Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Romans 3:28
Therefore we conclude that a man is justified by faith without the deeds of the law.
28. Therefore ] Another reading of the Gr. gives For. Evidence of MSS., &c. is strong on both sides: but the internal evidence, in the coherence of the argument, is decidedly for “ For.” Rom 3:28 is then a resum of what has gone before; a brief restatement of the “law of faith:” q. d. “for this is what our facts go to prove, that a man is justified, &c.”
If “ therefore ” is retained, this verse begins, or rather forms, a new minor paragraph, summing up indeed what has preceded, but with no bearing on what follows. If “ for ” is adopted, Rom 3:27; Rom 3:29 are in close connexion: the Jew’s boasting is “excluded,” because the “law of faith” is as much for the Gentile as for the Jew. “ We conclude ” should rather be we reason, we maintain.
Fuente: The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges
Therefore – As the result of the previous train of argument.
That a man – That all who are justified; that is, that there is no other way.
Is justified by faith – Is regarded and treated as righteous, by believing in the Lord Jesus Christ.
Without the deeds of the law – Without works as a meritorious ground of justification. The apostle, of course, does not mean that Christianity does not produce good works, or that they who are justified will not obey the Law, and be holy; but that no righteousness of their own will be the ground of their justification. They are sinners; and as such can have no claim to he treated as righteous. God has devised a plan by which, they may be pardoned and saved; and that is by faith alone. This is the grand uniqueness of the Christian religion. This was the special point in the reformation from popery. Luther often called this doctrine of justification by faith the article upon which the church stood or fell – articulus stantis, vel cadentis ecclesiae – and it is so. If this doctrine is held entire, all others will be held with it. If this is abandoned, all others will fall also. It may be remarked here, however, that this doctrine by no means interferes with the doctrine that good works are to be performed by Christians. Paul urges this as much as any other writer in the New Testament. His doctrine is, that they are not to be relied on as a ground of justification; but that he did not mean to teach that they are not to be performed by Christians is apparent from the connection, and from the following places in his epistles: Rom 2:7; 2Co 9:8; Eph 2:10; 1Ti 2:10; 1Ti 5:10, 1Ti 5:25; 1Ti 6:18; 2Ti 3:17; Tit 2:7, Tit 2:14; Tit 3:8; Heb 10:24. That we are not justified by our works is a doctrine which he has urged and repeated with great power and frequency. See Rom 4:2, Rom 4:6; Rom 9:11, Rom 9:32; Rom 11:6; Gal 2:16; Gal 3:2, Gal 3:5,Gal 3:10; Eph 2:9; 2Ti 1:9.
Fuente: Albert Barnes’ Notes on the Bible
Rom 3:28
Therefore we conclude that a man is justified by faith without the deeds of the law.
Justification
I. The terms of this conclusion.
1. Justification signifies, literally, acquittal. In a court of law such acquittal may be made on the ground of–
(1) Innocence.
(2) Of a sufficient satisfaction. The Scripture view of justification is acquittal on grounds consistent with the demands of justice.
2. Deeds of the law. Law is the will of a superior properly sanctioned; and Paul employs the term to denote generally the will of God.
(1) As made known by some deep and powerful impression where a written revelation has not been given.
(2) As having been made known by a written record. The whole may be called the moral law; and when the apostle speaks of deeds of the law, he refers to conformity to its requirements, the acting in consistency with the law written in the heart on the part of the Gentiles–the acting in consistency with the law inscribed on tables of stone by the Jews.
3. Faith is a repose upon Jesus Christ as given for us and offered to us–an appropriating confidence on the fact that He died for us, for me.
II. The mode by which the apostle arrives at this conclusion. The apostle has shown–
1. That mankind are all sinners.
(1) That the Gentiles are so morally fallen that there is scarcely a single crime which may not be charged upon them.
(2) The Jews are no less criminal. Now, look how this stands as part of the argument. If a man is justified by the deeds of the law his whole conduct must be conformed to law. It follows, therefore, that if mankind have all broken the law, a man cannot be justified by the deeds of the law. But it is more important that we make an application of this to ourselves.
2. That we are justified solely by Christ, and, consequently, by faith. The slightest attention to the perfections of God must convince us that He can never dispense mercy except in connection with His justice and truth. God, having given us a law, and that law having been broken, was bound in His righteousness to punish the sinner, unless someone were to be punished for him, and He, in His infinite wisdom and love, was pleased to set forth Jesus Christ to be a propitiation. Now it follows that if we are to be saved alone through our Lord Jesus Christ, we can only be righteous through trusting in Him.
III. The improvement which the apostle makes of this doctrine.
1. He vindicates the subject from the charge of novelty. Anything perfectly new in religion must be false. Paul shows that the doctrine was as old as Abraham, and that it entered into the whole Jewish system. He then cites the case of David (Psa 32:1-11) , and shows that, as it was the experience of David, it was the doctrine of the Jewish Church generally.
2. He guards the subject against licentious abuse. What has an immoral tendency in religion must be assumed to be fallacious. It was a very natural conclusion for some people to arrive at: Why, if we are not justified by the deeds of law there is no use for law.
(1) On the contrary, says he, we establish the law. We are justified by faith in Him who endured the penalty of the law for us. The law is thus made good, as it was fully honoured by Him on whom we repose, who was made our Substitute.
(2) We establish the law in another way, for it immediately brings the soul into union with God, and God sends forth the Spirit of His Son into the heart; and as soon as we feel that we love God. Here is the principle of all holiness. There is nothing so powerful in the world as love: faith works by love.
3. He uses the subject to excite confidence. Is He the God of the Jews only? Is He not of the Gentiles also? (A. E. Farrar.)
Justification
Our position in the sight of God, and our relation to His government, are of supreme importance to us.
1. We are just what God sees us to be. We are not necessarily what we think ourselves to be, because our judgment may be erroneous. We may be ignorant of what constitutes a true Christian. Or, knowing what a true Christian is, we may look too favourably upon certain false signs of religious life, and may thus, in either case, decide that we are Christians when we are not. In like manner our fellow men may be mistaken about us. But God makes no errors.
2. And we shall be just what Gods dealings with us tend to make us. Our future will be the fruit and the effect of Gods dealings with us here. And yet we often think more of being justified by man than by God. The reason of this is that we are unduly influenced by the present. The insignificant face of a man within a few feet of you will hide the face of the infinite and eternal God. But as we read the Scriptures, and as we open our hearts to the Spirit of God, our attention is called away from men to God, and from mans judgment to God the Judge of all.
3. The words before us are a conclusion derived from two propositions.
(1) The universal unrighteousness of man, as seen in the Gentiles, as exhibited by the Jews, as declared by Gods Word, and as made manifest by Gods law.
(2) The provision which God has made for free justification. If it be true that all men are unrighteous; that God hath set forth Christ a propitiation, etc., it is not possible that a man can be justified by the deeds of the law. Look–
I. At the means of justification here rejected. The deeds of the law.
1. The deeds of the law are the natural means of justification. Angels are justified by them, and so was Adam. Righteous means too are these and necessary. Why do men in their attempts to magnify the gospel denounce the law? Is not the Lawgiver the redeeming God, and the redeeming God the Lawgiver? And if the gospel be the glorious gospel, the commandment is holy and just and good.
2. But we are in such a position that we cannot use these means for justification. And why not? Because by one mans disobedience many were made sinners, and because individually we have followed our first father.
II. The means acknowledged and exhibited. What would be our position if we had simply a revelation telling us that we cannot be justified by the deeds of the law? By imagination place yourselves in this position. It is sometimes necessary for the rich to put themselves by thought in the position of the poor in order to awaken thankfulness for their mercies, Now do this with regard to the grace of God. Just think of yourselves as before Sinai; think as though you had never seen Calvary, and then you will be better able to appreciate all the blessedness involved in the words, A man is justified by faith, etc.
1. By faith in what? Not faith in anything. You may have faith in God and in many of Gods words, and yet not be justified. The faith to which Paul directs your attention here is faith in the manifestation of the righteousness of God without the law.
2. Faith in what sense and to what extent? Not the belief that such a manifestation has been made, but such a belief as leads to the use of it. Faith without works is dead. The faith to which Paul here points is faith that does work, that is work. It is the sort of faith which a starving man will have in the supply of food that you bring him.
Conclusion: Now, supposing this to be the doctrine of the text, what do we learn?
1. Guilt does not of itself prevent justification. Your sins will not ruin you, but your unbelief.
2. No circumstances of any kind in the case of those who hear the gospel constitute an exception to the mode of justification. Say that you are the children of godly parents, that you have always been remarkable for morality, you must still be justified by faith without the deeds of the law. But justification is within reach of all who can believe. It is present privilege. (S. Martin.)
Justification by faith
St. Paul is emphatically the apostle of the Reformation, of the vigorous, intellectual, Western races, and of the advancing civilisation of the world. Few understood him in his own day. The Church soon dropped a veil over his teaching, and developed the idea of sacramental grace, whose fundamental principles his very soul abhorred. For fifteen hundred years the dust of time settled on his doctrine; then Luther with one bold movement scattered it, and translated man once more out of a world of lifeless formalities into a world of vivid, spiritual life. The Churches, Jewish and Roman, had dead works; Christianity has lively faith. And as dead works breed nothing but corruption, while living faith is fruitful of all excellent graces, you may estimate how much they are severally worth to the world.
I. To understand the argument we must first grasp the vital distinction between works and fruits. Suppose you are crippled, and need constant attention. A servant for good pay may afford it; but there will be a certain hardness in it, and his work will be the basis of a claim. But if you have a wife or child, whose one desire is to be the minister of your needs, her joy in any alleviation she is able to afford rises into quite another region. The only return such service craves is that which it creates, increase of love. Now mans world is full of works; Gods is full of fruits. How much of mans work is under hard compulsion–work for hire, which gold repays! But in Gods great world we come into another region. The fields groaning with harvests, the trees bending with fruit, the birds caroling matins at heavens gate, the insects humming eves lullaby, do glad service to their Maker; and their reward is the mantle of beauty which His smile flings over all the worlds. And in this we have the key to the two theologies. Religion in Jewish and Roman schools is a working; in Pauls school, in Christs, it is a life.
II. And now let us apply this to the matter in hand. The works of the Pharisaic school are sketched by an unerring hand (Mat 23:23-27). Their works were abundant, their fruit nowhere. All within them that could bear fruit was dead. The evil in the Church began probably from a misreading of St. James. What St. James calls faith and works, Paul calls faith–that is, faith which is alive, and can prove its vitality by its fruitfulness. But the Church soon began to lay the chief stress on the works. They are the part of the matter with which a priesthood can most profitably concern itself. Follow the track of Tetzel, and see what the Pharisaic doctrine of work inevitably grows to in time. And the fruit of it is two fold. To the earnest, life becomes a weary, hopeless drudgery–a yoke which neither we nor our fathers were able to bear; with which compare Luthers description of his agony of mind while a Roman monk; while with the sensual it develops a reckless profligacy which, by a little clever arrangement with the Chancery of heaven, can all be set right at last.
III. Wherefore we conclude that a man is justified by faith without the deeds of the law, and we step out at once into a new and heavenly world (Gal 3:10-14; Gal 3:21-29). Pauls position and Luthers is that a soul in anguish on account of transgression must sweep clean out all anxieties as to what it can do to please the Father, beyond the filial act of looking to Him through Him who came to reveal Him. Believe on the Lord Jesus Christ, and thou shalt be saved.
1. Well but, said the Judaising theologians to St. Paul, and the Romanising theologians to Luther, this is to do away with the very foundations of morality. But this depends wholly on what we mean by faith. If it be simply a mental consent to Scriptural statements then the Judaisers and the Romanists are right. But if we believe with Paul and Luther, that the act of faith is a vital act whereby the sinner becomes dead to sin, but alive to God through Jesus Christ his Lord, then you have a guarantee for the fruits of faith, which may be regarded as the nobler works of the law, transfigured, glorified by life. It is a great mystery; so is the life of nature. It is the gift of God; so is the life of nature. As God has ordained the law by which the life of nature is quickened in the embryo, so has He ordained that in the spiritual sphere the just by faith shall live.
2. And Pauls conception of the meaning of justification was very large and grand. Justified by faith the law has no claim against you, the devil no accusation. God beholds you as you are in Christ, whose image, forming within, shines through all the follies and weaknesses that defile your frail humanity, and obliterates them to heavenly sight. Your title to the name of son, and the sons inheritance, is absolute. You have not to win it. One thing alone vitiates it–unbelief. Let faith fail, the life fails. Fix the eye of faith again on Christ, cry to Him, Lord, I believe; help Thou mine unbelief, and the life rises again in the springs. Good works will flow from you as summer fruits from the sunny earth, music from a harp full strung, or light from the fountain of day. And they are beautiful to Him, for He creates them; what glory is in them, the newborn lay as tribute at His feet. (J. Baldwin Brown, B. A.)
Justification by faith
I. What is meant by justification. The justification here meant–
1. Is not–
(1) That which comes upon all men, even infants, through the righteousness of Christ (Ch 5:14, 15, 18).
(2) That which shall take place at the day of judgment (Rom 2:13-16; Mat 12:37), which will be, not indeed by the merit (Rom 6:23), but by the evidence of works (Rev 20:12; Rev 22:12).
2. But that which the true people of God possess on earth (1Co 6:11; Tit 3:7); which is–
(1) Not the declaration of innocence, which is the meaning of the word in courts of law (Psa 143:2; Ch 3:20).
(2) Not the being made innocent or holy, which would confound it with regeneration or sanctification.
(3) But the having righteousness accounted to us; sin not imputed, sin pardoned; or the sentence of condemnation against us reversed, and our obligation to punishment cancelled by a judicial act of God. This implies, and draws after it, acceptance and adoption.
II. In what sense we are to be justified by faith. When the apostle says we are justified by faith–
1. He does not speak of–
(1) The moving cause of justification which is Divine grace; and hence we are said to be justified by grace (verse 24; Tit 3:4-7).
(2) Nor of the meritorious cause, which is the redemption of Christ (verse 24, 25; Isa 53:11; 2Co 5:1-21, ult.); and hence we are said to be justified by Christ (Gal 2:17).
(3) Nor of the efficient cause, either of the preparation necessary, as conviction and repentance for sin, or of a sense of this justification; this is the Holy Spirit (Tit 3:7).
(4) Nor of the instrumental cause on the part of God, which is part of His Word, viz., His declaration and promises respecting pardoning the penitent (Joh 15:3).
2. But of the instrumental cause on our part, which is faith–in Christ, as the Son of God, the Messiah, the Saviour, able and willing to save (Joh 3:16-18; Gal 2:16); this implies–
(1) That we come to Him (Joh 6:37; Joh 7:37; Mat 9:28).
(2) That we trust in Him as delivered for our offences (Rom 4:25), trust in His blood (Rom 3:25).
(3) That we receive Him (Joh 1:12) in God (Rom 4:24), in His mercy and promises through Christ (Rom 4:17-23). Those who have this faith are justified, and none without it. Thus, in different senses, we are justified by grace, by Christ, by the Spirit, by the Word, by faith.
III. How this is without the deeds of the law. (J. Benson.)
Justification by faith
I. The doctrine of justification.
1. On this subject great misconception prevails. There are two extremes into which men are betrayed.
(1) That justification originates with the creature, instead of the Creator.
(2) The exclusion of man from all active concern in the reception of the boon. In the former, sinners, like ancient Israel, attempt to establish a righteousness of their own; in the latter, justification is regarded as an act of the Divine government, irrespective of the production of moral character in the predestinated objects of it. Against both delusions we ought to be on our guard. The one is fraught with legal confidence, the other with antinomian licence.
2. That we may attach distinct ideas to the justification, it is necessary for us to consider it in reference to the attributes and revealed will of the Divine Lawgiver. It is God that justifieth; and the principles accordingly by which His decisions are conducted are those of unerring wisdom and unchangeable excellence. Now, the revealed ground of justification, when man was in a state of innocency, was a perfect conformity to the will of his heavenly Father. And will the unchangeable God now be satisfied with a less pure devotion to His will? Impossible! But, in Adams case, the righteousness was his own; now it is that of our Surety. Still, the principle of justification is one and the same, at once satisfying the claims of justice and vindicating the equity of the law. The patriarchal and Mosaic dispensations were at one with the Christian in the revealed ground of acceptance. The victim presented at the altar was a confession that the life of the offerer had been forfeited by sin, and that the law of righteousness was obligatory. True believers worshipped the holy Lord God as also merciful and gracious. To them, as to us, justification was granted as an act of forgiving love.
3. Justification includes pardon of sin and acceptance with God. Both are due to the voluntary substitution of the Son of God in our nature, who by active obedience fulfilled the law to the uttermost, and by penal suffering redeemed us from its curse.
4. From this scheme human works are completely excluded. The origin, the progress, the revelation, the execution of it are all alike Divine. It was devised in the counsels of unsearchable Wisdom, flows from the unmerited riches of sovereign compassion, and glorifies the Divine government in the estimation of all orders of intelligent beings.
II. The nature of that faith by which we are justified.
1. Note the relation which faith bears to the justifying act of God as an instrumental but not efficient cause. A mariner falls from the vessels side and is in imminent danger of sinking; a rope is thrown out to him; he believes that this presents a way for his escape, and his faith may be said to save him from a watery grave. Unless he had confided in the rope, death would have been inevitable. Now, it is in a sense analogous to this that we are justified by faith. It is not our faith that imparts a right to the blessings of redemption. Faith simply connects the needy but unworthy recipient with the munificent Giver. It is the opening of the mouth for the bread of life; the stretching forth of the withered hand towards the Divine Physician; the putting on the protecting robe against the inclemency of the storm.
2. Note its properties.
(1) Its Divine origin. Like every other good gift, it cometh from above. No man, says our Lord, can come to Me, except the Father, which hath sent Me, draw him. By grace are ye saved, through faith, and that not of yourselves, it is the gift of God. Hence we perceive an important distinction between a merely speculative or historical assent to the truth of God and that holy exercise of mans heart with which he believeth unto righteousness.
(2) Its appropriating character. We may admit the existence and value of many things in which we feel little personal interest. Without calling in question a single fact or doctrine of Holy Scripture we may be unmoved by its most solemn and touching representations. It is otherwise when the slumbers of spiritual death are broken. Instead of boasting as heretofore of good deeds and virtuous aspirations, the language is, God be merciful to me a sinner! But whither shall he take himself for remission? Will he be satisfied with mere generalities, as that Christ Jesus came into the world to save sinners, and that he need not therefore despair of mercy? Assuredly not. He is not satisfied till he can say, He loved me and gave Himself for me.
(3) It is inseparably connected with all other Christian graces. Faith works by love; purifies the heart; is the substance of things hoped for. (J. Sawer, M. A.)
The doctrine of justification by faith
I. The justification of sinners before God entirely excludes their own works.
1. When he says a man is justified by faith without works, he does not mean that there are different means of justification for different sinners, but that every individual sinner of the human family who is justified obtains this privilege by faith.
2. The moral law could not justify sinners; for by it, says the apostle, is the knowledge of sin. It points out the evil of sin as opposite to itself and to the Divine nature; it criminates sinners for their offences, and threatens deserved punishment; things as opposite to justification as anything can be.
3. Sinners cannot be justified by the works of the moral law, because, in their natural condition, they cannot obey any of its precepts. Their nature is corrupted, and all their actions polluted with sin. But actions from an impure source cannot justify, but must render men liable to condemnation. Besides, all men in their natural condition are under the curse of the law.
4. If it be pleaded that sincere though imperfect obedience will justify sinners, let me ask, Hath Jehovah anywhere in His Word required sincere obedience, or any degrees of it, as the ground of acceptance? Or can it be proved from the sacred oracles that one individual sinner of the human race ever yielded sincere obedience to the Divine law, till once he was renewed by the grace of God, and accepted through the merit of Christ? It cannot.
5. It is worthy of observation on this subject, that all the good works performed by believers in Christ Jesus are as much excluded from being the ground of justification as the works of sinners previous to conversion. All works really and instrumentally good are performed in a state of justification, are the proper and natural effects of it, and therefore cannot be the cause of it. They are proper and requisite to evidence the reality of justification to the consciences of believers and to the world, but were never designed by God to be the foundation of this important privilege.
II. The evangelical doctrine of justification by faith.
1. The righteousness which is the alone ground of the sinners acceptance consists in the spotless and perfect righteousness of the Redeemers nature and life, and in the complete satisfaction which He yielded to Divine justice. It glorifies the moral administration of Deity, and renders it amiably and awfully venerable.
2. Let us next inquire into the influence of faith on justification, and how it justifies.
(1) This influence is pointed out by the apostle when he declares in the text, A man is justified by faith without the deeds of the law. It is not a natural but a saving faith that justifies. By a natural faith is to be understood that assent of the understanding to the truths of Divine revelation which sinners are capable of yielding in their natural and unrenewed condition.
(2) Let us now ascertain the particular sense in which faith justifies. It does not justify merely as it is a grace implanted in the heart, for in this respect it is the work of God, and not of man; though still the existence of the principle is necessary to all its subsequent operations, and lays a foundation for them in the soul. Nor does it justify by its own act, as separated from its object, the Redeemers merit, as it is received by the believing sinner; for in this respect it is a duty, and as much excluded from the ground of justification as all other graces and duties are. Nor does it justify by any intrinsic merit in its principle or exercise, considered abstractly by themselves; for though it has in it a high degree of spiritual excellence, as a grace of the Spirit, yet the gifts of God can found no plea of personal merit in those who receive them. Neither does faith justify by assenting to this proposition, that the merit of Jesus is the only ground of the sinners acceptance with God; for this doctrine may be assented to as a true doctrine by sinners who are never justified and saved. As in the former respects faith does not justify, in what determinate sense does it justify? I reply, that faith justifies, as it is the Divinely appointed mean or instrument, whereby the renewed sinner apprehends and applies the glorious Mediator in His all-perfect and meritorious righteousness for the pardon of sin, acceptance into the Divine favour, and as the ground of his title to all gospel blessings. The mediatorial righteousness is the object of justifying faith, and faith justifies as it is the instrument by which the believing soul takes hold of the Redeemers righteousness as the alone ground of justification before God. The mediatorial righteousness justifies meritoriously, and faith instrumentally. It is necessary also to observe, that when faith justifies instrumentally, it is its primary act that justifies, and not any of its subsequent acts. By the continued actings of faith, sanctification is promoted, justification is evidenced, faith itself and the other Christian graces are invigorated, pious resolutions confirmed, communion with God maintained, the power and sweetness of religion experienced, Divine supplies are received, God and religion honoured, and the believer is gradually ripened for the inheritance of the saints in light. The more lively the actings of faith are, the more vigorous will the life of grace become in the soul, increasing degrees of Divine consolation will be felt, and the Christian will press forward with greater ardour to the glorious prize of his high calling.
III. The peculiar excellencies of this gospel method of justification.
1. It is an amazing device of infinite wisdom, by which the perfections and the government of God are eminently glorified.
2. It excludes boasting in believers, hides pride from their eyes, and leads them to a humble dependence on redeeming merit, which is a temper highly becoming sinful creatures, and suitable to their condition.
3. It places all the children of God upon the same level, so that they are all one in Christ Jesus, and none of them have any superiority over the rest. There are many other differences between them, but here there is none, as they all stand on the same immovable foundation. What a powerful motive arises from this to brotherly love, and to every office of the most endearing friendship! What a noble incentive to gratitude to God, and the Saviour, and to the cultivation of holiness in the heart and in life!
4. This Divine method of acceptance establishes the faith and hope of Christians upon an immovable and everlasting foundation. Had their own graces, frames, or duties, been the ground of pardon and acceptance, they must have been left in the greatest uncertainty about their interest in the favour of God, and had their hearts filled with perplexing doubts and fears. But the mediation and merit of Jesus removes all ground of uncertainty and perturbation. Believers neither need to turn inward to their graces and frames, nor outward to their duties, to find the matter of their justification. This is abundantly provided for them by the grace of God in the merit of Jesus Christ, whose spotless obedience and unequalled sufferings are, by the wise and benign appointment of Jehovah, the alone ground of pardon and life to guilty men.
5. This Divine plan of acceptance affords support, comfort, and tranquillity, to true Christians under the pressures of life, the revolutions of the world, and the challenges of conscience.
6. The doctrine of justification by faith in the merit of Christ affords the most powerful methods to love, gratitude, and obedience. Does not love naturally beget love? and shall not a display of the love of God in justifying the ungodly through the mediation of His Son beget love in the justified sinner? and if he love God, will not love constrain him to keep His commandments? (P. Hutchinson.)
Salvation by faith without the works of the law
The ark of Christs gospel need carry no lifeboat of human making on board. (Canon Miller.)
Salvation by faith without the works of the law
Some years ago two men, a bargeman and a collier, were in a boat near the Niagara Falls, and found themselves unable to manage it, it being carried so swiftly down the current that they must both inevitably be borne down and dashed to pieces. At last, however, one man was saved by floating a rope to him, which he grasped, The same instant a log floated by the other man. The thoughtless and confused bargeman, instead of seizing the rope, laid hold on the log. It was a fatal mistake, for clinging to the loose floating log he was borne irresistibly along and never heard of afterwards, while the other was saved because he had a connection with the people on the land. Faith has a saving connection with Christ. Christ is on the shore, so to speak, holding the rope, and as we lay hold of it with the hand of our confidence, He pulls us to shore; but our good works, having no connection with Christ, are drifted alone down to the gulf of fell despair. Grapple our virtues as tightly as we may, they cannot avail us in the least degree; they are the disconnected log which has no holdfast on the heavenly shore. (C. H. Spurgeon.)
Marriage of faith and works
The second chapter of the Epistle by James seems, to my mind, to describe a spiritual wedding. We are bidden to a marriage; and, as at the older marriage in Cana of Galilee, the holy Master is present, and consummates the nuptials. The parties to be united are but symbolic personages, and yet are real and lifelike too. The bride is young and beautiful–ever young, and ever clothed upon with light as with a garment. Her face is clear as the day; her look is firm, and yet trustful. She is not of the earth, but heaven born, and wears her celestial parentage in every lineament of her radiant countenance. Her name is Faith. She is the daughter of God. And beside her stands one whose lusty form was made for deeds of daring and endurance. He is sinewy and athletic. There is valour in his eye, and cunning in his ten fingers, and strength in his right arm. He was created to act, to do, to suffer. He was formed for strife and struggle. His name is Action. With solemn rites the two are joined in wedlock. They are both to love, and both to obey. They are always to live and move and suffer and conquer together. They are to be the fruitful parents of everything good on earth. On them, while united, Jehovah pronounces a blessing richer than that which gladdened the nuptials of Isaac and Rebekah, or of Jacob and Leah. While united, they are to live and grow and conquer; when separated, they are to droop and perish. For each other, and in each other, and with each other, their days of struggle and victory are to be passed, until time shall be no longer. And so faith and works were coupled by infinite Wisdom; and in the presence of the world it was solemnly announced, What God hath joined together, let no man put asunder. (T. L. Cuyler, D. D.)
Creed and conduct
(text, and Jam 2:14):–
1. The Bible does certainly teach that a certain kind of faith, which even James would commend, is essential to salvation.
(1) We see kindness and wisdom of God in this arrangement, inasmuch as it is a condition most easy to fulfil. And not only has man the capacity to believe, but he has a propensity to do so. He is a credulous being; he lives, and works, and hopes, and loves, and rests, by faith. Faith is the basis of society, the wheel of commerce, the tie of friendship, the channel of social intercourse.
(2) Nor is it more kind than wise. I cannot see how man could have been saved without a certain kind of faith. Before he changes his character, he must have new convictions. Man must become a Christian, as he becomes a farmer, a mariner, a physician–by faith.
2. It has been thought by some that James disparages faith, and places himself in antagonism to Paul. But note–
(1) The difference in the mental tendencies of the apostles. The natural tendency of Pauls mind was speculative. He delighted in the science of religion. The tendency of James was practical. He thought more about acts than ideas. He estimated the creed of a man by his works. With this mental difference, whilst both would hold the same great vital truth, one would be naturally more taken up with the speculative aspect, and the other with the practical.
(2) The difference in the characters to whom the apostles wrote. Paul had in view the legalist; James had in view those who combined an orthodox creed with an unorthodox practice. One was against legalism, and the other against antinomianism. In further illustration of the real harmony between the two inspired men, note–
I. That there may be a certain kind of work in connection with religion where there is no genuine faith. Those which spring–
1. From the feeling of merit. Such were the works of the old Pharisees. What a deal of work there is done in connection with religion from this feeling now!
2. From a sympathy with the feelings and doings of others. It is customary in the circle to which the man belongs to attend places of worship, and to contribute to religious institutions; and he of course must do the same. Certain religious doings are fashionable; and the love of fashion and the fear of singularity will prompt them.
3. From official position. A man takes some office in connection with Christianity–Sabbath school teacher, deacon, etc.
and he may do the duties of his office without any genuine faith.
4. From the love of a sect. The partisan feeling in religion is ever wondrously active.
II. There may be a certain kind of faith in connection with religion where there is no genuine faith. There is a kind of faith something like that sentimental charity that will talk fluently and tenderly about the sufferings of the poor, but will do nothing to relieve their sufferings.
1. A traditional faith. Such as people get from their parents, their sect, which is adopted without any honest searching in the light of common sense and the Bible before God. People whose faith is of this description, had they been born in Turkey, would have been Mohammedans; in India, Hindoos. This faith is a serious evil: it warps the intellect, shuts out new truth, and obstructs free thought, piety, and progress. It is everlastingly quarrelling–anathematising heretics.
2. A speculative faith. Persons of this faith believe in God, Christ, heaven, and hell as propositions, but do not realise their bearing on themselves.
3. A sentimental faith. Persons of this class are carried about with every wind of doctrine; they are taken up with this preacher today, and that tomorrow. They are Arminians one Sunday, and Antinomians the next. These are mental children–clouds without water; the creatures of clap-trap and novelty.
III. That neither the works unconnected with genuine faith, nor the faith unconnected with genuine works, are of any moral, service.
1. The works unconnected with genuine faith are of no moral service. Because–
(1) The worth of a work in the sight of God is the motive. As a man thinketh in his heart, so is he.
(2) The happiness of a work is in the motive. In the employment of man the outward act gives value to your service. So long as you can plough, sow, and build well, it does not matter what you think or feel. But, in religion, the feeling of the act is everything. The widows mite is more than all.
2. The faith unconnected with good works is of no moral service. What is a seed worth if it has not the germinating principle? What is the salt worth without its savour? What we want now is to have the creed of Churches worked out. This will do more against infidelity than all your libraries. Not everyone that saith unto me, Lord, Lord, etc.
IV. That the faith of the gospel will necessarily lead to good works, and the works of the gospel necessarily spring from gospel faith. And thus Paul and James agree.
1. The nature of the ease shows this. Faith in the gospel is faith in the infinite love of God for sinners. Can a man really believe in this without love rising in his heart to God? What is the first question of love? How shall I please? etc.
2. The biographies of believers show this. When it pleased God, says Paul, to reveal His Son in me, immediately I conferred not with flesh and blood, etc. James preached against the mere creedist, and Paul against the mere work monger; and such preachers every age requires. (D. Thomas, D. D.)
Fuente: Biblical Illustrator Edited by Joseph S. Exell
Verse 28. Therefore we conclude, c.] Seeing these things cannot be denied, viz., that all have sinned: that all are guilty, that all are helpless: that none can deliver his own soul, and that God, in his endless mercy, has opened a new and living way to the holiest by the blood of Jesus, Heb 10:19-20, &c: therefore we, apostles and Christian teachers, conclude, , prove by fair, rational consequence, that a man – any man, is justified – has his sins blotted out, and is received into the Divine favour, by faith in Christ’s blood, without the deeds of the law, which never could afford, either to Jew or Gentile, a ground for justification, because both have sinned against the law which God has given them, and, consequently, forfeited all right and title to the blessings which the obedient might claim.
Fuente: Adam Clarke’s Commentary and Critical Notes on the Bible
Here is the conclusion of the whole matter that he had been discoursing of, from Rom 1:17 to this very place. When he says, we conclude, he means, we have reasoned or argued well, as logicians do; or this is the full account that we have taken, and summed up, after the manner of arithmeticians.
A man is justified by faith without the deeds of the law; a phrase equivalent to that which is so much spoken against, that we are justified by faith only; as if we should say, That God is to be worshipped, excluding angels, idols, images, &c., it would be as much as to say, God is to be worshipped only.
Fuente: English Annotations on the Holy Bible by Matthew Poole
28. Therefore we conclude, c.Itis the unavoidable tendency of dependence upon our own works, less ormore, for acceptance with God, to beget a spirit of “boasting.”But that God should encourage such a spirit in sinners, by anyprocedure of His, is incredible. This therefore stamps falsehood uponevery form of “justification by works,” whereas thedoctrine that.
Our faith receivesa righteousness
That makes the sinnerjust,
manifestly and entirely excludes”boasting” and this is the best evidence of its truth.
Inference second: This and noother way of salvation is adapted alike to Jew and Gentile.
Fuente: Jamieson, Fausset and Brown’s Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible
Therefore we conclude,…. This is the conclusion from the premises, the sum total of the whole account:
that a man is justified by faith without the deeds of the law. The subject of justification is, “man”, not in opposition to angels; nor does it design the Jew against the Gentile, though some have so thought; but the apostle names neither Jew nor Gentile, but “man”, to show that Christ’s righteousness is unto all, and every man, that believes, be he who he will; and is to be understood indefinitely, that every man that is justified is justified by faith. The means is “by faith”, not habitually or actually considered; that is, either as an habit and principle infused into us, or as an act performed by us; but either organically, as it is a means of receiving Christ’s righteousness; or objectively, as it denotes Christ the object of it: and all this is done “without works”, of any sort; not by a faith which is without works, for such a faith is dead, and of no avail; but by faith without works joined to it, in the affair of justification; or by the righteousness of Christ imputed by God the Father, without any consideration of them, and received by faith, and relied upon by the believer, without any regard unto them.
Fuente: John Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible
We reckon therefore ( ). Present middle indicative. Westcott and Hort read instead of . “My fixed opinion” is. The accusative and infinitive construction occurs after here. On this verb , see Rom 2:3; Rom 4:3; Rom 8:18; Rom 14:14. Paul restates verses 21f.
Fuente: Robertson’s Word Pictures in the New Testament
1) “Therefore we conclude,” (logizometha gar) “For we reckon, conclude, calculate;” this is a certain, definite, reasoned conclusion that Paul affirmed for himself as the true position to be held by all the redeemed or justified, including the church at Rome to whom the book is addressed.
2) “That a man is justified by faith,” (dikaiousthai pistei Anthropon) “A’ man to be justified by faith,” by means, instrument, or (the) agency of faith. Faith must not be interpreted as a work of law. This faith in Jesus Christ is a renunciation of good works or deeds of any law as a means of being justified or made righteous before God, whether Jew or Gentile, Rom 3:31; Rom 5:11; Act 13:39; Gal 2:16.
3) “Without the deeds of the law,” (choris ergon nomou) “Without (or apart from) the works, deeds, or rituals and rites of the Law,” either the law of Moses or any other religious or civil law. For the righteousness of God is imputed to the believer thru faith in Jesus Christ, not thru any work or works, Eph 2:8-10; Rom 4:4-5; Rom 11:6; Tit 3:5.
Fuente: Garner-Howes Baptist Commentary
28. We then conclude, etc. He now draws the main proposition, as one that is incontrovertible, and adds an explanation. Justification by faith is indeed made very clear, while works are expressly excluded. Hence, in nothing do our adversaries labor more in the present day than in attempts to blend faith with the merits of works. They indeed allow that man is justified by faith; but not by faith alone; yea, they place the efficacy of justification in love, though in words they ascribe it to faith. But Paul affirms in this passage that justification is so gratuitous, that he makes it quite evident, that it can by no means be associated with the merit of works. Why he names the works of the law, I have already explained; and I have also proved that it is quite absurd to confine them to ceremonies. Frigid also is the gloss, that works are to be taken for those which are outward, and done without the Spirit of Christ. On the contrary, the word law that is added, means the same as though he called them meritorious; for what is referred to is the reward promised in the law. (125)
What, James says, that man is not justified by faith alone, but also by works, does not at all militate against the preceding view. The reconciling of the two views depends chiefly on the drift of the argument pursued by James. For the question with him is not, how men attain righteousness before God, but how they prove to others that they are justified, for his object was to confute hypocrites, who vainly boasted that they had faith. Gross then is the sophistry, not to admit that the word, to justify, is taken in a different sense by James, from that in which it is used by Paul; for they handle different subjects. The word, faith, is also no doubt capable of various meanings. These two things must be taken to the account, before a correct judgment can be formed on the point. We may learn from the context, that James meant no more than that man is not made or proved to be just by a feigned or dead faith, and that he must prove his righteousness by his works. See on this subject my Institutes.
(125) The phrase, χωρίς ἔργων νόμου, may be rendered, “without the works of law,” that is, either natural or revealed; for Gentiles as well as Jews are here contemplated. — Ed.
Fuente: Calvin’s Complete Commentary
(28) Therefore. . . .There is a remarkable division of some of the best authorities in this verse between therefore and for. The weight of authority seems somewhat in favour of for, which also makes the best sense. That boasting is excluded is much rather the consequence than the cause of the principle that man is justified by faith. This principle the Apostle regards as sufficiently proved by his previous argument.
We conclude.This conveys too much the idea of an inference; the statement is rather made in the form of an assertion, we consider, or we hold. For we hold that a man (any human beingwhether Jew or Greek) is justified by faith, independently of any works prescribed by law.
Fuente: Ellicott’s Commentary for English Readers (Old and New Testaments)
‘We reckon therefore that a man is justified (reckoned as in the right) by faith apart from the works of the law.’
So Paul can now come to his important conclusion. And that is that a man is accepted as righteous before God, not on account of His works, (nor even on account of his faith), but as a result of that man’s response of faith to His free gift of righteousness. Any connection with the works of the Law is totally excluded.
Fuente: Commentary Series on the Bible by Peter Pett
Rom 3:28. Therefore we conclude This inference is drawn from the whole preceding argument. The Greek word , in the singular, without the article, frequently signifies man, mankind,or anyman whatsoever. And the Apostle’s argument requires it should be taken in this general sense, so as to include all mankind, Jews and Gentiles, or all flesh, in opposition to no flesh, Rom 3:20. For Rom 3:28 is the reverse of Rom 3:20 and this extensive sense of the wordman is confirmed by the following verse; for the Apostle divides the whole world in this Epistle only into Jews and Gentiles. It is evident from Rom 3:30 that the meaning of the clause, Man is justified by faith, is, “Mankind may be justified, or may be interested by faith in the blessings of the Messiah’s kingdom;” for it is said, that God will justify the circumcision, &c. that is, Either Jew or Gentile, any part of mankind, may be justified by faith. God is ready to justify them whenever they believe.
Fuente: Commentary on the Holy Bible by Thomas Coke
Rom 3:28 gives the ground of the . . [919]
] (Theodore of Mopsuestia): censemus , we deem , as in Rom 2:3 , Rom 8:18 ; 2Co 11:5 . The matter is set down as something that has now been brought between Paul and his readers to a common ultimate judgment, whereby the victorious tone of Rom 3:27 is not damped (as Hofmann objects), but is on the contrary confidently sealed .
] On this, and not on (Th. Schott, Hofmann), lies the emphasis in accordance with the entire connection; . is correlative. Paul has conceived . . . together , and then placed first the word which has the stress; compare the critical observations. The dative denotes the procuring cause or medium, just like . Bernhardy, p. 101 f. The word “ alone ,” added by Luther formerly an apple of discord between Catholics and Lutherans (see the literature in Wolf) did not belong to the translation as such, [920] but is in explanation justified by the context, which in the way of dilemma “cuts off all works utterly” (Luther), and by the connection of the Pauline doctrinal system generally, which excludes also the fides formata . See Form. Conc. p. 585 f., 691. Comp on Gal 2:16 , Osiander in the Jahrb. f. Deutsche Theol. 1863, p. 703 f.; Morison in loc [922] All fruit of faith follows justification by faith; and there are no degrees in justification. [923]
. ] Without the co-operation therein of works of the law (Rom 3:20 ), which, on the contrary, remain apart from all connection with it. Comp Rom 3:21 .
On the quite general , a man , comp Chrysostom: , , , . See afterwards . . , Rom 3:30 . Comp Gal 2:16 .
[919] . . . .
[920] Luther has not added it in Gal 2:16 , where the Nrnberg Bible of 1483 reads “ only through faith.”
[922] n loc. refers to the note of the commentator or editor named on the particular passage.
[923] Comp. Riggenbach (against Romang) in the Stud. u. Krit. 1868, p. 227 ff.
Fuente: Heinrich August Wilhelm Meyer’s New Testament Commentary
28 Therefore we conclude that a man is justified by faith without the deeds of the law.
Ver. 28. A man is justified by faith ] Here St Paul shows himself a pure Lutheran, and is therefore sharply and blasphemously censured by some Jesuits for a hot-headed person, who was so transported with the pangs of zeal and eagerness beyond all compass in most of his disputes, that there was no great reckoning to be made of his assertions. (Speculum Europae.) Yea, he was dangerous to read, as savouring of heresy in some places, and better perhaps he had never written. Four years before the Council of Trent, Cardinal Contarenus asserted the doctrine of justification by faith alone, in a just treatise, and was therefore soon after poisoned. Cardinal Pole is thought to have been sound in this point. Bellarmine reproves Pighius for consenting to Luther herein, whom he undertook to confute, and yet Bellarmine himself with his tutissimum est, it is most safe. doth as much upon the matter. Magna est veritas, et valebit, Great is the truth, and shall prevail.
Fuente: John Trapp’s Complete Commentary (Old and New Testaments)
28. ] , not ‘ we conclude ,’ but we hold, we reckon , see reff.: the former is against N. T. usage; and has probably caused the change of into , by some who imagined that this verse was a conclusion from the preceding argument. For we hold (as explanatory of the verse preceding, on the other supposition the two verses are disjointed, and the conclusion comes in most strangely), that a man is justified by faith [apart from ] ( without [but more than without so distinctly without as to be utterly and entirely separate from and independent of]) the works of the law (not works of law ); and therefore boasting is excluded.
Fuente: Henry Alford’s Greek Testament
Rom 3:28 . : see critical note. In there is no idea of an uncertain conclusion: it rather suggests the confident self-consciousness of the reasoner. is not “any human being,” as if beings of another sort could be justified otherwise: it is like the German “man” or “one”. Cf. 1Co 4:1 ; 1Co 7:1 ; 1Co 11:28 , Gal 2:16 . The sharp distinction drawn between faith and works of law, as characterising two different religious systems, shows that faith must not itself be interpreted as a work of law. In principle it is a renunciation of all such confidence as legal obedience inspires.
Fuente: The Expositors Greek Testament by Robertson
conclude = reckon. Greek. logizomai. See Rom 2:3.
the. Omit.
Fuente: Companion Bible Notes, Appendices and Graphics
28.] , not we conclude, but we hold, we reckon, see reff.: the former is against N. T. usage; and has probably caused the change of into , by some who imagined that this verse was a conclusion from the preceding argument. For we hold (as explanatory of the verse preceding,-on the other supposition the two verses are disjointed, and the conclusion comes in most strangely), that a man is justified by faith [apart from] (without [but more than without-so distinctly without as to be utterly and entirely separate from and independent of]) the works of the law (not works of law); and therefore boasting is excluded.
Fuente: The Greek Testament
Rom 3:28. ) for , in this sense: So far as regards these things; for we wished to set it forth as fully proved, that it is by faith, etc. Most copies read ,[40] but it seems to have been repeated from Rom 3:27, and serves the purpose of the argument against boasting, which is now deduced from justification through faith, Rom 3:22.-, by faith) Luther, allein durch den glauben; by faith alone, or rather only by faith, as he himself explains, T. V. Jen. f. 141. Arithmetically expressed the demonstration stands thus:-
[40] BC and both Syr. Versions with Rec. Text . But AGfg Vulg. and Memph. Vers. read .-ED.
The matter in dispute involves two elements,
Faith and Works,
2
Works are excluded, 1
–
Faith alone remains, 1
If one be subtracted from two, one remains [comp. ch. Rom 11:6]. So the , only, is expressed at Rom 3:29; and so the LXX. added , only in Deu 6:13, in accordance with [to complete] the Sense: with which comp. Mat 4:10. The Vulgate has solum, only, Job 17:1, etc., , by faith alone, Basil., hom. 22, On Humility. In short, James, in discussing this very subject, and refuting the abuse of the doctrine of Paul, adds , only, ch. Rom 2:24. [And, in fact, volumes are on sale, abounding with testimonies of persons who used the word allein, only, before the time of Luther.-V. g.] Justification takes place through faith itself, not in so far as it is faith [not in the fact of its being faith; as if there were merit in itself] or a work of the law, but, in so far as it is faith of Christ, laying hold of Christ; that is, in so far as it has in it something apart from the works of the Law. Gal 3:12. [Take care, however, lest this point should be misunderstood. Faith alone justifies; but it neither is, nor does it remain alone; it is constantly working inwardly and outwardly.-V. g.]-) , any man whatever, Jew and Greek, with which comp. the following verse. So , a man, 1Co 4:1.
Fuente: Gnomon of the New Testament
Rom 3:28
Rom 3:28
We reckon therefore that a man is justified by faith apart from the works of the law.-From the foregoing facts he concludes that a man is justified by the law of faith and not by the law of Moses or of any works or inventions of men that allow glorying.
Fuente: Old and New Testaments Restoration Commentary
Justification
Justification, Summary: Justification and righteousness are inseparably united in Scripture by the fact that the same word (dikaios, “righteous”; dikaioo, “to justify”) is used for both. The believing sinner is justified because Christ, having borne his sins on the cross, has been “made unto him righteousness” 1Co 1:30. Justification originates in grace; Rom 3:24; Tit 3:4; Tit 3:5 is through the redemptive and propitiatory work of Christ, who has vindicated the law; Rom 3:24; Rom 3:25; Rom 5:9 is by faith, not works; Rom 3:28-30; Rom 4:5; Rom 5:1; Gal 2:16; Gal 3:8; Gal 3:24 and may be defined as the judicial act of God whereby He justly declares righteous one who believes on Jesus Christ. It is the Judge Himself Rom 8:31-34 who thus declares. The justified believer has been in court, only to learn that nothing is laid to his charge. Rom 8:1; Rom 8:33; Rom 8:34.
Fuente: Scofield Reference Bible Notes
Rom 3:20-22, Rom 3:26, Rom 4:5, Rom 5:1, Rom 8:3, Joh 3:14-18, Joh 5:24, Joh 6:40, Act 13:38, Act 13:39, 1Co 6:11, Gal 2:16, Gal 3:8, Gal 3:11-14, Gal 3:24, Phi 3:9, Tit 3:7
Reciprocal: Gen 17:10 – Every Rom 3:30 – General Rom 11:6 – And if Eph 2:9 – General Tit 3:5 – by works
Fuente: The Treasury of Scripture Knowledge
:28
Rom 3:28. Paul now draws his conclusion from the foregoing premises. A man is justified by faith (the Gospel of Christ), and not by virtue of the deeds of the law of Moses.
Fuente: Combined Bible Commentary
Rom 3:28. For we reckon. This reading is supported by the most ancient authorities (with the exception of the Vatican MSS.). It suggests the reason for the previous assertion: Glorying is excluded by the law of faith, for (we have already proved and hence) we reckon, etc. The common reading makes this verse an inference. Reckon is the word usually so rendered; conclude is incorrect, in any case.
By faith apart from the works of the law. This principle has already been established (Rom 3:21-26); and is re-stated here to furnish a basis for the argument against the pride of the Jew. Luther here adds alone, and the phrase faith alone has been a watchword of evangelical Protestantism. Certainly, the context excludes every other ground of justification and because it does there was no necessity for Pauls writing alone, or for our inserting it. The emphasis rests on faith, which is the alone instrument of justification; yet it is not alone in the person justified, but is ever accompanied with all other saving graces, and is no dead faith, but worketh by love. (Westminster Confession.) On works of the law, see Rom 3:20.
Fuente: A Popular Commentary on the New Testament
Observe here, 1. The conclusion drawn by the apostle, from all that he had been discoursing of in the foregoing chapters: namely, that God’s way of justification of a guilty sinner is not by works, done by him, but by faith in the Mediator, who hath satisfied the justice of God for him: Therfore we conclude, that a man is justified by faith without the deeds of the law.
Learn hence, That justifictation from our past sins is by faith alone, without respect to any works of ours, done either before or since conversion.
Observe, 2. How the apostle doth extend his proposition universally to all sorts of persons, Jews and Gentiles; that is, the whole race of mankind; affirming, that God will justify circumcised believers, and uncirmcumcised believers, one and the same way, even by the way of grace and faith: It is one God which justifieth the circumcision by faith, and uncircumcision through faith.
Where note, The argument is drawn from the unity or oneness of God, which is not to be understood so much of the unity of his essence and nature, as of his will and purpose; yet as God is one and the same unchangeable God in his nature, so is he as immutable in his will and purpose. Having therefore determined and declared his way of justifying all sinners to be one and the same to all nations, both Jew and Gentile, even by faith alone in his Son Christ Jesus; no other way is to be expected from that God who is unchangeable in his purpose.
Learn thence, That God’s way and method of justifying all sinners, Jews and Gentiles, great and small, is, and ever will be the same, namely, by faith alone, without works. What false notions soever men may entertain in their minds about it, and when the pride of men has arraigned the wisdom of God never so much, the apostle’s conclusion will remain like a rock unshaken, Therefore we conclude, that a man is justified by faith without the deeds of the law. Rom 3:28
Fuente: Expository Notes with Practical Observations on the New Testament
Rom 3:28. Therefore we conclude As if he had said, Since it appears, by what has been said, that all are sinners, involved in guilt and condemnation, and so cannot be justified by the law, whether natural or revealed, and that God has appointed another way of justification, we draw this conclusion; that a man is justified Is accounted righteous, accepted and dealt with as such; by faith By believing in the Lord Jesus Christ, and in the mercy and grace of God, and the truths and promises of the gospel through him. See Act 16:31; Gal 2:16; Rom 4:24. Without the deeds of the law Without perfect obedience to any law, as the meritorious cause of his justification. Every one, however, who is justified in this way, must show his faith by his works, Jas 2:14-26, and make the moral law the constant rule of his temper and conduct. It may be proper to observe here, 1st, That the faith by which men, under the new covenant, are justified, hath for its object persons, rather than propositions. So Christ himself hath told us; Ye believe in God, believe also in me. So Moses also; Abraham believed in the Lord, and it was counted to him for righteousness: and Paul; Believe in the Lord Jesus Christ, and thou shalt be saved. In the mean time, this faith in God and in Christ necessarily leads those who possess it, to believe every thing made known to them by God and by Christ, and to do every thing which they have enjoined: so that it terminates in the sincere belief of the doctrines of religion, and in the constant practice of its duties, as far as they are made known to the believer. 2d, When the apostle tells us, that by faith man is justified without the works of the law, or rather, works of law, his plain meaning is, that men are justified gratuitously by faith, and not meritoriously by perfect obedience to any law whatever. See note on chap. Rom 2:13. For at the same time he teaches us that men are justified freely through Gods grace; consequently he excludes faith equally with works, from any meritorious efficiency in the matter.
Fuente: Joseph Bensons Commentary on the Old and New Testaments
Vv. 28. The relation between this verse and the preceding rests on the contrast between the two ideas and , boasting and being justified by faith. We exclude boasting in proportion as we affirm justification by faith.
Several commentators read , then, after T. R., which is supported by the Vat. and the Byzs. In that case this verse would form the conclusion from what precedes: We conclude, then, that man…But if the apostle were concluding finally in Rom 3:28, why would he recommence to argue in the following verse? We must therefore prefer the reading of the other Alexs. and the Greco-Lats., , for: For we deem, we assert that…Another question is, Whether, with the Byzs., we are to put the word , by faith, before the verb , to be justified, or whether it is better to put it after, with the other two families, and so give the idea of justification the dominant place over that of the means of obtaining it. The connection with Rom 3:27 certainly speaks in favor of the Byz. reading, which has the Peshito for it. It is the idea of being justified by faith, and not that of being justified in general, which excludes boasting.
It is worth remarking the word , man. This general term is chosen designedly: whatever bears the name of man, Jew as well as Gentile, depends on the justification which is of faith, and can have no other. If it is so, it is plain that boasting is finally excluded. The apostle adds: without works of law, that is to say, without participation in any of those works which are wrought in the servile and mercenary spirit which prevails under the rule of law (see on Rom 3:20). The matter in question here is neither final salvation nor works as fruits of faith (good works, Eph 2:10; Tit 3:8). For these will be necessary in the day of judgment (see on Rom 2:13).
If it were otherwise, if the works of the law had not been excluded by the great act of expiation described Rom 3:24-26, and by the rule of faith involved in it, it would be found that God provided for the salvation of a part of mankind only, and forgot the rest. The unity of God is not compatible with this difference in his mode of acting. Now the dogma of the unity of God is the basis of the law, and of the whole of Judaism. On this point, too, therefore, the law is at one with faith, Rom 3:29-31.
Fuente: Godet Commentary (Luke, John, Romans and 1 Corinthians)
We reckon therefore that a man is justified by faith apart from the works of the law.
Fuente: McGarvey and Pendleton Commentaries (New Testament)
28. For we conclude that a man is justified by faith without works of law. How astonishing that, in the face of so much positive, clear and unequivocal inspired affirmation that justification is by faith alone without any works of any law, after all we see nominal Christianity burdened to death with human legalisms. Poor old Romanism got so heavily loaded centuries ago, that she not only got slowed down into a standstill on the track, but as the way to heaven is up-grade, and the way to hell downgrade, the tremendous gravity of her mammoth institutions reversed her wheels, so for many centuries she has been running perditionward with an appalling velocity. You have but to look around you and see the Protestant churches already burdened into a standstill, and yet competing either with other in the manufacture of ecclesiastical institutions unheard of in the Bible. The gullibility of poor, fallen humanity in religion has been proverbial in all ages, and, oh, how universally manifest at the present day, when, amid the universal fulfillment of the latter day prophecies, this old wicked world is so fast ripening for destruction, everywhere augmented and expected by fallen churchisms, furnishing a thousand substitutes for the precious blood of Jesus and the refining fire of the Holy Ghost. How triumphantly and irrefutably does this verse forever annihilate all the claims of human legalism, uncontrovertedly establishing the great fundamental Bible truth of justification for all men through the free grace of God in Christ, received and appropriated by faith without deeds of law; i. e., water baptism or anything else on the line of legal obedience.