Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Romans 12:8
Or he that exhorteth, on exhortation: he that giveth, [let him do it] with simplicity; he that ruleth, with diligence; he that showeth mercy, with cheerfulness.
8. he that exhorteth ] Here again a special division of Christian work is alluded to. The “exhortation” was, perhaps, a department of the speaking-duty of the Church less elaborate than the “teaching;” more entirely regarding practice; and allotted more with a view to physical qualifications, as of voice, &c.
on exhortation ] Lit. in the exhortation.
giveth ] distributeth; “imparteth” of his own possessions to the needy. Here, of course, no special office, but special opportunity, is in view. Every Christian would, more or less, be a giver; but the wealthier Christians would have peculiar responsibility in the matter.
with simplicity ] Lit. in simplicity. A derived meaning of the Gr. word, in connexion with giving, (and so here,) is liberality, openhandedness; the opposite to the doubled, closed, hand of the niggard. Same word as 2Co 8:2; 2Co 9:11; 2Co 9:13, (where lit. “ liberality of distribution”).
ruleth ] Lit. presideth; whether in the Church, or over any section of work, or over his own household.
with diligence ] Lit. in haste, i.e. with earnestness: with laborious and minute attention to duty.
he that sheweth mercy ] Here it is unlikely that a special class, or duty, is in view; except so far as some Christians, by means or opportunity, would be specially led to works of love for the sad and the destitute. Such workers of mercy were to give their work full effect by a spirit of cheerful, and cheering, kindness; as those who had known the kindness of God.
Fuente: The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges
He that exhorteth – This word properly denotes one who urges to the practical duties of religion, in distinction from one who teaches its doctrines. One who presents the warnings and the promises of God to excite men to the discharge of their duty. It is clear that there were persons who were recognised as engaging especially in this duty, and who were known by this appellation, as distinguished from prophets and teachers. How long this was continued, there is no means of ascertaining; but it cannot be doubted that it may still be expedient, in many times and places, to have persons designated to this work. In most churches this duty is now blended with the other functions of the ministry.
He that giveth – Margin, imparteth. The word denotes the person whose function it was to distribute; and probably designates him who distributed the alms of the church, or him who was the deacon of the congregation. The connection requires that this meaning should be given to the passage: and the word rendered giveth may denote one who imparts or distributes that which has been committed to him for that purpose, as well as one who gives out of his private property. As the apostle is speaking here of offices in the church, the former is evidently what is intended. It was deemed an important matter among the early Christians to impart liberally of their substance to support the poor, and provide for the needy: Act 2:44-47; Act 4:34-37; Act 5:1-11; Gal 2:10; Rom 15:26; 2Co 8:8; 2Co 9:2, 2Co 9:12. Hence, it became necessary to appoint persons over these contributions, who should be especially charged with the management of them, and who would see that they were properly distributed; Act 6:1-6. These were the persons who were denominated deacons; Phi 1:1; 1Ti 3:8, 1Ti 3:12.
With simplicity – see Mat 6:22, If thine eye be single, etc.; Luk 11:34. The word simplicity haplotes is used in a similar sense to denote singleness, honesty of aim, purity, integrity, without any mixture of a base, selfish, or sinister end. It requires the bestowment of a favor without seeking any personal or selfish ends; without partiality; but actuated only by the desire to bestow them in the best possible manner to promote the object for which they were given; 2Co 8:2; 2Co 9:11, 2Co 9:13; 2Co 1:12; Eph 6:5; Col 3:22. It is plain that when property was intrusted to them, there would be danger that they might be tempted to employ it for selfish and sinister ends, to promote their influence and prosperity; and hence, the apostle exhorted them to do it with a single aim to the object for which it was given. Well did he know that there was nothing more tempting than the possession of wealth, though given to be appropriated to others. And this exhortation is applicable not only to the deacons of the churches, but to all who in this day of Christian benevolence are intrusted with money to advance the kingdom of the Lord Jesus Christ.
He that ruleth – This word properly designates one who is set over others, or who presides or rules, or one who attends with diligence and care to a thing. In 1Th 5:12, it is used in relation to ministers in general: And we beseech you, brethren, to know them which labor among you, and are over you in the Lord; 1Ti 3:4-5, 1Ti 3:12, it is applied to the head of a family, or one who diligently and faithfully performs the duty of a father: One that ruleth well his own house; 1Ti 5:17, it is applied to elders in the church: Let the elders that rule well, etc. It is not used elsewhere except in Tit 3:8, Tit 3:14, in a different sense, where it is translated to maintain good works. The prevailing sense of the word, therefore, is to rule, to preside over, or to have the management of. But to what class of persons reference is had here, and what was precisely their duty, has been made a matter of controversy, and it is not easy to determine. Whether this refers to a permanent office in the church, or to an occasional presiding in their assemblies convened for business, etc. is not settled by the use of the word. It has the idea of ruling, as in a family, or of presiding, as in a deliberate assembly; and either of these ideas would convey all that is implied in the original word; compare 1Co 12:28.
With diligence – This word properly means haste Mar 6:25; Luk 1:39; but it also denotes industry, attention, care; 2Co 7:11, What carefulness it wrought in you; 2Co 7:12, That our care for you in the sight of God, etc.; 2Co 8:7-8, (Greek) Heb 6:11. It means here that they should be attentive to the duties of their vocation, and engage with ardor in what was committed to them to do.
He that showeth mercy – It is probable, says Calvin, that this refers to those who had the care of the sick and infirm, the aged and the needy; not so much to provide for them by charity, as to attend on them in their affliction, and to take care of them. To the deacons was committed the duty of distributing alms, but to others that of personal attendance. This can hardly be called an office, in the technical sense; and yet it is not improbable that they were designated to this by the church, and requested to perform it. There were no hospitals and no almshouses. Christians felt it was their duty to show personal attention to the infirm and the sick; and so important was their function, that it was deemed worthy of notice in a general direction to the church.
With cheerfulness – The direction given to those who distributed alms was to do it with simplicity, with an honest aim to meet the purpose for which it was intrusted to them. The direction here varies according to the duty to be performed. It is to be done with cheerfulness, pleasantness, joy; with a kind, benign, and happy temper. The importance of this direction to those in this situation is apparent. Nothing tends so much to enhance the value of personal attendance on the sick and afflicted, as a kind and cheerful temper. If any where a mild, amiable, cheerful, and patient disposition is needed, it is near a sick bed, and when administering to the wants of those who are in affliction. And whenever we may be called to such a service, we should remember that this is indispensable. If moroseness, or impatience, or fretfulness is discovered in us, it will pain those whom we seek to benefit, embitter their feelings, and render our services of comparatively little value. The needy and infirm, the feeble and the aged, have enough to bear without the impatience and harshness of professed friends. It may be added that the example of the Lord Jesus Christ is the brightest which the world has furnished of this temper. Though constantly encompassed by the infirm and the afflicted, yet he was always kind, and gentle, and mild, and has left before us exactly what the apostie meant when he said, he that showeth mercy with cheerfulness. The example of the good Samaritan is also another instance of what is intended by this direction; compare 2Co 9:7. This direction is particularly applicable to a physician.
We have here an account of the establishment, the order, and the duties of the different members of the Christian church. The amount of it all is, that we should discharge with fidelity the duties which belong to us in the sphere of life in which we are placed; and not despise the rank which God has assigned us; not to think of ourselves more highly than we ought; but to act well our part, according to the station where we are placed, and the talents with which we are endowed. If this were done, it would put an end to discontent, ambition, and strife, and would produce the blessings of universal peace and order.
Fuente: Albert Barnes’ Notes on the Bible
Verse 8. Or he that exhorteth] , The person who admonished and reprehended the unruly or disorderly; and who supported the weak and comforted the penitents, and those who were under heaviness through manifold temptations.
He that giveth] He who distributeth the alms of the Church, with simplicity-being influenced by no partiality, but dividing to each according to the necessity of his case.
He that ruleth] , He that presides over a particular business; but as the verb also signifies to defend or patronize, it is probably used here to signify receiving and providing for strangers, and especially the persecuted who were obliged to leave their own homes, and were destitute, afflicted, and tormented. It might also imply the persons whose business it was to receive and entertain the apostolical teachers who travelled from place to place, establishing and confirming the Churches. In this sense the word is applied to Phoebe, Ro 16:2: She hath been a SUCCOURER of many, and of myself also. The apostle directs that this office should be executed with diligence, that such destitute persons should have their necessities as promptly and as amply supplied as possible.
He that showeth mercy] Let the person who is called to perform any act of compassion or mercy to the wretched do it, not grudgingly nor of necessity, but from a spirit of pure benevolence and sympathy. The poor are often both wicked and worthless: and, if those who are called to minister to them as stewards, overseers, c., do not take care, they will get their hearts hardened with the frequent proofs they will have of deception, lying, idleness, &c. And on this account it is that so many of those who have been called to minister to the poor in parishes, workhouses, and religious societies, when they come to relinquish their employment find that many of their moral feelings have been considerably blunted and perhaps the only reward they get for their services is the character of being hard-hearted. If whatever is done in this way be not done unto the Lord, it can never be done with cheerfulness.
Fuente: Adam Clarke’s Commentary and Critical Notes on the Bible
Exhortation: see the notes on the foregoing verse.
He that giveth, let him do it with simplicity; i.e. he that hath the office of collecting and distributing the church alms, (which was the deacons work or charge, Act 6:1, &c.), let him discharge it with simplicity, or with singleness of heart; ( so the word is rendered, Eph 6:5); let him do it faithfully and impartially, and without favour or affection.
He that ruleth; or he that is a president, and set over others. There is great difference amongst expositors, who is meant by this ruler. It is not meant of state rulers, (of them he treats in the next chapter), but of church rulers. Some understand, all church officers in general. Others think, such are meant as were not properly pastors and teachers, put together with them had the oversight of the church, to rule the same; to regulate misdemeanors, to pacify differences, to administer discipline in admonition and censures: these they call seniors or elders, or the censors of manners; and are the same the apostle calls governments, or governors, 1Co 12:28; see 1Ti 5:17.
He that showeth mercy, with cheerfulness: some understand this generally of all Christians, that they should be charitable, and that with cheerfulness. But the apostle is yet speaking of the special offices of the church. It cannot be meant of deacons, forasmuch as he had spoken of them before in this very verse. Such therefore may be intended, as had the care assigned them of the sick and impotent, of prisoners and strangers, &c.; see 1Ti 5:10; the same, it may be, that he calleth helps in 1Co 12:28. This charge he directeth them to discharge with cheerfulness; without being weary of that troublesome work, or being sour and froward to those they had to do with.
Fuente: English Annotations on the Holy Bible by Matthew Poole
8. Or he that exhortethSinceall preaching, whether by apostles, prophets, or teachers, wasfollowed up by exhortation (Act 11:23;Act 14:22; Act 15:32,c.), many think that no specific class is here in view. But ifliberty was given to others to exercise themselves occasionally inexhorting the brethren, generally, or small parties of the lessinstructed, the reference may be to them.
he that givethin theexercise of private benevolence probably, rather than in thedischarge of diaconal duty.
with simplicityso theword probably means. But as simplicity seems enjoined in the nextclause but one of this same verse, perhaps the meaning here is, “withliberality,” as the same word is rendered in 2Co 8:22Co 9:11.
he that rulethwhetherin the Church or his own household. See 1Ti 3:4;1Ti 3:5, where the same word isapplied to both.
with diligencewithearnest purpose.
he that showeth mercy, withcheerfulnessnot only without grudging either trouble orpecuniary relief, but feeling it to be “more blessed to givethan to receive,” and to help than be helped.
Fuente: Jamieson, Fausset and Brown’s Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible
Or he that exhorteth, on exhortation,…. This is the other branch of prophesying or preaching, and which is more practical, and lies in giving a word of exhortation to the saints, as their particular cases call for; for as prophets were teachers, Ac 13:1; so also exhorters, Ac 15:32; and one considerable branch of the ministry, and which is more principally the pastor’s work, as well as to teach, is to exhort all sorts of persons, young and old, rich and poor, high and low, bond and free, under his care, with all longsuffering and doctrine. The words will bear to be read, “he that comforteth, on consolation”; and so the Syriac version renders them, , “and another who is a comforter, in his consolation”. Though all the ministers of the Gospel are to speak comfortably to the saints, by preaching the doctrines of free justification by Christ’s righteousness, and remission of sins by his blood, by bringing the good news of salvation by him, and by opening the exceeding great and precious promises of the Gospel; yet some have a greater talent this way than others; some are “Boanergeses”, sons of thunder, Mr 3:17, and others “Barnabases”, sons of consolation, Ac 4:36; and each should attend to that with all diligence and humility, he is best qualified for.
He that giveth, [let him do it] with simplicity. Here begins the subdivision of the deacon’s office into its several branches, “giving”, “ruling”, and “showing mercy”: by “giving” is meant, not giving of his own, or performing: acts of charity, which is common to all the members of the church, who ought liberally to contribute to the relief of the poor; but imparting or distributing the church’s money to proper objects, which is to be done “with simplicity”; with all faithfulness and integrity, without fraud or embezzling the church’s stock, with impartiality, and without respect of persons, and liberally and bountifully, as the word here used signifies; see 2Co 8:2;
he that ruleth, with diligence; deacons are the “helps, governments”, mentioned in 1Co 12:28, who are assisting to the pastor in the government of the church; their business is, to observe the conversations of the members of the church, and to warn them that are unruly and walk disorderly, to compose differences, and prepare matters to lay before the church; a deacon is
, “one that goes before”; and leads on others by way of example in his conduct and conversation; or as the Syriac renders it, , “that stands at the head” of affairs in the church; in the management of which he ought to use all study, thoughtfulness, care and diligence:
he that sheweth mercy, with cheerfulness; which is not to be understood of showing compassion to miserable objects in common, or of giving alms to necessitous persons, and which ought to be done according to the Jewish l canons, , “with a cheerful countenance”; and is what is highly pleasing to God, who “loves a cheerful giver”: but of a branch of the deacon’s office, whose work, among other things, is to visit the sick and distressed, and communicate to them as their wants require; all which should be done, not in a morose and frowning manner, but with a pleasant look and cheerful countenance, which makes the visit and the gift more welcome, acceptable, and useful.
l Maimon. Hilch. Mattanot Anayim, c. 10. sect. 4. 13.
Fuente: John Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible
Exhortation. Aimed at the heart and will. See on consolation, Luk 6:24. Compare 1Co 14:3; Act 4:36, where Rev. gives son of exhortation.
He that giveth [ ] . Earthly possessions. The preposition meta indicates sharing with. He that imparteth. Compare Eph 4:28; Luk 3:11.
Simplicity [] . See on single, Mt 6:22, and compare Jas 1:5, where it is said that God gives aJplwv simply. See note there. In 2Co 8:2; 2Co 9:11, 13, the A. V. gives liberality; and in Jas 1:5, liberally. Rev. accepts this in the last – named passage, but gives singleness in margin. In all the others liberality is, at best, very doubtful. The sense is unusual, and the rendering simplicity or singleness is defensible in all the passages.
He that ruleth [ ] . Lit., he that is placed in front. The reference is to any position involving superintendence. No special ecclesiastical office is meant. Compare Tit 3:8, to maintain good works; the idea of presiding over running into that of carrying on or practicing. See note there. Compare also prostativ succorer, Rom 16:2, and see note.
With diligence [ ] . See on Jude 1:3. In Mr 6:25; Luk 1:39, it is rendered haste. In 2Co 7:11, carefulness (Rev., earnest care). In 2Co 7:12, care (Rev., earnest care). In 2Co 8:8, forwardness (Rev., earnestness). In 2Co 8:16, earnest care. With cheerfulness [ ] . Only here in the New Testament. It reappears in the Latin hilaritas; English, hilarity, exhilarate. “The joyful eagerness, the amiable grace, the affability going the length of gayety, which make the visitor a sunbeam penetrating into the sick – chamber, and to the heart of the afflicted.”
Fuente: Vincent’s Word Studies in the New Testament
1) “Or he that exhorteth, on exhortation,” (eite ho parakalon, en te paraklesei) “Or the one exhorting (to motivate men to action in harmony with “the faith”) let him be exhorting or involved in exhorting,” according to the charismatic gift of exhortation, in accord with the word, the faith, Rom 12:6. The exhorter was one who encouraged and emotionally motivated others toward being and doing good, Rom 15:4-5; Act 13:15-16.
2) “He that giveth, let him do it with simplicity,” (ho metodidous en haploteti) “The one sharing with others in charismatic gift administration, let it be in mindful simplicity,” without a public display of his gift, with modesty, not high mindedness, not with display. to humiliate his object of charity. With sincerity and liberality all giving, in worship and alms, is to be done, Mat 6:1-3; 2Co 9:7; 2Co 9:11; 2Co 9:13; Jas 1:5.
3) “He that ruleth, with diligence,” (ho proistamenos en spoude) “The one standing forward, taking the lead or the one leading let it be in diligence”; whether the one leading in the ministry of the church be an official, as a pastor or deacon, or some other leader, in S.S. work, a building construction or clean up, or social or recreational (leader-ruler) it is to be in diligent humility not as a Lord, dictator, or dominating bully over God’s heritage, 1Pe 5:2; 1Th 5:12; 1Ti 5:17; 1Ti 3:4-5; 1Ti 3:12.
4) “He that sheweth mercy, with cheerfulness,” (ho eleon en hilaroteti) “The one showing mercy let him do it in a state of good cheer or cheerfulness”; a grudging, envious, despondent pouter can not show mercy, for he himself is an object of pity and needs mercy. The one visiting the sick, afflicted, or oppressed in body, mind, or spirit, must be a person of faith, hope, good cheer, and bright countenance, 2Co 9:7; Pro 15:13; Joh 16:33; Act 27:22; Act 27:25; Act 27:36.
Fuente: Garner-Howes Baptist Commentary
8. Or he who gives, let him do so in simplicity, etc. From the former clauses we have clearly seen, that he teaches us here the legitimate use of God’s gifts. By the μεταδιδούντοις, the givers, of whom he speaks here, he did not understand those who gave of their own property, but the deacons, who presided in dispensing the public charities of the Church; and by the ἐλούντοις, those who showed mercy, he meant the widows, and other ministers, who were appointed to take care of the sick, according to the custom of the ancient Church: for there were two different offices, — to provide necessaries for the poor, and to attend to their condition. But to the first he recommends simplicity, so that without fraud or respect of persons they were faithfully to administer what was entrusted to them. He required the services of the other party to be rendered with cheerfulness, lest by their peevishness (which often happens) they marred the favor conferred by them. For as nothing gives more solace to the sick or to any one otherwise distressed, than to see men cheerful and prompt in assisting them; so to observe sadness in the countenance of those by whom assistance is given, makes them to feel themselves despised.
Though he rightly calls those προϊστάμενους presidents, to whom was committed the government of the Church, (and they were the elders, who presided over and ruled others and exercised discipline;) yet what he says of these may be extended universally to all kinds of governors: for no small solicitude is required from those who provide for the safety of all, and no small diligence is needful for them who ought to watch day and night for the wellbeing of the whole community. Yet the state of things at that time proves that Paul does not speak of all kinds of rulers, for there were then no pious magistrates; but of the elders who were the correctors of morals.
Fuente: Calvin’s Complete Commentary
(8) He that exhorteth.It will be observed that in the apostolic writings, the one idea of preaching is divided into its several branches, speaking with tongues, prophesying (which appears to have had reference to the more recondite portions or relations of the faith), teaching, exhortation. This last form of address, corresponding perhaps rather to our word encouragement, would be especially needed in the troubled circumstances of the early Church.
He that giveth.In this and the following phrases the Apostle passes on from considering the definite functions of the ministry to those which were common to all members of the Church; giveth is therefore here to be taken in a wide sense.
Simplicity.With singleness of motive, desiring only Gods glory, and to benefit the object for which he gives, and with no secret thought of self-exaltation. He who gives to be seen of men, or with any selfish motive, exhausts thereby the merit of the act, see Mat. 6:2 et seq.
He that ruleth.He who holds any position of prominence or importance in the Church. The same word is applied to presbyters in 1Th. 5:12; 1Ti. 5:17; and to heads of families in 1Ti. 3:4-5; 1Ti. 3:12.
He that sheweth mercy, with cheerfulness.A happy combination which is an instance of the Apostles fresh and genuine view of human nature. The kindness of charity is doubled when it is done in a cheerful and kindly way. There is a class of religious minds which is especially apt to forget this. Cheerfulness is not merely a matter of temperament, but to be cultivated as a duty.
Fuente: Ellicott’s Commentary for English Readers (Old and New Testaments)
8. Exhorteth As the teacher explained facts and truths for the memory, so the exhorter, on the same grade below the prophet, was the emotional stirrer of the heart. Undoubtedly the prophet, and even above him the apostle, could and often did both teach and exhort, (1Ti 6:2; Tit 2:15.) Nor was there any official boundary line preventing the teacher or exhorter, if the divine charism moved him, from rising into the prophet, but never into the proper apostle. (See note on Luk 1:2.)
Giveth Distributeth, that is, the charities of the Church.
Ruleth Or presides, whether as a permanent official or as chosen chairman for any particular occasion.
Showeth mercy Compassion or benefaction to any case of distress.
All the good-doings thus far mentioned contribute to the united activity of the Church; but they do not specify so many officers by appointment, the whole moving by the spontaneity of the Spirit, rather than by a constituted polity.
Fuente: Whedon’s Commentary on the Old and New Testaments
‘Or he who exhorts, (let him give himself) to his exhorting, he who gives, (let him do it) with liberality, he who rules, with diligence, he who shows mercy, with cheerfulness.’
Exhortation and encouragement (not necessarily just in preaching) was a separate gift, as some were enabled by the Holy Spirit so as to stir fellow-Christians up to obedience, and encourage them in their daily lives, both spiritually and materially. For there were no social services to cater to the physical needs of the members, and Christians were therefore to fulfil this role, especially towards their fellow-members. The church was to provide the social services. Thus the ability to give humbly and unostentatiously in a liberal manner was another gift of the Spirit (compare Rom 12:13).
The word translated ‘liberality’ means ‘with singleness of heart and purpose’. It was to be genuine, unselfish giving. They were not to be like those who, when giving in the Temple, made sure that everyone saw what they were giving. Compare Mat 6:1-4. The gifts would then be used in the ongoing ministry of the church, including the benefiting of those in the church who were in physical need, and who had no one to care for those needs (see 1Ti 5:3-4). In return those who benefited had a responsibility of continuing in prayer (1Ti 5:5).
Those who administered the affairs of the church were to do it with due diligence. It is noteworthy that ‘ruling’ was not seen as the primary gift (it comes well down the list), or as making someone especially important. It was to be carried out as a service with true humility, not as something that put the person above others. Meanwhile those whom the Spirit enabled in acts of mercy and compassion (compare Rom 16:1-2) were to do it cheerfully. The whole body were to pull together in their concern the one for the other.
Fuente: Commentary Series on the Bible by Peter Pett
Rom 12:8. He that ruleth, with diligence Lord Barrington thinks this clause relates to the receiving and succouring of strangers; most probably, persecuted strangers; or, however, such as travelled for the propagation of the Gospel; and that for these reasons: First, because the Apostle has admonished them to use well all the gifts of the Spirit for the good of men’s minds, Rom 12:6-7 and in the first clause of the present verse. It seems, therefore, most natural to suppose, that he should in the three last clauses of this verse direct them how to use other gifts of God’s providence for the good of men’s morals and religion; and that he should lay the several instances of the kindness of others together in the same manner, as in Heb 13:2-3. Secondly, , a feminine word of the same original and signification with; , is used in this sense, ch. Rom 16:2. She hath been a succourer of many, and of myself also; the word signifies, among other things, to defend, patronize; and so it might be rendered, Tit 3:8; Tit 3:14. To patronize good works; meaning to encourage and assist in them. In this sense the clause here should be rendered, He that gives succour, or relief, let him do it with care and application. See Lord Barrington’s Miscel. Sacr. Essay 1: p. 76.
Fuente: Commentary on the Holy Bible by Thomas Coke
Rom 12:8 . . . .] The detailed exposition with ceases as the discourse flows onward more vehemently, but the series of those charismatically endowed is continued , yet in such a way that now there are no longer mentioned such as possess a for a definite function in the church, but such as possess it generally for the activity of public usefulness in the social Christian life . Hence, because with . . . the continuance of the exhortations is indicated, we are to place before not a full stop, but a comma, or, better, a colon. The reference of these last three points to definite ministerial functions (such as that . is the diaconus who distributes the gifts of love; . the president of the community , bishop or presbyter; he who takes charge of the sick ) is refuted, first, by the fact that the assumed references of . (according to Act 4:35 , we should at least expect ) are quite incapable of proof, and indeed improbable in themselves; secondly, by the consideration that such an analysis of the diaconal gift would be out of due place, after mention had been already made of the as a whole; and thirdly, by the consideration that the position of the , as the presbyter , between two diaconal functions, and almost at the end of the series, would he unsuitable. But if we should wish to explain . as guardian of the strangers (my first edition; Borger), there is an utter want of proof both for this particular feature of the diaconia and for its designation by . (for the at Athens, the patron of the metoeci , was something quite different; Hermann, Staatsalterth . 115. 4).
] he who imparts , who exercises the charisma of charitableness by imparting of his means to the poor. Eph 4:28 ; Luk 3:11 . To understand the imparting of spiritual good (Baumgarten-Crusius), or this along with the other (Hofmann), receives no support from the context, especially seeing that the spiritual imparting has already been previously disposed of in its distinctive forms.
.] in simplicity , therefore without any selfishness, without boasting, secondary designs, etc., but in plain sincerity of disposition. Comp. 2Co 8:2 ; 2Co 9:11 ; 2Co 9:13 , and the classical collocations of , . . . . . On the subject-matter, comp. Mat 6:2 ff.
] the president , he who exercises the of presiding over others as leader, of directing affairs and the like (comp. , Herodian, vii. 10. 16), consequently one who through spiritual endowment is (Plato, Prot . p. 352 B). This had to be possessed by the presbyter or for behoof of his work (comp. 1Co 12:28 ); but we are not to understand it as applying to him exclusively, or to explain it specially of the office of presbyter, as Rothe and Philippi again do, in spite of the general nature of the context, while Hofmann likewise thinks that the presbyter is meant, not as respects his office , but as respects his activity . What is meant is the category of charismatic endowment, under which the work destined for the presbyter falls to be included .
] with zeal; it is the earnest, strenuous attention to the fulfilment of duty, the opposite of .
] he who is merciful towards the suffering and unfortunate, to whom it is his to administer comfort, counsel, help.
.] with cheerful, friendly demeanour, 2Co 9:7 , the opposite of a reluctant and sullen carriage. Comp. Xen. Mem . ii. 7. 12 : .
Observe, further, that ., , and . do not denote, like the preceding definitions with , the sphere of service within which the activity is to exert itself, but the quality , with which those who are gifted are to do their work; and all these three qualities characterize, in like manner, the nature of true , Rom 12:3 .
Fuente: Heinrich August Wilhelm Meyer’s New Testament Commentary
8 Or he that exhorteth, on exhortation: he that giveth, let him do it with simplicity; he that ruleth, with diligence; he that sheweth mercy, with cheerfulness.
Ver. 8. Or he that exhorteth ] The pastor properly so called. See Trapp on “ Eph 4:11 “
Fuente: John Trapp’s Complete Commentary (Old and New Testaments)
8 .] The was not necessarily distinct from the , see 1Co 14:31 .
appears to be the giver of the alms to the poor , either the deacon himself, or some distributor subordinate to the deacon. This however has been doubted, and not without reason: for a transition certainly seems to be made, by the omission of the , from public to private gifts. We cannot find any ecclesiastical meaning for (though indeed Calvin, al., understand by it “viduas et alios ministros qui curandis grotis, secundum veterem Ecclesi morem, prficiebantur”), and the very fact of the three preceding being all limited to their respective official spheres, whereas these three are connected with qualitative descriptions, speaks strongly for their being private acts , to be always performed in the spirit described. Add to all, that, as Vitringa remarks, is more properly to distribute ( Act 4:35 ), to impart of one’s own to another . I would therefore render it: He that bestoweth.
] ordinarily, ‘ with simplicity .’ But seeing that , referred to alms-giving, bears another and an objective meaning, this hardly satisfies me, because and designate not so much the inward frame of mind, as the outward character of the superintendence and the compassion: as might be expected, when gifts to be exercised for mutual benefit are spoken of. In 2Co 8:2 ; 2Co 9:11 ; 2Co 9:13 , Jos. Antt. vii. 13. 4 (where David admires Araunah, ), the word signifies ‘ liberality :’ so perhaps also, Jas 1:5 , but see note there. This meaning is not recognized by Wahl, Lex., but defended by Tholuck, who connects it with the phrase found in Stobus, Eclog. Phys. i. p. 123, , ‘to open the hands wide:’ and I would thus render it here.
] He that presides but over what? If over the Church exclusively, we come back to offices again: and it is hardly likely that the rulers of the Church, as such, would be introduced so low down in the list, or by so very general a term, as this. In 1Ti 3:4-5 ; 1Ti 3:12 , we have the verb used of presiding over a man’s own household : and in its absolute usage here, I do not see why that also should not be included. Meyer would understand it of ‘ patronage of strangers’ (ch. Rom 16:2 ). Stuart in his Excursus on this place, appended to his Commentary, takes up and defends the same view. But, not insisting on the general usage of the word being preferable where it occurs absolutely , will apply to this meaning? Of course so far as is applicable to every employment, it might, but more than this is required, where words are connected in so marked a manner as here. Giving the ordinary meaning, these words fit admirably: implying that he who is by God set over others, be they members of the Church or of his own household, must not allow himself to forget his responsibility, and take his duty indolently and easily, but must , making it a serious matter of continual diligence.
] See above: He that sheweth mercy , is the very best rendering: and I cannot conceive that any officer of the Church is intended, but every private Christian who exercises compassion. It is in exhibiting compassion, which is often the compulsory work of one obeying his conscience rather than the spontaneous effusion of love, that cheerfulness is so peculiarly required, and so frequently wanting. And yet in such an act it is even of more consequence towards the effect, consoling the compassionated, than the act itself. , Sir 18:16 .
Fuente: Henry Alford’s Greek Testament
exhorteth. App-134.
exhortation. Greek. paraklesis. See Act 4:36.
giveth. See Rom 1:11.
simplicity. Greek. haplotes. Elsewhere, 2Co 1:12; 2Co 8:2; 2Co 9:11, 2Co 9:13; 2Co 11:3. Eph 6:5. Col 3:22.
ruleth = presideth. Greek. proistemi. Here; 1Th 5:12. 1Ti 3:4, 1Ti 3:5, 1Ti 3:12; 1Ti 5:17. Tit 3:8, Tit 3:14.
cheerfulness. Greek. hilarotes. Only here. The adjective in 2Co 9:7.
Fuente: Companion Bible Notes, Appendices and Graphics
8.] The was not necessarily distinct from the ,-see 1Co 14:31.
appears to be the giver of the alms to the poor,-either the deacon himself, or some distributor subordinate to the deacon. This however has been doubted, and not without reason: for a transition certainly seems to be made, by the omission of the , from public to private gifts. We cannot find any ecclesiastical meaning for (though indeed Calvin, al., understand by it viduas et alios ministros qui curandis grotis, secundum veterem Ecclesi morem, prficiebantur),-and the very fact of the three preceding being all limited to their respective official spheres, whereas these three are connected with qualitative descriptions, speaks strongly for their being private acts, to be always performed in the spirit described. Add to all, that, as Vitringa remarks, is more properly to distribute (Act 4:35), to impart of ones own to another. I would therefore render it: He that bestoweth.
] ordinarily, with simplicity. But seeing that , referred to alms-giving, bears another and an objective meaning, this hardly satisfies me, because and designate not so much the inward frame of mind, as the outward character of the superintendence and the compassion: as might be expected, when gifts to be exercised for mutual benefit are spoken of. In 2Co 8:2; 2Co 9:11; 2Co 9:13, Jos. Antt. vii. 13. 4 (where David admires Araunah, ), the word signifies liberality: so perhaps also, Jam 1:5, but see note there. This meaning is not recognized by Wahl, Lex., but defended by Tholuck, who connects it with the phrase found in Stobus, Eclog. Phys. i. p. 123, , to open the hands wide:-and I would thus render it here.
] He that presides-but over what? If over the Church exclusively, we come back to offices again: and it is hardly likely that the rulers of the Church, as such, would be introduced so low down in the list, or by so very general a term, as this. In 1Ti 3:4-5; 1Ti 3:12, we have the verb used of presiding over a mans own household: and in its absolute usage here, I do not see why that also should not be included. Meyer would understand it of patronage of strangers (ch. Rom 16:2). Stuart in his Excursus on this place, appended to his Commentary, takes up and defends the same view. But, not insisting on the general usage of the word being preferable where it occurs absolutely, will apply to this meaning? Of course so far as is applicable to every employment, it might, but more than this is required, where words are connected in so marked a manner as here. Giving the ordinary meaning, these words fit admirably: implying that he who is by God set over others, be they members of the Church or of his own household, must not allow himself to forget his responsibility, and take his duty indolently and easily, but must , making it a serious matter of continual diligence.
] See above: He that sheweth mercy, is the very best rendering: and I cannot conceive that any officer of the Church is intended, but every private Christian who exercises compassion. It is in exhibiting compassion, which is often the compulsory work of one obeying his conscience rather than the spontaneous effusion of love, that cheerfulness is so peculiarly required, and so frequently wanting. And yet in such an act it is even of more consequence towards the effect,-consoling the compassionated, than the act itself. , Sir 18:16.
Fuente: The Greek Testament
Rom 12:8. ) signifies to give; to impart, [to give a share,] so that, he who gives, may not strip himself of all, that he has.- ) as God gives, Jam 1:5, liberally, abundantly, 2Co 8:2, [neither prevented by the desire of private advantage, nor by anxious deliberation, whether or not another may be worthy of the favour given, and whether proper moderation be observed in giving.-V. g.]- ) one who has the care of [rules, Engl. V.] others, and has them under his patronage.- , with diligence) The force of this word is very extensive; Rom 12:11; 2Co 7:11, note.
Fuente: Gnomon of the New Testament
Rom 12:8
Rom 12:8
or he that exhorteth, to his exhorting:-Exhortation was a power of persuading and encouraging others to work, and of counseling, comforting, and consoling them when in distress. This is a peculiar and useful talent. It is natural to some. Barnabas was a son of exhortation, or one gifted with this talent. (Act 4:36). He had a talent of that kind and a gift corresponding to the talent. It was not so high a talent as some others, but those gifted were to use it for the honor of God and the good of man.
he that giveth, let him do it with liberality;-[The word here translated liberajity is elsewhere rendered singleness of heart. (Eph 6:5; Col 3:22). The meaning here evidently is: openness of heart, manifesting itself by liberality and benefactions, free from pretense and self-seeking.] It must not be done in an ostentatious, pretentious manner, to be seen of men. Jesus says: When therefore you doest alms, sound not a trumpet before thee, as the hypocrites do in the synagogues and in the streets, that they may have glory of men, (Mat 6:2).
he that ruleth, with diligence;-He that rules (directs in the affairs of the church) should do it with diligence, promptness, and earnestness. [In a still more general sense the word is applied to ruling ones own house and children. (1Ti 3:3-5; 1Ti 3:12).]
he that showeth mercy, with cheerfulness.-He that showeth mercy, let him do it not complainingly or grudgingly, but with gladness and cheerfulness, showing that the service is willingly and gladly rendered. [Cheerfulness in dispensing merciful assistance seems to double its value, and certainly tends to a far more ready reception of spiritual counsel and advice on the part of the succored one.]
Fuente: Old and New Testaments Restoration Commentary
exhorteth: Act 13:15, Act 15:32, Act 20:2, 1Co 14:3, 1Th 2:3, 1Ti 4:13, Heb 10:25, Heb 13:22
giveth: or, imparteth, Rom 12:13, Deu 15:8-11, Deu 15:14, Job 31:16-20, Psa 112:9, Pro 22:9, Ecc 11:1, Ecc 11:2, Ecc 11:6, Isa 32:5, Isa 32:8, Isa 58:7-11, Mat 6:2-4, Mat 25:40, Luk 21:1-4, Act 2:44-46, Act 4:33-35, Act 11:28-30, 2Co 8:1-9, 2Co 8:12, 1Th 2:8, 1Pe 4:9-11
with simplicity: or, liberally, 2Co 1:12, 2Co 8:2, 2Co 11:3, Eph 6:5, Col 3:22
ruleth: Rom 13:6, Gen 18:19, Psa 101:1-8, Act 13:12, Act 20:28, 1Co 12:28, 1Th 5:12-14, 1Ti 3:4, 1Ti 3:5, 1Ti 5:17, Heb 13:7, Heb 13:17, Heb 13:24, 1Pe 5:2, 1Pe 5:3
with diligence: Ecc 9:10, shewth, Deu 16:11, Deu 16:14, Deu 16:15, Psa 37:21, Isa 64:5, 2Co 9:7
Reciprocal: Exo 18:13 – General Deu 15:10 – thine heart Act 2:46 – singleness 2Co 9:11 – bountifulness 1Ti 3:13 – used 1Ti 6:18 – ready Heb 6:11 – we desire
Fuente: The Treasury of Scripture Knowledge
2:8
Rom 12:8. To exhort means to insist on the performance of known duties. Giveth is from METADIDOMI, and Thay-er’s first definition is, “To share a thing with any one.” Simplicity is from HAPLOTES, and it has been rendered in the King James Version by, bountifulness, liberality, singleness. He that ruleth applies to the elders since they are the only rulers in the church. They are to be diligent and “watch” the conduct of the members to see that it is not such as to endanger their souls. (See Heb 13:17.) When administering to the distress of another let it be done cheerfully, and not in the spirit of one who does it merely because it is a duty he has to perform.
Fuente: Combined Bible Commentary
Rom 12:8. Or he that exhorteth, on exhortation, lit., the exhortation, which is his sphere. Teaching was directed to the understanding; exhortation, rather to the heart and will. The exhorter might also be a prophet, but the habit seems to have been to base the exhortation on a passage of Scripture, as in the synagogue (comp. Act 13:15). It is impossible to find here any permanent office in the church, though these four were probably the basis of a subsequent development into more permanent official positions.
He that giveth, or, imparteth, let him do it with simplicity, or, liberality. This should be referred to all who have the gift of imparting, private Christians as well as the official almoners of the Church. It does not mean the imparting of spiritual benefit, but of earthly goods. This is a charism which many may have, who can do little else for Christs cause. He who thus gives should do it with simplicity, i.e., without any selfishness, without boasting, without secondary designs, etc., but in plain sincerity of disposition (Meyer). Many explain with liberality, because the other qualifications referred to outward character, rather than to the frame of mind. But this sense of the Greek word is very unusual, and the exhortation to simplicity seems both appropriate and needful. Liberal giving is far easier than simple giving.
He that ruleth, or, presideth, with diligence. That this gift was necessary for the presbyter (the ruler, or, bishop) of the church, is quite evident. But since the preceding and subsequent clauses point, either to private Christians, or to the deacons, an exclusive reference to the office of presbyter seems out of place. Diligence should characterize the performance of duty of all those who have the gift of leadership. The explanation: he that entertaineth strangers, is unsustained by good evidence.
He that showeth mercy, with cheerful-ness. This also refers to all Christians who administer help and comfort to the suffering. Here there is great danger of rendering perfunctory service, hence the appropriate exhortation with cheerfulness.
The three gifts which private Christians also have might far more frequently be exercised. Too many who could do great service by giving, presiding (or, performing other executive duty), and showing mercy, waste their energies by attempting to exhort and teach, or even to prophesy. Let each prayerfully consider what his special gift is.
The hints given here and elsewhere in the Epistles do not support any one theory of church polity. This whole matter seems to have been in process of development during the Apostolic age. Of fixed and binding usage there is little trace. The Apostle says little, because so much was to be left to the free enactment of the various bodies of Christians. The true way to unity will doubtless be through liberty, and to liberty the freedom of association is essential; and to freedom of association variety of form seems, for the present at least, to be equally essential.
Fuente: A Popular Commentary on the New Testament
or he that exhorteth, to his exhorting: he that giveth, let him do it with liberality [Exhortation is addressed to the feeling as teaching is to the understanding. It is used to stir or excite people, whether of the church or not, to do their duty. As endowed or spiritually gifted Christians of that day spoke with tongues (1 Cor 12 and 14), both the teacher and the exhorter would be properly classed as among the workers of miracles. After mentioning the exhorter, Paul drops the word “or” (eite), and thus seems to make a distinction between the workers of miracles whom he has been admonishing, and the class of workers who follow, who evidently had no miraculous power whatever. “Liberality” (haplotes) signifies “the disposition not to turn back on oneself; and it is obvious that from this first meaning there may follow either that of generosity, when a man gives without letting himself be arrested by any selfish calculation; or that of simplicity, when he gives without his left hand knowing what his right hand does–that is to say, without any vain going back on himself, and without any air of haughtiness” (Godet). The word may be correctly translated objectively “liberality” (2Co 8:2; 2Co 9:11; 2Co 9:13; Jam 1:5); but, used subjectively and more naturally, it signifies singleness of purpose, simplicity, sincerity (Mat 6:22; Luk 11:34; 2Co 1:12; 2Co 11:3; Eph 6:5; Col 3:22). The latter meaning is clearly indicated here by the context,* for Paul is rebuking ostentation (comp. Mat 6:1-4) and enforcing humility, sober self-thought, subjective investigation, simplicity. The giving was to be with honesty of aim, without ulterior or personal or selfish motive]; he that ruleth, with diligence; he that showeth mercy, with cheerfulness. [Whether they ruled as elders and deacons in the church, or as parents at home (1Ti 3:3-5; 1Ti 3:12), they were to do so with a spirit of zealous attention to the work entrusted to them, not with a vainglorious desire to lord it, or to exalt or enrich themselves (1Th 5:12-13; 1Ti 3:4-5; 1Ti 3:12; 1Ti 5:17; 1Pe 5:1-4). Showing mercy is probably best defined at Mat 25:35-36 . Paul here directs that these acts be performed with cheerfulness. The context shows that he means inward joy, not outward simulation of it; for the whole passage is subjective, not objective. (Comp. 2Co 9:7) Cheer, like love, must be without hypocrisy, for the one showing mercy has the better end of the blessing (Act 20:35). The purpose of the entire passage is to enforce the spirit of contented humility upon Christians in all their actions, lest those having superior gifts be thereby betrayed into pride and self-exaltation, and those having inferior gifts be seduced by envy to fall into bitterness of spirit or idleness. “In the school of Christ,” says Leighton, “the first lesson of all is, self-denial and humility; yea, it is written above the door, as the rule of entry or admission, ‘Learn of me, for I am meek and lowly in heart.'”]
* We are decidedly averse to criticizing or correcting the text of the English Revised Version, not wishing to breed suspicious unrest in the minds of its readers. But we can not but feel that occasionally the translators yield to the strong temptation to choose the English word which can be understood at once without the aid of the commentator, whether it conveys the shade of meaning desired by the Scripture writer or not. (Compare note on “spiritual,” Rom 12:1 .) In such cases we have pointed out the looseness of the translators. “Give much!” is the urgent cry of this age, and it is thoroughly Scriptural; but the Spirit, speaking through Paul, also said, “Give in simplicity”–i. e., in meekness–and the command must not be lost sight of, simply to effect an easy translation. Perhaps this age needs the latter command more than the former; for, as Caryl observes, “you must rather bring your graces to the touchstone, to try their truth, than to the balance, to weigh their measure.”
Fuente: McGarvey and Pendleton Commentaries (New Testament)
8. Or he that exhorteth, in exhortation. The church was multiplied exceedingly by the exhortation of the Holy Ghost (Act 9:31). Hence we see that the red-hot exhortation rung out by the rank and file of the membership, baptized with the Holy Ghost and fire, is the very thing in the divine order, to convict, convert and sanctify the people, thus multiplying the membership of the church, while teaching them the Word of God is the means of their progressive edification. He that giveth, with a single eye, i. e., having nothing in view but the glory of God in making his contribution. All this surreptitious carnal policy through stratagem, fandangos and human trickery, appealing to pride, vanity and lust, so prevalent in the churches, in order to raise money to keep up their finances, is an abomination in the sight of God, grieving away the Holy Spirit and plunging the church into apostasy and damnation. It actually scandalizes God in the estimation of the wicked world, as if He were poor and hard pressed for money, depending on the liberality of the devils people to support His church, which is all an infamous lie. He says, If I were hungry I would not tell you, for the cattle upon a thousand hills are mine. He that standeth before the people, with expedition. A slow leader quickly slows down and ruins anything that he leads. In this way prayer meetings and Sunday-schools and all sorts of religious services are constantly and everywhere undergoing torture and homicide. By all means have a live, wide awake, expeditious leader in everything. Put in a laggard, and he holds all the balance back till he slows the thing to death. He that showeth mercy, with laughter. For God loves a laughing giver (1Co 9:7). If you can not give to God with a heart so cheerful that you laugh over the privilege of making your contribution, whether for the ministry, the poor or the heathens, God does not want your poor, stingy offering, for He has millions of ravens ready to fly on missions of love and mercy.
Fuente: William Godbey’s Commentary on the New Testament
12:8 Or he that {n} exhorteth, on exhortation: he that {o} giveth, [let him do it] with simplicity; he that {p} ruleth, with diligence; he that {q} sheweth mercy, with cheerfulness.
(n) Who in other passages is called the “pastor”.
(o) That is, the alms, that he distributes them faithfully, and without any favouritism.
(p) The elders of the church.
(q) Those that are occupied with the care of the poor must do it with cheerfulness, lest they add sorrow upon sorrow.
Fuente: Geneva Bible Notes
Chapter 26
CHRISTIAN DUTY: DETAILS OF PERSONAL CONDUCT
Rom 12:8-21
ST. PAUL has set before us the life of surrender, of the “giving over” of faculty to God, in one great preliminary aspect. The fair ideal (meant always for a watchful and hopeful realisation) has been held aloft. It is a life whose motive is the Lords “compassions”; whose law of freedom is His will; whose inmost aim is, without envy or interference towards our fellow servants, to “finish the work He hath given us to do.” Now into this noble outline are to be poured the details of personal conduct which, in any and every line and field are to make the characteristics of the Christian.
As we listen again, we will again remember that the words are levelled not at a few, but at all who are in Christ. The beings indicated here are not the chosen names of a Church Calendar, nor are they the passionless inhabitants of a Utopia. They are all who, in Rome of old, in England now, “have peace with God through our Lord Jesus Christ,” “have the Spirit of God dwelling in them,” and are living out this wonderful but most practical life in the straight line of their Fathers will.
As if he could not heap the golden words too thickly together, St. Paul dictates here with even unusual abruptness and terseness of expression. He leaves syntax very much alone; gives us noun and adjective, and lets them speak for themselves. We will venture to render as nearly verbatim as possible. The English will inevitably seem more rough and crude than the Greek, but the impression given will be truer on the whole to the original than a fuller rendering would be.
Your love, unaffected. Abominating the ill, wedded to the good. For your brotherly kindness, full of mutual home affection. For your honour, your code of precedence, deferring to one another. For your earnestness, not slothful. For the Spirit, as regards your possession and use of the divine Indweller, glowing. For the Lord, bond serving. For your hope, that is to say, as to the hope of the Lords Return, rejoicing. For your affliction, enduring. For your prayer, persevering. For the wants of the saints, for the poverty of fellow Christians, communicating; “sharing,” a yet nobler thing than the mere “giving” which may ignore the sacred fellowship of the provider and the receiver. Hospitality-prosecuting as with a studious cultivation. Bless those who persecute you; bless, and do not curse. This was a solemnly appropriate precept, for the community over which, eight years later, the first great Persecution was to break in “blood, and fire, and vapour of smoke.” And no doubt there was abundant present occasion for it, even while the scene was comparatively tranquil. Every modern mission field can illustrate the possibilities of a “persecution” which may be altogether private, or which at most may touch only a narrow neighbourhood; which may never reach the point of technical outrage, yet may apply a truly “fiery trial” to the faithful convert. Even in circles of our decorous English society is no such thing known as the “persecution” of a life “not conformed to this world,” though the assault or torture may take forms almost invisible and impalpable, except to the sensibilities of the object of it? For all such cases, as well as for the confessor on the rack, and the martyr in the fire, this precept holds expressly: “Bless, do not curse.” In Christ find possible the impossible; let the resentment of nature die, at His feet, in the breath of His love.
To rejoice with the rejoicing, and to weep with the weeping; holy duties of the surrendered life, too easily forgotten. Alas, there is such a phenomenon, not altogether rare, as a life whose self-surrender, in some main aspects, cannot be doubted, but which utterly fails in sympathy. A certain spiritual exaltation is allowed actually to harden, or at least to seem to harden, the consecrated heart; and the man who perhaps witnesses for God with a prophets ardour is yet not one to whom the mourner would go for tears and prayer in his bereavement, or the child for a perfectly human smile in its play. But this is not as the Lord would have it be. If indeed the Christian has “given his body over,” it is that his eyes, and lips, and hands, may be ready to give loving tokens of fellowship in sorrow, and (what is less obvious) in gladness too, to the human hearts around him.
Feeling the same thing towards one another; animated by a happy identity of sympathy and brotherhood. Not haughty in feeling, but full of lowly sympathies; accessible, in an unaffected fellowship, to the poor, the social inferior, the weak and the defeated, and again to the smallest and homeliest interests of all. It was the Lords example; the little child, the wistful parent, the widow with her mite, the poor fallen woman of the street, could “lead away” His blessed sympathies with a touch, while He responded with an unbroken majesty of gracious power, but with a kindness for which condescension seems a word far too cold and distant.
Do not get to be wise in your own opinion; be ready always to learn; dread the attitude of mind, too possible even for the man of earnest spiritual purpose, which assumes that you have nothing to learn and everything to teach; which makes it easy to criticise and to discredit; and which can prove an altogether repellent thing to the observer from outside, who is trying to estimate the Gospel by its adherent and advocate. Requiting no one evil for evil; safe from the spirit of retaliation, in your surrender to Him “who when He was reviled, reviled not again; when He suffered, threatened not.” Taking forethought for good in the sight of all men; not letting habits, talk, expenses, drift into inconsistency; watching with open and considerate eyes against what others may fairly think to be unchristian in you. Here is no counsel of cowardice, no recommendation of slavery to a public opinion which may be altogether wrong. It is a precept of loyal jealousy for the heavenly Masters honour. His servant is to be nobly indifferent to the worlds thought and word, where he is sure that God and the world antagonise. But he is to be sensitively attentive to the worlds observation where the world, more or less acquainted with the Christian precept or principle, and more or less conscious of its truth and right, is watching, maliciously or it may be wistfully, to see if it governs the Christians practice. In view of this the man will never be content even with the satisfaction of his own conscience; he will set himself not only to do right, but to be seen to do it. He will not only be true to a monetary trust, for example; he will take care that the proofs of his fidelity shall be open. He will not only mean well towards others; he will take care that his manner and bearing, his dealings and intercourse, shall unmistakably breathe the Christian air.
If possible, as regards your side (the “your” is as emphatic as possible in position and in meaning), living at peace with all men; yes, even in pagan and hostile Rome. A peculiarly Christian principle speaks here. The men who had “given over their bodies a living sacrifice” might think, imaginably, that their duty was to court the worlds enmity, to tilt as it were against its spears, as if the one supreme call was to collide, to fall, and to be glorified. But this would be fanaticism; and the Gospel is never fanatical, for it is the law of love. The surrendered Christian is not, as such, an aspirant for even a martyrs fame, but the servant of God and man. If martyrdom crosses his path, it is met as duty; but he does not court it as eclat. And what is true of martyrdom is of course true of every lower and milder form of the conflict of the Church, and of the Christian, in the world.
Nothing more nobly evidences the divine origin of the Gospel than this essential precept; “as far as it lies with you, live peaceably with all men.” Such wise and kind forbearance and neighbourliness would never have been bound up with the belief of supernatural powers and hopes, if those powers and hopes had been the mere issue of human exaltation, of natural enthusiasm. The supernatural of the Gospel leads to nothing but rectitude and considerateness, in short to nothing but love, between man and man. And why? Because it is indeed divine; it is the message and gift of the living Son of God, in all the truth and majesty of His rightfulness. All too early in the history of the Church “the crown of martyrdom” became an object of enthusiastic ambition. But that was not because of the teaching of the Crucified, nor of His suffering Apostles.
Not avenging yourselves, beloved; no, give place to the wrath; let the angry opponent, the dread persecutor, have his way, so far as your resistance or retaliation is concerned. “Beloved, let us love”; {1Jn 4:7} with that strong and conquering love which wins by suffering. And do not fear lest eternal justice should go by default; there is One who will take care of that matter; you may leave it with Him. For it stands written, {Deu 32:35} “To Me belongs vengeance; I will recompense, saith the Lord.” “But if” (and again he quotes the older Scriptures, finding in the Pro 25:21-22 -the same oracular authority as in the Pentateuch), “but if thy enemy is hungry, give him food; if he is thirsty, give him drink; for so doing thou wilt heap coals of fire on his head”; taking the best way to the only “vengeance” which a saint can wish, namely, your “enemys” conviction of his wrong, the rising of a burning shame in his soul, and the melting of his spirit in the fire of love. Be not thou conquered by the evil, but conquer, in the good, the evil.
“In the good”; as if surrounded by it, moving invulnerable, in its magic circle, through “the contradiction of sinners,” “the provoking of all men.” The thought is just that of Psa 31:18-19 : “How great is Thy goodness, which Thou hast laid up for them that fear Thee, which Thou hast wrought for them that trust in Thee before the sons of men! Thou shalt hide them in the secret of Thy presence from the pride of man; Thou shalt keep them secretly in a pavilion from the strife of tongues.” “The good” of this sentence of St. Pauls is no vague and abstract thing; it is “the gift of God”; {Rom 6:23} it is the life eternal found and possessed in union with Christ, our Righteousness, our Sanctification, our Redemption. Practically, it is “not It but He.” The Roman convert who should find it more than possible to meet his enemy with love, to do him positive good in his need, with a conquering simplicity of intention, was to do so not so much by an internal conflict between his “better self” and his worse, as by the living power of Christ received in his whole being; by “abiding in Him.”
It is so now, and forever. The open secret of divine peace and love is what it was; as necessary, as versatile, as victorious. And its path of victory is as straight and as sure as of old. And the precept to tread that path, daily and hourly, if occasion calls, is still as divinely binding as it ever was for the Christian, if indeed he has embraced “the mercies of God,” and is looking to his Lord to be evermore “transfigured, by the renewing of his mind.”
As we review this rich field of the flowers, and of the gold, of holiness, this now completed paragraph of epigrammatic precepts, some leading and pervading principles emerge. We see first that the sanctity of the Gospel is no hushed and cloistered “indifferentism.” It is a thing intended for the open field of human life; to be lived out “before the sons of men.” A strong positive element is in it. The saint is to “abominate the evil”; not only to deprecate it, and deplore. He is to be energetically “in earnest.” He is to “glow” with the Spirit, and to “rejoice” in the hope of glory. He is to take practical, provident pains to live not only aright, but manifestly aright, in ways which “all men” can recognise. Again, his life is to be essentially social. He is contemplated as one who meets other lives at every turn, and he is never to forget or neglect his relation to them. Particularly in the Christian Society, he is to cherish the “family affection” of the Gospel; to defer to fellow Christians in a generous humility; to share his means with the poor among them; to welcome the strangers of them to his house. He is to think it a sacred duty to enter into the joys and the sorrows round him. He is to keep his sympathies open for despised people, and for little matters. Then again, and most prominently after all, he is to be ready to suffer, and to meet suffering with a spirit far greater than that of only resignation. He is to bless his persecutor; he is to serve his enemy in ways most practical and active; he is to conquer him for Christ, in the power of a divine communion.
Thus, meanwhile, the life, so positive, so active in its effects, is to be essentially all the while a passive, bearing, enduring, life. Its strength is to spring not from the energies of nature, which may or may not be vigorous in the man, but from an internal surrender to the claim and government of his Lord. He has “presented himself to God”; {Rom 6:13} he has “presented his body, a living sacrifice”. {Rom 12:1} He has recognised, with a penitent wonder and joy, that he is but the limb of a Body, and that his Head is the Lord. His thought is now not for his personal rights, his individual exaltation, but for the glory of his Head, for the fulfilment of the thought of his Head, and for the health and wealth of the Body, as the great vehicle in the world of the gracious will of the Head.
It is among the chief and deepest of the characteristics of Christian ethics, this passive root below a rich growth and harvest of activity. All through the New Testament we find it expressed or suggested. The first Beatitude uttered by the Lord {Mat 5:3} is given to “the poor, the mendicant () in spirit.” The last {Joh 20:29} is for the believer, who trusts without seeing. The radiant portrait of holy Love {1Co 13:1-13} produces its effect, full of indescribable life as well as beauty, by the combination of almost none but negative touches; the “total abstinence” of the loving soul from impatience, from envy, from self-display, from self-seeking, from brooding over wrong, from even the faintest pleasure in evil, from the tendency to think ill of others. Everywhere the Gospel bids the Christian take sides against himself. He is to stand ready to forego even his surest rights, if only he is hurt by so doing; while on the other hand he is watchful to respect even the least obvious rights of others, yea, to consider their weaknesses, and their prejudices, to the furthest just limit. He is “not to resist evil”; in the sense of never fighting for self as self. He is rather to “suffer himself to be defrauded” {1Co 6:7} than to bring discredit on his Lord in however due a course of law. The straits and humiliations of his earthly lot, if such things are the will of God for him, are not to be materials for his discontent, or occasions for his envy, or for his secular ambition. They are to be his opportunities for inward triumph; the theme of a “song of the Lord,” in which he is to sing of strength perfected in weakness, of a power not his own “overshadowing” him. {2Co 12:9-10}
Such is the passivity of the saints, deep beneath their serviceable activity. The two are in vital connection. The root is not the accident, but the proper antecedent of the product. For the secret and unostentatious surrender of the will, in its Christian sense, is no mere evacuation, leaving the house swept but empty; it is the reception of the Lord of life into the open castle of the City of Mansoul. It is the placing in His hands of all that the walls contain. And placed in His hands, the castle, and the city, will show at once, and continually more and more, that not only order, but life, has taken possession. The surrender of the Moslem is, in its theory, a mere submission. The surrender of the Gospel is a reception also; and thus its nature is to come out in “the fruit of the Spirit.”
Once more, let us not forget that the Apostle lays his main emphasis here rather on being than on doing. Nothing is said of great spiritual enterprises; everything has to do with the personal conduct of the men who, if such enterprises are done, must do them. This too is characteristic of the New Testament. Very rarely do the Apostles say anything about their converts duty, for instance, to carry the message of Christ around them in evangelistic aggression. Such aggression was assuredly attempted, and in numberless ways, by the primeval Christians, from those who were “scattered abroad” {Act 8:4} after the death of Stephen onwards. The Philippians {Php 2:15-16} “shone as lights in the world, holding out the word of life.” The Ephesians {Eph 5:13} penetrated the surrounding darkness, being themselves “light in the Lord.” The Thessalonians {1Th 1:8} made their witness felt “in Macedonia, and Achaia, and in every place.” The Romans; encouraged by St. Pauls presence and sufferings, “were bold to speak the word without.” {Php 1:14} St. John {3Jn 1:7} alludes to missionaries who, “for the Names sake, went forth, taking nothing of the Gentiles.”
Yet is it not plain that, when the Apostles thought of the life and zeal of their converts, their first care, by far, was that they should be wholly conformed to the will of God in personal and social matters? This Was the indispensable condition to their being, as a community, what they must be if they were to prove true witnesses and propagandists for their Lord.
God forbid that we should draw from this phenomenon one inference, however faint, to thwart or discredit the missionary zeal now in our day rising like a fresh, pure tide in the believing Church. May our Master continually animate His servants in the Church at home to seek the lost around them, to recall the lapsed with the voice of truth and love. May He multiply a hundredfold the scattered host of His “witnesses in the uttermost parts of the earth,” through the dwelling places of those eight hundred millions who are still pagan, not to speak of the lesser yet vast multitudes of misbelievers, Mahometan and Jewish. But neither in missionary enterprise, nor in any sort of activity for God and man, is this deep suggestion of the Epistles to be forgotten. What the Christian does is even more important than what he says. What he is is the all-important antecedent to what he does. He is “nothing yet as he ought to” be if, amidst even innumerable efforts and aggressions, he has not “presented his body a living sacrifice” for his Lords purposes, not his own; if he has not learnt, in his Lord, an unaffected love, a holy family affection, a sympathy with griefs and joys around him, a humble esteem of himself, and the blessed art of giving way to wrath, and of overcoming evil in “the good” of the presence of the Lord.