause of righteousness, He that is not against us is on our part. And one of the latter states that the unbelieving husband is sanctified by the (believing) wife, and the unbelieving wife is sanctified by the (believing) husband; and he adds, Else were your children unclean; but now they are holy (1Co 7:14). Now, children who may be pronounced holy must be proper subjects of baptism. Why may they not have been consecrated and sealed as holy in baptism? But, assuming that both parents and children, admitted into the Church of Christ by baptism, are present in the Church assembly, while his pastoral is being read, the apostle would have them to remember that the fact that they are thus admitted and present, even though it be through the bath of baptism, does not do away with their reciprocal obligations, but renders them still more urgently imperative. Therefore the loving words of exhortation to both (Eph 6:1-4). (W. Tyson.)

Circumcision and infant baptism

1. It looks a rational system to make sure of the thing signified ere you impress the sign. We read of this one convert and that other having believed and been baptized, and this should be the order with every grownup person. But mark how it fared with Abraham and his posterity. He believed and was circumcised; and it was laid down for a statute in Israel that all his children should be circumcised in infancy. In like manner, the first Christians believed and were baptized, and then their children. Express authority is needed to warrant a change; but it is not needed to warrant a continuation. It is this want of express authority which stamps on the opposite system a character of innovation. When once bidden to walk in a straight line, it does not require the successive impulse of new biddings, to make us persevere in it. But it would require a new bidding to justify our going off from the line. Had the mode of infant baptism sprung up as a new piece of sectarianism, it would not have escaped notice. But there is no record of its ever having entered amongst us as a novelty; and we have therefore the strongest reason for believing that it has come down in one uncontrolled tide of example and observation from the days of the apostles. And if they have not given us any authority for it, they at least, had it been wrong, and when they saw that whole families of discipleship were getting into this style of observation, would have interposed and lifted up the voice of their authority against it. But we read of no such interdict. We have therefore the testimony of apostolic silence in favour of infant baptism.

2. But is it not wrong when the sign and the thing signified do not go together? Yes. In the case of an adult the thing signified should precede the sign. But in the case of an infant the sign precedes the thing signified. The former has been impressed upon him by the will of his parent, and the latter remains to be worked within him by the care of his parent. If he do not put forth this care, he is in the fault. He is like the steward who is entrusted by his superior with the subscription of his name to a space of blank paper, on the understanding that it was to be filled up in a particular way, agreeable to the will of his lord; and, instead of doing so, has filled it up with matter of a different import altogether. The infant, with its mind unfilled and unfurnished, has been put by the God of providence into his hands; and after the baptism which he himself hath craved, it has been again made over to him with the signature of Christian discipleship, and, by his own consent, impressed upon it; and he, by failing to grave the characters of discipleship upon it, hath unworthily betrayed the trust that was reposed in him. The worthies of the Old Testament circumcised their children in infancy, and the mark of separation reminded them of their duty to rear them as a holy generation; and many a Hebrew parent was solemnised by this observance to say, like Joshua, that whatever others should do, he with all his house should fear the Lord; and this was the testimony of God to Abraham, that He knew him, that he would bring up his children after him in all the ways that he had himself been taught; and it was the commandment of God to His servants of old, that they should teach their children diligently of the loyalty and gratitude that should be rendered to the God of Israel. And if this be enough to rationalise the infant circumcision of the Jews, it is equally enough to rationalise the infant baptism of Christians. The parent of our day, who feels as he ought, will feel himself in conscience to be solemnly charged that the infant whom he has held up to the baptism of Christianity, he should bring up in the belief of Christianity. It is well that there should be one sacrament in behalf of the grownup disciple, for the solemn avowal of his Christianity before men, and the very participation of which binds more closely about his conscience all the duties and all the consistencies of the gospel. But it is also well that there should be another sacrament, the place of which in his history is at the period of his infancy, and the obligation of which is felt, not by his conscience still in embryo, but by the conscience of him whose business is to develop and to guard and to nurture its yet unawakened sensibilities. This is like removing baptism upward on a higher vantage ground. It is assigning for it a station of command and of custody at the very fountainhead of moral influence.

3. Baptism, viewed as a seal, marks the promise of God, to grant the righteousness of faith to him who is impressed by it; but, viewed as a sign, it marks the existence of this faith. But if it be not a true sign, it is not an obligatory seal. He who believes and is baptized shall be saved. But he who is baptized and believes not shall be damned. It is not the circumcision which availeth, but a new creature. It is not the baptism which availeth, but the answer of a good conscience. God hath given a terrible demonstration of the utter Worthlessness of a sign that is deceitful, and hath let us know that on that event as a seal it is dissolved. When a whole circumcised nation lost the spirit, though they retained the letter of the ordinance, He swept it away. Beware, ye parents, who regularly hold up your children to the baptism of water, and make their baptism by the Holy Ghost no part of your concern or of your prayer–lest you thereby swell the judgments of the land, and bring down the sore displeasure of God upon your families. (T. Chalmers, D. D.)

The spiritual family of Abraham

Under the old covenant the ground of mans justification with God was the same as it is under the new, viz., faith. Ordinances varied, being but helpful accessories leading to, or resting upon, the one changeless basis of mans justification.


I.
Faith alone could admit Jews or Gentiles to the spiritual family of Abraham.

1. Faith was Abrahams sole ground of acceptance (Rom 4:9; Gal 3:6). The promises (Gen 12:3; Gen 17:4-6) preceded his circumcision.

2. Faith was indispensable for the Jews, although descended from Abraham, and circumcised (Rom 4:12; Rom 2:28-29; Rom 9:6-7). For neglecting this truth, and unduly trusting in their privileges of birth and circumcision, Christ rebuked them in Mat 3:9; Joh 8:39; and in the parable of Dives and Lazarus (Luk 16:22-23).

3. Faith admits Gentiles (verse 11) into the family of Abraham (Gal 3:7; Gal 3:9; Gal 3:29), who is the father of us all (verse 16). Zaccheus was thus admitted (Luk 19:9).


II.
Circumcision had a two-fold aspect.

1. To Abraham and adult proselytes it was a seal of antecedent faith (verse 11).

2. To infants receiving it, as did Jesus when eight days old, it was the seal of their admission into covenant with God; an incentive and pledge of future faith. If a child did not receive it, he hath broken My covenant (Gen 17:14).


III.
Analogy between baptism and circumcision.

1. St. Paul implies this when naming baptism (Gal 3:26-27; Gal 3:29) in connection with the Christians adoption into the family of Abraham and heirship of the promises.

2. Thus, to adults, baptism is, as circumcision was to Abraham, a seal of antecedent faith (Mar 16:16; Act 2:41; Act 8:12; Act 8:37).

3. To infants, baptism is, like circumcision, the seal of admission to covenant; pledge and incentive to future faith. The analogy of Gen 17:14, he hath broken My covenant, bears strongly on need of infant baptism.

Conclusion:

1. Examine ourselves as to performance of covenant promises made to God in baptism and renewed in confirmation.

2. Shun Jewish error of resting on rites and on privileges while ignoring the spiritual root of the matter–faith (Gal 5:6; Gal 6:15-16). (A. Scott Robertson, M. A.)

That he might be the father of all them that believe.

The father of the faithful

Two points are involved in this name.


I.
Abraham was himself faithful. In him was most distinctly manifested the gift of faith. In him, long before Luther, long before Paul, was it proclaimed that man is justified by faith. Abraham believed in the Lord and He counted it to him for righteousness (verse 13; cf. Gen 15:6). Powerful as is the effect of these words when we read them in their untarnished freshness, they gain immensely in their original language, to which neither Greek nor German, much less Latin or English, can furnish any full equivalent. He supported himself, he built himself up, he reposed as a child in his mothers arms in the strength of God; in God whom he did not see, more than in the giant empires of the earth, and the bright lights of heaven, or the claims of tribe and kindred, which were always before him. It was counted to him for righteousness. It was counted to him, and his history seals and ratifies the result. His faith transpires not in any outward profession, but precisely in that which far more nearly concerns him and every one of us, in his prayers, in his actions, in the justice, the uprightness, the elevation of soul and spirit which sent him on his way straightforward without turning to the right hand or to the left. His belief, vague and scanty as it may be, even in the most elementary truths of religion, is implied rather than stated. It is in him simply the evidence of things not seen, the hope against hope. His faith in the literal sense of the word is only known to us through his works. He and his descendants are blessed, not, as in the Koran, because of his adoption of the first article of the creed of Islam, but because he obeyed (Gen 26:5; Gen 18:19).


II.
He was the father of the faithful. In modern times it has too often happened that the doctrine of faith has had a narrowing effect on those who have strongly embraced it. It was far otherwise with Paul, to whom it was almost synonymous with the admission of the Gentiles. It was far otherwise with its first exemplification in Abraham. His very name implies this universal mission. The Father (Abba); The lofty Father (Ab-ram); The Father of multitudes (Ab-raham); the venerable parent, surveying, as if from that lofty eminence,, the countless progeny who should look up to him as their spiritual ancestor. He was, first, the Father of the chosen people, the people who by reason of their faith, though in one sense the narrowest of all ancient nations, yet were also the widest in their diffusion and dispersion–the only people that, by virtue of an invisible bond, maintained their national union in spite of local difference and division. But he was much more than the father of the chosen people. It is not a mere allegory or accidental application of separate texts, that justify St. Pauls appeal to the case of Abraham as including within itself the faith of the whole Gentile world. His position, as represented to us in the original records, is of itself far wider than that of any merely Jewish saint or national hero; and he is, on that ground alone, the fitting image to meet us at the outset of the history of the Church. He was the Hebrew to whom the Arabian no less than the Israelite tribes look back as to their first ancestor. The scene of his life, as of the patriarchs generally, breathes a larger atmosphere than the contracted limits of Palestine–the free air of Mesopotamia and the desert–the neighbourhood of the vast shapes of the Babylonian monarchy on one side, and of Egypt on the other. He is not an ecclesiastic, not an ascetic, not even a learned sage, but a chief, a shepherd, a warrior, full of all the affections and interests of family and household, and wealth and power, and for this very reason the first true type of the religious man, the first representative of the whole Church of God. This universality of Abrahams faith–this elevation, this multitudinousness of the patriarchal character has also found a response in later traditions and feelings. When Mohammed attacks the idolatry of the Arabs, he justifies himself by arguing, almost in the language of Paul, that the faith he proclaimed in one supreme God was no new belief, but was identical with the ancient religion of their first father Abraham. When the Emperor Alexander Severus placed in the chapel of his palace the statues of the choice spirits of all times, Abraham rather than Moses was selected as the centre, doubtless, of a more extended circle of sacred associations. (Dean Stanley.)

Abrahams spiritual fatherhood

This idea was quite a familiar one to St. Paul. In Galatians he expands and illustrates it still more fully. It represents Abraham–


I.
As a grand type or example of believers (cf. Gen 4:20-21)

.


II.
As the first of the saints. No doubt Abel, Enoch, Noah, and Shem were saved by faith, but still it was not until the time of Abraham that one was chosen in whom this great truth should be clearly and conspicuously exemplified.


III.
As the federal head of the faithful. All believers are accounted as his seed, so that the promises made to him are also made to them, and the covenant entered into with him is also the same as that entered into with them. We have now another head, that is, Christ, and in Him the promises of God assume a far higher and more spiritual aspect than they did in regard to Abraham; but still the headship of Abraham is not destroyed, but absorbed. So far as Gods covenant with him extended, it is still firm and binding, and it belongs to all his seed, even all believers. It was a germ, out of which has sprung the higher covenant of God in Christ; but still we shall find in it much which may excite our interest, provoke our gratitude and determine our conduct. (T. G. Horton.)

The true children of Abraham


I.
How they are reckoned.

1. Not by birth.

2. Not according to law.

3. But by faith.


II.
How they are distinguished.

1. By the true circumcision of the heart, which is both a sign and a seal of the righteousness of faith.

2. By walking in the steps of Abrahams faith.


III.
What are their privileges.

1. Adoption.

2. Inheritance. (J. Lyth, D. D.)

Who walk in the stops of that faith of our father Abraham.–

The faith of Abraham

This was–

1. A simple child-like dependence on the naked word of God.

2. An acceptance of and trust in Gods promised Saviour.

3. A renouncing of his own works as meritorious.

4. A faith that wrought by love, making him the friend of God (Jam 2:23).

5. One that overcame the world, leading him to seek a hotter country (Heb 11:10).

6. One that evidenced its reality by a self-denying obedience (Heb 11:8; Heb 11:17; Jam 2:21). True Abrahamic faith is love in the battlefield. (T. Robinson, D. D.)

Fuente: Biblical Illustrator Edited by Joseph S. Exell

Verse 9. Cometh this blessedness – upon the circumcision only] The word , only, is very properly supplied by our translators, and indeed is found in some excellent MSS., and is here quite necessary to complete the sense. The apostle’s question is very nervous. If this pardon, granted in this way, be essential to happiness – and David says it is so – then is it the privilege of the Jews exclusively? This cannot be; for, as it is by the mere mercy of God, through faith, the circumcision cannot even claim it. But if God offer it to the circumcision, not because they have been obedient, for they also have sinned, but because of his mere mercy, then of course the same blessedness may be offered to the Gentiles who believe in the Lord Jesus. And this is evident; for we say, following our own Scriptures, that faith was reckoned to Abraham for righteousness; he had no merit, he was an idolater; but he believed in God, and his faith was reckoned to him , in reference to his justification; he brought faith when he could not bring works; and God accepted his faith in the place of obedience; and this became the instrumental cause of his justification.

Fuente: Adam Clarke’s Commentary and Critical Notes on the Bible

This word cometh is not in the original, but it is aptly inserted by our translators.

Circumcision again is put for the circumcised, and uncircumcision for the uncircumcised: see Rom 2:28.

For we say; q.d. This we have proved, and it is on all hands confessed,

that faith was reckoned to Abraham for righteousness: now, therefore, the question is, whether this blessedness of justification belongs to the circumcised only, or to the uncircumcised also.

Fuente: English Annotations on the Holy Bible by Matthew Poole

9-12. Comeththis blessedness then, c.that is, “Say not, All this isspoken of the circumcised, and is therefore no evidence ofGod’s general way of justifying men for Abraham’sjustification took place long before he was circumcised, and so couldhave no dependence upon that rite: nay, ‘the sign of circumcision’was given to Abraham as ‘a seal’ (or token) of the (justifying)righteousness which he had before he was circumcised; in orderthat he might stand forth to every age as the parent believerthemodel man of justification by faithafter whose type, as the firstpublic example of it, all were to be moulded, whether Jew or Gentile,who should thereafter believe to life everlasting.”

Fuente: Jamieson, Fausset and Brown’s Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible

[Cometh] this blessedness then upon the circumcision [only]?…. That is, upon the circumcised Jews; are they the only persons that partake of this happiness? the word “only” is rightly supplied, and is in the Claromontane exemplar used by Beza, and in the Vulgate Latin and Ethiopic versions:

or upon the uncircumcision also? upon the uncircumcised Gentiles; do not they likewise share in this blessedness?

for we say, that faith was reckoned to Abraham for righteousness. The design of these words with the following, is to prove that the blessing of justification belongs to Gentiles as well as Jews, and that it is by faith, and not by circumcision; which is done by observing the state and condition Abraham was in when justified.

Fuente: John Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible

The Case of Abraham.

A. D. 58.

      9 Cometh this blessedness then upon the circumcision only, or upon the uncircumcision also? for we say that faith was reckoned to Abraham for righteousness.   10 How was it then reckoned? when he was in circumcision, or in uncircumcision? Not in circumcision, but in uncircumcision.   11 And he received the sign of circumcision, a seal of the righteousness of the faith which he had yet being uncircumcised: that he might be the father of all them that believe, though they be not circumcised; that righteousness might be imputed unto them also:   12 And the father of circumcision to them who are not of the circumcision only, but who also walk in the steps of that faith of our father Abraham, which he had being yet uncircumcised.   13 For the promise, that he should be the heir of the world, was not to Abraham, or to his seed, through the law, but through the righteousness of faith.   14 For if they which are of the law be heirs, faith is made void, and the promise made of none effect:   15 Because the law worketh wrath: for where no law is, there is no transgression.   16 Therefore it is of faith, that it might be by grace; to the end the promise might be sure to all the seed; not to that only which is of the law, but to that also which is of the faith of Abraham; who is the father of us all,   17a (As it is written, I have made thee a father of many nations,)

      St. Paul observes in this paragraph when and why Abraham was thus justified; for he has several things to remark upon that. It was before he was circumcised, and before the giving of the law; and there was a reason for both.

      I. It was before he was circumcised, v. 10. His faith was counted to him for righteousness while he was in uncircumcision. It was imputed, Gen. xv. 6, and he was not circumcised till ch. xvii.. Abraham is expressly said to be justified by faith fourteen years, some say twenty-five years, before he was circumcised. Now this the apostle takes notice of in answer to the question (v. 9), Cometh this blessedness then on the circumcision only, or on the uncircumcision also? Abraham was pardoned and accepted in uncircumcision, a circumstance which, as it might silence the fears of the poor uncircumcised Gentiles, so it might lower the pride and conceitedness of the Jews, who gloried in their circumcision, as if they had the monopoly of all happiness. Here are two reasons why Abraham was justified by faith in uncircumcision:–

      1. That circumcision might be a seal of the righteousness of faith, v. 11. The tenour of the covenants must first be settled before the seal can be annexed. Sealing supposes a previous bargain, which is confirmed and ratified by that ceremony. After Abraham’s justification by faith had continued several years only a grant by parole, for the confirmation of Abraham’s faith God was pleased to appoint a sealing ordinance, and Abraham received it; though it was a bloody ordinance, yet he submitted to it, and even received it as a special favour, the sign of circumcision, c. Now we may hence observe, (1.) The nature of sacraments in general: they are signs and seals–signs to represent and instruct, seals to ratify and confirm. They are signs of absolute grace and favour they are seals of the conditional promises; nay, they are mutual seals: God does in the sacraments seal to us to be to us a God, and we do therein seal to him to be to him a people. (2.) The nature of circumcision in particular: it was the initiating sacrament of the Old Testament; and it is here said to be, [1.] A sign–a sign of that original corruption which we are all born with, and which is cut off by spiritual circumcision,–a commemorating sign of God’s covenant with Abraham,–a distinguishing sign between Jews and Gentiles,–a sign of admission into the visible church,–a sign prefiguring baptism, which comes in the room of circumcision, now under the gospel, when (the blood of Christ being shed) all bloody ordinances are abolished; it was an outward and sensible sign of an inward and spiritual grace signified thereby. [2.] A seal of the righteousness of the faith. In general, it was a seal of the covenant of grace, particularly of justification by faith–the covenant of grace, called the righteousness which is of faith (ch. x. 6), and it refers to an Old-Testament promise, Deut. xxx. 12. Now if infants were then capable of receiving a seal of the covenant of grace, which proves that they then were within the verge of that covenant, how they come to be now cast out of the covenant and incapable of the seal, and by what severe sentence they were thus rejected and incapacitated, those are concerned to make out that not only reject, but nullify and reproach, the baptism of the seed of believers.

      2. That he might be the father of all those that believe. Not but that there were those that were justified by faith before Abraham; but of Abraham first it is particularly observed, and in him commenced a much clearer and fuller dispensation of the covenant of grace than any that had been before extant; and there he is called the father of all that believe, because he was so eminent a believer, and so eminently justified by faith, as Jabal was the father of shepherds and Jubal of musicians, Gen 4:20; Gen 4:21. The father of all those that believe; that is, a standing pattern of faith, as parents are examples to their children; and a standing precedent of justification by faith, as the liberties, privileges, honours, and estates, of the fathers descend to their children. Abraham was the father of believers, because to him particularly the magna charta was renewed. (1.) The father of believing Gentiles, though they be not circumcised. Zaccheus, a publican, if he believe, is reckoned a son of Abraham, Luke xix. 9. Abraham being himself uncircumcised when he was justified by faith, uncircumcision can never be a bar. Thus were the doubts and fears of the poor Gentiles anticipated and no room left to question but that righteousness might be imputed to them also, Col 3:11; Gal 5:6. (2.) The father of believing Jews, not merely as circumcised, and of the seed of Abraham according to the flesh, but because believers, because they are not of the circumcision only (that is, are not only circumcised), but walk in the steps of that faith–have not only the sign, but the thing signified–not only are of Abraham’s family, but follow the example of Abraham’s faith. See here who are the genuine children and lawful successors of those that were the church’s fathers: not those that sit in their chairs, and bear their names, but those that tread in their steps; this is the line of succession, which holds, notwithstanding interruptions. It seems, then, those were most loud and forward to call Abraham father that had least title to the honours and privileges of his children. Thus those have most reason to call Christ Father, not that bear his name in being Christians in profession, but that tread in his steps.

      II. It was before the giving of the law, v. 13-16. The former observation is levelled against those that confined justification to the circumcision, this against those that expected it by the law; now the promise was made to Abraham long before the law. Compare Gal 3:17; Gal 3:18. Now observe,

      1. What that promise was–that he should be the heir of the world, that is, of the land of Canaan, the choicest spot of ground in the world,–or the father of many nations of the world, who sprang from him, besides the Israelites,–or the heir of the comforts of the life which now is. The meek are said to inherit the earth, and the world is theirs. Though Abraham had so little of the world in possession, yet he was heir of it all. Or, rather, it points at Christ, the seed here mentioned; compare Gal. iii. 16, To thy seed, which is Christ. Now Christ is the heir of the world, the ends of the earth are his possession, and it is in him that Abraham was so. And it refers to that promise (Gen. xii. 3), In thee shall all the families of the earth be blessed.

      2. How it was made to him: Not through the law, but through the righteousness of faith. Not through the law, for that was not yet given: but it was upon that believing which was counted to him for righteousness; it was upon his trusting God, in his leaving his own country when God commanded him, Heb. xi. 8. Now, being by faith, it could not be by the law, which he proves by the opposition there is between them (Rom 4:14; Rom 4:15): If those who are of the law be heirs; that is, those, and those only, and they by virtue of the law (the Jews did, and still do, boast that they are the rightful heirs of the world, because to them the law was given), then faith is made void; for, if it were requisite to an interest in the promise that there should be a perfect performance of the whole law, then the promise can never take its effect, nor is it to any purpose for us to depend upon it, since the way to life by perfect obedience to the law, and spotless sinless innocency, is wholly blocked up, and the law in itself opens no other way. This he proves, v. 15. The law worketh wrath–wrath in us to God; it irritates and provokes that carnal mind which is enmity to God, as the damming up of a stream makes it swell–wrath in God against us. It works this, that is, it discovers it, or our breach of the law works it. Now it is certain that we can never expect the inheritance by a law that worketh wrath. How the law works wrath he shows very concisely in the latter part of the verse: Where no law is there is no transgression, an acknowledged maxim, which implies, Where there is a law there is transgression and that transgression is provoking, and so the law worketh wrath.

      3. Why the promise was made to him by faith; for three reasons, v. 16. (1.) That it might be by grace, that grace might have the honour of it; by grace, and not by the law; by grace, and not of debt, nor of merit; that Grace, grace, might be cried to every stone, especially to the top-stone, in this building. Faith hath particular reference to grace granting, as grace hath reference to faith receiving. By grace, and therefore through faith, Eph. ii. 8. For God will have every crown thrown at the feet of grace, free grace, and every song in heaven sung to that tune, Not unto us, O Lord, not unto us, but unto thy name be the praise. (2.) That the promise might be sure. The first covenant, being a covenant of works, was not sure: but, through man’s failure, the benefits designed by it were cut off; and therefore, the more effectually to ascertain and ensure the conveyance of the new covenant, there is another way found out, not by works (were it so, the promise would not be sure, because of the continual frailty and infirmity of the flesh), but by faith, which receives all from Christ, and acts in a continual dependence upon him, as the great trustee of our salvation, and in whose keeping it is safe. The covenant is therefore sure, because it is so well ordered in all things, 2 Sam. xxiii. 5. (3.) That it might be sure to all the seed. If it had been by the law, it had been limited to the Jews, to whom pertained the glory, and the covenants, and the giving of the law (ch. ix. 4); but therefore it was by faith that Gentiles as well as Jews might become interested in it, the spiritual as well as the natural seed of faithful Abraham. God would contrive the promise in such a way as might make it most extensive, to comprehend all true believers, that circumcision and uncircumcision might break no squares; and for this (v. 17) he refers us to Gen. xvii. 5, where the reason of the change of his name from Abram–a high father, to Abraham–the high father of a multitude, is thus rendered: For a father of many nations have I made thee; that is, all believers, both before and since the coming of Christ in the flesh, should take Abraham for their pattern, and call him father. The Jews say Abraham was the father of all proselytes to the Jewish religion. Behold, he is the father of all the world, which are gathered under the wings of the Divine Majesty.–Maimonides.

Fuente: Matthew Henry’s Whole Bible Commentary

Is this blessing then pronounced? ( ?). “Is this felicitation then?” There is no verb in the Greek. Paul now proceeds to show that Abraham was said in Ge 15:6 to be set right with God by faith before he was circumcised.

Fuente: Robertson’s Word Pictures in the New Testament

JUSTIFICATION NOT RELATED TO THE ORDINANCES

1) “Cometh this blessedness then upon the circumcision only?” (ho makarismos oun houtos epi ten peritomen) “Does this blessedness come on the circumcision alone;” are the circumcised the only people who have or can have the righteousness of God, justification, redemption, or eternal life?

2) “Or upon the uncircumcision also?” (e kai epi ten arkrobustian); “Or also upon the uncircumcision?” or upon the Gentiles, those uncircumcised among the races, also? The answer is “upon the uncircumcision also,” as to the household of Cornelius, Act 10:34-47; and to all believing Gentiles, Act 11:18.

3) “For we say that faith was reckoned to Abraham,” (legomen gar elogisthe to Abraam he pistis) “For we assert that the faith (of) was reckoned to Abraham,” or faith was imputed (counted) to Abraham, to or for his sin-need;” In no place is it stated or inferred that circumcision is, was, or may be imputed for righteousness.

4) “For righteousness,” (eis dikaiosunen) “For righteousness, in order to make Abraham righteous. Never was any work of the flesh reckoned or imputed for righteousness to any person, Rom 4:4; Rom 4:11-12. The conclusion Paul affirmed was that the blessedness of imputed righteousness, forgiveness of sins, and pardon is not restricted to those of the circumcision only, Gal 3:6-9.

Fuente: Garner-Howes Baptist Commentary

9-10. As circumcision and uncircumcision are alone mentioned, some unwisely conclude, that the only question is, that righteousness is not attained by the ceremonies of the law. But we ought to consider what sort of men were those with whom Paul was reasoning; for we know that hypocrites, whilst they generally boast of meritorious works, do yet disguise themselves in outward masks. The Jews also had a peculiar way of their own, by which they departed, through a gross abuse of the law, from true and genuine righteousness. Paul had said, that no one is blessed but he whom God reconciles to himself by a gratuitous pardon; it hence follows, that all are accursed, whose works come to judgment. Now then this principle is to be held, that men are justified, not by their own worthiness, but by the mercy of God. But still, this is not enough, except remission of sins precedes all works, and of these the first was circumcision, which initiated the Jewish people into the service of God. He therefore proceeds to demonstrate this also.

We must ever bear in mind, that circumcision is here mentioned as the initial work, so to speak, of the righteousness of the law: for the Jews gloried not in it as the symbol of God’s favor, but as a meritorious observance of the law: and on this account it was that they regarded themselves better than others, as though they possessed a higher excellency before God. We now see that the dispute is not about one rite, but that under one thing is included every work of the law; that is, every work to which reward can be due. Circumcision then was especially mentioned, because it was the basis of the righteousness of the law.

But Paul maintains the contrary, and thus reasons: “If Abraham’s righteousness was the remission of sins, (which he safely takes as granted,) and if Abraham attained this before circumcision, it then follows that remission of sins is not given for preceding merits.” You see that the argument rests on the order of causes and effects; for the cause is always before its effect; and righteousness was possessed by Abraham before he had circumcision.

Fuente: Calvin’s Complete Commentary

Text

Rom. 4:9-12. Is this blessing then pronounced upon the circumcision, or upon the uncircumcision also? for we say, To Abraham his faith was reckoned for righteousness. Rom. 4:10 How then was it reckoned? when he was in circumcision, or in uncircumcision? Not in circumcision, but in uncircumcision: Rom. 4:11 and he received the sign of circumcision, a seal of the righteousness of the faith which he had while he was in uncircumcision: that he might be the father of all them that believe, though they be in uncircumcision, that righteousness might be reckoned unto them; Rom. 4:12 and the father of circumcision to them who not only are of the circumcision, but who also walk in the steps of that faith of our father Abraham which he had in uncircumcision.

REALIZING ROMANS, Rom. 4:9-12

143.

Why mention circumcision?

144.

Give the meaning of the word reckoned as in Rom. 4:9.

145.

Paul is going to prove something by showing that Abraham was declared righteous before he was circumcised; what is it?

146.

Circumcision is here called a sign and a sealwhat does this indicate as to its importance-or lack of importance?

147.

Abraham became the father of all who believe at the time in which he was circumcised. Explain how.

148.

Abraham can be the father of those in uncircumcision. This was a terrible thought to the Jew. Why?

149.

What is the meaning of the expression, Walk in the steps of that faith . . . ?

Paraphrase

Rom. 4:9-12. Cometh this blessedness, then, of the Lords not punishing sin, on persons in the visible church [assembly of Israel] only? or on persons out of the visible church also? Certainly on them also. For we affirm, that faith was counted to Abraham for righteousness, in uncircumcision.

Rom. 4:10 What state then was Abraham in, when it was so counted? When he was in circumcision or in uncircumcision? Not in circumcision, but in uncircumcision. For it happened long before he and his family were made the church of God by circumcision.

Rom. 4:11 And instead of being justified by circumcision, he received the mark of circumcision on his body after his justification, as a seal of the righteousness of the faith which he exercised in uncircumcision, in order to his being made the federal head of all them who believe out of the visible church, to assure us that the righteousness of faith shall be counted even to them, by virtue of Gods promise to him:

Rom. 4:12 Also the federal head of the circumcised, that is, of those who are in the visible church, to assure us that righteousness shall be counted to them who do not rest contented with being of the visible church only, but who also walk in the footsteps of that faith and obedience which our father Abraham exercised in uncircumcision; that is, while he was no member of Gods visible church.

Summary

The blessedness of justification by belief, is for Jews and Gentiles alike. Abraham was justified before he was circumcised, his circumcision being a seal of that fact. Hence justification does not depend on circumcision. Abraham is father to all who believe in an uncircumcised state, as well as to all the circumcised who walk in his steps.

Comment

Since the discussion has been concerned with Abraham, David also being mentioned, are we to conclude that only to the circumcised has the blessing or justification through faith been given? Or is it given to the uncircumcised also? This can be answered from the very illustration given, for we must realize WHEN Abraham was declared righteous. Was it when he was circumcised or before his circumcision? Ah, you know, it was before circumcision. If you will but consider for a moment you will remember that circumcision was given to Abraham as a seal or a sign of the fact that God had justified him. Then because of Abrahams submission to this rite as a token of Gods covenant with him, he became the spiritual head of all in the world who have faith like his. cp. Gen. 17:11. He did become the father of all who, although not circumcised, had a belief like Abraham and through this faith were justified. And likewise he became the father of the Jew who was not only circumcised but also walked by faith, faith like that exercised by Abraham while he was yet in uncircumcision. Rom. 4:9-12

Fuente: College Press Bible Study Textbook Series

(9) Cometh this blessedness.We shall, perhaps. best see the force of the particles then and for if we take the sentence out of its interrogative form. It follows from the language of David that the blessedness thus predicated belongs to the uncircumcised as well as to the circumcised, forthen comes the first premise of the argument by which this is proved. It was the act of faith which was the cause of Abrahams justification. But both the act of faith and the justification consequent upon it were prior to the institution of the rite of circumcision. The narrative of this institution falls in Genesis 17, when Abraham was ninety-nine years old, and Ishmael, his son, thirteen (Gen. 17:1; Gen. 17:24-25), while the vision and promise of Genesis 15 apparently came before the birth of Ishmael.

Fuente: Ellicott’s Commentary for English Readers (Old and New Testaments)

(9-12) What is the bearing of this upon the relation between Jew and Gentile? Is the blessedness of the justified state reserved only for the former? Is it limited to those who are circumcised? On the contrary, the state of justification was attributed to Abraham himself before he was circumcised. Justification is the result of faith, not of circumcision. Circumcision is so far from superseding faith that it was only the sign or seal of it.

This, then, is the great test. Those who have it may hope for justification, whether their descent from Abraham is spiritual or literal.

Fuente: Ellicott’s Commentary for English Readers (Old and New Testaments)

9-12. Not only was Abraham justified by faith, but he was justified as essentially a Gentile; he was justified for twenty-five years before he was circumcised. That circumcision was not the antecedent ground of his justification, but the subsequent sign and seal of it. So under Christian dispensation baptism is the seal of infant justification, or upon the adult convert is the sign and seal consequent upon the justification of actual faith.

Fuente: Whedon’s Commentary on the Old and New Testaments

‘Is this blessing then pronounced on the circumcision, or on the uncircumcision also? For we say, To Abraham his faith was reckoned for righteousness. How then was it reckoned? When he was in circumcision, or in uncircumcision? Not in circumcision, but in uncircumcision,’

Paul now uses the life of Abraham to support his contention that the uncircumcised can receive the blessing of ‘being reckoned as in the right’ equally with the circumcised. For, he says, when Abraham was reckoned as in the right in Rom 15:6 it was long before he was circumcised. Circumcision could not have been further from his mind. It was as an uncircumcised man that he was reckoned as in the right before God. Thus it is clear that God saw being reckoned as in the right before Him as having nothing to do with circumcision.

Fuente: Commentary Series on the Bible by Peter Pett

2). How Then Does Circumcision Affect The Issue As Illustrated In The Life Of Abraham? (4:9-12).

Paul now brings up with respect to Abraham the point that he had made in Rom 3:30, where he had claimed that God ‘will justify the circumcision by faith, and the uncircumcision through faith.’ Here he asks, ‘Is this blessing (the blessing of not having sin reckoned to them, and of having righteousness reckoned to them) then pronounced on the circumcision, or on the uncircumcision also?’ And his reply is that when Abraham believed God and was reckoned as righteous by faith he was not circumcised. Nor, he could have argued, was he circumcised until a good while after. Circumcision was nowhere related to his being accounted as righteous.

And we could add that that circumcision was not related to his being reckoned as righteous at any stage. It had rather to do with God’s promises to Abraham, not only about Isaac and his descendants, but also about Ishmael and his descendants. In other words circumcision was much broader than Israel. Paul does not bring that out (to him the church was Israel), but he does stress that Abraham be seen as the father of us all, both circumcised and uncircumcised. He would no doubt in support of this have pointed back to other promises that Abraham had believed, after he had responded in faith to God, namely that he would be a blessing to the world (Gen 12:3). All that being so, circumcision cannot be seen as necessary in order for a man to be reckoned as righteous by God. Only faith is necessary.

Fuente: Commentary Series on the Bible by Peter Pett

Righteousness by Faith is for the Uncircumcised as Well as the Circumcised In Rom 4:9-12 Paul clearly explains that righteousness was imputed to Abraham while he was in uncircumcision. This conclusion supports Paul’s next statement that the divine blessings and promises were imparted to Abraham because of his faith and not under any of the conditions of the Law.

Rom 4:9  Cometh this blessedness then upon the circumcision only, or upon the uncircumcision also? for we say that faith was reckoned to Abraham for righteousness.

Rom 4:10  How was it then reckoned? when he was in circumcision, or in uncircumcision? Not in circumcision, but in uncircumcision.

Rom 4:9-10 Comments Abraham’s Blessings – The blessings of Abraham come to us through the atonement of Jesus Christ. Now if Abraham were blessed after circumcision, then these blessings would only be for those who are circumcised like Abraham, which means we would have to be a Jew. But thank God, Abraham was blessed before he was circumcised. Therefore, his blessings are for both the circumcised and the uncircumcised, for both Jews and Gentiles.

Rom 4:11  And he received the sign of circumcision, a seal of the righteousness of the faith which he had yet being uncircumcised: that he might be the father of all them that believe, though they be not circumcised; that righteousness might be imputed unto them also:

Rom 4:11 “And he received the sign of circumcision” Comments Circumcision in the Old Testament was a symbol of a severing of the flesh. Through circumcision, the Jews had a constant reminder that they were to crucify the flesh, not being led by their own ways, but by faith in God. Circumcision was the seal ( ) (G4973) of righteousness by faith.

Under the new covenant, we receive the seal of the Holy Spirit as a sign of the new covenant. The Scriptures tell us this in Eph 1:13. The Spirit prompts us to be led by our hearts, no longer walking in the flesh.

Eph 1:13, “In whom ye also trusted, after that ye heard the word of truth, the gospel of your salvation: in whom also after that ye believed, ye were sealed with that holy Spirit of promise ,”

Abraham opened his heart to God (Deu 10:16).

Deu 10:16, “Circumcise therefore the foreskin of your heart, and be no more stiffnecked.”

Rom 4:11 “that he might be the father of all them that believe, though they be not circumcised” Comments Abraham is considered to be the Father of all Jews. This verse tells us that his act of circumcision, being a sign of his covenant with God the Father, caused him to become the father of all Gentiles who believe, as well as the Jews who walk in the footsteps of God’s standard of righteousness.

What does it mean to become a “father” of a people? One good example is seen in some of the historic flights made today with some of the world’s biggest passenger jets. One of these took place on November 10, 2005 when a Boeing 777 commercial airline flew from Hong Kong to London, a distance of 18,662 kilometers (11,664 miles) on a flight that took 22 hours and 43 minutes in the air, breaking the record for the longest nonstop flight by a commercial jet. Those on board enjoyed the luxuries of a lounge, beds, sofas and meals. But such events did not begin that way. The first man make such a flight across the oceans was Lindburgh, who fathered flights across the Atlantic. On May 20, 1927 he roared down the muddy runway of Roosevelt Field, Long Island and lifted his small aircraft, the “Spirit of St. Louis,” into the air. Thirty-three and one half-hours and 3,500 miles later he landed in Paris, France. This was a dangerous journey that had already seen a number of men lost at sea in their failed attempts to be the first to cross the Atlantic. Lindburgh had no parachute, but only took with him with four sandwiches, two canteens of water and 451 gallons of fuel in order to keep his load light. His spirit and will to succeed captivated the world and made many believe that it could be done. From that point men worked hard in faith knowing that they could follow in the steps of Lindburgh. [164]

[164] “Lindbergh Flies the Atlantic, 1927,” (Eye Witness to History, www.eyewitnesstohistory.com , 1999) [on-line]; accessed 18 April 2010; available from http://www.eyewitnesstohistory.com/lindbergh.htm; Internet.

Today, we look at Abraham’s historic steps in the Promised Land, obeying the Lord in order to demonstrate to us that it is possible to live in right standing with God. Thus, he serves as a “father of faith” for all who were to believe afterwards.

Rom 4:12  And the father of circumcision to them who are not of the circumcision only, but who also walk in the steps of that faith of our father Abraham, which he had being yet uncircumcised.

Fuente: Everett’s Study Notes on the Holy Scriptures

Justification does not presuppose the fulfillment of the Law:

v. 9. Cometh this blessedness, then, upon the circumcision only, or upon the uncircumcision also? For we say that faith was reckoned to Abraham for righteousness.

v. 10. How was it then reckoned, when he was in circumcision or in uncircumcision? Not in circumcision, but in uncircumcision.

v. 11. and he received the sign of circumcision, a seal of the righteousness of the faith which he had yet being uncircumcised, that he might be the father of all them that believe, though they be not circumcised, that righteousness might be imputed unto them also;

v. 12. and the father of circumcision to them who are not of the circumcision only, but who also walk in the steps of that faith of our father Abraham which he had being yet uncircumcised.

St. Paul had proved that Abraham had not been justified on account of his keeping the Law, by reason of his merits in general; he now shows that circumcision is neither the basis nor the condition of his acceptance. That the joyful exclamation of David at the blessedness of the people whom he describes could be applied to the circumcised needed no proof: but the difficulty was whether it could be applied also to people that had not received the sacrament of circumcision. And so the apostle again takes up the case of Abraham. This blessedness now, does it come upon the circumcision or upon the uncircumcision? Does the psalmist’s declaration of blessedness concern the circumcised people only? Is circumcision necessary to justification? For we say that faith was imputed to Abraham for righteousness. This declarative. sentence serves as an illustration for the question, it states a concrete fact, on the basis of which alone the general question may be answered. How, then, was it imputed? In what condition was Abraham when he received the declaration of God concerning his justification? History gives the answer: Not when he was circumcised, but when he was uncircumcised, before the Lord had given him the rite of the Old Testament initiation. The justification of Abraham took place some fourteen years before his circumcision; therefore it was not the specific Jewish rite upon which he depended for acceptance with God. What was the relation, then, between God’s declaration and between the institution of the sacrament? What was the true nature, design, and object of circumcision? Abraham received the sign of circumcision, the sign which consisted in the circumcision, as a seal of the righteousness of faith which he had had in his uncircumcised state. The Jews took a great delight in boasting of circumcision, not only as a mark to distinguish them from the heathen, but as a form of merit, teaching that every circumcised person by that token became a partaker of the blessings of the Kingdom. Thus they believed also of Abraham that he had been acceptable to God on account of the mere external work of carrying out the command of God to circumcise all the males of his household. But Paul here emphasizes that Abraham received the rite as a gift, not as a merit; and furthermore, that Abraham was circumcised only after he had been justified by the express sentence of God. And the purpose of God in ordering matters in this way was a twofold one. Abraham was to be the spiritual father, first, of those who, like himself, received justification while in the state of uncircumcision, in order that to them also righteousness might be imputed. And, in the second place, Abraham was to be the spiritual father of those that, having received the rite of circumcision, proved themselves true children of Abraham by walking in the footsteps of the faith that he had long before God instituted the sacrament and entrusted it to him. “It was God’s intention that Abraham should be the representative and typical believer, in whom all believers without distinction should recognize their spiritual father. ” Note: The righteousness of the Christians is the righteousness of faith, that is, the righteousness which they receive by faith and apply to themselves. Mark also: All believers are spiritual children of Abraham, they have their father’s manner, they possess the same justifying faith. “Thus all those that, according to the model of Abraham, believe, are the seed of Abraham and partakers of the blessing, whether they be Gentiles or Jews, circumcised or uncircumcised.”

Fuente: The Popular Commentary on the Bible by Kretzmann

Rom 4:9-10 . From the connection ( , Rom 4:6 ) of this Davidic with what had previously been adduced, Rom 4:3-5 , regarding Abraham, it is now inferred ( ) that this declaration of blessedness affects, not the circumcised as such, but also the uncircumcised; for Abraham in fact, as an uncircumcised person, was included among those pronounced blessed by David.

. .] The verb obviously to be supplied is most simply conceived as (the extends to etc.; comp Rom 2:9 ; Act 4:33 et al [994] ). Less natural is from Rom 4:6 (Fritzsche); and (Theophylact, Bos) is arbitrary, as is also (Oecumenius), and (Olshausen). Comp Rom 4:13 , and see Buttmann, neut. Gr. p. 120 f.

. . . . [996] ] to the circumcised, or also to the uncircumcised? The shows that the previous . . is conceived as exclusive , consequently without a .

. . [997] ] In saying this Paul cannot wish first to explain, quite superfluously, how he comes to put such questions (Hofmann), but, as is indicated by , which lays down a proposition as premiss to the argument that follows, he enters on the proof ( ) from the history of Abraham for the . . which is conceived as affirmed. The present denotes the assertion pointing back to Rom 4:3 as continuing: for our assertion, our proposition is , etc. The plural assumes the assent of the readers. The emphasis however is not on . (Fritzsche, de Wette, Baumgarten-Crusius, Maier, Philippi, and others), which Paul would have made apparent by the position of the words . ; nor on , which in that case would necessarily have a pregnant meaning not indicated in the whole connection (as a pure act of grace, independent of external conditions); but on (and thus primarily on ) brought together at the end, by which the import of Rom 4:3 , . , is recapitulated.

] The proposition, that to Abraham, etc., is certain; consequently the point at issue is the question quomodo , viz. under what circumstances as to status (whether in his circumcision, or whilst he was still uncircumcised) that imputation of his faith to him for righteousness took place. [998] Hofmann places the first mark of interrogation after , so that the second question is supposed to begin with . But without sufficient ground, and contrary to the usage elsewhere of the interrogative by Paul, who has often put thus without a verb, but never . We should in such case have to understand ; but this word, according to the usual punctuation, is already present , and does not therefore need to be supplied.

, .] scil. . The imputation in question took place as early as Gen 15 ; circumcision not till Gen 17 ; the former at least fourteen years earlier.

[994] t al. and others; and other passages; and other editions.

[996] . . . .

[997] . . . .

[998] Respecting the form of the discourse, Erasmus aptly observes: “Praeter interrogationis gratiam multum lucis addit dilemma , cujus altera parte rejecta alteram evincit. Nullum enim argumentandi genus vel apertius vel violentius.”

Fuente: Heinrich August Wilhelm Meyer’s New Testament Commentary

Cometh this blessedness then upon the circumcision only, or upon the uncircumcision also? for we say that faith was reckoned to Abraham for righteousness. (10) How was it then reckoned? when he was in circumcision, or in uncircumcision? Not in circumcision, but in uncircumcision. (11) And he received the sign of circumcision, a seal of the righteousness of the faith which he had yet being uncircumcised: that he might be the father of all them that believe, though they be not circumcised; that righteousness might be imputed unto them also: (12) And the father of circumcision to them who are not of the circumcision only, but who also walk in the steps of that faith of our father Abraham, which he had being yet uncircumcised.

The Apostle having introduced this portion of David’s writings, by way of confirmation to the doctrine of justification by faith without works, returns again to the history of Abraham, to gather further proofs to the same precious truth. He had now fully established the fact itself, that the thing is as he had stated, and that a man is blessed to whom the Lord will not impute sin; and he demands in a way of question, in order to shew that the whole is of grace, and not of works, when this blessedness is first enjoyed? Cometh it, saith the Apostle, after a man is circumcised, or was it before circumcision? And in answering this question he proves most decidedly, from the instance of Abraham, that it is perfectly unconnected with any ordinance whatever. For this Patriarch was in a state of justification before God, at least thirteen years antecedent to the appointment of circumcision. Ishmael, we are told, was thirteen years old when he was circumcised, and it was in the self-same day with Abraham his father. Whereas the justification of Abraham before God was thirteen years prior to the birth of Ishmael. Compare Gen 27:25-26 with Gen 15:1-7 .

To what purpose then, it may be asked, was the rite of circumcision? The answer is already given in this very chapter, by the Apostle. It was intended as a sign or seal of God’s covenant with Abraham and his seed. A mark or badge of separation, for it distinguished all the posterity of Abraham from all the earth. But it was not intended to act as a sign or seal of any promised grace to all the family of Abraham in nature. This is very evident from the first day of its observance in the case of Ishmael, and very probably others of Abraham’s house, who were circumcised, Gen 17:27 . There should seem to have been a sign or seal intended by circumcision to keep the whole seed of Abraham distinct and separate from all the world beside; but while it pointed to Christ, and in him had its full accomplishment, though it kept all the seed of Abraham in nature in expectation of Him to whom it referred, yet it became no promise to any but to Abraham’s seed in grace.

And it is worthy the Reader’s observation, that as circumcision among Abraham’s seed acted as an outward sign or badge to all, and yet became no seal of any covenant promise but to Christ’s seed in grace, so outward ordinances do not convey any inward effects, but to the children of the Covenant in Christ. It were devoutly to be wished, that the Church of God in all ages had less respect to mere shadows, and more to substance. What are all ordinances, without an eye to the God of ordinances? What can baptism, or the Lord’s supper, benefit a sinner, dead in trespasses and sins? Signs and seals of the Covenant in Christ’s blood, can only be truly so, to those that are in the Covenant. And, to every child of God, the mere outward ordinance is nothing. His sign, is the Person, blood, and righteousness of Christ. And his seal, the work of God the Spirit, engraven on his heart, by whom he is sealed, unto the day of redemption, Heb 12:24 ; Eph 4:30 .

I will only detain the Reader a moment longer over those verses, to observe what the Apostle saith, of Abraham being the common father, and head, of both Jew and Gentile, who walk in the steps of that faith which he had, before he was a Jew by circumcision. Abraham was a Gentile, , before he was a Jew. And, his justification before God took place, when he was in the Gentilism of an uncircumcised state. Of consequence, therefore, he was the common father of both. And, as such it is an error, to call the Jew the elder brother of the Gentile ; and wholly unscriptural. Both are one in Abraham, according to the faith. And Abraham, and all his spiritual seed, are one in Christ, Eph 1:4 ; Gal 3:28-29 .

Fuente: Hawker’s Poor Man’s Commentary (Old and New Testaments)

9 Cometh this blessedness then upon the circumcision only , or upon the uncircumcision also? for we say that faith was reckoned to Abraham for righteousness.

Ver. 9. Cometh this blessedness ] This is the third time that the apostle avoucheth the universality of the subject of justification. For this he had done once before, Rom 3:23 , and again,Rom 3:29-31Rom 3:29-31 . The Scripture doth not use, saith one, to kill flies with beetles, to cleave straws with wedges of iron, to spend many words where there is no need.

Fuente: John Trapp’s Complete Commentary (Old and New Testaments)

9 12. ] This declaration of blessedness applies to circumcised and uncircumcised alike. For Abraham himself was thus Justified when in UNCIRCUMCISION, and was then pronounced the father of the faithful, uncircumcised as well as circumcised .

of course includes the fact, on account of which the congratulation is pronounced, the justification itself .

Fuente: Henry Alford’s Greek Testament

9. ] sc. , see reff.

The form of the question, with , presupposes an affirmative answer to the latter clause; which affirmative answer is then made the ground of the argumentation in Rom 4:10-12 : On the uncircumcision (-cised) also. For we say , &c. The stress is on , not on : for we say that TO ABRAHAM faith was reckoned for righteousness .

Fuente: Henry Alford’s Greek Testament

Rom 4:9-12 . In these verses the justification of Abraham appears in a new light. In virtue of its ground in his faith, he is not only a forefather ( i.e. , the natural ancestor of the Jews), but he is the spiritual ancestor of all believers. The faith which was imputed to him for righteousness constitutes him such; it is the same in essence as Christian faith; and so it is a vital bond between him and all who believe, whether they be Jews or Gentiles. God’s method has been the same through all history.

Fuente: The Expositors Greek Testament by Robertson

Rom 4:9 . : This felicitation, then, what is its extent? Does it apply to the circumcision only, or to the uncircumcision also? Just as Rom 4:1-8 correspond to Rom 3:27 f., so do Rom 4:9-12 correspond to Rom 3:29-31 . God is not the God of the Jews only, but of the Gentiles also, and the Apostle’s purpose here is to show that the felicitation of the justified in Psa 32 is not limited by circumcision. . . .: for our proposition is, that his faith was reckoned, etc.

Fuente: The Expositors Greek Testament by Robertson

NASB (UPDATED) TEXT: Rom 4:9-12

9Is this blessing then on the circumcised, or on the uncircumcised also? For we say, “””””Faith was credited tooo Abraham as righteousnesss.”” 10How then was it credited? While he was circumcised, or uncircumcised? Not while circumcised, but while uncircumcised;; 11and he received the sign of circumcision, a seal of the righteousness of the faith which he had while uncircumcised, so that he might be the father of all who believe without being circumcised, that righteousness might be credited to them,, 12and the father of circumcision to those who not only are of the circumcision, but who also follow in the steps of the faith of our father Abraham which he had while uncircumcised..

Rom 4:9-12 Paul possibly included this discussion of circumcision because of the Judaizers’ emphasis on the necessity of circumcision for salvation (cf. the book of Galatians and the Jerusalem Council of Acts 15).

Paul, trained in rabbinical exegesis, knew that in Gen 15:6 and Psa 32:2 the same verb appears (both in Hebrew text and Greek Septuagint). This would have united these passages for theological purposes.

Rom 4:9 The question of Rom 4:9 expects a “no” answer. God accepts all people, even Gentiles, by faith. Gen 15:6 is quoted again. Abraham, the father of the Jewish nation, was reckoned righteous (cf. Genesis 15) before the Law of Moses (Rom 4:13) and before he was circumcised (cf. Genesis 17).

Rom 4:10-11 “the sign of circumcision, a seal of righteousness of faith” After Abraham had been called and reckoned as righteous, God gave him circumcision as a covenant sign (Gen 17:9-14). All the peoples of the Ancient Near East were circumcised except the Philistines who were of Greek origin from the Aegean Islands. Circumcision, for them, was a rite of passage from boyhood to manhood. In Jewish life it was a religious symbol of covenant membership, performed on males on the eighth day after birth.

In this verse “sign” and “seal” are parallel and both refer to Abraham’s faith. Circumcision was a visible mark of one who exercised faith in God. The genitive phrase “of the righteousness of faith” is repeated in Rom 4:13. The key to being declared right with a holy God was not circumcision, but faith.

Rom 4:11 “that he might be the father of all who believe without being circumcised” The book of Romans was written after the book of Galatians. Paul was sensitive to the Jewish tendency of trusting in (1) their racial lineage (cf. Mat 3:9; Joh 8:33; Joh 8:37; Joh 8:39) and (2) the performance of the current Jewish interpretations of the Mosaic covenant (The Oral Tradition, or the tradition of the elders which was later written down and was called the Talmud). Therefore, he used Abraham as the paradigm of all who believe by faith (father of believing, uncircumcised Gentiles, cf. Rom 2:28-29; Gal 3:29).

“seal” See Special Topic below.

SPECIAL TOPIC: SEAL

Rom 4:12 “follow in the steps” This was a military term (stoiche) for soldiers marching in single file (cf. Act 21:24; Gal 5:25; Gal 6:16; Php 3:16). Paul is speaking in this verse of Jews (“father of circumcision”) who believe. Abraham is the father of all who exercise faith in God and His promises.

Because of the double article (tois) it is possible that this second aspect (“following in the steps of”) adds the concept of lifestyle faith (present middle [deponent] participle) and not a once-only faith. Salvation is an ongoing relationship, not just a decision or volitional moment.

Fuente: You Can Understand the Bible: Study Guide Commentary Series by Bob Utley

Cometh, &c. = This blessing, then, is it?

Fuente: Companion Bible Notes, Appendices and Graphics

9-12.] This declaration of blessedness applies to circumcised and uncircumcised alike. For Abraham himself was thus Justified when in UNCIRCUMCISION, and was then pronounced the father of the faithful, uncircumcised as well as circumcised.

of course includes the fact, on account of which the congratulation is pronounced,-the justification itself.

Fuente: The Greek Testament

Rom 4:9. ) Paul comprehends in this what he lately said respecting Abraham and David.-) Does it come on the circumcision only, by itself, to the exclusion of others? or upon the circumcision also?-, we say, Rom 4:3.

Fuente: Gnomon of the New Testament

Rom 4:9

Rom 4:9

Is this blessing then pronounced upon the circumcision, or upon the uncircumcision also?-Does this faith that proves and perfects itself in obedience so that God will not reckon sins to him pertain to the Jews only, or may not the Gentiles so believe in God as to attain this condition of blessedness also?

for we say, To Abraham his faith was reckoned for righteousness.-Faith was reckoned to Abraham for righteousness.

Fuente: Old and New Testaments Restoration Commentary

This Blessedness Is for All

Rom 4:9-15

In Abrahams case it is clear that he was justified when he was still a Gentile. The initial badge of Judaism was stamped upon him long after he had believed God. The Apostle lays great stress on this order of time: first faith, then obedience, and afterward circumcision, that made him the father and founder of the Jewish people. Justification is imputed to him in the first stage-not in circumcision, not even in obedience, but in the simple act of believing God, as we have it in Gen 15:6. We do not hear of circumcision till Gen 17:1-27.

Clearly, then, if we Gentiles have Abrahams faith, we may also claim the same justifying righteousness, though we have not received any outward rite. And also, we may be reckoned among his children. If we enter into the meaning of these earlier stages of the patriarchs life, we may claim the promises made to him in uncircumcision. Count them up; they are yours. We, too, may become heirs of the world; in us also, because we are his seed, all mankind may be blessed.

Fuente: F.B. Meyer’s Through the Bible Commentary

Cometh: Rom 3:29, Rom 3:30, Rom 9:23, Rom 9:24, Rom 10:12, Rom 10:13, Rom 15:8-19, Isa 49:6, Luk 2:32, Gal 3:14, Gal 3:26-28, Eph 2:11-13, Eph 3:8, Col 3:11

for we: Rom 4:3

Reciprocal: Gen 15:6 – he believed Gen 17:10 – Every Gen 17:23 – circumcised Joh 7:22 – circumcision Rom 2:9 – of the Jew Rom 4:6 – blessedness Rom 9:30 – even the righteousness Gal 3:6 – as

Fuente: The Treasury of Scripture Knowledge

4:9

Rom 4:9. This blessedness refers to the grace of God bestowed because of faith and not on the virtue of works. Paul asks if it was bestowed on the circumcision (Jews) only, or on the uncircumcision (Gentiles) also. He then cites the fact that such blessedness was given to Abraham. The Jew would reply that he had a point in that very case, for Abraham was the first man to be circumcised. The apostle expected that reply, and he met it in the next verse.

Fuente: Combined Bible Commentary

Rom 4:9. Is this blessedness then, etc. This pronouncing blessed, then, is it upon, etc. The reference is to Davids words. The inference, in the form of a question, is, that this declaration of blessedness affects the uncircumcision also, for an affirmative answer to this clause is implied in the form of the original.

For we say (i.e., in accordance with the quotation in Rom 4:3). This begins the proof from the case of Abraham, by restating the Scriptural fact. The further facts and conclusion follow. That should be omitted.

To Abraham, etc. The emphasis rests on Abraham, as the emended order indicates.

His faith, lit., the faith, the faith just spoken of in Rom 4:3.

Fuente: A Popular Commentary on the New Testament

Here the apostle moves the question, namely, Whether the forementioned blessedness of pardon of sin, and justification by faith, belongs to the circumcised Jews only, or to the uncircumcised Gentiles also? which question carrieth with it the force of a strong affirmation, that seeing faith was imputed to Abraham for righteousness, many years before he was circumcised; therefore the uncircumcised Gentiles, as well as the circumcised Jews, shall by faith be made partakers of the same blessedness, unto which Abraham wa intitled before he was circumcised.

Learn hence, That God has appointed one and the same way and method for the justification and salvation of all persons, circumcised and uncircumcised, Jew and Gentile, honourable and ignoble; namely, justification by faith in the blood of his Son, without which no church privileges, or spiritual prerogatives whatsoever, will intitle them to real blessedness. Cometh this blessedness on the circumcision only, or upon the uncircumcision also? Abraham believed unto righteousness before he was circumcised; therefore, the Gentiles by faith shall be accounted righteous, though they never be circumcised.

Fuente: Expository Notes with Practical Observations on the New Testament

Rom 4:9-10. Cometh this blessedness Mentioned by Abraham and David; on the circumcision Those that are circumcised only? or upon the uncircumcision also? The circumcision are the Jews, the members of Gods visible church, and the uncircumcision are the Gentiles, who are out of the visible church. In this question, therefore, the justification of those who are out of the visible church, but who believe and obey God, is implied: for the apostle proves that such are justified, by appealing to Abrahams justification while in uncircumcision. Abraham was not circumcised till he was ninety-nine years old, Gen 17:24. At that time Ishmael was thirteen years old, Rom 4:25. But before Ishmael was born, Abraham had his faith counted to him for righteousness, Gen 15:6, compared with Gen 16:16. It is evident, therefore, that Abraham was justified in uncircumcision more than thirteen years before he and his family were made the visible church and people of God by circumcision. Heathen, therefore, who believe and obey the true God, as Abraham did, will, like him, have their faith counted to them for righteousness, though no members of any visible church.

Fuente: Joseph Bensons Commentary on the Old and New Testaments

Vv. 9, 10. Is this beatification then for the circumcision, or for the uncircumcision also? for we say:Faith was reckoned to Abraham for righteousness. How was it then reckoned? when he was in a state of circumcision, or of uncircumcision? Not in a state of circumcision, but of uncircumcision.

The then serves merely to resume the discussion: I ask then if this celebration of the blessedness of the justified applies only to the circumcised, or also to the uncircumcised. On this everything really depended. For, on the first alternative, the Gentiles had no way left of admission to the privilege of justification by faith except that of becoming Jews; and there was an end of Paul’s gospel. M. Reuss regards all this as an example of the scholasticism of the Jewish schools of the day, and of a theological science which could supply the apostle only with extremely doubtful modes of argument. We shall see if it is really so.

The second part of the verse: for we say…is intended to bring back the mind of the reader from David to Abraham: For, in fine, we were affirming that Abraham was justified by faith. How is it then with this personage, whose example forms the rule? How was he justified by faith? as uncircumcised or as circumcised? Such is the very simple meaning of Rom 4:10. The then which connects it with Rom 4:9 is thus explained: To answer the question which I have just put (9a), let us then examine how the justification of Abraham took place.

The answer was not difficult; it was furnished by Genesis, and it was peremptory. It is in chap. 15 that we find Abraham justified by faith; and it is in chap. 17, about fourteen years after, that he receives the ordinance of circumcision. The apostle can therefore answer with assurance: not as circumcised, but as uncircumcised. There was a time in Abraham’s life when by his uncircumcision he represented the Gentiles, as later after his circumcision he became the representative of Israel. Now, it was in the first of these two periods of his life, that is to say, in his Gentilehood, that he was justified by faith…the conclusion was obvious at a glance. Paul makes full use of it against his adversaries. He expounds it with decisive consequences in the sequel.

Fuente: Godet Commentary (Luke, John, Romans and 1 Corinthians)

Is this blessing then pronounced upon the circumcision, or upon the uncircumcision also? for we say, To Abraham his faith was reckoned for righteousness.

Fuente: McGarvey and Pendleton Commentaries (New Testament)

Verse 9

Cometh, &c. Having thus shown that the Jews, or, as he expresses it, the circumcision, are entirely dependent on the mercy of God, he proceeds to prove that the uncircumcision, that is, the Gentiles, are not excluded from this mercy, by showing that Abraham enjoyed the gracious acceptance of God, before the rite of circumcision was performed.

Fuente: Abbott’s Illustrated New Testament

4:9 {6} [Cometh] this {e} blessedness then upon the circumcision [only], or upon the uncircumcision also? for we say that faith was reckoned to Abraham for righteousness.

(6) A new proposition: that this manner of justification belongs both to uncircumcised and also to the circumcised, as is declared in the person of Abraham.

(e) This saying of David, in which he pronounces them as blessed.

Fuente: Geneva Bible Notes

3. The priority of faith to circumcision 4:9-12

The examples of Abraham and David, both Jews, led to the question Paul voiced in the next verse (Rom 4:9). The apostle pointed out that when God declared Abraham righteous the patriarch was uncircumcised. He was a virtual Gentile. Fourteen years later Abraham underwent circumcision (Gen 17:24-26). His circumcision was a sign (label) of what he already possessed. This point would have encouraged Paul’s Jewish readers, who made so much of circumcision, to keep it in its proper place as secondary to faith. Paul used Abraham as more than an example of faith.

"As the recipient and mediator of the promise, his experience becomes paradigmatic for his spiritual progeny." [Note: Moo, p. 267.]

Fuente: Expository Notes of Dr. Constable (Old and New Testaments)