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Consecration to God; Duty towards God; Duty towards Ourselves; Due Exercise of Spiritual Gifts; Duty towards Our Brethren; Brotherly Love; Love to Enemies. . 1 I beseech you therefore, brethren, by the mercies of God, that ye present your bodies a living sacrifice, holy, acceptable unto God, which is your reasonable service. 2 And be not conformed to this world: but be ye transformed by the renewing of your mind, that ye may prove what is that good, and acceptable, and perfect, will of God. 3 For I say, through the grace given unto me, to every man that is among you, not to think of himself more highly than he ought to think; but to think soberly, according as God hath dealt to every man the measure of faith. 4 For as we have many members in one body, and all members have not the same office: 5 So we, being many, are one body in Christ, and every one members one of another. 6 Having then gifts differing according to the grace that is given to us, whether prophecy, let us prophesy according to the proportion of faith; 7 Or ministry, let us wait on our ministering: or he that teacheth, on teaching; 8 Or he that exhorteth, on exhortation: he that giveth, let him do it with simplicity; he that ruleth, with diligence; he that showeth mercy, with cheerfulness. 9 Let love be without dissimulation. Abhor that which is evil; cleave to that which is good. 10 Be kindly affectioned one to another with brotherly love; in honour preferring one another; 11 Not slothful in business; fervent in spirit; serving the Lord; 12 Rejoicing in hope; patient in tribulation; continuing instant in prayer; 13 Distributing to the necessity of saints; given to hospitality. 14 Bless them which persecute you: bless, and curse not. 15 Rejoice with them that do rejoice, and weep with them that weep. 16 Be of the same mind one toward another. Mind not high things, but condescend to men of low estate. Be not wise in your own conceits. 17 Recompense to no man evil for evil. Provide things honest in the sight of all men. 18 If it be possible, as much as lieth in you, live peaceably with all men. 19 Dearly beloved, avenge not yourselves, but rather give place unto wrath: for it is written, Vengeance is mine; I will repay, saith the Lord. 20 Therefore if thine enemy hunger, feed him; if he thirst, give him drink: for in so doing thou shalt heap coals of fire on his head. 21 Be not overcome of evil, but overcome evil with good. We may observe here, according to the scheme mentioned in the contents, the apostle's exhortations, I. Concerning our duty to God, We see what is godliness. 1. It is to surrender ourselves to God, and so to lay a good foundation. We must first give our own selves unto the Lord, 2 Corinthians 8:5 . This is here pressed as the spring of all duty and obedience, Romans 12:1 ; Romans 12:2 . Man consists of body and soul, Genesis 2:7 ; Ecclesiastes 12:7 . (1.) The body must be presented to him, Romans 12:1 ; Romans 12:1 . The body is for the Lord, and the Lord for the body, 1 Corinthians 6:13 ; 1 Corinthians 6:14 . The exhortation is here introduced very pathetically: I beseech you, brethren. Though he was a great apostle, yet he calls the meanest Christians brethren, a term of affection and concern. He uses entreaty; this is the gospel way: As though God did beseech you by us, 2 Corinthians 5:20 . Though he might with authority command, yet for love's sake he rather beseeches, Philemon 1:8 ; Philemon 1:9 . The poor useth entreaty, Proverbs 18:23 . This is to insinuate the exhortation, that it might come with the more pleasing power. Many are sooner wrought upon if they be accosted kindly, are more easily led than driven. Now observe, [1.] The duty pressed—to present our bodies a living sacrifice, alluding to the sacrifices under the law, which were presented or set before God at the altar, ready to be offered to him. Your bodies —your whole selves; so expressed because under the law the bodies of beasts were offered in sacrifice, ; 1 Corinthians 6:20 . Our bodies and spirits are intended. The offering was sacrificed by the priest, but presented by the offerer, who transferred to God all his right, title, and interest in it, by laying his hand on the head of it. Sacrifice is here taken for whatsoever is by God's own appointment dedicated to himself; see 1 Peter 2:5 . We are temple, priest, and sacrifice, as Christ was in his peculiar sacrificing. There were sacrifices of atonement and sacrifices of acknowledgment. Christ, who was once offered to bear the sins of many, is the only sacrifice of atonement; but our persons and performances, tendered to God through Christ our priest, are as sacrifices of acknowledgment to the honour of God. Presenting them denotes a voluntary act, done by virtue of that absolute despotic power which the will has over the body and all the members of it. It must be a free-will offering. Your bodies; not your beasts. Those legal offerings, as they had their power from Christ, so they had their period in Christ. The presenting of the body to God implies not only the avoiding of the sins that are committed with or against the body, but the using of the body as a servant of the soul in the service of God. It is to glorify God with our bodies ( ; 1 Corinthians 6:20 ), to engage our bodies in the duties of immediate worship, and in a diligent attendance to our particular callings, and be willing to suffer for God with our bodies, when we are called to it. It is to yield the members of our bodies as instruments of righteousness, Romans 6:13 . Though bodily exercise alone profits little, yet in its place it is a proof and product of the dedication of our souls to God. First, Present them a living sacrifice; not killed, as the sacrifices under the law. A Christian makes his body a sacrifice to God, though he does not give it to be burned. A body sincerely devoted to God is a living sacrifice. A living sacrifice, by way of allusion—that which was dead of itself might not be eaten, much less sacrificed, ; Deuteronomy 14:21 ; and by ways of opposition—"The sacrifice was to be slain, but you may be sacrificed, and yet live on"—an unbloody sacrifice. The barbarous heathen sacrificed their children to their idol-gods, not living, but slain sacrifices: but God will have mercy, and not such sacrifice, though life is forfeited to him. A living sacrifice, that is, inspired with the spiritual life of the soul. It is Christ living in the soul by faith that makes the body a living sacrifice, Galatians 2:20 . Holy love kindles the sacrifices, puts life into the duties; see Romans 6:13 . Alive, that is, to God, ; Romans 12:11 . Secondly, They must be holy. There is a relative holiness in every sacrifice, as dedicated to God. But, besides this, there must be that real holiness which consists in an entire rectitude of heart and life, by which we are conformed in both to the nature and will of God: even our bodies must not be made the instruments of sin and uncleanness, but set apart for God, and put to holy uses, as the vessels of the tabernacle were holy, being devoted to God's service. It is the soul that is the proper subject of holiness; but a sanctified soul communicates a holiness to the body it actuates and animates. That is holy which is according to the will of God; when the bodily actions are no, the body is holy. They are the temples of the Holy Ghost, 1 Corinthians 6:19 . Possess the body in sanctification, ; 1 Thessalonians 4:4-5 . [2.] The arguments to enforce this, which are three:— First, Consider the mercies of God: I beseech you by the mercies of God. An affectionate obtestation, and which should melt us into a compliance: dia ton oiktirmon tou Theou. This is an argument most sweetly cogent. There is the mercy that is in God and the mercy that is from God—mercy in the spring and mercy in the streams: both are included here; but especially gospel-mercies (mentioned Romans 11:1-36 ), the transferring of what the Jews forfeited and lost by their unbelief unto us Gentiles ( Ephesians 3:4-6 ): the sure mercies of David, Leviticus 3:0 ; Leviticus 3:0 . God is a merciful God, therefore let us present our bodies to him; he will be sure to use them kindly, and knows how to consider the frames of them, for he is of infinite compassion. We receive from him every day the fruits of his mercy, particularly mercy to our bodies: he made them, he maintains them, he bought them, he has put a great dignity upon them. It is of the Lord's mercies that we are not consumed, that our souls are held in life; and the greatest mercy of all is that Christ hath made not his body only, but his soul, an offering for sin, that he gave himself for us and gives himself to us. Now surely we cannot but be studying what we shall render to the Lord for all this. And what shall we render? Let us render ourselves as an acknowledgment of all these favours—all we are, all we have, all we can do; and, after all, it is but very poor returns for very rich receivings: and yet, because it is what we have, Secondly, It is acceptable to God. The great end we should all labour after is to be accepted of the Lord ( 2 Corinthians 5:9 ), to have him well-pleased with our persons and performances. Now these living sacrifices are acceptable to God; while the sacrifices of the wicked, though fat and costly, are an abomination to the Lord. It is God's great condescension that he will vouchsafe to accept of any thing in us; and we can desire no more to make us happy; and, if the presenting of ourselves will but please him, we may easily conclude that we cannot bestow ourselves better. Thirdly, It is our reasonable service. There is an act of reason in it; for it is the soul that presents the body. Blind devotion, that has ignorance for the mother and nurse of it, is fit to be paid only to those dunghill-gods that have eyes and see not. Our God must be served in the spirit and with the understanding. There is all the reason in the world for it, and no good reason can possibly be produced against it. Come now, and let us reason together, ; Isaiah 1:18 . God does not impose upon us any thing hard or unreasonable, but that which is altogether agreeable to the principles of right reason. Ten logiken latreian hymon — your service according to the word; so it may be read. The word of God does not leave out the body in holy worship. That service only is acceptable to God which is according to the written word. It must be gospel worship, spiritual worship. That is a reasonable service which we are able and ready to give a reason for, in which we understand ourselves. God deals with us as with rational creatures, and will have us so to deal with him. Thus must the body be presented to God. (2.) The mind must be renewed for him. This is pressed ( Romans 12:2 ): " Be you transformed by the renewing of your mind; see to it that there be a saving change wrought in you, and that it be carried on." Conversion and sanctification are the renewing of the mind, a change not of the substance, but of the qualities of the soul. It is the same with making a new heart and a new spirit—new dispositions and inclinations, new sympathies and antipathies; the understanding enlightened, the conscience softened, the thoughts rectified; the will bowed to the will of God, and the affections made spiritual and heavenly: so that the man is not what he was—old things are passed away, all things are become new; he acts from new principles, by new rules, with new designs. The mind is the acting ruling part of us; so that the renewing of the mind is the renewing of the whole man, for out of it are the issues of life, ; Proverbs 4:23 . The progress of sanctification, dying to sin more and more and living to righteousness more and more, is the carrying on of this renewing work, till it be perfected in glory. This is called the transforming of us; it is like putting on a new shape and figure. Metamorphousthe — Be you metamorphosed. The transfiguration of Christ is expressed by this word ( Matthew 17:2 ), when he put on a heavenly glory, which made his face to shine like the sun; and the same word is used 2 Corinthians 3:18 , where we are said to be changed into the same image from glory to glory. This transformation is here pressed as a duty; not that we can work such a change ourselves: we could as soon make a new world as make a new heart by any power of our own; it is God's work, ; Ezekiel 11:19 ; Ezekiel 36:26-27 . But be you transformed, that is, "use the means which God hath appointed and ordained for it." It is God that turns us, and then we are turned; but we must frame our doings to turn, ; Hosea 5:4 . "Lay your souls under the changing transforming influences of the blessed Spirit; seek unto God for grace in the use of all the means of grace." Though the new man be created of God, yet we must put it on ( Ephesians 4:24 ), and be pressing forward towards perfection. Now in this verse we may further observe, [1.] What is the great enemy to this renewing, which we must avoid; and that is, conformity to this world: Be not conformed to this world. All the disciples and followers of the Lord Jesus must be nonconformists to this world. Me syschematizesthe — Do not fashion yourselves according to the world. We must not conform to the things of the world; they are mutable, and the fashion of them is passing away. Do not conform either to the lusts of the flesh or the lusts of the eye. We must not conform to the men of the world, of that world which lies in wickedness, not walk according to the course of this world ( ; Ephesians 2:2 ); that is, we must not follow a multitude to do evil, Exodus 23:2 . If sinners entice us, we must not consent to them, but in our places witness against them. Nay, even in things indifferent, and which are not in themselves sinful, we must so far not conform to the custom and way of the world as not to act by the world's dictates as our chief rule, nor to aim at the world's favours as our highest end. True Christianity consists much in a sober singularity. Yet we must take heed of the extreme of affected rudeness and moroseness, which some run into. In civil things, the light of nature and the custom of nations are intended for our guidance; and the rule of the gospel in those cases is a rule of direction, not a rule of contrariety. [2.] What is the great effect of this renewing, which we must labour after: That you may prove what is that good, and acceptable, and perfect will of God. by the will of God here we are to understand his revealed will concerning our duty, what the Lord our God requires of us. This is the will of God in general, even our sanctification, that will which we pray may be done by us as it is done by the angels; especially his will as it is revealed in the New Testament, where he hath in these last days spoken to us by his Son. First, The will of God is good, and acceptable, and perfect; three excellent properties of a law. It is good ( ; Micah 6:8 ); it is exactly consonant to the eternal reason of good and evil. It is good in itself. It is good for us. Some think the evangelical law is here called good, in distinction from the ceremonial law, which consisted of statutes that were not good, Ezekiel 20:25 . It is acceptable, it is pleasing to God; that and that only is so which is prescribed by him. The only way to attain his favour as the end is to conform to his will as the rule. It is perfect, to which nothing can be added. The revealed will of God is a sufficient rule of faith and practice, containing all things which tend to the perfection of the man of God, to furnish us thoroughly to every good work, 2 Timothy 3:16-17 . Secondly, That it concerns Christians to prove what is that will of God which is good, and acceptable, and perfect; that is, to know it with judgment and approbation, to know it experimentally, to know the excellency of the will of God by the experience of a conformity to it. It is to approve things that are excellent ( ; Philippians 1:10 ); it is dokimazein (the same word that is used here) to try things that differ, in doubtful cases readily to apprehend what the will of God is and to close in with it. It is to be of quick understanding in the fear of the Lord, Isaiah 11:3 . Thirdly, That those are best able to prove what is the good, and acceptable, and perfect will of God, who are transformed by the renewing of their mind. A living principle of grace is in the soul, as far as it prevails, an unbiassed unprejudiced judgment concerning the things of God. It disposes the soul to receive and entertain the revelations of the divine will. The promise is ( ; John 7:17 ), If any man will do his will, he shall know of the doctrine. A good wit can dispute and distinguish about the will of God; while an honest, humble heart, that has spiritual senses exercised, and is delivered into the mould of the word, loves it, and practises it, and has the relish and savour of it. Thus to be godly is to surrender ourselves to God. 2. When this is done, to serve him in all manner of gospel obedience. Some hints of this we have here ( Romans 12:11-12 ), Serving the Lord. Wherefore do we present ourselves to him, but that we may serve him? Acts xxvii. 23 , Whose I am; and then it follows, whom I serve. To be religious is to serve God. How? (1.) We must make a business of it, and not be slothful in that business. Not slothful in business. There is the business of the world, that of our particular calling, in which we must not be slothful, ; 1 Thessalonians 4:11 . But this seems to be meant of the business of serving the Lord, our Father's business, Luke 2:49 . Those that would approve themselves Christians indeed must make religion their business—must choose it, and learn it, and give themselves to it; they must love it, and employ themselves in it, and abide by it, as their great and main business. And, having made it our business, we must not be slothful in it: not desire our own ease, and consult that, when it comes in competition with our duty. We must not drive on slowly in religion. Slothful servants will be reckoned with us wicked servants. (2.) We must be fervent in spirit, serving the Lord. God must be served with the spirit ( ; Romans 1:9 ; John 4:24 ), under the influences of the Holy Spirit. Whatever we do in religion it is pleasing to God no further than it is done with our spirits wrought upon by the Spirit of God. And there must be fervency in the spirit—a holy zeal, and warmth, and ardency of affection in all we do, as those that love God not only with the heart and soul, but with all our hearts, and with all our souls. This is the holy fire that kindles the sacrifice, and carries it up to heaven, an offering of a sweet-smelling savour.— Serving the Lord. To kairo douleuontes (so some copies read it), serving the time, that is, improving your opportunities and making the best of them, complying with the present seasons of grace. (3.) Rejoicing in hope. God is worshipped and honoured by our hope and trust in him, especially when we rejoice in that hope, take a complacency in that confidence, which argues a great assurance of the reality and a great esteem of the excellency of the good hoped for. (4.) Patient in tribulation. Thus also God is served, not only by working for him when he calls us to work, but by sitting still quietly when he calls us to suffer. Patience for God's sake, and with an eye to his will and glory, is true piety. Observe, Those that rejoice in hope are likely to be patient in tribulation. It is a believing prospect of the joy set before us that bears up the spirit under all outward pressure. (5.) Continuing instant in prayer. Prayer is a friend to hope and patience, and we do in it serve the Lord. Proskarterountes. It signifies both fervency and perseverance in prayer. We should not be cold in the duty, nor soon weary of it, ; Luke 18:1 ; 1 Thessalonians 5:17 ; Ephesians 6:18 ; Colossians 4:2 . This is our duty which immediately respects God. II. Concerning our duty which respects ourselves; this is sobriety. 1. A sober opinion of ourselves, ; Romans 12:3 . It is ushered in with a solemn preface: I say, through the grace given unto me: the grace f wisdom, by which he understood the necessity and excellency of this duty; the grace of apostleship, by which he had authority to press and enjoin it. "I say it, who am commissioned to say it, in God's name. I say it, and it is not for you to gainsay it." It is said to every one of us, one as well as another. Pride is a sin that is bred in the bone of all of us, and we have therefore each of us need to be cautioned and armed against it.— Not to think of himself more highly than he ought to think. We must take heed of having too great an opinion of ourselves, or putting too high a valuation upon our own judgments, abilities, persons, performances. We must not be self-conceited, nor esteem too much our own wisdom and other attainments, not think ourselves to be something, Galatians 6:3 . There is a high thought of ourselves which we may and must have to think ourselves too good to be the slaves of sin and drudges to this world. But, on the other hand, we should think soberly, that is, we must have a low and modest opinion of ourselves and our own abilities, our gifts and graces, according to what we have received from God, and not otherwise. We must not be confident and hot in matters of doubtful disputation; not stretch ourselves beyond our line; not judge and censure those that differ from us; not desire to make a fair show in the flesh. These and the like are the fruits of a sober opinion of ourselves. The words will bear yet another sense agreeable enough. Of himself is not in the original; therefore it may be read, That no man be wise above what he ought to be wise, but be wise unto sobriety. We must not exercise ourselves in things too high for us ( ; Psalms 131:1-2 ), not intrude into those things which we have not seen ( Colossians 2:18 ), those secret things which belong not to us ( Deuteronomy 29:29 ), not covet to be wise above what is written. There is a knowledge that puffs up, which reaches after forbidden fruit. We must take heed of this, and labour after that knowledge which tends to sobriety, to the rectifying of the heart and the reforming of the life. Some understand it of the sobriety which keeps us in our own place and station, from intruding into the gifts and offices of others. See an instance of this sober modest care in the exercise of the greatest spiritual gifts, 2 Corinthians 10:13-15 . To this head refers also that exhortation ( Romans 12:16 ), Be not wise in your own conceits. It is good to be wise, but it is bad to think ourselves so; for there is more hope of a fool than of him that is wise in his own eyes. It was an excellent thing for Moses to have his face shine and not know it. Now the reasons why we must have such a sober opinion of ourselves, our own abilities and attainments, are these:— (1.) Because whatever we have that is good, God hath dealt it to us; every good and perfect gift comes from above, ; James 1:17 . What have we that we have not received? And, if we have received it, why then do we boast? 1 Corinthians 4:7 . The best and most useful man in the world is no more, no better, than what the free grace of God makes him every day. When we are thinking of ourselves, we must remember to think not how we attained, as though our might and the power of our hand had gotten us these gifts; but think how kind God hath been to us, for it is he that gives us power to do any thing that is good, and in him is all our sufficiency. (2.) Because God deals out his gifts in a certain measure: According to the measure of faith. Observe, The measure of spiritual gifts he calls the measure of faith, for this is the radical grace. What we have and do that is good is so far right and acceptable as it is founded in faith, and flows from faith, and no further. Now faith, and other spiritual gifts with it, are dealt by measure, according as Infinite Wisdom sees meet for us. Christ had the Spirit given him without measure, John iii. 34 . But the saints have it by measure; see Eph. iv. 7 . Christ, who had gifts without measure, was meek and lowly; and shall we, that are stinted, be proud and self-conceited? (3.) Because God has dealt out gifts to others as well as to us: Dealt to every man. Had we the monopoly of the Spirit, or a patent to be sole proprietors of spiritual gifts, there might be some pretence for this conceitedness of ourselves; but others have their share as well as we. God is a common Father, and Christ a common root, to all the saints, who all drive virtue from him; and therefore it ill becomes us to lift up ourselves, and to despise others, as if we only were the people in favour with heaven, and wisdom should die with us. This reasoning he illustrates by a comparison taken from the members of the natural body (as ; 1 Corinthians 12:12 ; Ephesians 4:16 ): As we have many members in one body, &c., ; Romans 12:4-5 . Here observe, [1.] All the saints make up one body in Christ, who is the head of the body, and the common centre of their unity. Believers lie not in the world as a confused disorderly heap, but are organized and knit together, as they are united to one common head, and actuated and animated by one common Spirit. [2.] Particular believers are members of this body, constituent parts, which speak them less than the whole, and in relation to the whole, deriving life and spirits from the head. Some members in the body are bigger and more useful than others, and each receives spirits from the head according to its proportion. If the little finger should receive as much nourishment as the leg, how unseemly and prejudicial would it be! We must remember that we are not the whole; we think above what is meet if we think so; we are but parts and members. [3.] All the members have not the same office ( Romans 12:4 ), but each hath its respective place and work assigned it. The office of the eye is to see, the office of the hand is to work, &c. So in the mystical body, some are qualified for, and called to, one sort of work; others are, in like manner, fitted for, and called to, another sort of work. Magistrates, ministers, people, in a Christian commonwealth, have their several offices, and must not intrude one upon another, nor clash in the discharge of their several offices. [4.] Each member hath its place and office, for the good and benefit of the whole, and of every other member. We are not only members of Christ, but we are members one of another, ; Romans 12:5 . We stand in relation one to another; we are engaged to do all the good we can one to another, and to act in conjunction for the common benefit. See this illustrated at large, 1 Corinthians 12:14 , &c. Therefore we must not be puffed up with a conceit of our own attainments, because, whatever we have, as we received it, so we received it not for ourselves, but for the good of others. 2. A sober use of the gifts that God hath given us. As we must not on the one hand be proud of our talents, so on the other hand we must not bury them. Take heed lest, under a pretence of humility and self-denial, we be slothful in laying out ourselves for the good of others. We must not say, "I am nothing, therefore I will sit still, and do nothing;" but, "I am nothing in myself, and therefore I will lay out myself to the utmost in the strength of the grace of Christ." He specifies the ecclesiastical offices appointed in particular churches, in the discharge of which each must study to do his own duty, for the preserving of order and the promotion of edification in the church, each knowing his place and fulfilling it. Having then gifts. The following induction of particulars supplies the sense of this general. Having gifts, let us use them. Authority and ability for the ministerial work are the gift of God.— Gifts differing. The immediate design is different, though the ultimate tendency of all is the same. According to the grace, charismata kata ten charin. The free grace of God is the spring and original of all the gifts that are given to men. It is grace that appoints the office, qualifies and inclines the person, works both to will and to do. There were in the primitive church extraordinary gifts of tongues, of discerning, of healing; but he speaks here of those that are ordinary. Compare ; 1 Corinthians 12:4 ; 1 Timothy 4:14 ; 1 Peter 4:10 . Seven particular gifts he specifies ( Romans 12:6-8 ), which seem to be meant of so many distinct offices, used by the prudential constitution of many of the primitive churches, especially the larger. There are two general ones here expressed by prophesying and ministering, the former the work of the bishops, the latter the work of the deacons, which were the only two standing officers, Philippians 1:1 . But the particular work belonging to each of these might be, and it should seem was, divided and allotted by common consent and agreement, that it might be done the more effectually, because that which is every body's work is nobody's work, and he despatches his business best that is vir unius negotii—a man of one business. Thus David sorted the Levites ( ; 1 Chronicles 23:4-5 ), and in this wisdom is profitable to direct. The five latter will therefore be reduced to the two former. (1.) Prophecy. Whether prophecy, let us prophesy according to the proportion of faith. It is not meant of the extraordinary gifts of foretelling things to come, but the ordinary office of preaching the word: so prophesying is taken, 1 Corinthians 14:1-3 ; 1 Corinthians 6:4 ; 1 Thessalonians 5:20 . The work of the Old-Testament prophets was not only to foretel future things, but to warn the people concerning sin and duty, and to be their remembrancers concerning that which they knew before. And thus gospel preachers are prophets, and do indeed, as far as the revelation of the word goes, foretel things to come. Preaching refers to the eternal condition of the children of men, points directly at a future state. Now those that preach the word must do it according to the proportion of faith — kata ten analogian tes pisteos, that is, [1.] As to the manner of our prophesying, it must be according to the proportion of the grace of faith. He had spoken ( ; Romans 12:3 ) of the measure of faith dealt to every man. Let him that preaches set all the faith he hath on work, to impress the truths he preaches upon his own heart in the first place. As people cannot hear well, so ministers cannot preach well, without faith. First believe and then speak, Psalms 116:10 ; 2 Corinthians 4:13 . And we must remember the proportion of faith—that, though all men have not faith, yet a great many have besides ourselves; and therefore we must allow others to have a share of knowledge and ability to instruct, as well as we, even those that in less things differ from us. " Hast thou faith? Have it to thyself; and do not make it a ruling rule to others, remembering that thou hast but thy proportion." [2.] As to the matter of our prophesying, it must be according to the proportion of the doctrine of faith, as it is revealed in the holy scriptures of the Old and New Testament. By this rule of faith the Bereans tried Paul's preaching, ; Acts 17:11 . Compare Acts 26:22 ; Galatians 1:9 . There are some staple-truths, as I may call them, some prima axiomata—first axioms, plainly and uniformly taught in the scripture, which are the touchstone of preaching, by which (though we must not despise prophesying) we must prove all things, and then hold fast that which is good, ; 1 Thessalonians 5:20-21 . Truths that are more dark must be examined by those that are more clear; and then entertained when they are found to agree and comport with the analogy of faith; for it is certain one truth can never contradict another. See here what ought to be the great care of preachers—to preach sound doctrine, according to the form of wholesome words, Titus 2:8 ; 2 Timothy 1:13 . It is not so necessary that the prophesying be according to the proportion of art, the rules of logic and rhetoric; but it is necessary that it be according to the proportion of faith: for it is the word of faith that we preach. Now there are two particular works which he that prophesieth hath to mind—teaching and exhorting, proper enough to be done by the same person at the same time, and when he does the one let him mind that, when he does the other let him do that too as well as he can. If, by agreement between the ministers of a congregation, this work be divided, either constantly or interchangeably, so that one teaches and the other exhorts (that is, in our modern dialect, one expounds and the other preaches), let each do his work according to the proportion of faith. First, let him that teacheth wait on teaching. Teaching is the bare explaining and proving of gospel truths, without practical application, as in the expounding of the scripture. Pastors and teachers are the same office ( ; Ephesians 4:11 ), but the particular work is somewhat different. Now he that has a faculty of teaching, and has undertaken that province, let him stick to it. It is a good gift, let him use it, and give his mind to it. He that teacheth, let him be in his teaching; so some supply it, Ho didaskon, en te didaskalia. Let him be frequent and constant, and diligent in it; let him abide in that which is his proper work, and be in it as his element. See 1 Timothy 4:15-16 , where it is explained by two words, en toutois isthi, and epimene autois, be in these things and continue in them. Secondly, Let him that exhorteth wait on exhortation. Let him give himself to that. This is the work of the pastor, as the former of the teacher; to apply gospel truths and rules more closely to the case and condition of the people, and to press upon them that which is more practical. Many that are very accurate in teaching may yet be very cold and unskilful in exhorting; and on the contrary. The one requires a clearer head, the other a warmer heart. Now where these gifts are evidently separated (that the one excels in the one and the other in the other) it conduces to edification to divide the work accordingly; and, whatsoever the work is that we undertake, let us mind it. To wait on our work is to bestow the best of our time and thoughts upon it, to lay hold of all opportunities for it, and to study not only to do it, but to do it well. (2.) Ministry. If a man hath diakonian — the office of a deacon, or assistant to the pastor and teacher, let him use that office well—a churchwarden (suppose), an elder, or an overseer of the poor; and perhaps there were more put into these offices, and there was more solemnity in them, and a greater stress of care and business lay upon them in the primitive churches, than we are now well aware of. It includes all those offices which concern the ta exo of the church, the outward business of the house of God. See ; Nehemiah 11:16 . Serving tables, Acts 6:2 . Now let him on whom this care of ministering is devolved attend to it with faithfulness and diligence; particularly, [1.] He that giveth, let him do it with simplicity. Those church-officers that were the stewards of the church's alms, collected money, and distributed it according as the necessities of the poor were. Let them do it en aploteti — liberally and faithfully; not converting what they receive to their own use, nor distributing it with any sinister design, or with respect of person: not froward and peevish with the poor, nor seeking pretences to put them by; but with all sincerity and integrity, having no other intention in it than to glorify God and do good. Some understand it in general of all almsgiving: He that hath wherewithal, let him give, and give plentifully and liberally; so the word is translated, ; 2 Corinthians 8:2 ; 2 Corinthians 9:13 . God loves a cheerful bountiful giver. [2.] He that ruleth with diligence. It should seem, he means those that were assistants to the pastors in exercising church-discipline, as their eyes, and hands, and mouth, in the government of the church, or those ministers that in the congregation did chiefly undertake and apply themselves to this ruling work; for we find those ruling that laboured in the word and doctrine, ; 1 Timothy 5:17 . Now such must do it with diligence. The word denotes both care and industry to discover what is amiss, to reduce those that go astray, to reprove and admonish those that have fallen, to keep the church pure. Those must take a great deal of pains that will approve themselves faithful in the discharge of this trust, and not let slip any opportunity that may facilitate and advance that work. [3.] He that showeth mercy with cheerfulness. Some think it is meant in general of all that in any thing show mercy: Let them be willing to do it, and take a pleasure in it; God loves a cheerful giver. But it seems to be meant of some particular church-officers, whose work it was to take care of the sick and strangers; and those were generally widows that were in this matter servants to the church-deaconesses ( 1 Timothy 5:9-10 ), though others, it is likely, might be employed. Now this must be done with cheerfulness. A pleasing countenance in acts of mercy is a great relief and comfort to the miserable; when they see it is not done grudgingly and unwillingly, but with pleasant looks and gentle words, and all possible indications of readiness and alacrity. Those that have to do with such as are sick and sore, and commonly cross and peevish, have need to put on not only patience, but cheerfulness, to make the work the more easy and pleasant to them, and the more acceptable to God. III. Concerning that part of our duty which respects our brethren, of which we have many instances, in brief exhortations. Now all our duty towards one another is summer up in one word, and that a sweet work, love. In that is laid the foundation of all our mutual duty; and therefore the apostle mentions this first, which is the livery of Christ's disciples, and the great law of our religion: Let love be without dissimulation; not in compliment and pretence, but in reality; not in word and tongue only, ; 1 John 3:18 . The right love is love unfeigned; not as the kisses of an enemy, which are deceitful. We should be glad of an opportunity to prove the sincerity of our love, 2 Corinthians 8:8 . More particularly, there is a love owing to our friends, and to our enemies. He specifies both. 1. To our friends. He that hath friends must show himself friendly. There is a mutual love that Christians owe, and must pay. (1.) An affectionate love ( ; Romans 12:10 ): Be kindly affectioned one to another, with brotherly love, philostorgoi —it signifies not only love, but a readiness and inclination to love, the most genuine and free affection, kindness flowing out as from a spring. It properly denotes the love of parents to their children, which, as it is the most tender, so it is the most natural, of any, unforced, unconstrained; such must our love be to one another, and such it will be where there is a new nature and the law of love is written in the heart. This kind affection puts us on to express ourselves both in word and action with the greatest courtesy and obligingness that may be.— One to another. This may recommend the grace of love to us, that, as it is made our duty to love others, so it is as much their duty to love us. And what can be sweeter on this side heaven than to love and be beloved? He that thus watereth shall be watered also himself. (2.) A respectful love: In honour preferring one another. Instead of contending for superiority, let us be forward to give to others the pre-eminence. This is explained, Philippians 2:3 , Let each esteem other better than themselves. And there is this good reason for it, because, if we know our own hearts, we know more evil by ourselves than we do by any one else in the world. We should be forward to take notice of the gifts, and graces, and performances of our brethren, and value them accordingly, be more forward to praise another, and more pleased to hear another praised, than ourselves; te time allelous proegoumenoi — going before, or leading one another in honour; so some read it: not in taking honour, but in giving honour. "Strive which of you shall be most forward to pay respect to those to whom it is due, and to perform all Christian offices of love (which are all included in the word honour) to your brethren, as there is occasion. Let all your contention be which shall be most humble, and useful, and condescending." So the sense is the same with ; Titus 3:14 , Let them learn, proistasthai — to go before in good works. For though we must prefer others (as our translation reads it), and put on others, as more capable and deserving than ourselves, yet we must not make that an excuse for our lying by and doing nothing, nor under a pretence of honouring others, and their serviceableness and performances, indulge ourselves in ease and slothfulness. Therefore he immediately adds ( Romans 12:11 ), Not slothful in business. (3.) A liberal love ( ; Romans 12:13 ): Distributing to the necessities of saints. It is but a mock love which rests in the verbal expressions of kindness and respect, while the wants of our brethren call for real supplies, and it is in the power of our hands to furnish them. [1.] It is no strange thing for saints in this world to want necessaries for the support of their natural live. In those primitive times prevailing persecutions must needs reduce many of the suffering saints to great extremities; and still the poor, even the poor saints, we have always with us. Surely the things of this world are not the best things; if they were, the saints, who are the favourites of heaven, would not be put off with so little of them. [2.] It is the duty of those who have wherewithal to distribute, or (as it might better be read) to communicate to those necessities. It is not enough to draw out the soul, but we must draw out the purse, to the hungry. See James 2:15-16 ; 1 John 3:17 . Communicating — koinonountes. It intimates that our poor brethren have a kind of interest in that which God hath given us; and that our reliving them should come from a sense and fellow-feeling of their wants, as though we suffered with them. The charitable benevolence of the Philippians to Paul is called their communicating with his affliction, ; Philippians 4:14 . We must be ready, as we have ability and opportunity, to relieve any that are in want; but we are in a special manner bound to communicate to the saints. There is a common love owing to our fellow-creatures, but a special love owing to our fellow-christians ( Galatians 6:10 ), Especially to those who are of the household of faith. Communicating, tais mneiais — to the memories of the saints; so some of the ancients read it, instead of tais chreiais. There is a debt owing to the memory of those who through faith and patience inherit the promises—to value it, to vindicate it, to embalm it. Let the memory of the just be blessed; so some read ; Proverbs 10:7 . He mentions another branch of this bountiful love: Given to hospitality. Those who have houses of their own should be ready to entertain those who go about doing good, or who, for fear of persecution, are forced to wander for shelter. They had not then so much of the convenience of common inns as we have; or the wandering Christians durst not frequent them; or they had not wherewithal to bear the charges, and therefore it was a special kindness to bid them welcome on free-cost. Nor is it yet an antiquated superseded duty; as there is occasion, we must welcome strangers, for we know not the heart of a stranger. I was a stranger, and you took me in, is mentioned as one instance of the mercifulness of those that shall obtain mercy: ten philoxenian diokontes — following or pursuing hospitality. It intimates, not only that we must take opportunity, but that we must seek opportunity, thus to show mercy. As Abraham, who sat at the tent-door ( Genesis 18:1 ), and Lot, who sat in the gate of Sodom ( Genesis 19:1 ), expecting travellers, whom they might meet and prevent with a kind invitation, and so they entertained angels unawares, Hebrews 13:2 . (4.) A sympathizing love ( ; Romans 12:15 ): Rejoice with those that do rejoice, and weep with those that weep. Where there is a mutual love between the members of the mystical body, there will be such a fellow-feeling. See 1 Corinthians 12:26 . True love will interest us in the sorrows and joys of one another, and teach us to make them our own. Observe the common mixture in this world, some rejoicing, and others weeping (as the people, Ezra 3:12-13 ), for the trial, as of other graces, so of brotherly love and Christian sympathy. Not that we must participate in the sinful mirths or mournings of any, but only in just and reasonable joys and sorrows: not envying those that prosper, but rejoicing with them; truly glad that others have the success and comfort which we have not; not despising those that are in trouble, but concerned for them, and ready to help them, as being ourselves in the body. This is to do as God does, who not only has pleasure in the prosperity of his servants ( ; Psalms 35:27 ), but is likewise afflicted in all their afflictions, Isaiah 63:9 . (5.) A united love: " Be of the same mind one towards another ( v. 16 ), that is, labour, as much as you can, to agree in apprehension; and, wherein you come short of this, yet agree in affection; endeavour to be all one, not affecting to clash, and contradict, and thwart one another; but keep the unity of the Spirit in the bond of peace, Philippians 2:2 ; Philippians 3:15-16 ; 1 Corinthians 1:10 ; to auto eis allelous phronountes — wishing the same good to others that you do to yourselves;" so some understand it. This is to love our brethren as ourselves, desiring their welfare as our own. (6.) A condescending love: Mind not high things, but condescend to men of low estate, ; Romans 12:16 . True love cannot be without lowliness, Ephesians 4:1-2 ; Philippians 2:3 . When our Lord Jesus washed his disciples' feet, to teach us brotherly love ( John 13:5 ; John 13:34 ), it was designed especially to intimate to us that to love one another aright is to be willing to stoop to the meanest offices of kindness for the good of one another. Love is a condescending grace: Non bene conveniunt—majestas et amor—Majesty and love do but ill assort with each other. Observe how it is pressed here. [1.] Mind not high things. We must not be ambitious of honour and preferment, nor look upon worldly pomp and dignity with any inordinate value or desire but rather with a holy contempt. When David's advancements were high, his spirit was humble ( ; Psalms 131:1 ): I do not exercise myself in great matters. The Romans, living in the imperial city, which reigned over the kings of the earth ( Revelation 17:18 ), and was at that time in the meridian of its splendour, were perhaps ready to take occasion thence to think the better of themselves. Even the holy seed were tainted with this leaven. Roman Christians, as some citizens do upon the country; and therefore the apostle so often cautions them against high-mindedness; compare Romans 11:20 . They lived near the court, and conversed daily with the gaiety and grandeur of it: "Well," saith he, "do not mind it, be not in love with it." [2.] Condescend to men of low estate — Tois tapeinois synapagomenoi. First, It may be meant of mean things, to which we must condescend. If our condition in the world be poor and low, our enjoyments coarse and scanty, our employments despicable and contemptible, yet we must bring our minds to it, and acquiesce in it. So the margin: Be contented with mean things. Be reconciled to the place which God in his providence hath put us in, whatever it be. We must account nothing below us but sin: stoop to mean habitations, mean fare, mean clothing, mean accommodations when they are our lot, and not grudge. Nay, we must be carried with a kind of impetus, by the force of the new nature (so the word synapagomai properly signifies, and it is very significant), towards mean things, when God appoints us to them; as the old corrupt nature is carried out towards high things. We must accommodate ourselves to mean things. We should make a low condition and mean circumstances more the centre of our desires than a high condition. Secondly, It may be meant of mean persons; so we read it (I think both are to be included) Condescend to men of low estate. We must associate with, and accommodate ourselves to, those that are poor and mean in the world, if they be such as fear God. David, though a king upon the throne, was a companion for all such, ; Psalms 119:63 . We need not be ashamed to converse with the lowly, while the great God overlooks heaven and earth to look at such. True love values grace in rags as well as in scarlet. A jewel is a jewel, though it lie in the dirt. The contrary to this condescension is reproved, James 2:1-4 . Condescend; that is, suit yourselves to them, stoop to them for their good; as Paul, ; 1 Corinthians 9:19 , &c. Some think the original word is a metaphor taken from travellers, when those that are stronger and swifter of foot stay for those that are weak and slow, make a halt, and take them with them; thus must Christians be tender towards their fellow travellers. As a means to promote this, he adds, Be not wise in your own conceits; to the same purport with Romans 12:3 . We shall never find in our hearts to condescend to others while we find there so great a conceit of ourselves: and therefore this must needs be mortified. Me ginesthe phronimoi par heautois —" Be not wise by yourselves, be not confident of the sufficiency of your own wisdom, so as to despise others, or think you have no need of them ( ; Proverbs 3:7 ), nor be shy of communicating what you have to others. We are members one of another, depend upon one another, are obliged to one another; and therefore, Be not wise by yourselves, remembering it is the merchandise of wisdom that we profess; now merchandise consists in commerce, receiving and returning." (7.) A love that engages us, as much as lies in us, to live peaceably with all men, Romans 12:18 . Even those with whom we cannot live intimately and familiarly, by reason of distance in degree or profession, yet we must with such live peaceably; that is, we must be harmless and inoffensive, not giving others occasion to quarrel with us; and we must be gall-less and unrevengeful, not taking occasion to quarrel with them. Thus must we labour to preserve the peace, that it be not broken, and to piece it again when it is broken. The wisdom from above is pure and peaceable. Observe how the exhortation is limited. It is not expressed so as to oblige us to impossibilities: If it be possible, as much as lies in you. Thus ; Hebrews 12:14 , Follow peace. Ephesians 4:3 , Endeavouring to keep. Study the things that make for peace.— If it be possible. It is not possible to preserve the peace when we cannot do it without offending God and wounding conscience: Id possumus quod jure possumus—That is possible which is possible without incurring blame. The wisdom that is from above is first pure and then peaceable, ; James 3:17 . Peace without purity is the peace of the devil's palace.— As much as lieth in you. There must be two words to the bargain of peace. We can but speak for ourselves. We may be unavoidably striven with; as Jeremiah, who was a man of contention ( Jeremiah 15:10 ), and this we cannot help; our care must be that nothing be wanting on our parts to preserve the peace, Psalms 120:7 . I am for peace, though, when I speak, they are for war. 2. To our enemies. Since men became enemies to God, they have been found very apt to be enemies one to another. Let but the centre of love be once forsaken, and the lines will either clash and interfere, or be at an uncomfortable distance. And, of all men, those that embrace religion have reason to expect to meet with enemies in a world whose smiles seldom concur with Christ's. Now Christianity teaches us how to behave towards our enemies; and in this instruction it quite differs from all other rules and methods, which generally aim at victory and dominion; but this at inward peace and satisfaction. Whoever are our enemies, that wish us ill and seek to do us ill, our rule is to do them no hurt, but all the good we can. (1.) To do them no hurt ( ; Romans 12:17 ): Recompense to no man evil for evil, for that is a brutish recompence, and befitting only those animals which are not conscious either of any being above them or of any state before them. Or, if mankind were made (as some dream) in a state of war, such recompences as these were agreeable enough; but we have not so learned God, who does so much for his enemies ( Matthew 5:45 ), much less have we so learned Christ, who died for us when we were enemies ( Romans 5:8 , Romans 5:10 ), so loved that world which hated him without a cause.—" To no man; neither to Jew nor Greek; not to one that has been thy friend, for by recompensing evil for evil thou wilt certainly lose him; not to one that has been thine enemy, for by not recompensing evil for evil thou mayest perhaps gain him." To the same purport, ; Romans 12:19 , Dearly beloved, avenge not yourselves. And why must this be ushered in with such an affectionate compellation, rather than any other of the exhortations of this chapter? Surely because this is intended for the composing of angry spirits, that are hot in the resentment of a provocation. He addresses himself to such in this endearing language, to mollify and qualify them. Any thing that breathes love sweetens the blood, lays the storm, and cools the intemperate heat. Would you pacify a brother offended? Call him dearly beloved. Such a soft word, fitly spoken, may be effectual to turn away wrath. Avenge not yourselves; that is, when any body has done you any ill turn, do not desire nor endeavour to bring the like mischief or inconvenience upon him. It is not forbidden to the magistrate to do justice to those that are wronged, by punishing the wrong-doer; nor to make and execute just and wholesome laws against malefactors; but it forbids private revenge, which flows from anger and ill-will; and this is fitly forbidden, for it is presumed that we are incompetent judges in our own case. Nay, if persons wronged in seeking the defence of the law, and magistrates in granting it, act from any particular personal pique or quarrel, and not from a concern that public peace and order be maintained and right done, even such proceedings, though seemingly regular, will fall under this prohibited self-revenging. See how strict the law of Christ is in this matter, Matthew 5:38-40 . It is forbidden not only to take it into our own hands to avenge ourselves, but to desire and thirst after event that judgment in our case which the law affords, for the satisfying of a revengeful humour. This is a hard lesson to corrupt nature; and therefore he subjoins, [1.] A remedy against it: Rather give place unto wrath. Not to our own wrath; to give place to this is to give place to the devil, ; Ephesians 4:26-27 . We must resist, and stifle, and smother, and suppress this; but, First, To the wrath of our enemy. "Give place to it, that is, be of a yielding temper; do not answer wrath with wrath, but with love rather. Yielding pacifies great offences, Ecclesiastes 10:4 . Receive affronts and injuries, as a stone is received into a heap of wool, which gives way to it, and so it does not rebound back, nor go any further." So it explains that of our Saviour ( Matthew 5:39 ), Whosoever shall smite thee on thy right cheek, turn to him the other also. Instead of meditating how to revenge one wrong, prepare to receive another. When men's passions are up, and the stream is strong, let it have its course, lest by an unseasonable opposition it be made to rage and swell the more. When others are angry, let us be calm; this is a remedy against revenge, and seems to be the genuine sense. But, Secondly, Many apply it to the wrath of God: "Give place to this, make room for him to take the throne of judgment, and let him alone to deal with thine adversary." [2.] A reason against it: For it is written, Vengeance is mine. We find it written, ; Deuteronomy 32:35 . God is the sovereign King, the righteous Judge, and to him it belongs to administer justice; for, being a God of infinite knowledge, by him actions are weighed in unerring balances; and, being a God of infinite purity, he hates sin and cannot endure to look upon iniquity. Some of this power he hath trusted in the hands of the civil magistrates ( Genesis 9:6 ; Genesis 8:4 ); their legal punishments therefore are to be looked upon as a branch of God's revengings. This is a good reason why we should not avenge ourselves; for, if vengeance be God's, then, First, We may not do it. We step into the throne of God if we do and take his work out of his hand. Secondly, We need not do it. For God will, if we meekly leave the matter with him; he will avenge us as far as there is reason or justice for it, and further we cannot desire it. See ; Psalms 38:14-15 , I heard not, for thou wilt hear; and if God hears what need is there for me to hear? (2.) We must not only not to hurt to our enemies, but our religion goes higher, and teaches us to do them all the good we can. It is a command peculiar to Christianity, and which does highly commend it: Love your enemies, Matthew 5:44 . We are here taught to show that love to them both in word and deed. [1.] In word: Bless those who persecute you, ; Romans 12:14 . It has been the common lot of God's people to be persecuted, either with a powerful hand or with a spiteful tongue. Now we are here taught to bless those that so persecute us. Bless them; that is, First, "Speak well of them. If there be any thing in them that is commendable and praiseworthy, take notice of it, and mention it to their honour." Secondly, "Speak respectfully to them, according as their place is, not rendering railing for railing, and bitterness for bitterness." And, Thirdly, We must wish well to them, and desire their good, so far from seeking any revenge. Nay, Fourthly, We must offer up that desire to God, by prayer for them. If it be not in the power of our hand to do any thing else for them, yet we can testify our good-will by praying for them, for which our master hath given us not only a rule, but an example to back that rule, Luke 23:34 — Bless, and curse not. It denotes a thorough good-will in all the instances and expressions of it; not, "bless them when you are at prayer, and curse them at other times;" but, "bless them always, and curse not at all." Cursing ill becomes the mouths of those whose work it is to bless God, and whose happiness it is to be blessed of him. [2.] In deed ( ; Romans 12:20 ): " If thine enemy hunger, as thou hast ability and opportunity, be ready and forward to show him any kindness, and do him any office of love for his good; and be never the less forward for his having been thine enemy, but rather the more, that thou mayest thereby testify the sincerity of thy forgiveness of him." It is said of archbishop Cranmer that the way for a man to make him his friend was to do him an ill turn. The precept is quoted from Proverbs 25:21-22 ; so that, high as it seems to be, the Old Testament was not a stranger to it. Observe here, First, What we must do. We must do good to our enemies. " If he hunger, do not insult over him, and say, Now God is avenging me of him, and pleading my cause; do not make such a construction of his wants. But feed him." Then, when he has need of thy help, and thou hast an opportunity of starving him and trampling upon him, then feed him ( psomize auton, a significant word)—"feed him abundantly, nay, feed him carefully and indulgently:" frustulatim pasce — feed him with small pieces, "feed him, as we do children and sick people, with much tenderness. Contrive to do it so as to express thy love. If he thirst, give him drink: potize auton — drink to him, in token of reconciliation and friendship. So confirm your love to him." Secondly, Why we must do this. Because in so doing thou shalt heap coals of fire on his head. Two senses are given of this, which I think are both to be taken in disjunctively. Thou shalt heap coals of fire on his head; that is, "Thou shalt either," 1. "Melt him into repentance and friendship, and mollify his spirit towards thee" (alluding to those who melt metals; they not only put fire under them, but heap fire upon them; thus Saul was melted and conquered with the kindness of David, ; 1 Samuel 24:16 ; 1 Samuel 26:21 )—"thou wilt win a friend by it, and if thy kindness have not that effect then," 2. "It will aggravate his condemnation, and make his malice against thee the more inexcusable. Thou wilt hereby hasten upon him the tokens of God's wrath and vengeance." Not that this must be our intention in showing him kindness, but, for our encouragement, such will be the effect. To this purpose is the exhortation in the last verse, which suggests a paradox not easily understood by the world, that in all matters of strife and contention those that revenge are the conquered, and those that forgive are the conquerors. (1.) " Be not overcome of evil. Let not the evil of any provocation that is given you have such a power over you, or make such an impression upon you, as to dispossess you of yourselves, to disturb your peace, to destroy your love, to ruffle and discompose your spirits, to transport you to any indecencies, or to bring you to study or attempt any revenge." He that cannot quietly bear an injury is perfectly conquered by it. (2.) " But overcome evil with good, with the good of patience and forbearance, nay, and of kindness and beneficence to those that wrong you. Learn to defeat their ill designs against you, and either to change them, or at least to preserve your own peace." He that hath this rule over his spirit is better than the mighty. 3. To conclude, there remain two exhortations yet untouched, which are general, and which recommend all the rest as good in themselves, and of good report. (1.) As good in themselves ( ; Romans 12:9 ): Abhor that which is evil, cleave to that which is good. God hath shown us what is good: these Christian duties are enjoined; and that is evil which is opposite to them. Now observe, [1.] We must not only not do evil, but we must abhor that which is evil. We must hate sin with an utter and irreconcilable hatred, have an antipathy to it as the worst of evils, contrary to our new nature, and to our true interest—hating all the appearances of sin, even the garment spotted with the flesh. [2.] We must not only do that which is good, but we must cleave to it. It denotes a deliberate choice of, a sincere affection for, and a constant perseverance in, that which is good. "So cleave to it as not to be allured nor affrighted from it, cleave to him that is good, even to the Lord ( Acts 11:23 ), with a dependence and acquiescence." It is subjoined to the precept of brotherly love, as directive of it; we must love our brethren, but not love them so much as for their sakes to commit any sin, or omit any duty; not think the better of any sin for the sake of the person that commits it, but forsake all the friends in the world, to cleave to God and duty. return to ' Top of Page ' Romans Rom 11 Romans Rom Romans Rom 13 Footnotes: Copyright Statement These files are public domain and are a derivative of an electronic edition that is available on the Christian Classics Ethereal Library Website. Bibliographical Information Henry, Matthew. "Complete Commentary on Romans 12". 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keys=t.split(',');keys.forEach(function(key){if(key==='com'){_ts_loadCom();}if(key==='bib'){_ts_loadBib();}});} function _ts_loadCom(){var commEl=document.querySelector('.commentary');comsec=commEl?commEl.getAttribute('data-com-sec'):'';comlang=commEl?commEl.getAttribute('data-com-lang'):'';comabbr=commEl?commEl.getAttribute('data-com-abbr'):'';var qs='bk='+encodeURIComponent(cur_com_bn)+'&ch='+encodeURIComponent(cur_com_cn)+'&vs='+encodeURIComponent(cur_com_vs)+'&cs='+encodeURIComponent(comsec)+'&cl='+encodeURIComponent(comlang)+'&ca='+encodeURIComponent(comabbr);fetch('/cgi-bin/bible/getBible_data.cgi?'+qs).then(function(r){return r.text();}).then(function(text){var doc=new DOMParser().parseFromString(text,'text/xml');var sn=_ts_xmlSplit(doc,'sn');var sa=_ts_xmlSplit(doc,'sa');var sf=_ts_xmlSplit(doc,'sf');for(var i=0;i u?o(n,r,t,e,u+1):0:0==i?1:-1}(o,n,r,t,0)})} var TS_PARENT_MODE={commentary:'section',translation:'language',chapter:'book',verse:'chapter'}; function 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0);}else{takesVerse=(parseInt(verse,10)>0);}if(takesVerse){translationSelector_menu('verse');}else{_ts_sendThemBack('reference-noverse');}}});}if(mode==='verse'){return _ts_el('div',{cls:'popupDiv-item clickable selector-chapter',data:{number:o},html:o,click:function(){_ts_removeOverlay();verse=parseInt(this.getAttribute('data-number'),10);_ts_sendThemBack('reference-verse');}});}if(mode==='language'){return _ts_el('div',{cls:'popupDiv-item clickable selector-languages',data:{'trans-lang':items[o].abbr},html:items[o].name,click:function(){_ts_removeOverlay();translang=this.getAttribute('data-trans-lang');translationSelector_menu('translation');}});}if(mode==='translation'){return _ts_el('div',{cls:'popupDiv-item clickable selector-translation',data:{'trans-abbr':items[o].trans},html:items[o].name,click:function(){_ts_removeOverlay();transabbr=this.getAttribute('data-trans-abbr');_ts_sendThemBack('translation');}});}} function _ts_sendThemBack(reason){var origPath=window.location.pathname;var parts=origPath.split('/');var noVerse=(reason==='reference-noverse');var inputIsPerVerse=_ts_isPerVerseUrl(origPath);if(parts[1]==='interlinear-study-bible'){parts=parts.slice(0,5);parts[3]=book_data[book].url;parts[4]=noVerse?(chapter+'.html'):(chapter+'-'+verse+'.html');}else if(parts[1]==='commentary'){parts=parts.slice(0,4);parts[2]=book_data[book].url;parts[3]=noVerse?(chapter+'.html'):(chapter+'-'+verse+'.html');}else if(parts[1]==='commentaries'){parts[2]=comlang;parts[3]=comabbr;if(inputIsPerVerse){parts=parts.slice(0,6);parts[4]=book_data[book].url;parts[5]=noVerse?(chapter+'.html'):(chapter+'-'+verse+'.html');}else{parts=parts.slice(0,5);parts[4]=book_data[book].url+'-'+chapter+'.html';}}else if(parts[1]==='bible'){parts=parts.slice(0,6);parts[2]=translang;parts[3]=transabbr;parts[4]=book_data[book].url;parts[5]=(verse duction ","Verses 1-21"]; function

Pericope (part_of)

절 (explains)

bible-text/rom-12-1, bible-text/rom-12-2, bible-text/rom-12-3, bible-text/rom-12-4, bible-text/rom-12-5, bible-text/rom-12-6, bible-text/rom-12-7, bible-text/rom-12-8, bible-text/rom-12-9, bible-text/rom-12-10, bible-text/rom-12-11, bible-text/rom-12-12, bible-text/rom-12-13, bible-text/rom-12-14, bible-text/rom-12-15, bible-text/rom-12-16, bible-text/rom-12-17, bible-text/rom-12-18, bible-text/rom-12-19, bible-text/rom-12-20, bible-text/rom-12-21

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**1-2절 — 하나님께 자신을 드림 (산 제물과 마음의 변화)**

> 그러므로 형제 여러분, 내가 하나님의 긍휼하심을 힘입어 여러분에게 권합니다. 여러분의 몸을 하나님께서 기뻐 받으실 거룩한 산 제물로 드리십시오. 이것이 여러분이 드릴 영적 예배입니다. 이 세상을 본받지 말고, 마음을 새롭게 함으로 변화를 받으십시오. 그리하여 하나님의 선하시고 기뻐하시고 온전하신 뜻이 무엇인지 분별하십시오. (롬 12:1-2)

**첫째, 몸을 하나님께 드려야 한다(롬 12:1).** 몸은 주를 위한 것이고 주는 몸을 위한 것이다(고전 6:13-14). 이 권면은 매우 감동적인 방식으로 소개된다. "내가 여러분에게 권합니다, 형제 여러분." 그는 위대한 사도임에도 가장 미천한 그리스도인들도 형제라고 부른다. 이는 애정과 관심의 호칭이다. 그는 간청하는 방식을 사용한다. 이것이 복음의 방식이다. "하나님께서 우리를 통하여 여러분에게 간청하신다"(고후 5:20). 그는 권위로 명령할 수도 있었지만, 사랑 때문에 차라리 간청하기를 원했다(몬 1:8-9). 많은 이들이 친절하게 접근받을 때 더 쉽게 마음이 움직인다. 이제 주목하라.

**[1] 강요되는 의무—몸을 산 제물로 드리는 것이다.** 율법 아래서의 제물은 하나님 앞 제단에 드려졌다. "여러분의 몸"은 여러분 전체를 뜻한다. 율법 아래서는 짐승의 몸이 희생 제물로 드려졌으나, 이제는 우리의 몸과 영이 모두 드려져야 한다. 제물은 제사장이 바쳤으나 드리는 사람이 제사장의 권위를 인정하며 머리에 손을 얹음으로써 제물에 대한 자신의 모든 권리와 이해관계를 하나님께 이전했다. 제물에는 속죄 제사와 감사 제사가 있었다. 많은 사람들의 죄를 지기 위해 단번에 드려진 그리스도만이 유일한 속죄 제사이다. 그러나 우리의 인격과 행위는 우리의 제사장이신 그리스도를 통해 하나님께 드려질 때 하나님을 기리는 감사 제사가 된다.

  • **산 제물이어야 한다.** 율법의 제물처럼 죽임당한 것이 아니라, 살아 있는 것이어야 한다. 그리스도인은 몸을 하나님께 드리되, 불태워지기 위해 내어 주지는 않는다. 하나님께 진실로 헌신된 몸은 산 제물이다. 믿음을 통해 영혼 안에 사시는 그리스도가 몸을 산 제물로 만든다(갈 2:20). 거룩한 사랑이 제물에 불을 붙이고, 의무에 생명을 불어넣는다(롬 6:13). 하나님께 살아 있어야 한다.
  • **거룩한 제물이어야 한다.** 모든 제물에는 하나님께 헌납되었다는 상대적 거룩함이 있다. 그러나 그 외에도 심령과 삶이 하나님의 본성과 뜻에 일치함으로써 나타나는 실제 거룩함이 있어야 한다. 우리의 몸조차 죄와 불결의 도구가 되어서는 안 되고, 하나님께 구별되어 거룩한 목적에 쓰여야 한다. 우리는 성령의 성전이다(고전 6:19). 거룩함 안에서 몸을 다스려야 한다(살전 4:4-5).

**[2] 이를 강화하는 세 가지 논증이 있다.**

  • **첫째, 하나님의 긍휼을 생각하라.** "내가 하나님의 긍휼하심을 힘입어 여러분에게 권합니다." 이는 우리를 순종으로 녹이는 논증이다. 하나님 안에 있는 긍휼과 하나님에게서 오는 긍휼, 즉 근원으로서의 긍휼과 흘러넘치는 긍휼이 모두 포함된다. 특히 복음의 긍휼(롬 11장에서 언급된)이 여기 포함된다. 하나님은 긍휼의 하나님이시므로 우리의 몸을 그분께 드리자. 그분께서는 반드시 친절하게 다루실 것이다. 우리가 거저 받고 있는 그분의 긍휼의 열매들을 생각하라. 그리고 가장 위대한 긍휼은 그리스도께서 그분의 영혼을 죄를 위한 제물로 드리셨다는 것, 곧 그분이 우리를 위해 자신을 내어 주셨다는 것이다. 우리가 주님께 무엇으로 보답할지 고민하는 것은 당연하지 않은가? 우리가 드릴 수 있는 것은 우리 자신 전부뿐이다. 그것이 매우 풍성한 받음에 비해 지극히 초라한 되갚음이라도.
  • **둘째, 그것이 하나님께 기쁜 것이다.** 우리 모두가 힘써 얻어야 할 가장 위대한 목표는 주님께 열납되는 것이다(고후 5:9). 이제 이 산 제물들은 하나님께 기쁜 것이다. 악인들의 제물은 하나님께 가증한 것이지만, 살아 있는 제물들은 그분께 기쁨이 된다.
  • **셋째, 그것이 합리적인 예배이다.** 여기에는 이성의 행위가 있다. 영혼이 몸을 드리기 때문이다. 이에 반하는 타당한 이유를 내세울 수 없다. 하나님은 우리에게 어렵거나 불합리한 것을 부과하시지 않는다. 하나님은 이성적인 피조물로서 우리를 다루시며, 우리가 그분께도 그렇게 대하기를 원하신다.

**둘째, 마음을 새롭게 해야 한다(롬 12:2).** "마음을 새롭게 함으로 변화를 받으십시오." 회심과 성화는 마음의 새로워짐이다. 본질의 변화가 아니라 영혼의 속성들이 바뀌는 것이다. 이해력이 밝아지고, 양심이 부드러워지며, 생각이 바로잡히고, 의지가 하나님의 뜻에 굴복하며, 정서가 영적이고 천상적인 것이 된다. 이것을 "변화"라고 부른다. 그리스도의 변형이 이 단어로 표현되었다(마 17:2). 같은 단어가 고린도후서 3:18에서도 사용된다.

**[1] 이 새로워짐의 가장 큰 방해물—세상을 본받는 것—을 피해야 한다.** "이 세상을 본받지 마십시오." 주 예수님의 모든 제자와 따르는 자들은 이 세상과의 동조를 거부하는 자들이어야 한다. 세상의 욕망, 세상의 사람들의 행로를 본받아서는 안 된다. 여럿이 악을 행한다고 그 뒤를 따라서는 안 된다(출 23:2). 무관한 것들에 있어서도 세상의 관습과 방식을 따를 때, 그것이 으뜸 규칙이 되거나 세상의 칭찬이 최고의 목표가 되어서는 안 된다. 참된 기독교는 사려 깊은 분별됨을 많이 포함한다.

**[2] 이 새로워짐의 가장 큰 효과—하나님의 뜻을 분별하게 된다.** "하나님의 선하시고 기뻐하시고 온전하신 뜻이 무엇인지 분별하게 된다." 여기서 하나님의 뜻은 우리의 의무에 관한 그분의 계시된 뜻, 즉 주 우리 하나님이 우리에게 요구하시는 것을 뜻한다. 하나님의 뜻은 선하고 기쁘시며 온전하다—법의 탁월한 세 가지 속성이다. 마음이 새로워진 사람들이 하나님의 선하고 기뻐하시며 온전하신 뜻을 가장 잘 분별할 수 있다. 은혜의 살아 있는 원리가 영혼 안에서 힘을 발휘하는 한, 그것은 하나님의 일들에 관해 편향되지 않고 선입견 없는 판단력을 갖게 한다.

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**3절 — 자신에 대한 절제된 생각**

> 내게 주신 은혜를 힘입어 여러분 가운데 있는 모든 사람에게 말합니다. 마땅히 생각할 그 이상으로 자기를 높게 생각하지 말고, 하나님께서 각 사람에게 나누어 주신 믿음의 분량대로 분수에 맞게 생각하십시오. (롬 12:3)

이것은 엄숙한 서문과 함께 소개된다. "내게 주신 은혜를 힘입어." 그는 지혜의 은혜로 이 의무의 필요성과 탁월함을 이해했고, 사도의 은혜로 이것을 강조하고 명령할 권위를 받았다. 교만은 우리 모두의 뼈 속에 자리 잡고 있는 죄이기에, 우리 각 사람은 이에 대한 경고와 무장이 필요하다.

자신에 대해 마땅히 생각해야 할 것보다 높게 생각하지 말아야 한다. 자신의 판단력·능력·인격·행위에 대해 지나치게 높게 평가해서는 안 된다. 자만하거나 자신의 지혜와 다른 성취를 지나치게 자랑해서는 안 된다. 반면, 하나님께서 주신 것에 따라 자신과 자신의 능력에 대해 낮고 겸손한 견해를 가지고 분수에 맞게 생각해야 한다.

이 분수 있는 자기 생각을 위한 이유들이 있다.

**(1) 우리가 가진 선한 것은 무엇이든 하나님께서 우리에게 나누어 주신 것이다.** 모든 선하고 온전한 선물은 위로부터 온다(약 1:17). 우리가 받지 않은 것이 있는가? 그것을 받았다면 왜 자랑하는가(고전 4:7)? 세상에서 가장 선하고 유용한 사람도 날마다 하나님의 값없는 은혜가 만들어 주는 것 그 이상도 이하도 아니다.

**(2) 하나님은 은사를 일정한 분량으로 나누어 주신다.** "하나님께서 각 사람에게 나누어 주신 믿음의 분량대로." 믿음의 분량이 영적 은사의 분량이다. 믿음이 근본적인 은혜이기 때문이다. 그리스도는 분량 없이 성령을 받으셨다(요 3:34). 그러나 성도들은 분량으로 받는다(엡 4:7). 분량 없이 은사를 받으신 그리스도도 온유하고 겸손하셨는데, 제한을 받는 우리가 교만하고 자만해야 하겠는가?

**(3) 하나님은 우리에게만이 아니라 다른 사람들에게도 은사를 나누어 주셨다.** "각 사람에게 나누어 주신." 우리만이 성령을 독점하거나 영적 은사에 대한 특허권을 가진다면 이런 자부심에 어느 정도 구실이 있을 것이다. 그러나 다른 이들도 우리와 같은 몫을 받는다. 하나님은 공통된 아버지이시며, 그리스도는 모든 성도들의 공통된 뿌리이시다.

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**4-8절 — 한 몸의 여러 지체와 은사의 다양한 사용**

> 한 몸에 많은 지체가 있으나 그 지체들이 다 같은 기능을 하지 않는 것처럼, 우리 많은 사람도 그리스도 안에서 한 몸이며, 각각 서로 지체가 됩니다. 우리에게 주신 은혜대로 우리는 서로 다른 은사를 가졌으니, 예언이면 믿음의 분량대로 예언하고, 섬기는 일이면 섬기는 일에 힘쓰고, 가르치는 사람이면 가르치는 일에 힘쓰고, 권면하는 사람이면 권면하는 일에 힘쓰십시오. 나누어 주는 사람은 후하게 하고, 다스리는 사람은 부지런하게 하고, 긍휼을 베푸는 사람은 기쁜 마음으로 하십시오. (롬 12:4-8)

바울은 자연적인 몸의 지체들로부터 비교를 이끌어낸다.

**[1] 모든 성도는 그리스도 안에서 한 몸을 이룬다.** 그리스도는 몸의 머리이시며 연합의 공통 중심이다. 믿는 자들은 세상에 혼란스럽고 무질서한 무더기로 놓여 있지 않다. 그들은 하나의 공통 머리에 연합되고 하나의 공통 성령에 의해 생기를 받아 함께 조직되고 연결되어 있다.

**[2] 개별 믿는 자들은 이 몸의 지체들이다.** 몸에서 어떤 지체들은 다른 것들보다 더 크고 유용하며, 각각 그 비율에 따라 머리로부터 생기를 받는다.

**[3] 모든 지체들이 같은 기능을 하지 않는다(롬 12:4).** 눈의 기능은 보는 것이고, 손의 기능은 일하는 것이다. 신비로운 몸에서도 어떤 이들은 한 종류의 일에 적합하고 부름받으며, 다른 이들은 다른 종류의 일에 적합하다.

**[4] 각 지체는 전체와 다른 모든 지체의 유익을 위해 자기 자리와 기능을 가진다.** 우리는 그리스도의 지체일 뿐만 아니라 서로 지체이다(롬 12:5). 우리가 무엇을 가졌든 우리 자신을 위해서가 아니라 다른 이들의 유익을 위해 받은 것이다.

바울은 일곱 가지 특별한 은사들을 구체적으로 언급한다(롬 12:6-8).

**(1) 예언—믿음의 분량대로 예언하라.** 여기서는 장래의 일을 예고하는 비범한 은사가 아니라 말씀을 전하는 일반적인 직무를 뜻한다(고전 14:1-3). 복음 설교자들은 선지자들이다. 말씀을 전하는 자들은 믿음의 분량에 따라 해야 한다. 즉 [1] 방법에 있어서 믿음의 은혜의 비율에 따라—설교자는 자신이 가진 믿음을 다 동원하여 전하는 진리를 자신의 마음에 먼저 인상시켜야 한다. [2] 내용에 있어서 믿음의 교리의 비율에 따라—베뢰아 사람들은 이 믿음의 규칙으로 바울의 설교를 시험했다(행 17:11). 한 진리가 또 다른 진리를 모순되게 할 수 없다.

**(2) 섬기는 일—섬기는 일에 힘쓰라.** 집사의 직무 또는 목사와 교사를 돕는 이를 말한다. 이 일이 맡겨진 자는 신실함과 부지런함으로 그 직무를 수행해야 한다. 특히:

  • **[1] 나누어 주는 사람은 후하게 하라.** 교회의 구제를 맡은 교회 임원들은 헌금을 모으고 가난한 자들의 필요에 따라 나누어 주었다. 이것을 하되 진실하고 정직하게 해야 한다. 받은 것을 자신의 용도로 전용하거나, 사특한 목적으로 나누거나, 사람을 봐서 나누어서는 안 된다.
  • **[2] 다스리는 사람은 부지런하게 하라.** 교회 치리를 행하는 일을 돕는 자들을 뜻한다. 이들은 잘못된 것을 발견하고, 길을 잃은 자들을 돌이키며, 쓰러진 자들을 책망하고 권면하며, 교회의 순결을 지키는 데 큰 수고를 기울여야 한다.
  • **[3] 긍휼을 베푸는 사람은 기쁜 마음으로 하라.** 이는 병자와 나그네를 돌보는 특별한 교회 임원들을 뜻하는 것으로 보인다. 이것은 기쁘게 해야 한다. 어려운 자들에게 기꺼이, 즐거운 얼굴과 부드러운 말로 베풀 때, 그것이 고통받는 자들에게 큰 위안이 된다. 성미가 까다롭고 사나운 이들을 상대해야 하는 자들은 인내뿐 아니라 기쁨으로 무장해야 한다.

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**9-16절 — 형제를 향한 의무: 사랑과 연합**

> 사랑에는 거짓이 없게 하십시오. 악한 것을 미워하고 선한 것을 굳게 붙드십시오. 형제를 사랑함에 서로 따뜻하게 아끼고, 서로 존경하기를 먼저 하십시오. 부지런함에 게으르지 말고, 영으로 뜨겁게 하며, 주를 섬기십시오. 소망 가운데 기뻐하고, 환난 가운데 참으며, 기도에 끊임없이 힘쓰십시오. 성도들의 필요를 채워 주고, 손님 대접하기를 힘쓰십시오. (롬 12:9-13)

형제를 향한 우리의 모든 의무는 한 단어, 곧 달콤한 단어인 **사랑**으로 요약된다. 이것이 모든 상호 의무의 토대이다. 그러므로 바울은 그리스도의 제자들의 표지이자 종교의 위대한 법인 이것을 먼저 언급한다.

**사랑에는 거짓이 없어야 한다.** 겉치레나 가장이 아닌 실제 사랑이어야 한다. 말과 혀로만이 아니어야 한다(요일 3:18). 참된 사랑은 가식 없는 사랑이다. 원수의 입맞춤처럼 속이는 것이 아니어야 한다.

친구들을 향한 사랑에는 여러 가지가 있다.

**(1) 따뜻한 사랑(롬 12:10).** "형제를 사랑함에 서로 따뜻하게 아끼라." 이것은 가장 자연스럽고 자유로운 애정인 부모의 자녀에 대한 사랑을 나타내는 단어이다. 이러한 친절한 애정은 우리 서로에 대해 말로나 행동으로 최대한 예의 바르고 친절하게 표현하도록 이끈다.

**(2) 존중하는 사랑.** "서로 존경하기를 먼저 하십시오." 우월을 다투는 대신, 다른 이에게 우선권을 기꺼이 양보하자. 빌립보서 2:3에서 설명되듯이, 서로를 자신보다 낫게 여기라. 자신의 마음을 알고 있다면 이 세상 그 어떤 사람보다 자신에 대해 더 많은 악을 알고 있기 때문이다.

**(3) 너그러운 사랑(롬 12:13).** "성도들의 필요를 채워 주라." 친절과 존경의 말만으로 사랑을 표현하고 형제들의 필요가 실제적인 공급을 요구하는데도 그것이 힘 안에 있는데 하지 않는다면 그것은 가짜 사랑일 뿐이다. 성도들이 이 세상에서 자신들의 자연적인 삶의 지원에 필요한 것들을 부족하게 갖는 것은 낯선 일이 아니다. 세상의 것들이 최선의 것들이 아님이 분명하다. 최선의 것들이라면 하늘의 총아인 성도들이 그것들을 이렇게 적게 갖고 만족하지 않을 것이기 때문이다.

또 다른 사랑의 가지: "손님 대접하기를 힘쓰십시오." 자기 집을 가진 이들은 선을 행하러 다니는 이들이나 박해를 피해 피난처를 찾는 이들을 기꺼이 환영해야 한다. 아브라함이 장막 문에 앉아(창 18:1) 손님을 기다린 것처럼, 우리는 기회를 찾을 뿐만 아니라 기회를 추구해야 한다.

**(4) 공감하는 사랑(롬 12:15).** "기뻐하는 사람들과 함께 기뻐하고, 우는 사람들과 함께 우십시오." 참된 사랑은 우리가 서로의 슬픔과 기쁨에 참여하게 한다(고전 12:26). 이 세상에는 어떤 이들은 기뻐하고 어떤 이들은 우는 흔한 뒤섞임이 있다(스 3:12-13). 이것은 형제 사랑과 기독교적 공감을 포함한 다른 은혜들을 시험한다. 다른 이들이 번성할 때 시기하지 않고 함께 기뻐하고, 어려움에 처한 이들을 경멸하지 않고 그들을 위해 힘쓰는 것이 요구된다.

**(5) 연합하는 사랑.** "서로 한마음을 품으라(롬 12:16)." 즉 가능한 한 의견에서 일치하고, 거기에 미치지 못한다면 적어도 애정에서 일치하도록 힘쓰라. 다투거나 반박하고 방해하는 것을 즐기지 말고, 평화의 띠 안에서 성령의 연합을 지키라(빌 2:2).

**(6) 낮아지는 사랑.** "높은 것에 마음을 두지 말고 도리어 낮은 사람들과 어울리라(롬 12:16)." 참된 사랑은 겸손 없이는 있을 수 없다(엡 4:1-2; 빌 2:3). 높은 것에 마음을 두지 말라. 명예와 지위에 야망을 품거나 세속적인 위세와 체면에 과도한 가치를 두거나 욕심을 내어서는 안 된다. 낮은 이들에게 낮아지라—즉 그들에게 맞추어 주고, 그들의 유익을 위해 그들에게 내려가라. 이것을 돕는 수단으로 "스스로 지혜롭게 여기지 마라"고 덧붙인다. 자신의 지혜로 충분하다고 자만하면 결코 다른 이들에게 낮아지는 마음을 찾을 수 없다.

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**11-12절 — 주님을 섬기는 방식**

> 부지런함에 게으르지 말고, 영으로 뜨겁게 하며, 주를 섬기십시오. 소망 가운데 기뻐하고, 환난 가운데 참으며, 기도에 끊임없이 힘쓰십시오. (롬 12:11-12)

이를 위하여 우리는 어떻게 하나님을 섬겨야 하는가?

**(1) 사업으로 삼아야 하며, 그 사업에서 게으르지 말아야 한다.** 이것은 주님을 섬기는 일, 아버지의 사업을 뜻하는 것으로 보인다(눅 2:49). 참된 그리스도인임을 보여 주려는 자들은 종교를 자신들의 사업으로 삼아야 한다. 그것을 선택하고 배우며 헌신해야 한다. 그것을 사랑하고 거기에 자신을 쏟으며 그것을 자신의 중대하고 주된 사업으로 삼아 거기에 머물러야 한다. 게으른 종은 사악한 종으로 여김받을 것이다.

**(2) 영으로 뜨거워야 한다.** 하나님은 영으로 섬김을 받으셔야 한다(롬 1:9; 요 4:24). 하나님의 성령의 영향을 받아 우리의 영으로 행할 때에만 종교에서 무엇을 행하든 하나님께 기쁜 것이 된다. 그리고 영에 열정이 있어야 한다—거룩한 열심과 온기와 뜨거운 애정이 있어야 한다. 마음을 다하고 목숨을 다하여 하나님을 사랑하는 자들처럼. 이것이 제물에 불을 붙이고 제물을 하늘로 올려 보내는 거룩한 불이다.

**(3) 소망 가운데 기뻐해야 한다.** 하나님은 그분을 향한 우리의 소망과 신뢰로 예배받고 경배받으신다. 특히 그 소망 안에서 기뻐할 때, 즉 그 확신 안에서 만족할 때 더욱 그렇다.

**(4) 환난 가운데 참아야 한다.** 이런 방식으로도 하나님은 섬김을 받으신다. 부를 때 일하는 것뿐만 아니라 고난을 요구하실 때 조용히 앉아 있는 것도 하나님을 섬기는 것이다. 소망 가운데 기뻐하는 자들이 환난 가운데 인내할 가능성이 높다. 우리 앞에 놓인 기쁨을 믿음으로 바라보는 것이 모든 외적 압박 아래서 영을 떠받친다.

**(5) 기도에 끊임없이 힘써야 한다.** 기도는 소망과 인내의 친구이며, 우리는 기도 안에서 주님을 섬긴다. 이것은 기도에서의 열정과 인내 모두를 의미한다. 기도에서 냉랭하거나 쉽게 지쳐서는 안 된다(눅 18:1; 살전 5:17; 엡 6:18; 골 4:2).

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**17-21절 — 원수를 향한 의무: 악을 선으로 이기라**

> 아무에게도 악을 악으로 갚지 말고, 모든 사람 앞에서 존경받을 만한 일에 마음을 쓰십시오. 할 수 있거든 여러분 편에서 할 수 있는 대로 모든 사람과 더불어 평화롭게 지내십시오. 사랑하는 여러분, 스스로 원수를 갚지 말고 하나님의 진노하심에 맡기십시오. 기록되기를 "원수 갚는 것은 내게 있으니 내가 갚으리라고 주께서 말씀하신다" 하였습니다. 그러므로 "네 원수가 주리거든 먹이고, 목마르거든 마시게 하라. 그렇게 함으로 네가 그의 머리 위에 숯불을 쌓아 놓는 것이다" 하였습니다. 악에게 지지 말고 선으로 악을 이기십시오. (롬 12:17-21)

사람들이 하나님의 원수가 된 이후로, 서로 원수가 되기 쉬워졌다. 그리고 종교를 받아들인 자들은 그 미소가 그리스도의 것과 좀처럼 일치하지 않는 세상에서 원수를 만날 것을 예상해야 한다. 이제 기독교는 원수들을 향해 어떻게 처신할지를 가르쳐 준다.

우리의 원수들—우리에게 해악을 바라고 해를 끼치려 하는 이들—에 대한 규칙은 그들에게 해를 끼치지 말고 가능한 한 모든 선을 행하는 것이다.

**(1) 그들에게 해를 끼치지 말라(롬 12:17).** "아무에게도 악을 악으로 갚지 말라." 이는 짐승 같은 보복이다. 이와 같은 취지로 롬 12:19에서 "사랑하는 여러분, 스스로 원수를 갚지 말라"고 한다. 왜 이 권면을 다른 것들보다 이 다정한 호칭으로 소개하는가? 분명히 분을 내며 모욕을 분하게 여기는 이들의 격한 심령을 달래기 위해서이다. 사랑을 호흡하는 모든 것은 혈기를 부드럽게 하고, 폭풍을 가라앉히며, 과도한 열을 식힌다.

스스로 원수를 갚지 말라. 즉 어떤 사람이 해를 끼쳤을 때, 그에게 같은 불행이나 불편을 바라거나 가져오려 하지 말라. 자신의 분노와 악의로 행하는 사적인 복수를 금하는 것이다. 이것은 우리가 자신의 사건에서 적합하지 않은 재판관이라고 전제하기 때문에 적절히 금지된다. 그리스도의 법은 이 문제에서 매우 엄격하다(마 5:38-40).

  • **[1] 이에 대한 처방.** "하나님의 진노하심에 맡기라." 우리가 그 사건을 판단의 보좌에 앉으신 하나님께 맡기고, 그분이 우리의 대적자를 다루시도록 하는 것이다.
  • **[2] 이에 대한 이유.** "원수 갚는 것은 내게 있으니"(신 32:35). 하나님은 주권적인 왕이시며 의로운 재판장이시다. 그분은 무한한 지식의 하나님이시므로 행위들이 오류 없는 저울에 달린다. 그러므로 우리가 스스로 갚아서는 안 된다. 복수가 하나님의 것이라면 첫째로 우리는 그렇게 할 수 없다. 그렇게 하면 우리는 하나님의 보좌에 올라 그분의 일을 손에 빼앗는 것이다. 둘째로 우리는 그럴 필요가 없다. 하나님께서 우리가 온유하게 그 문제를 맡기면 갚아 주실 것이기 때문이다.

**(2) 원수에게 해를 끼치지 않을 뿐 아니라, 종교는 더 나아가 가능한 모든 선을 그들에게 행하도록 가르친다.** 이것은 기독교에 고유한 명령이다. "네 원수를 사랑하라"(마 5:44).

  • **[1] 말로 사랑하라.** "여러분을 박해하는 자들을 축복하십시오(롬 12:14)." 하나님의 백성들은 강한 손으로 또는 심술궂은 혀로 박해받아 왔다. 이제 우리는 우리를 박해하는 자들을 축복하도록 배운다. 즉, 첫째 "그들에 대해 좋게 말하라." 둘째 "그들에게 정중하게 말하라." 셋째 "그들의 선을 바라라." 넷째 "그들을 위해 기도하라." "축복하고 저주하지 말라." 이는 모든 표현에서 철저한 선의를 뜻한다. "기도할 때는 축복하고 다른 때는 저주하지 말라"가 아니라, "항상 축복하고 절대 저주하지 말라"는 뜻이다.
  • **[2] 행동으로 사랑하라(롬 12:20).** "네 원수가 주리거든 먹이고, 목마르거든 마시게 하라." 이 계명은 잠언 25:21-22에서 인용되었으므로, 높이 보이지만 구약성경도 이것을 알지 못했던 것이 아니다. 주목하라.

- 무엇을 해야 하는가: 원수에게 선을 행해야 한다. "그가 주리거든 그를 멸시하지 말라. 이제 하나님이 나를 위해 복수하신다고 말하지 말라. 그의 필요를 그렇게 해석하지 말라. 먹이라." 그가 굶주렸을 때, 그를 먹이되—풍성하게, 나아가 조심스럽게, 세심하게 먹이라.

- 왜 그렇게 해야 하는가: "그렇게 함으로 네가 그의 머리 위에 숯불을 쌓아 놓는 것이다." 이것에는 두 가지 의미가 있다. 첫째, "이것으로 그를 회개와 우정으로 녹일 것이다"(금속을 녹이는 자들은 아래에서뿐 아니라 위에서도 불을 쌓는다). 다윗의 친절로 사울이 녹아 정복된 것처럼(삼상 24:16; 26:21). 둘째, "그것이 그의 정죄를 가중시키고 너를 향한 그의 악의를 더욱 변명하기 어렵게 만들 것이다." 이것이 우리의 의도가 되어서는 안 되지만, 우리의 격려를 위해 이런 결과가 있을 것이다.

마지막 절의 권면은 세상이 쉽게 이해하지 못하는 역설을 담고 있다. 모든 다툼과 갈등에서 복수하는 자들이 정복당한 자들이고, 용서하는 자들이 정복자들이라는 것이다.

**(1) "악에게 지지 말라."** 어떤 모욕에 대한 자극의 악이 여러분을 그토록 지배하여 평화를 빼앗고, 사랑을 파괴하며, 심령을 흩뜨려 어떤 불미스러운 일을 저지르거나 복수를 연구하고 시도하게 만들어서는 안 된다. 상처를 조용히 견디지 못하는 자는 그것에 완전히 정복당한 것이다.

**(2) "선으로 악을 이기라."** 인내와 관용의 선, 나아가 당신을 해친 자들에 대한 친절과 자선의 선으로. 그들의 악한 계획을 무력화하고, 그들을 변화시키거나 적어도 자신의 평화를 지키는 법을 배우라. 자기 심령을 다스리는 자는 강한 자보다 낫다.

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원주석

1~21절 카드 ↗

R O M A N S. CHAP. XII. The apostle, having at large cleared and confirmed the prime fundamental doctrines of Christianity, comes in the next place to press the principal duties. We mistake our religion if we look upon it only as a system of notions and a guide to speculation. No, it is a practical religion, that tends to the right ordering of the conversation. It is designed not only to inform our judgments, but to reform our hearts and lives. From the method of the apostle's writing in this, as in some other of the epistles (as from the management of the principal ministers of state in Christ's kingdom) the stewards of the mysteries of God may take direction how to divide the word of truth: not to press duty abstracted from privilege, nor privilege abstracted from duty; but let both go together, with a complicated design, they will greatly promote and befriend each other. The duties are drawn from the privileges, by way of inference. The foundation of Christian practice must be laid in Christian knowledge and faith. We must first understand how we receive Christ Jesus the Lord, and then we shall know the better how to walk in him. There is a great deal of duty prescribed in this chapter. The exhortations are short and pithy, briefly summing up what is good, and what the Lord our God in Christ requires of us. It is an abridgment of the Christian directory, an excellent collection of rules for the right ordering of the conversation, as becomes the gospel. It is joined to the foregoing discourse by the word "therefore." It is the practical application of doctrinal truths that is the life of preaching. He had been discoursing at large of justification by faith, and of the riches of free grace, and the pledges and assurances we have of the glory that is to be revealed. Hence carnal libertines would be apt to infer."Therefore we may live as we list, and walk in the way of our hearts and the sight of our eyes." Now this does not follow; the faith that justifies is a faith that "works by love." And there is no other way to heaven but the way of holiness and obedience. Therefore what God hath joined together let no man put asunder. The particular exhortations of this chapter are reducible to the three principal heads of Christian duty: our duty to God t ourselves, and to our brother. The grace of God teaches us, in general, to live "godly, soberly, and righteously;" and to deny all that which is contrary hereunto. Now this chapter will give us to understand what godliness, sobriety, and righteousness, are though somewhat intermixed. return to ' Top of Page ' <a name="verses-1-21" class="com-number"

Pericope (part_of)

절 (explains)

Source

로마서 12장에서 바울은 기독교 교리의 정수를 길게 다루고 나서 이제 핵심 의무들을 권면하는 단계로 나아간다. 우리는 종교를 단순한 사상 체계나 사변의 안내서로만 바라보는 실수를 범해서는 안 된다. 기독교는 실천적인 종교이며, 삶의 질서를 바르게 세우는 것을 목표로 한다. 기독교는 우리의 판단력을 알리는 데 그치지 않고, 우리의 마음과 삶을 개혁하도록 설계되어 있다. 바울의 편지 저술 방식—이 서신뿐 아니라 다른 서신들에서도—은 그리스도 왕국의 주요 신하들이 일을 처리하는 방식과 같이, 하나님의 비밀을 맡은 청지기들에게 진리의 말씀을 어떻게 나눌지에 관한 방향을 제시한다. 특권과 분리된 의무만을 강조하거나, 의무와 분리된 특권만을 강조해서는 안 된다. 둘을 함께 다루어야 한다. 그것들은 서로를 크게 북돋고 유익하게 한다. 의무들은 특권에서 추론의 방식으로 도출된다. 기독교 실천의 기초는 기독교 지식과 믿음 위에 놓여야 한다. 우리는 예수 그리스도를 주님으로 어떻게 영접하는지를 먼저 이해해야, 그 안에서 어떻게 걸어야 할지를 더 잘 알 수 있다.

이 장에는 수많은 의무가 담겨 있다. 권면들은 짧고 간결하며, 선한 것과 하나님께서 우리에게 그리스도 안에서 요구하시는 것을 간략하게 요약한다. 이 장은 기독교 실천 안내서의 압축본이자, 복음에 합당하게 삶을 바르게 정돈하기 위한 훌륭한 규칙 모음집이다. 이 장은 앞선 내용과 "그러므로"라는 단어로 연결되어 있다. 교리적 진리의 실천적 적용이야말로 설교의 생명이다. 바울은 믿음으로 말미암는 칭의와 값없는 은혜의 풍요로움, 그리고 장차 나타날 영광의 보증과 담보에 관해 길게 논했다. 여기서 세속적인 자유주의자들은 "그러므로 우리 마음이 원하는 대로 살며, 마음의 길과 눈의 보는 것을 따라 행해도 된다"고 추론하기 쉽다. 그러나 이것은 옳지 않다. 칭의하는 믿음은 "사랑으로 역사하는" 믿음이다. 그리고 거룩과 순종의 길 외에 하늘로 가는 다른 길은 없다. 그러므로 하나님이 짝지어 주신 것을 사람이 나누지 말아야 한다.

이 장의 개별 권면들은 기독교 의무의 세 가지 주요 항목으로 정리된다. 하나님을 향한 의무, 자신을 향한 의무, 그리고 이웃을 향한 의무이다. 하나님의 은혜는 우리에게 일반적으로 "경건하고, 절제하며, 의롭게" 살도록 가르치며, 이에 반하는 모든 것을 거부하도록 가르친다. 이 장은 비록 다소 뒤섞여 있기는 하나, 경건·절제·의로움이 무엇인지를 우리에게 이해하게 해 준다.

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원주석

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