Biblia

Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Romans 16:25

Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Romans 16:25

Now to him that is of power to establish you according to my gospel, and the preaching of Jesus Christ, according to the revelation of the mystery, which was kept secret since the world began,

25 27. Final Doxology to the Giver and Revealer of the universal Gospel of Salvation by Faith

25. Now to him, &c.] The construction of this Doxology is irregular; for in Rom 16:27 the lit. Gr. is, To God only wise, through Jesus Christ, to whom be glory for ever. Amen; and the relative pronoun “ to whom ” is redundant. (See further on that verse.) The practical meaning, however, is clear. The whole is a Doxology to the Eternal Father, through the Son, for the gift and manifestation of the world-wide Salvation by Faith, which prophets had foretold and which was now at last fully proclaimed. On the questions raised about this Doxology, see Introduction, ii. 3.

to stablish you ] Cp. Rom 1:11 ; 1Th 3:13; 2Th 2:17; 2Th 3:3; 1Pe 5:10. See also Act 14:23; Act 20:32.

according to my gospel ] i.e. in the way revealed and promised in the Gospel as taught by St Paul; the Gospel which offers justification to the believer, and with it the gift of the Divine Spirit and His aid. “ My Gospel: ” same words as Rom 2:16, (where see note;) 2Ti 2:8. Cp. 1Ti 1:11.

the preaching of Jesus Christ ] This may grammatically mean either (1) “the preaching which speaks of Him; ” (in which case it would be a phrase explanatory of “my Gospel;”) or (2) “the preaching which He Himself delivers.” In the latter case again the reference may be either ( a) to the Lord’s utterances when on earth (as e.g. John 3, 6); or ( b) to His after work through St Paul and the other Apostles; cp. Rom 15:18, and note there. On the whole, the last reference seems the most likely. St Paul thus both qualifies the thought that the Gospel he preached was “his,” and enforces the thought of its absolute truth. “ Preaching: ” the Gr. word (same as 1Co 1:21,) means the contents of the message, not the act of preaching.

according to the revelation, &c.] St Paul’s Gospel and the Lord’s Proclamation were “ according to,” in harmony with, this “ unveiling ” of the great hidden Truth. The unveiling of the Truth occasioned the proclamation, and was the substance of it. The unveiling and the proclamation were thus coincident and harmonious.

the mystery ] On the word “ mystery,” see note on Rom 11:25. The great Secret here is that of Salvation by Faith for all, of whatever nation, who come with “the obedience of faith” to Christ the Propitiation. See especially Eph 3:3-9. Here, however, more than there, the emphasis seems to be on the freedom of the Way of Acceptance as well as on the world-wide largeness of the offer; on the “obedience of Faith” as well as on the “making of it known to all nations.” Not that Salvation by Faith was a secret unheard of till the Christian age; (for see ch. 4;) but that its Divine manifestation in the Cross, and consequent unreserved proclamation as the central truth of Redeeming Love, were new.

which was kept secret since the world began ] Lit. which had been reserved in silence during onian times, or periods of ages. The “ages” here probably refer to the whole lapse of periods before the Gospel “age,” perhaps including not only human time with its patriarchal and Mosaic “ages,” and its ranges of pagan history, but the “age” of angelic life. For we gather (cp. Eph 3:10) that even to angels the Incarnation and its results in believing mankind formed a new manifestation of the Divine wisdom. The E. V. thus well represents the Gr. as a paraphrase. Cp. again Eph 3:3-9.

Fuente: The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges

Now to him – This and the two following verses are found in many manuscripts at the close of Rom. 14. Its proper place, however, is here; and the apostle thus concludes the whole Epistle with an ascription of praise.

To him … – To God; be glory; Rom 16:20.

Is of power – Greek, Is able; who has power; Eph 3:20; Jud 1:24, Now unto him that is able to keep you from falling, etc. God only can keep Christians in the path of salvation; and it was well to bring that truth prominently into view at the close of the Epistle.

To establish you – To strengthen and confirm you.

According to my gospel – According to the gospel which I preach; the doctrines which I have been defending in this Epistle. It is called his gospel, not because he was the author of it, or because others did not preach it also, but because he had been particularly defending it in this Epistle. The doctrines which he had advanced were just those which were suited to strengthen and confirm them, – the doctrine of justification, of election, of perseverance, and of the protection and favor of God to both Jews and Gentiles. These were the doctrines which he had defended; and it might easily be shown that these are the doctrines that give stability to the Christian faith, hope, and love.

And the preaching of Jesus Christ – Not his personal preaching; but according to that preaching of which Christ is the author and the subject; and particularly, as the following clause shows, to the doctrines by which the partition between the Jews and the Gentiles was broken down, and by which they were admitted to the same privileges and hopes.

According to the revelation – According to the communication of what has been so long concealed, but which is now made manifest. The word revelation refers to the publication of the plan by the gospel.

Of the mystery – The word mystery means properly what is hidden or concealed, and is thus applied to any doctrine which was not before known. It does not mean necessarily what is unintelligible; but what had not been before revealed; see the note at Mat 13:11. The word here seems to refer to the principal doctrines of the gospel; its main truths, which had been concealed, especially from the entire Gentile world, but which were now made known.

Which was kept secret – Which were kept in silence (Greek, sesigemenou), were not divulged or proclaimed.

Since the world began – In all past times. This refers particularly to the Gentiles. The Jews had some obscure intimations of these truths, but they were now made known to all the world. The phrase since the world began is in Greek, in eternal times; that is, in all past times; or, as we should say, they have been always concealed.

Fuente: Albert Barnes’ Notes on the Bible

Rom 16:25-27

Now to Him that is of power to stablish you according to my gospel.

Apostolic praise

What a doxology! Full of Divine melody; full of grace and truth!


I.
The stablishing. He is the Creator.

(1) He is the mighty God. He is of power (literally, able) to stablish you.

(2) The fountain-head of the mystery of hidden wisdom.

(3) He is the everlasting God (Psa 90:1).

(4) He is the God only wise. Such is our Stablisher! Can we fear or be discouraged? Shall our weakness, or frailty, or the number of our foes appal us?


II.
The stablishing. The word expresses steadfastness, fixture, and strength (see Luk 9:51; Rom 1:11; 1Th 3:2; 1Th 3:13; 2Th 2:17; 2Th 3:3; Jam 5:8; 1Pe 5:10). It assumes that on our part there is weakness, wavering, changeableness; that there is peril. The process of stablishing is what we need so much; it is more than being kept from falling, and we require both. The gospel

(1) says to us, Be steadfast;

(2) shows us what steadfastness is;

(3) supplies us with the means of steadfastness. In clasping that gospel, we are holding that which alone can keep us from being moved.


III.
The stablished. These are, first of all, the saints at Rome, called, beloved of God, whose faith was spoken of throughout the whole world. They needed stablishing, though apostles were their pastors and teachers. (H. Bonar, D.D.)

The doxology

This Epistle is remarkable for the number of its endings. The invocation at the end of chap. 15. may be regarded as closing the Epistle itself. Then the first benediction (chap. 16:20) was doubtless intended to be indeed the conclusion of the whole. But now Pauls companions desired to send greetings, which having been done, we have the benediction a second time (Rom 15:24). The pen of Tertius was now put down. The Epistle must be read aloud for review and correction. What was done in the latter respect we cannot tell. But the apostle and his companions were filled with profound emotions; and so Tertius was bidden to again take up the pen, and to write, Now to Him, etc. And then the MS. was devoutly rolled up and sealed, and delivered to Phebe. Notice–


I.
The establishment of the Roman Christians in the faith. Observe–

1. That in respect to which the establishment is to be effected: the gospel. It is described in respect to–

(1) Its subjective medium and source–my gospel. Not that his gospel differed essentially from the gospel of any other apostle, though he had not learnt it from any of them; but it was his as distinguished from all corrupted gospels (Gal 1:6-7).

(2) Its objective character and contents.

(1) It is the revelation of a mystery which–

(a) had been kept silent in eternal times, i.e., from eternity up to the time of the advent of Christ; but–

(b) had now, since the appearance of Christ, been made fully manifest. It is the great mystery of redemption through the One Divine-human Mediator, so called, not in respect to its incomprehensible character, but because it never could have been imagined by unaided human reason, nor appreciated by men before it had been evolved in history (Eph 1:9; 2Ti 1:9-10).

(2) Enigmatical portions of the truth concerning it were disclosed from time to time in type and prophecy; but given in such separate fragments, that there was not skill to bring piece to piece, and so combine the whole as to discover the mystery. Even the prophets themselves were perplexed as to what could be the true significance of their predictions (Peter 1:10-12).

(3) But now, since the advent, the whole mystery had been manifested, and the time for silence has passed away: Go ye into all the world, etc.

2. The establishment itself.

(1) This was not simply that they should become so steadfast as never to apostatise; nor only that they should so maintain personal faith in Christ to inherit everlasting life; but also that they should have such a clear understanding of the spirit and purpose of Christianity; such a grasp of its various facts and truths, as that they should be in no danger of enfeebling the gospel by heterogeneous additions, or by an incomplete apprehension or enunciation of its truths.

(2) Those who should thus be firmly established in the truth concerning Christ, are also supposed to hold firmly to Him, by personal living faith, who is Himself the Truth.


II.
The ascription of glory to the only wise God through Christ, who was able to do this thing for them.

1. The ability here spoken of is not an ability of mere power, but one which is manifested, and which becomes effective, through wisdom. Men are established in the truth by a clear apprehension of it, and of its grounds and bearings (Eph 4:14; Heb 5:12-14). God has made abundant provision to present to believers the truth in an unmistakable form, and to give them every aid in mastering that form.

2. But the establishment includes, not only apprehension and belief, but also love, of the truth. And in all this God has manifested not His sole wisdom only, but His surpassing love; and we may be fully assured that He who thus appeals to the understanding by intelligible truth for the purpose of salvation will also, by the gentle and persuasive influence of love, appeal to the heart.

3. And this ascription of praise to the only wise God through Christ who is able to do this, was itself also intended to be one of the means to promote this very end. There are contained therein both incentive and encouragement. (W. Tyson.)

Praise


I.
Belongs to god–as–

1. The God of power.

2. The only wise.


II.
Is due to god.

1. For everything.

2. But especially for the gospel.

(1) Its revelation.

(2) Publication.

(3) Successes.


III.
Is awakened by god.

1. Through faith.

2. In the preaching of the gospel.


IV.
Is presented to god.

1. Through Christ.

2. In glory.

3. For ever. (J. Lyth, D.D.)

Stablished in the gospel

In the introductory words of the Epistle, Paul declares his strong desire to visit Rome, that its members might be established in the faith. As, then, he commences the Epistle with the expression of this object, it is natural that he should close it with the ascription of glory to Him who was able to do it.


I.
The material is which the establishing is to take place.

1. My gospel.

(1) The gospel as preached by Paul. Already there had appeared those who proclaimed another gospel, of whom he says, let him be accursed. His gospel was that which this Epistle especially expounded.

(2) But the gospel is not a mere intellectual object set forth in order by the reason, and made evident in logical and eloquent speech; it is something which a man possesses in the inner nature of his being. It was a spiritual life for Paul.

2. The preaching of Jesus Christ. Pauls gospel was the fact that Jesus was the Saviour of the world, and the Christ of God.

3. It is easy now to see the substance of the Christian character in which believers are to be established.

(1) It consists in the apprehension of a truth. That truth is–

(a) Historic. The facts of the life, death, resurrection and ascension of Jesus, His glory and power given to Him of God.

(b) Doctrinal. The relations which these facts bear to one another, to man, to God, to the Divine government, to sin, to the destiny of the race and the universe.

(2) This substance of the Christian character is moral and personal. When a man rightly apprehends these truths, he comes into moral relation to them. He believes them; this belief produces a becoming state of the emotions; these emotions act upon the character, will, conscience, and life. The man not only believes, he also lives. Now, in this sphere of the believers condition there will be growth, and for the development, as for the commencement of this, the Holy Ghost is ceaselessly engaged.

(3) As the central fact and power, both of doctrine and life, is the preaching of Jesus Christ, we ever need to be more fully instructed in the life of Jesus, more clearly to apprehend it, more strongly to feel His relation to us, more completely to have our lives and hearts submitted to His control, and consecrated to His service.


II.
The nature of this establishing. The word signifies the supporting, the solidifying of anything. Thus, a prop set under an object that might fall, the fastening of what was shaking and unstable, the setting of a liquid into firm consistency, are all expressed by words of kindred origin with the word establish. It is not difficult, then, to perceive the application of the term to the faith and life of a Christian man. It is clearly no external ratification. No such foreign act as confirming by bishop, or approval by the Church or its officers, is contemplated. But it is that work of Divine grace upon the heart after belief, whereby the knowledge and the faith, with all the graces that spring therefrom, are made more clear and strong, and the soul more able to contend and to continue, until the final victory is attained. Establishment in the faith–

1. Consists in an increase of knowledge of the facts and truths of the gospel. Deeper and deeper will the believer drink into the teaching of that gospel, and every draught shall freshen and quicken and establish him in the faith. The best means of dealing with the prevailing spirit of unbelief is not controversial defence; the truth, the history, the doctrine, is its own best defence. Rich in this lore, the cunning craftiness of men will assault you in vain. Justified by this learning, you will meet the mightiest attack of the enemy unmoved as the stony rock when it receives the beat of oceans waves and breaks them into harmless foam that only laves its brow and makes it glisten with a brighter radiance.

2. Must take place in the moral and spiritual nature of the man. We may increase in knowledge without any corresponding increase in virtue. The little brook that babbles as it runs, when it has reached the plain, grows to a broad, deep river, but is silent in its onward majestic flow. The waves of the streamlet only glistened in the light. The bosom of the river reflects a heaven upon its calm, still surface. So shall the soul grow in its love for God and Christ, its blessed experiences of mercy and grace. Less show and excitement, but the enjoyment of a fuller blessing, a richer knowledge.

3. Reaches forth into the life, and controls it. At first, the power of the truth was intermittent, partial; but as the confirming went on, the life became fuller of golden deeds of a Divine and celestial beauty. The altar of our surrender was ever builded higher and made wider, until at last it filled all the space of life, and life became a complete consecration.


III.
The power by which this confirmation shall be secured. It is a Divine work. He who gave the foundation of our faith alone can establish us in it, as He alone will crown it at last. It is quite certain that we can do nothing of ourselves, for as life proceeds we learn our helplessness, our vanity. But our God has power to hold us up. His grace is limitless, and by this established, we shall not fail. (Ll. D. Bevan, D.D.)

Establishing grace


I.
Its necessity.


II.
Its source. The God of power.


III.
Its means.

1. The gospel.

2. The gospel of Paul.

3. The gospel preached. (J. Lyth, D.D.)

According to the revelation of the mystery.

The worlds mystery unfolded in Christ


I.
The mystery. The word mystery in Scripture implies not necessarily that the fact or truth cannot be understood, but that it is not known except as revealed from God. It is a favourite word of Pauls. Except in three passages of the Gospels (Mat 13:11; Mar 4:11; Luk 8:10), and four places in the Revelation (Rev 1:20; Rev 10:7; Rev 17:5; Rev 17:7), Paul is the only writer who employs the word, and he uses it twenty times. In several of these cases of Pauline usage, the term refers to that great fact of the universality of the gospel (Eph 3:6). And this mystery forms one of the great subjects of this Epistle. It may be interesting to refer to some of the passages and there learn what this great mystery is (Rom 1:5-6; Rom 1:13; Rom 1:15; Rom 3:29; Rom 4:11; Rom 9:25-26; Rom 9:30; Rom 10:11-13; Rom 11:11; Rom 11:30; Rom 15:8-21). The mystery, then, is the universality of the gospel of Jesus Christ. All men have sinned. But all men may be saved by the free and sovereign grace of God through Jesus Christ our Lord. This was the sublime truth which Paul desired firmly to establish in the imperial city of the world, in order that there might then go forth to all mankind a power greater than that of Rome, more splendid than her glory, more searching than her law, more victorious than her legions, and which should abide when Rome should have crumbled into ruins. This mystery has been revealed to you. If you have received it, are you living in its blessedness, and up to the measure of the fulness of its freedom and life?


II.
Its concealment. Which was kept silent in the aeonian periods.

1. The past ages received concerning this great truth no voice from the Divine silence. Men knew nothing of this gracious scheme of salvation for the universe.

(1) The Jew did not know it. If he regarded his God as also the creator and ruler of other men, they at least bore to Him some inferior relation, and if they were to be blessed at all, it was to be by and through the law of Moses.

(2) The Gentile had altogether failed to gain a glimpse of it. Each people held itself to be autochthonous, sprung from the soil; all the rest were strangers, aliens, slaves. Humanity was unknown, and anything like a moral dealing with the individual that was to be of universal application, had never been hinted at in the whole range of Gentile philosophy and faith.

(3) And now those who have not themselves accepted this gracious mystery in practice wholly ignore the idea that the entire human race is dealt with in the atonement of Jesus, and that the purpose of God includes that whole race within His love and power. Even within the Church, how few fully understand or obey the law which declares that there is in Jesus Christ neither bond nor free, etc.

2. What wisdom may we not find, yea, what grace, in the concealment of this truth! The world had to be and is still being prepared for it. All those denominationalisms which are only the Judaisms of the modern world, and the patriotisms which at best are but pagan virtues, are nothing but the concealment of the truth of the human unity in Jesus Christ, which is part of the plan of God when He will perfect the society of man in the breaking down of nationalities and ecclesiasticisms in a world-wide union. Happy souls who catch some glimpses of this bright day! Happier they who help on its coming, and make this their gospel, the preaching of Jesus Christ according to the unveiling of the mystery which in the past ages of the Divine purpose had not been uttered unto men.


III.
Its manifestation.

1. The mystery was manifested in the character of Christ. While our Lord was a Jew and was careful of all Mosaic ordinances, yet the enthusiasm of humanity glowed within Him. His parables, sermons, conversations, works of charity and power, and death, are stamped with the mark of human nature, and have in them not a trace of the Israelite. He predicts the fall of the sacred city, affirms the universal worship of the God of heaven, and points with sublime assurance to the fact that when He has been crucified, He will draw all men unto Him.

2. And the history of the Church reflects the quality of its Masters work: At first baptized with a spirit which promised a universal scope, then narrowing down to the dimensions of a new Jewish sect, Divine providence compelled it to pass beyond the limits within which its leaders would have confined it, until it proved itself to be a world-wide Church, every road in life leading to its sacred courts.

3. And does not the history of the Church prove this in every succeeding age? What nation has been able to resist its advance? The seed of the kingdom grows in every soil.

Conclusion:

1. In respect of the inexplicable and perplexed events and conditions of human life we have only to await the Divine time, and all shall be made clear.

2. Learn from this mystery the measure and the inspiration of our preaching. According to the revelation of the mystery. For every man is the mercy obtained; to every man its grace offered.

3. This mystery being for a world, awaits your acceptance. (Ll. D. Bevan, D.D.)

The mystery of the gospel

The gospel is–


I.
A mystery–long kept secret.


II.
A mystery revealed.

1. By the prophets.

2. Apostles.


III.
A mystery revealed by the commandment of God.


IV.
A mystery revealed by the commandment of God to all nations.


V.
A mystery revealed by the commandment of God to all nations for the obedience of faith. (J. Lyth, D.D.)

And by the Scriptures of the prophets, according to the commandment of the everlasting God, made known to all nations for the obedience of faith.

The universal gospel

1. Revelation is perfected in promulgation. That which has been made manifest in Jesus Christ is to be made known by the Church unto all nations.

2. The means of this information is the Scriptures of the prophets. Which from Eph 3:3-6 we must not limit to either those of the ancient or the later dispensation. The later Scriptures supplement and expound the former, and thus come to the obedience of faith.


I.
The gospel as a scheme of universal salvation is revealed in order that it may be published to all men.

1. God might have adopted some method of treatment of the race which was not a matter for revelation. There must be a great part of the Divine system of the universe which deeply affects man which, perhaps, he never will and never can know. Indeed, very much of the physical constitution of things, by which the circumstances of our daily life are determined, is wholly unknown to us. We find it out only by patient observation after long ignorance, repeated failure, constant mistake. The system of nature is left for man to find it out for himself. But this is not so with the gospel. It must be made known, to be effective. There are no esoteric or exoteric doctrines in Christianity. All need it, all may receive it; it must be made known to all, and this universal knowledge must be a knowledge of all the truth. When Jesus was revealed, nothing was to be kept back. All the truth, and All the world are the twin legends of His revelation.

2. Thus nothing which conceals from men the truth or seeks to produce spiritual effect other than by the influence of truth clearly apprehended, can be in harmony with the gospel. Two evils are contrary to this clear law of gospel promulgation, viz: the sacrifice of intelligent apprehension to mere feeling and sentiment; and the production of religious ends by mechanical services. The former is the error of the fanatic, the latter of the sacerdotalist.


II.
The law of this promulgation is the commandment of the Eternal God.

1. We might seek for illustrations of this command in the words of Christ, Go ye into all the world, etc., or in His appointment of those who should be witnesses unto Him, etc. (Act 1:8), or in the vision of Peter, or in the word to Ananias concerning Saul, or to any other of those direct appointments of the gospel ministry in its relation to the entire race. But we prefer to understand by the command of the eternal God that everlasting purpose which lay at the base of the methods of the Divine procedure. Any conception of the gospel which is less than this, must necessarily be incomplete. Creation lies in the bosom of redemption. Salvation by Christ is not a mere scene enacted as part of a vast drama upon the theatre of time and nature. The world, with all its physical characteristics, i.e., its human story are but episodes in vast movements and evolutions of salvation.

2. Science boasts that it has relegated the earth and all earthly things to their proper place as very minor items in the universe of being. But such science forgets that, after all, its universe must be a universe which thought transcends. I can, in imagination, pass beyond the utmost limits of your natural universe, and I can rise to a height of moral being, beyond the uttermost reach even of my thought. Thus, vast though the universe may be, I am greater even than all the worlds, and it is with this range of being that the eternal God is concerned in the redemption of Jesus Christ. Hence, the consummation of the spiritual ends of the Divine purpose is the only infinite. It is this that circumscribes the universe. It is this that antedates creation.

3. The gospel is thus no expedient put in to prop the falling race, the temporal cure of an accidental injury to man. The salvation of the entire race of man is part of that universal gathering of all things into one in Christ which has been the everlasting purpose of Gods almighty will. Upon this ocean of eternal will, time and being float, as the barques which the waves lift and the currents bear. And, as a part of this commandment of the eternal God, the mystery is revealed and made known unto all nations.

4. If this be so, with what calm equanimity shall we not regard the phases through which the Divine designs move on to their accomplishment. We see the world in its apostacy, overwhelmed by a flood, and threatened with complete destruction. Over the raging of that catastrophe moves the calm purpose of the eternal God. We behold patriarchal ages when one family, and it but feebly, maintained the pure faith. How the flame flickers; but we know the eternal God is overhead, and His purposes depend not upon the choice and fleeting life and character of man. It is the time of the Mosaic economy, and one people is chosen, one family is priestly, one land alone has received the light of Gods revealed grace; and we are affronted by its idolatry and sin. Shall we fear for the outcome? Not at all. The purposes of God are ripening fast, and millenniums are only the moments of the Eternal. And so of our own age and time. Perchance we lift the old lament or mocking cry: The fathers, where are they? etc. Lift up your eyes and see the clear, calm stars of an eternal purpose. The tempest reaches but a few fathoms below the surface, and the waves that strew the ocean with wrecks are only ripples in the mighty currents that roll unceasing in the sovereign will of God. The gospel is His; its proclamation is His command. And when the eternal throne crumbles into ruin, then, and then only, shall the evangel of Gods grace and Christs redemption be an empty sound.


III.
This divine purpose of the promulgation of the gospel has been made known by the utterances of a continued series of inspired persons. There has ever been a witness amongst men, the sum of whose testimony has been to make known to all nations the mystery of a universal salvation. A Divine purpose has ever been accompanied by a prophetic word.


IV.
The ultimate end of this publishing of the mystery is the obedience of faith among all nations.

1. Paul here returns to the opening ideas and expressions of the Epistle, one of which is the obedience of faith. By this, some understand that obedience which springs from faith. But this does not seem altogether to suit the word as it is used in the first passage. Others give to faith the meaning of the Christian truth–a signification which belongs to the word in the later usage of the Church and not in the New Testament. Is it not rather that obedience which counts as faith itself, that yielding of the heart and the will to the revelations of God which is the ground of justification on its human side? (Rom 10:3). To accept the grace, to believe in God through Jesus Christ, is to render the obedience of faith. This, then, is the object which is sought by the divulging of the mystery.

2. The end, then, of an apostolic ministry is more than a mere testimony. Some have held that the gospel is only a test, whereby the elect and non-elect are discovered. Men say, on the one hand, We have preached the truth, the hearer must take the responsibility. On the other hand, men say, We have heard the truth; it does not compel our faith; it cannot be for us. Now, to both of these Paul says, Made known to all nations for the obedience of faith. Shall we dare to rest content that we have spoken even the whole of the Divine grace, and not seek by every means in our power to induce men to obey? How is it with you who have believed? Are you content with a world still disobedient, with your city full of the faithless, with your homes, your very pews, occupied by those who resist the gospel? And what shall I say to you who hear and refuse? You heap judgment on yourselves. There is no hope but in the gospel. If you do not obey, with faith in Gods way of salvation, there is nothing for you in this world but disappointment, and in the world to come eternal death.

3. The promulgation of the gospel is not merely that men may know; the object of its being known is the obedience of faith. Will you believe? Then you take Jesus Christ not only as your atonement, but as your Lord, your pattern, your rule, your guide. (Ll. D. Bevan, D.D.)

To God only wise be glory through Jesus Christ for ever.

The universal doxology

If you consult the Revised Version, you will there find the accurate reproduction of the Greek words, to the only wise God, through Jesus Christ, to whom be the glory for ever. The words, through Jesus Christ, and the place of the words be the glory at the end of the passage, furnish at once the representation of the original. It is clear that after the lengthened construction of the twenty-fifth and twenty-sixth verses, the apostle intends by the words, to the only wise God, to complete and explain the pronoun–to Him, with which the whole passage commences. So far it is clear. Then comes the expression, through Jesus Christ, understood by some to be the instrument through whom the glory is given, and by others the person by whom God is the only wise. Neither of these interpretations perfectly contents me. Have we not the true parallel to this passage in the words of St. Paul to the elders at Ephesus: And now brethren, I commend you to God and to the word of His grace who is able to hold you up. The idea is not altogether foreign from that of establishing which we have in the passage. Would not such a prayer more naturally find its place at the end of the Epistle than even a doxology, the latter being generally more incorporated into the very substance of the letter itself? Might not this be one of the prayers to which Paul refers in the opening words of the Epistle (verse 19)–prayers, the end of which was this very establishing of his correspondents? Then the phrase through Jesus Christ is natural and appropriate, the entire construction of the clause easy and unbroken, the concluding relative fittingly introduced, referring to Jesus Christ just mentioned, the ascription of glory to Him being quite in harmony with other such ascriptions, found in other portions of the apostles writings. We shall therefore base our discourse upon the passage viewed as a combined prayer and doxology, as if the words ran, To the only wise God do I look for aid and blessing upon you, through Jesus Christ, to whom be the glory of the eternal ages. Amen.


I.
The consideration of the gospel as a scheme of universal salvation, naturally directs the attention of the devout and earnest heart towards the only wise God. Christianity, though rich in its ideas, is also always a practical and an efficient system. It is not the parent of dreams, it is not a mere poet. It presents the dream only as the token of what it will produce. It chants its sublime rhapsodies only as preludes of what shall be the song of triumph when its redeeming, its new creating work, is done. Thus, is it an ideal man that it would paint? It manifests Him and makes us touch Him, and hear Him, and walk with Him, and live in the light of His beauty and perfectness, in the person of Jesus Christ. Or is it a Divine power which, it declares, man needs? This power it gives to man. The Holy Ghost is shed abroad. The Comforter has come, and has abided for all the past years, and throughout all the world He is now dwelling as a real and actual strength and grace and life among the saints. So with this conception of the perfected and glorified Church of the redeemed: the race restored and made one not only with itself but with its God and Governor, its Lord and Ruler. It is the gospel of Jesus Christ which supplies the conception. Nowhere else has the grand vision been displayed.


II.
Such turning of the heart Godwards demands the mediation of Jesus Christ, not only as the means of finding God, but also as the instrument through whom God will bestow all grace. Two attributes that necessarily are involved in this mystery of a worlds salvation are clearly displayed. The one is power and the other love. All natural reasoning upon the state of man and his relation to God would lead us to conclude that the only possible end of human life must be everlasting destruction and eternal loss. All that we can see is the law and the sin. Man needs no revelation to make this plain. But the gospel declares that man can be rescued, and rescued without any loss of the dignity of law, without any lessening of the sanction and obligations of moral duty. This is done by a sacrifice on the part of God, not of the law, but of Himself, at a vast cost of suffering and shame, and weakness and death, all borne in the person of Jesus Christ. What is this, then, but the wisdom which we have seen God alone possesses in the fashion and guise of love? Nay, it is love itself. And all so necessarily and inherently Divine, that the love becomes a showing of that very being of God which is Love. But this thought of a worlds salvation that leads us to our God is not only a thought of love, but also a thought of power. To bring it about will need a strength far beyond any wielded by a human arm.


III.
The conclusion of this Godward aspect will be the ascription of eternal glory to the Author of this salvation. This glory is ascribed to the God of salvation by the conscious and uttered praises of the redeemed. How wonderful is that song of praise which ever ascends to the eternal throne! And what will be the ascription of glory when earth is exchanged for heaven, and the curtains of the eternal world are withdrawn, and the redeemed race has entered into its promised inheritance of bliss! But the glory that will be rendered to the Author of our salvation will not be the mere ascription of praise from the assembled myriads of the redeemed; it is to be found also in the very nature and character of the salvation itself. You all remember how the architect of St. Pauls Cathedral has no tomb or sculptured monument, to bear his name and tell the story of his skill in carven effigy, or cut upon the lasting brass. A brief inscription over the entrance of the cathedral gives his name, and then bids you if you seek his monument to look around. And such as this is the true ascription of glory to the Lord. It is not the mere voices of the angels; it is their hosts themselves, kept in their places, holden in their high, unfallen blessedness. It is not the cry of jubilant triumph from the creation of life; it is that very creation itself, in its being, in its growth, in its perfectness, made by His word, sustained by His power, completed for the great purposes of His changeless will.


IV.
The prayer and doxology of the earnest Christian workman will receive the accordant acclaim of the universe. The word Amen is used as the expression of agreement, of consent, of assurance, of certainty. The doxology uttered by St. Paul is such as all will unite in. The prayer, the commending to God, the giving of glory, are the consentaneous expressions of all who may catch the ideas and hear the words.

1. It is the consent of wonder. All will marvel at the great achievement of God and His Christ. In awe and reverence profound the universe shall cry, Amen.

2. It is the consent of delight. Throughout the universe of spiritual being, then freely traversed by the purified minds, all parts being in harmony, a communication opened up between all spheres, the delight shall spread when the glory of God shall be seen in the heavens.

3. It is the consent of approval. Gods right to judge will be recognised, and His higher right to save will be equally assured. Splendid will be the state of heaven; high will be the joys of that serene condition. But chief of all, men and angels will perceive the justice and the righteousness of that salvation which the human race shall gain.

4. Then finally, this consent shall be the consent of all. Not a single spirit in the entire universe shall hold back its acclaim. All men who shall be saved must surely join in the Amen. It will be impossible that any of the redeemed will be silent. (Ll. D. Bevan, D.D.)

God only wise

In the beginning of the doxology he praises Gods power, and at its close His wisdom. God also is the only wise in the sense that in the scheme of salvation He acted without counsel from any, and in a method which none other could have devised. He wrought the best ends by the best means. He solved problems which never otherwise could have been solved. He removed barriers which He alone could remove. He reconciled contradictions which were incapable of reconciliation, except by Divine knowledge. He effected a scheme of redemption which is simple in itself, adapted to man everywhere, and which is of such a nature as to attract all who have minds to think and hearts to feel. He caused mercy and truth to meet together. He broke down all partition walls which existed between Himself and the sinner, and between Jew and Gentile. He united the claims of justice and purity with the pleadings of love and grace. In redemption, even more than in creation, we adore the manifold wisdom of God, and behold Him as One who has no second, but stands alone in His glory, infinitely removed from all His creatures in heaven and earth. (C. Neil, M.A.)

Gods wisdom


I.
What wisdom is. It consists in–

1. Acting for a right end.

2. Observing all circumstances for action.

3. Willing and acting according to the right reason and judgment of things. Wisdom and knowledge are two distinct perfections. Knowledge hath its seat in the speculative understanding, wisdom in the practical.


II.
Some propositions in general concerning the wisdom of God.

1. There is an essential and a personal wisdom of God. The essential wisdom is the essence of God, the personal wisdom is the Son of God (Luk 7:35; 1Co 1:24).

2. It is not a habit added to Gods essence, as it is in man, but it is His essence. It is like the splendour of the sun, the same with the sun itself.

3. It is the property of God alone. He is only wise.

(1) Necessarily. He cannot but contrive counsels, and exert operations becoming the greatness of His nature.

(2) Originally. Men acquire wisdom; God goes not out of Himself to search it (Rom 11:34; Isa 40:14).

(3) Perfectly. There is no cloud upon His understanding.

(4) Universally. Wisdom in one man is of one sort, in another of another sort. But God hath an universal wisdom. His executions are as wise as His contrivances.

(5) Perpetually. The wisdom of man is got by instruction and lost by dotage. But the Ancient of days is an unchangeable possessor of it (Job 12:13; Psa 33:11).

(6) Incomprehensibly (Psa 92:5; Rom 11:33).

(7) Infallibly. The wisest men often design and fail; God never fails of anything He aims at (Isa 55:11; Pro 21:30).


III.
The proofs of Gods wisdom.

1. God could not be infinitely perfect without wisdom. All the other perfections of God without this would be as a body without an eye, a soul without understanding. God, being the first Being, possesses whatsoever is most noble in any being.

2. Without infinite wisdom He could not govern the world. He could not be an universal governer without a universal wisdom; nor the sole governor without an inimitable wisdom; not an independent governor without an original and independent wisdom; nor a perpetual governor without an incorruptible wisdom.

3. The creatures working for an end, without their own knowledge, demonstrates the wisdom of God that guides them. As there was some prime cause, which by His power inspired them with their several instincts, so there must be some supreme wisdom which moves and guides them to their end.

4. God is the fountain of all wisdom in the creatures, and therefore is infinitely wise Himself. As He hath a fulness of being in Himself, because the streams of being are derived to other things from Him, so He hath a fulness of wisdom, because He is the spring of wisdom to angels and men (Job 32:8; Dan 2:21).


IV.
Wherein it appears.

1. In creation. As in a musical instrument there is first the skill of the workman in the frame, then the skill of the musician in stringing it proper for such musical notes as he will express upon it, and after that the tempering of the strings, by various stops, to a delightful harmony, so is the wisdom of God seen in framing the world, then in tuning it, and afterwards in the motion of the several creatures (Psa 104:24; Pro 3:19; Jer 10:12). This wisdom of the creation appears in–

(1) Its variety (Psa 104:24).

(2) Its beauty and order, and in the situation of the several creatures (Ecc 3:11).

(3) The fitness of everything for its end, and the usefulness of it. Divine wisdom is more illustrious in this than in the composure of the distinct parts, as the artificers skill is more eminent in fitting the wheels, and setting them in order for their due motion, than in the external fabric of the materials which compose the clock.

(4) The linking all these useful parts together, so that one is subordinate to the other for a common end.

2. In His government of man–

(1) As a rational creature.

(a) In the law He gives to man, which is suited to his nature, happiness and conscience.

(b) In the various inclinations and conditions of men. Some are inspired with a particular genius for one art, some for another. The rich have as much need of the poor as the poor have of the rich.

(2) As fallen and sinful. Gods wisdom is seen in–

(a) The bounding of sin (Psa 76:10).

(b) The bringing glory to Himself out of sin.

(c) Bringing good to the creature out of sin.

The redemption of man in so excellent a way was drawn from the occasion of sin. The devil inspired man to content his own fury in the death of Christ, and God ordered it to accomplish His own design of redemption. The sins and corruptions remaining in the heart of a man, God orders for good, and there are good effects by the direction of His wisdom and grace.

(3) As converted (Eph 1:11-12). Divine wisdom appears–

(a) In the subjects of conversion. Who will question the skill that alters jet into crystal, a glow-worm into a star, a lion into a lamb, and a swine into a dove?

(b) In the seasons of conversion. The prudence of man consists in the timing the execution of his counsels; and no less doth the wisdom of God consist in this.

(c) In the manner of conversion. So great a change God makes, not by a destruction, but with a preservation of, and suitableness to, nature.

(d) In His discipline.

3. In redemption. The wisdom of God is seen here–

(1) In that the greatest different interests are reconciled, justice in punishing and mercy in pardoning (Rom 3:24-25).

(2) In selecting the fittest person for this work. He by whom God created the world was most conveniently employed in restoring it (Heb 1:2). He was the light of men in creation (Joh 1:4), and therefore it was most reasonable He should be the light of men in redemption. Who fitter to reform the Divine image than He that first formed it? Who fitter to speak for us to God than He who was the Word? (Joh 1:1).

(3) In the two natures of Christ, whereby this redemption was accomplished. This union was the foundation of the union of God and the fallen creature. He had a nature whereby to suffer for us, and a nature whereby to be meritorious in those sufferings.

(4) In manifesting two contrary affections at the same time, and in one act: the greatest hatred of sin, and the greatest love to the sinner.

(5) In overturning the devils empire by the nature He had vanquished, and by ways quite contrary to what that malicious spirit could imagine.

(6) In giving us this way the surest ground of comfort, and the strongest incentive to obedience. The rebel is reconciled, and the rebellion shamed; God is propitiated and the sinner sanctified by the same blood.

(7) In the condition He hath settled for the enjoying the fruits of redemption; and this is faith, a wise and reasonable condition, and the concomitants of it.

(8) In the manner of the publishing and propagating this doctrine of redemption.

(a) In the gradual discoveries of it.

(b) In using all proper means to render the belief of it easy.

(c) In the instruments He employed in the publishing it. (S. Charnock, B.D.)

Fuente: Biblical Illustrator Edited by Joseph S. Exell

Verse 25. Now to him] In Clarke’s note at “Ro 14:23, I have shown that this and the following verses are by the most reputable MSS. and versions placed at the end of that chapter, which is supposed by most critics to be their proper place. Some of the arguments adduced in favour of this transposition may be found in the note above mentioned. I shall therefore refer to Griesbach, and proceed to make a few short remarks on the verses as they occur here.

Of power to stablish you] To that God, without whom nothing is wise, nothing strong; who is as willing to teach as he is wise; as ready to help as he is strong.

According to my Gospel] That Gospel which explains and publishes God’s purpose of taking the Gentiles to be his people under the Messiah, without subjecting them to the law of Moses. This is what he here calls the preaching of Jesus Christ; for without this he did not think, as Mr. Locke observes, that Christ vas preached to the Gentiles as he ought to be; and therefore in several places of his epistle to the Galatians he calls it the truth, and the truth of the Gospel, and uses the like expressions to the Ephesians and Colossians. This is that mystery which he is so much concerned that the Ephesians should understand and adhere to firmly, and which was revealed to him according to that Gospel whereof he was made a minister. And it is probable that this grand mystery of bringing the Gentiles into the kingdom of God, without passing through the rites of the Mosaic law, was revealed more particularly to St. Paul than to any other of the apostles, and that he preached it more pointedly, and certainly with more success. See Taylor and Locke.

Which was kept secret] This purpose of calling the Gentiles, and giving them equal privileges to the Jews, without obliging them to submit to circumcision, &c.

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

He concludes all with an excellent doxology; wherein, first, he describes God, and then he ascribes eternal glory to him. He describes him by two of his attributes or perfections: the first is his

power; He is able to establish you; i.e. in grace and in truth; to keep you from falling into sin and into error. The Scripture often attributes our establishment unto God: see 1Th 3:13; 2Th 2:17; 2Th 3:3; 1Pe 5:10. Our own weakness and Satans power are such, that unless God did establish us, we shonld soon totter and fall: see Rom 14:4, and the notes there. Our establishment is further amplified by the instrumental cause thereof, which is the gospel; touching which, several things are here to be noted. First, he calls it my gospel, because he was the preacher and publisher thereof: see Rom 2:16, and the notes there. Secondly, he calls it

the preaching of Jesus Christ: which may be taken actively, for the preaching of our Lord himself; so the doctrine of salvation is called, the word that was spoken by the Lord, Heb 2:3; see Mat 4:23; Mat 9:35. Or rather passively, for the gospel which was preached concerning Jesus Christ: see Rom 1:1,3, and the notes there. Thirdly: He calls it a

mystery, which was kept secret since the world began, but now is made manifest: see parallel places, 1Co 2:7; Eph 3:9; Col 1:26. Some restrain this to the calling of the Gentiles; but it is better understood of the whole doctrine of the gospel, concerning the Trinity, the incarnation of the Son of God, &c., which. although it was in some sort made known under the Old Testament, yet, in respect of the present light and revelation, it was a hidden mystery.

Fuente: English Annotations on the Holy Bible by Matthew Poole

25. Now to him that is of powermoresimply, as in Jude 24, “toHim that is able.”

to stablishconfirm, oruphold

you, according to my gospel,and the preaching of Jesus Christthat is, in conformity withthe truths of that Gospel which I preach, and not I only, but all towhom has been committed “the preaching of Jesus Christ.”

according to the revelationof the mystery(See on Ro11:25).

which was kept secret sincethe world beganliterally, “which hath been kept insilence during eternal ages.”

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

Now to him that is of power to stablish you,…. God is here described by his power, and the particular instance of it is the establishing of his people; that is, in the Gospel, as the Syriac version reads the next clause, and in the profession of it, with grace in their hearts, and in the exercise of it, and more lively and cheerful discharge of duty; [See comments on Ro 1:11];

according to my Gospel; this is the means by which God usually establishes his people in faith and holiness; it is, indeed, an act of divine power, and which there is reason to hope and believe will be exerted; for words which express the power of God to do this, or the other thing, generally import willingness to do it, as the word does here; but then this is commonly done in the use of means: and that is the Gospel, than which nothing has a greater tendency to, and is better calculated for, and with a divine blessing always issues in the establishment of the saints. The apostle calls the Gospel his, not because he was the author of it, or the subject of it; but because he was the minister of it; it was that Gospel which he was sent and qualified to preach, and did preach fully and faithfully, and which he explains by the following clauses:

and the preaching of Jesus Christ: being that Gospel which Jesus Christ himself preached, for which he was anointed and sent, and which first began to be spoken by him in its power and purity, and in such a manner as it never was before or since: and of which he also is the subject; it treats of his person, offices, righteousness, blood, sacrifice, and salvation; and which when preached aright is done in his name, by his authority, through gifts, grace, and strength received from him, and with a view to his glory: it follows as a further explanation of it,

according to the revelation of the mystery; by which is meant, not, as some think, only the calling and conversion of the Gentiles through the preaching of the Gospel, though what is said of it well agrees with it; see Eph 3:3; nor merely the mystery of Christ’s incarnation and redemption by him; but the whole Gospel, and all the truths of it, which is often in Scripture called a “mystery”, because the reason of many of its important doctrines does not clearly appear to the carnal reason of men; and the “modus” of several of them will ever remain inexplicable by us, as the doctrine of the Trinity, the sonship of Christ, and his incarnation, the resurrection, c. though the things themselves are most clearly revealed, as here “revelation” is ascribed unto them by which is meant not that internal revelation of them, by the Spirit of God to the souls of men, though absolutely necessary to the understanding of them in a spiritual manner; nor the revelation of them to the apostles by Christ, by which, and not by men, they were taught and received; but that revelation which they have made of them in the external ministry of the word:

which was kept secret since the world began, or “from eternal times”: from all the ages of the former dispensation, or that have run out from the beginning of the world; not that this mystery of the Gospel was entirely unknown, nor any hints given of it in those ages; for there certainly were, as to our first parents after the fall, to Abraham, Moses, David, Isaiah, and others; but it was but obscurely revealed, only some dark intimations were given of it; it was exhibited in types, shadows, and sacrifices; and, in a comparative sense, was wrapped up in darkness and silence, in reference to the more clear discovery and open exhibition of it under the Gospel dispensation.

Fuente: John Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible

Description of the Gospel; The Apostle’s Doxology.

A. D. 58.

      25 Now to him that is of power to stablish you according to my gospel, and the preaching of Jesus Christ, according to the revelation of the mystery, which was kept secret since the world began,   26 But now is made manifest, and by the scriptures of the prophets, according to the commandment of the everlasting God, made known to all nations for the obedience of faith:   27 To God only wise, be glory through Jesus Christ for ever. Amen.

      Here the apostle solemnly closes his epistle with a magnificent ascription of glory to the blessed God, as one that terminated all in the praise and glory of God, and studied to return all to him, seeing all is of him and from him. He does, as it were, breathe out his soul to these Romans in the praise of God, choosing to make that the end of his epistle which he made the end of his life. Observe here,

      I. A description of the gospel of God, which comes in in a parenthesis; having occasion to speak of it as the means by which the power of God establishes souls, and the rule of that establishment: To establish you according to my gospel. Paul calls it his gospel, because he was the preacher of it and because he did so much glory in it. Some think he means especially that declaration, explication, and application, of the doctrine of the gospel, which he had now made in this epistle; but it rather takes in all the preaching and writing of the apostles, among whom Paul was a principal labourer. Through their word (John xvii. 20), the word committed to them. Ministers are the ambassadors, and the gospel is their embassy. Paul had his head and heart so full of the gospel that he could scarcely mention it without a digression to set forth the nature and excellency of it.

      1. It is the preaching of Jesus Christ. Christ was the preacher of it himself; it began to be spoken by the Lord, Heb. ii. 3. So pleased was Christ with his undertaking for our salvation that he would himself be the publisher of it. Or, Christ is the subject-matter of it; the sum and substance of the whole gospel is Jesus Christ and him crucified. We preach not ourselves, says Paul, but Christ Jesus the Lord. That which establishes souls is the plain preaching of Jesus Christ.

      2. It is the revelation of the mystery which was kept secret since the world began, and by the scriptures of the prophets made known. The subject-matter of the gospel is a mystery. Our redemption and salvation by Jesus Christ, in the foundation, method, and fruits of it, are, without controversy, a great mystery of godliness, 1 Tim. iii. 16. This bespeaks the honour of the gospel; it is no vulgar common thing, hammered out by any human wit, but it is the admirable product of the eternal wisdom and counsel of God, and has in it such an inconceivable height, such an unfathomable depth, as surpass knowledge. It is a mystery which the angels desire to look into, and cannot find the bottom of. And yet, blessed be God, there is as much of this mystery made plain as will suffice to bring us to heaven, if we do not wilfully neglect so great salvation. Now,

      (1.) This mystery was kept secret since the world began: chronois aioniois sesigemenou. It was wrapped up in silence from eternity; so some–a temporibus ternis; it is no new and upstart notion, no late invention, but took rise from the days of eternity and the purposes of God’s everlasting love. Before the foundation of the world was laid, the mystery was hid in God, Eph. iii. 9. Or, since the world began, so we translate it. During all the times of the Old-Testament this mystery was comparatively kept secret in the types and shadows of the ceremonial law, and the dark predictions of the prophets, which pointed at it, but so that they could not stedfastly look to the end of those things, 2 Cor. iii. 13. Thus it was hid from ages and generations, even among the Jews, much more among the Gentiles that sat in darkness and had no notices at all of it. Even the disciples of Christ themselves, before his resurrection and ascension, were very much in the dark about the mystery of redemption, and their notion of it was very much clouded and confused; such a secret was it for many ages. But,

      (2.) It is now made manifest. The veil is rent, the shadows of the evening are done away, and life and immortality are brought to light by the gospel, and the Sun of righteousness has risen upon the world. Paul does not pretend to have the monopoly of this discovery, as if he alone knew it; no, it is made manifest to many others. But how is it made manifest by the scriptures of the prophets? Surely, because now the event has given the best exposition to the prophecies of the Old Testament. Being accomplished, they are explained. The preaching of the prophets, as far as it related to this mystery, was in a great measure dark and unintelligible in the ages wherein they lived; but the scriptures of the prophets, the things which they left in writing, are now not only made plain in themselves, but by them this mystery is made known to all nations. The Old Testament does not only borrow light from, but return light to, the revelation of the New Testament. If the New Testament explains the Old, the Old Testament, by way of requital, very much illustrates the New. Thus the Old-Testament prophets prophesy again, now their prophecies are fulfilled, before many people, and nations, and tongues. I refer to Rev. x. 11, which this explains. Now Christ appears to have been the treasure hid in the field of the Old Testament. To him bear all the prophets witness. See Luke xxiv. 27.

      (3.) It is manifested according to the commandment of the everlasting God–the purpose, counsel, and decree of God from eternity, and the commission and appointment given first to Christ and then to the apostles, in the fulness of time. They received commandment from the Father to do what they did in preaching the gospel. Lest any should object, “Why was this mystery kept secret so long, and why made manifest now?”–he resolves it into the will of God, who is an absolute sovereign, and gives not an account of any of his matters. The commandment of the everlasting God was enough to bear out the apostles and ministers of the gospel in their preaching. The everlasting God. This attribute of eternity is here given up to God very emphatically. [1.] He is from everlasting, which intimates that though he had kept this mystery secret since the world began, and had but lately revealed it, yet he had framed and contrived it from everlasting, before the worlds were. The oaths and covenants in the written word are but the copy of the oath and covenant which were between the Father and the Son from eternity: those the extracts, these the original. And, [2.] He is to everlasting, intimating the eternal continuance to us. We must never look for any new revelation, but abide by this, for this is according to the commandment of the everlasting God. Christ, in the gospel, is the same yesterday, to-day, and for ever.

      (4.) It is made known to all nations for the obedience of faith. The extent of this revelation he often takes notice of; that whereas hitherto in Judah only God was known, now Christ is salvation to the ends of the earth, to all nations. And the design of it is very observable; it is for the obedience of faith–that they may believe and obey it, receive it and be rules by it. The gospel is revealed, not to be talked of and disputed about, but to be submitted to. The obedience of faith is that obedience which is paid to the word of faith (see that phrase, Acts vi. 7), and which is produced by the grace of faith. See here what is the right faith–even that which works in obedience; and what is the right obedience–even that which springs from faith; and what is the design of the gospel–to bring us to both.

      II. A doxology to that God whose gospel it is, ascribing glory to him for ever (v. 27), acknowledging that he is a glorious God, and adoring him accordingly, with the most awful affections, desiring and longing to be at this work with the holy angels, where we shall be doing it to eternity. This is praising God, ascribing glory to him for ever. Observe,

      1. The matter of this praise. In thanking God, we fasten upon his favours to us; in praising and adoring God, we fasten upon his perfections in himself. Two of his principal attributes are here taken notice of:– (1.) His power (v. 25): To him that is of power to establish you. It is no less than a divine power that establishes the saints. Considering the disposition there is in them to fall, the industry of their spiritual enemies that seek to overthrow them, and the shaking times into which their lot is cast, no less than an almighty power will establish them. That power of God which is put forth for the establishment of the saints is and ought to be the matter of our praise, as Jude 24, To him that is able to keep you from falling. In giving God the glory of this power we may, and must, take to ourselves the comfort of it–that whatever our doubts, and difficulties, and fears, may be, our God, whom we serve, is of power to establish us. See 1Pe 1:5; Joh 10:29. (2.) His wisdom (v. 27): To God only wise. Power to effect without wisdom to contrive, and wisdom to contrive without power to effect, are alike vain and fruitless; but both together, and both infinite, make a perfect being. He is only wise; not the Father only wise, exclusive of the Son, but Father, Son, and Holy Ghost, three persons and one God, only wise, compared with the creatures. Man; the wisest of all the creatures in the lower world, is born like a wild ass’s colt; nay, the angels themselves are charged with folly, in comparison with God. He only is perfectly and infallibly wise; he only is originally wise, in and of himself; for he is the spring and fountain of all the wisdom of the creatures, the Father of all the lights of wisdom that any creature can pretend to (James i. 17): with him are strength and wisdom, the deceived and deceiver are his.

      2. The Mediator of this praise: Through Jesus Christ. To God only wise through Jesus Christ; so some. It is in and through Christ that God is manifested to the world as the only wise God; for he is the wisdom of God, and the power of God. Or rather, as we read it, glory through Jesus Christ. All the glory that passes from fallen man to God, so as to be accepted of him, must go through the hands of the Lord Jesus, in whom alone it is that our persons and performances are, or can be, pleasing to God. Of his righteousness therefore we must make mention, even of his only, who, as he is the Mediator of all our prayers, so he is, and I believe will be to eternity, the Mediator of all our praises.

Fuente: Matthew Henry’s Whole Bible Commentary

Verses 25-27 conclude the noble Epistle with the finest of Paul’s doxologies.

To him that is able ( ). Dative of the articular participle of . See similar idiom in Eph 3:20.

To stablish (). First aorist active infinitive of , to make stable.

According to my gospel ( ). Same phrase in Rom 2:16; 2Tim 2:8. Not a book, but Paul’s message as here set forth.

The preaching ( ). The proclamation, the heralding.

Of Jesus Christ ( ). Objective genitive, “about Jesus Christ.”

Revelation (). “Unveiling.”

Of the mystery (). Once unknown, but now revealed.

Kept in silence (). Perfect passive participle of , to be silent, state of silence.

Through times eternal ( ). Associative instrumental case, “along with times eternal” (Robertson, Grammar, p. 527). See 1Cor 2:6; 1Cor 2:7; 1Cor 2:10.

Fuente: Robertson’s Word Pictures in the New Testament

This is the only epistle of Paul which closes with a doxology. The doxology (see on ch. Rom 14:23) stands at the close of this chapter in most of the very oldest MSS., and in the Peshito or Syriac and Vulgate versions. In a very few MSS. it is omitted or erased by a later hand. In many MSS. including most of the cursives, it is found at the close of ch. 14, and in a very few, at the close of both 14 and 16. 75 Weiss (” Introduction to the New Testament “) says that the attempt to prove its un – Pauline character has only been the result of extreme ingenuity.

Stablish [] . See on 1Pe 5:10 Mystery. See on ch. Rom 11:25. The divine plan of redemption. The particular mystery of the conversion of the Gentiles, which is emphasized in Eph 3:3 – 9; Col 1:26, is included, but the reference is not to be limited to this.

Kept secret [] . Rev., more accurately, kept in silence. In Eph 3:9; Col 1:26, ajpokekrummenon hidden away, is used.

Fuente: Vincent’s Word Studies in the New Testament

1) “Now to him that is of power to stablish you,” (to de dunameno humas steriksai) “Now to the one who is dynamic (well able) to establish you all;” Jud 1:24; Heb 7:25; Psa 40:1-3; 1Co 3:10-15; 2Th 3:3.

2) “According to my gospel (kata to evangellion mou) “In harmony with my gospel,” my good news or the gospel message I bear, 1Co 1:17; 1Co 15:1-4, as I have taught it, 1Th 2:16-17; 1Th 3:13.

3) “And the preaching of Jesus Christ,” (kai to kerugma lesou Christou) “and the proclamations, heralding, or preaching of Jesus Christ;” 1Co 1:2; 1Co 1:23; 1Co 2:1-2; Rom 1:14-16.

4) “According to the revelation of the mystery,” (kata apokalupsin musteriou) “And the unveiling, uncovering, revealing, or disclosing of the mystery;- The mystery is the Revelation that the church, called from among the Gentiles as a people for his name’s sake should be custodian of his redemption message and center of acceptable worship always, Mat 13:1-58; Eph 1:8-11; Eph 3:3-11; Eph 3:21.

5) “Which was kept secret since the World began,” (chronois aioniois sesigemenou) “Which in times eternal -was kept silent,” or in times back into eternity was not clearly disclosed, or understood, even by the prophets who prophesied regarding it, Dan 2:44; Zec 13:7; Mat 26:31-32; Luk 12:32; Luk 22:28-30.

Fuente: Garner-Howes Baptist Commentary

CRITICAL NOTES

Rom. 16:25-27.Editors are divided as to the position of the doxology, but its genuineness is substantiated by external and internal evidence. This concluding sentence contains the kernel of the doctrine of the whole epistle. The way for this evangelical revelation had been quietly prepared by the prophetical Scriptures. According to Bengels comparison, there was in the Old Testament the silent movement of the hands of a clock, but it sounded forth the hour with an audible voice in the gospel. In Rom. 16:25-26 St. Paul speaks of a purpose hidden, now revealed and made known. Bishop Lightfoot says that the idea of secrecy or reserve disappears when is adopted into the Christian vocabulary by St. Paul; and the word signifies simply a truth which was once hidden, but now is revealeda truth which, without special revelation, would have been unknown. Of the nature of the truth itself the word says nothing. It may be transcendental, mystical, incomprehensible, mysterious, in the modern sense of the term; but this idea is quite accidental, and must be gathered from the special circumstances of the case.

Rom. 16:27. The only wise God.This, as the fathers note, cannot exclude the divine nature of Jesus Christ, who is the wisdom of the Father, from this title, any more than those words who only hath immortality excludes Christ from being immortal.

MAIN HOMILETICS OF THE PARAGRAPH.Rom. 16:25-27

The only wise God.Plato calls God Mens. Cleanthus used to call God Reason, and Socrates thought the title of too magnificent to be attributed to anything else but God alone. Wisdom is the property of God alone. He is only wise. It is an honour peculiar to Him. Upon this account, that no man deserved the title of wise, but that it was a royalty belonging to God, Pythagoras would not be called , a title given to their learned men, but . The name philosopher arose out of a respect to this transcendent perfection of God. God is wise, but wisdom does not convey to the mind the complete conception of a God. If wisdom be the choice of worthy ends and of the best means to accomplish them, then there must be the superadded notion of power. Wisdom would be naked without power to act, while power would be useless without wisdom to guide. Wisdom and power are the two essential attributes of the divine nature. The apostle therefore rightly joins the two conceptions. To Him that is of powerto the only wise God.

I. God is the only wise originally.Human wisdom is not an original but an acquired endowment. One man is born with more brain power than another, and yet wisdom is not a birth gift, but an after-development. Many men with great brain power have great lack of wisdom. Our ripest wisdom is the product of our richest experience, oftentimes the result of repeated failures. Man is wise after the event. Wisdom fails when looking into the future. And yet man in his vanity presumes to arraign the wisdom of God. The rays of the sun are not original, but derived; and those rays upbraid the sun because he is not doing his appointed work more perfectly. The common soldier has physical force and seldom mental power. He could no more direct an army than the wisest general could manage the planetary system; and yet that soldier is glib enough in saying how the general ought to have managed. Foolish man can lay down laws and rules for the only wise God. He is the spring of wisdom to all and in all. The instinct of the cunning insect and the wisdom of a philosopher are derived from the wisdom of the All-wise.

II. God is the only wise essentially.Wisdom is not an essential attribute of humanity. It is an attribute too often conspicuous by its absence. The vast majority of men possess neither knowledge nor wisdom. Knowledge has increased in the earth, but there has not been a corresponding increase of wisdom. Some men appear to be so weighed down and oppressed by their knowledge that there is not space and atmosphere for the growth and exercise of wisdom. Our knowledge is the slow accumulation of years of toil, and in the process wisdom is not being evolved. God does not waste the bloom and freshness of His everlasting years in seeking to know. The divine knowledge is intuitive. There are to the divine mind no arcana. The mysteries hidden in the divine breast are not mysteries to the divine nature. He would not be a perfect God if He were not complete in knowledge, in wisdom to make the right use of knowledge, and in power to carry out the behests of wisdom.

III. God is the only wise unchangeably.Change is the striking characteristic of humanity. While many men are seldom wise, no man is wise at all hours. We only wish we were. Memory is a sad book to read, as it relates the story of our many follies. The backward look of life is depressing, for the pathway is strewn with the ruins caused by our lack of wisdom. Our wisdom has been wanting when most needful, and our wise purposes have been broken off because of the lack of power. There can be no depressing backward looks to the divine mind. Wisdom never fails. The Lord possessed wisdom in the beginning of His way to the human aspect, before His works of old. Divine wisdom was set up from everlasting, from the beginning or ever the earth was. And God can never say, My purposes have been broken off for lack of power.

IV. God is the only wise effectually.Abortive plans and purposes strew our pathway. Our Babel towers end in confusion. Our strutting monarchs grovel with the beasts. Broken hearts are too oft the result of our unattainable ideals. Where is the complete life that has seen sublime visions and has had power to work out the dreams effectually and successfully? God would not be omnipotent were He capable of forming a purpose and yet incapable of bringing that purpose to a successful issue. His wisdom in the conception of a planet where there should be variety, beauty, the fitness of every creature for its use, the subordination of one creature to another, and the joint concurrence of all to one common end, has been successfully worked out. A ruined planet is a magnificent testimony to the effectual wisdom of God. The splendour of the ruins speaks of the splendour of the primitive structure. Gods wisdom and power are not at fault because the earth temple has been despoiled and left in a state of disrepair. The proper time was not come; the planet will not always wander through space disconsolately. Gods wisdom and power will touch even material things into glorious order, beauty, and harmony. Gods wisdom in the conception of a kingdom where all should be peace, joy, and righteousness has been so far successfully worked outso far; for the conception has not been fully evolved. Gods wisdom in the conception of a redemptive scheme whereby nations should be made obedient to the faith has been effectual. Christianity has the highest moral standard; and Christians have walked on the highest moral plane. The Christian Church, notwithstanding its many drawbacks, in spite of all its adversaries may assert, is a noble testimony for the wisdom of God.

V. God is the only wise progressively.His wise plans and purposes are unfolding and evidencing more of their beauty and harmony as the ages advance. The moral light which dawned on the darkened Eden has been shining more and more through all times dispensations; and onward the orb of light will move and unfold its radiance until the perfect day of complete divine disclosures. The gospel arcanum was published in paradise, but in such words as Adam did not fully understand; it was both discovered and clouded in the smoke of the sacrifices; it was wrapped up in a veil under the law, but not opened till the death of the Redeemer; it was then plainly said to the cities of Judah: Behold, your God comes. The revelation of the mystery is advancing; clearer light shines on the upper pathway; the completed revelation will redound to the glory of the divine wisdom.

VI. God is the only wise gloriously.To God the only wise be glory through Jesus Christ for ever. Day unto day uttereth speech of the divine glory. Dispensation after dispensation brilliantly proclaims the divine wisdom. Glory to God in the highest was the strain sung at the Saviours advent. Glory to God in the highest will be the strain sung in fuller measure when Jesus shall see of the full travail of His soul, and is satisfiedwhen all the redemptive plan of the divine wisdom is revealed in full-orbed splendour. The strains how full and sweetfull as the sound of many waters, sweet as the notes sent forth by the skilful harpers harping on well-tuned instrumentswhen the universal Church shall surround the throne of the eternal Wisdomwhen all the angels stand round about the throne, and exhort the elders and the four beasts, and shall fall as one united throng before the throne on their faces, and shall worship God, saying: Blessing, and glory, and wisdom, and thanksgiving, and honour, and power, and might be unto our God for ever and ever. Amen.

SUGGESTIVE COMMENTS ON Rom. 16:27

Creatures without a known end demonstrate Gods wisdom.The creatures working for an end, without their own knowledge, demonstrate the wisdom of God that guides them. All things in the world work for some end; the ends are unknown to them, though many of their ends are visible to us. As there was some prime Cause which by His power inspired them with their several instincts, so there must be some supreme wisdom which moves and guides them to their end. As their being manifests His power that endowed them, so the acting, according to the rules of their nature, which they themselves understand not, manifests His wisdom in directing them; everything that acts for an end must know that end, or be directed by another to attain that end. The arrow doth not know who shoots it, or to what end it is shot, or what mark is aimed at; but the archer that puts it in and darts it out of the bow knows. A watch hath a regular motion, but neither the spring nor the wheels that move know the end of their motion; no man will judge a wisdom to be in the watch, but in the artificer that disposed the wheels and spring by a joint combination to produce such a motion for such an end. Doth either the sun that enlivens the earth, or the earth that travails with the plant, know what plant it produceth in such a soil, what temper it should be of, what fruit it should bear, and of what colour? What plant knows its own medicinal qualities, its own beautiful flowers, and for what use they are ordained? When it strikes up its head from the earth doth it know what proportion of them there will be? Yet it produceth all these things in a state of ignorance. The sun warms the earth, concocts the humours, excites the virtue of it, and cherishes the seeds which are cast into her lap, yet all unknown to the sun or the earth. Since therefore that nature, that is the immediate cause of those things, doth not understand its own quality nor operation, nor the end of its action, that which thus directs them must be conceived to have an infinite wisdom. When things act by a rule they know not, and move for an end they understand not, and yet work harmoniously together for one end that all of them, we are sure, are ignorant of, it mounts up our minds to acknowledge the wisdom of that supreme Cause that hath ranged all these inferior causes in their order, and imprinted upon them the laws of their motions, according to the idea in His own mind, who orders the rule by which they act, and the end for which they act, and directs every motion according to their several natures, and therefore is possessed with infinite wisdom in His own nature. God is the fountain of all wisdom in the creatures, and therefore is infinitely wise Himself. As He hath a fulness of being in Himself, because the streams of being are derived to other things from Him, so He hath a fulness of wisdom, because He is the spring of wisdom to angels and men. That Being must be infinitely wise whence all other wisdom derives its original, for nothing can be in the effect which is not eminently in the cause; the cause is always more perfect than the effect. If, therefore, the creatures are wise, the Creator must be much more wise; if the Creator were destitute of wisdom, the creature would be much more perfect than the Creator. If you consider the wisdom of the spider in her web, which is both her house and net; the artifice of the bee in her comb, which is both her chamber and her granary; the provision of the pismire in her repositories for corn,the wisdom of the Creator is illustrated by them: whatsoever excellency you see in any creature is an image of some excellency in God. The skill of the artificer is visible in the fruits of his art; a workman transcribes his spirit in the work of his hands; but the wisdom of rational creatures, as men, doth more illustrate it. All arts among men are the rays of divine wisdom shining upon them, and by a common gift of the Spirit enlightening their minds to curious inventions, as Pro. 8:12, I, Wisdom, find out the knowledge of witty inventionsthat is, I give a faculty to men to find them out; without my wisdom all would be buried in darkness and ignorance. Whatsoever wisdom there is in the world, it is but a shadow of the wisdom of God, a small rivulet derived from Him, a spark leaping out from uncreated wisdom: He created the smith that bloweth the coals in the fire, and makes the instruments (Isa. 54:16). The skill to use those weapons in warlike enterprises is from Him: I have created the waster to destroy. It is not meant of creating their persons, but communicating to them their art; He speaks it there to expel fear from the Church of all warlike preparations against them. He had given men the skill to form and use weapons, and could as well strip them of it and defeat their purposes. The art of husbandry is a fruit of divine teaching (Isa. 28:24-25). If those lower kinds of knowledge that are common to all nations and easily learned by all are discoveries of divine wisdom, much more the nobler sciences intellectual and political wisdom: He gives wisdom to the wise, and knowledge to them that know understanding (Dan. 2:21); speaking of the more abstruse parts of knowledge, The inspiration of the Almighty gives understanding (Job. 32:8). Every mans soul is endowed more or less with those noble qualities. The soul of every man exceeds that of a brute; if the streams be so excellent, the fountain must be fuller and clearer. The first Spirit must infinitely more possess what other spirits derive from Him by creation; were the wisdom of all the angels in heaven and men on earth collected in one spirit, it must be infinitely less than that what is in the spring, for no creature can be equal to the Creator. As the highest creature already made, or that we can conceive may be made, by infinite power would be infinitely below God in the notion of a creature, so it would be infinitely below God in the notion of wise.Charnock.

Gods works represent Him.As a beam of light passing through a chink in a wall, of what figure soever, always forms a circle on the place where it is reflected, and by that describes the image of its original, the sun, thus God in every one of His works represents Himself. But the union of all the parts by such strong and secret bands is a more pregnant proof of His omnipotent mind. Is it a testimony of great military skill to range an army, composed of divers nations that have great antipathies between them, in that order which renders it victorious in battle? And is it not a testimony of infinite providence to dispose all the hosts of heaven and earth so as they join successfully for the preservation of nature? Sophocles was accused by his ungrateful sons, that his understanding being declined with his age, he was unfit to manage the affairs of his family; he made no other defence before the judges, but recited part of a tragedy newly composed by him, and left it to their decision whether there was a failure in his intellectual faculties, upon which he was not only absolved, but crowned with praises.Bates.

Excellence of this epistle.Ancient and divine are the gospel tidings of our salvation. Delightfully they harmonise with the types and predictions of the Old Testament. And their offers and blessings graciously extend to all nations of mankind, and by the Holy Ghost are made effectual to some of all ranks and degrees. With what faith and love ought they, then, to be received, submitted to, obeyed, and practised. And infinite is the glory that redounds to God, from this His wonderful work of our salvation.John Brown of Haddington.

Thus endeth the apostle Pauls Epistle to the Romans; a writing which, for brevity and strength of expression, for regularity in its structure, but, above all, for the unspeakable importance of the discoveries which it contains, stands unrivalled by any mere human composition; and as far exceeds the most celebrated productions of the learned Greeks and Romans, as the shining of the sun exceedeth the twinkling of the stars.Macknight.

It is related of Melancthon, by his contemporary Mylius, that he was constantly engaged in explaining the Epistle to the Romans, which he was accustomed to regard as the key to the whole Scriptures. And that he might more thoroughly understand its doctrines, and more fully investigate its scope and signification, he expounded this epistle, both orally and in writing, more frequently than any other part of the New Testament. It is said, also, that in his youth he often wrote out this epistle, as Demosthenes wrote out Thucydides.Professor Tholuck.

Like a wall of adamant, St. Pauls writings form a bulwark around all the Churches of the world; while he himself, as some mighty champion, stands even now in the midst, casting down every high thing that exalteth itself against the knowledge of God, and bringing into captivity every thought to the obedience of Christ.Chrysostom.

Fuente: The Preacher’s Complete Homiletical Commentary Edited by Joseph S. Exell

THE DOXOLOGY, CLOSING THE EPISTLE, Rom 16:25-27.

The close of this great epistle, like its exordium, is elaborate and well rounded. If one will read Rom 16:25 to the word gospel inclusive, and then (omitting the intervening) read in continuation the last verse, he will find the main thought completely expressed.

In Rom 16:25 the and is best read even: my Gospel, even the preaching of Jesus, the latter phrase being explanatory of the former. The two accordings are coordinate, both being dependent upon establish you. Thus:

Establish you According to my Gospel, namely, the preaching of Jesus Christ, According to revelation of mystery, in age-enduring times unuttered, but now revealed.

But the according in Rom 16:26, by a strong inversion, depends upon made known, made known being coordinate with revealed, connecting with our translation of Rom 16:25, thus:

And through the prophetic Scriptures, made known according to the commandment of the God of ages, to all nations, for the obedience of faith.

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

25. To him Reiterated in Rom 16:27, To God.

Of power Literally, able.

Stablish you Not merely in accordance with 18, 19, but in the faith of this entire epistle.

My gospel As expounded in this book of Romans.

Preaching Literally, heralding, proclaiming, whether by tongue or pen.

Mystery Paul’s Gospel, as in this book unfolded, is no invention of his own; it was in past aeons or ages an unuttered mystery of God.

Since the world began A loose paraphrase of , aeonic times, which signifies that God has cycles or ages or dispensations in his eternal providence, and that during the past cycles of time, that is, before the era of Christ, this Gospel was an unrevealed mystery.

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

‘Now to him who is able (tow dunamenow – to him that is of power) to establish you according to my gospel and the preaching of Jesus Christ, according to the revelation of the mystery which has been kept in silence through times eternal, but now is manifested, and by the scriptures of the prophets, according to the commandment of the eternal God, is made known to all the nations unto obedience of faith,’

The letter concludes with this final doxology which ties in closely with the opening chapter of Romans. For ‘to Him that is of power’ compare ‘the power of God unto salvation’ (Rom 1:16); for ‘by the Scriptures of the Prophets’ compare ‘which he had promised previously in the Holy Scriptures’ (Rom 1:2). For ‘made known to all the nations unto obedience of faith’ compare ‘for obedience to the faith among all the nations’ (Rom 1:5). There appears to be a deliberate connection with the opening themes.

And the point that Paul is emphasising is that God is able to establish us ‘in accordance with my Gospel’ (compare Rom 2:16) and ‘the teaching of Jesus Christ’. The thought of being ‘established’ was found in Rom 1:11 where it was to be through Paul imparting to them some spiritual gift. Here that spiritual gift is seen to be in the form of ‘my Gospel’. By ‘my Gospel’ he of course means the Gospel that he holds to and has presented, which he elsewhere describes as ‘the Gospel of God’ (Rom 1:1), ‘the Gospel of His Son’ (Rom 1:9), ‘the Gospel’ (Rom 1:16). He is not claiming that it is unique to himself. And he immediately equates it with ‘the teaching of Jesus Christ’, for it was to Him that he looked as the source for what he taught. ‘The teaching of Jesus Christ’ could signify that his Gospel is in accordance with what Jesus Christ taught, and he makes clear in his letters that that was so. But more probably here the ‘teaching of Jesus Christ’ signifies ‘the teaching concerning Jesus Christ’, which is, however, clearly based on His teaching.

He then explains the even earlier source of the Gospel. It is, ‘according to the revelation of the mystery which has been kept in silence through times eternal, but now is manifested, and by the scriptures of the prophets, according to the commandment of the eternal God, is made known to all the nations unto obedience of faith.’

The Gospel is revealing ‘the mystery which has been kept in silence through times eternal, but is now manifested’. A ‘mystery is something hidden which is now revealed’. The fact that it has been ‘kept in silence through times eternal’ does not mean that there had been no indication of it previously, only that it had not been openly spoken of and clearly made known. It had rather been presented in veiled form until the time came for it to be fully manifested. The Old Testament Scriptures gave many indications of it, but these indications were expressed in veiled terms the meaning of which only became apparent when their fulfilment was revealed. But now in the Gospel those indications have been turned into clear revelation. The truth that they expressed has now been clearly revealed.

That is why the ‘Scriptures of the Prophets’ can now be called on as witnesses to and explanations of that ‘mystery’ (Rom 1:2; Rom 3:21), in order through them to make known to all nations the truth now revealed, so that they might respond in the obedience which springs from faith. It will be noted in this regard that Paul constantly calls on the Scriptures to back his arguments (e.g. in Rom 3:10-18; Rom 4:1-25; Rom 9:25-29; Rom 9:33; Rom 10:14-21; Rom 11:26-27). And this time of manifestation was not of man’s devising but was the consequence of the command of the eternal God, Who had existed throughout the times eternal when the Gospel had remained hidden. It was the eternal God Himself Who chose the time of revelation (compare Gal 4:1).

‘To make known to all nations.’ This is what Paul has constantly argued throughout Romans, that the Good News of Christ is for all nations (e.g. Rom 1:14; Rom 1:16; Rom 4:16-18; Rom 9:25-26; Rom 10:18; Rom 10:20).

Thus the Gospel is the mystery now revealed, it is based on the Scriptures of the Prophets, and its present manifestation is the consequence of God’s command Who had now determined that that truth should be made known to all nations.

Fuente: Commentary Series on the Bible by Peter Pett

The Doxology Rom 16:25-27 serves as the doxology to the epistle of Romans.

Textual Criticism Rom 16:25-27 makes up the doxology of the epistle to the Romans. This doxology is found a various positions in ancient manuscripts. One ancient manuscript, the Chester Beatty papyrus (p46), places this doxology at the end of chapter 15 and before the text of chapter 16. However, the best manuscripts, both Alexandrian and Western, place it at the end of chapter 16. Note how it follows almost the same benediction (Rom 16:24) that is written in Rom 16:20. We can also note that every one of the Pauline epistles except the book of Romans ends with a prayer of God’s grace being with his recipients. This Roman epistle is the only one that ends with a doxology.

Rom 16:25  Now to him that is of power to stablish you according to my gospel, and the preaching of Jesus Christ, according to the revelation of the mystery, which was kept secret since the world began,

Rom 16:25 “according to my gospel” Comments – Eusebius (A.D. 260 to 340) tells us that because of Paul’s close companionship with Luke, he is referring in this phrase to the Gospel of Luke ( Ecclesiastical History 3.4.7-8).

“But Luke, who was of Antiochian parentage and a physician by profession, and who was especially intimate with Paul and well acquainted with the rest of the apostles, has left us, in two inspired books, proofs of that spiritual healing art which he learned from them. One of these books is the Gospel, which he testifies that he wrote as those who were from the beginning eye witnesses and ministers of the word delivered unto him, all of whom, as he says, he followed accurately from the first. The other book is the Acts of the Apostles which he composed not from the accounts of others, but from what he had seen himself. And they say that Paul meant to refer to Luke’s Gospel wherever, as if speaking of some gospel of his own, he used the words, “according to my Gospel .”“ ( Ecclesiastical History 3.4.7-8)

Scripture Reference – Note the other times when Paul used this phrase:

Rom 2:16, “In the day when God shall judge the secrets of men by Jesus Christ according to my gospel .”

2Ti 2:8, “Remember that Jesus Christ of the seed of David was raised from the dead according to my gospel :”

Rom 16:26  But now is made manifest, and by the scriptures of the prophets, according to the commandment of the everlasting God, made known to all nations for the obedience of faith:

Rom 16:26 “But now is made manifest” Scripture Reference – Note:

1Ti 3:16, “And without controversy great is the mystery of godliness: God was manifest in the flesh , justified in the Spirit, seen of angels, preached unto the Gentiles, believed on in the world, received up into glory.”

Rom 16:26 “made known to all nations for the obedience of faith” Scripture Reference – Note a similar opening verse to this epistle:

Rom 1:5, “By whom we have received grace and apostleship, for obedience to the faith among all nations, for his name:”

This is an indication that these two verses reflect the major theme in the epistle to the Romans

Rom 16:26 Comments – The themes of each book of the Holy Scriptures can be found in the open verses or passages of each book, and often in the closing verses. This is certainly the case with the epistle to the Romans. Notice how Paul opens and closes the epistle of Romans with the same phrase in Rom 1:5 and Rom 16:26 about obedience to the faith among all nations.

Rom 1:5, “By whom we have received grace and apostleship, for obedience to the faith among all nations, for his name:”

Rom 16:26, “But now is made manifest, and by the scriptures of the prophets, according to the commandment of the everlasting God, made known to all nations for the obedience of faith:”

Rom 16:27  To God only wise, be glory through Jesus Christ for ever. Amen.

Rom 16:27 “Amen” Comments – In the Textus Receptus the word “Amen” is attached to the end of all thirteen of Paul’s epistles, as well as to the Gospels of Matthew and Mark, and to the General Epistles of Hebrews , 1 and 2 Peter , 1 and 2 John, and to the book of Revelation. However, because “Amen” is not supported in more ancient manuscripts many scholars believe that this word is a later liturgical addition. For example, these Pauline benedictions could have been used by the early churches with the added “Amen.”

Fuente: Everett’s Study Notes on the Holy Scriptures

The concluding doxology:

v. 25. Now to Him that is of power to establish you according to my Gospel and the preaching of Jesus Christ, according to the revelation of the mystery which was kept secret since the world began,

v. 26. but now is made manifest, and by the Scriptures of the prophets, according to the commandment of the everlasting God, made known to all nations for the obedience of faith:

v. 27. to God only wise, be glory through Jesus Christ forever! Amen.

It is altogether in harmony with the rich content of the letter to the Romans that Paul closes it with such a remarkable doxology, a veritable effusion of glowing thoughts, interwoven with a beautiful eulogy of the Gospel. He gives all glory to God, to Him that is able to make the Christians firm and constant in faith and holy life. God establishes, confirms, the believers in their faith according to the Gospel; that is both norm and means through which God works. This Gospel, so far as its contents are concerned, is nothing but the preaching of Jesus Christ, who is Alpha and Omega, the Beginning and the End, of all true evangelical preaching. The Gospel is further described as being a mystery, namely, the secret concerning Christ and salvation in Christ. It had been hidden, kept secret, unknown and undiscoverable by human reason, from ancient times, from eternity. The counsel of God for the redemption of mankind had been hid in God, Eph 3:9, and it had not been made known in its fullness and glory for several millenniums after the creation of the world. But now this mystery has been uncovered, made known, become manifest. Jesus Christ has carried out the counsel of God for salvation, the revelation has been committed to the apostles with the command to preach it to all creatures. And the preaching is being done through the Scriptures of the prophets, the apostles always referring to the promises of the Messiah and demonstrating their fulfillment in Christ. Through the preaching of the Gospel the very writings of the prophets are made clear and are shown to contain glorious Gospel-truths. And so the work of the New Testament ministry is being carried forward according to the commandment of the eternal God, unto the obedience of faith, to work this obedience in the hearts of men, to he made known to all the Gentiles. In brief, the Gospel, revealed in the preaching of the New Testament, is to serve for the salvation of all men. And God, who works faith in Christ Jesus through the Gospel, will through that same preaching strengthen and confirm the believers in faith unto the end. To Him, therefore, who alone is wise, who is the essence of all wisdom, as is shown by His wonderful plan for the salvation of all men, be glory forever and ever, through Jesus Christ, our Savior! Glory be to the Father and to the Son, equal in power, majesty, and glory, throughout eternity! Amen.

Summary

The apostle sends greetings, both his own and those of his companions, inserts a warning against false teachers, and concludes with a wonderful doxology

Fuente: The Popular Commentary on the Bible by Kretzmann

Rom 16:25 . ] to make firm and stedfast . Luk 22:32 ; Rom 1:11 ; 1Th 3:2 ; 2Th 2:17 , et al. The description of God by corresponds to the entire scope of the epistle. Comp. Rom 1:11 (in opposition to Lucht).

] , 1Th 3:13 .

. ] is closely connected with . ( to strengthen in respect of my gospel ), so that we are not to supply in fide (Koppe, de Wette, van Hengel) or the like (Reiche: “in the religious and moral life”); but the sense is not different from . . (comp. 2Th 2:17 ; 2Pe 1:12 ), namely: so to operate upon you that you may remain stedfastly faithful to my gospel , and not become addicted to doctrines and principles deviating from it. More far-fetched is the explanation of others (taking in the sense of the rule ): “ so to strengthen you, that you may now live and act according to my gospel ,” Kllner (comp. Chrysostom, Theodoret, Theophylact, Wolf, Koppe, Tholuck); or ( of the regulative modal character ): after the fashion of my gospel (Hofmann).

The expression . , the gospel preached by me , cannot, seeing that in Rome Pauline Christianity was in the ascendant, be accounted, on an impartial consideration of the apostolic consciousness, and in comparison with Rom 2:16 (see also 2Th 2:14 ; 2Ti 2:8 ; Gal 2:2 ), as in itself surprising, least of all when we attend to the added: . This, namely, far from aiming at a conciliatory comparison with the preaching of the other apostles (Lucht), is a more precise definition of . , proceeding from the humble piety of the apostle. As he wrote or uttered the latter expression, he at once vividly felt that his gospel was withal nothing else than the preaching which Christ Himself caused to go forth ( through him as His organ ); and by making this addition, he satisfies his own principle: . , Rom 15:18 . Comp. on the thought, Eph 2:17 ; 2Co 13:3 . This humility , amidst all the boldness in other respects of his apostolic consciousness, suggested itself the more to his heart, because in connection with a praise of God . With this view of the genitive agree substantially Rckert, de Wette, Fritzsche, Baumgarten-Crusius, Ewald. The more usual explanation: the preaching concerning Christ (Erasmus, Luther, Calvin, and many others, including Kllner, Tholuck (?), Reithmayr, Philippi), yields after . somewhat of tautology, and forfeits the thoughtful correlation between and . The personal oral preaching of Christ Himself during His earthly life (Grotius, Wolf, Koppe, Bhme, Hofmann), to which Paul never expressly refers in his epistles (not even in Gal 5:1 ), is not to he thought of.

. . . .] co-ordinated to the preceding , and likewise dependent on . In the exalted feeling of the sublime dignity of the gospel, in so far as he has just designated it as the of Jesus Christ , the apostle cannot leave the description of its character without also designating it further according to its grand and sacred contents (not according to its novelty , as Hofmann explains, which lies neither in the text nor in the connection), and that with a theocratic glance back upon the primitive counsel of salvation of God: as revelation of a secret kept in silence in eternal times (comp. Col 1:26 ; Eph 3:9 ; Eph 1:4 ; 1Co 2:7 ). Note the bipartite character of the designation by the twofold , according to which Paul sets forth the gospel, (1) ratione subjecti , as his gospel and of Christ , and (2) ratione objecti , as the revelation of the primitive sacred mystery .

The second is to be taken quite like the first (comp. Col 2:8 ); but Paul designates the divine decree of the redemption of the world [51] as (comp. generally on Rom 11:25 ), in so far as it, formed indeed by God from eternity (hidden in God, Eph 3:9 ), and in the fulness of time accomplished by Christ, was first disclosed [52] through the gospel, i.e. laid open to human contemplation (Eph 3:4 ; Eph 3:8-9 ; Eph 6:19 ); hence the gospel is the actual of this secret. The article was not requisite with ., since the following genitive has no article, and, besides, a preposition precedes (Winer, p. 118 f. [E. T. p. 155]; comp. 1Pe 1:7 ). But , if it was to be in itself the definite secret, must have had the article (Eph 3:3 ; Eph 3:9 ; Col 1:26 ); hence we must explain “ of a secret ,” so that it is only the subsequent concrete description which expresses what secret is meant: “ in respect to the revelation of a secret, which was kept silent in eternal times, but now has been brought to light ,” etc. Among the varying explanations, the only one linguistically correct is that of Fritzsche (comp. Kllner, Rckert, Tholuck, and Philippi), who makes . . dependent not merely on , but on . . taken together, and takes as in consequence of , thus namely: “qui potest vos corroborare in secundum patefactionem arcani, h. e. postquam facta est patefactio arcani, i. q. ;” more exactly Rckert, Philippi, Tholuck: in correspondence with the revelation, etc. But no necessity exists for taking here in another sense than previously (as e.g. there is such a necessity, obviously, with immediately below); on the contrary, after the words, “who is in a position to strengthen you in respect of the gospel,” the idea “secundum patefactionem arcani” would be superfluous and self-evident, and therefore the weighty mode of its expression would be without motive and turgid. It would be otherwise if . . . were intended to establish not the ability of God, but His willingness . Incorrectly, in fine, Olshausen and older expositors think that should be supplied: “ which preaching has taken place through revelation of a secret ,” etc. This Paul would have known how to say properly, had he meant it.

.] Period in which the . took place; Act 8:11 ; Act 13:20 ; Jos 2:20 ; Winer, p. 205 [E. T. p. 273]; Kuhner, II. 1, p. 386. From the very beginning down to the time of the N. T. proclamation reach the , which are meant and popularly so designated. Bengel: “tempora primo sui initio aeternitatem quasi praeviam attingentia.” Comp. 2Ti 1:9 ; Tit 1:2 . As at almost every word of the doxology, Lucht has taken offence at the expression . [53] And Reiche incorrectly understands the course of eternity down to the time of the prophets . For by . . . . . Paul wished to designate the New Testament gospel ( ), which therefore had not been preached before Christ; but he thinks of the prophetical predictions as the means used (Rom 16:26 ) for the making it known, and justly, since in them the publication has not yet taken place, but there is contained merely the still obscure preindication and preparatory promise (Rom 1:2 ) which were only to obtain their full and certain light through the far later of the mystery, and consequently were to serve as a medium of faith to the preaching which announces the secret of salvation. Comp. Weiss, bibl. Theol . p. 293. Suggestively Bengel remarks: “V. T. est tanquam horologium in suo cursu tacito; N. T. est sonitus et pulsus aeris.” The silence respecting the secret was first put an end to by the preaching of the N. T., so that now the came in its place; and up to that time even the prophetic language was, in reference to the world, as yet a silence , because containing only (Theodoret) what afterwards (“ a complemento ,” Calovius) was to become through the evangelical preaching manifest, brought clearly to light (comp. Rom 1:19 , Rom 3:21 ; Col 4:4 ; 1Pe 1:10-11 ; 1Pe 1:20 ; Tit 1:2-3 ; 2Ti 1:10 ).

[51] The bestowal of blessing on the Gentiles (Eph 3:6 ) is an essential feature of the contents of the ; but to refer the latter in our passage to this alone (Beza, Bengel, Philippi, Tholuck, and others) is not justified by the context.

[52] This disclosure made to men through the preaching of the gospel (Rom 1:17 ; Gal 3:23 ) is meant according to the context, and not “ mihi data patefactio” (van Hengel), which Paul elsewhere, when he means it, actually expresses . Comp. Gal 1:16 ; Eph 3:3 ; 1Co 2:10 ; Eph 3:5 ; Gal 1:12 .

[53] The fashion, in which he professes to explain the separate elements from a Gnostic atmosphere, is so arbitrary as to place itself beyond the pale of controversy. Thus, e.g. , . . is held to refer to the Gnostic aeons , . to the Gnostic Sige , . . to the of allegorical explanation of Scripture .

Fuente: Heinrich August Wilhelm Meyer’s New Testament Commentary

Rom 16:25-27 . As a final complete conclusion, we have now this praising of God , rich in contents, deep in feeling (perhaps added by the apostle’s own hand), in which the leading ideas contained in the whole epistle, as they had already found in the introduction, Rom 1:1-5 , their preluding keynote, and again in Rom 11:33 ff. their preliminary doxological expression, now further receive, in the fullest unison of inspired piety, their concentrated outburst for the ultimate true consecration of the whole. No one but Hofmann, who assigns to these three verses their place after Rom 14:23 (see the critical notes), could deny that they form a doxology at all. According to him, is to be connected with , Rom 15:1 , and to be governed by this verb (thus: to Him, who is able we are debtors , etc.). This is, however, nothing less than a monstrosity of exegetical violence, and that, first, because the verses carry on their front the most immediate and characteristic stamp of a doxology (comp. especially Jud 1:24-25 ), in which even the is not wanting (comp. Rom 9:5 , Rom 11:36 ); secondly, because the fulness and the powerful pathos of the passage would be quite disproportionate as a preparatory basis for the injunction that follows in Rom 15:1 , and would be without corresponding motive; thirdly, because in Rom 16:25 stands, but in the supposed continuation, Rom 15:1 , , which is an evidence against their mutual connection; and lastly, because the , Rom 15:1 , stands inexorably in the way. This , namely, could not be the antithetic of the apodosis and after participles , especially after absolute participles (Klotz, ad Devar . p. 372 ff.; Khner, II. 2, p. 818; Baeumlein, Partik . pp. 92 f., 94), but only the resumptive (Khner, II. 2, p. 815; Baeumlein, p. 97); and then Paul must have written not , but either , which would reassume the previously described subject, or he must have put his in Rom 16:27 along with , and therefore somewhat thus: .

Fuente: Heinrich August Wilhelm Meyer’s New Testament Commentary

25 Now to him that is of power to stablish you according to my gospel, and the preaching of Jesus Christ, according to the revelation of the mystery, which was kept secret since the world began,

Ver. 25. Which was kept secret ] Even from the very angels, 1Pe 1:12 , who do daily profit in the knowledge of this secret, Eph 3:10 .

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

25 27. ] CONCLUDING DOXOLOGY. The genuineness of this doxology, and its position in the Epistle have been much questioned. The external evidence will be found in the var. readings; from which it is plain, that its genuineness as a part of the Epistle is placed beyond all reasonable doubt . Nor does the variety of position militate here, as in some cases, against this conclusion. For the transference of it to the end of ch. 14 may be explained, partly from the supposed reference of to the question treated in ch. 14 (so Chrys., , . ), partly from the supposed inappropriateness of it here after the benediction of Rom 16:24 , in consequence of which that verse is omitted by MSS. which have the doxology here, partly from the unusual character of the position and diction of the doxology itself.

This latter has been used as an internal argument against the genuineness of the portion. Paul never elsewhere ends with such a doxology. His doxologies, when he does use such, are simple, and perspicuous in construction, whereas this is involved, and rhetorical. This objection however is completely answered by the supposition (Fritz.) that the doxology was the effusion of the fervent mind of the Apostle on taking a general survey of the Epistle. We find in its diction striking similarities to that of the pastoral Epistles: a phnomenon occurring in several places where Paul writes in a fervid and impassioned manner, also where he writes with his own hand ; the inferences from which I have treated in the Prolegg. to those Epistles (vol. iii. Prolegg. ch. vii. i. 30 33). That the doxology is made up of unusual expressions taken from Paul’s other writings, that it is difficult and involved, are facts, which if rightly argued from, would substantiate, not its interpolation, but its genuineness : seeing that an interpolator would have taken care to conform it to the character of the Epistle in which it stands, and to have left in it no irregularity which would bring it into question. The construction is exceedingly difficult. Viewed superficially, it presents only another instance added to many in which the Apostle begins a sentence with one construction, proceeds onward through various dependent clauses till he loses sight of the original form, and ends with a construction presupposing another kind of beginning. And such no doubt it is: but it is not easy to say what he had in his mind when commencing the sentence. Certainly, . forbids us from supposing that was intended to follow the datives, for thus this latter clause would be merely a repetition. We might imagine that he had ended the sentence as if it had begun , . . . and expressed a wish that He who was able to confirm them, might confirm them: but this is prevented by its being evident, from the , that the datives are still in his mind. This latter fact will guide us to the solution. The dative form is still in his mind, but not the reference in which he had used it. Hence, when the sentence would naturally have concluded (as it actually does in B: see digest) , , . , a break is made, as if the sense were complete at , and the relative refers back to the subject of the sentence preceding, thus imagined complete, viz. to . The analogy of the similar passage Act 20:32 would tempt us to supply with the datives , or the like, as suggested by Olsh.; but as De W. remarks, the form of a doxology is too evident to allow of this. After all, perhaps, the datives may be understood as conveying a general ascription of praise for the mercies of Redemption detailed in the Epistle , and then . as superadded, q. d., To Him who is able &c. be all the praise: to whom be glory for ever .

Fuente: Henry Alford’s Greek Testament

25. ] , in reference to , i.e. ‘in subordination to,’ and according to the requirements of.

. can hardly mean, as De W. and Meyer, ‘ the preaching which Jesus Christ hath accomplished by me ’ (ch. Rom 15:18 ), nor again as Chrys., , but the preaching of Christ , i.e. making known of Christ, as the verb is used 1Co 1:23 ; 1Co 15:12 al. fr. So Calv., and most Commentators.

.] This second is best taken, not as co-ordinate to the former one, and following , nor as belonging to , which would be an unusual limitation of the divine Power, but as subordinate to , the preaching of Jesus Christ according to, &c . The omission of before . is no objection to this.

.] The mystery (see ch. Rom 11:25 , note) of the gospel is often said to have been thus hidden from eternity in the counsels of God see Eph 3:9 ; Col 1:26 ; 2Ti 1:9 ; Tit 1:2 ; 1Pe 1:20 ; Rev 13:8 .

Fuente: Henry Alford’s Greek Testament

Rom 16:25-27 . The doxology. St. Paul’s letters, as a rule, terminate with a benediction, and even apart from the questions of textual criticism, connected with it, this doxology has given rise to much discussion. The closest analogies to it are found in the doxology at the end of Eph 3 , and in Jude (Jud 1:24-25 ); there is something similar in the last chapter of Hebrews (Heb 13:20 f.), though not quite at the end; Pauline doxologies as a rule are briefer (Rom 1:25 , Rom 9:5 , Rom 11:36 , Phi 4:20 ), and more closely related to what immediately precedes. This one, in which all the leading ideas of the Epistle to the Romans may be discovered, though in a style which reminds one uncomfortably of the Pastoral Epistles rather than of that to which it is appended, would seem more in place if it stood where [42] [43] and an immense number of MSS. place it after Rom 14:23 . It may represent the first emergence and conscious apprehension of thoughts which were afterwards to become familiar; but it cannot be denied that the many distinct points of contact with later writings give it, in spite of all it has of imposing, a somewhat artificial character, and it may not belong to the Epistle to the Romans any more than the doxology in Mat 6 belongs to the Lord’s Prayer.

[42] Codex Alexandrinus (sc. v.), at the British Museum, published in photographic facsimile by Sir E. M. Thompson (1879).

[43] Codex Angelicus (sc. ix.), at Rome, collated by Tischendorf and others.

Fuente: The Expositors Greek Testament by Robertson

Rom 16:25 f. : cf. Eph 3:20 , Jud 1:24 . : this word takes us back to the beginning of the epistle (Rom 1:11 .) Paul wished to impart to them some spiritual gift, to the end that they might be established; but only God is able ( cf. Rom 14:4 ) to effect this result. The stablishing is to take place : in agreement with the gospel Paul preached. When it is achieved, the Romans will be settled and confirmed in Christianity as it was understood by the Apostle. For cf. Rom 2:16 , 2Ti 2:8 : also 1Ti 1:11 , . The expression implies not only that Paul’s gospel was his own, in the sense that he was not taught it by any man (Gal 1:11 f.), but also that it had something characteristic of himself about it. The characteristic feature, to judge by this epistle, was his sense of the absolute freeness of salvation (justification by faith, apart from works of law), and of its absolute universality (for every one that believeth, Jew first, then Greek). is practically the same as . It was in a preaching (1Co 2:4 ; 1Co 15:14 , Tit 1:3 ) of which Jesus Christ was the object that Paul declared the characteristic truths of his gospel: and this preaching, as well as the gospel, may be said to be the rule according to which the Romans are to be established as Christians. . This passage “goes not with , but with ” (Sanday and Headlam). This is the simplest construction: the gospel Paul preaches, the gospel in accordance with which he would have them established, is itself in accordance with we may even say identical with the revelation of a mystery, etc. The here referred to is God’s world-embracing purpose of redemption, as it has been set out conspicuously in this epistle. One aspect of this one element of the mystery is referred to where is used in Rom 11:25 ; but the conception of the Gospel as a revealed in the fulness of the time dominates later epistles, especially Ephesians ( cf. Eph 1:9 ; Eph 3:3-4 ; Eph 3:9 ; Eph 6:19 ). The Gospel as Paul understood it was a , because it could never have been known except through Divine revelation: and are correlative terms. : the dative expresses duration. Winer, p. 273; cf. 2Ti 1:9 , Tit 1:2 . For cf. Rom 3:21 . The aorist refers to Christ’s appearing, though the significance of this had to be made clear by revelation (Weiss). : for cf. Rom 2:16 . The connection is meant to be as close as possible: the follows the as a matter of course. The are the O.T. Scriptures of which Paul made constant use in preaching his gospel ( cf. in 1Co 15:3-4 ). For him the O.T. was essentially a Christian book. His gospel was witnessed to by the law and the prophets (Rom 1:2 , Rom 3:21 ; Rom 3:4 , passim ), and in that sense the mystery was made known through them. But their significance only came out for one who had the Christian key to them the knowledge of Christ which revelation had given to Paul. : cf. 1Ti 1:1 , Tit 1:3 . The idea is that only an express command of the Eternal God could justify the promulgation of the secret He had kept so long. For the “Eternal God” cf. Gen 21:33 , 1Ti 1:17 ( ). : cf. Rom 1:5 : in Rom 1:5 it is : for in this sense see Rom 3:22 . It is very difficult to believe that such mosaic work is the original composition of Paul.

Fuente: The Expositors Greek Testament by Robertson

NASB (UPDATED) TEXT: Rom 16:25-27

25Now to Him who is able to establish you according to my gospel and the preaching of Jesus Christ, according to the revelation of the mystery which has been kept secret for long ages past, 26but now is manifested, and by the Scriptures of the prophets, according to the commandment of the eternal God, has been made known to all the nations, leading to obedience of faith; 27to the only wise God, through Jesus Christ, be the glory forever. Amen.

Rom 16:25-27 This is one sentence in Greek. This benediction can be found in ancient Greek manuscripts, both at the end of Romans 14 and Romans 15. This context is a recapitulation of the major themes of the book possibly written in Paul’s own hand.

Some believe that this doxology may have been

1. the cover letter for the cyclical letter of Ephesians

2. for those on the way to Rome because

a. Paul had never visited Rome, yet he says hello to twenty-six people

b. Romans 16 is the first mention of false teachers

c. this doxology appears in the Greek manuscripts at several different places.

It is also possible that Paul made two copies, Romans 1-14 to Rome, Romans 1-16 to Ephesus. Usually these assertions are answered by

1. the fact that many of these early Christian workers traveled

2. the fact that no Greek manuscript of Romans is without Romans 16

3. the possibility that false teachers are implied in Rom 14:1 to Rom 15:13

Rom 16:25 “to Him who is able” This is another wonderful title for God used three times in the NT (cf. Eph 3:20; Jud 1:24).

Notice how God establishes believers.

1. Paul’s gospel presentation

2. the preaching about Jesus Christ

3. the revealing of God’s eternal plan of salvation which had been kept secret (mystery)

Believers are enabled by the knowledge of the gospel. This gospel has now been made available to all!

“the mystery” God has a unified purpose for mankind’s redemption that even preceded the fall (cf. Genesis 3). Hints of this plan are revealed in the OT (cf. Gen 3:15; Gen 12:3; Exo 19:5-6; and the universal passages in the Prophets). However this full agenda was not clear (cf. 1Co 2:6-8). With the coming of Jesus and the Spirit it begins to become more obvious. Paul used the term “mystery” to describe this total redemptive plan (cf. 1Co 4:1; Eph 2:11 to Eph 3:13; Eph 6:19; Col 4:3; 1Ti 1:9). However, he uses it in several different senses.

1. A partial hardening of Israel to allow Gentiles to be included . This influx of Gentiles will work as a mechanism for Jews to accept Jesus as the Christ of prophecy (cf. Rom 11:25-32).

2. The gospel was made known to the nations, which are all included in Christ and through Christ (cf. Rom 16:25-27; Col 2:2).

3. Believers’ new bodies at the Second Coming (cf. 1Co 15:5-57; 1Th 4:13-18).

4. The summing up of all things in Christ (cf. Eph 1:8-11).

5. The Gentiles and Jews are fellow-heirs (cf. Eph 2:11 to Eph 3:13).

6. Intimacy of the relationship between Christ and the Church described in marriage terms (cf. Eph 5:22-33).

7. Gentiles included in the covenant people and indwelt by the Spirit of Christ so as to produce Christlike maturity, that is, restore the marred image of God in fallen humanity (cf. Gen 6:5; Gen 6:11-13; Gen 8:21) of God in man (cf. Gen 1:26-27; Gen 5:1; Gen 9:6; Col 1:26-28).

8. The end-time Anti-Christ (cf. 2Th 2:1-11).

9. An early church summary of the mystery is found in 1Ti 1:16.

Rom 16:26 “now is manifested” This mystery or plan of God has now been clearly revealed to all mankind.

It is the gospel of Jesus Christ (cf. Eph 2:11 to Eph 3:13).

“and by the Scriptures” God has manifested this mystery in the person and work of Jesus. This was foretold by the OT prophets. The establishment of a NT church made up of believing Jews and Gentiles was always God’s plan (cf. Gen 3:15; Gen 12:3; Exo 19:5-6; Jer 31:31-34).

“eternal God” See Special Topic below.

SPECIAL TOPIC: ETERNAL

“has been made known to all the nations” This is an aorist passive participle. It was placed last in the Greek sentence for emphasis. God has presented the gospel offer to the whole world, which was always His purpose (cf. Gen 3:15)!

NASB”leading to obedience of faith”

NKJV”for obedience to the faith”

NRSV”to bring about the obedience of faith”

TEV”leading to obedience of faith”

NJB”to bring them to the obedience of faith”

There are different ways to understand this phrase; it may refer to

1. doctrine about Christ

2. trust in Christ

3. obedience to the gospel both initially and continually

Obedience (cf. Rom 1:5) must be combined theologically with the concept of repentance and faith (cf. Mar 1:15; Act 3:16; Act 3:19; Act 20:21).

Rom 16:27 “the only wise God” This is an allusion to monotheism (see Special Topic at Rom 3:30, cf. Deu 6:4-5). Christianity has only one God, just like Judaism, however, the full deity of Jesus and the full personality of the Spirit force us to a “tri-unity,” Trinity (see Special Topic at Rom 8:11).

“be the glory forever” See note at Rom 3:23.

“Amen” See Special Topic at Rom 1:25.

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

SECOND POSTSCRIPT (PAUL).

of power = able. Greek. dunamai, Compare Rom 8:39. See App-176.

stablish. See Rom 1:11.

according to. App-104.

gospel. App-140.

preaching. App-121.

Jesus Christ. App-98.

the = a.

revelation. App-106. Compare Eph 3:3.

mystery. Greek. musterion. App-193

which. . . secret = which (secret) has been kept in silence (Greek. sigao, Compare. Act 15:12. 1Co 14:28; 1Co 14:30; 1Co 14:34).

since . . . began. App-151.

LONGER NOTE. THE SECOND POSTSCRIPT (Rom 16:25-27).

That the “doxology” is a postscript added by the apostle after he had arrived at, and was residing in, Rome (61-63 A, D.: see App-180), and was writing Ephesians, seems clear for the following reasons:

First, there is no question as to the genuineness or authenticity of these verses.

The question raised by their appearance not only after the close of the Epistle itself, but also after the postscript of the amanuensis, Tertius, is connected with the “mystery” “kept in silence from age-times but now manifested by means of prophetic writings”. To find the subject-matter of Ephesians introduced suddenly, in such a position, and in the diction of this doxology, has been a difficulty for ancient transcribers and modern commentators alike.

The original manuscripts prove this by the position the doxology occupies in many of them.

In over 190 it stands after Rom 14:23.

In two or three it is wanting.

In some it appears in both places (i.e. after Rom 14:23 and Rom 16:24).

In some, where the doxology stands as in the Authorized Version the second benediction (Rom 16:24) is omitted.

This difficulty is shared by modern commentators. Some suppose the doxology was “the effusion of the fervent mind of the apostle on taking a general view of the Epistle”.

Others say “it needs only to read the doxology to see that its main purpose is nothing lower than thanksgiving for the Universal Gospel as a whole, and that its weighty grandeur of tone belongs to the close not of a section, but of the whole Epistle. “

But the suggestion that this “postscript” was added later by the apostle removes all the difficulties, and shows that the minds of the ancient copyists were needlessly disturbed. The truth of the “mystery” had been lost long before the date of our oldest MSS. Hence the transcribers’ excitement and perplexity. Had it been known, they would have at once understood that the doxology was subsequently added. 1 And the same remark applies to modern commentators.

Although Paul must have had the “secret” revealed to him beforehand, probably about 57 or 68 A.D., yet he was not permitted to publish the truths of the mystery in writing until after he was in Rome, and in prison. Consequently, when the Epistle was sent first to the Romans, it was closed by the second benediction (Rom 16:24).

Although given to him before the expiry of the period of grace enjoyed by the pentecostal church, he was not allowed to divulge it. So long as the offer of the Kingdom (see App-112, App-113, App-114) to earthly Israel was open, the “mystery” could not be made known.

But when the sentence of judicial blindness had been promulgated and the prophecy of Isa 6 fulfilled (Act 28:26, Act 28:27), then the glorious truths for the later-born were allowed to be set forth by “prophetic writings”, viz. the prison epistles.

Therefore the apostle was guided by the Holy Spirit to add the postscript to Romans; thus completing in beautiful perfection the Divine arrangement of the Epistle (see Structure, p. 1661) and striking the key-note in the doctrinal teaching which is taken up and developed at large in Ephesians.

Footnotes: 1 This suggestion was first made by Bishop Lightfoot in Biblical Essays, and adopted by others.

Fuente: Companion Bible Notes, Appendices and Graphics

25-27.] CONCLUDING DOXOLOGY. The genuineness of this doxology, and its position in the Epistle have been much questioned. The external evidence will be found in the var. readings;-from which it is plain, that its genuineness as a part of the Epistle is placed beyond all reasonable doubt. Nor does the variety of position militate here, as in some cases, against this conclusion. For the transference of it to the end of ch. 14 may be explained, partly from the supposed reference of to the question treated in ch. 14 (so Chrys., , . ), partly from the supposed inappropriateness of it here after the benediction of Rom 16:24, in consequence of which that verse is omitted by MSS. which have the doxology here,-partly from the unusual character of the position and diction of the doxology itself.

This latter has been used as an internal argument against the genuineness of the portion. Paul never elsewhere ends with such a doxology. His doxologies, when he does use such, are simple, and perspicuous in construction, whereas this is involved, and rhetorical. This objection however is completely answered by the supposition (Fritz.) that the doxology was the effusion of the fervent mind of the Apostle on taking a general survey of the Epistle. We find in its diction striking similarities to that of the pastoral Epistles:-a phnomenon occurring in several places where Paul writes in a fervid and impassioned manner,-also where he writes with his own hand;-the inferences from which I have treated in the Prolegg. to those Epistles (vol. iii. Prolegg. ch. vii. i. 30-33). That the doxology is made up of unusual expressions taken from Pauls other writings, that it is difficult and involved, are facts, which if rightly argued from, would substantiate, not its interpolation, but its genuineness: seeing that an interpolator would have taken care to conform it to the character of the Epistle in which it stands, and to have left in it no irregularity which would bring it into question. The construction is exceedingly difficult. Viewed superficially, it presents only another instance added to many in which the Apostle begins a sentence with one construction, proceeds onward through various dependent clauses till he loses sight of the original form, and ends with a construction presupposing another kind of beginning. And such no doubt it is: but it is not easy to say what he had in his mind when commencing the sentence. Certainly, . forbids us from supposing that was intended to follow the datives,-for thus this latter clause would be merely a repetition. We might imagine that he had ended the sentence as if it had begun , … and expressed a wish that He who was able to confirm them, might confirm them: but this is prevented by its being evident, from the , that the datives are still in his mind. This latter fact will guide us to the solution. The dative form is still in his mind, but not the reference in which he had used it. Hence, when the sentence would naturally have concluded (as it actually does in B: see digest) , , . ,-a break is made, as if the sense were complete at , and the relative refers back to the subject of the sentence preceding, thus imagined complete,-viz. to – . The analogy of the similar passage Act 20:32 would tempt us to supply with the datives , or the like, as suggested by Olsh.;-but as De W. remarks, the form of a doxology is too evident to allow of this. After all, perhaps, the datives may be understood as conveying a general ascription of praise for the mercies of Redemption detailed in the Epistle, and then . as superadded, q. d., To Him who is able &c. be all the praise: to whom be glory for ever.

Fuente: The Greek Testament

Rom 16:25. , now to Him) As a doxology concludes the disquisition, ch. Rom 11:36, so it now concludes the whole epistle. So 2Pe 3:18; Jud 1:25. The last words of this epistle plainly correspond to the first, ch. Rom 1:1-5; especially in regard to the Power of God, the Gospel, Jesus Christ, the Scriptures, the obedience of faith, all nations.-, that is of power- , according to my Gospel) The power of God is certain, Rom 1:16; Act 20:32, note.-, you) Jews and Gentiles.-) we have the same word, Rom 1:11.-) This same word is found at Rom 1:17.- must be construed with .-, of the mystery) concerning the Gentiles being made of the same body, Eph 3:3; Eph 3:6.- , since the world began) [during the eternal ages], from the time, when not only men, but even angels, were created, to both of whom the mystery had been at first unknown, Eph 3:9-10. The times are denoted, which with their first commencement as it were touch upon the previous eternity, and are, so to speak, mixed with it; not eternity itself, of which times are only the streams; for the phrase, BEFORE eternal ages (Engl. Ver. before the world began) is used at 2Ti 1:9; Psalms 77 (76):6, .-, kept secret) The Old Testament is like a clock in its silent course: the New Testament like the sound of brass, that is struck [viz. brazen cymbals, or drums]. In the Scriptures of the prophets, the calling of the Gentiles had been foretold; but the Jews did not understand it.

Fuente: Gnomon of the New Testament

Rom 16:25

Rom 16:25

Now to him that is able to establish you-He commends them to God, who has power to render them steadfast, unmovable from Christ and from the truth as it is in him. [This is the end to which Paul wished to impart unto them some spiritual gift. (Rom 1:11-12).]

according to my gospel-When the Romans became finally fixed and settled in their faith, Paul hoped to see that faith in exact parallel with his gospel. He had already called the gospel a form, or mold. (Rom 6:17). God is able through it to put his stamp upon their thinking, feeling, and living, so that in all these there will never be any divergence from it. A church is established when it reverently believes and says of everything-God, Christ, sin and Satan, salvation, death and life-just what the gospel reveals. [The heart is unstable, there is so much false teaching, and Satan is so persistently seeking to undermine that God alone is of power to establish so that there is no swerving. (Rom 1:16; 1Pe 1:5; Jud 1:24-25).]

a`sxcv bmn

nd the preaching of Jesus Christ,-[Not the preaching which Christ did, but the preaching which respects him, or has him for its object-Christ Jesus, and him q

crucified. (1Co 2:2).]

according to the revelation of the mystery-The preaching of Jesus Christ accorded with the revelation by God to Paul of a mystery. A mystery was a spiritual truth which could not be explained except by direct revelation. But after it was explained by an inspired man, it was no longer a mystery. The sum of the mystery embraced the union of the Jew and Gentile on the same level in Christ. The relation of the Jew and Gentile was the burning question in the church in Pauls day. [Nothing could be settled until it was settled. This question well-nigh wrecked the churches in Galatia.]

which hath been kept in silence through times eternal,-The numerous ages that have elapsed between the creation of man and the appearing of the Christ.

Fuente: Old and New Testaments Restoration Commentary

mystery

(See Scofield “Mat 13:11”). The “mystery” here is the Church; Eph 3:1-9.

Fuente: Scofield Reference Bible Notes

to him: Rom 14:4, Act 20:32, Eph 3:20, Eph 3:21, 1Th 3:13, 2Th 2:16, 2Th 2:17, 2Th 3:3, Heb 7:25, 1Pe 5:10, Jud 1:24, Jud 1:25

my gospel: Rom 2:16, 2Co 4:3, Gal 2:2, 2Th 2:14, 2Ti 2:8

and the: Act 9:20, 1Co 1:23, 1Co 2:2, 2Co 4:5

to the: 1Co 2:7, Eph 1:9, Col 1:26, Col 1:27

which: Psa 78:2, Dan 2:22, Amo 3:7, Mat 13:17, Mat 13:35, Luk 10:23, Luk 10:24, Eph 3:3-5, Eph 3:9, Eph 3:11, 1Pe 1:10-12, 1Pe 1:20

Reciprocal: Num 9:10 – be unclean Deu 29:29 – secret Deu 30:11 – it is not hidden Job 11:6 – show thee Job 15:8 – the secret Psa 7:9 – but Isa 48:6 – showed Isa 52:15 – for Mat 11:11 – greater Mat 13:11 – mysteries Mat 20:7 – Because Mat 24:14 – shall be Luk 8:10 – Unto Joh 15:15 – all Act 10:11 – and a Act 16:5 – so Rom 1:1 – the gospel Rom 1:11 – to the Rom 10:14 – and how shall Rom 11:25 – this 1Co 1:8 – confirm 1Co 4:1 – mysteries 1Co 13:2 – understand 1Co 14:2 – howbeit 2Co 1:21 – stablisheth 2Co 10:14 – the gospel Eph 3:5 – in other Eph 4:10 – fill Col 1:28 – Whom Col 2:2 – understanding Col 2:7 – stablished 1Ti 3:16 – the mystery 1Ti 6:16 – to whom 2Ti 1:8 – according 2Ti 1:9 – before 2Ti 4:17 – by Tit 1:2 – before 1Jo 1:2 – was manifested Rev 1:1 – Revelation Rev 10:7 – the mystery Rev 14:6 – preach

Fuente: The Treasury of Scripture Knowledge

THE SCRIPTURES OF THE PROPHETS

The mystery which now is made manifest, and, by the scriptures of the prophets, according to the commandment of the everlasting God, made known to all nations, for the obedience of faith.

Rom 16:25-26

I am always more and more impressed by the internal witness to its own capacity for supernatural results which emerges from a renewed reflection upon the structure of the Bible. Contemplate it as it lies before you.

I. It is at once many books and one.It is the product of many generations, yet immortally adjusted to all times. It is the literature of an Oriental nation, of a provincial Oriental nation, yet it is the Book of universal man; it proves itself to be so, more and yet more. Yes, reflect upon this profound paradox, which yet is solid fact.

II. How did this literature of a thousand years sum itself up at last into a Book?What magic has made such a Library sublimely one work in moral character and bearing, one in its presentation of God, of man, of sin, of righteousness, of redemption? How did its vastly various types of literary form, its histories, poems, allegories, sermons, biographies, predictions, from one aspect of a hundred minds, so coalesce as to impress nevertheless the reader, the reader touched by a sympathy with the Bible, genuine, however imperfect, as being all the while the work of One Mind? Does not reason answer, as loudly at least as faith, that this is so because here is the finger of God?

III. The Book is abundantly human.But it absolutely refuses to be rightly understood as merely human. It casts off from itself, by its own essential phenomena, the poor and shallow naturalismshallow, however brilliantly presentedshallow, however surrounded with a mass of learningwhich denies to it the profound presence of an element properly miraculous. The Book asserts the miraculous in it by its vast and coherent structure. So it prepares us to credit, to embrace, to adore the miraculous, not only in its story and in its prophecy, but also in its results of moral miracle upon the soul of man.

IV. There is no tenet on which the scattered writers of the first Christian ages are more emphatically united, semper, ubique, omnes, than on the Divine character, the supreme authority, the glorious worth for our whole spiritual need, of the Holy Scriptures. St. Chrysostom speaks for all his coevals and all his predecessors when he calls upon all men who can to buy the Scriptures, and to read them. He speaks as a voice of the Church when he says, in his preamble to the Romans, that all the tumults and errors of religious thought, all the epidemic of heresies, all the weary, miserable conflicts within the Church, our disorders of life, our unfruitfulness of toil, arise from ignorance of the Scriptures. It is he, if I mistake not, the great expository preacher, never weary of his Bible, who says (or if the treatise is not his, it is from his school) that in the last and most trying days of Christendom all else shall fail; the institutions of the Church shall totter; but the Scriptures shall be the stay of the Church, and her portion for ever, yea, even in that dark hour.

V. To those Scriptures let us return, with the reverential study which understands them because, in the fear of God, it sympathises with them. In company with them let us live, and let us die. And meanwhile let us take our part with thankfulness and with hope in any work which seeks, through the Scriptures of the prophets and the apostles, to make known the mystery of redeeming love to all the nations, for the obedience of faith, and for the hope of glory.

Bishop H. C. G. Moule.

Illustration

Within Christendom, and beyond it, are amply, magnificently, visible to-day its promised effects. The entrance of the Word giveth light; it converteth the soul; it testifies of Christ; it prepares His way. That way the Bible, read altogether apart from the missionarys teaching, is preparing in innumerable hearts in India, Mahometan and Hindoo. And one mysterious story has reached me, on evidence which I think indubitable, of a community of Jews in Central Arabia, so isolated that they had never heard even a rumour of the name Jesus of Nazareth and who then, when their Rabbi received, from Cairo, sent by loving stealth, a copy of the New Testament in Hebrew, welcomed its witness at once, and owned Jesus as their true Messiah, and worshipped in His Name.

Fuente: Church Pulpit Commentary

:25

Rom 16:25. My Gospel means the Gospel that Paul was preaching, and that it was the power by which they were to be stablished (made firm), communicated to them by preaching. A mystery is anything not known, and such was the case regarding the great system of salvation through Christ.

Fuente: Combined Bible Commentary

Rom 16:25. Now to him, etc. This is the usual form in a doxology; the only wise God (Rom 16:27), is in apposition with Him, all that intervenes being descriptive. There is, however, a grammatical difficulty, owing to the change of construction in the latter part of Rom 16:27. The phrase on which all that precedes logically depends (be the glory) is placed in a dependent relative clause. Some have thought that in beginning the Apostle had in mind another form of expression than a doxology, and that the relative in Rom 16:27 refers to Christ, while others regard the relative as an interpolation (see below).

Who is able to stablish you. Comp. marginal references. This description of God is appropriate in this Epistle.

According to my gospel. It is difficult to determine the exact sense and connection of this phrase, but it seems best to join it with stablish, with the sense in reference to my gospel, that you may remain steadfastly faithful to the teaching I have set forth. Others give it the wider sense of in subordination to and according to the requirements of my gospel (so Alford). The explanation through is lexically untenable.

And the preaching of Jesus Christ. This is closely joined with the preceding phrase, and is probably an explanation of it; either the preaching concerning Christ, which is the substance of his gospel, or the preaching which Christ causes to be promulgated through him. Preaching here means the thing preached, and the former explanation is preferable, since it follows the analogy of the phrase the gospel of Christ. The Apostle would thus efface what might seem too personal in that noun, according to my gospel (Godet). To refer the phrase to the preaching of Christ himself when on earth, is unwarranted.

According to the revelation, etc. The connection of the clause here introduced has been explained in three ways: (1.) Coordinate with according to my gospel, etc., and thus closely connected with stablish. (2.) Explanatory of the whole preceding statement, and thus defining able to stablish, etc. (3.) Explanatory of my gospel and the preaching of Jesus Christ, connected with the verbal idea therein implied. The last seems least defensible grammatically. Either of the other two would be linguistically correct, but it is more probable that according to here has the same sense as before. We therefore prefer (1), which gives us another designation of the gospel, as the revelation of the primitive sacred mystery (Meyer).

Of the mystery. The article is wanting in the Greek, but what follows explains mystery as the specific one on which the Apostle delighted to dwell. On the word, see chap. Rom 11:25, but especially Eph 1:9. Here, as in Ephesians, the contents of this mystery are, in general, the salvation of sinful men, decreed from eternity, accomplished by Christ, proclaimed through the gospel to all men, so that this is the revelation of the mystery! But the Apostle in such expressions seems always to have in mind the extension of salvation to the Gentiles, so that they become one body with believing Jews (see Eph 3:3-9; Col 1:26). But the view we take of the connection prevents our limiting the reference to this extension.

Hath been kept in silence during eternal ages. The thought is a common one in the Apostles writings. Eternal ages include all the ages of human history, but also plainly suggest that eternal past when God formed his counsels of redemption (Eph 1:4). Since the world began (E. V.) needlessly limits the sense to the period since the creation.

Fuente: A Popular Commentary on the New Testament

Our apostle here concludes his excellent epistle with a solemn doxology or thanksgiving to God; in which he first describes God, and then ascribes eternal glory to him. He describes him both by his power and by his wisdom.

By his power first, To him that is able to establish you according to my gospel; that is, to establish you, in grace and truth, in faith and holiness, and to keep you from falling into sin and error. Such is our weakness and Satan’s power, that unless God confirm and establish us, we shall soon run into sin and danger.

Observe farther, The instrumental means which God makes use of for his people’s establishment; and that is, the gospel, and the preaching of Jesus Christ, the doctrine of the gospel which Christ and his apostle taught and delivered. This is called a mystery, kept secret since the world began, and now made manifest for the obedience of the faith; that is, that it may be believed and obeyed.

The second attribute in the description of God, is his wisdom: he is called the wise, the only wise God; not to exclude the Son and Holy Ghost, but the wisdom of the creature only. He is only wise originally, his wisdom is of himself: yea, his wisdom is himself: the wisdom of God is not a quality separable from himself, but is his very essence and nature.

He is only wise, because he is incomparably wise; there is none for wisdom can compare with him. He has wisdom in such a degree and eminency, that the very angels are chargeable with folly before him.

In a word, he is only wise, because all wisdom of angels and men is but a ray from his light, a drop from his ocean. And if so, then let the wisdom of God, in all his dealings with us and ours, be admired and adored by us; for all his works of providence are as orderly and perfect as his works of creation, though we perceive it not.

Now unto him that is able to keep us from falling, and to present us faultless before the presence of his glory with exceeding joy; to the only wise God our Saviour, be glory and majesty, dominion and power, now and ever. Amen.

Fuente: Expository Notes with Practical Observations on the New Testament

Rom 16:25-27. Now to him that is of power, , that is able, to establish you according to my gospel That is, in your belief of the great and important doctrines contained in it, particularly those that respect the gratuitous justification of Jews and Gentiles by faith. These doctrines he calls his gospel, or good news, not in contradistinction to the good news of the other apostles, as Locke fancies, to the great discredit of the rest, whose doctrine was the same with Pauls, so far as it went: but in opposition to the doctrines taught by the Judaizers, and other false teachers, who added the law to the gospel, on pretence that the gospel was defective in rites of atonement. This is not all: he doubtless desired also that they should be established in the possession of all Christian graces, particularly in the faith whereby the just live and walk; in that hope of life eternal which is as an anchor of the soul, sure and steadfast; and in that love to God, his people, and all mankind, in which whosoever abideth, dwelleth in God, and God in him; and in all other graces comprehended in, or flowing from these. He wished them to be established also in the steady, persevering performance of every Christian duty, whether toward God or man: or, in seeking glory, honour, and immortality; by a patient continuance in well-doing By being steadfast, unmoveable, always abounding in the work of the Lord: according to the revelation of the mystery Of the admission of the Gentiles into the church of God, without subjecting them to the law of Moses; which, as plainly as it was foretold in the prophets, was still hid from many even of the believing Jews, and is therefore called a mystery, (in allusion to the mysteries of the heathen, which used to be concealed from all but the initiated,) kept secret since the world began Or, as , may be rendered, kept in silence from eternal ages; or in all former ages from the beginning of the world. But now is made manifest By the preaching of the gospel; and by, or according to, the scriptures of the prophets, the meaning whereof is now set forth and elucidated by the revelation of the Spirit; not by chance, but according to the commandment (which is the chief foundation of the apostolical office) of the everlasting God A more proper epithet could not be used. A new dispensation infers no change in God. Known unto him are all his works, and every variation of them, from eternity. Made known to all nations To the Gentile nations as well as the people of Israel; for the obedience of the faith That they might not only know the blessings of the gospel, but enjoy them also, by believing in Christ, and in the truths and promises of his gospel, as they are commanded to do. To God only wise Whose manifold wisdom is known in the church through the gospel, and who has so prudently contrived, and so effectually executed, this grand scheme. Dr. Macknight renders the clause, To the wise God alone, thinking that is the true translation, both here and in 1Ti 1:17; Jdg 1:25; because, if the translation were to be, To the only wise God, it would imply that there are some gods who are not wise. Or if we render the clause, To God only wise, the reader might be apt to think that God hath no perfection but wisdom. Whereas the apostles meaning is, that glory ought to be ascribed to God alone in the highest degree: or that God alone is entitled thereto, in and of himself; all other beings, to whom any glory is due, deriving their title to it from the perfection which God has communicated to them, or the authority which he has bestowed on them: be glory in all the churches on earth, and in the general assembly and church of the firstborn in heaven; through Jesus Christ for ever Through his mediation and grace, through which alone guilty and sinful creatures can give glory to God in an acceptable manner; and let every believer say, Amen!

Thus endeth Pauls Epistle to the Romans; a writing which, for sublimity and truth of sentiment, for brevity and strength of expression, for regularity in its structure, but above all, for the unspeakable importance of the discoveries which it contains, stands unrivalled by any human composition; and as far exceeds the most celebrated productions of the learned Greeks and Romans, as the shining of the sun exceedeth the twinkling of the stars.

Fuente: Joseph Bensons Commentary on the Old and New Testaments

Thirty-first Passage (16:25-27). The Look Upward.

Could the apostle have closed such an Epistle with the words: and the brother Quartus? After the final benediction, he had added the salutations of some eminent brethren who surrounded him, and who were connected with certain members of the church of Rome. But could he, having reached the close of such a writing, fail once more to lift his eye upward and invoke on this work, the gravity of which he knew, and on the church for which it was intended, the blessing of Him who alone truly builds up and strengthens? He had done so several times, in the course of his writing, when concluding some important development. How could he avoid doing it with stronger reason at the close of the entire Epistle? In the somewhat exceptional presence of a doxology at the end of this letter, there is therefore nothing which of itself can inspire the least suspicion.

Our one task is to examine whether this passage comes up to the elevation of the apostle’s mind, and agrees with his mode of writing; and then, if as a whole and in its details it possesses satisfactory appropriateness.

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

Now to him that is able to establish you [i. e., to the one who has given you an eternal foundation for your life (Mat 7:24-27) and is able to build you as enduring material thereon (1Co 3:10-17). Comp. Rom 1:11] according to my gospel and the preaching of Jesus Christ [Establish you according to, or in conformity with, the terms, conditions, means, grace and power found in that gospel which was revealed to me personally (Rom 2:16; Gal 1:11-17), even the heavenly truth contained in the preaching of Jesus Christ, who is the core and heart of that gospel. (Comp. Rom 1:3; Rom 2:16; Rom 10:8-12; Gal 1:6-8) Paul’s gospel did not differ from that committed to the twelve, but he calls it specifically “my gospel” because it was delivered to him in lessons where he was the sole pupil (Gal 1:12), and because his spiritual discernment, coupled with his special commission as apostle to the Gentiles, enabled him to see clearly two things in the gospel which were but faintly comprehended by the others; viz., that gospel salvation is wholly gratuitous and is not partly gratuitous and partly a matter of purchase by obedience to the Mosaic law (Gal 5:1-12); that it is universal to all who are obedient unto the faith, and is in no sense confined to the Jews or their proselytes– Gal 3:26-29], according to the revelation of the mystery which hath been kept in silence through times eternal [Establish you by the gospel and preaching which accords with or is true to the revelation or unveiling of the great mystery or secret; i. e., the divine purpose of God to save the world by the sacrifice of his Son–a secret of times eternal (2Ti 1:9; Tit 1:2), known only to the Father, and therefore capable of no revelation till his voice broke silence as to it. Comp. Mat 24:36; Mar 13:32; 1Pe 1:12; Act 1:7],

Fuente: McGarvey and Pendleton Commentaries (New Testament)

25. To him who is able to establish you according to my gospel according to the revelation of the mystery having been hidden through eternal times,

Fuente: William Godbey’s Commentary on the New Testament

Rom 16:25-27. The Closing Doxology.As to the place of this passage, see Introd. 4. At first sight, it looks like a paragraph strayed from Ephesians, Colossians, or the Pastorals (see the Revised parallel references); close examination shows it relevant enough to this epistle.

Rom 16:25 f. Paul renders praise to him that is able (cf. Eph 3:20) to establish youhis own earnest longing (Rom 1:11; cf. Rom 14:4)according to my gospel (as in Rom 2:16; cf. 2Ti 2:8) and the proclamation of Jesus Christ (in the style of 1Co 1:21-24; 1Co 15:14). For obedience of faith made known unto all the nations carries us back to Rom 1:5; Rom 1:13-15, while the expression through prophetic scriptures almost repeats that of Rom 1:2, having no other parallel in Paul; the epistle teems with references to the OT prophets.The mystery held in silence in times eternal (2Ti 1:9 f., Tit 1:2 f.), but now made manifest, is Gods purpose to impart to the Gentiles the Messianic salvation (cf. Rom 1:5; Rom 1:16, Rom 10:12, Rom 15:7-13)the secret of the Cross (see 1Co 2:6-9); Eph 2:14-22; Eph 3:4-6, unfolds the further, consequent mystery of their incorporation in the universal Church (p. 812). The parallel expressions, according to my gospel and the preaching, etc., and according to the revelation, etc., point to the human and Divine activities co-operating to establish Roman believers: we preach ChristGod reveals the mystery of His eternal grace (cf. Mat 16:17, Eph 1:17 ff.). Manifested now (the Greek order) and through prophetic scriptures (remove the comma of EV); the mystery revealed in the Gospel was foreshadowed by the old Economy (cf. Rom 3:21). The mandate of the eternal God (cf. 1Ti 1:1, Tit 1:3) directed alike the present unveiling and the earlier hidden preparations for the bringing about of faith-obedience; for this end Gods great secret has been made known unto all the nations.

Rom 16:27. To whom is probably an early textual blunder, due to Gal 1:5 and 2Ti 4:18, or introduced through liturgical usage. With the deletion (mg.) of the relative pronoun (a single Greek letter), which throws grammatical confusion into this noble passage, the Doxology concludes by resuming and completing its overture: To the only, the wise God (cf. 1Ti 1:17; 1Ti 6:15 f.) through Jesus Christ be glory for ever! Only and wise are distinct attributes: He is the one God (Rom 3:29 f.), whose sovereign counsel wisely disposes the successive epochs of revelation and dispenses its manifold gifts; see Rom 11:33-36.

The epistle ends in the sublime and stately fashion of its beginning.

Fuente: Peake’s Commentary on the Bible

16:25 {7} Now to him that is of power to stablish you according to my gospel, and the preaching of Jesus Christ, according to the revelation of the {l} mystery, which was kept secret since the world began,

(7) He sets forth the power and wisdom of God with great thanksgiving, which especially appears in the gospel, and makes mention also of the calling of the Gentiles, to confirm the Romans in the hope of this salvation.

(l) That secret and hidden thing, that is to say, the calling of the Gentiles.

Fuente: Geneva Bible Notes

5. A doxology 16:25-27

The apostle brought together words and ideas from his earlier epistles as well as from this one in this doxology.

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

The apostle was confident that God could do for his readers what they needed (cf. Rom 1:11; Eph 3:20). The gospel is God’s chief tool to that end. "My gospel" identifies the one that Paul had preached widely and had expounded in this epistle. The "preaching of Jesus Christ" is another name for the gospel that stresses its subject, Jesus Christ. Proclamation follows revelation. The gospel had been hidden in eternity past until God revealed it first in the Old Testament and then fully in the New (cf. Rom 11:25; Gal 1:12; Gal 1:15-16; Eph 3:9; Col 1:26; Col 4:3).

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