Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Romans 13:9
For this, Thou shalt not commit adultery, Thou shalt not kill, Thou shalt not steal, Thou shalt not bear false witness, Thou shalt not covet; and if [there be] any other commandment, it is briefly comprehended in this saying, namely, Thou shalt love thy neighbor as thyself.
9. For this ] Lit. For the; each precept being a quasi-substantive with the definite article.
Thou shalt not bear false witness ] Perhaps to be omitted, on documentary evidence.
and if there be any other commandment, &c.] The Gr. phrase nearly = and whatever other commandments there are, all are summed up, &c.
Thou shalt love, &c.] Lev 19:18. See the Lord’s own quotation of the words, Mat 22:39. Cp. Jas 2:8.
Fuente: The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges
For this – This which follows is the sum of the laws. This is to regulate us in our conduct toward our neighbor. The word this here stands opposed to that in Rom 13:11. This law of love would prompt us to seek our neighbors good; that fact, that our salvation is near, would prompt us to be active and faithful in the discharge of all the duties we owe to him.
Thou shalt not commit adultery – All the commands which follow are designed as an illustration of the duty of loving our neighbor; see these commands considered in the notes at Mat 19:18-19. The apostle has not enumerated all the commands of the second table. He has shown generally what they required. The command to honor our parents he has omitted. The reason might have been that it was not so immediately to his purpose when discoursing of love to a neighbor – a word which does not immediately suggest the idea of near relatives. The expression, Thou shalt not bear false witness, is rejected by the best critics as of doubtful authority, but it does not materially affect the spirit of the passage. It is missing in many manuscripts and in the Syriac version.
If there be any other commandment – The law respecting parents; or if there be any duty which does not seem to be specified by these laws, it is implied in the command to love our neighbor as ourselves.
It is briefly comprehended – Greek, It may be reduced to this head; or it is summed up in this.
In this saying – This word, or command,
Thou shalt love … – This is found in Lev 19:18. See it considered in the notes at Mat 19:19. If this command were fulfilled, it would prevent all fraud, injustice, oppression, falsehood, adultery, murder, theft, and covetousness. It is the same as our Saviours golden rule. And if every man would do to others as he would wish them to do to him, all the design of the Law would be at once fulfilled.
Fuente: Albert Barnes’ Notes on the Bible
Rom 13:9-10
Thou shalt not commit adultery and if there be any other commandment, it is briefly comprehended in this Thou shalt love thy neighbout as thyself.
The comprehensiveness of love
It comprehends–
I. The whole law.
II. The letter and the spirit.
III. Our neighbour as ourselves. (J. Lyth, D.D.)
The love of our neighbour
I. The object of the affection. Love of our neighbour, or benevolence, seeks the good of others, and in its noblest form is the perfection of God.
II. Its proper extent. As ourselves. This implies–
1. That it is to be of the same kind. We have a common interest in others and in ourselves.
2. That it is to bear a certain proportion to our love for ourselves. What this proportion is to be is not easily decided, for affection is not easily measured; but as to actions, the expression of affection, the more others occupy our thoughts the better, provided we neglect not ourselves.
3. That it is to equal our love for ourselves, No ill consequences can ensue from this, for–
(1) Men have other affections for themselves not felt for others.
(2) They are specially interested in themselves.
(3) They have a particular perception of their own interest, so that there is no fear of self neglect.
III. Its influence on our general temper.
1. To produce all charitableness.
2. To fit men for every relation and duty.
3. To moderate party feeling.
4. To prevent or heal all strife.
IV. What it includes–all virtue. It prompts men–
1. To seek the greatest happiness of all, which is itself a discharge of all our obligations.
2. To the practice of all personal virtues–temperance, etc., and certainly a neglect of these virtues implies a deficiency of love to others. (Bp. Butler.)
Love worketh no ill to his neighbour.
The working of love
I. Love is essentially an active principle.
II. Works no ill.
1. In deed.
2. In word.
3. In thought.
III. Must work good.
1. Wherever it has opportunity.
2. To the extent of its ability.
IV. Is therefore the fulfilling of the law.
1. Negatively.
2. Positively. (J. Lyth, D.D.)
The work of low
The Arabian commentators of Mahomet attempted to make a law applicable to every relation in life. They published, it is said, a code containing seventy-five thousand rules; but cases soon arose to which none of these rules would apply. The New Testament adopts another method. It deals in broad and fundamental principles capable of universal application. It gives us in plain words a law of love. This suggests principles which are universal and eternal. It gives a life rather than a rule.
I. love worketh no ill to his neighbour. This is a broad truth. Ones neighbour is primarily the one near–the near dweller, any one with whom we have to do. Christ has for ever answered the question, Who is my neighbour?
1. The spirit of this statement strikes a blow at all kinds of business which injure ones neighbour. It meets the servant and the master, the maid and her mistress; it enters the counting-house and the workshop; it confronts the lawyer and his client, the physician and his patient, the pastor and his people. It enters the social circle and hushes the voice of the slanderer. It stands like an incarnate conscience across the track of the vile wretch who would rob youth of purity and glory. It lifts a voice against the man who destroys his neighbour with strong drink. It thunders its condemnation in the ear of the gambler. It lifts before us the great white throne, and enables us to anticipate its final decisions.
2. This law of love also opposes all forms of bad example. The man who desecrates Gods day, disbelieves Gods book, and disobeys Gods Son, is an enemy to his neighbour. No man has a right to set a bad example before men. The man who misleads the young may blight the lives of coming generations.
3. This law reaches those who are only negatively good. No man has a right to remain in that position. Your good name, while you remain in that attitude to God, makes your influence the greater and your condemnation the heavier. Have you accepted Christ as your personal Saviour? Then come to the Church. For the sake of your neighbour come into the ranks. Confess Christ; march in line with His people. Thus will you work no ill to your neighbour.
II. But it is clearly implied that love works well to ones neighbour. This is a step in advance. It cannot rest in the mere negative condition. Love does not simply do no ill; it does well. It understands that to withhold good when it might be done, is as truly sin as to devise evil. Paul (1Co 13:1-13.) shows that it is the principle without which all other gifts are worthless. The Corinthian chapter is the inspired commentary on the Roman text. What a world this would be if this love dominated all the actions of men! Social life would be regenerated; commercial life be consecrated; heaven would be begun on earth. (R. S. Macarthur, D.D.)
Therefore love is the fulfilling of the law.–
Love the fulfilling of the law
Love is–
I. The best expositor of the law. It teaches us to keep it–
1. Conscientiously as in the sight of God.
2. Sincerely with the whole heart.
3. Fully in every point.
4. Perfectly, not merely negatively.
II. The best keeper of the law. It fulfils it with–
1. Delight.
2. All its strength.
3. Constancy. (J. Lyth, D.D.)
Love
I. Reaches the full extent of the law.
1. It keeps the whole law; not only its prohibitions, but also its precepts.
2. Keeps it perfectly, not only with the hands, but with the heart.
3. Is never weary.
II. Makes its performance easy.
1. It draws help from a Divine source.
2. Supplies Divine strength.
3. Guarantees the Divinest reward. (J. Lyth, D.D.)
Love is the fulfilling of the law
Because it–
I. Teaches everything.
1. It unfolds the spirit of the law.
2. Strengthens the voice of conscience.
3. Resolves all difficult questions.
II. Does everything.
1. Is not contented with the appearance.
2. Does not stop short half-way.
3. Seeks not for reward.
III. Rewards everything.
1. The good intention.
2. The secret act.
3. The greatest sacrifice. (J. Lyth, D.D.)
Love is the fulfilling of the law
Because the love of God and man is the soul of every outward duty, and a cause that will produce these as effects. (R. Baxter.)
Love fulfils law
A religion which can announce this as its distinctive principle needs bring no further credentials of its heavenly origin. Michael Angelo need not carve his name on his own statuary, nor Raphael write his on his pictures. The song tells you what is the bird which sings. And so our text is unlike the trees that spring out of merely human soil. Its fragrance and its fruit announce it to be a slip from the tree that grows in the midst of the Paradise of God, and whose leaves are for the healing of the nations.
I. Love is the substance of the demands of the law; it is their very essence and quintessence.
1. A tree may have a thousand branches, and ten thousand leaves, all of them having a different direction and shape; but they all arise out of life. So all the commandments are but the outward forms of an inward spirit, and that spirit is love.
2. Law does not fall so pleasantly on the ear as love. It is like a spiked wall between us and tempting fruit; or like the warning guide-post, No road this way, precisely at the spot where the path seems to lose itself in the most enchanting scenery. But this is a false view of law. Love could not be the fulfilling of it if it were of this nature, but the abolishing of it. For what is law? A wanton restraint, a needless burden, the arbitrary exaction of a superior authority, and thus superfluous circumscription of our liberty, and wilful limitation of our pleasures? No! It is but such a limitation and restraint as secures for each man the largest sweep of liberty. It is true that if there were no human laws, certain individuals would be able to indulge their wills and passions over a much wider field; but what of the people generally? The man who can go beyond his just bounds of right, can only do so by invading the bounds of another. This is the essence of tyranny. Liberty can only live where law is the supremest thing. No man resents a just law, but he who is at heart an enemy to the righteous claims of his fellow-men. Law is a hedge; but no hedge is thorny and repulsive to a man who does not wish to break through and trample upon the sacred privileges of his neighbour.
3. Can you find a law of God which is in itself, and on all sides of it, a dark and repulsive thing? I know of no law of His which has not in its very heart this command, Be happy. This has ever been the view of good men. Oh! how love! Thy law! it is daily my delight. Great peace have they that love Thy law. Of law, Hooker has said, there can be no less acknowledged than that her seat is the bosom of God, her voice the harmony of the world; all things in heaven and earth do her homage, the very least as feeling her care, and the greatest as not exempted from her power; both angels and men, and creatures of what condition soever, though each in differing sort and manner, yet all with uniform consent, admiring her as the mother of their peace and joy.
II. Obedience is to arise from love.
1. There may be what men esteem the fulfilling of a law for which they have no respect. There is the fulfilling–
(1) Which arises from fear, and despots may feel flattered and feel safer as they see a population pale with terror at their power. But that power is always the safest which inspires love. The law of God can never be obeyed through terror. Only think of a man obeying God because he dreads Him. Think of him saying, If God were not as powerful as He is, I would set my heel upon His laws; but I am no match for Him, and therefore I submit and obey. Nay, you neither submit nor obey. You might do this in the case of an earthly king, whose laws are satisfied if they receive an external obedience. But God is a King and a Father, who says, Thou shalt love; not, Thou shalt dread the Lord thy God. He is a Monarch whose laws you cannot obey except by loving Him. He clearly discriminates between what seems obedience and what is. This people draweth nigh unto Me with their lips, but their heart is far from Me. You fathers know that it is not worth the name of obedience if your child serve you from dread of consequences.
(2) Which is prompted by a mere sense of interest. This is little better than that we have just considered. Of course obedience brings sooner or later its own reward. But there is a great difference between pursuing a course which is profitable, and pursuing it because it is profitable. A faithful servant of a monarch may be paid for his service; but if he serves only for his pay, he is not a faithful servant. Will it be said that this seems to strike against the promises of the joys and glories of Heaven? No, they are far more gracious gifts than wages. When Christ says, I will make thee ruler over many things, it is not because we have deserved it. And hence the saints in heaven cast their crowns at the feet of Him that sits upon the throne, saying, Thou art worthy, O Lord, etc. And the crowns are not given to those who have served for gain; they are given to those who have served from love. The fulfilling of the law from love creates now its own heaven within the man.
2. The law of service is the law of love. This was so with Christ. I delight to do Thy will, O God. And the service we render to Christ must be like that. Lovest thou Me? etc. And this truth applies equally to our relations to our fellow-men. Thou shalt love thy neighbour as thyself. There is far too much of the spirit, in these times, which regards men as so many competitors on the great arena of life, each one feeling that he loses what another gains, and that he must do the best for himself, leaving the weaker to go unpitied to the wall. But Christ came to teach us a holier and more blessed law, viz., that we are all brethren, brethren in nature, brethren in Him, because He partook our nature, and is not ashamed to call us brethren. (E. Mellor, D.D.)
Love the essence of obedience
I. The nature of true love. It is–
1. Universal, extending to being in general, or to God and all His creatures.
2. Impartial. It regards every proper object of benevolence according to its apparent worth and importance in the scale of being.
3. Disinterested. Mercenary love can never form a virtuous character.
II. True love is the fulfilling of the law.
1. It conforms the heart to God. God is love. Be ye therefore perfect, even as your Father which is in heaven is perfect. If the moral perfection of man consists in conformity to the moral perfection of God, and the moral perfection of God consists in love, then love must be the fulfilling of the law.
2. It answers the full demand of the law. When a certain man asked our Saviour, Which is the great commandment in the law? He replied, Thou shalt love, etc. So Paul says, The end of the commandment is charity out of a pure heart. By this he declares that charity or true love fully answers the spirit and design of the law.
3. It makes us feel and act in every respect just as God requires. So far as we possess it, we shall both internally and externally obey every Divine command.
4. It restrains men from everything which God forbids. (N. Emmons, D.D.)
Fuente: Biblical Illustrator Edited by Joseph S. Exell
Verse 9. For this, Thou shalt not commit adultery] He that loves another will not deprive him of his wife, of his life, of his property, of his good name; and will not even permit a desire to enter into his heart which would lead him to wish to possess any thing that is the property of another: for the law-the sacred Scripture, has said: Thou shalt love thy neighbour as thyself.
It is remarkable that , thou shalt not bear false witness, is wanting here in ABDEFG, and several other MSS. Griesbach has left it out of the text. It is wanting also in the Syriac, and in several of the primitive fathers. The generality of the best critics think it a spurious reading.
Fuente: Adam Clarke’s Commentary and Critical Notes on the Bible
This verse proves that love is the fulfilling of the law. It is done by an induction or enumeration of the particular precepts of the second table. The fifth is not mentioned, because the Jews made that commandment a part of the first table; so some: or because he had treated before of duty to the higher powers and superiors, under which parents are comprehended; so others. It may be, he would only mention the negative precepts, as being most contrary to love. But, why doth he mention the seventh commandment before the sixth? Because of the commonness of adultery amongst the Romans; so some: because of the odiousness of it; so others. Hence
adultery is first named amongst the works of the flesh, Gal 5:19. Possibly it is, because the Seventy, in Exodus, rehearse the commandments in this very order. The tenth commandment is summed up in one word:
Thou shalt not covet; it seems, then, it is but one commandment, and their opinion is ridiculous who divide it into two. When he says, if there be any
other commandment? He means a commandment of the same nature, requiring us to pay what we owe one to another; ergo, to honour our parents; or he means, any other in the Scripture, though not expressed in the decalogue. All commandments respecting our neighbour are summed up in this one:
Thou shalt love thy neighbour as thyself: see Mat 22:39; Gal 5:14; 1Ti 1:5.
Fuente: English Annotations on the Holy Bible by Matthew Poole
9. For this, &c.betterthus: “For the [commandments], Thou shalt not kill, Thou shaltnot commit adultery, Thou shalt not steal, Thou shalt not covet, andwhatever other commandment [there may be], it is summed up,” &c.(The clause, “Thou shalt not bear false witness,” iswanting in all the most ancient manuscripts). The apostle refers hereonly to the second table of the law, as love to our neighbor is whathe is treating of.
Fuente: Jamieson, Fausset and Brown’s Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible
For this, thou shalt not commit adultery,…. The apostle here reckons up the several laws of the second table, with this view, that it might appear that so far as a man loves his neighbour, whether more near or distantly related, he fulfils the law, or acts according to it. He omits the first of these, the fifth commandment, either because he had urged this before, so far as it may be thought to regard magistrates; or because, according to the division of the Jews, who reckon five commands to each table, this belonged to the first: and he puts the seventh before the sixth, which is of no great moment; the order of things being frequently changed in the Scripture, and which is often done by Jewish writers, in alleging and citing passages of Scripture; and with whom this is a maxim,
, “that there is no first nor last in the law” c; that is, it is of no importance which stands first or last in it: it follows,
thou shall not kill, thou shalt not steal, thou shalt not bear false witness, thou shalt not covet; which are the sixth, eighth, ninth, and tenth commands of the decalogue, Ex 20:13:
and if there be any other commandment; of God, respecting the neighbour, either in the decalogue, as there was the fifth,
Ex 20:12, or elsewhere, the apostle repeating this by memory:
it is briefly comprehended in this saying, namely, thou shall love thy neighbour as thyself; see Le 19:18; this is the summary and epitome of them; so Christ reduces the laws of the first table to the head of love to God, and those of the second to the head of love to the neighbour, Mt 22:37, as the apostle does here, and in Ga 5:14, and the Apostle James, in Jas 2:8.
c T. Bab. Pesachim, fol. 6. 2.
Fuente: John Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible
For this ( ). For the article () pointing to a sentence see 8:26, here to the quotation. The order of the commandments here is like that in Luke 18:20; Jas 2:11 and in B for De 5, but different from that of the Hebrew in Rom 13:20; Rom 13:5. The use of with the volitive future in prohibitions in place of and the imperative or subjunctive is a regular Greek idiom.
And if there be any other ( ). Paul does not attempt to give them all.
It is summed up (). Present passive indicative of , late literary word or “rhetorical term” (, , head or chief as in Heb 8:1). Not in the papyri, but , quite common for sum or summary. In N.T. only here and Eph 1:10.
Namely ( ). See at the beginning of the verse, though omitted by B F. The quotation is from Le 19:18. Quoted in Matt 5:43; Matt 22:39; Mark 12:31; Luke 10:27; Gal 5:14; Jas 2:8 it is called (royal law).
Thy neighbour ( ). is an adverb and with the article it means “the one near thee.” See on Mt 5:43.
Fuente: Robertson’s Word Pictures in the New Testament
Thou shalt not commit adultery, etc. Omit thou shalt not bear false witness. The seventh commandment precedes the sixth, as in Mr 10:19; Luk 18:20; Jas 2:11.
It is briefly comprehended [] . Only here and Eph 1:10. Rev., it is summed up. Ana has the force of again in the sense of recapitulation. Compare Lev 19:18. The law is normally a unit in which there is no real separation between the commandments. “Summed up in one word.” The verb is compounded, not with kefalh head, but with its derivative kefalaion the main point.
Namely thou shalt love, etc. [ ] . The Greek idiom is, it is summed up in the thou shalt love, the whole commandment being taken as a substantive with the definite article.
Neighbor [ ] . See on Mt 6:43.
Fuente: Vincent’s Word Studies in the New Testament
1) “For this, thou shalt not commit adultery,” (to gar ou moicheuseis) “For this cause or logical reason thou shalt not commit adultery,” moral and ethical sexual wrong, acts in conflict with Divinely revealed principles of moral chastity, purity, cleanliness, or holiness.
2) “Thou shalt not kill,” (ou phoneuseis) “Thou shalt not kill,” or you shall not in malice aforethought, or fit of anger, take or deprive another human being of his life.
3) “Thou shalt not steal,” (ou klepseis) “Thou shalt not steal,” cheat, or by dishonesty deprive or defraud another human being of what belongs to him, whether it be property or a good name.
4) “Thou shalt not bear false witness; Thou shalt not covet,” (ou epithumeseis) “Thou shalt not covet,” have or hold wilfully a fleshly desire for anything that belong; to another, whether it be property, traits of personality or person, or a good name,” — The first phrase is omitted from the more prominent original texts. To bear false witness, however, is an expression of both covetousness and stealing what belongs to another.
5) “And if there be any other commandment,” (kai ei tis hetera entole) “And if there is or exists any other (kind of) commandment, to cover condemnation of evil.
6) “It is briefly comprehended in this saying, namely,” (en to logo touto anakephalaioutai) “It is summed up in this expression, as follows,” (en to) namely or like this: Mat 22:39-40; Mar 12:31; Gal 5:13-14.
7) “Thou shalt love thy neighbor as thyself,” (agapeseis ton plesion sou hos seauton) “Thou shalt love thy neighbor as thyself,” to do him good always, to do him harm, never, to speak good of him always, to speak ill of him never any more than of your own self.
Fuente: Garner-Howes Baptist Commentary
9. For this, Thou shalt not commit adultery, etc. It cannot be from this passage concluded what precepts are contained in the second table, for he subjoins at the end, and if there be any other precept He indeed omits the command respecting the honoring of parents; and it may seem strange, that what especially belonged to his subject should have been passed by. But what if he had left it out, lest he should obscure his argument? Though I dare not to affirm this, yet I see here nothing wanting to answer the purpose he had in view, which was to show, — that since God intended nothing else by all his commandments than to teach us the duty of love, we ought by all means to strive to perform it. And yet the uncontentious reader will readily acknowledge, that Paul intended to prove, by things of a like nature, that the import of the whole law is, that love towards one another ought to be exercised by us, and that what he left to be implied is to be understood, and that is, — that obedience to magistrates is not the least thing which tends to nourish peace, to preserve brotherly love.
Fuente: Calvin’s Complete Commentary
(9) Thou shalt not commit adultery.It will be seen that in this arrangement the seventh commandment precedes the sixth. The same arrangement is found in Mar. 10:19, Luk. 18:20, and Jas. 2:11. On the other hand, the ordinary arrangement appears in Mat. 19:18. There can be no doubt that St. Paul followed an order that was found in the copies of the LXX. that he was in the habit of using. The famous Codex Vaticanus still presents the same order in Deu. 5:17. In Exo. 20:13-15 it places the seventh commandment, first, then the eighth, then the sixth.
Fuente: Ellicott’s Commentary for English Readers (Old and New Testaments)
9. For Implying that the term law finds its standard expression in the decalogue, as the due performance of the decalogue requires, as its source and spring, love in the heart. Right doing, as a permanent life, can only flow from right feeling.
Thou shalt not The negative form forbids every possible course but the right one, and so hems us in to the right. It is implied by this negative form that the directions toward wrong are innumerable, and man’s impulses toward them as countless.
Thou shalt love This form of the decalogue locates the obedience in the heart, and not in the outward limb, and substitutes the positive for the negative form, and concentrates it into the briefest, most portable, and most practical form.
Fuente: Whedon’s Commentary on the Old and New Testaments
‘For this, You shall not commit adultery, You shall not kill, You shall not steal, You shall not covet, and if there be any other commandment, it is summed up in this word, namely, You shall love your neighbour as yourself.’
He points out that all the commandments, some of which he lists, are all really summed up in the command to ‘love your neighbour as yourself’. For all the things described in the commandments, adultery, murder, theft, coveting, etc. cause hurt to others, and if we love we will not want to hurt. Of course, the Law is a detailed guide as to what we should do in order to reveal our love to others. It has thus become a guide rather than burden (compare Jas 1:22-25).
Fuente: Commentary Series on the Bible by Peter Pett
Rom 13:9 . ] , Chrysostom. But is not to be neglected (is again comprised; see on Eph 1:10 ), and is to be referred to the fact that Lev 19:18 recapitulates , summarily repeats, the other previously adduced commands in reference to one’s neighbour. Comp. Thilo, ad Cod. Apocr . p. 223.
The arrangement which makes the fifth commandment follow the sixth is also found in Mar 10:19 , Luk 18:20 (not in Mat 19:18 ), Jas 2:11 , in Philo, de decal ., and Clement of Alexandria, Strom . vi. 16. The LXX. have, according to Cod. A, the order of the Masoretic original text; but in Cod. B the sixth commandment stands immediately after the fourth, then the seventh, and afterwards the fifth; whereas at Deu 5:17 , according to Cod. B, the order of the series is: six, five, seven in the LXX., as here in Paul. The latter followed copies of the LXX . which had the same order. The deviations of the LXX. from the original text in such a case can only be derived from a diversity of tradition in determining the order of succession in the decalogue, not from speculative reasons for such a determination, for which there is no historical basis.
On . , see on Mat 22:39 .
Fuente: Heinrich August Wilhelm Meyer’s New Testament Commentary
9 For this, Thou shalt not commit adultery, Thou shalt not kill, Thou shalt not steal, Thou shalt not bear false witness, Thou shalt not covet; and if there be any other commandment, it is briefly comprehended in this saying, namely, Thou shalt love thy neighbour as thyself.
Ver. 9. Briefly comprehended ] Capitulated, fulfilled, saith the Syriac, summed up, . St Bartholomew is quoted by Dionysius to have said of divinity, , Et magnum esse et minimam, that it was large and yet little, as containing much matter in few words.
Fuente: John Trapp’s Complete Commentary (Old and New Testaments)
9. ] ., brought under one head , ‘united in the one principle from which all flow.’
Fuente: Henry Alford’s Greek Testament
Rom 13:9 . . Cf. Rom 8:26 . The order of the commandments here is different from that in Exo 20 or Deu 5 (Hebrew), but it is the same as in Luk 18:20 , and (so far) in Jas 2:11 . This order is also found in Cod. . of the LXX in Deu 5 : this shows that the enumeration does not aim at completeness, and that the insertion in some MSS. of , to complete the second table, is beside the mark. : it is summed up the scattered particulars are resumed and brought to one. The only other instance of this word in the N.T. (Eph 1:10 ) illustrates the present one, though the meaning is not exactly the same. . . . In Lev 19:18 this is given as a summary of various laws, mostly precepts enjoining humanity, in various relations; by our Lord (in Mat 22:39 ) and by Paul (here and in Gal 5:14 ) an ampler, indeed an unlimited range, is given to it. Its supreme position too seems to be what is indicated in Jas 2:8 by calling it .
Fuente: The Expositors Greek Testament by Robertson
covet. See Rom 7:7.
if . . . any. Greek. ei (App-118. a) tis (App-123.)
commandment. See Rom 7:8, Rom 7:9.
briefly comprehended = summed up. Greek. anakephalaioomai. Only here and Eph 1:10.
saying. App-121.
namely. Literally in (App-104.) the (saying).
neighbour. Greek. plesios.
Fuente: Companion Bible Notes, Appendices and Graphics
9.] ., brought under one head,-united in the one principle from which all flow.
Fuente: The Greek Testament
Rom 13:9. , thou shalt not commit adultery) Paul goes over the commandments without binding himself down to their order.- , thou shalt not bear false witness) I did not think that this came from Pauls pen, but Baumgarten thinks so, as he writes, that Whitby should be consulted. See Appendix. crit. Ed. ii on this passage.[138]- , if there be any other) for example, honour thy father.-) , a commandment, a part; , the law, the whole.-, in the saying) a short, easy one.-) it is briefly comprehended, so that although particular precepts may not be thought of, yet no offence can be committed against any one of them by the man, who is endued with love; comp. is fulfilled [in one word] Gal 5:14, likewise, hang [all the law and the prophets] Mat 22:40.- ) So Seidelianus along with some; others read , which Baumgarten approves. I was of opinion that one sigma had been written instead of two, and those, who are acquainted with the habits of the transcribers, will readily agree with me. Examples will be found in App. crit., p. 383.[139]
[138] The German Version has the clause, rather, I should think, from a slip of memory, than from change of opinion.-E. B.
[139] ABD() Vulg. Orig. have . But G and Rec. Text .-ED.
ABD()Gfg Origen, the best MSS. of Vulg. omit . Rec. Text keep the words, with which a few MSS. of the Memph. Vers. agree.-ED.
Fuente: Gnomon of the New Testament
Rom 13:9
Rom 13:9
For this, Thou shalt not commit adultery, Thou shalt not kill, Thou shalt not steal, Thou shalt not covet,-The law given to Moses requires the things to be done that bring no evil, but good, to others. It forbids all wrong to his neighbor.
and if there be any other commandment, it is summed up in this word, namely, Thou shalt love thy neighbor as thyself.-All the duties and obligations man owes to his fellow man are summed up by Jesus in the statement: Thou shalt love thy neighbor as thyself. You are to be as careful to do no wrong to your neighbor as you are to do none to yourself. Observance of these laws of God prevents man from doing evil to his neighbor. Obeying a command of God never brought evil to any man.
Fuente: Old and New Testaments Restoration Commentary
For this: Exo 20:12-17, Deu 5:16-21, Mat 19:18, Mat 19:19, Mar 10:19, Luk 18:20
covet: Rom 7:7, Rom 7:8
love: Lev 19:18, Lev 19:34, Mat 22:39, Mar 12:31, Luk 10:27, Gal 5:13, Jam 2:8-10
Reciprocal: Gen 44:8 – how then Exo 20:13 – General Deu 5:19 – General Deu 5:21 – General Mat 22:40 – General Luk 3:14 – Do violence to no man Jam 2:11 – Do not commit 1Jo 4:21 – General 2Jo 1:6 – this is love
Fuente: The Treasury of Scripture Knowledge
3:9
Rom 13:9. The Jews regretted giving up the law that contained what they thought were such important principles. Paul is showing that those principles are not lost by receiving the Gospel. It requires Christians to love their neighbors as themselves, and if they do, they will necessarily do all the things that are named in this verse.
Fuente: Combined Bible Commentary
Rom 13:9. For this, etc. Four out of the five commandments in the second table of the law are cited: The received text inserts the ninth commandment also, but on insufficient authority. The seventh commandment here precedes the sixth, as elsewhere in the New Testament (Mar 10:19, received text; Luk 18:20; Jas 2:11). The same order occurs in some MSS. of the LXX; and Paul may have followed these. The tenth commandment is given in brief form. It forbids the most frequent cause of a violation of the rights of others. Only the second table is recalled, because duties to our neighbor are under discussion.
If there be, etc. This includes the omitted commandment, whether Paul had this in mind or not
Summed up again. The Greek word answers exactly to our word recapitulate, to bring together again under one head. Comp. Eph 1:10.
This saying, lit, word, a term applied to the commandment.
Thou shalt love, etc. The commandments were more than prohibitory, as this recapitulation by Moses plainly showed; see marginal references also.
Fuente: A Popular Commentary on the New Testament
Two particulars are here observable, namely, a proposition asserted, that love is the fulfilling of the law. “And this proposition proved by an induction and enumeration of particular duties belonging to the second table.
Observe, 1. The proposition asserted and maintained by the apostle, ver 8 and 10 namely, that love is the fulfulling of the law.
“But can the law be said to be fulfilled by us? If so, in what sense?
Answer By the law here we are certainly to understand that branch of the moral law which respects our duty to our neighbour. All our duty to men is virtually comprehended in loving them as ourselves; as no man will hurt himself, so neither will he hurt his neighbour, if he loveth him as himself: thus love is the complement or fulfilling of the law relating to our neighbour.
The church of Rome would infer from hence, That a person may keep the law of God perfectly, and without the least deficiency.
But observe, He that loveth keepeth the law. How keepeth? Even as he loveth; if he loveth perfectly, he keepeth the law perfectly; but if his love be imperfect, (as is the best on this side heaven,) then is his fulfilling of the law imperfect also. Perfect fulfilling of the law is what we should labour after, but whilst in an imperfect state we cannot attain unto; yet such is the grace of God in the gospel, as to account sincerity instead of perfection, and to esteem unfeigned love to our neighbour the fulfilling of the law, or all the duties of the second table.
Observe, 2. This proposition is proved by an induction and enumeration of particular duties belonging to the second table: Thou shalt not commit adultery, thou shalt not kill, thou shalt not steal, nor bear false witness, nor covet. Where all injury is forbidden to be done to our neighbour, in his name, in his estate, marriage right, &c. and this is called the fulfilling of the law.
“But how can that be? Is the law fulfilled by mere negatives, by doing no hurt to our neighbours? Is not doing them all the good we can, required also?
Answer Yes, no doubt: Love worketh no ill to his neighbour, it is implied, that love doth all possible good to his neighbour, as well as worketh no evil; though the negatives only are mentioned, yet the affirmatives also are included.
Fuente: Expository Notes with Practical Observations on the New Testament
Vv. 9, 10. For this: Thou shalt not commit adultery, thou shalt not kill, thou shalt not steal, thou shalt not covet; and if there be any other commandment, it is summed up in this saying, namely, Thou shalt love thy neighbor as thyself. Love worketh no ill to his neighbor; therefore love is the fulfilling of the law.
It has been asked why the apostle only mentioned here the commandments of the second table. Simply because he does not make ethics at will, and because he keeps strictly to his subject. Duties to God do not belong to justice; the obligations which constitute the latter are therefore found solely in the second table of the law, which was, so to speak, the civil code of the Jewish people. It is this also which explains the negative form of the commandments. Justice does not require the positive doing of good, but only the abstaining from doing wrong to others. Paul begins like Jesus, Mar 10:19, Luk 18:20, and Jam 2:11, with the commandment forbidding adultery; Philo does the same. Hofmann thinks this order arises from the fact that the relation between man and wife is anterior to the relation which a man holds to all his neighbors. This solution is not so inadmissible as Meyer thinks. The latter believes that the apostle simply follows the order which he finds in his manuscript of the LXX.; for such inversions are observed in the MSS. of this version.
According to the most of the documents belonging to the three families, the words: Thou shalt not bear false witness, are unauthentic. This is possible; for Paul closes the enumeration with the general expression: and if there by any other commandment. The commandment which forbids covetousness is mentioned here, because it puts the finger on the secret principle of the violation of all the rest. It is really in the struggle with this internal source of all injustices that love appears as the indispensable auxiliary of justice; what other feeling than love could extinguish covetousness?
The word , different, is not, strictly speaking, used for , other; it reminds us that every article of the code protects our neighbor on a different side from the preceding.
The apposition , in the (namely), though wanting in some MSS., is certainly authentic; it might easily be forgotten after the preceding substantive ( ). Like the , for this, at the beginning of the verse, it points to the saying quoted as something familiar to all readers.
The quotation is taken from Lev 19:18; as true as it is that one does not wrong himself, so true is it that it contains all the duties of justice to our neighbor. : to gather up a plurality in a unity; Eph 1:10.
The Alexs. have thought right to correct the , himself, by , thyself. It was not in the least necessary; comp. Joh 18:34.
Fuente: Godet Commentary (Luke, John, Romans and 1 Corinthians)
For this [Paul here begins the statement of a first premise, and in the eleventh verse, with the words “and this,” he begins the statement of a second premise. The first premise is that the Christian (or faith) life, freed from the complications and onerous burden of the multitudinous laws of the Jewish (or law) life, is governed by the principle underlying all these laws most happily reduced to a simple commandment; viz., “Love thy neighbor as thyself” (Rom 13:9-10). The second premise is that salvation, which is so dimly suggested to the Jewish (or law) life as to be no incentive at all to good deeds, is clearly and distinctly promised to the Christian (or faith) life, and is comprehended by it to be as rapidly and as surely approaching as the dawning day. From these two premises the conclusion is drawn that we should lead the faith-life becomingly, by putting on Christ. If we supply the word “reason” after each “this,” the meaning will be clear. Surely the simplicity of the Christian life, and the sureness and exceeding greatness of the salvation which is its reward, are sufficient reasons for our leading it becomingly], Thou shalt not commit adultery, Thou shalt not kill, Thou shalt not steal, Thou shalt not covet, and if there be any other commandment, it is summed up in this word, namely, Thou shalt love thy neighbor as thyself. [The Ten Commandments are divided into two divisions of four and six. The first four relate to duties to God, and are taken no notice of here, for they do not pertain to justice to our fellowman, and hence are outside the sphere of Paul’s present argument. The second division, or second table of the Ten Commandments, contains six precepts which relate to man’s duty to his fellows: four of them are given here, and two relating to honoring parents and bearing false witness are omitted (Exo 20:12-17). Though not named, they are included in the phrase “any other commandment.” The order, too, is not that given in the Hebrew Bible, but follows one of the versions of the LXX. The order in which the commands are here given is likewise found at Mar 10:19; Luk 18:20; Jam 2:11; and also in Philo, and Clement of Alexandria. It is surmised that the LXX. changed the order because of some of their traditions. Many commands as to conduct towards neighbors are summed up by Moses in this love commandment in a manner somewhat similar to Paul’s (Lev 19:9-18; comp. Mat 19:19; Mat 22:39-40; Gal 5:14; Gal 5:22-23). The last of the ten forbids covetousness, a passion which presents almost as broad and powerful an impulse for the breaking of all the commandments as love does for keeping them, for the love of money alone is a root of all evil (1Ti 6:10), though it is but one phase of covetousness. The truth is that covetousness gives wider scope to self-love than any other passion, and self-love is the motive which leads to all breaches of law. Love of neighbor is the opposite motive, counteracting all lawlessness, and tending to the manifestation of the perfect life. But we have no perfect example of this ideal, altruistic love save in the Christ himself. Plesion means near, close by: with the article it means “neighbor”; i. e., the near by. We readily acknowledge the one who is permanently and literally near by as our neighbor; but Christ taught us that the one who is temporarily near is also a neighbor (Luk 10:30-37), and so likewise are those who are constructively near; that is, those with whom modern means of communication have made us acquainted, so that, knowing their needs, we are thereby prompted to sympathize and impelled to help– Act 16:9-10]
Fuente: McGarvey and Pendleton Commentaries (New Testament)
DIVINE LOVE IS THE FULFILLING OF THE LAW
9, 10. For thou shalt not commit adultery, thou shalt not steal, thou shalt not covet, and if there be any other commandment it is fulfilled in this word, namely, thou shalt love thy neighbor with divine love as thyself. Divine love worketh no evil to his neighbor; therefore, divine love is the fulfilling of the law. The solution of all this is plain and easy. Christian perfection is not of work, but grace, i. e., perfect love. God rewarded David for building the temple, though he did not build it. Why? Because his will was good to do it, but God kept him in other business, reserving the building of the temple for his son Solomon. Perfect love puts you where you say yes to the will of God and no to the devil all the time. While we abide in these tenements of clay, we are disqualified by infirmities to render a perfect obedience. Hence, our perfection which God requires is simply that of love, which delights to serve God on earth like the angels in heaven, despite a thousand failures through physical and mental infirmities. God seeing the heart, takes the will for the deed, receiving this heart perfection in lieu of perfect work.
Fuente: William Godbey’s Commentary on the New Testament
13:9 For this, Thou shalt not commit adultery, Thou shalt not kill, Thou shalt not steal, Thou shalt not bear false witness, Thou shalt not covet; and if [there be] any other commandment, it is {h} briefly comprehended in this saying, namely, Thou shalt love thy neighbour as thyself.
(h) For the whole law commands nothing else but that we love God and our neighbour. But seeing that Paul speaks here of the duties we owe one to another, we must restrain this word “law” to the second table of the ten commandments.
Fuente: Geneva Bible Notes
Paul again appealed to the Law to show that what he had written in Rom 13:8 was in harmony with what God had commanded earlier. Whereas the Mosaic Law specified numerous situations in which the Israelites were to practice love, the Law of Christ contains comparatively few. The simple principle is enough. This is another excellent example of the essentially legal character of the Mosaic Law and the gracious character of Christ’s teachings. Jesus Christ gave us a model to follow in loving (Joh 13:34). Love promotes obedience.
"The Christian, who belongs to the New Covenant people of God, is no longer ’under the [Mosaic] law,’ the law for the Old Covenant people of God; he is under a ’new law,’ ’the law of Christ’ (see Gal 6:2 and 1Co 9:19-21). And central to this new law is a command that Christ himself took from the Mosaic law and made central to his new demand: the command to love our neighbors as ourselves (cf. Gal 6:2 with Rom 5:13-14)." [Note: Moo, pp. 816-17.]
"What is commanded is that we are to have the same loving regard for others that we have instinctively for ourselves." [Note: Mounce, p. 246.]