Biblia

Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Romans 3:25

Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Romans 3:25

Whom God hath set forth [to be] a propitiation through faith in his blood, to declare his righteousness for the remission of sins that are past, through the forbearance of God;

25. hath set forth ] Lit. did set forth; the aorist (see on Rom 3:23). The Gr. verb bears also the derived meaning “to purpose, design,” (so Eph 1:9), which would not be unsuitable here. But the E. V. is made more probable by the context, which dwells on the fact of the manifestation of redemption.

a propitiation ] The Gr. word is only found elsewhere in N. T., Heb 9:5, where it means the golden lid of the Ark, the “Mercy-seat.” (In 1Jn 2:2 ; 1Jn 4:10, where E. V. has “propitiation,” the Gr. has another but cognate word.) The translation “Mercy-seat” is insisted on here by many commentators, and it is a fact on their side that in the LXX. the Gr. word is always used locally, of the Mercy-seat, or the like. But on the other side are the facts (1) that the word, as to its form, can quite well mean a price of expiation; (2) that it is found, though very rarely, in that sense in secular Greek; and above all (3) that the context here is strongly in favour of the sense “an expiatory offering.” He becomes “a propitiation” to the soul “ through faith in His blood; ” an expression which naturally points to the Victim, not the Mercy-seat, as the type in view.

through faith ] This, as always in the Scripture doctrine of salvation, is the necessary medium of application. In Himself the Saviour is what He is, always and absolutely; to the soul He is what He is, as Saviour, only when approached by faith; i.e. accepted, in humble trust in the Divine word, as the sole way of mercy. The progress of the Epistle will be abundant commentary.

in his blood ] The same construction as in Gr. of Mar 1:15: “believe in the Gospel.” The idea is of faith as a hand, or anchor, finding a hold in the object. Here first in the Epistle the holy Blood is mentioned; once again at ch. Rom 5:9, in precisely the same connexion. For similar mentions see Mat 26:28; Joh 6:53-56; Act 20:28; Eph 1:7; Col 1:20; Heb 9:12; Heb 9:14; Heb 9:22; Heb 10:19; Heb 12:24; Heb 13:12; Heb 13:20; 1Pe 1:2 ; 1Pe 1:19; 1Jn 1:7; Rev 1:5; Rev 5:9; Rev 7:14; Rev 12:11.

to declare his righteousness ] Lit. to be a demonstration, or display, of his righteousness. The Redeemer’s expiatory death, and the gift of pardon solely “through faith in” it, explained beyond all doubt that the Divine mercy did not mean indifference to the Divine Law. Many questions regarding the atonement may be beyond our knowledge; but this at least is “declared,” as the sinful soul contemplates it. Here, probably, the phrase “Righteousness of God” bears a sense (suggested in the note) exceptional to the rule given in note on Rom 1:17. But the meaning as in Rom 1:17 is not wholly out of place.

for the remission, &c.] Lit. on account of the letting-pass of the fore-gone sins in the forbearance of God. Almost every word here needs special notice. “ Letting-pass: ” a word weaker than full and free pardon, and thus specially appropriate to God’s dealings with sin before the Gospel, when there was just this reserve about the forgiveness, that the Reason of it was not fully revealed. “ Fore-gone, or fore-done, sins: ” i.e., those before the Gospel. These are specially mentioned here, not because sin was more, or less, sinful then than now, but because the matter in hand here is the display of the righteousness of the Divine pardon of any sin. Cp. Heb 9:16. “ In the forbearance, &c.:” perhaps = in the time when God forebore, i.e. did not punish sin, though without a fully-revealed propitiation. But the words may mean, practically, as E. V., through, &c.; i.e. “His forbearance was the cause of that letting-pass; of that ‘obscure’ pardon.” Lastly, “ On account of the letting-pass: ” the point of this phrase will now be clear. The pardon of sinners under the O. T., being (in a certain sense) unexplained, demanded such a display at last of the Righteousness of Pardon as was made in the Cross.

Fuente: The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges

Whom God hath set forth – Margin, Fore-ordained ( proetheto). The word properly means, to place in public view; to exhibit in a conspicuous situation, as goods are exhibited or exposed for sale, or as premiums or rewards of victory were exhibited to public view in the games of the Greeks. It sometimes has the meaning of decreeing, purposing, or constituting, as in the margin (compare Rom 1:13; Eph 1:9); and many have supposed that this is its meaning here. But the connection seems to require the usual signification of the word; and it means that God has publicly exhibited Jesus Christ as a propitiatory sacrifice for the sins of people. This public exhibition was made by his being offered on the cross, in the face of angels and of people. It was not concealed; it was done openly. He was put to open shame; and so put to death as to attract toward the scene the eyes of angels, and of the inhabitants of all worlds.

To be a propitiation – hilasterion. This word occurs but in one other place in the New Testament. Heb 9:5, and over it (the ark) the cherubim of glory shadowing the mercy-seat. It is used here to denote the lid or cover of the ark of the covenant. It was made of gold, and over it were the cherubim. In this sense it is often used by the Septuagint Exo 25:17, And thou shalt make a propitiatory hilasterion of gold, Exo. 18-20, 22; Exo 30:6; Exo 31:7; Exo 35:11; Exo 37:6-9; Exo 40:18; Lev 16:2, Lev 16:13. The Hebrew name for this was kaphoreth, from the verb kaaphar, to cover or to conceal. It was from this place that God was represented as speaking to the children of Israel. Exo 25:22, and I will speak to thee from above the Hilasterion, the propitiatory, the mercy-seat. Lev 16:2, For I will appear in the cloud upon the mercy-seat. This seat, or cover, was covered with the smoke of the incense, when the high priest entered the most holy place, Lev 16:13.

And the blood of the bullock offered on the great day of atonement, was to be sprinkled upon the mercy-seat, and before the mercy-seat, seven times, Lev 16:14-15. This sprinkling or offering of blood was called making an atonement for the holy place because of the uncleanness of the children of Israel, etc. Lev 16:16. It was from this mercy-seat that God pronounced pardon, or expressed himself as reconciled to his people. The atonement was made, the blood was sprinkled, and the reconciliation thus effected. The name was thus given to that cover of the ark, because it was the place from which God declared himself reconciled to his people. Still the inquiry is, why is this name given to Jesus Christ? In what sense is he declared to be a propitiation? It is evident that it cannot be applied to him in any literal sense. Between the golden cover of the ark of the covenant and the Lord Jesus, the analogy must be very slight, if any such analogy can be perceived. We may observe, however,

(1) That the main idea, in regard to the cover of the ark called the mercy-seat, was that of Gods being reconciled to his people; and that this is the main idea in regard to the Lord Jesus whom God hath set forth.

(2) This reconciliation was effected then by the sprinkling of blood on the mercy-seat, Lev 16:15-16. The same is true of the Lord Jesus – by blood.

(3) In the former case it was by the blood of atonement; the offering of the bullock on the great day of atonement, that the reconciliation was effected, Lev 16:17-18. In the case of the Lord Jesus it was also by blood; by the blood of atonement. But it was by his own blood. This the apostle distinctly states in this verse.

(4) In the former case there was a sacrifice, or expiatory offering; and so it is in reconciliation by the Lord Jesus. In the former, the mercy-seat was the visible, declared place where God would express his reconciliation with his people. So in the latter, the offering of the Lord Jesus is the manifest and open way by which God will be reconciled to people.

(5) In the former, there was joined the idea of a sacrifice for sin, Lev. 16. So in the latter. And hence, the main idea of the apostle here is to convey the idea of a sacrifice for sin; or to set forth the Lord Jesus as such a sacrifice. Hence, the word propitiation in the original may express the idea of a propitiatory sacrifice, as well as the cover to the ark. The word is an adjective, and may be joined to the noun sacrifice, as well as to denote the mercy-seat of the ark. This meaning accords also with its classic meaning to denote a propitiatory offering, or an offering to produce reconciliation. Christ is thus represented, not as a mercy-seat, which would be unintelligible; but as the medium, the offering, the expiation, by which reconciliation is produced between God and man.

Through faith – Or by means of faith. The offering will be of no avail without faith. The offering has been made; but it will not be applied, except where there is faith. He has made an offering which may be efficacious in putting away sin; but it produces no reconciliation, no pardon, except where it is accepted by faith.

In his blood – Or in his death – his bloody death. Among the Jews, the blood was regarded as the seat of life, or vitality. Lev 17:11, the life of the flesh is in the blood. Hence, they were commanded not to eat blood. Gen 9:4, but flesh with the life thereof, which is the blood thereof, shall ye not eat. Lev 19:26; Deu 12:23; 1Sa 14:34. This doctrine is contained uniformly in the Sacred Scriptures. And it has been also the opinion of not a few celebrated physiologists, as well in modern as in ancient times. The same was the opinion of the ancient Parsees and Hindus. Homer thus often speaks of blood as the seat of life, as in the expression porphureos thanatos, or purple death. And Virgil speaks of purple life,

Purpuream vomit ille animam.

AEniad, ix. 349.

Empedocles and Critias among the Greek philosophers, also embraced this opinion. Among the moderns, Harvey, to whom we are indebted for a knowledge of the circulation of the blood, fully believed it. Hoffman and Huxham believed it Dr. John Hunter has fully adopted the belief, and sustained it, as he supposed, by a great variety of considerations. See Goods Book of Nature, pp. 102, 108, New York edition, 1828. This was undoubtedly the doctrine of the Hebrews; and hence, with them to shed the blood was a phrase signifying to kill; hence, the efficacy of their sacrifices was supposed to consist in the blood, that is, in the life of the victim. Hence, it was unlawful to eat it, as it were the life, the seat of vitality; the more immediate and direct gift of God. When, therefore, the blood of Christ is spoken of in the New Testament, it means the offering of his life as a sacrifice, or his death as an expiation. His life was given to make atonement. See the word blood thus used in Rom 5:9; Eph 1:7; Col 1:14; Heb 9:12, Heb 9:14; Heb 13:12; Rev 1:5; 1Pe 1:19; 1Jo 1:7. By faith in his death as a sacrifice for sin; by believing that he took our sins; that he died in our place; by thus, in some sense, making his offering ours; by approving it, loving it, embracing it, trusting it, our sins become pardoned, and our souls made pure.

To declare – eis endeixis. For the purpose of showing, or exhibiting; to present it to man. The meaning is, that the plan was adopted; the Saviour was given; he suffered and died: and the scheme is proposed to people, for the purpose of making a full manifestation of his plan, in contradistinction from all the plans of people.

His righteousness – His plan of justification. The method or scheme which he has adopted, in distinction from that of man; and which he now exhibits, or proffers to sinners. There is great variety in the explanation of the word here rendered righteousness. Some explain it as meaning veracity; others as holiness; others as goodness; others as essential justice. Most interpreters, perhaps, have explained it as referring to an attribute of God. But the whole connection requires us to understand it here as in Rom 1:17, not of an attribute of God, but of his plan of justifying sinners. He has adopted and proposed a plan by which people may become just by faith in Jesus Christ, and not by their own works. His acquitting people from sin; his regarding them and treating them as just, is set forth in the gospel by the offering of Jesus Christ as a sacrifice on the cross. (For the true meaning of this phrase, see the note at Rom 1:17; Rom 3:22.)

For the remission of sins – Margin, Passing over. The word used here paresin occurs no where else in the New Testament, nor in the Septuagint. It means passing by, as not noticing, and hence, forgiving. A similar idea occurs in 2Sa 24:10, and Mic 7:18. Who is a God like unto thee, that passeth by the transgression of the remnant of his inheritance? In Romans it means for the pardoning, or in order to pardon past transgression.

That are past – That have been committed; or that have existed before. This has been commonly understood to refer to past generations, as affirming that sins under all dispensations of the world are to be forgiven in this manner, through the sacrifice of Christ. And it has been supposed that all who have been justified, have received pardon by the merits of the sacrifice of Christ. This may be true; but there is no reason to think that this is the idea in this passage. For,

(1) The scope of the passage does not require it. The argument is not to show how people had been justified, but how they might be. It is not to discuss an historical fact, but to state the way in which sin was to be forgiven under the gospel.

(2) The language has no immediate or necessary reference to past generations. It evidently refers to the past lives of the individuals who are justified, and not to the sins of former times. All that the passage means, therefore, is, that the plan of pardon is such as completely to remove all the former sins of the life, not of all former generations. If it referred to the sins of former times, it would not be easy to avoid the doctrine of universal salvation.

(The design of the apostle is to showy the alone ground of a sinners justification. That ground is the righteousness of God. To manifest this righteousness, Christ had been set forth in the beginning of the gospel age as a propitiatory sacrifice. But though at this time manifested or declared, it had in reality been the ground of justification all along. Believers in every past dispensation, looking forward to the period of its revelation, had built their hopes on it, and been admitted into glory.

The idea of manifestation in gospel times, seems most intimately connected with the fact that in past ages, the ground of pardon had been hidden, or at best but dimly seen through type and ceremony. There seems little doubt that these two things were associated in the apostles mind. Though the ground of Gods procedure in remitting the sins of his people, during the former economy, had long been concealed, it was now gloriously displayed before the eyes of the universe. Paul has the very same idea in Heb 9:15, And for this cause he is the Mediator of the New Testament, that by means of death, for the redemption of the transgressions that were under the first testament, they which are called might receive the promise of eternal inheritance. It may be noticed also that the expression in Heb 9:20, at this time, that is, in the gospel age, requires us to understand the other clause, sins that are past, as pointing to sin committed under former dispensations. Nor is there any fear of lending support to the doctrine of universal salvation. if we espouse this view. the sins remitted in past ages being obviously those of believers only. The very same objection might be urged against the parallel passage in Heb 9:15.)

Through the forbearance of God – Through his patience, his long-suffering. That is, he did not come forth in judgment when the sin was committed; he spared us, though deserving of punishment; and now he comes forth completely to pardon those sins concerning which he has so long and so graciously exercised forbearance. This expression obviously refers not to the remission of sins, but to the fact that they were committed while he evinced such long-suffering; compare Act 17:30. I do not know better how to show the practical value and bearing of this important passage of Scripture, than by transcribing a part of the affecting experience of the poet Cowper. It is well known that before his conversion he was oppressed by a long and dreadful melancholy; that this was finally heightened to despair; and that he was then subjected to the kind treatment of Dr. Cotton in Albans, as a melancholy case of derangement.

His leading thought was that he was doomed to inevitable destruction, and that there was no hope. From this he was roused only by the kindness of his brother, and by the promises of the gospel; (see Taylors Life of Cowper). The account of his conversion I shall now give in his own words. The happy period, which was to shake off my fetters, and afford me a clear discovery of the free mercy of God in Christ Jesus, was now arrived. I flung myself into a chair near the window, and seeing a Bible there, ventured once more to apply to it for comfort and instruction. The first verse I saw was Rom 3:25; Whom God hath set forth, etc. Immediately I received strength to believe, and the full beam of the Sun of righteousness shone upon me. I saw the sufficiency of the atonement he had made for my pardon and justification. In a moment I believed, and received the peace of the gospel. Unless, the Almighty arm had been under me, I think I should have been overwhelmed with gratitude and joy. My eyes filled with tears, and my voice choked with transport. I could only look up to heaven in silent fear, overwhelmed with love and wonder. How glad should I now have been to have spent every moment in prayer and thanksgiving. I lost no opportunity of repairing to a throne of grace; but flew to it with an earnestness irresistible, and never to be satisfied.

Fuente: Albert Barnes’ Notes on the Bible

Rom 3:25

Whom God hath set forth to be a propitiation:

I.

Speak of Christ as a propitiation, or show what His being said to be a propitiation for sin may imply in it–

1. That He was appointed by God the Father to make an atonement for the sins of men.

2. That He was substituted in the room of sinners, and in suffering and making satisfaction to Divine justice for their sins, represented their persons, and was considered as one with them in the eye of the law.

3. That He condescended to take upon Him all the guilt of His people.

4. That He suffered the punishment which His people deserved on account of their sins.

5. That all who have an interest in His death, and the sacrifice which He offered, are freed from the guilt of sin, and are no more liable to the punishment of it.

6. That by suffering the death threatened in the law for the transgression of it, and satisfying the demands of justice in the room of sinners, He laid the foundation of a throne of grace, to which the most destitute, yea, the most guilty belonging to the fallen race of Adam have free access, and from which God dispenses to them all blessings, without eclipsing the glory of His justice, holiness, and other glorious perfections.


II.
Christs being set forth as a propitiation, for the benefit of sinners guilty before God, and condemned to everlasting death by His law.

1. Christ may be said to have been set forth to be a propitiation in the purpose and decree of God from eternity.

2. Christ was exhibited as a propitiation in the first gospel promise (Gen 3:15).

3. Christ was set forth as a propitiation in all the types and ceremonies belonging to the Old Testament economy, particularly in the legal sacrifices, all which were typical of that great sacrifice which the Son of God, the promised Messiah, was to offer in the human nature for expiating the guilt of sin.

4. Christ was exhibited as a propitiation in the several prophecies and promises respecting Him that were delivered to the Church under the Old Testament dispensation.

5. Christ was set forth as a propitiation in His incarnation and assumption of the human nature.

6. The Lord Jesus is exhibited, or set forth, as a propitiation in the dispensation of the everlasting gospel: The very design of the gospel is to exhibit a crucified Redeemer to guilty sinners. Hence the preaching of the gospel is called the preaching of the Cross, and the preaching of Christ crucified.

7. Christ is set forth as a propitiation in the sacraments of the New Testament, particularly in the Lords Supper.


III.
Confirm the doctrine, or show that as Jesus Christ is by the authority and appointment of the great Jehovah set forth to guilty sinners as a propitiation, all to whom the gospel comes, may warrantably claim the benefit of that propitiation in a way of believing. This is abundantly evident from the words of the text; for the gospel is preached by Divine appointment to every creature, and in it Christ is set forth as a propitiation to every sinner that hears it. It is further evident

1. From the types that prefigured Him under the Old Testament economy. The manna which was rained from heaven for nourishing the Israelites in the wilderness (Exo 14:13-16) was a remarkable type of Christ, who is the Bread of Life; is such as a propitiation, for He is said to have given His flesh, namely by offering it as a sacrifice to expiate the guilt of sin, for the life of the world (Joh 6:51); and it was what everyone belonging to the camp of Israel might warrantably gather and apply to his own use (Exo 16:15). The brazen serpent was also a type of Christ, and that was lifted up on a pole for the benefit of all belonging to the congregation of Israel, so that every one of them that had been wounded by the fiery serpents was authorised to look to it in order to his being healed (Num 21:8-9; Joh 3:14-15). The scapegoat was also a remarkable type of Christ, and designed to prefigure the efficacy of His death for procuring the remission of sins to all who believe in Him.

2. That all who hear the gospel may warrantably claim the benefit of the New Testament propitiation spoken of in the text, or trust in the Lord Jesus for the remission of sins, is evident from the similitudes under which Christ and His grace are set forth to us in Scripture (Zec 13:1; Rev 22:2; Isa 25:6; Pro 9:1-5; Mat 22:4).

3. The truth of the doctrine is further evident from the very nature of the gospel, which is not a system of precepts requiring of men obedience to the law of God, to any law whatsoever, as the condition of life, but consists wholly of gracious promises exhibiting life, salvation, and all spiritual blessings freely, as the gift of God to perishing sinners.

4. The same thing is evident from the declared end and design of the gospel, which is that sinners may believe in Christ revealed and exhibited in it (Joh 20:31).

5. That all who hear the gospel have a sufficient warrant to claim the benefit of the propitiation spoken of in the text, or to apply Christ and the benefits of redemption to their own souls, appears from the many gracious calls and invitations addressed to sinners in the gospel.

6. The peremptory command of God binding it upon all the hearers of the gospel, as their indispensable duty, to believe on the name of His Son, puts the matter beyond all debate (1Jn 3:23).


IV.
Practical improvement of the doctrine.

1. The great error of Socinians who deny that Christ died to make an atonement for sin, and satisfy the justice of God in the room of sinners, by suffering the punishment which their sins deserved; or that the sacrifice which He offered was a proper sacrifice.

2. Hence we may learn, that men by nature are in a most wretched and deplorable condition. They are under guilt and wrath, otherwise there would have been no need to offer a propitiatory sacrifice for them.

3. Hence let us take occasion to admire the love of God toward sinners of mankind, manifested in providing such a sacrifice.

4. Hence we may see what was the great end of the Redeemers incarnation, and of His taking our nature into a personal union with Himself.

5. Hence we may learn what was the nature, end, and use of all the sacrifices that were offered by Divine appointment under the Old Testament dispensation. They had no merit or efficacy for satisfying the justice of God and appeasing His wrath. They were only typical of that sacrifice which the Messiah was to offer in the fulness of time for these ends.

6. From what has been said we may see that the dispensation of the gospel in purity is a great privilege, an inestimable blessing. (D. Wilson.)

Propitiation through faith in Christs blood


I.
Christ, a propitiation. Sin draws on the sinner the holy anger of God, although it cannot quench the love of God. And that it could not quench His love is shown by His providing and setting forth as a propitiation His own Son, through whom He can look on us with anger no more, but with complacency. This He has done. It often costs us much, we have often got much to get over in order to let the affection that there is in our heart towards some human being have its way, to help and succour him on account of some waywardness in him. What would not the father or mother of a profligate child give to be able to lavish on the degraded being tokens of affection as freely as they did when they folded him in their arms a happy innocent child, if they felt they could do so without their goodness being abused by him to his own hurt and to their shame, or being regarded by him as a proof that they did not look on his vices with any great detestation or sorrow? What the sacrifice of Gods only-begotten and well-beloved Son involved to Him, we vainly attempt to conceive. He spared not His own Son, but gave Him up to the death for us all. Mark that it is not said here that the Saviour has made propitiation, but that He is a propitiation. So speaks also the Apostle John: He is the propitiation for our sins. In the Saviour Himself, in the living person of the God-man, is found the ground of pardon and acceptance. The virtue of His obedience and death is centred in His person, and radiates from it.


II.
The way in which propitiation is effected. Christ is a propitiation through faith in His blood. By His blood and by faith–not faith in His blood–but by His blood, by which He expiated sin, He is a propitiation by faith as the subjective means of appropriation of this propitiation. You must look, on the one hand, to Christs sacrificial death, and on the other to faith in Christ, in order to account for the sinner being received into the favour of God and being reconciled to Him.

1. It was by the giving of His holy life in sacrifice that Jesus propitiated God on our behalf, or appeased the wrath, and delivered us from the curse of God due for sin.

2. Christ is only actually and effectually a propitiation to you and to me, if we believe in Him. He is a propitiation only through faith. In this the righteousness of God is also seen. It were unrighteous to justify any but him who believed in Jesus, or for God to be propitiated through Christ on behalf of anyone who did not believe on Christ. For through faith we come into a life-union with the Son of God.


III.
Christ, as our propitiation, is set forth by God. That type of Christ of old, which furnishes the name and explains the aspect under which Christ is set forth here, the propitiation, propitiatory, or mercy seat, was hid in the innermost shrine of the dwelling place of God. It was seen by no mortal eye but that of the high priest, and that only when, once a year, he entered with awed spirit behind the veil. But Jesus Christ, the great reality, of which that golden throne of grace was the sign and shadow, is not hidden, but is openly set forth. In word and ordinance He is exhibited.

1. There is the Bible, about which such daring opinions nowadays are ventured, and of which, in their secret hearts, many have doubts and sentiments which they would not dare to utter; which many, who read so much that is deleterious, never or rarely open; which many read so carelessly and to so little purpose! My friend, hast thou ever thought that in that Book God has set forth His Son as a propitiation? This is the great end for which it is written.

2. There is the everlasting gospel, which is of small account with many, a weariness, a superfluity, which even in their view might be banished from the sanctuary; or, if it cannot be banished, may be thrust as far as possible into a corner, and its place supplied very pleasantly by something that will soothe and regale the senses and the taste. But oh! see that you are not blind to what is set forth in the garb of His words and thoughts–Jesus Christ the propitiation through faith in His blood. See above all that you do not forget that, though with mans voice, and in mans language, and often with much weakness, yet God is really setting forth Christ as a propitiation.

3. In the sacraments God so sets forth His Son. (W. Wilson, M. A.)

Christ the propitiation


I.
As set forth by God.

1. The words set forth signify foreordained; and also places in public view; as goods are exposed for sale, or as rewards of victory were exhibited in the Grecian Games. So has God made conspicuous Jesus as the propitiation of sin.

(1) By Divine decree. Christ did not take upon Himself the office of High Priest without being chosen thereunto. But this was not independent of His own choice, for in the volume of the Book it is written of Him, I delight to do Thy will, O God.

(2) In His promises before the Advent did not God speak constantly, by verbal and typical promises, to multitudes of holy men the coming of Him who should bruise the serpents head, and deliver His people from the power of the curse?

(3) When Christ came God set Him forth by angelic messengers, and by the star in the East. Throughout His life, how constantly did His Father set Him forth! The voice of God was in the voice of John, Behold the Lamb of God which taketh away the sin of the world. And on the Cross itself, when it pleased the Father to bruise Him, and put Him to grief, what an exhibition was there to the eye of Jew and Gentile of the propitiation!

(4) When the Holy Ghost came down on Pentecost! And what have all conversions been since but repeated seals to the same testimony?

(5) In you God has graciously fulfilled the text.

2. What it is that God has so manifestly set forth. The Greek word may mean–

(1) A mercy seat. Now God hath said to the sinner, Do you desire to meet Me? would you be no longer My enemy? would you receive My blessing? I set forth Christ to you as being the Mercy seat, where I can meet you and you Me.

(2) A covering; as the mercy seat covered the tables of the law, and so covered that which was the cause of Divine ire, because we had broken His commandment. Wouldst thou have anything which can cover thy sin from Me, so that I need not be provoked to anger; from you so that you need not tremble? Wouldst thou have a shelter which shall hide altogether thy sins? I set it forth to thee in Jesus. Trust in His blood, and thy sin is covered.

3. God has set forth Christ before every one of you, in the preaching of the Word, and in the Inspired Book, as dying, that your sins might die; buried, that your iniquities might be buried; risen, that you might rise to newness of life; ascended, that you might ascend to God; received in triumph, that you might be received in triumph too; made to reign, that you might reign in Him; forever loved, forever crowned, that you in Him may be forever loved and forever crowned too.


II.
As looked upon by the believer.

1. We may mistake the proper object of faith. We may look on–

(1) Repentance as a grace, indeed, without which there can be no salvation, but an act which may be substituted for faith in the propitiation.

(2) Evidences. Evidences are good as second things, but as first things they are usurpers, and may prove anti-Christs.

(3) Gods promises. I know many Christians who, when they are in distress, take up the Bible to find a promise–a very good plan, if they go to Christ first. There is a man who very much desires an estate, at the same time his heart is smitten with the beauty of some fair heiress. He gets the title deeds of her estate. Well, the title deeds are good, but the estates are not his, though he has got the title deeds. By and by he marries the lady, and everything is his own. Get the heiress and you have got the estate. It is so in Christ; promises are the title deeds of His estates. A man may get the promise and not get Christ, then they will be of no use to him.

2. God has set forth Christ to be the propitiation through faith in His blood, and we ought to accept that as being–

(1) An all-sufficient propitiation. We have never got the full idea of Christ till we know that every sin of thought, of word, of deed finds its death.

(2) An immutable propitiation. Our standing before God, when we have believed in Jesus, depends no more upon our frames and feelings than the sun depends upon the clouds and darkness that are here below.


III.
As set forth by us and looked upon by God.

1. If in this pulpit Christ be set forth, God will look down upon that Christ set forth, and honour and bless the word. I might preach clear doctrine, but God might never look down upon doctrine, nor upon moral essays, nor upon philosophy. God will not look down on any mans ministry unless that man sets forth what God sets forth. Then His Word shall not return unto Him void; it shall prosper in the thing whereto He hath sent it.

2. As in the case of the ministry, so you in your pleadings for souls must set forth Christ. Abels blood demanded vengeance; Christs blood demands pardons and must have it.

3. As in pleading for the souls of others, so in pleading for our own we must set forth the propitiation. (C. H. Spurgeon.)

Christ the propitiation

In the only other place where the word occurs in the New Testament (Heb 9:5) it is rendered mercy seat.


I.
To the institution of the mercy seat, therefore, we must look, that we may rightly understand the allusion (Exo 25:17). It is from this description that the appellation is given to Jehovah of the God that dwelleth between the cherubim, an appellation, therefore, equivalent in import to the God of mercy, the God of all grace, the God of peace: and the position of the mercy seat or propitiatory, upon the ark of the testimony, seems to indicate that His appearing, in this benign character, to commune with guilty creatures, was in full consistency with the claims and sanctions of His perfect law; so that when Jehovah thus manifested Himself. Mercy and truth met together, righteousness and peace embraced each other. All this cannot fail to remind us of Him who received from God the Father honour and glory, when there came such a voice to Him from the excellent glory, This is My beloved Son, in whom I am well pleased. It is in Him, as the subject either of promise, of prophecy, of type, or of direct testimony, that God has from the beginning made Himself known to men in the character of the God of peace. It is in Him that He reconciles sinners to Himself, not imputing their trespasses unto them.


II.
Had nothing more been said of the mercy seat, we might have been led to conclude that Jehovah appeared there in the exercise of mere mercy, apart from any satisfaction for sin. We must, therefore, connect this description of the mercy seat with the account given of the manner in which it was to be approached by the worshipper (Lev 16:2; Lev 16:11-12). It was to be approached with the blood of atonement (verses 6, 30, 34), which was sprinkled on and before the mercy seat; and while the sacrificial blood was thus presented, the burning incense was to diffuse its grateful odour, in emblematic testimony of the Divine satisfaction; which is, accordingly, elsewhere expressed in connection with the sacrifice of Christ, and the offerings by which it was typified, by Jehovahs smelling a sweet savour (cf. Gen 8:21 with Eph 5:2; Rev 8:3; and see also Psa 141:2)

. The mercy seat, then, in order to Jehovahs appearing there, consistently with the glory of His name, as the God of grace, must be stained with the blood of sprinkling, the blood that maketh atonement for the soul; and in this is set before us the necessity of the shedding of the blood of Christ, in order to Gods being in Him well-pleased. And, agreeably to this, the Divine declaration from the excellent glory, of satisfaction in His well-beloved Son, was made in connection with the subject of conference on the holy mount–the decease which Jesus was to accomplish at Jerusalem.


III.
The proper idea of propitiation is, rendering the Divine Being favourable.

1. We must, beware, however, of understanding by this anything like the production of a change in the Divine character; as if God required an inducement to be merciful. We ought to conceive of Jehovah as eternally compassionate and merciful. But while God is infinitely and immutably good, He is at the same time infinitely and immutably holy and just and true. Never ought we to speak of Him as acting at one time according to mercy, and at another according to justice. His attributes, though we may speak of them distinctly, are inseparable in their exercise.

2. What, then, is the light in which the idea of atonement places the Divine Being? As a righteous Governor Jehovah is displeased with His guilty creatures; while, at the same time, from the infinite benignity of His nature, He is inclined to forgiveness. But if His government is righteous, its claims, in their full extent, must of necessity be maintained inviolate. The great question, then, on this momentous subject comes to be: In what manner may forgiveness be extended to the guilty, so as to satisfy the claims of justice? The rendering of the Divine Being propitious, in this view, refers, it is obvious, not to the production of love in His character, but simply to the mode of its expression. The inquiry is, How may God express love so as to express at the same time abhorrence of sin; and thus, in making known the riches of His mercy, to display the inflexibility of justice and the unsullied perfection of holiness? When we say that God is displeased with any of His creatures, we speak of them not as creatures, but as sinners. He hath no pleasure in the death of the wicked, but He hates sin; and the punishment of it is required both by the glory of His righteousness and by a regard to the general happiness of the intelligent creation, which sin tends directly to destroy. It is in this view that the blessed God is said to be angry with the wicked every day, to hate all the workers of iniquity; to have revealed from heaven His wrath against all ungodliness and unrighteousness of men: and when He forgives iniquity He is, in consistency with such expressions, described as having His anger turned away. This is propitiation; and it is in Christ Jesus, in virtue of His atoning sacrifice, that God is thus propitious to sinners. The animal sacrifices of the Old Testament, of which the blood (because it was the life) was declared to be the atonement for the soul, were all intended to prefigure the true propitiation for sin. (R. Wardlaw, D. D.)

The history of Gods relations with human sin


I.
Antecedently to the death of Christ, the sins of men were passed over in the forbearance of God, i.e., God suffered them to go by unavenged. He winked at the times of ignorance. So far was this strange toleration carried, that the very justice of the Divine Judge came in some danger, and were there no judgment to come, men really could not affirm that the world was ruled on principles of perfect righteousness. In the providence of the world vengeance limps but tardily in the footsteps of crime; while, not to speak of the impenitent who go unpunished, what shall we say of pre-Christian penitents who asked pardon for their sins, yet found no expiation for them? The blood of bulls and goats could never take away sin. The Divine policy was to leg sin pass, neither avenged nor atoned for, leaving still an open reckoning.


II.
At last God cleared His clouded administration and vindicated His righteousness (verse 25). He held forth to public gaze an expiation of sin which did satisfy justice and demonstrate the severe impartial rectitude of the Divine judgments. The death of Jesus Christ is set forth as a public act done by God Himself for the illustration of His own justice. The word propitiation (or propitiatory) may either mean a victim offered in sacrifice for the recovery of Divine favour, or it may refer to the golden lid of the ark in the holy of holies, where God sat enthroned and propitious because on it was yearly sprinkled the blood of an atoning sacrifice. The death of Christ is in either case the one Sacrifice through which the sins of the world have been expiated and God has been enabled to extend favour to His guilty creatures. And this solemn and unparalleled act is at the same time the most impressive exhibition of the Divine vengeance against sin. Rather than that sins passed over so long should go altogether unavenged, God offered His Son for their expiation. By this He has cut off from men the temptation to misconstrue His earlier toleration of sins, or His unwillingness to forgive them. He did pretermit sin in His forbearance; but it was only because He had purposed in His heart one day to offer for it a satisfaction such as this. For this He could hold His peace through long centuries under injurious suspicion, because He knew that one day the awful Cross of His own Son would silence every cavil and give to the universe emphatic demonstration that He is a just God, who will by no means clear the guilty.


III.
Let us look at the bearing of Christs death on this present season. The same public satisfaction for sin is adequate to justify God in forgiving sin now (verse 26). Before His attitude to sin was one of forbearance. More than that it could not be, because no proper satisfaction for sin had as yet been offered. But now, since Christ has died, God has no need to wink at sin, and pass it by. He no longer holds out to penitents as He used to do a hope that it will one day become possible for Him to blot their sins. For He is now able to deal finally and effectually with sin. Justice has received all the satisfaction it needs or can ask for. No shade of suspicion, whether of feebleness or of injustice, can rest upon the Divine character, in acquitting at once any man for whose guilt Christ has made complete atonement. Now, therefore, God is in a position, not to pretermit sins only, but to remit them; not to promise forgiveness merely, but to confer it. This new attitude it is worth while to trace out in detail.

1. This propitiation having been amply adequate to vindicate Divine justice, Christs death becomes obviously our redemption; i.e., it serves as a ransom, an offering in consideration of which we who were held in custody as sentenced prisoners of justice may now go free. The Son of Man has given His life as a ransom price in the stead of many; and that atoning ransom being adequate, we have redemption through His blood–even the forgiveness of sins. So that it is so far from being unjust in God to acquit those for whom Christs death is pleaded, that it would be plainly unjust to do anything else. The Deliverer has paid the price of blood for forfeited lives of guilty men; and Justice herself will now fling wide open her prison gates, tear across her handwriting of condemnation, and proclaim the ransomed to be justified from sin. This St. Paul terms the redemption that is in Christ Jesus (verse 24).

2. On the ground of this redemption, such a justifying must be entirely gratuitous (verse 24). It must be so, because it is obviously independent of any action of mens own. It manifested the judicial impartiality and uprightness of the Lawgiver; but it was done at the bidding of love for the condemned, and its issue is free, unstinted grace to the undeserving. God must be just; but He chose this way of manifesting His justice, that through it He might also manifest mercy; and mercy rejoiceth over judgment.

3. A way of being justified which is so entirely gratuitous must be impartial and catholic. It is offered on such easy terms, because on no harder terms could helpless and condemned men receive it. Heathen or Jew, there is no distinction between men (verse 22) such as could limit a gratuitous righteousness to one set of them rather than to another. All of them alike sinned; therefore they must be justified on a ground which cuts away every distinction of better or worse among them, of more deserving or less deserving. A righteousness which is given away gratuitously must be meant for all.

4. Yes, to all who will trust in it (verse 26). For our justification is limited to faith, and that just because it is limited to the work of Christ. Our faith is the natural counterpart to Christs atonement; it is our response to His sacrifice; it is our acceptance of Gods terms. God offers to justify us, but He does so only because Christ has propitiated for our sins. If we accept His offer, we consent to be justified on that same ground of Christs propitiation, for nothing else is offered. The very terms on which God historically vindicated His justice and wrought redemption tie us down and limit us to such faith as rests on Christ as the instrument of our justification. (J. Oswald Dykes, D. D.)

Through faith In His blood.

The blood of Christ

Listen, apart from all argument, to what Christ says of it, and think, Is it possible that all this can mean no more than what men say who do not believe in its atoning power, as shed for us? They will sink deeper in your minds, if studied in Gods Word. But look at this barest outline of them. They will be the meditation and praise and thanksgiving of eternity; and in all eternity we shall long to thank more and more for them, when our whole being will be thanksgiving and love. We were far off [from God], but were made nigh [to Him] by the Blood of Christ (Eph 2:13); we were justified by His blood (Rom 5:9); He suffered, that He might sanctify us by His blood (Heb 13:12); we have, as a continual possession, redemption through His blood, the remission of sins (Eph 1:7); the blood of Christ who, through the Eternal Spirit, offered Himself without spot to God, purifieth our consciences from dead works to serve the living God (Heb 9:14); the blood of Christ cleanseth us from all sin (1Jn 1:7); we have been redeemed by the precious blood of Christ (1Pe 1:18-19); He has purchased the Church with His own blood (Act 20:28); God made peace through the blood of His Cross, through Him, as to the things on earth, and the things in heaven (Col 1:20): Christ, by His own blood, entered once into the holy place, having obtained eternal redemption (Heb 9:12). We, too, ever since have boldness to enter the holiest by the blood of Jesus, by a new and living way which He hath consecrated for us through His flesh (Heb 10:19-20). We are elect, according to the foreknowledge of God, in sanctification of the spirit, unto obedience and the sprinkling of the blood of Jesus Christ (1Pe 1:2). We are come to Jesus, the Mediator of the new Covenant, and the blood of sprinkling which speaketh better things than that of Abel (Heb 12:22-24). And when the beloved disciple saw heaven opened, he saw the Faithful and True, the Word of God, clothed with a vesture dyed with blood (Rev 19:13), and he heard the new song of those who sang, Thou wast slain and didst purchase us to God by Thy blood out of every tribe and tongue and people and nation (Rev 5:9); and he heard that they had washed their robes and made them white in the blood of the Lamb (Rev 7:14), and had overcome the accuser by the blood of the Lamb (Rev 12:11). And St. Johns doxology is, To Him who loveth us and hath washed us from our sins in His own blood, to Him be glory and might forever and ever. Amen (Rev 1:5). (E. B. Pusey, D. D.)

Fuente: Biblical Illustrator Edited by Joseph S. Exell

Verse 25. Whom God hath set forth] Appointed and published to be a propitiation, , the mercy-seat, or place of atonement; because the blood of the sacrifice was sprinkled on and before that, in order to obtain remission of sin, punishment, c. The mercy-seat was the lid or cover of the ark of the covenant, where God was manifest in the symbol of his presence, between the cherubim therefore the atonement that was made in this place was properly made to God himself. See Clarke on Lu 18:13.

Through faith in his blood] This shows what we are to understand both by the , redemption, and the , propitiation; viz. that they refer to the sacrificial death of Jesus Christ, as the atonement made, and the price paid down, for the redemption of the souls of men.

To declare his righteousness] , for the manifestation of his righteousness; his mercy in saving sinners, by sending Jesus Christ to make an atonement for them; thereby declaring his readiness to remit all past transgressions committed both by Jews and Gentiles, during the time in which his merciful forbearance was exercised towards the world; and this applies to all who hear the Gospel now: to them is freely offered remission of all past sins.

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

Whom God hath set forth; i.e. God the Father hath proposed this Jesus, in the eternal counsel, and covenant of redemption, Eph 1:9; 1Pe 1:20,21; or in the types and shadows of the old tabernacle; and hath now at last shown him openly to the world.

To be a propitiation, or atonement, 1Jo 2:2. He alludes to the mercy seat sprinkled with blood, which was typical of this great atonement; and from whence God showed himself so propitious and favourable to sinners, Lev 16:2; Num 7:89.

Through faith in his blood: he goes on to show the instrumental cause of justification, to wit, faith; i.e. the close adherence and most submissive dependence of the sinner; together with the peculiarity of the object of faith, viz. the blood, i.e. the death and sacrifice, of Christ; in contra-distinction to his dominion, (with which yet on other accounts faith is so much concerned), and in opposition to the blood of beasts slain and sacrificed.

To declare his righteousness; i.e. for the showing forth either of his goodness and mercy; see 1Sa 12:7,8,10; Psa 36:10; or of his faithfulness in his promises, and fulfilling all types and prophecies; or else of his vindictive justice, in the just proceedings of God against sin, which he hath condemned in his Son, though he justify the sinner. Or further, it may be understood of the righteousness of faith, of which Rom 3:22, which is hereby shown to be his; and to manifest itself in the forgiveness of sins, which is so declared as to be exhibited.

For the remission of sins that are past, through the forbearance of God; he means, either the sins committed before justification, while God bore so patiently with the sinner, and did not presently take the forfeiture; or else the sins committed under the Old Testament, before the proposed propitiation was exposed to the world, when God so indulged our fathers, as to pardon them upon the account of what was to come: see Heb 9:15-18.

Fuente: English Annotations on the Holy Bible by Matthew Poole

25, 26. Whom God hath set forth tobe a propitiationor “propitiatory sacrifice.”

through faith in hisbloodSome of the best interpreters, observing that “faithupon” is the usual phrase in Greek, not “faithin” Christ, would place a “comma” after”faith,” and understand the words as if written thus: “tobe a propitiation, in His blood, through faith.” But “faithin Christ” is used in Ga3:26 and Eph 1:15; and”faith in His blood” is the natural and appropriate meaninghere.

to declare his righteousnessfor the remissionrather, “pretermission” or “passingby.”

of sins“thesins.”

that are pastnot thesins committed by the believer before he embraces Christ, but thesins committed under the old economy, before Christ came to “putaway sin by the sacrifice of Himself.”

through the forbearance ofGodGod not remitting but only forbearing topunish them, or passing them by, until an adequate atonement for themshould be made. In thus not imputing them, God was righteous,but He was not seen to be so; there was no “manifestationof His righteousness” in doing so under the ancient economy. Butnow that God can “set forth” Christ as a “propitiationfor sin through faith in His blood,” the righteousness of Hisprocedure in passing by the sins of believers before, and in nowremitting them, is “manifested,” declared, brought fullyout to the view of the whole world. (Our translators haveunfortunately missed this glorious truth, taking “the sins thatare past” to mean the past sins of believerscommitted beforefaithand rendering, by the word “remission,” what meansonly a “passing by”; thus making it appear that “remissionof sins” is “through the forbearance of God,” which itcertainly is not).

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

Whom God had set forth to be a propitiation,…. Redemption by Christ is here further explained, by his being “a propitiation”: which word may design either Christ the propitiator, the author of peace and reconciliation; or the propitiatory sacrifice, by which he is so; and both in allusion to the mercy seat, which was a type of him as such. The apostle here uses the same word, which the Septuagint often render “the mercy seat”, by; and Philo the Jew calls it by the same name, and says it was a symbol,

“of the propitious power of God” b. Christ is the propitiation to God for sin; which must be understood of his making satisfaction to divine justice, for the sins of his people; these were imputed to him, and being found on him, the law and justice of God made demands on him for them; which he answered to satisfaction, by his obedience and sacrifice; and which, as it could not be done by any other, nor in any other way, is expressed by “reconciliation”, and “atonement”: whence God may be said to be pacified, or made propitious; not but that he always loved his people, and never hated them; nor is there, nor can there be any change in God, from hatred to love, any more than from love to hatred: Christ has not, by his sacrifice and death, procured the love and favour of God, but has removed the obstructions which lay in the way of love’s appearing and breaking forth; there was, a law broken, and justice provoked, which were to be attended to, and Christ by his sacrifice has satisfied both; so that neither the wrath of God, nor any of the effects of it, can fall upon the persons Christ is the propitiation for, even according to justice itself; so that it is not love, but justice that is made propitious: for this is all owing to the grace and goodness of God, who “hath set him forth”, for this intent, in his eternal purposes and decrees; in the promises of the Old Testament, in the types, shadows, and sacrifices of the old law; by the exhibition of him in our nature, and in the ministration of the Gospel; and this is said to be

through faith in his blood. The “blood” of Christ is that, by which Christ is the propitiation; for without the shedding of that blood, there is no redemption, no peace, no reconciliation, or remission of sin; and “faith” in his blood is the means by which persons become partakers of the benefits of his propitiation; such as peace, pardon, atonement, justification, and adoption: and the end of Christ’s being set forth as a propitiation, on the part of God’s people, is,

for the remission of sins that are past, through the forbearance of God: by “sins that are past”, are meant, not sins before baptism, nor the sins of a man’s life only, but the sins of Old Testament saints, who lived before the incarnation of Christ, and the oblation of his sacrifice; and though this is not to be restrained to them only, for Christ’s blood was shed for the remission of all his people’s sins, past, present, and to come; yet the sins of the saints before the coming of Christ, seem to be particularly designed; which shows the insufficiency of legal sacrifices, sets forth the efficacy of Christ’s blood and sacrifice, demonstrates him to be a perfect Saviour, and gives us reason under the present dispensation to hope for pardon, since reconciliation is completely made: “remission” of sin does not design that weakness which sin has brought upon, and left in human nature, whereby it is so enfeebled, that it cannot help itself, and therefore Christ was set forth, and sent forth, to be a propitiation; but rather God’s passing by, or overlooking sin, and not punishing for it, under the former dispensation; or else the forgiveness of it now, and redemption from it by the blood of Christ, “through the forbearance of God”; in deferring the execution of justice, till he sent his Son, and in expecting satisfaction of his Son; which shows the grace and goodness of God to his people, and the trust and confidence he put in his Son: the other end on the part of God, in setting forth Christ to be a propitiation, was

to declare his righteousness Ps 22:31; meaning either the righteousness of Christ, which was before hid, but now manifested; or rather the righteousness of God the Father, his faithfulness in his promises relating to Christ, his grace and goodness in the mission of his Son, the holiness and purity of his nature, and his vindictive justice, in avenging sin in his own Son, as the surety of his people: the execution of this was threatened from the beginning; the types and sacrifices of the old law prefigured it; the prophecies of the Old Testament express it; and the sufferings and death of Christ openly declare it, since God spared not his own Son, but sheathed the sword of justice in him.

b Philo de Vita Mosis, l. 3. p. 668.

Fuente: John Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible

Set forth (). Second aorist middle indicative. See on 1:13 for this word. Also in Eph 1:9, but nowhere else in N.T. God set before himself (purposed) and did it publicly before () the whole world.

A propitiation (). The only other N.T. example of this word is in Heb 9:5 where we have the “cherubim overshadowing the mercy seat” ( ). In Hebrews the adjective is used as a substantive or as “the propitiatory place ” But that idea does not suit here. Deissmann (Bible Studies, pp. 124-35) has produced examples from inscriptions where it is used as an adjective and as meaning “a votive offering” or “propitiatory gift.” Hence he concludes about Ro 3:25: “The crucified Christ is the votive gift of the Divine Love for the salvation of men.” God gave his Son as the means of propitiation (1Jo 2:2). H is an adjective () from , to make propitiation (Heb 2:17) and is kin in meaning to , propitiation (1John 2:2; 1John 4:10). There is no longer room for doubting its meaning in Ro 3:25.

Through faith, by his blood ( ). So probably, connecting (in his blood) with .

To show his righteousness ( ). See 2Co 8:24. “For showing of his righteousness,” the God-kind of righteousness. God could not let sin go as if a mere slip. God demanded the atonement and provided it.

Because of the passing over ( ). Late word from , to let go, to relax. In Dionysius Hal., Xenophon, papyri (Deissmann, Bible Studies, p. 266) for remission of punishment, especially for debt, as distinct from (remission).

Done aforetime (). Second perfect active genitive participle of . The sins before the coming of Christ (Acts 14:16; Acts 17:30; Heb 9:15).

Forbearance (). Holding back of God as in 2:4. In this sense Christ tasted death for every man (Heb 2:9).

Fuente: Robertson’s Word Pictures in the New Testament

Set forth [] . Publicly, openly [] ; correlated with to declare. He brought Him forth and put Him before the public. Bengel, “placed before the eyes of all;” unlike the ark of the covenant which was veiled and approached only by the high – priest. The word is used by Herodotus of exposing corpses (v. 8); by Thucydides of exposing the bones of the dead (ii. 34). Compare the shew – bread, the loaves of the setting – forth [ ] . See on Mr 2:26. Paul refers not to preaching, but to the work of atonement itself, in which God ‘s righteousness is displayed. Some render purposed or determined, as Rom 1:13; Eph 1:9, and according to the usual meaning of proqesiv purpose, in the New Testament. But the meaning adopted here is fixed by to declare.

Propitiation [] . This word is most important, since it is the key to the conception of Christ ‘s atoning work.

In the New Testament it occurs only here and Heb 9:5; and must be studied in connection with the following kindred words : iJlaskomai which occurs in the New Testament only Luk 18:13, God be merciful, and Heb 2:17, to make reconciliation. Ilasmov twice, 1Jo 2:2; 1Jo 4:10; in both cases rendered propitiation. The compound ejxilaskomai, which is not found in the New Testament, but is frequent in the Septuagint and is rendered purge, cleanse, reconcile, make atonement. Septuagint usage. These words mostly represent the Hebrew verb kaphar to cover or conceal, and its derivatives. With only seven exceptions, out of about sixty or seventy passages in the Old Testament, where the Hebrew is translated by atone or atonement, the Septuagint employs some part or derivative of iJlaskomai or ejxilaskomai or Ilasmov or ejxilasmov is the usual Septuagint translation for kippurim covering for sin, A. V., atonement. Thus sin – offerings of atonement; day of atonement; ram of the atonement. See Exo 29:36; Exo 30:10; Lev 23:27; Num 5:8, etc. They are also used for chattath sin – offering, Eze 44:27; Eze 45:19; and for selichah forgiveness. Psa 129:4; Dan 9:9.

These words are always used absolutely, without anything to mark the offense or the person propitiated.

Ilaskomai, which is comparatively rare, occurs as a translation of kipher to cover sin, Psa 64:3; Psa 77:38; Psa 78:9; A. V., purge away, forgive, pardon. Of salach, to bear away as a burden, 2Ki 5:18; Psa 24:11 : A. V., forgive, pardon. It is used with the accusative (direct objective) case, marking the sin, or with the dative (indirect objective), as be conciliated to our sins.

Exilaskomai mostly represents kipher to cover, and is more common than the simple verb. Thus, purge the altar, Eze 43:26; cleanse the sanctuary, Eze 45:20; reconcile the house, Dan 9:24. It is found with the accusative case of that which is cleansed; with the preposition peri concerning, as “for your sin,” Exo 32:30; with the preposition uJper on behalf of A. V., for, Eze 45:17; absolutely, to make an atonement, Lev 16:17; with the preposition ajpo from, as “cleansed from the blood,” Num 35:33. There are but two instances of the accusative of the person propitiated : appease him, Gen 32:20; pray before [] the Lord, Zec 7:2.

Ilasthrion, A. V., propitiation, is almost always used in the Old Testament of the mercy – seat or golden cover of the ark, and this is its meaning in Heb 9:5, the only other passage of the New Testament in which it is found. In Eze 43:14, 17, 20, it means a ledge round a large altar, and is rendered settle in A. V.; Rev., ledge, in margin.

This term has been unduly pressed into the sense of explanatory sacrifice. In the case of the kindred verbs, the dominant Old – Testament sense is not propitiation in the sense of something offered to placate or appease anger; but atonement or reconciliation, through the covering, and so getting rid of the sin which stands between God and man. The thrust of the idea is upon the sin or uncleanness, not upon the offended party. Hence the frequent interchange with ajgiazw to sanctify, and kaqarizw to cleanse. See Eze 43:26, where ejxilasontai shall purge, and kaqariousin shall purify, are used coordinately. See also Exo 30:10, of the altar of incense : “Aaron shall make an atonement [] upon the horns of it – with the blood of the sin – offering of atonement” [ ] . Compare Lev 16:20. The Hebrew terms are also used coordinately.

Our translators frequently render the verb kaphar by reconcile, Lev 6:30; Lev 16:20; Eze 45:20. In Lev 8:15, Moses put blood upon the horns of the altar and cleansed [] the altar, and sanctified [] it, to make reconciliation [ ] upon it. Compare Eze 45:15, 17; Dan 9:24.

The verb and its derivatives occur where the ordinary idea of expiation is excluded. As applied to an altar or to the walls of a house (Lev 14:48 – 53), this idea could have no force, because these inanimate things, though ceremonially unclean, could have no sin to be expiated. Moses, when he went up to make atonement for the idolatry at Sinai, offered no sacrifice, but only intercession. See also the case of Korah, Num 16:46; the cleansing of leprosy and of mothers after childbirth, Lev 14:1 – 20; Lev 12:7; Lev 14:30; the reformation of Josiah, 2 Chronicles 34; the fasting and confession of Ezra, Ezr 10:1 – 15; the offering of the Israelite army after the defeat of Midian. They brought bracelets, rings, etc., to make an atonement [] before the Lord; not expiatory, but a memorial, Num 31:50 – 54. The Passover was in no sense expiatory; but Paul says, “Christ our Passover was sacrificed for us; therefore purge out [] the old leaven. Let us keep the feast with sincerity and truth;” 1Co 5:7, 8.

In the Old Testament the idea of sacrifice as in itself a propitiation continually recedes before that of the personal character lying back of sacrifice, and which alone gives virtue to it. See 1Sa 14:22; Psa 40:6 – 10; Psa 50:8 – 14, 23; Psa 51:16, 17; Isa 1:11 – 18; Jer 7:21 – 23; Amo 5:21 – 24; Mic 6:6 – 8. This idea does not recede in the Old Testament to be reemphasized in the New. On the contrary, the New Testament emphasizes the recession, and lays the stress upon the cleansing and life – giving effect of the sacrifice of Christ. See Joh 1:29; Col 1:20 – 22; Heb 9:14; Heb 10:19 – 21; 1Pe 2:24; 1Jo 1:7; 1Jo 4:10 – 13. The true meaning of the offering of Christ concentrates, therefore, not upon divine justice, but upon human character; not upon the remission of penalty for a consideration, but upon the deliverance from penalty through moral transformation; not upon satisfying divine justice, but upon bringing estranged man into harmony with God. As Canon Westcott remarks : “The scripture conception of iJlaskesqai is not that of appeasing one who is angry with a personal feeling against the offender, but of altering the character of that which, from without, occasions a necessary alienation, and interposes an inevitable obstacle to fellowship” (Commentary on St. John’s Epistles, p. 85).

In the light of this conception we are brought back to that rendering of iJlasthrion which prevails in the Septuagint, and which it has in the only other New – Testament passage where it occurs (Heb 9:5) – mercy – seat; a rendering, maintained by a large number of the earlier expositors, and by some of the ablest of the moderns. That it is the sole instance of its occurrence in this sense is a fact which has its parallel in the terms Passover, Door, Rock, Amen, Day – spring, and others, applied to Christ. To say that the metaphor is awkward counts for nothing in the light of other metaphors of Paul. To say that the concealment of the ark is inconsistent with set forth is to adduce the strongest argument in favor of this rendering. The contrast with set forth falls in perfectly with the general conception. That mercy – seat which was veiled, and which the Jew could approach only once a fear, and then through the medium of the High – Priest, is now brought out where all can draw nigh and experience its reconciling power (Heb 10:19, 22; compare Heb 9:8). “The word became flesh and dwelt among us. We beheld His glory. We saw and handled” (Joh 1:14; 1Jo 1:1 – 3). The mercy – seat was the meetingplace of God and man (Exo 25:17 – 22; Lev 16:2; Num 7:89); the place of mediation and manifestation. Through Christ, the antitype of the mercy – seat, the Mediator, man has access to the Father (Eph 2:18). As the golden surface covered the tables of the law, so Christ stands over the law, vindicating

Fuente: Vincent’s Word Studies in the New Testament

1) “Whom God hath set forth,” (hon proetheto ho te hos) “Whom God has set forward;” In His purpose and promise of the Redeemer, Isa 7:14; Isa 9:6; Joh 3:16-17.

2) “To be a propitiation,” (hilasterion) “As or to be a propitiation,” a covering an eelemosenary offering, a charitable gift offering, Isa 53:10-12; 2Co 5:21.

3) “Through faith in his blood,” (dia pisteos en to autou haimati) “Through faith in (by) his blood;” This method of blood redemption was set forth in the Passover and sacrifices of the Old Testament and declared in the New Testament; Note the sin covering is to be thru faith (not thru baptism, church membership, etc.) Act 10:43; Act 13:38-39; Eph 1:7; Col 1:20.

4) “To declare his righteousness,” (eis endeiksin dikaiosunes autou) “A demonstration or showing forth of his righteousness,” when he “bare our sins in his body,” 1Pe 2:24.

5) “For the remission of sins that are past,” (dia ten paresin ton progegonoton hamartematon) “Because of sins having previously occurred or passed by,” as a payment adequate for the sins of men past, as well as present, and future, Isa 53:1-6; Isa 53:11.

6) “Through the forbearance of God,” (en te anoche tou theou) “In the forbearance of God;” Act 17:30; Rom 2:4-6.

Fuente: Garner-Howes Baptist Commentary

25. Whom God hath set forth, etc. The Greek verb, προτίθεναι, means sometimes to determine beforehand, and sometimes to set forth. If the first meaning be taken, Paul refers to the gratuitous mercy of God, in having appointed Christ as our Mediator, that he might appease the Father by the sacrifice of his death: nor is it a small commendation of God’s grace that he, of his own good will, sought out a way by which he might remove our curse. According to this view, the passage fully harmonizes with that in Joh 3:16,

God so loved the world, that he gave his only-begotten Son.”

Yet if we embrace this meaning, it will remain still true, that God hath set him forth in due time, whom he had appointed as a Mediator. There seems to be an allusion in the word, ἱλαστήριον, as I have said, to the ancient propitiatory; for he teaches us that the same thing was really exhibited in Christ, which had been previously typified. As, however, the other view cannot be disproved, should any prefer it, I shall not undertake to decide the question. What Paul especially meant here is no doubt evident from his words; and it was this, — that God, without having regard to Christ, is always angry with us, — and that we are reconciled to him when we are accepted through his righteousness. God does not indeed hate in us his own workmanship, that is, as we are formed men; but he hates our uncleanness, which has extinguished the light of his image. When the washing of Christ cleanses this away, he then loves and embraces us as his own pure workmanship.

A propitiatory through faith in his blood, etc. I prefer thus literally to retain the language of Paul; for it seems indeed to me that he intended, by one single sentence, to declare that God is propitious to us as soon as we have our trust resting on the blood of Christ; for by faith we come to the possession of this benefit. But by mentioning blood only, he did not mean to exclude other things connected with redemption, but, on the contrary, to include the whole under one word: and he mentioned “blood,” because by it we are cleansed. Thus, by taking a part for the whole, he points out the whole work of expiation. For, as he had said before, that God is reconciled in Christ, so he now adds, that this reconciliation is obtained by faith, mentioning, at the same time, what it is that faith ought mainly to regard in Christ — his blood.

For ( propter) the remission of sins, (120) etc. The causal preposition imports as much as though he had said, “for the sake of remission,” or, “to this end, that he might blot out sins.” And this definition or explanation again confirms what I have already often reminded you, — that men are pronounced just, not because they are such in reality, but by imputation: for he only uses various modes of expression, that he might more clearly declare, that in this righteousness there is no merit of ours; for if we obtain it by the remission of sins, we conclude that it is not from ourselves; and further, since remission itself is an act of God’s bounty alone, every merit falls to the ground.

It may, however, be asked, why he confines pardon to preceding sins? Though this passage is variously explained, yet it seems to me probable that Paul had regard to the legal expiations, which were indeed evidences of a future satisfaction, but could by no means pacify God. There is a similar passage in Heb 9:15, where it is said, that by Christ a redemption was brought from sins, which remained under the former Testament. You are not, however, to understand that no sins but those of former times were expiated by the death of Christ — a delirious notion, which some fanatics have drawn from a distorted view of this passage. For Paul teaches us only this, — that until the death of Christ there was no way of appeasing God, and that this was not done or accomplished by the legal types: hence the reality was suspended until the fullness of time came. We may further say, that those things which involve us daily in guilt must be regarded in the same light; for there is but one true expiation for all.

Some, in order to avoid what seems inconsistent, have held that former sins are said to have been forgiven, lest there should seem to he a liberty given to sin in future. It is indeed true that no pardon is offered but for sins committed; not that the benefit of redemption fails or is lost, when we afterwards fall, as Novatus and his sect dreamed, but that it is the character of the dispensation of the gospel, to set before him who will sin the judgment and wrath of God, and before the sinner his mercy. But what I have already stated is the real sense.

He adds, that this remission was through forbearance; and this I take simply to mean gentleness, which has stayed the judgment of God, and suffered it not to burst forth to our ruin, until he had at length received us into favor. But there seems to be here also an implied anticipation of what might be said; that no one might object, and say that this favor had only of late appeared. Paul teaches us, that it was an evidence of forbearance.

(120) The words are, διὰ τὴν πάρεσιν. They seem connected, not with the first clause, but with the one immediately preceding; and διὰ may be rendered here in; see a note on Rom 2:26; or more properly, perhaps, on account of. “For a proof of his own righteousness in passing by the sins,” etc., [ Macknight ] ; “In order to declare his justification with respect to the remission of sins,” [ Stuart ]

What is God’s “righteousness” here has been variously explained. Some regard it his righteousness in fulfilling his promises, as [ Beza ] ; others, his righteousness in Christ to believers, mentioned in Rom 1:17, as [ Augustine ] ; and others, his righteousness as the God of rectitude and justice, as [ Chrysostom ] Some, too, as [ Grotius ] , view it as meaning goodness or mercy, regarding the word as having sometimes this sense.

It is the context that can help us to the right meaning. God exhibited his Son as a propitiation, to set forth this righteousness; and this righteousness is connected with the remission of, or rather; as the word means, the preterition of or connivance at sins committed under the old dispensation: and those sins were connived at through the forbearance of God, he not executing the punishment they deserved; and the purpose is stated to be, — that God might be or appear just, while he is the justifier of those who believe in Christ. Now, what can this righteousness be but his administrative justice? As the law allowed no remission, and God did remit sins, there appeared to be a stain on divine justice. The exhibition of Christ as an atonement is what alone removes it. And there is a word in the former verse, as [ Venema ] justly observes, which tends to confirm this view, and that word is redemption, ἀπολυτρώσις, which is a deliverance obtained by a ransom, or by a price, such as justice requires.

Both [ Doddridge ] and [ Scott ] regard the passage in this light; and the latter gives the following version of it, —

Whom God hath before appointed to be a propitiation, through faith in his blood, for a demonstration of his justice, on account of the passing by of sins, that had been committed in former times, through the forbearance of God; I say, for a demonstration of his justice, in this present time, in order that he might be just, and the justifier of him that believeth in Jesus.” — Nothing can be clearer than this version.

The last words are rightly rendered, though not literally; τὸν ἐκ πίστεως Ιησου — “him of the faith of Jesus,” or, “him of faith in Jesus.” Him of faith is him who believes, as τοῖς οὑκ ἐκ περιτομὢς — “them not of circumcision” means “them who are not circumcised,” Rom 4:12; and τοῖς έξ ἐριθείας — “those of contention,” signifies, “those who contend,” or, are contentious, Rom 2:8. — Ed.

Fuente: Calvin’s Complete Commentary

(25) Hath set forth.Rather, set forth, publicly exhibited, in the single act of the death upon the cross.

A propitiation.The Greek word properly means that which renders propitious. Here, that which renders God propitious. In some way, which is not explained at all in this passage, and imperfectly explained elsewhere, the death of Christ did act so as to render God propitious towards men. He became more ready to pardon as they became more anxious to be pardoned.

There is a remarkable use of the same Greek word in the LXX. version of the Old Testament to express the mercy-seat, i.e., the lid or covering of the ark which was sprinkled by the high priest with the blood of the victim on the Day of Atonement. Some have thought that there is a reference to this here. Christ is the mercy-seat of the New Covenant. It is upon Him, as it were, that the divine grace, drawn forth by His own atoning blood, resides. It would hardly be a conclusive objection to this view that, according to it, Christ would be represented as at once the victim whose blood is sprinkled and the covering of the ark on which it is sprinkled; for a similar double reference certainly occurs in Heb. 9:11-12, where Christ is typified at one and the same time both by the victim whose blood is shed and by the high priest by whom it is offered. There seem to be, however, on the whole, reasons for supplying rather the idea of sacrifice, which is more entirely in keeping with the context, and is especially supported by the two phrases, whom God hath set forth (i.e., exhibited publicly, whereas the ark was confined to the secrecy of the Holy of Holies), and in His blood. We should translate, therefore, a propitiatory or expiatory (sacrifice).

Through faith.Faith is the causa apprehendens by which the proffered pardon takes effect upon the soul of the believer.

In his blood.On the whole, it seems best not to join these words with through faith, but to refer them to the main word of the sentence. Whom God set forth by the shedding of His blood to be a propitiatory offering through faith. It was in the shedding of the blood that the essence of the atonement exhibited upon the cross consisted. No doubt other portions of the life of Christ led up to this one; but this was the culminating act in it, viewed as an atonement.

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

(25, 26) The death of Christ had a twofold object or final cause:(1) It was to be, like the sacrifices of the old covenant, an offering propitiatory to God, and actualised in the believer through faith. (2) It was to demonstrate the righteousness of God by showing that sin would entail punishment, though it might not be punished in the person of the sinner. The apparent absence of any adequate retribution for the sins of past ages made it necessary that by one conspicuous instance it should be shown that this was in no sense due to an ignoring of the true nature of sin. The retributive justice of God was all the time unimpaired. The death of Christ served for its vindication, at the same time that a way to escape from its consequences was opened out through the justification of the believer.
Precisely in what sense the punishment of our sins fell upon Christ, and in what sense the justice of God was vindicated by its so falling, is another point which we are not able to determine. Nothing, we may be sure, can be involved which is in ultimate conflict with morality. At the same time, we see that under the ordinary government of God, the innocent suffer for the guilty, and there may be some sort of transference of this analogy into the transcendental sphere. Both the natural and the supernatural government of God are schemes imperfectly comprehended. In any case, Christ was innocent, and Christ suffered. On any theory there is a connection between His death and human sin. What connection, is a question to which, perhaps, only a partial answer can be given. Some weighty remarks on this subject will be found in Butlers Analogy of Religion, Part II., Romans 5 (latter part).

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

25. Set forth Exhibited to the world.

Propitiation The Greek word is generally considered to be an adjective signifying propitiatory; that is, appeasing, removing wrath. The noun supposed to be understood is either cover, or sacrifice. In the holy of holies of the temple was the ark of the covenant, overshadowed by the cherubim. Once a year, on the great day of atonement, the high priest entered and sprinkled the blood of the victim upon the cover of the ark as a propitiation of the divine wrath for the sins of the people. The lid of the ark was thence called the propitiatory-cover, or mercyseat; and sometimes in the Greek of the Septuagint the propritiatory, the very Greek word here used. Hence many commentators understand Jesus here to be called, by a very strong figure, the mercyseat. Yet a less harsh view is that which supplies the word sacrifice, and thus makes Jesus the divine propitiatory victim. Alford, indeed, affirms the word to be not an adjective but a noun, literally signifying a propitiatory or appeasing sacrifice. That view of the atonement which assumes that it was only a method of removing our enmity to God, not God’s wrath against us, besides its absurdity of assuming against abundant Scripture testimonies, that God has no wrath or opposition against sin, finds an answerable refutation in this word.

His blood The visible symbol of death. Faith in his blood or death is reliance upon the sufficiency of his death for the pardon of our sin, and upon its efficiency for our salvation.

Declare Make clear.

Righteousness Rectoral or governmental justice. Pure, absolute justice, as revealed to us by our intuitive sense, could never be done by the substitution of a sufferer in the place of the criminal. The same sense of absolute justice that requires that there should be a sufferer at all, requires that the sufferer should be no other than the guilty actor of the crime. If Damon died in Pythias’ stead, the justice thereby satisfied was not absolute intuitive justice, but rectoral justice, the justice that requires that law and government shall be sustained.

Remission Not so much forgiveness as withholding of penalty.

Sins that are past Sins committed before the death of Christ. That atoning death reflected back its efficacy upon previous ages and generations. That is, God, in view of that foreknown atonement, withheld penalty until the sacrifice, and then fully pardoned it.

Forbearance God forebore for ages in view of the propitiation.

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

‘Whom God set forth to be a propitiation, through faith, in his blood, to show his righteousness because of the passing over of the sins done aforetime, in the forbearance of God, for the showing, I say, of his righteousness at this present season, that he might himself be just, and the justifier (reckoner as in the right) of him who has faith in Jesus.’

For God set Him forth as a propitiatory sacrifice (compare 1Jn 2:2), appropriated through faith in His sacrificial death. The idea here is that something was required in order to satisfy God’s antipathy to sin. Sin had to be punished. A price had to be paid. And it was because of this sacrificial death that God had been able righteously to pass over ‘sins done aforetime’, the many sins of believers from the time of Adam. And it is also because of this sacrificial death that He is even now at this present time able to remain totally righteous while at the same time declaring as ‘in the right’ the one who has faith in Jesus, even though he be ungodly (not in present behaviour and attitude but condemned as such because of his past life – Rom 4:5). As a consequence of this His antipathy to our sin is removed, because our sin has been transferred to Jesus Christ. God no longer counts anything against us. It is a sacrificial death that covers all men for all time when they come to believe in Him. He ‘perfects for ever those who are being sanctified’ (Heb 10:14).

This offering of Christ as a propitiatory sacrifice is in order to ‘show God’s righteousness’. It was necessary that He be seen as ‘just’. That is why He could not simply forgive without any necessity for the paying of a price. His righteousness and holiness must be displayed in what He did. And the question was, how could He be seen as ‘just’ while reckoning as righteous the ungodly? The answer lay in the shedding of Christ’s blood on our behalf. Because He took the sentence of death on Himself for us, being made sin for us (2Co 5:21), bearing our sin (1Pe 2:24), we who are ungodly and under sentence of death may go free. The justice of God is fully satisfied with what He has done. He can thus ‘account as righteous’ the ungodly who believe in Him (Rom 4:5; Rom 5:7). So now those who are in Him can be ‘reckoned as righteous’ because of their faith in Him, with His death being reckoned to them because they are now in Him (Gal 2:20).

Fuente: Commentary Series on the Bible by Peter Pett

Rom 3:25. Whom God hath set forth, &c. See the note on Exo 25:17. The Alexandrian copy omits the words by faith, which seems conformable to the sense of the Apostle here. He says that God hath set forth Christ to be the propitiatory in his blood: the atonement under the law was made by blood, sprinkled on the propitiatory, or mercy-seat; Lev 16:14. “Christ,” says St. Paul here, “is now set forth, and shewn by God to be the real propitiatory in his own blood.” See Heb 9:25-26 where the sacrifice of himself is opposed to the blood of others. God hath set him forth to be so, to declare his righteousness,the mercy-seat being the place whereon God spake, and declared his pleasure; Exo 25:22. There God always appeared, Lev 16:2. It was the place of his presence; and therefore he is said to dwell between the cherubim (Psa 80:1.); for the mercy-seat was between the cherubim: in all which respects our Saviour, who was the antitype, is properly called the propitiatory. If, however, the words through faith be retained, they must not be understood as if our faith was the cause of Christ’s being appointed to be a mercy-seat. The cause of Christ’s being appointed to be a mercy-seat is, the free purpose and grace of God; but it has reference to our use and application of the mercy-seat. See Rev 7:14; Rev 12:11. For the remission of sins that are past, may be read, In relation to the remission, &c.; for the original word , with an accusative, frequently signifies, in respect, or relation to. See on chap. Rom 8:10. The sins that are past,evidently mean in this place, the sins which both Jews and Gentiles had been guilty of before the Gospel had been promulgated; by which sins both were deserving of destruction, and unworthy the blessings of God’s covenant. See 2Co 5:19. Locke and Bos.

Fuente: Commentary on the Holy Bible by Thomas Coke

Rom 3:25 . See on Rom 3:25 f. Ritschl, in the Jahrb. f. Deutsche Theol. 1863, p. 500 ff.; Pfleiderer in Hilgenfeld’s Zeitschr. 1872, p. 177 ff.; the critical comparison of the various explanations in Morison, p. 268 ff.

. . [843] ] whom God has openly set forth for Himself . [844] This signification, familiar from the Greek usage (Herod. iii. 148, vi. 21; Plat. Phaed. p. 115 E; Eur. Alc. 667; Thuc. ii. 34, 1, 64, 3; Dem. 1071, 1; Herodian, viii. 6, 5; also in the LXX.), is decidedly to be adopted on account of the correlation with . . [845] (Vulgate, Pelagius, Luther, Beza, Bengel and others; also Rckert, de Wette, Philippi, Tholuck, Hofmann and Morison); and not the equally classic signification: to propose to oneself , adopted by Chrysostom, Oecumenius, Theophylact, Toletus, Pareus, de Dieu, Elsner, Heumann, Bhme, Flatt and Fritzsche (Rom 1:13 ; Eph 1:9 ; 3Ma 2:27 ): “quem esse voluit Deus piaculare sacrificium,” Fritzsche. [846] In that case an infinitive must have been required; and it was with the publicity of the divine act before the whole world that the Apostle was here concerned, as he has already indicated by in Rom 3:21 . Matthias explains it: whom He caused to be openly made known, to be preached . But the classical use of , in the active and middle, in the sense of promulgare is here foreign, since it refers to the summoning or proclamation of assemblies (Soph. Ant. 160, and Hermann in loc [847] ; Lucian, Necyom . 19, and Hemsterhuis in loc [848] ; Dion. Hal. vi. 15 al [849] ; see Schoem. Comit. p. 104; Dorvill. a [850] Charit. p. 266 f.) or to the promulgation of laws . Besides the of God rests, in fact, not on the preaching of the atoner, but on the work of atonement itself , which God accomplished by the . . [851]

God’s own participation therein (for it was His , willed and instituted by Himself ) which is expressed by the middle , is placed beyond question by the . . [852] , and decisively excludes Hofmann’s conception of the death of Christ as a befalling . Compare on Rom 3:26 .

] is the neuter of the adjective , used as a substantive, and hence means simply expiatorium in general, without the word itself conveying the more concrete definition of its sense. The latter is supplied by the context . Thus, for example, in the LXX. (in the older profane Greek the word does not occur) the lid of the ark of the covenant, the Kapporeth , as the propitiatorium operculum, is called (see below), which designation has become technical, and in Exo 25:17 ; Exo 37:6 receives its more precise definition by the addition of . They also designate the ledge (choir) of the altar for burnt offerings, the (Eze 43:15 ; Eze 43:17 ; Eze 43:20 ) in the same way, because this place also was, through the blood of reconciliation with which it was sprinkled, and generally as an altar-place, a place of atonement. When they render in Amo 9:1 ( knob ) by , it is probable that they read . See generally Schleusner, Thes. III. p. 108 f. The word in the sense of offerings of atonement does not occur in the LXX., though it is so used by other writers, so that it may be more specially defined by or . Thus in Dio Chrys. Orat. xi. 1, p. 355 Reiske: , where a votive gift bears this inscription, and is thereby indicated as an offering of atonement, as indeed votive gifts generally fall under the wider idea of offerings (Ewald, Alterth. p. 96; Hermann, gottesd. Alterth. 25, 1); again in Nonnus, Dionys. xiii. p. 383: (the true reading instead of ) . 4Ma 17:22 : [853] . Hesych.: . Comp Schol. Apoll. Rhod. ii. 487, where is explained by ; also the corresponding expressions for sacrifices, (Xen. Anab. iii. 2, 9; v. 1, 1; LXX. Exo 20:24 ); (Herod. i. 35; Aeschin. p. 4, 10); (Poll. i. 32); (Xen. Cyr. iv. 1, 2; Polyb. xxi. 1, 2); (Polyb. v. 14, 8). Compare also such expressions as ; and see generally Schaefer, a [855] Bos. Ell. p. 191 ff. Even in our passage the context makes the notion of an atoning sacrifice (comp Lev 17:11 ) sufficiently clear by . ; compare Pfleiderer l.c [857] p. 180. The interpretation expiatory sacrifice is adopted by Chrysostom (who at least represents the . of Christ as the antitype of the animal offerings ), Clericus, Bos, Eisner, Kypke, and others, including Koppe, Flatt, Klee, Reiche, de Wette, Kllner, Fritzsehe, Tholuck, Messner and Ewald; Weiss ( bibl. Theol. p. 324) is in doubt between this and the following explanation. [858] Others, as Moms, Rosenmller, Rckert, Usteri and Glckler, keep with the Vulgate ( propitiationem ) and Castalio ( placamentum ), to the general rendering: means of propitiation . So also Hofrnann (comp Schriftbew . II. 1, p. 338 f.), comparing specially 1Jn 4:10 , and Luk 2:30 ; and Rich. Schmidt, Paul. Christol . p. 84 ff. But this, after the which points to a definite public appearance, is an abstract idea inappropriate to it (as “ propiatition ”), especially seeing that . belongs to , and seeing that the view of the death of Jesus as the concrete propitiatory offering was deeply impressed on and vividly present to the Christian consciousness (Eph 5:2 ; 1Co 5:7 ; Heb 9:14 ; Heb 9:28 ; 1Pe 1:19 ; Joh 1:29 ; Joh 17:19 al [860] ). Origen, Theophylact, Erasmus, Luther, Calvin, Piscator, Pareus, Hammond, Grotius, Calovius, Wolf, Wetstein, and others; also Olshausen, Tholuck (Exo 5 ), Philippi, Umbreit, Jatho, Ritschl in the Jahrb. f. Deutsche Theol. 1863, p. 247, and altkathol. Kirche , p. 85; Weber, vom Zorne Gottes , p. 273; Delitzsch on Heb. p. 719, and in the illustrations to his Hebrew translation , p. 79; Mrcker, and others, have rendered in quite a special sense, namely, as referring to the canopy-shaped cover suspended over the ark of the covenant (see Ewald, Alterth. p. 164 ff.), on which, as the seat of Jehovah’s throne, the blood of the sacrifice was sprinkled by the high priest on the great day of atonement (Exo 25:22 ; Num 7:89 ; Lev 16:13 ff.; Keil, Arch. I. 84, and generally Lund, Jd. Heiligth. ed. Wolf, p. 37 ff.), and which therefore, regarded as the vehicle of the divine grace (see Bhr, Symbolik , I. p. 387 ff.; Hengstenberg, Authent. des Pentateuches , II. p. 642; Schulz, alttest. Theol. I. p. 205), typified Christ as the atoner. [861] That the Kapporeth was termed is not only certain from the LXX. [862] (Exo 25:18-20 ; Exo 31:7 al [863] ), but also from Heb 9:5 , and Philo ( vit. Mos. p. 668, D and E ; de profug. p. 465 A), who expressly represents the covering of the ark as a symbol of the of God. Compare also Joseph. Antt. iii. 6, 5. There is consequently nothing to be urged against this explanation, either as respects the usus loquendi or as respects the idea, in accordance with which Christ, the bearer of the divine glory and grace, sprinkled with His own sacrificial blood, would be regarded as the antitype of the Kapporeth. But we may urge against it: (1) that . does not stand with the article, as in the Sept. and Heb 9:5 , although Christ was to be designated as the realised idea of the definite and in fact singly existing ( , Theodoret); (2) that even though the term , as applied to the cover of the ark, was certainly familiar to the readers from its use by the LXX., nevertheless this name, in its application to Christ, would come in here quite abruptly , without anything in the context preparing the way for it or leading to it; (3) that would in that case be inappropriate, because the ark of the covenant, in the Holy of Holies, was removed from the view of the people; (4) that, if Christ were really thought of here as , the following would be inappropriate, since the must have appeared rather as the of the divine grace (comp Heb 4:16 ); (5) and lastly, that the conception of Christ as the antitype of the cover of the ark is found nowhere else in the whole N. T., although there was frequent opportunity for such expression; and it is therefore to be assumed that it did not belong to the apostolic modes of viewing and describing the atoning work of Christ. Moreover, if it is objected that this interpretation is unsuitable, because Christ, who shed His own blood, could not be the cover of the ark sprinkled with foreign blood, it is on the other hand to be remembered that the Crucified One sprinkled with His own blood might be regarded as the cover of the ark with the same propriety as Christ offering His own blood is regarded in the Epistle to the Hebrews as High Priest. If, on the other side, it is objected to the interpretation expiatory offering (see Philippi), that it does not suit because Christ offered Himself as a sacrifice to God, but God did not present Him as such to humanity, the objection is untenable, since the idea that God has given Christ to death pervades the whole N. T. not that God has thereby offered Christ as a sacrifice, which is nowhere asserted, but that He has set forth before the eyes of the universe Him who is surrendered to the world by the very fact of His offering Himself as a sacrifice in obedience to the Father’s counsel, as such actually and publicly, namely, on the cross. An exhibition through preaching (as Philippi objects) is not to be thought of, but rather the divine act of redemption , which took place through the sacrificial death on Golgotha.

] may be connected either with (Philippi, following older writers) or with (Rckert, Matthias, Ewald, Hofmann, Morison, and older expositors). The latter is the right construction, since faith, as laying hold of the propitiation, is the very thing by which the set forth becomes subjectively effective ; but not that whereby the setting forth itself , which was an objective fact independent of faith, has been accomplished. [865] Hence: as a sacrifice producing the through faith . Without faith the would not be actually and in result, what it is in itself; for it does not reconcile the unbeliever.

] belongs to . . [866] God has set forth Christ as an effectual expiatory offering through faith by means of His blood ; i.e. in that He caused Him to shed His blood, in which lay objectively the strength of the atonement. [867] Observe the position of : “ quem proposuit ipsius sanguine.” Krger, 47, 9, 12. Comp Rom 11:11 ; Tit 3:5 ; 1Th 2:19 ; Heb 2:4 al [869] Comp Rom 3:24 . Still . . . is not to be joined with in such a way as to make it the parallel of . . (Wolf, Schrader, Kllner, Reithmayr, Matthias, Mehring, Hofmann, Mangold, and others); for . . [871] requires that . . . shall be the element defining more closely the divine act of the . . [872] , by which the divine righteousness is apparent; wherefore also . . . . is placed immediately before . . [873] , and not before (against Hofmann’s objection). Other writers again erroneously make . dependent on (Luther, Calvin, Beza, Seb. Schmid, and others; also Koppe, Klee, Flatt, Olshausen, Tholuck, Winzer, and Morison), joining . . likewise to : through faith on His blood . In that case would not be equivalent to , but would indicate the basis of faith (see on Gal 3:26 ); nor can the absence of the article after . be urged against this rendering (see on Gal. l.c [874] ): but the . . becomes in this connection much too subordinate a point. Just by means of the shedding of His blood was the setting forth of Christ for a propitiatory offering accomplished; in order that through this utmost, highest, and holiest sacrifice offered for the satisfaction of the divine justice through the blood of Christ that justice might be brought to light and demonstrated. From this connection also we may easily understand why . ., which moreover, following , was a matter of course, is added at all; though in itself unnecessary and self-evident, it is added with all the more weight, and in fact with solemn emphasis. For just in the blood of Christ, which God has not spared, lies the proof of His righteousness, which He has exhibited through the setting forth of Christ as an expiatory-sacrifice; that shed blood has at once satisfied His justice, and demonstrated it before the whole world. On the atoning , actually sin-effacing power of the blood of Christ, according to the fundamental idea of Lev 17:11 (compare Heb 9:22 ), see Rom 5:9 ; Mat 26:28 ; Act 20:28 ; Eph 1:7 ; Col 1:14 ; Rev 5:9 al [875] ; 2Co 5:14 ; 2Co 5:21 ; Gal 3:13 al [876] Comp Kahnis, Dogm. I. p. 270 ff., 584 f. Reiche considers that . should be coupled with ., and . . should be a parenthesis, whilst . . . is to be co-ordinated with the . . But by this expedient the discourse is only rendered clumsy and overladen.

. . . ] purpose of God in the . The is righteousness , as is required by the context ( . . . ), not: truth (Ambrosiaster, Beza, Turretin, Hammond, Locke, Bhme), or goodness (Theodoret, Grotius, Semler, Koppe, Rosenmller, Morus, Reiche, also Tittmann, Synon. p. 185) significations which the word never bears. It does not even indicate the holiness (Fritzsche, Reithmayr, Klaiber, Neander, Gurlitt in the Stud. u. Krit. 1840, p. 975; Lipsius, Rechtfertigungsl . p. 146 ff.); or the righteousness, including grace (Ritschl); or generally the Divine moral order of justice (Morison); or the self-equality of God in His bearing (Hofmann); but in the strict sense the opposite of in Rom 3:5 , the judicial (more precisely, the punitive) righteousness (comp Ernesti, Urspr. d. Snde , I. p. 169 ff.), which had to find its holy satisfaction, but received that satisfaction in the propitiatory offering of Christ, and is thereby practically demonstrated and exhibited. On , in the sense of practical proof , comp 2Co 8:24 , and on Eph 2:7 : . Following Rom 3:26 , Chrysostom and others, including Krehl and Baumgarten-Crusius, take it unsatisfactorily as justifying righteousness. Anselm, Luther, Eisner, Wolf, and others, also Usteri, Winzer, van Hengel and Mangold, hold that it is, as in Rom 3:21 , the righteousness, that God gives . On the other hand, see the immediately following . .

. . [880] ] on account of the passing by of sins that had previously taken place , i.e. because He had allowed the pre-Christian sins to go without punishment , whereby His righteousness had been lost sight of and obscured, [881] and therefore came to need an for men. [882] Thus the atonement accomplished in Christ became “the divine Theodice for the past history of the world” (Tholuck), and, in view of this , that ceases to be an enigma.

, which occurs only here in the N. T. (see however Dionys. Hal. vii. 37; Phalar. Epist. 114; Xen. de praef. eq. 7, 10; and Fritzsche in loc [883] ; Loesner, p. 249); erroneously explained by Chrysostom as equivalent to , is distinguished from in so far as the omission of punishment is conceived in as a letting pass ( , Act 17:30 ; comp Rom 14:16 ), in (Eph 1:7 ; Col 1:14 ) as a letting free . Since Paul, according to Acts l.c [885] , regarded the non-punishment of pre-Christian sins as an “overlooking” (comp Wis 11:23 ), we must consider the peculiar expression, , here as purposely chosen . Comp , Sir 23:2 . If he had written , the idea would be, that God, instead of retaining those sins in their category of guilt (comp Joh 20:23 ), had let them free, i.e. had forgiven them. [889] He has not forgiven them, however, but only let them go unpunished (comp 2Sa 24:10 ), neglexit . The wrath of God, which nevertheless frequently burst forth (comp Rom 1:17 ff.) in the ages before Christ over Jews and Gentiles (for Paul, in his perfectly general expressions, has not merely the former in view), was not an adequate recompense counterbalancing the sin, and even increased it (Rom 1:24 ff.); so that God’s attitude to the sin of the time before Christ, so long as it was not deleted either by an adequate punishment, or by-atonement, appears on the whole as a letting pass (comp Act 14:16 ) and overlooking. As the correlative of , there is afterwards appropriately named (comp Rom 2:4 ), not , for the latter would correspond to , Eph 1:7 .

The pre-Christian sins are not those of individuals prior to their conversion (Mehring and earlier expositors), but the sum of the sins of the world before Christ . The of Christ is the epoch and turning-point in the world’s history (comp Act 17:30 ; Act 14:16 .

. ] in virtue of the forbearance (tolerance, comp Rom 2:4 ) of God, [896] contains the ground which is the motive of the . It is not to be attached to . (Oecumenius, Luther, and many others; also Rckert, Gurlitt, Ewald, van Hengel, Ritschl, and Hofmann), which would yield the sense with or “ during the forbearance of God.” Against this view we may urge the very circumstance that the time when the sins referred to took place is already specified by , and expressed in a way simply and fully corresponding with the contrast of the that follows, as well as the special pertinent reason, that our mode of connecting . . . with . . . [897] brings out more palpably the antithetical relation of this to the divine . Moreover, as is a moral attribute, the temporal conception of is neither indicated nor appropriate. What is indicated and appropriate is simply the use, so common, of in the sense of the ethical ground. Reiche connects . with . . . ., making it co-ordinate with the . .: “the showed itself positively in the forgiveness of sins, negatively in the postponement of judgment.” Incorrect, on account of the erroneous explanation of and . thus necessitated.

Our whole interpretation of the passage from . to is not at variance (as Usteri thinks) with Heb 9:15 ; for, if God has allowed pre-Christian sins to pass, and then has exhibited the atoning sacrifice of Christ in proof of His righteousness, the death of Christ must necessarily be the for the transgressions committed under the old covenant, but passed over for the time being. But there is nothing in our passage to warrant the reference to the sins of the people of Israel , as in Heb. l.c [898] (in opposition to Philippi).

[843] . . . .

[844] Which has been done by the crucifixion . Compare the discourse of Jesus where He compares Himself with the serpent of Moses, Joh 3 . Christ has been thus held up to view as . In Greek authors the word is specially often used to express the exhibition of dead bodies (Kruger on Thuc. ii. 34, 1; Stallbaum, ad Plat. Phaed. p. 115 E). We are not to suppose however that this usage influenced the Apostle in his choice of the word, since he had Christ before his eyes, not as a dead body, but as shedding His blood and dying.

[845] . . . .

[846] Ewald has in the translation predestined , but in the explanation exhibited . Van Hengel declares for the latter.

[847] n loc. refers to the note of the commentator or editor named on the particular passage.

[848] n loc. refers to the note of the commentator or editor named on the particular passage.

[849] l. and others; and other passages; and other editions.

[850] d refers to the note of the commentator or editor named on the particular passage.

[851] . . . .

[852] . . . .

[853] The article is, critically, uncertain; but at all events the blood is conceived as atoning sacrifice -blood; comp. ver. 19.

[855] d refers to the note of the commentator or editor named on the particular passage.

[857] .c. loco citato or laudato .

[858] Estius also explains victimam propitiatoriam , but yet takes . as masculine . It was already taken as masculine (propitiator) in the Syriac (compare the reading propitiatorem in the Vulgate) by Thomas Aquinas and others; also Erasmus (in his translation ), Melancthon and Vatablus; more recently also by Vater, Schrader, Reithmayr and van Hengel. But to this it may be objected that there is no example of used with reference to persons . This remark also applies against Mehring, who interprets powerful for atonement . Kahnis, Dogm. I. p. 584, and similarly Mangold, properly retain the rendering: expiatory offering; and even Morison recognises the sacrificial conception of the “ propitiatory ,” although like Mehring he abides in substance by the idea of the adjective.

[860] l. and others; and other passages; and other editions.

[861] So also Funke, in the Stud. u. Krit. 1842, p. 314 f. The old writers, and before them the Fathers, have in some instances very far-fetched points of comparison. Calovius, e.g. , specifies five: (1) quoad causam efficientem; (2) quoad materiam (gold and not perishable wood divine and human nature); (3) quoad numerum (only one); (4) quoad objectum (all); (5) quoad usum et finem.

[862] The LXX. derived the word Kapporeth, in view of the idea which it represented, from , condonavit. Comp. also the Vulgate (“expiatorium”).

[863] l. and others; and other passages; and other editions.

[865] Even had no one believed on the Crucified One a contingency indeed, which in view of the divine could not really occur He would still have been set forth as a propitiatory offering, though this offering would not have subjectively benefited any one.

[866] . . . .

[867] This secures at all events to the Apostle’s utterance the conception of a sacrifice atoning, i.e. doing away the guilt, whichever of the existing explanations of the word we may adopt. This also applies against Rich. Schmidt l.c. , according to whom (comp. Sabatier, p. 262 f.) the establishment of the consisted in God actually passing sentence on sin itself in the flesh of His Son, and wholly abolishing it as an objective power exercising dominion over humanity consequently in the destruction of the sin-principle. Regarding Rom 8:3 see on that passage.

[869] l. and others; and other passages; and other editions.

[871] . . . .

[872] . . . .

[873] . . . .

[874] .c. loco citato or laudato .

[875] l. and others; and other passages; and other editions.

[876] l. and others; and other passages; and other editions.

[880] . . . .

[881] Compare J. Mller, v. d. Snde , I. p. 352, Exo 5 .

[882] The explanation that “ here indicates that, whereby the manifests itself” (Reiche; so also Benecke, Koppe, and older expositors) is incorrect, just because Paul in all cases (even in Rom 8:11 and Gal 4:13 ) makes a sharp distinction between with the accusative and with the genitive. This interpretation has arisen from the erroneous conception of (as goodness or truth ).

[883] n loc. refers to the note of the commentator or editor named on the particular passage.

[885] .c. loco citato or laudato .

[889] In the guilt and punishment are cancelled; in both are tacitly or expressly left undealt with, but in their case it may be said that “ omittance is not acquittance .” For the idea of forgiveness and alone form the standing mode of expression in the N. T. And beyond doubt (in opposition to the view of Luther and others, and recently Mangold) Paul would here have used this form, had he intended to convey that idea. The is intermediate between pardon and punishment. Compare Ritschl in the Jahrb. f. D. Th. 1863, p. 501.

[896] Paul writes , not again , because he utters the . from his own standpoint, so that the subject is presented objectively . Comp. Xen. Anab. i. 9, 15. But even apart from this the repetition of the noun instead of the pronoun is of very frequent occurrence in all Greek authors, and also in the N. T. (Winer, p. 136 [E. T. 180]).

[897] . . . .

[898] .c. loco citato or laudato .

Fuente: Heinrich August Wilhelm Meyer’s New Testament Commentary

25 Whom God hath set forth to be a propitiation through faith in his blood, to declare his righteousness for the remission of sins that are past, through the forbearance of God;

Ver. 25. To be a propitiation ] Or a covering, in allusion to the law; where the ark covering the two tables within it, the mercy seat covering the ark, and the cherubims covering the mercy seat and one another, showed Christ covering the curses of the law, in whom is the ground of all mercy; which things the angels desire to pry into, as into the pattern of God’s deep wisdom.

For the remission of sins ] Gr. , for the relaxation or releasement of sins, as of bonds or fetters.

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

25. ] , not here ‘ decreed ,’ as in reff. N. T., but put forth, set forth , manifested historically in His incarnation, sufferings, and exaltation. Wetst. quotes Thucyd. ii. 34, , ‘they expose the bones of the deceased to public view.’

] as a propitiatory offering . So we have , Exo 20:24 , ( ), 2Ma 12:45 , and , Herod. i. 35, in the sense of thank-offerings and offerings of purification (no subst., as , need be supplied, the words being themselves substantives): and we have this very word in Dio Chrysos. Orat. ii. p. 184 (cited by Stuart), where he says that the Greeks offered an , a propitiatory sacrifice. The ordinary interpretation (Theodoret, Theophyl., Luth., Calv., Grot., Calov., Wolf, Olsh.) is founded on the sense in which the LXX use the word, as signifying the golden cover of the ark of the covenant, between the Cherubim, where Jehovah appeared and whence He gave His oracles. , . . . . , , . Theodoret: on which Theophylact further, , , . The expression occurs in full, , Exo 25:17 ; elsewhere only, as ref. Heb. See also Philo, Vita Mos. iii. 8, vol. ii. p. 150. But De Wette well shews the inapplicability of this interpretation, as not agreeing with . . . (which requires a victim , see below), and as confusing the unity of the idea here, Christ being (according to it) one while a victim ( ), and another, something else. The other interpretation (Vulg. propitiationem : so E. V.: Beza, Rckert, al.: adj. Rosenmller, Wahl), which makes an adj. agreeing with , ‘ a propitiator ,’ hardly agrees with , implying an external demonstration of Christ as the , not merely an appointment in the divine conomy.

] by faith , as the subjective means of appropriation of this propitiation: not to be joined with (but the omission of is no objection to this, see above on Rom 3:22 ), as Luth., Calv. al., Olsh., Rckert, for such an expression as or . . . would be unexampled, and (which is decisive) the clause requires a primary, not a subordinate place in the sentence, because the next clause, . . . ., directly refers to it. As . is the subjective means of appropriation, so . is the objective means of manifestation, of Christ as a propitiatory sacrifice. does not = , but refers to propitiation by blood , the well-known typical use of it in sacrifice.

. . .] in order to the manifestation of His righteousness : this is the aim of the putting forth of Christ as an expiatory victim.

, not truth (Ambrst [16] , al.), not goodness (Theodoret, Grot., Hammond, Koppe, Rosenm., Reiche), not both these combined with justice (Beza), not justifying or sin-forgiving righteousness (Chrys., Aug [17] , Estius, Krehl, B.-Crus.), not the righteousness which He gives (Luther, Elsner, Wolf, al.), which last would repeat the idea already contained in Rom 3:21 and rob . of all meaning, not holiness , which does not correspond to and , but judicial righteousness , JUSTICE (as Orig [18] , Calov., Tholuck, Meyer, Schrader, Rckert Exo 2 , al.). This interpretation alone suits the requirements of the sense, and corresponds to the idea of , which is itself judicial. A sin-offering betokens on the one side the expiation of guilt, and on the other ensures pardon and reconciliation: and thus the Death of Christ is not only a proof of God’s grace and love, but also of His judicial righteousness which requires punishment and expiation. (Mainly from De Wette.)

[16] Ambr osia st er , i.e. Hilary the Deacon , fl. 384

[17] Augustine, Bp. of Hippo , 395 430

[18] Origen, b. 185, d. 254

. . . .] = . , and contains the reason why God would manifest His judicial righteousness; on account of the overlooking of the sins which had passed, in the forbearance of God : i.e. to vindicate that character for justice, which might seem, owing to the suspension of God’s righteous sentence on sin in former ages in His forbearance, to be placed in question: to shew, that though He did not then fully punish for sin, and though He did then set forth inadequate means of (subjective) justification, yet He did both, not because His justice was slumbering, nor because the nature of His righteousness was altered, but because He had provided a way whereby sin might be forgiven, and He might be just. Observe, is not forgiveness [nor “ remission ,” as E. V. erroneously renders it], but [ passing over , or] overlooking , which is the work of forbearance (see Act 17:30 ), whereas forgiveness is the work of grace , see ch. Rom 2:4 : nor is . ., ‘the sins of each man which precede his conversion ‘(Calov.), but those of the whole world before the death of Christ . See the very similar words Heb 9:15 .

The rendering , ‘ by means of ’ (Origen, Luth., Calv., Calov., Le Clerc, Elsn., Koppe, Reiche, Schrader), is both ungrammatical and unmeaning.

Fuente: Henry Alford’s Greek Testament

Rom 3:25 f. But the question whether the word involves of itself a reference to the cost at which the thing is accomplished is after all of minor consequence: that cost is brought out unambiguously in Rom 3:25 . The is in Christ Jesus, and it is in Him as One whom God set forth in propitiatory power, through faith ( or , reading , through the faith referred to), in His blood. in Eph 1:9 ( cf. Rom 1:13 ) is “purposed”; but here the other meaning, “set forth” (Vulg. proposuit ) suits the context much better. has been taken in various ways. (1) In the LXX it is the rendering of , (A.V.) “mercy-seat”. If one passage at least, Exo 25:16 , is rendered , which is possibly a combination of two translations a literal one, a “lid” or “covering”; and a figurative or spiritual one, “a propitiatory”. Many scholars argue that Paul’s use must follow that of the LXX, familiarity with which on the part of his readers is everywhere assumed. But the necessity is not quite apparent; and not to mention the incongruities which are introduced if Jesus is conceived as the mercy-seat upon which the sacrificial blood His own blood is sprinkled, there are grammatical reasons against this rendering. Paul must have written, to be clear, , or some equivalent phrase. Cf. 1Co 5:8 (Christ our passover). A “mercy-seat” is not such a self-evident, self-interpreting idea, that the Apostle could lay it at the heart of his gospel without a word of explanation. Consequently (2) many take as an adjective. Of those who so take it, some supply or , making the idea of sacrifice explicit. But it is simpler, and there is no valid objection, to make it masculine, in agreement with : “whom God set forth in propitiatory power”. This use of the word is sufficiently guaranteed by Jos., Ant. , xvi. 7, 1: . The passage in 4Ma 17:22 ( [ ] ) is indecisive, owing to the doubtful reading. Perhaps the grammatical question is insoluble; but there is no question that Christ is conceived as endued with propitiatory power, in virtue of His death. He is set forth as ( ) . It is His blood that covers sin. It seems a mere whim of rigour to deny, as Weiss does, that the death of Christ is here conceived as sacrificial. It is in His blood that Christ is endued with propitiatory power; and there is no propitiatory power of blood known to Scripture unless the blood be that of sacrifice. It is not necessary to assume that any particular sacrifice say the sin offering is in view; neither is it necessary, in order to find the idea of sacrifice here, to make neuter, and supply ; it is enough to say that for the Apostle the ideas of blood with propitiatory virtue, and sacrificial blood, must have been the same. The precise connection and purpose of ( ) is not at once clear. Grammatically, it might be construed with ; cf. Eph 1:15 , Gal 3:26 (?), Mar 1:15 ; but this lessens the emphasis due to the last words. It seems to be inserted, almost parenthetically, to resume and continue the idea of Rom 3:22 , that the righteousness of God which comes in this way, namely, in Christ, whom God has set forth in propitiatory power in virtue of His death comes only to those who believe. Men are saved freely, and it is all God’s work, not in the very least their own; yet that work does not avail for any one who does not by faith accepts it. What God has given to the world in Christ, infinitely great and absolutely free as it is, is literally nothing unless it is taken. Faith must have its place, therefore, in the profoundest statement of the Gospel, as the correlative of grace. Thus ( ) , though parenthetic, is of the last importance. With . . . we are shown God’s purpose in setting forth Christ as a propitiation in His blood. It is done with a view to demonstrate His righteousness, owing to the passing by of the sins previously committed in the forbearance of God. God’s righteousness in this place is obviously an attribute of God, on which the sin of the world, as hitherto treated by Him, has cast a shadow. Up till now, God has “passed by” sin. He has “winked at” (Act 17:30 ) the transgressions of men perpetrated before Christ came ( – ), . The last words may be either temporal or causal: while God exercised forbearance, or because He exercised it, men sinned, so to speak, with impunity, and God’s character was compromised. The underlying thought is the same as in Psa 50:21 : “These things hast Thou done, and I kept silence: Thou thoughtest that I was altogether such an one as Thyself ”. Such had been the course of Providence that God, owing to His forbearance in suspending serious dealing with sin, lay under the imputation of being indifferent to it.” But the time had now come to remove this imputation, and vindicate the Divine character. If it was possible once, it was no longer possible now, with Christ set forth in His Blood as a propitiation, to maintain that sin was a thing which God regarded with indifference, Paul does not say in so many words what it is in Christ crucified which constitutes Him a propitiation, and so clears God’s character of the charge that He does not care for sin: He lays stress, however, on the fact that an essential element in a propitiation is that it should vindicate the Divine righteousness. It should proclaim with unmistakable clearness that with sin God can hold no terms. (The distinction between , the suspension, and , the revocation, of punishment, is borne out, according to Lightfoot, Notes on Epp. of St. Paul , p. 273, by classical usage, and is essential here.) In Rom 3:26 this idea is restated, and the significance of a propitiation more fully brought out. “Yes, God set Him forth in this character with a view to demonstrate His righteousness, that He might be righteous Himself, and accept as righteous him who believes in “Jesus.” The words refer to the Gospel Age, the time in which believers live, in contrast to the time when God exercised forbearance, and men were tempted to accuse Him of indifference to righteousness. , as distinguished from , makes us think rather of the person contemplating the end than of the end contemplated; but there is no essential difference. : the article means “the already mentioned in Rom 3:25 ”. But the last clause, . . ., is the most important. It makes explicit the whole intention of God in dealing with sin by means of a propitiation. God’s righteousness, compromised as it seemed by His for bearance, might have been vindicated in another way; if He had executed judgment upon sin, it would have been a kind of vindication. He would have secured the first object of Rom 3:26 : “that He might be righteous Himself”. But part of God’s object was to justify the ungodly (chap. Rom 4:5 ), upon certain conditions; and this could not be attained by the execution of judgment upon sin. To combine both objects, and at once vindicate His own righteousness, and put righteousness within reach of the sinful, it was necessary that instead of executing judgment God should provide a propitiation. This He did when He set forth Jesus in His blood for the acceptance of faith. (Hring takes the of God’s righteousness here to be the same as the “revelation” of in Rom 1:17 , or the “manifestation” of it in Rom 3:21 ; but this is only possible if with him we completely ignore the context, and especially the decisive words, .) The question has been raised whether the righteousness of God, here spoken of as demonstrated at the Cross, is His judicial (Weiss) or His penal righteousness (Meyer). This seems to me an unreal question; the righteousness of God is the whole character of God so far as it must be conceived as inconsistent with any indifference about sin. It is a more serious question if we ask what it is in Christ set forth by God in His blood which at once vindicates God’s character and makes it possible for Him to justify those who believe. The passage itself contains nothing explicit except in the words . It is pedantic and inept to argue that since God could have demonstrated His righteousness either by punishment or by propitiation, therefore punishment and propitiation have no relation to each other. Christ was a propitiation in virtue of His death ; and however a modern mind may construe it, death to Paul was the doom of sin . To say that God set forth Christ as a propitiation in His blood is the same thing as to say that God made Him to be sin for us. God’s righteousness, therefore, is demonstrated at the Cross, because there, in Christ’s death, it is made once for all apparent that He does not palter with sin; the doom of sin falls by His appointment on the Redeemer. And it is possible, at the same time, to accept as righteous those who by faith unite themselves to Christ upon the Cross, and identify themselves with Him in His death: for in doing so they submit in Him to the Divine sentence upon sin, and at bottom become right with God. It is misleading to render . , that He might be just and yet the justifier,” etc.: the Apostle only means that the two ends have equally to be secured, not that there is necessarily an antagonism between them. But it is more than misleading to render “that He might be just and therefore the justifier”: there is no conception of righteousness, capable of being clearly carried out, and connected with the Cross , which makes such language intelligible. (See Dorner, System of Christian Doctrine , iv., 14, English Translation.) It is the love of God, according to the consistent teaching of the New Testament, which provides the propitiation, by which God’s righteousness is vindicated and the justification of the ungodly made possible. is every one who is properly and sufficiently characterised as a believer in Jesus. There is no difficulty whatever in regarding as objective genitive, as the use of throughout the N.T. (Gal 2:16 , e.g. ) requires us to do: such expressions as (Rom 4:16 ) are not in the least a reason to the contrary: they only illustrate the flexibility of the Greek language. See on Rom 3:22 above.

Fuente: The Expositors Greek Testament by Robertson

hath. Omit.

set forth = foreordained (margin) Greek. protithemi. See Rom 1:13.

to be = as.

propitiation. Greek. hilasterion. Only here and Heb 9:5. The word comes to us from the Septuagint. In Exo 25:17 kapporeth (cover) is rendered hilasterion epithema, propitiatory cover, the cover of the ark on which the blood was sprinkled as the means of propitiation.

to, &c. = for (Greek. eis. App-104.) a declaration of (Greek. endeixis. Occurs also, Rom 3:26; 2Co 8:24. Php 1:1, Php 1:28).

for = by reason of. Greek. dia. App-104. Rom 3:2.

remission. Literally the passing over. Greek. paresis. Only here.

sins. Greek. hamartema. App-128.

past. Greek. proginomai. Only here. Compare Act 17:30.

forbearance. Greek. anoche. See Rom 2:4.

Fuente: Companion Bible Notes, Appendices and Graphics

25.] , not here decreed, as in reff. N. T.,-but put forth, set forth, manifested historically in His incarnation, sufferings, and exaltation. Wetst. quotes Thucyd. ii. 34, , they expose the bones of the deceased to public view.

] as a propitiatory offering. So we have , Exo 20:24,- ( ), 2Ma 12:45,-and , Herod. i. 35, in the sense of thank-offerings and offerings of purification (no subst., as , need be supplied,-the words being themselves substantives): and we have this very word in Dio Chrysos. Orat. ii. p. 184 (cited by Stuart), where he says that the Greeks offered an , a propitiatory sacrifice. The ordinary interpretation (Theodoret, Theophyl., Luth., Calv., Grot., Calov., Wolf, Olsh.) is founded on the sense in which the LXX use the word, as signifying the golden cover of the ark of the covenant, between the Cherubim, where Jehovah appeared and whence He gave His oracles. , . . . . , , . Theodoret: on which Theophylact further,- , , . The expression occurs in full, , Exo 25:17; elsewhere only, as ref. Heb. See also Philo, Vita Mos. iii. 8, vol. ii. p. 150. But De Wette well shews the inapplicability of this interpretation, as not agreeing with … (which requires a victim, see below), and as confusing the unity of the idea here, Christ being (according to it) one while a victim ( ), and another, something else. The other interpretation (Vulg. propitiationem: so E. V.: Beza, Rckert, al.: adj.-Rosenmller, Wahl), which makes an adj. agreeing with , a propitiator, hardly agrees with , implying an external demonstration of Christ as the , not merely an appointment in the divine conomy.

] by faith, as the subjective means of appropriation of this propitiation:-not to be joined with (but the omission of is no objection to this, see above on Rom 3:22), as Luth., Calv. al., Olsh., Rckert,-for such an expression as or . . . would be unexampled,-and (which is decisive) the clause requires a primary, not a subordinate place in the sentence, because the next clause, . . . ., directly refers to it. As . is the subjective means of appropriation, so . is the objective means of manifestation, of Christ as a propitiatory sacrifice. does not = , but refers to propitiation by blood,-the well-known typical use of it in sacrifice.

…] in order to the manifestation of His righteousness: this is the aim of the putting forth of Christ as an expiatory victim.

, not truth (Ambrst[16], al.),-not goodness (Theodoret, Grot., Hammond, Koppe, Rosenm., Reiche),-not both these combined with justice (Beza),-not justifying or sin-forgiving righteousness (Chrys., Aug[17], Estius, Krehl, B.-Crus.),-not the righteousness which He gives (Luther, Elsner, Wolf, al.), which last would repeat the idea already contained in Rom 3:21 and rob . of all meaning,-not holiness, which does not correspond to and ,-but judicial righteousness, JUSTICE (as Orig[18], Calov., Tholuck, Meyer, Schrader, Rckert ed. 2, al.). This interpretation alone suits the requirements of the sense, and corresponds to the idea of , which is itself judicial. A sin-offering betokens on the one side the expiation of guilt, and on the other ensures pardon and reconciliation: and thus the Death of Christ is not only a proof of Gods grace and love, but also of His judicial righteousness which requires punishment and expiation. (Mainly from De Wette.)

[16] Ambrosiaster, i.e. Hilary the Deacon, fl. 384

[17] Augustine, Bp. of Hippo, 395-430

[18] Origen, b. 185, d. 254

. …] = . , and contains the reason why God would manifest His judicial righteousness; on account of the overlooking of the sins which had passed, in the forbearance of God: i.e. to vindicate that character for justice, which might seem, owing to the suspension of Gods righteous sentence on sin in former ages in His forbearance, to be placed in question:-to shew, that though He did not then fully punish for sin, and though He did then set forth inadequate means of (subjective) justification,-yet He did both, not because His justice was slumbering, nor because the nature of His righteousness was altered,-but because He had provided a way whereby sin might be forgiven, and He might be just. Observe, is not forgiveness [nor remission, as E. V. erroneously renders it], but [passing over, or] overlooking, which is the work of forbearance (see Act 17:30), whereas forgiveness is the work of grace,-see ch. Rom 2:4 :-nor is . ., the sins of each man which precede his conversion (Calov.), but those of the whole world before the death of Christ. See the very similar words Heb 9:15.

The rendering , by means of (Origen, Luth., Calv., Calov., Le Clerc, Elsn., Koppe, Reiche, Schrader), is both ungrammatical and unmeaning.

Fuente: The Greek Testament

Rom 3:25. ) hath set forth before the eyes of all. Luk 2:31. The in does not carry with it the idea of time, but is much the same as the Latin proponere, to set forth.-, a propitiatory [Eng. vers. not so strictly, propitiation]) The allusion is to the mercy-seat [propitiatory] of the Old Testament, Heb 9:5; and it is by this Greek term that the LXX generally express the Hebrew , Exo 25:17-22. Propitiation goes on the supposition of a previous offence, which opposes the opinion of the Socinians.- , in His own blood) This blood is truly propitiatory. Comp. Lev 16:2; Lev 16:13, etc.- , to the declaration of [for the demonstration of] His righteousness) This is repeated in the following verse, as if it were after a parenthesis, for the purpose of continuing the train of thought; only that instead of , Latin in, there is used in the following verse , ad, which implies a something more immediate,[38] ch. Rom 15:2. Eph 4:12.- [demonstration], declaration) Comp. notes at ch. Rom 1:17.- , for [Engl. Vers.] the pretermission [passing by]) Paul, in the Acts, and epistles to Ephesians, Colossians, and Hebrews, along with the other apostles, often uses , remission: None but he alone, and in this single passage, uses , pretermission; and certainly not without some good reason. There was remission even before the advent and death of Christ, ch. Rom 4:7; Rom 4:3; Mat 9:2, in so far as it implies the application of grace to individuals; but pretermission in the Old Testament had respect to transgressions, until () redemption of [or from] them was accomplished in the death of Christ, Heb 9:15; which redemption, , itself is, however, sometimes also called , Eph 1:7. is nearly of the same import as , Act 17:30. Hence, in Sir 23:3 (2) and are parallel; for both imply the punishment of sin. Ed. Hoeschel, p. 65, 376. , pretermission [the passing over or by sins] is not an imperfect , remission; but the distinction is of quite a different sort; abolition or entire putting away is opposed to the former (as to this abolition, , see Heb 9:26), retaining to the latter, Joh 20:23. Paul, at the same time, praises Gods forbearance. The object of pretermission are sins; the object of forbearance are sinners, against whom God did not prosecute His claim. So long as the one and other of these existed, the justice [righteousness] of God was not so apparent; for He did not seem to be so exceedingly angry with sin as He really is, but appeared to leave the sinner to himself, , to regard not. Heb 8:9 [, I regarded them not]; but in the blood and atoning death of Christ, Gods justice [righteousness] was exhibited, accompanied with His vengeance against sin itself, that He might be Himself just, and at the same time accompanied with zeal for the deliverance of the sinner, that He might be Himself [at the same time also] the justifier; and therefore very frequent mention of this vengeance and of this zeal is made by the prophets, and especially by Isaiah, for example, Isa 9:6, and Isa 61:2. And , on account of [not for, as Eng. vers.] that pretermission in the forbearance of God, it was necessary that at some time there should be made a demonstration [a showing forth, ] of His justice [righteousness].-) of sins which had been committed, before atonement was made for them by the blood of Christ. Comp. again Heb 9:15.

[38] , towards, with a view to; , for, with the effect of.-ED.

Fuente: Gnomon of the New Testament

Rom 3:25

Rom 3:25

whom God set forth to be a propitiation, through faith, in his blood,-In the work of rescuing man, the offended majesty of heaven must be propitiated, made favorable; the universe must see and know that Gods laws cannot be trifled with; and in bringing man back into union and harmony with the laws of the universe and with God, that he may be saved, the sanctity and majesty of divine authority must not be compromised. Gods laws must be satisfied, his honor vindicated, ere man can be received of God. This work of satisfying the divine law, of propitiating the offended majesty of heaven, and of securing divine favor that man as a servant of God might be saved, was accomplished by the blood of Christ, as of a lamb without blemish and without spot, even the blood of Christ: who was foreknown indeed before the foundation of the world, but was manifested at the end of the times for your sake, who through him are believers in God. (1Pe 1:19-21). This shows why the sentence was not literally executed at once.

to show his righteousness because of the passing over of the sins done aforetime, in the forbearance of God;-During the patriarchal and the Jewish dispensations sins were not finally forgiven. The typical blood of those covenants was necessary to the partial and temporary cleansing from sin. It did not make the comers thereunto perfect as pertaining to the conscience, and there was a remembrance of sin every year, to be finally and fully purged away from the soul only when the blood of Christ, which sealed the everlasting covenant, was shed. For if the blood of goats and bulls, and the ashes of a heifer sprinkling them that have been defiled, sanctify unto the cleanness of the flesh: how much more shall the blood of Christ, who through the eternal Spirit offered himself without blemish unto God, cleanse your conscience from dead works to serve the living God? (Heb 9:13-14). This shows plainly that when life was forfeited it could be redeemed only by life. It, furthermore, teaches that the blood of bulls and goats under the patriarchal and Jewish dispensations possessed efficacy only in pointing to and connected with the blood of Jesus Christ that cleanses from all sin, and that the partial and temporary forgiveness or passing over of sins, requiring a sacrificial remembrance every year, became final and complete only when Christ came as the mediator of a new covenant, that a death having taken place for the redemption of the transgressions that were under the first covenant, they that have been called may receive the promise of the eternal inheritance. (Heb 9:15). Those called under the Old Testament came into full possession of the promise of eternal life when the blood of Christ, through the eternal Spirit, was offered; for only then was the full and final forgiveness of sins secured.

Fuente: Old and New Testaments Restoration Commentary

propitiation

Lit. a propitiatory sacrifice, through faith by his blood; (Greek – , “place of propitiation).” The word occurs, 1Jn 2:2; 1Jn 4:10 as the trans. of hilasmos, “that which propitiates,” “a propitiatory sacrifice.” Hilasterion is used by the Septuagint, and Heb 9:5 for “mercy-seat.” The mercy-seat was sprinkled with atoning blood in the day of atonement Lev 16:14 in token that the righteous sentence of the law had been (typically) carried out, so that what must else have been a judgment-seat could righteously be a mercy-seat; Heb 9:11-15; Heb 4:14-16, a place of communion Exo 25:21; Exo 25:22.

In fulfilment of the type, Christ is Himself the hilasmos, “that which propitiates,” and the hilasterion, “the place of propitiation” –the mercy-seat sprinkled with His own blood– the token that in our stead He so honoured the law by enduring its righteous sentence that God, who ever foresaw the cross, is vindicated in having “passed over” sins from Adam to Moses Rom 5:13 and the sins of believers under the old covenant (See Scofield “Exo 29:33”) and just in justifying sinners under the covenant. There is no thought in propitiation of placating a vengeful God, but of doing right by His holy law and so making it possible for Him righteously to show mercy.

remission passing over of sins done aforetime, i.e. since Adam. Cf. Heb 9:15.

Fuente: Scofield Reference Bible Notes

set forth: or, foreordained, Act 2:23, Act 3:18, Act 4:28, Act 15:18, 1Pe 1:18-20, Rev 13:8

to be: Exo 25:17-22, Lev 16:15, Heb 9:5,*Gr: 1Jo 2:2, 1Jo 4:10

through: Rom 5:1, Rom 5:9, Rom 5:11, Isa 53:11, Joh 6:47, Joh 6:53-58, Col 1:20-23, Heb 10:19, Heb 10:20

to declare: Rom 3:26, Psa 22:31, Psa 40:10, Psa 50:6, Psa 97:6, Psa 119:142, 1Jo 1:10

remission: or, passing over, Rom 3:23, Rom 3:24, Rom 4:1-8, Act 13:38, Act 13:39, Act 17:30, 1Ti 1:15, Heb 9:15-22, Heb 9:25, Heb 9:26, Heb 10:4, Heb 11:7, Heb 11:14, Heb 11:17, Heb 11:39, Heb 11:40, Rev 5:9, Rev 13:8, Rev 20:15

Reciprocal: Gen 17:10 – Every Exo 37:6 – General Exo 40:20 – mercy Lev 1:4 – atonement Lev 17:11 – I have Num 15:25 – the priest Deu 16:1 – the passover Job 36:3 – ascribe Psa 36:6 – righteousness Psa 85:10 – righteousness Psa 116:5 – and righteous Psa 145:17 – righteous Isa 42:6 – called Isa 42:21 – well Isa 45:21 – a just Isa 45:25 – the Lord Jer 9:24 – lovingkindness Eze 33:12 – as for Hos 2:19 – in righteousness Mic 6:5 – know Mat 3:14 – I have Luk 1:77 – the Joh 11:51 – that Jesus Joh 19:30 – It is Rom 2:4 – forbearance Rom 3:5 – But if Rom 4:25 – Who was Rom 10:4 – Christ Rom 10:6 – righteousness 1Co 15:3 – Christ Gal 3:17 – the covenant Col 1:14 – whom Heb 2:10 – it Heb 6:18 – set 1Pe 1:20 – verily 1Jo 5:6 – blood

Fuente: The Treasury of Scripture Knowledge

:25

Rom 3:25. Propitiation means something that satisfies a demand made by one person of another, or that was justly due another whether it had been demanded or not. A man might be in debt to another to the amount of one million dollars, which it would be impossible for him to pay. The creditor, having a son who wished to receive the services of a faithful attendant, would agree to consider the debt “settled” if the debtor would become such an attendant. That is what God proposes to man, if he will become a faithful servant of his Son. Sins that are past is represented in the illustration by the million dollars for which the debtor had become indebted but could not pay.

Fuente: Combined Bible Commentary

Rom 3:25. Whom. The personal redeemer Christ Jesus stands immediately connected with justification; how is here declared (Rom 3:25; Rom 3:20).

God set forth. One historical fact is spoken of. The meaning purposed, which the original word may have, is inappropriate, because the purpose is expressed in detail afterwards. Publicly set forth or himself is the full sense of the term here.

To be a propitiatory sacrifice. One word in the original, but something must be supplied in English: as, for, to be, have been suggested, the last being preferable because a fact is referred to. The Greek word is strictly an adjective, meaning propitiatory, but is used in the LXX. as a noun, usually referring to the mercy-seat (kapporeth), the lid of the ark of the covenant; in this sense it occurs in Heb 9:5, the only other instance of its use in the New Testament. Explanations have been suggested: (1.) Mercy-seat; but this confuses metaphors; the mercy-seat was hidden, not set forth; the article is wanting; the figure is nowhere else applied to Christ, and the mercy-seat was designed to show Gods grace, not His righteousness. (2.) In consequence of these objections we prefer to render it a propitiatory sacrifice, either taking the word in that sense, or supplying the noun. This amounts to the same as the other explanation, but is not open to the same objections. (3.) To be propitiatory; but there is no instance of the adjective being applied to persons. (4.) As propitiator; this is open to the same objection. (5.) As a means of propitiation; this is too abstract.

It will be noticed that all explanations rest on the thought that Christs death was sacrificial and expiatory; that it was a real atonement, required by something in the character of God, and not merely designed to effect moral results in man. We may not know all that this propitiation involves, but since God Himself was willing to instruct His ancient people by types of this reality, we ought to know something definite and positive respecting it. The atoning death of Christ is the ground of the reconciliation (wrongly translated atonement in chap. Rom 5:11), since it satisfies the demands of Divine justice on the one hand, and on the other draws men to God. Independently of the former, the latter could not be more than a groundless human feeling.

Through faith, in his blood. We insert a comma after faith, because the word translated in is never joined with faith, and because the important phrase in his blood, is made too subordinate by the ordinary punctuation. Further, faith in Christ is more than faith in His blood. We join in His blood with set forth, etc. This setting forth of Christ as a propitiatory sacrifice took place in the shedding of His blood. By His blood is not so exact. The entire thought is purely expiatory; the figure is that of doing away guilt by blood; the reality is the atoning death of Christ, which really removes the guilt of sin. Through faith (lit, the faith, pointing to faith already mentioned in Rom 3:22) may be connected either with propitiation, so that it indicates how this propitiation becomes effective, or with set forth, etc. The former is perhaps preferable, since the propitiation could hardly be said to be set forth through faith. The notion that faith here means Christs faithfulness is altogether unwarranted.

To exhibit, or, unto the exhibition, or, demonstration.

His righteousness. Gods judicial (or punitive) righteousness. His retributive justice is meant; the death of Christ shows how He hates sin, while He saves sinners. The rest of the verse, when fairly interpreted, opposes the various other interpretations.

Because of the passing over of sins formerly done. The E. V. is misleading. This clause gives, not the design, but the occasion of the showing of Gods righteousness: passing over is not the same as remission. God had allowed the sins of the race which were committed before Christs death (sins formerly done), to pass by without full punishment. He had not forgiven them; the wrath that appeared (comp. chap. Rom 1:18) was not a sufficient punishment; His passing over these sins obscured His righteousness. The death of Christ as an atoning sacrifice showed what His righteousness demanded, while it effected pardon and justification. That this is the correct view, appears not only from Rom 3:26, but from the next clause: in the forbearance of God, which explains the passing over. Remission is a matter of grace; passing over, of forbearance. To refer the latter part of this verse to actual pardon under the Old Testament dispensation is contrary to the obvious sense of the words, however true it is that the Old Testament saints had remission of sins.

Fuente: A Popular Commentary on the New Testament

Rom 3:25-26. Whom God hath set forth Before angels and men: hath in his infinite mercy exhibited to us in the gospel, to be a propitiation Greek, , a propitiatory, or mercy-seat, where mercy may be found by the penitent, in a way consistent with divine justice. The reader will observe, the cover of the ark, in the tabernacle and temple of the Israelites, was called the mercy-seat, or propitiatory, and is termed by the LXX., Exo 25:17, , a propitiatory cover, because it was the throne on which the glory of the Lord was wont to be displayed, and received the atonements made by the high-priest on the day of expiation, and from which God dispensed pardon to the people. In allusion to this ancient worship, the apostle represents Christ as a propitiatory, or mercy-seat, set forth by God for receiving the worship of men, and dispensing pardon to them. Or, if a propitiatory is, by a common metonymy, put for a propitiatory sacrifice, the apostles meaning will be, that, by the appointment of God, Christ died as a sacrifice for sin, and that God pardons sin through the merit of that sacrifice. Hence Christ is called , a propitiation, 1Jn 2:2; 1Jn 4:10. By teaching this doctrine, the apostle removed the great objection of Jews and heathen against the gospel, that it had neither a priest nor a sacrifice. Macknight. Through faith in his blood Through believing that Christs blood was shed to expiate our sins, and trusting therein for pardon and acceptance with God, and all other benefits which he has thereby procured for us: to declare, , for a demonstration of his, Gods, own righteousness: both his justice and mercy, especially the former, that thereby it might appear he could pardon sin, without any impeachment of his righteousness, in that he did not pardon it without full satisfaction made to the law by the sufferings of Christ, who was wounded for our transgressions, and on whom was laid that chastisement of sin which was necessary to procure our peace, and render our acceptance with God consistent with the divine perfections, and the equity of his government. For the remission of sins that are past All the sins antecedent to their believing. Or the expression, , may be properly rendered, on account of the passing by, or not instantly and adequately punishing, sins which were before committed, that is, before the coming of Christ: the sins of which both Jews and Gentiles had been guilty before the gospel was promulgated, and on account of which both deserved destruction, and were unworthy of the blessings of Gods covenant. Now Gods righteousness or justice might have appeared doubtful, on account of his having so long, in his great forbearance, thus passed by the sins of men, unless in the mean time he had made a sufficient display of his hatred to sin. But such a display being made in the death of Christ, his justice is thereby fully proved. Doddridge thus paraphrases the passage: The remission extends not only to the present but former age, and to all the offences which are long since past, according to the forbearance of God, who has forborne to execute judgment upon sinners for their repeated provocations, in reference to that atonement which he knew should in due tinge be made. To declare, , for a demonstration of his righteousness (see the former verse) at this time , at this period of his showing mercy to sinners. As if he had said, When he most highly magnified his mercy in finding out this way of reconciliation, he did also most eminently declare his justice, in requiring such satisfaction for the transgression of his law: that he might be just Might evidence himself to be strictly and inviolably righteous in the administration of his government, even while he is the merciful justifier of the sinner that believeth in Jesus Who so believes in Jesus, as to embrace this way of justification, renouncing all merit in himself, and relying entirely on the sacrifice and intercession of Christ, for reconciliation with God, and all the blessings of the new covenant. The attribute of justice must be preserved inviolate; and inviolate it is preserved, if there was a real infliction of punishment on Christ. On this plan all the attributes harmonize; every attribute is glorified, and not one superseded, nor so much as clouded.

By just, indeed, in this verse, Taylor would understand merciful, and Locke, faithful to his promises; but either of these, as Doddridge observes, makes but a very cold sense, when compared with that here given. It is no way wonderful that God should be merciful, or faithful to his promises, though the justifier of believing sinners; but that he should be just in such an act, might have seemed incredible, had we not received such an account of the atonement. This subject is set in a clear and striking light by a late writer: The two great ends of public justice are the glory of God, and in connection with it, the general good of his creatures. It is essentially necessary to the attainment of these ends, that the authority of the government of God should be supported, in all its extent, as inviolably sacred; that one jot or tittle should in no wise pass from the law; that no sin, of any kind, or in any degree, should appear as venial; that if any sinner is pardoned, it should be in such a way, as, while it displays the divine mercy, shall at the same time testify the divine abhorrence of his sins. All this is gloriously effected in the gospel, by means of atonement; by the substitution of a voluntary surety, even of him whose name is Immanuel, to bear the curse of the law, in the room of the guilty. In his substitution we see displayed, in a manner unutterably affecting and awful, the holy purity of the divine nature; for no testimony can be conceived more impressive, of infinite abhorrence of sin, than the sufferings and death of the Son of God. Here too we behold the immutable justice of the divine government, inflicting the righteous penalty of a violated law. It is to be considered as a fixed principle of the divine government, that sin must be punished; that if the sinner is pardoned, it must be in a way that marks and publishes the evil of his offence. This is effected by substitution; and, as far as we can judge, could not be effected in any other way. In inflicting the sentence against transgression on the voluntary and all-sufficient Surety, Jehovah, while he clears the sinner, does not clear his sins; although clothed with the thunders of vindictive justice against transgression, he wears, to the transgressor, the smile of reconciliation and peace; he dispenses the blessings of mercy from the throne of his holiness; and, while exercising grace to the guilty, he appears in the character equally lovely and venerable of the sinners friend, And sins eternal foe!

In this way, then, all the ends of public justice are fully answered. The law retains its complete unmitigated perfection; is magnified and made honourable: the dignity and authority of the divine government are maintained, and even elevated: all the perfections of Deity are gloriously illustrated and exhibited in sublime harmony. While the riches of mercy are displayed, for the encouragement of sinners to return to God, the solemn lesson is at the same time taught, by a most convincing example, that rebellion cannot be persisted in with impunity; and motives are thus addressed to the fear of evil, as well as to the desire of good. Such a view of the Divine Being is presented in the cross as is precisely calculated to inspire and to maintain (to maintain, too, with a power which will increase in influence the more closely and seriously the view is contemplated) the two great principles of a holy life the LOVE, and the FEAR OF GOD; filial attachment, freedom, and confidence, combined with humble reverence and holy dread. See Mr. Ralph Wardlaws Discourses on the Principal Points of the Socinian Controversy, pp. 211-213.

Fuente: Joseph Bensons Commentary on the Old and New Testaments

Vv. 25, 26. Whom He had established beforehand as a means of propitiation through faith,by His blood, for the demonstration of His justice, because of the tolerance shown toward sins done aforetime, during the forbearance of God, for the demonstration of His justice at the present time; that He might be just, and justifying him who is of the faith in Jesus.

It is not without reason that these two verses have been called the marrow of theology. Calvin declares that there is not probably in the whole Bible a passage which sets forth more profoundly the righteousness of God in Christ. And yet it is so short that the statement seems scarcely to have begun when all is said, within so few lines are the most decisive thoughts concentrated! It is really, as Vitringa has said, the brief summary of divine wisdom.

It is God Himself who, according to this passage, is to be regarded as the author of the whole work of redemption. The salvation of the world is not therefore wrested from Him, as is sometimes represented by the mediation of Christ. The same thought is expressed elsewhere; for example, 2Co 5:18 : All is of God, who hath reconciled us to Himself by Jesus Christ; and Joh 3:16 : God so loved the world, that He gave His only-begotten Son. This point should never be forgotten in the idea which we form of expiation.

The verb , to put before, may signify in the middle, either: to exhibit, present publicly (in view of oneself), or to set before oneself in the innermost shrine of the spirit; to decide, to design beforehand within oneself. For the preposition may have the local meaning in front of, or the temporal meaning before. Both significations of the verb have been used here, and in favor of both numerous examples may be quoted in classic Greek. The second sense is obviously the prevailing one in the New Testament; comp. Rom 1:13, Eph 1:9, etc., as well as the common use of the word to denote God’s eternal plan (Rom 8:28; Eph 3:11); see also Act 27:13. In favor of the first meaning, there may be quoted, indeed, the phrase , the shewbread, in the LXX. If we use it here, it would make the apostle say: whom God set forth publicly as a propitiatory victim. This act of public showing forth would refer either to the exhibition of Jesus on the cross, or to the proclamation of His death by the apostolic preaching. The middle form (to set forth for oneself) would find its explanation in the clause following: for the demonstration of His justice. This meaning is not impossible. It is adopted by the Vulgate, Luth., Beng., Thol., de Wette, Philip., Meyer, Hofm., Morison. But this idea of a public exhibition of the person of Jesus appears to us to have it something at once theatrical and superfluous. Independently of what we have just been saying of the ordinary meaning of the words , , in the New Testament, the context speaks strongly in favor of the other meaning. The fundamental idea of the passage is the contrast between the time of God’s forbearance in regard to sin, and the decisive moment when at once He carried out the universal expiation. It is natural in this order of ideas to emphasize the fact that God had foreseen this final moment, and had provided Himself beforehand with the victim by means of which the expiation was to be accomplished. Thus the phrase: to set forth beforehand, already gives a hint of the contrast: at the present time, Rom 3:26. Placed as it is at the head of the whole passage, it brings out forcibly, at the same time, the incomparable gravity of the work about to be described. The middle of the verb refers to the inward resolution of God. In adopting this meaning, we find ourselves at one with the ancient Greek interpreters, Chrys., OEcum., Theoph.; see, among the moderns, Fritzsche. The word , propitiatory, belongs to that host of Greek adjectives whose termination () signifies what serves to. The meaning therefore is: what serves to render propitious, favorable. The verb corresponds in the LXX. to kipper, the Piel of kaphar, to cover. Applied to the notion of sin, this Piel has a double sense: either to pardonthe subject is then the offended one himself, who, as it were, covers the sin that he may see it no more, for example, Psa 65:4or to expiatethe subject is then the victim which covers (effaces) the sin with its blood, that the judge may see it no more, for example, Exo 29:36. In the New Testament this verb occurs twice, Luk 18:13, where the publican says to God: , show Thyself propitious to me, which is equivalent to: forgive me; and Heb 2:17 : , to expiate the sins of the people. We find in these same two passages the two meanings of the term in the Old Testament. The etymology of this verb is the adjective , favorable, propitious (probably connected with , merciful). To explain the word in our text, very many commentators, Orig., Theoph., Er., Luth., Calv., Grot., Vitringa, and among the moderns, Olsh., Thol., Philip., etc., have had recourse to the technical meaning which it has in the LXX., where it denotes the propitiatory, or lid of the ark of the covenant. With this meaning the substantive understood would be , lid, which is sometimes joined to the adjective, for example, Exo 25:17. As is well known, the high priest, on the day of atonement, sprinkled this lid with the blood of the victim (Lev 16:14 et seq.). On this account these commentators hold that it was here regarded by Paul as the type of Christ, whose shed blood covers the sin of the world. The term is found in this sense, Heb 9:5. We do not, however, think this interpretation admissible. 1. If the matter in question were a well-known definite object, the only one of its kind, the article could not be omitted. 2. The Epistle to the Romans is not a book which moves, like the Epistle to the Hebrews, in the sphere of Levitical symbolism; there is nothing here to indicate that the term is applied to an object belonging to the Israelitish cultus. 3. Gess justly observes that if this type had been familiar to St. Paul, it would have been found elsewhere in his letters; and if it were not so, the term would have been unintelligible to his readers. 4. In all respects the figure would be a strange one. What a comparison to make of Jesus Christ crucified with a lid sprinkled with blood! 5. Give to the verb whichever of the two meanings you choose, the figure of the propitiatory remains unsuitable. In the sense of exhibiting publicly, there is a contradiction between this idea of publicity and the part assigned to the propitiatory in the Jewish cultus; for this object remained concealed in the sanctuary, the high priest alone could see it, and that only once a year, and through a cloud of smoke. And if the verb be explained in the sense which we have adopted, that of establishing beforehand, it is still more impossible to apply this idea of an eternal purpose, either to a material object like the propitiatory itself, or to its typical connection with Jesus Christ. We must therefore understand the word in a very wide sense: a means of propitiation. After reading Morison, we cannot venture to define more strictly, and to translate: a victim of propitiation, as if there were to be understood the substantive (victim). For this meaning of the term used here does not seem to be sufficiently proved by the passages alleged (see the examples quoted by Thol., de Wette, Meyer, with Morison’s criticism). The English commentator himself takes the word as a masculine adjective, agreeing with the relative : Jesus Christ, whom God set forth as making propitiation. Such is the explanation of the Peshito, Thomas Aquinas, Er., Mel., etc. It is certainly allowable. But in this sense would not Paul rather have used the masculine substantive ? The word is indeed found, not (Hofm.). We therefore hold by the generally received interpretation, which makes the term a neuter substantive (originally the neuter of the adjective; comp. , , etc.). As to the idea of sacrifice, if it is not in the word itself, it follows from its connection with the following clause: by His blood (see below). For what is a means of propitiation by blood, if it is not a sacrifice? A question may here be raised: if it is God himself who, as we have just said, has established this means of pardon of His free grace, what purpose then was this means to serve? For it cannot obtain for us anything else than we possessed already, the Divine love. This objection rests on the false idea that expiation is intended to originate a sentiment which did not exist in God before. What it produces is such a change in the relation between God and the creature, that God can henceforth display toward sinful man one of the elements of His nature rather than another. The feeling of the divine mind shows itself in the foundation of the expiatory work as compassion. But the propitiation once effected, it can display itself in the new and higher form of intimate communion. As Gess says: Divine love manifests itself in the gift of the Son, that it may be able afterward to diffuse itself in the heart by the gift of the spirit. There are therefore1. The love which precedes the propitiation, and which determines to effect it; and 2. Love such that it can display itself, once the propitiation is effected.

The clause [b , by faith, is wanting in the Alex., which, however is not enough to render it suspicious. Five Mjj. (Alex. and Greco-Lat.) omit the article (the, before faith). It would be impossible to explain why this word had been rejected if it existed originally in the text. It has therefore been added to give the notion of faith a more definite sense: the well-known faith in Jesus. But it was not on this or that particular faith the apostle wished here to insist; it was on faith in its very idea, in opposition to works. On what does the clause depend: , by faith? According to some ancients and Philippi: on (He set forth, or established beforehand). But it is difficult to conceive what logical relation there can be between the ideas of setting forth or establishing, and a clause such as by faith. The only natural connection of this clause is with the word (means of propitiation): God has established Jesus beforehand as the means of propitiation through faith, which signifies that the efficacy of this means was from the first bound by the divine decree to the condition of faith. God eternally determined within Himself the means of pardon, but as eternally He stipulated with Himself that the condition on which this means should become available for each individual should be faith, neither more nor less. This idea is important; the subjective condition of faith entered as an integral element into the very decree of amnesty (the ). This is what we shall find afterward expressed in the words , whom He foreknew (as His own by faith), Rom 8:29. The clause following: in or by His blood, is connected by most commentators (Luth., Calv., Olsh., Thol., Morison) with the word faith: by faith in His blood. Grammatically this connection is possible; comp. Eph 1:15. And it is the interpretation, perhaps, which has led to the article being added before . But it should certainly be rejected. The idea requiring a determining clause is not faith, which is clear of itself, but the means of propitiation. In a passage entirely devoted to the expounding of the fact of expiation, Paul could not possibly fail to indicate the manner in which the means operated. We therefore find the notion of propitiation qualified by two parallel and mutually completing clauses: the first, by faith, indicating the subjective condition; and the second, by His blood, setting forth the historical and objective condition of the efficacy of the means. Propitiation does not take place except through faith on the part of the saved, and through blood on the part of the Saviour. The attempt of Meyer, Hofmann, etc., to make this clause dependent on (He set Him forth or established Him beforehand…through His blood) is unnatural. To present or establish a person through or in his blood, would not only be an obscure form of speech, but even offensively harsh. According to Lev 17:11, the soul of man, the principle of life, is in the blood. The blood flowing forth is the life exhaling. Now the wilful sinner has deserved death. Having used the gift of life to revolt against Him from whom he holds it, it is just that this gift should be withdrawn from him. Hence the sentence: In the day thou sinnest, thou shalt die. Every act of sin should thus, in strict justice, be followed by death, the violent and instant death of its author. The sinner, it is true, no longer understands this; for sin stupefies the conscience at the same time that it corrupts the heart and perverts the will. Such, then, is the law which must be set in the light of day before pardon is granted, and that it may be granted. Otherwise the sovereign majesty of God on the one side, and the criminal character of the sinner on the other, would remain shrouded in the conscience of the pardoned sinner; and such a pardon, instead of laying a foundation for his restoration, would consummate his degradation and entail his eternal ruin. Thus are justified the two qualifications of the means of propitiation indicated here by the apostle: in blood and by faith; in other terms 1. The judgment of God on sin by the shedding of blood; 2. The adherence of the guilty to this judgment by faith. The apostolic utterance may consequently be paraphrased thus: Jesus Christ, whom God settled beforehand as the means of propitiation on the condition of faith, through the shedding of His blood.

Blood does not certainly denote the holy consecration of life in general. It is purely arbitrary to seek any other meaning in the word than it naturally expresses, the fact of a violent and bloody death. This signification is specially obvious in a passage where the word is found in such direct connection with (propitiation), in which there is concentrated the whole symbolism of the Jewish sacrifices.

The relation commonly maintained between propitiation (the act which renders God favorable) and blood is this: the blood of the Messiah, shed as an equivalent for that of sinners, is the indemnity offered to God’s justice to purchase the pardon granted by love. But it must be observed that this relation is not stated by the apostle himself, and that the term , to render propitious, does not necessarily contain the idea of an indemnity paid in the form of a quantitative equivalent. The word denotes in general the act, whatever it be, in consequence of which God, who was displaying His wrath, is led to display His grace, and to pardon. This propitiatory act is, Luk 18:13-14, the cry of the penitent publican; Psa 51:17, the sacrifice of a broken and contrite heart. In the supreme and final redemption which we have in Christ, the way of propitiation is more painful and decisive. The apostle has just told us in what it consists; he proceeds in the words which follow to explain to us its object: for the demonstration of His justice.

The term demonstration is remarkable. If the apostle had in view a payment offered to justice in compensation for the death which sinful men have merited, he would rather have said: for the satisfaction of His justice. The word manifestation seems to belong to a somewhat different order of ideas. But let us begin with fixing the meaning of the principal expression: the righteousness of God. Luther has connected it with justification. But in this case the contrast with the time of God’s long-suffering, Rom 3:26, becomes unintelligible, and the two last terms of the same verse: that He might be just and the justifier, could not be distinguished from one another. So all interpreters agree to take the word as indicating a divine attribute which, long veiled, was put in the light of day by the cross. Which attribute is it? Justice sometimes denoting moral perfection in general, each commentator has taken the term used by Paul as expressing the special attribute which agreed best with his system in regard to the work of redemption. It has been taken to express(1) Goodness (Theodor., Abel., Grot., Seml., etc.); (2) Veracity or fidelity (Ambr., Beza, Turret.); (3) Holiness (Nitzsch, Neand., Hofm., Lipsius); (4) Righteousness as justifying and sanctifying (the Greek Fathers, Mel., Calv., Oltram.) this meaning is almost identical with Luther’s; (5) Righteousness in so far as it carries the salvation of the elect to its goal; such is the meaning of Ritschl, which comes very near No. 3; (6) Retributive justice in God, considered here specially as the principle of the punishment of sin (de Wette, Mey., Philip.). The first five meanings all fall before one common objection; the Greek language, and Paul’s vocabulary in particular, have special terms terms to express each of those particular attributes: , goodness; , veracity; , faithfulness; , grace; , holiness. Why not use one of these definite terms, instead of introducing into this so important didactic passage a term fitted to occasion the gravest misunderstandings, if it was really to be taken in a sense different from its usual and natural signification? Now this signification is certainly that of No. 6: justice, as the mode of action whereby God maintains the right of every being, and consequently order throughout the whole moral universe, blessing him who has respect to this order, visiting with punishment him who violates it. The essence of God is the absolute love of the good, His holiness (Isa 6:3 : Holy, holy, holy…). Now, the good is order, the normal relation between all free beings, from God Himself to the last of them. The attribute of justice, eternally latent in holiness, passes into the active state with the appearance of the free creature. For in the fact of freedom there was included the possibility of disorder, and this possibility soon passed into reality. God’s abhorrence of evil, His holiness, thus displays itself in the form of justice preserving order and maintaining right. Now, to maintain order without suppressing liberty, there is but one means, and that is punishment. Punishment is order in disorder. It is the revelation of disorder to the sinner’s conscience by means of suffering. It is consequently, or at least may be, the point of departure for the reestablishment of order, of the normal relation of free beings. Thus is explained the notion of the justice of God, so often proclaimed in Scripture (Joh 17:25; 2Th 1:5; 2Ti 4:8; Rev 16:5; Rev 19:2; Rev 19:11, etc.); and especially Rom 2:5 et seq., where we see the , the just judgment, distributing among men wrath and tribulation (Rom 3:8-9), glory and peace (Rom 3:7-10).

This meaning which we give with Scripture to the word justice, and which is in keeping with its generally received use, is also the only one, as we shall see, which suits the context of this passage, and especially the words which follow.

How was the cross the manifestation of the justice of God? In two ways so closely united, that either of them separated from the other would lose its value. 1. By the very fact of Christ’s sufferings and bloody death. If Paul does not see in this punishment a quantitative equivalent of the treatment which every sinner had incurred, this is what clearly appears from such sayings as 2Co 5:21 : God made Him sin for us; Gal 3:13 : Christ hath redeemed us from the curse of the law, being made a curse for us. Now, herein precisely consists the manifestation of the righteousness wrought out on the cross. God is here revealed as one against whom no creature can revolt without meriting death; and the sinner is here put in his place in the dust as a malefactor worthy of death. Such is the objective manifestation of righteousness. 2. This demonstration, however striking, would be incomplete without the subjective or moral manifestation which accompanies it. Every sinner might be called to die on a cross. But no sinner was in a condition to undergo this punishment as Jesus did, accepting it as deserved. This is what He alone could do in virtue of His holiness. The calm and mute resignation with which He allowed Himself to be led to the slaughter, manifested the idea which He Himself formed of the majesty of God and the judgment He was passing on the sin of the world; from His cross there rose the most perfect homage rendered to the righteousness of God. In this death the sin of mankind was therefore doubly judged, and the righteousness of God doubly manifestedby the external fact of this painful and ignominious punishment, and by the inward act of Christ’s conscience, which ratified this dealing of which sin was the object in His person.

But now it will be asked what rendered such a demonstration necessary: Because, says St. Paul, of the tolerance exercised in regard to sins done aforetime.

For four thousand years the spectacle presented by mankind to the whole moral universe (comp. 1Co 4:9) was, so to speak, a continual scandal. With the exception of some great examples of judgments, divine righteousness seemed to be asleep; one might even have asked if it existed. Men sinned here below, and yet they lived. They sinned on, and yet reached in safety a hoary old age!…Where were the wages of sin? It was this relative impunity which rendered a solemn manifestation of righteousness necessary. Many commentators have completely mistaken the meaning of this passage, by giving to the word , which we have translated tolerance, the sense of pardon (Orig., Luth., Calv., Calov.; see also the Geneva translation of 1557, and, following it, Osterv. etc.). This first mistake has led to another. There has been given to the preposition the meaning of by, which it cannot have when governing the accusative, or it has been translated in view of, which would have required the preposition . The first error lies in confounding the term (tolerance, impunity) with (remission, pardon). The second of these substantives comes from the verb , to send away, dismiss, pardon (remittere); while the first used here comes from the verb , to let pass, neglect, not to occupy oneself with (praetermittere); nearly the same idea as that expressed by the word , to close the eyes to, Acts 18:30. The signification of the verb appears clearly from the two following passages: Sir 23:2 : Lest sins should remain unpunished ( ); and Xenophon, Hipparchic. 7.10: Such sins must not be allowed to pass unpunished ( ). It is worthy of remark also that in these two places sin is designated by the same word as Paul employs in our passage: sin in the form of positive fault, transgression. The real sense of is therefore not doubtful. It has been given by Theodor., Grot., Beng.; it is now almost universally received (Thol., Olsh., Mey., Fritzs., Rck., de Wette, Philip. etc.). The can thus receive its true meaning (with the accusative): on account of; and the idea of the passage becomes clear: God judged it necessary, on account of the impunity so long enjoyed by those myriads of sinners who succeeded one another on the earth, at length to manifest His justice by a striking act; and He did so by realizing in the death of Jesus the punishment which each of those sinners would have deserved to undergo.

Ritschl, who, on account of his theory regarding the righteousness of God (see on Rom 1:18), could not accept this meaning, supposes another interpretation (II. p. 217 et seq.). Tolerance () is not, according to him, contrasted with merited punishment, but with the pardon which God has finally granted. Rom 3:25 would thus signify that till the coming of Jesus Christ, God had only exercised patience without pardoning, but that in Christ the justice of God (His faithfulness to the salvation of His elect) had advanced so far as to give complete pardon. But where then, asks Gess, is this only, so necessary to indicate the advance from tolerance to pardon? The natural contrast to impunity is not pardon, but punishment; comp. Rom 2:4-5, and the parallel passage to ours, Act 17:30-31 : The times of ignorance God winked at, but now commandeth men to repent, because He hath appointed a day in which He will judge the world in righteousness. Finally, it is impossible on this interpretation to give a natural meaning to the words on account of. For pardon was not given because of the impunity exercised toward those sins. Paul would have required to say, either: because of those sins themselves, or: following up the long tolerance exercised toward them.

Several commentators (Calovius, for example) refer the expression: sins done aforetime, not to the sins of mankind who lived before Christ, but to those committed by every believer before his conversion. It is difficult in this sense to explain the words which follow: at this time, which form an antithesis to the former. We must apply them to the moment when each sinner in particular believes. But this meaning does not correspond to the gravity of the expression: at this time, in which the apostle evidently contrasts the period of completion with that of general impunity, and even with the eternal decree (the ).

It may be further asked if these sins done aforetime are those of all mankind anterior to Christ, or perhaps, as Philippi thinks, only those of the Jews. The argument which this commentator derives from the meaning of , the lid of the ark, the propitiatory so called, has of course no weight with us. Might one be found in the remarkable parallel, Heb 9:15 : The transgressions that were under the first testament? No, for this restricted application follows naturally from the particular aim of the Epistle to the Hebrews (comp. for example, Rom 2:16). It may even be said that the demonstration of which the apostle speaks was less necessary for Israel than for the rest of mankind. For the sacrifices instituted by God were already a homage rendered to his justice. But this homage was not sufficient; for there was wanting in it that which gives value to the sacrifice of Christ; the victim underwent death, but did not accept it. Hence it was that the death of the Messiah necessarily closed the long series of the Levitical sacrifices. No more can we receive the opinion of Beza, Cocceius, Morison, who think the sins that are past are those of the faithful of the Old Testament whom God pardoned from regard to the future sacrifice of Christ. The article (the sins) does not admit of this restriction, which there is nothing else to indicate. And the sacrifice of Christ cannot be explained here by an end so special.

But if it is asked why Paul gives as the reason for this sacrifice only the past and not the future sins of mankind, as if the death of Christ did not apply equally to the latter, the answer is easy, from the apostle’s stand-point: the righteousness of God once revealed in the sacrifice of the cross, this demonstration remains. Whatever happens, nothing can again efface it from the history of the world, nor from the conscience of mankind. Henceforth no illusion is possible: all sin must be pardonedor judged.

Regarded from the point of view here taken by the apostle, the death of Jesus is in the history of humanity, something like what would emerge in the life of a sinner had he a time of perfect lucidity when, his conscience being miraculously brought into one with the mind of God regarding sin, he should judge himself as God judges him. Such a moment would be to this man the starting-point of a total transformation. Thus the demonstration of righteousness given to the world by the cross of Christ at the close of the long economy of sin tolerated, founded the new epoch, and with the possibility of pardon established the principle of the radical renewal of humanity.

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

whom God set forth to be a propitiation, through faith, in his blood, to show his righteousness because of the passing over of the sins done aforetime, in the forbearance of God;

Fuente: McGarvey and Pendleton Commentaries (New Testament)

25. Whom God set forth a vicarious atonement through faith in his blood. We can only be saved from hell through the substitutionary death of Christ, who paid our penalty, dying a ransom in our room and stead, thus blockading the mouth of hell with his crucified body in order to keep us out. This is justification, i. e., negative salvation. It is not only indispensable that we be kept out of hell, but equally pertinent that we be prepared for heaven. While the negative phase of salvation through the vicarious atonement keeps us out of hell, it is equally true that the positive phase of salvation through the precious blood expurging all sin makes us holy and congenializes us to the heavenly state, thus making us forever like the unfallen angels and qualifying us to enjoy the society of angels, arch-angels and glorified spirits forever. It is bold and comprehensive, involving full salvation, both negative and positive. We have but one human condition specified, and that is that we get it all through faith in his blood.

Thorough repentance must put the sinner on believing ground, where he can be justified by faith; while complete consecration is indispensable to put the Christian on believing ground where he can be wholly sanctified through faith alone, precisely as he when a sinner received justification through faith alone. Satans preachers are always crying out obedience. It is a fond trick of the devil to deceive people by good things; e. g., obedience is good and commendable in its sphere. The truth of the matter is, true faith inspired by the Holy Ghost is always obedient, whether in the justification of a sinner or the sanctification of a Christian. Right here comes in the devils tricky delusion in fixing the eye on the obedience instead of on Christ, and thus running the poor devotee into idolatry, which is your inevitable fate if you depend upon anything but Christ to save you. It is only Satans counterfeit that does not obey God, the genuine being always gladly obedient to every ramification of the divine administration. Unto the manifestation of his own righteousness, through the remission of the sins which are passed.

Fuente: William Godbey’s Commentary on the New Testament

Verse 25

A propitiation; an expiatory sacrifice.–Faith in his blood. Blood is the symbol of death. The meaning is, faith in his death, as an expiation for sin.–His righteousness; the righteousness with which he invests the believer, in justifying him through faith.

Fuente: Abbott’s Illustrated New Testament

3:25 {10} Whom God hath set forth [to be] a propitiation through faith in his {x} blood, to declare his righteousness for the remission of sins that {y} are past, through the {z} forbearance of God;

(10) God then is the author of that free justification, because it pleased him: and Christ is he who suffered punishment for our sins, and in whom we have remission of them: and the means by which we apprehend Christ is faith. In short, the result is the setting forth of the goodness of God, that by this means it may appear that he is indeed merciful, and faithful in his promises, as he that freely, and of grace alone, justifies the believers.

(x) The name of blood reminds us of the symbol of the old sacrifices, and that the truth and substance of these sacrifices is in Christ.

(y) Of those sins which we committed when we were his enemies.

(z) Through his patience, and his enduring nature.

Fuente: Geneva Bible Notes

Paul stressed faith in this verse. Therefore we should probably understand his reference to the public display of Christ as being an allusion to His presentation in the gospel rather than to His crucifixion.

There are two possible meanings of "propitiation" (NASB) or "sacrifice of atonement" (NIV). The Greek word (hilasterion) is an adjective that can substitute for a noun. It means having placating or expiating force. [Note: A Greek-English . . ., s.v. "hilasterios," p. 301.] It could refer to Jesus Christ as the place where God satisfied His wrath and removed our sins. This is the substantival usage, translated "propitiation." In favor of this interpretation is the use of this Greek word to translate the mercy seat on the ark of the covenant (Exo 25:17, LXX; Heb 9:5). However, it seems more natural to take hilasterion as referring to Jesus Christ as the sacrifice that satisfied God’s wrath and removed our sins (cf. Luk 18:13; Heb 2:17). This is the normal adjectival use, translated "sacrifice of atonement" (cf. 1Jn 2:2; 1Jn 4:10). Jesus Christ was the sacrifice, but the place where God made atonement was the Cross.

The translation "through faith in His blood" (NIV) correctly represents the word order in the Greek text. Paul elsewhere urged faith in the person of Jesus Christ (Rom 3:22; Rom 3:26). Probably Paul mentioned His blood as representing His life poured out as a sacrifice of atonement instead of the person of Christ here to draw attention to what made His sacrifice atoning (cf. Rom 5:9; Eph 1:7; Eph 2:13; Col 1:20). This then is a metonymy, in which the name of one thing appears in the place of another associated with it.

The full idea of the first part of the verse would then be this. God has publicly displayed Jesus Christ in the gospel as a sacrifice of atonement that satisfied God’s wrath and removed our sins. His sacrifice becomes efficacious for those who trust in Him.

The antecedent of "this" (NASB) is the redemption (Rom 3:24) God provided in Christ, as is clear in the NIV translation. Another reason God provided a sacrifice of atonement was to justify (declare righteous) God’s own character (i.e., to vindicate Him). This was necessary because God had not finally dealt with sins committed before Jesus died. God had shown forbearance, not out of weakness or sentimentality but because He planned to provide a final sacrifice in the future, namely, at the Cross.

"Passed over" (NASB) or "left . . . unpunished" (NIV) is not the same as "forgave." Two different though related Greek words describe these two ideas, paresis and aphesis respectively. God did not forgive the sins of Old Testament saints finally until Jesus died on the cross. The blood of the animal sacrifices of Judaism only covered (removed) them temporarily. God did not exact a full penalty for sin until Jesus died. It is as though the Old Testament believers who offered the sacrifices for the expiation of sin that the Mosaic Law required paid for those sins with a credit card. God accepted those sacrifices as a temporary payment. However the bill came due later, and Jesus Christ paid that off entirely. [Note: See also Jarvis Williams, "Violent Atonement in Romans: The Foundation of Paul’s Soteriology," Journal of the Evangelical Theological Society 53:3 (September 2010):579-99.]

"Paul has thus pressed into service the language of the law-court (’justified’), the slave-market (’redemption’) and the altar (’expiation’, ’atoning sacrifice’) in the attempt to do justice to the fullness of God’s gracious act in Christ. Pardon, liberation, atonement-all are made available to men and women by his free initiative and may be appropriated by faith." [Note: Bruce, pp. 101-2.]

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