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Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Romans 4:2

Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Romans 4:2

For if Abraham were justified by works, he hath [whereof] to glory; but not before God.

2. For ] Q. d., “the question is asked, because if the answer is yes, Abraham stands in a position of independence before God.”

by works ] Lit. out of works; in consequence of them.

he hath ] “As he stands before us in Scripture;” a frequent and natural use of the present tense.

whereof to glory ] Lit. a boast; a ground of self-congratulation. The word is nearly the same as that in Rom 3:27. Both Gr. words are good or bad according to their connexion; meaning sometimes rightful and even holy exultation (e.g. ch. Rom 5:2; Heb 3:6, “rejoicing”), sometimes vanity and self-assertion.

but not before God ] Lit. but not towards God; i.e. “not as looking Him in the face.” Before is thus a fair rendering. The phrase seems to be pregnant: instead of a mere negative to the question proposed, St Paul suggests the ultimate reason of the negative the impossibility that man can boast rightly before God. We may paraphrase: “But as a fact he had no ground of boasting; for, in view of the holiness of God, that could not be, even for him. And (Rom 4:3) Scripture bears this out in direct terms; for it records that he was accepted as believing.”

Fuente: The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges

For if Abraham … – This is the answer of the apostle. If Abraham was justified on the ground of his own merits, he would have reason to boast, or to claim praise. He might regard himself as the author of it, and take the praise to himself; see Rom 4:4. The inquiry, therefore, was, whether in the account of the justification of Abraham, there was to be found any such statement of a reason for self-confidence and boasting.

But not before God – In the sight of God. That is, in his recorded judgment, he had no ground of boasting on account of works. To show this, the apostle appeals at once to the Scriptures, to show that there was no such record as that Abraham could boast that he was justified by his works. As God judges right in all cases, so it follows that Abraham had no just ground of boasting, and of course that he was not justified by his own works. The sense of this verse is well expressed by Calvin. If Abraham was justified by his works, he might boast of his own merits. But he has no ground of boasting before God. Therefore he was not justified by works.

Fuente: Albert Barnes’ Notes on the Bible

Verse 2. For if Abraham were justified by works] The JEW proceeds: – I conclude, therefore, that Abraham was justified by works, or by his obedience to this law of circumcision; and, consequently, he has cause for glorying, , to exult in something which he has done to entitle him to these blessings. Now, it is evident that he has this glorying, and consequently that he was justified by works.

APOSTLE. But not before God] These seem to be the apostle’s words, and contain the beginning of his answer to the arguments of the Jew, as if he had said: – Allowing that Abraham might glory in being called from heathenish darkness into such marvellous light, and exult in the privileges which God had granted to him; yet this glorying was not before God as a reason why those privileges should be granted; the glorying itself being a consequence of these very privileges.

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

He hath whereof to glory; he hath cause or matter of glorying and boasting; he hath something from whence he may take occasion of so doing.

But not before God; something must be supplied to fill up the sense, i.e. he hath nothing whereof to glory before God. The argument of the apostle might be thus formed: If Abraham had obtained justification by works, he should have had somewhat whereof he might glory before God: but he had nothing whereof to glory before God; therefore he was not justified by works. Gods way of justifying sinners is such, as shuts out all glorying and boasting, as he had before laid down, Rom 3:27.

Fuente: English Annotations on the Holy Bible by Matthew Poole

2. For if Abraham were justified byworks, he hath whereof to glory; but not before God“Ifworks were the ground of Abraham’s justification, he would havematter for boasting; but as it is perfectly certain that he hath nonein the sight of God, it follows that Abraham could not have beenjustified by works.” And to this agree the words of Scripture.

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

For if Abraham were justified by works,…. That Abraham was not, and could not be justified by works, is clear from hence, that if this was his case,

he hath whereof to glory; which will be allowed him before men, on account of his pious life and conversation:

but not before God; who saw all the iniquity of his heart, and was privy to all his failings and infirmities: besides, glorying before God in a man’s own works, is contrary to the scheme and method of God’s grace; is excluded by the doctrine of faith; nor is there any place for glorying before God but in Christ, and his righteousness: if therefore Abraham had not that of which he could glory before God, he could not be justified by works in his sight: but does not the Apostle James say that he was justified by works, Jas 2:21? To this it may be replied, that the two apostles, Paul and James, are not speaking of the same thing: Paul speaks of justification before God, James of justification before men; Paul speaks of the justification of the person, James of the justification of a man’s cause, as the truth of his faith, or the uprightness of his conduct; Paul speaks of works, as the causes of justification, James of them as the effects and evidences of faith; Paul had to do with the self-righteous, who trusted in their own works for justification, James with Gnostics, who slighted and neglected the performance of them. These things considered, they will be found to agree.

Fuente: John Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible

The Scripture ( ). Ge 15:6.

Was justified by works ( ). Condition of first class, assumed as true for the sake of argument, though untrue in fact. The rabbis had a doctrine of the merits of Abraham who had a superfluity of credits to pass on to the Jews (Lu 3:8).

But not towards God (). Abraham deserved all the respect from men that came to him, but his relation to God was a different matter. He had there no ground of boasting at all.

Fuente: Robertson’s Word Pictures in the New Testament

For. Supply, Abraham found nothing according to the flesh; for, if he did. he has something to boast of.

By works [ ] . Lit., out of works. In speaking of the relation of works to justification, Paul never uses dia by or through, but ejk out of; works being regarded by the Jew as the meritorious source of salvation.

Fuente: Vincent’s Word Studies in the New Testament

1) “For if Abraham were justified by works,” (ei gar Abraam eks ergon edikaiothe) “For if Abraham was justified by works,” as the Jews contended, on Which they doted, but he wasn’t, Rom 5:1; Rom 5:9; Luk 18:14; Rom 3:28. Paul discusses Abraham’s faith which God sees. James discusses Abraham’s works which man sees, works he did because of faith he had, Jas 2:1-26.

2) “He hath whereof to glory,” (echei Kauchema) “He has or holds an occasion to boast,” or has a real boast, doesn’t he? This appears to be irony or sarcasm? Self-glorying is vain, empty, hypocritical. This was the fall of the Jews, their basis of proud rejection of Jesus Christ, Joh 8:24; Joh 8:33; Joh 8:37; Joh 8:39; Joh 8:44.

3) “But not before God,” (all’ ou pros theon) “But not with God,” not in any association with God. Because no one is justified with God by works! See? Works do not acquit or release one from condemnation of sin and God’s broken law. Works of Moses’ Law did not and do not impart, transfer, or impute Divine righteousness to any person –neither does baptism, reformation, church membership, The Lord’s Supper, or the doing of any deed of the laws of Christ impart salvation to a sinner. This Salvation comes solely by faith in Jesus Christ, apart from church membership, church ordinances, tithes, etc. God’s children, who have been saved by Grace thru faith, should thereafter live in these obedient ways, not to obtain or retain salvation, but to honor God Rom 6:4; Joh 14:15; 1Jn 5:1.

Fuente: Garner-Howes Baptist Commentary

2. For if Abraham, etc. This is an incomplete argument, (131) which may be made in this form — “If Abraham was justified by works, he might justly glory: but he had nothing for which he could glory before God; then he was not justified by works.” Thus the clause but not before God, is the minor proposition; and to this must be added the conclusion which I have stated, though it is not expressed by Paul. He calls that glorying when we pretend to have anything of our own to which a reward is supposed to be due at God’s tribunal. Since he takes this away from Abraham, who of us can claim for himself the least particle of merit?

(131) Epicheirema; in Greek ἐπιχείρεμα, an attempted but an unfinished process of reasoning. It is not necessary to introduce this sort of syllogism, it being not the character of Scripture nor of any other writing to discuss matters in this form.

The word for “glorying” here, καύχημα, is different from that in Rom 3:27, καύχησις, and means reason, ground, or cause for glorying, and is rendered by [ Grotius ] “ unde laudem speret — whereby he may hope for praise;” and by [ Beza ] and [ Piscator ] “ unde glorietur — whereby he may glory.” To complete the following clause, most repeat the words ἔχει καύχημα — “But he has no ground for glorying before God.” [ Vatablus ] gives another meaning, “But not with regard to God,” that is, with regard to what he has said in his word; and this view is confirmed by what immediately follows, “For what saith the Scripture?” In this case there is nothing understood. That πρὸς θεόν is used in a similar manner, is evident from other passages : τα πρὸς θεόν — “things which pertain to God,” i.e., to God’s work or service. See Heb 2:17; Heb 5:1. — Ed.

Fuente: Calvin’s Complete Commentary

(2) We know that he obtained justification. If that justification had been earned by his own works it would then have been something to be proud of; it would be a pride that he might fairly hold both towards men and towards God; for to men he could point to the privileged position that he had gained, and in the sight of God he would be able to plead a certain merit of his own. But he has not this merit. His justification was not earned, but it was bestowed upon him, not for the sake of his works, but of his faith. This is the express statement of Scripture. And hence it follows that though his privileged position in the sight of men remains, he has nothing to boast of before God.

But not before God.This is an instance of the rapid and eager dialectic of the Apostle. If the whole train of thought had been given it would probably have run much as above, but the greater part of it is suppressed, and the Apostle strikes straight at the one point which he intended to bring into relief. (Whatever there might be before men) there is no boasting before God.

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

2. Not before God Says old Bishop Jackson: “He [Abraham] might boldly contest (as Job did, and every godly man yet safety may) with others for integrity of life and plenty of works, in which he might justly rejoice or glory; yet with men, not with God.” Humanitarians and secular reformers largely boast of their own high moral standard and inflexible conscientiousness. They plume themselves (often very factitiously) even over the Christian Church, and rebuke the religious professors for their slowness to engage in moral enterprises for the removal of abuses and the advancement of the age. Christians should accept such rebukes as far as just, and arouse to nobler and holier zeal in good works. But let not the merely secular humanitarian fancy that his good works will recommend him to God’s favour. When the Most Holy walks into his heart with his lighted candle to make search, wickedness enough will be there found, even in his most righteous moments and his most conscientious performances, to damn his soul a thousand times forever. He has whereof to glory before men, but not before God! In the earnestness of his soul he should cry, Enter not into judgment with thy servant, O Lord, for in thy sight shall no flesh be justified! He would do well to bow down with the humblest Christian whom he, perhaps justly, rebukes, while both smite upon their hearts and pray, like the Publican, God be merciful to me the sinner!

Many commentators suppose a very harsh ellipsis here; but not any man has whereof to glory before God. Paul assumes this universal principle, but he asserts it only of Abraham.

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

‘For if Abraham was reckoned as in the right by works, he has that in which to glory, but not towards God.’

But Paul reacts strongly against the suggestion that Abraham was reckoned as righteous by God because of his works. He declares that if Abraham really was reckoned as in the right by works, as the unbelieving Jews claimed, (he is making a concession, notice the ‘if’) it could only be in the eyes of men. He would then have a cause of boasting before men. But, Paul stresses, he would not have a grounds of boasting before God. For God requires, not partial, but total obedience. He will agree that in the eyes of men Abraham might well be highly esteemed and be seen as better than most men, so that he could glory/boast before men. But he will not for one moment concede that he had any grounds for boasting before God. This is a position which he now demonstrates from Scripture, which must be the final arbiter (as both Jew and Christian would agree).

Note how this argument reflects Rom 3:27 ‘Where then is the glorying? It is excluded. By what manner of law? Of works? No, but by a law of faith.’

Fuente: Commentary Series on the Bible by Peter Pett

Rom 4:2. But not before God This appears to be the Apostle’s answer to the Jew’s objection (Rom 4:1-2.), and it implies that Abraham might have some sort of glorying, possibly such as the Apostle himself had, 1Co 9:15. 2Co 1:12; 2Co 10:13; 2Co 10:18; 2Co 11:16-30. The Apostle had glorying in his superior vouchsafements and labour, but only before men, and with respect to them; not before God, in regard to whom his language was, Not I, but the grace of God. Note farther, that before God hints, that the Apostle considers Abraham as standing in the court before God’s tribunal, when the promise was given him. It perhaps would make this passage clearer, if the present verse ended with the word glory, and the third began with the clause before us. See Raphelius.

Fuente: Commentary on the Holy Bible by Thomas Coke

Rom 4:2 . The question in Rom 4:1 contained the negative sense, which had therefore necessarily to be limited by : “We may not assert that Abraham has obtained anything according to the flesh.” The reason for this is now assigned ( ): “ For, assuming that Abraham has been justified by works ” (as was the Jewish opinion [964] ), “ he has cause for boasting ,” namely, that he has attained righteousness through his actions, but he has not this ground of boasting with respect to God (as if his justification were the divine act), since, namely, in the case supposed it is not God to whom he owes the justification, but on the contrary he has himself earned it, and God would simply have to acknowledge it as a human self-acquirement. God has not, in that supposed case, done anything for him, on account of which he might thus boast with regard to God as his justifier; for , . , Theodoret. Comp also Chrysostom, Oecumenius, and Theophylact. Thus for the proper understanding of this difficult passage (Chrysostom: ) we must go back to the explanation of the Greek expositors, which is quite faithful both to the words and the context. Comp on Rom 4:3-4 . This interpretation, now adopted also by Tholuck (comp Reithmayr and Th. Schott), has especially this advantage, that is not taken otherwise than in the entire development of the , not therefore as somewhat indefinite and general (“justus apparuit,” Grotius), in which case it would remain a question by whom Abraham was found righteous (Rckert, Philippi; comp Beza and others; also Grotius and Koppe, and, with trifling variation, de Wette, likewise Spohn in the Stud. u. Krit. 1843, p. 429 ff., Volckmar, and others). That Abraham was justified with God was known to no Jew otherwise (comp Sir 44:19 ff.; Manass. 8; Joseph. Antt. xi. 5, 7; Eisenmenger, entdeckt. Judenth . I. p. 322, 343), and no reader could in accordance with the entire context understand otherwise, than in this definite sense, consequently in the solemn absolute sense of the Apostle (in opposition to Lipsius, Rechtfertigungsl . p. 35). The only question was, whether or . If we suppose the former case, it is indeed for Abraham worthy of all honour, and he may boast of that which he has himself achieved, but with reference to God , as if He had justified him, he has no ground for boasting. [970] Observe besides, that is used not in the sense of , coram (Hofmann: overagainst ), or apud (Vulgate), but in accordance with the quite common usage of with the object of the thing (to have something to do, to say, to boast, to ask, to censure, etc.), and with specification of the relation of reference to some one through . The opposite of is , Col 3:13 . The special mode of the reference is invariably furnished by the context, which here, in accordance with the idea of , suggests the notion that God is the bestower of the blessing meant by . To that the of Abraham does not refer, if he was justified by works . In the latter case he cannot boast of himself: , . Reiche and Fritzsche, following Calvin, Calovius, and many others, have discovered here an incomplete syllogism , in which . is the minor premiss, and the conclusion is wanting, to this effect: “Si suis bene factis Dei favorem nactus est, habet quod apud Deum glorietur.; sed non habet, quod apud Deum glorietur, quum libri s. propter fidem , non propter pulchre facta eum Deo probatum esse doceant (Rom 4:3 ).; non est igitur Abr. ob bene facta Deo probatus,” Fritzsche. So in substance also Kraussold in the Stud. u. Krit. 1842, p. 783; Baur in the Theol. Jahrb. 1857, p. 71; Kstlin in the Jahrb. f. Deutsche Theol. 1856, p. 92. Forced, and even contrary to the verbal sense; for through the very contrast . . . the simple is distinguished from the . , as one that takes place not . Paul must have written: (or ) . Mehring takes as a question : “If Abraham has become righteous by works, he has glory, but has he it not before God? ” But in what follows it is the very opposite of the affirmation, which this question would imply, that is proved. If the words were interrogative, must have been used instead of ( but yet not before God? ) Hofmann, in consequence of his erroneous exposition of Rom 4:1 , supposes that Paul wishes to explain how he came to propose the question in Rom 4:1 , and to regard an answer to it as necessary. What is here involved, namely, is nothing less than a contradiction between what Christians say of themselves (when they deny all possibility of becoming righteous by their own actions), and what holds good of “an Abraham,” the father of the people of God . If the latter has become righteous through his own action, he has glory, and by this very circumstance his ancestorship is distinguished from that of all others. But then the Scripture teaches that what God counted worthy in Abraham was his faith, and it is therefore clear that the glory which he has, if he has become righteous by works, is no glory in presence of God, and consequently is not fitted to be the basis of his position in sacred history . This is a chain of ideas imported into the passage; instead of which it was the object of the Apostle himself merely to set forth the simple proposition that Abraham was not justified by works, and not at all to speak of the mode in which the Christian ancestorship of the patriarch came to subsist.

(comp on Phi 1:26 ; Phi 2:16 ) is throughout the N. T. materies gloriandi; as also in the LXX. and Apocrypha; although in classic authors (Pind. Isthm. v. 65; Plut. Ages. 31) it also occurs as the equivalent of , gloriatio . In Gal 6:4 , also, it is joined with .

[964] In the Talmud it is even inferred from Gen 26:5 that Abraham kept the whole law of Moses. Kiddusch f. 82, 1; Joma f. 28, 2; Beresch. rabba f. 57, 4. Comp. the passages from Philo quoted by Schneckenburger in the Stud. u. Krit. 1833, p. 135.

[970] Van Hengel places a point after ., and takes . as an independent sentence, in which he supplies secundum literas sacras , making the sense: “Atqui gloriandi materiam Deum Abrahamo denegare videmus in libris sacris.” But that is, in fact, not there. Against my own interpretation in the 1st ed. (making . the question , and then ( . the answer negativing it) see Philippi. The must be the dialectic if .

Fuente: Heinrich August Wilhelm Meyer’s New Testament Commentary

2 For if Abraham were justified by works, he hath whereof to glory; but not before God.

Ver. 2. But not before God ] Who when he begins to search our sacks, as the steward did Benjamin’s, can find out those our thieveries that we thought not of; bring to mind and light those sins that we had forgotten, or not observed. When he comes to turn the bottom of the bag upwards it will be bitter with us. Abimelech’s excuse was accepted, and yet his sin was chastised, Gen 20:6 . Vae hominum vitae quantumvis laudabili, si remora misericordia iudicetur. The best lamb should abide the slaughter, except the rams were sacrificed, that Isaac might be saved.

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

2. ] For if Abraham was [not ‘ were ’ as E. V.] justified (assuming, as a fact known to all, that he was justified by some means) by works, he hath matter of boasting (not expressed here whether in the sight of men , or of God , but taken generally: the proposition being assumed, ‘He that has earned justification by works, has whereof to boast ’). Then, in disproof of this, that Abraham has matter of boasting, whatever men might think of him, or attribute to him (e.g. the perfect keeping of the law, as the Jews did), one thing at least is clear, that he has none before God . ( , probably as in the second ref., with , in the sense of chez : apud Deum.) This we can prove, ( Rom 4:3 ) for what saith the Scripture? Abraham believed God (God’s promise) and it ( ) was reckoned (so LXX. Heb., ‘He reckoned it’) to him as (ch. Rom 2:26 ) righteousness .

The whole question so much mooted between Protestants on the one hand, and Romanists, Arminians, and Socinians on the other, as to whether this righteousness was reckoned (1) ‘ per fidem ,’ being God’s righteousness imputed to the sinner; or (2) ‘ propter fidem ,’ so that God made Abraham righteous on account of the merit of his faith , lies in fact in a small compass, if what has gone before be properly taken into account. The Apostle has proved Jews and Gentiles to be all under sin : utterly unable by works of their own to attain to righteousness. Now faith , in the second sense mentioned above, is strictly and entirely a work , and as such would be the efficient cause of man’s justification, which, by what has preceded, it cannot be . It will therefore follow, that it was not the act of believing which was reckoned to him as a righteous act, or on account of which perfect righteousness was laid to his charge, but that the fact of his trusting God to perform His promise introduced him into the blessing promised . God declared his purpose ( Gen 12:3 ) of blessing all the families of the earth in Abraham, and again ( Gen 15:5 ) that his seed should be as the stars of heaven, when as yet he had no son. Abraham believed this promise, and became partaker of this blessing . But this blessing was, justification by faith in Christ . Now Abraham could not, in the strict sense of the words, be justified by faith in Christ , nor is it necessary to suppose that he directed his faith forward to the promised Redeemer in Person; but in so far as God’s gracious purpose was revealed to him, he grasped it by faith, and that righteousness which was implied, so far, in it, was imputed to him. Some have said (Tholuck, e.g.) that the parallel is incomplete Abraham’s faith having been reckoned to him for righteousness, whereas, in our case, the righteousness of Christ is reckoned to us as our righteousness, by faith. But the incompleteness lies in the nature of the respective cases. In his case, the righteousness itself was not yet manifested. He believed implicitly , taking the promise, with all it involved and implied, as true . This then was his way of entering into the promise, and by means of his faith was bestowed upon him that full justification which that faith never apprehended. Thus his faith itself , the mere fact of implicit trust in God, was counted to him for righteousness. But though the same righteousness is imputed to us who believe, and by means of faith also, it is no longer the mere fact of believing implicitly in God’s truth, but the reception of Christ Jesus the Lord by faith, which justifies us (see Rom 4:23-25 and note). As it was then the realization of God’s words by faith, so now: but we have the Person of the Lord Jesus for the object of faith , explicitly revealed: he had not . In both cases justification is gratuitous , and is by faith ; and so far, which is as far as the argument here requires, the parallel is strict and complete.

Fuente: Henry Alford’s Greek Testament

Rom 4:2 f. With the Apostle summarily repels the objection. “You say he has ground of boasting? On the contrary, he has no ground of boasting in relation to God, For what does the Scripture say? Abraham believed God, and it was imputed to Him for righteousness.” The quotation is from Gen 15:6 , and is exactly as in the LXX, except that Paul writes instead of , which serves partly to bring out the contrast between the real mode of Abraham’s justification, and the mode suggested in Rom 4:2 , partly to give prominence to faith , as that on which his argument turned. The reading is also found in Jas 1:23 , Philo i. 605 (Mangey), as well as Clem. Rom., I., x., 6, and Just. Martyr, Dial. , 92: so that it was probably current, and not introduced by Paul. It is assumed that something not in itself righteousness was reckoned to Abraham as righteousness; only on this assumption is boasting in his case excluded.

Fuente: The Expositors Greek Testament by Robertson

if App-118.

justified. App-191.

by. Greek. ek. App-104.

glory. Greek. kauchema. See Rom 3:27 and 2Co 9:3.

not. App-105.

before. Greek. pros. App-104.

God. App-98.

Fuente: Companion Bible Notes, Appendices and Graphics

2.] For if Abraham was [not were as E. V.] justified (assuming, as a fact known to all, that he was justified by some means) by works, he hath matter of boasting (not expressed here whether in the sight of men, or of God, but taken generally: the proposition being assumed, He that has earned justification by works, has whereof to boast). Then, in disproof of this,-that Abraham has matter of boasting,-whatever men might think of him, or attribute to him (e.g. the perfect keeping of the law, as the Jews did), one thing at least is clear, that he has none before God. (, probably as in the second ref., with, in the sense of chez: apud Deum.) This we can prove, (Rom 4:3) for what saith the Scripture? Abraham believed God (Gods promise) and it ( ) was reckoned (so LXX. Heb., He reckoned it) to him as (ch. Rom 2:26) righteousness.

The whole question so much mooted between Protestants on the one hand, and Romanists, Arminians, and Socinians on the other, as to whether this righteousness was reckoned (1) per fidem, being Gods righteousness imputed to the sinner; or (2) propter fidem, so that God made Abraham righteous on account of the merit of his faith, lies in fact in a small compass, if what has gone before be properly taken into account. The Apostle has proved Jews and Gentiles to be all under sin: utterly unable by works of their own to attain to righteousness. Now faith, in the second sense mentioned above, is strictly and entirely a work, and as such would be the efficient cause of mans justification,-which, by what has preceded, it cannot be. It will therefore follow, that it was not the act of believing which was reckoned to him as a righteous act, or on account of which perfect righteousness was laid to his charge, but that the fact of his trusting God to perform His promise introduced him into the blessing promised. God declared his purpose (Gen 12:3) of blessing all the families of the earth in Abraham, and again (Gen 15:5) that his seed should be as the stars of heaven, when as yet he had no son. Abraham believed this promise, and became partaker of this blessing. But this blessing was, justification by faith in Christ. Now Abraham could not, in the strict sense of the words, be justified by faith in Christ,-nor is it necessary to suppose that he directed his faith forward to the promised Redeemer in Person; but in so far as Gods gracious purpose was revealed to him, he grasped it by faith, and that righteousness which was implied, so far, in it, was imputed to him. Some have said (Tholuck, e.g.) that the parallel is incomplete-Abrahams faith having been reckoned to him for righteousness, whereas, in our case, the righteousness of Christ is reckoned to us as our righteousness, by faith. But the incompleteness lies in the nature of the respective cases. In his case, the righteousness itself was not yet manifested. He believed implicitly, taking the promise, with all it involved and implied, as true. This then was his way of entering into the promise, and by means of his faith was bestowed upon him that full justification which that faith never apprehended. Thus his faith itself, the mere fact of implicit trust in God, was counted to him for righteousness. But though the same righteousness is imputed to us who believe, and by means of faith also, it is no longer the mere fact of believing implicitly in Gods truth, but the reception of Christ Jesus the Lord by faith, which justifies us (see Rom 4:23-25 and note). As it was then the realization of Gods words by faith, so now: but we have the Person of the Lord Jesus for the object of faith, explicitly revealed: he had not. In both cases justification is gratuitous, and is by faith; and so far, which is as far as the argument here requires, the parallel is strict and complete.

Fuente: The Greek Testament

Rom 4:2. , if) A particle implying reluctant concession [for arguments sake].-, for) [The expresses] the cause after the proposition, and the reason why, in Rom 4:1, he added the limitation, hath found as pertaining to the flesh.[43]-) to, or before. He was not justified by works before God, and therefore, he has no ground of boasting before God; but both [hold good of him] according to the flesh.

[43] , from works) Abraham was before the law, hence Paul introduces no mention of the law, ver. 1-12.-V. g.

Fuente: Gnomon of the New Testament

Rom 4:2

Rom 4:2

For if Abraham was justified by works, he hath whereof to glory; but not toward God.-Abraham was justified, but by which law? That of faith or by the works of the law? If he was saved by works, or the law of works, he might have whereof to glory; but if he was saved by faith, there was no room for glorying, save in Gods blessing. Abraham was justified by faith before he was circumcised. Faith led Abraham away from self, away from home and friends, to follow God, who led him to offer his son of promise. Faith leads man to do the things that he in whom he believes commands. Faith in another leads man to distrust self and to trust and follow the one in whom his faith is centered.

Fuente: Old and New Testaments Restoration Commentary

works

Cf. Jam 2:24. These are two aspects of one truth. Paul speaks of that which justifies man before God, viz.: faith alone, wholly apart from works; James of the proof before men, that he who professes to have justifying faith really has it. Paul speaks of what God sees–faith; James of what men see–works, as the visible evidence of faith. Paul draws his illustration from Gen 15:6 James from Gen 22:1-19. James’ key phrase is “ye see” Jam 2:24 for men cannot see faith except as manifested through works.

Fuente: Scofield Reference Bible Notes

Abraham: Rom 3:20-28, Phi 3:9

he hath: Rom 3:27, Rom 15:17, Eze 8:9, Jer 9:23, Jer 9:24, 1Co 9:16, 2Co 5:12, 2Co 11:12, 2Co 11:30, 2Co 12:1-9, Gal 6:13, Gal 6:14, Eph 2:9

but: Gen 12:12, Gen 12:13, Gen 12:18, Gen 12:20, Gen 20:9-13, Jos 24:2, 1Co 1:29, 1Co 4:7, Gal 3:22

Reciprocal: Luk 10:29 – willing Rom 2:13 – justified Rom 4:17 – who quickeneth 1Co 4:4 – yet Gal 2:16 – that

Fuente: The Treasury of Scripture Knowledge

4:2

Rom 4:2. Abraham did not have to rely on his works to have something of which to glory in God’s sight. The Jews were boasting of Abraham’s works, for his sake, but there was no need for the patriarch to boast on that ground.

Fuente: Combined Bible Commentary

Rom 4:2. For if Abraham was justified by works. It is assumed that he was justified, but the Jews held the opinion that he was justified by works. Notice that even in their view, justification was a matter where Gods verdict was concerned.

Ground of glorying (not the same word as in chap. Rom 3:27); comp. Gal 6:4, where the same phrase occurs.

But not toward God. The best paraphrase of this concisely expressed passage is: If Abraham, as the Jews suppose, was justified by works, he has reason to glory toward God (for he could claim justification from God as of debt), but he has no ground of glorying toward God (and hence was not justified by works), for the Scripture says he was justified by faith (Rom 4:3). Some commentators, however, following the Greek fathers, take the clause: but not toward God, as implying that his justification by faith gives him a ground of glorying toward God, but the supposed justification by works would give him only a pound of glorying toward men, God having nothing to do with it except to acknowledge it as justly earned. The objections to this view are that Rom 4:3 would then contain a refutation introduced by but not for; that it is not like Paul to admit any ground of glorying toward men, much less toward God, in connection with the matter of justification.

Fuente: A Popular Commentary on the New Testament

Vv. 2. Some commentators take this verse as the logical proof (for) of the negative answer which must be understood between Rom 4:1-2 : Nothing; for, if he had been justified by his works, he would have whereof to glory, which is inadmissible. But why would it be inadmissible? This is exactly the matter to be examined. The reasoning would then be only a vicious circle. The verse must be regarded, not as a proof of the negative answer anticipated, but as the explanation why Paul required to put the question of Rom 4:1 : I ask this, because if Abraham had been justified by his works, he would really have something of which to glory; and consequently the boasting which I declared to be excluded (Rom 3:27) would reappear once more as right and good. Did not Abraham’s example form the rule?

The expression by works is substituted for that of Rom 4:1 : according to the flesh, as the term being justified replaces the having found. In both cases, the term appearing in Rom 4:2 indicates the concrete result (works, being justified), as that in Rom 4:1 expressed the abstract principle (the flesh, finding). The word signifies a matter for glorying in, which is quite a different thing from , the act of glorying. Paul does not say that Abraham would really glory, but only that he would have matter for doing so. But how can the apostle express himself at the end of the verse in the words: but not before God, so as to make us suppose that Abraham was really justified by his works, though not before God? Some commentators (Beza, Grot., de Wette, Rck., Philip.) think themselves obliged to weaken the sense of the word justified, as if it denoted here justification in the eyes of men: If Abraham was justified by his works (in the judgment of men), he has a right to boast (relatively to them and himself), but not as before God. But would such an attenuated sense of the word justify be possible in this passage, which may be called Paul’s classical teaching on the subject of justification? Calvin, Fritzsche, Baur, Hodge, assert that we have here an incomplete syllogism; the major: If Abraham was justified by works, he has whereof to glory; the minor: Now he could not have whereof to glory before God; the conclusion (understood): Therefore he was not justified by works. But the minor is exactly what it would have been necessary to prove; for what had been said, Rom 3:27, of the exclusion of boasting or of justification by works, was again made a question by the discussion on the case of Abraham. Besides, the conclusion was the important part, and could not have been left to be understood. The apostle has not accustomed us to such a mode of arguing. Meyer, after some variations in his first editions, has ended by siding with the explanation of Chrysostom and Theodoret, which is to the following effect: If Abraham was justified by his works, he has undoubtedly something whereof to glory in his own eyes; but in this case he has received no favor from God, nothing which honors him as the object of divine grace; and his justification not coming from God, he has no cause to glory in relation to God. This meaning is very ingenious; nevertheless it is untenable; for

1. The term glorying would require to be taken in a good sense: glorying in a real favor received from God, while throughout the whole piece it is applied to an impure boasting, the ground of which man finds in himself and in his own work.

2. Paul must have said in this sense: , in God, rather than , in relation to God, comp. Rom 2:17.

3. Rom 4:3 does not naturally connect itself with Rom 4:2 when thus understood, for this verse proves not what it should (for), to wit, that Abraham has no cause for boasting in the case supposed, but the simple truth that he was justified by his faith. Semler and Glckler have had recourse to a desperate expedient, that of taking as the exclamation of an oath: But no, by God, it is not so. But this sense would have required ; and what could have led Paul to use such a form here? The turn of expression employed by the apostle is certainly singular, we shall say even a little perplexed. He feels he is approaching a delicate subject, about which Jewish national feeling could not but show itself very sensitive. To understand his meaning, we must, after the words: If he was justified by works, he hath whereof to glory, add the following: and he has really great reason for glorying; it is something to have been made an Abraham; one may be proud of having borne such a name, but…Here the apostle resumes in such a way as to return to his theme: but all this glorying has nothing to do with the account which he had to render to God. The words: in relation to God, , are evidently opposed to a corresponding: in relation to man, understood. In comparing himself with men less holy than he, Abraham might have some cause for glorying; but the instant he put himself before God, his righteousness vanished. This is exactly the point proved by the following verses.

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

For if Abraham was justified by works, he hath whereof to glory; but not toward God.

Fuente: McGarvey and Pendleton Commentaries (New Testament)

2. For if Abraham were justified by works, he hath boasting, but not before God. The covenant which God stipulated with Abraham is identical with the covenant of redemption which he made with His Son in heaven, pursuant to which the mediatorial, involving the redemption of the world, was launched (Gal 3:16). This covenant two thousand years subsequently God renewed and confirmed with Abraham, being ultimately verified in the incarnation of Christ and ratified by His atoning blood. It was pertinent that God should elucidate the plan of salvation by the stipulation of the mediatorial covenant with some human being, who should give it notoriety and thus normally receive the paternity of faith on the earth. This glorious honor, in His wisdom, God conferred on Abraham. The very fact that the Abrahamic is identical with the mediatorial covenant involves the conclusion that human salvation is restricted to that covenant. Hence we see that all the people who seek justification by works are without hope, because out of harmony with Abraham, who was justified by faith alone without works. Hence the utter and hopeless futility of all the legalistic systems, which, like fallen Judaism, have girdled the globe for ages.

For what saith the Scripture? But Abraham believed God and it was imputed unto him for righteousness (Gen 15:6).

Fuente: William Godbey’s Commentary on the New Testament

Verse 2

But not before God; that is, he has no cause to glory before God The meaning appears to be that, however high and honorable the character and memory of Abraham might be in the estimation of men, in the eye of God, he was a sinner,–to be saved, like other men, by grace.

Fuente: Abbott’s Illustrated New Testament

4:2 {2} For if Abraham were justified by works, he hath [whereof] to glory; but not before God.

(2) A preventing of an objection. Abraham may well rejoice and extol himself among men, but not with God.

Fuente: Geneva Bible Notes

This verse applies Paul’s earlier statement about boasting (Rom 3:27) to Abraham’s case for the sake of contrast. Abraham had no ground for boasting before God because he received justification by faith, not by works.

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