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POSTED 21 APRIL, 2009
The Message
of Romans
by J.K. McKee
editor@tnnonline.net
It is not at all difficult for a Bible reader to see how Romans can
be classified as the most influential letter ever written in human
history. Romans certainly stands as the single longest, most
detailed, and most eloquent of the Pauline Epistles. It is the
Apostle Paul's magnum opus. But Romans also possesses a long
history of interpretation that has not only affected how theologians
have developed doctrines such as justification by faith or the role
of sanctification, but how their thoughts have in turn affected
contemporary philosophies and governmental structures for the past
2,000 years. As an undergraduate political science student in 2001,
I recall having to examine how parts of Romans affected John
Calvin's theology, which in turn affected the Protestant Reformation
and the growth of Western European democracy. Yet we need not
digress too much about the long-lasting affects of Romans...
Our interest in the Epistle to the Romans should be focused on how
we understand the text as a whole, and specifically for how it may
affect us as the emerging Messianic movement. Romans teaches us
important things about the relationship of Jew and non-Jew in the
Body of Messiah, and some of the ancient factionalism, divisions,
and pride that the Apostle Paul wanted to see jettisoned from among
the Roman Believers. How does he address parts of his letter to the
Jewish Believers in Rome, and address parts of it to the non-Jewish
Believers in Rome? Today's Messianics frequently have questions and
criticisms lodged at them from Romans about their Torah observant
convictions, many of which can be easily addressed if we read Romans
closely and not try to rush through. None of us needs to be
criticized from a letter that is actually not too difficult to
understand. We need to see Paul's message of how all are sinners in
the eyes of God, that any unnecessary divisions present among His
people should be removed, and that all Believers are interdependent
and must rely on one another.
Have we ever sat down as Messianics and read what Romans was as a
First Century letter, written to a specific ancient audience, with a
specific purpose? What kind of observations should we make from
reading the letter? What kind of intertextuality is seen in Romans,
with quotations and appeals made to the Tanach (i.e., Psalms,
Isaiah, Deuteronomy)? What did the letter ask its ancient
recipients? What does the letter ask us today? What is the message
of Romans?
Much unlike his earlier letter of Galatians, Paul's letter to the
Romans was written to a group of people whom he had never met. The
good Apostle entrusted the epistle to “our sister Phoebe” (16:1-2),
who would not only transport the letter to the Roman Believers and
their assemblies, but be able to assist all the brothers and sisters
(16:3-16) who would hear it and perhaps need clarifications. (We
would certainly all like to know her explanations of Paul's letter!)
It is rightfully thought that Paul wrote the Epistle to the Romans
as a letter of self-promotion, as his ministry work in the Eastern
Mediterranean had relatively ended (15:19-20), and it was now time
to begin ministry work in the Western Mediterranean (15:23-24, 28).
Paul would need a base of operations and support, much like Antioch
or Ephesus had served him in the East, and so Rome with a large
Jewish population and community of Believers was an obvious choice
(15:29) for the West. Yet, the Roman Believers—although having heard
of Paul—would need to know some things about him and his
teachings, presented in a series of vignettes This is one of
the major reasons why Romans is so detailed among the Pauline
letters.
The opening chapters of the Epistle to the Romans speak in
theological generalities, which give us a significant view into how
the Apostle Paul approached the world around him. Paul asserts his
apostleship as originating from God (1:1), the gospel of Yeshua the
Messiah as being deeply rooted in the Tanach Scriptures (1:2), that
Yeshua is the expected Deliverer of Israel (1:3-4), and that the
Messiah's arrival necessitates Paul “to call people from among all
the Gentiles to the obedience that comes from faith” (1:5),
something that included the Romans (1:6-7). Paul eagerly desires to
visit the Roman Believers (1:8-12), expressing how “I planned many
times to come to you...in order that I might have a harvest among
you” (1:13). Now, the time for his going to Rome to proclaim the
gospel and instruct the Believers had come (1:14-15), as Paul
expresses “I am not ashamed of the gospel, because it is the power
of God for the salvation of everyone who believes” (1:16). The
significance of the gospel is seen in that it is “a righteousness
from God,” as faith in God is to dictate how the redeemed live their
lives (cf. Habakkuk 2:4).
Where does the gospel begin for Paul? It begins in understanding the
reality of human sin from which all suffer. The Creator God
has revealed Himself to all of mankind via His handiwork, causing
all people to be “without excuse” (1:18-20). In spite of the
goodness of God, though, humanity at large “neither glorified God
nor gave thanks to him, but their thinking became futile and their
foolish hearts were darkened” (1:21). Instead of expressing worship
and thanks to God, idolatry prevailed (1:22-23, 25). Consequently in
rejecting Him, God gave the nations over to “the sinful desires of
their hearts,” notably including “sexual impurity” (1:24) and
homosexuality (1:26-27). Paul's line of reasoning in describing the
gross sins committed (1:28-32) was quite consistent with common
Jewish views of the day, which depicted the Gentiles as little more
than sexually immoral idolaters (Wisdom of Solomon 14:12;
Testament of Naphtali 3:4; Psalm 106:20).
Even though the nations will be condemned by God for these gross
sins, this does not mean that people who know (of) God and His
righteousness—Paul's own Jewish brethren—will not likewise be held
accountable, and that they somehow get a free pass. “You, therefore,
have no excuse, you who pass judgment on someone else, for at
whatever point you judge the other, you are condemning yourself,
because you who pass judgment do the same things” (2:1). These words
indicate that some of the Jewish people have dabbled in the same
gross sins at one point in their lives. Harsh judgment of others—a
job reserved for the Almighty—will only be a self-condemning
exercise (2:2-3). As terrible as sin may be, it is “God's kindness
[which] leads you to repentance” (2:4). Regardless of whether a
person is a Jew or not, the unrepentant will be justly punished by
God for their sins (2:5-11; cf. Psalm 62:12).
Those who are outside a life of Torah, total pagans, and those
inside a life of Torah, here most specifically the Jewish people,
will be judged (2:12).[1]
Those who possess and know the Torah are to adhere to its standard
of righteousness (2:13). This is because those who have God's Torah
and follow it will be held to a much higher standard than those who
do not, intensifying the need for any of the Jewish Believers in
Rome to be careful in their condemnation of others. Paul reminds the
Romans how that nations “who do not have the law,” can still “do by
nature the things required by the law” because the Creator God has
given them a conscience, with “their thoughts now accusing, now even
defending them” (2:14-15). Many things will be revealed on the day
of God's judgment that are likely to surprise more than a few of the
Jewish Believers in His dealings with the nations (2:16). Some of
the nations—people once perceived as totally lost pagans—may be
considered worthy of entering into His restored Kingdom by having
accepted Him via His natural revelation (cf. 1:19-20). And some of
the Jewish people, having once condemned all such people as
worthless barbarians, may not enter. This is why Paul designates
all of this as “the secret thoughts of all” (2:16, NRSV).
Paul explains how the Jewish people, who in his day were the prime
owners of God's Torah, have an extreme responsibility placed upon
them (2:17-29). He asks, “if you are convinced that you are a guide
for the blind, a light for those who are in the dark, an instructor
of the foolish, a teacher of infants, because you have in the law
the embodiment of knowledge and truth—you, then, who teach others,
do you not teach yourself?” (2:19-21a). Those who teach from God's
Torah cannot act as though the Torah's standard of holiness does not
apply to themselves as well (2:21b-22), as he asks “You who brag
about the law, do you dishonor God by breaking the law?” (2:23). It
can be easy to forget some of the Torah's significant imperatives,
and while possessing the Torah actually be found to be breaking it.
This is why Paul appealed to Isaiah 52:5 and Ezekiel 36:20: “God's
name is blasphemed among the Gentiles because of you.”
In the First Century, possession of God's Torah had become a source
of great pride for many of the Jewish people—and Jewish possession
of the Torah had caused many to forget that the Torah equally
condemned all as sinners before Him. Paul reminds the Romans,
“Circumcision has value if you observe the law, but if you break the
law, you have become as though you had not been circumcised” (2:25).
Those who are uncircumcised, yet keep the things that those who are
circumcised have broken, are as though they have been circumcised
(2:26-27). Physical circumcision to the Jewish person is to remind
him of the need to be circumcised of heart (2:28), because “Such a
man's praise is not from men, but from God” (2:29).
While Paul wants the Jewish Believers in Rome to realize that their
Jewish pedigree does not grant them special favors on judgment day,
this by no means makes him a turncoat Jew. He does not think that
the Jewish people somehow do not possess a great value and calling
by God. Paul writes, “What advantage, then, is there in being a Jew,
or what value is there in circumcision? Much in every way!”
(3:1-2a). Even “if some did not have faith,” this does not by any
means “nullify God's faithfulness” (3:2b-3; cf. Psalm 116:11; 51:4),
as His promises and faithful actions remain secure. God called
Paul's Jewish brethren and remained faithful to them. Yet God is not
unjust in judging His own chosen people for their sin, because if He
were “how could God [then] judge the world?” (3:5-6). All are
human and subject to the penalties of sin. And, simply because
the faithlessness of people can enhance God's faithfulness
and truth, does not all of a sudden mean that sinners will not be
punished by Him as faithless people are used to accomplish His tasks
(3:7-8).
For Paul, the fact that “Jews and Gentiles alike are all under sin [hup
hamartian]” (3:9) is something that the Tanach gives ample
testimony to (3:10-18; cf. Psalm 14:1-4; 5:9; 140:3; 10:7; 36:1).
The Torah speaks to those who are in it (en tō nomō), with
the specific reason “so that every mouth may be silenced and the
whole world held accountable to God” (3:19), indicating that the
entire human race—Jewish and non-Jewish people alike—will somehow be
punished for their violation of it. The intention for God giving the
Torah not only to the Jewish people, but for the world, is not so
that it would be turned into “works of the Law” or some kind of
sectarian identity barriers (3:20a, NASU; 4QMMT), but “rather,
through the law we become conscious of sin” (3:20b).
In Romans 3:21 Paul asserts, “now a righteousness from God, apart
from law, has been made known.” Here, it is best for us to
understand righteousness (Heb. tzedaqah; Grk. dikaiosunē)
in its sense of pertaining to God's vindication and saving activity.
(In this context, righteousness would not be dissimilar from the
Psalmist's cry, “Answer me when I call to you, O my righteous God.
Give me relief from my distress” [Psalm 4:1].) God's righteousness
has been made known in something apart from the story of the
Torah—which up to this point would have largely been defined for the
Jewish people in terms of the Exodus from Egypt—although Paul is
very clear that such a righteous event is something “to
which the Law and the Prophets testify” (3:21b). It is “a
righteousness that comes from God, through the faithfulness of
Yeshua the Messiah[2]”
(3:22a, CJB), meaning the faithful actions of Yeshua to die on the
cross for our sins (3:25-26), prophesied and attested by the Tanach
Scriptures (cf. 1:2). This is something available “to all who
believe,” because as Paul says, “all have sinned and fall short of
the glory of God” (3:23).
Boasting, because all have sinned, is something that is not possible
(3:27). One's identity is not to be found in sectarian-defined
“works of the Law” (3:28), but instead a person placing his or her
trust in the actions accomplished by the Lord. “Works of the Law,”
which either marked out ancient Jewish sects and denominations or
defined their halachah, is not what is to justify people and
mark them as members of God's people. Rather, the faithfulness of
Yeshua at Golgotha is to mark them, as “there is only one God, who
will justify the circumcised and the uncircumcised through that same
faith” (3:30).[3]
Yet the Apostle Paul made it clear that God's Torah was not all of a
sudden unimportant: “Do we, then, nullify the law by this faith? Not
at all! Rather, we uphold the law” (3:31), in light of the
faithfulness of Yeshua which we are to surely strive to emulate.
Paul found it necessary to remind the Jewish Believers in Rome about
the life of Abraham, specifying how Abraham was justified not in the
actions he performed, but rather from his faith and steadfast trust
in God (4:1-3; cf. Genesis 15:6). One's righteousness before God is
not to be given to him as wages due a paid laborer (4:4), but the
one who is forgiven from sin because of faith placed in Him (4:5-8;
cf. Psalm 32:1-2). The status of being forgiven of one's
transgressions is available for anyone, whether circumcised or
uncircumcised, because Abraham was considered righteous before being
given the covenant of circumcision (4:9-10). At a later time as
Abraham continued in God's covenant with him, he was then
circumcised (4:11), being the patriarch of both uncircumcised and
circumcised (4:12). Trust in the unseen God preceded any other
action, as God's blessing of Abraham came because of his faith
in Him (4:13). Such a promise—the promise of the Messiah to come—is
brought by faith, because the purpose of God's Torah is to
principally define human sin and transgression (4:14-15).
Paul teaches how the promise of the Messiah “comes by faith, so that
it may be by grace and may be guaranteed to all of Abraham's
offspring” (4:16)—all in the Body of Messiah (4:16b) who are
connected to Abraham in many different ways (Galatians 3:29; Genesis
17:5). It comes to the Jew who already possesses God's Torah, but
also to the non-Jew who begins his faith by emulating the example of
Abraham (4:17a). This promise comes from a great and powerful God
“who gives life to the dead and calls things that are not as though
they were” (4:17b). Via Abraham's steadfast trust he saw Isaac
conceived (4:18-20), “being fully persuaded that God had the power
to do what he had promised,” and “This is why ‘it was credited to
him as righteousness'” (4:21, 22; Genesis 15:6). Paul says that all
are affected by Abraham's model of faith (4:23), because just as
Abraham had to believe that the child of promise would come forth
from Sarah and he, so must Believers in the Messiah “believe in him
who raised Yeshua our Lord from the dead” (4:24), being the Source
of our justification (4:25).
What has the justification—forgiveness of sins and identity—brought?
“[W]e have peace with God through our Lord Yeshua the Messiah,
through whom we have gained access by faith into this grace in which
we now stand” (5:1b-2). The faith that we now place in the work of
the Lord Yeshua gives us the perseverance that a Believer needs to
endure the trials of life (5:3-4), and it includes God's love made
manifest to us via the presence of His Holy Spirit (5:5). Yeshua,
unlike any other person, died for the ungodly (5:6-8). Yeshua's
sacrifice assures a person deliverance from God's wrath, and
complete reconciliation with Him (5:9-11).
If the Jewish Believers in Rome had not yet been convinced that
as far as sin goes, they were no better off than the pagans
around them—Paul's comments about Adam would have been most direct:
“[S]in entered the world through one man, and death through sin, and
in this way death came to all men, because all sinned” (5:12).[4]
Here, there is no kind of delineation between Jewish sin and
everyone else's sin. Paul's remark that follows, though, can be a
bit confusing to understand, as he actually says “for before the law
was given, sin was in the world. But sin is not taken into account
when there is no law” (5:13). This would be speaking of a condition
prior to Mount Sinai, where instructions regulating the atonement
and punishment of sin were finally delivered and codified (Galatians
3:19). Prior to Mount Sinai, while such sins existed, there was no
definite way to account for all of them, even though “death reigned
from the time of Adam to the time of Moses” (5:14), because high
sins will inevitably have their negative affects made manifest in
one way or another (cf. 1 Corinthians 5:5).
If all human beings are affected by the sin of Adam, then “how much
more did God's grace and the gift that came by the grace of the one
man, Yeshua the Messiah, overflow to the many!” (5:15). Yeshua is
compared to being a Second Adam—One without sin who came to resolve
the human sin problem. Paul tells the Romans, “For if, by the
trespass of one man, death reigned through that one man, how much
more will those who receive God's abundant provision of grace and of
the gift of righteousness reign in life through the one man, Yeshua
the Messiah” (5:17). The faithfulness of Yeshua the Messiah is
exemplified by Paul, as “through the obedience of the one man the
many will be made righteous” (5:19). When the Torah was given by God
to Israel, trespasses inevitably increased (5:20a). “But where sin
increased, grace increased all the more, so that, just as sin
reigned in death, so also grace might reign through righteousness to
bring eternal life through Yeshua the Messiah our Lord” (5:20b-21).
The Torah came to regulate sin and define God's standard of
holiness, so that the final atonement via the Lord Yeshua could be
made manifest.
Paul is very clear to answer any potential objections that the
Romans may ask, especially in his assertion that while human sin
increased, God's grace also increased. “What shall we say, then?
Shall we go on sinning so that grace may increase? By no means! We
died to sin; how can we live in it any longer” (6:1-2). The Believer
who has been transformed by the gospel, having been immersed in
water, is to be identified in Yeshua's death, burial, and
resurrection—specifically so that “we...may live a new life”
(6:3-4). The kind of “death” that Believers have experienced is one
of death to sin and its hold (6:5-6), “because anyone who has died
has been freed from sin” (6:7). We are called to emulate the
Messiah, who died for us and rose again, and who modeled the life of
sinlessness that we are to emulate (6:8-10). Paul summarizes, “In
the same way, count yourselves dead to sin but alive to God in
Messiah Yeshua” (6:11), as people are to “not offer the parts of
[their] bod[ies] to sin, as instruments of wickedness, but...to God,
as those who have been brought from death to life” (6:12-13).
Paul qualifies the status of a redeemed person by stating, “sin
shall not be your master, because you are not under law, but under
grace” (6:14). When sin is a person's lord and owner, such a status
results in one being “under law.” When one has been reconciled to
God through Yeshua, the contrasting status is one being “under
grace.” People who are “under law” stand judged by God's Torah and
subject to its penalties. People who are “under grace” stand
forgiven before God.
Paul anticipates how some may ask, “Shall we sin because we are not
under law but under grace?” (6:15). If the penalties of God's Torah
have been removed for the redeemed, would it not be possible to then
sin and not worry about it? Paul properly answers, “By no means!
Don't you know that when you offer yourselves as someone to obey him
as slaves, you are slaves to the one whom you obey—whether you are
slaves to sin, which leads to death, or to obedience, which leads to
righteousness?” (6:15-16). When the Roman Believers were “under law”
they were also “slaves to sin” (6:17). But being redeemed, they were
“set free from sin and” became “slaves to righteousness” (6:18).
And notably, being “under grace” here does include obedience to God!
Paul's analogy to slavery in comparing the status of non-Believers
“under law” and Believers “under grace” is described as being “human
terms” (6:19-22), something that he would obviously expect the
Jewish Believers in Rome to understand, but more specifically the
non-Jewish Believers (who could very likely have included many
people from the slave class).
Paul's teaching in Romans 7 is likely the most confusing and/or
difficult part of the letter for today's Messianics to understand,
often because it is interpreted from an inappropriate anti-Torah
bias. Paul is very clear in the offset, “for I am speaking to men
who know the law” (7:1a), yet too frequently knowing something
about the Torah's instructions does not often play a role in how
contemporary interpreters view his words. Having just described the
death of Believers to sin, Paul asserts, “that the law has authority
over [lords it over, LITV] a man as long as he lives” (7:1b).
Depicting the Torah as a master over a person, existence
“under law” (cf. 6:14-14) or being subject to its harsh condemnation
is in view. Redeemed individuals have died to sin, and the authority
of the Torah to condemn is something that they have been released
from.
To illustrate this important point, the Apostle Paul makes use of
the Torah's regulations regarding marriage. He says, “by law a
married woman is bound to her husband as long as he is alive, but if
her husband dies, she is released from the law of marriage” (7:2).
This is not the Torah as a whole, but rather demonstrates how
a particular part of its instructions become non-applicable. The
“law of marriage” is being compared to the condemnation of the Torah
upon sinners, and its subsequent death penalty.
The married woman would be an adulteress if she took another man,
but she would not be an adulteress if she remarried as a widow
(7:3). In a similar way, Paul can say, “So, my brothers, you also
died to the law through the body of Messiah”—an obvious reference to
His crucifixion for sin—“that you might belong to another, to him
who was raised from the dead” (7:4). Paul does not say that
Believers have died to the standard of God's holiness in His Law,
but rather that the Torah as a harsh, condemning overlord to sinners
is what Believers have been made dead to. This was a life controlled
by sinful passions, and “by dying to what once bound us, we have
been released from the law so that we serve in the new way of the
Spirit” (7:5-6). This new way causes us to properly “uphold the law”
(3:31) as a part of the New Covenant brought by God's Spirit
(Jeremiah 31:31-33; Ezekiel 36:26-27).
Paul by no means associates God's Torah and human sin as being
synonymous, anticipating that some might conclude he associates a
life controlled by sin to be a life controlled by the Torah. To this
he asserts, “What shall we say then? Is the law sin? Certainly not!”
(7:7a).
From 7:7b-8:1 we see a variety of “I” statements made regarding the
role of God's Law. Many Romans interpreters naturally read this as
some kind of autobiographical summary and/or personal confessions
made by Paul. Many others, though, have come to think of this “I” as
a hypothetical sinner, with the Apostle Paul employing an ancient
form of rhetoric such as prosopopeia.[5]
(I too am personally inclined to think that Paul is not
speaking of himself.) We must notably recognize that the sin problem
targeted here is covetousness (7:8; Exodus 20:17; Deuteronomy 5:21),
but Paul's principal sin problem was actually murder (1 Corinthians
15:9; Galatians 1:23). Furthermore, Paul will later admonish the
Romans to overcome evil (12:21), yet the sinner depicted in this
section still struggles with sin (7:17-20). Surely, the status of a
person struggling with sin on the way to salvation, or a new
Believer still maturing in faith yet giving himself an excuse to
sin, should give us enough reason to reassess whether Paul is really
speaking about himself here, as the great Apostle would actually
portray himself as spiritually immature.
This “I” sinner testifies how sin is shown to be sin via God's
Torah, and in being shown to be sin, sin can take advantage of a
situation (7:7-8). In the case of the covetous person, “Once I was
alive apart from law; but when the commandment came, sin sprang to
life and I died” (7:9). Disobedience to God's Law brings an
existence of death and condemnation. The sinner discovers “that the
very commandment that was intended to bring life actually brought
death” (7:10), not because of the commandment, but
because of sin (7:11). Paul is very clear to specify how “the law is
holy, and the commandment is holy, righteous and good” (7:12), yet
how “through the commandment sin might become utterly sinful”
(7:13). God's Torah provides a clear standard of righteousness that
exposes sin to be the problem that it truly is.
This “I” sinner further states how “We know that the law is
spiritual; but I am unspiritual, sold as a slave of sin” (7:14). He
is conflicted, doing disobedient things he does not want to do, and
not doing the obedient things that he wants to do (7:14-15)—all the
while recognizing “that the law is good” (7:16). The presence of sin
in his life causes disobedience to God's Torah (7:17-20). The
principle at work for this person is, “When I want to do good, evil
is right there with me. For in my inner being I delight in God's
law; but I see another law at work in the members of my body, waging
war” (7:21-23). The question that this “I” sinner asks is, “Who will
rescue me from this body of death?” (7:24). All he can answer to
this is, “Thanks be to God—through Yeshua the Messiah our Lord!”
(7:25).
Yeshua provides the answer to the conflicted sinner, a person who
wants to obey God, but not quite able to do so (7:25b). The
person feels continually condemned, but is able to come to the
point where “there is now no condemnation for those who are in
Messiah Yeshua, because through Messiah Yeshua the law of the Spirit
of life set me free from the law of sin and death” (8:1-2). Not
infrequently, the usage of nomos or “law” can be viewed as
akin to “principle,” which would not at all be inappropriate—yet
another way of looking at this would be God's Torah guided by His
Spirit, set against God's Torah in conflict with a sinner's fallen
nature. Either way we look at it, “what the law was powerless to do
in that it was weakened by the sinful nature, God did by sending his
own son in the likeness of sinful man to be a sin offering” (8:3).
The Torah on its own is clearly not enough for a person, but once
atonement for sin was provided, “the righteous requirements of the
law [can] be fully met in us, who do not live according to the
sinful nature,” or the flesh, “but according to the Spirit” (8:4).
God's Torah still plays a definite role for the redeemed person
who acknowledges the sacrifice of Yeshua that takes away sin.
Paul discusses what the new life guided by God's Spirit is all
about, contrasting it to the old life guided by sin (8:5-8). Most
notably, “the sinful mind is hostile to God. It does not submit to
God's law, nor can it do so” (8:7). People that have been
regenerated by God's Spirit possess the ability to belong to Him,
and live a life that reflects a true child of God (8:9-14). Paul
tells the Romans, “you received the Spirit of sonship. And by him we
cry, ‘Abba, Father.' The Spirit himself testifies with our
spirit that we are God's children” (8:15-16), able to inherit great
things (8:17). Even though there may be some temporary hardships and
persecutions to experience, each Believer is a part of a great
redemption to come, involving the resurrection and restoration of
the Created order (8:18-25). In the meantime, “the Spirit helps us
in our weaknesses” as we might find how “We do not know what we
ought to pray for, but the Spirit himself intercedes for us with
groans that words cannot express” (8:26).
A
redeemed life, while surely involving obedience to God, also
involves the significant presence of His Spirit to guide and direct
Believers. This enables God's people to be overcomers and conquerors
when they face challenges (8:27-37; Psalm 42:22). For Paul, “I am
convinced that neither death nor life, neither angels nor demons,
neither the present time nor the future, nor any powers, neither
height nor depth, nor anything else in all creation, will be able to
separate us from the love of God that is in Messiah Yeshua our Lord”
(8:37-39). Any Believer, whether one of the Romans or someone
today, must come to a similar conclusion in his or her life,
confirmed by the presence of the Holy Spirit.
For many past Romans interpreters, their engagement level with the
text of Paul's letter would significantly decrease after chapter 8,
with chs. 9-16 not being given the same degree of attention as chs.
1-8. All too often, this was because the Epistle to the Romans was
primarily not viewed as being a letter written to a First Century
group of Believers, but instead was viewed as written primarily as a
doctrinal treatise. While no one can easily deny the unique
doctrinal qualities of Romans among the letters of the Pauline
corpus, more modern interpreters have rightly recognized the value
of chs. 9-16, and in particular what it tells us about the
relationship that non-Jewish Believers have toward Israel and the
Jewish people.
Romans chs. 9-11 are probably the most reviewed and considered part
of Paul's letter by today's Messianics, precisely because they speak
to the relationship of Jew and non-Jew within the Messiah's Body,
what God's purpose was in choosing Israel, and what to do with the
reality that—in Paul's day—many Jewish people were rejecting Yeshua
as the Messiah. Whereas some parts of Paul's letter thusfar seem to
be addressed more to the Jewish Believers in Rome, answering some of
their possible questions and/or critiques, much of the remaining
letter addresses potential questions that would be asked from the
non-Jewish Believers in Rome.
The Apostle Paul expresses great distress—“great sorrow and
unceasing anguish” (9:2)—because of the current condition of his own
Jewish people. He actually wishes “that I myself were cursed and cut
off from Messiah for the sake of my brothers, those of my own race”
(9:3). He identifies them as “the people of Israel. Theirs is the
adoption as sons; theirs is the divine glory, the covenants, the
receiving of the law, the temple worship and the promises” (9:4),
also pointing out “from them is traced the human ancestry of
Messiah, who is God over all, forever praised!” (9:5). While later
Paul will weave in some Tanach passages, describing the greater
restoration of Israel and how the salvation of the nations is
involved, he notably considers his own Jewish people to constitute
“Israel.” Paul recognized them as those who have been faithful to
possess the gifts of God, and the Jewish people are worthy of being
called “Israel” even with a scattered Israel out there in the
nations.
The subject of the Jewish people is a difficult one for Paul. He
expresses to the Romans how “It is not as though God's word has
failed,” but then observes how “not all who are descended from
Israel are Israel” (9:6), here depicting an Israel that composes
the redeemed of faith and not just an ethnic community. He
similarly states how, “Nor because they are his descendants are they
all Abraham's children” (9:7), because only those who partake of
God's promise—the promise of the Messiah—can be considered actual
“offspring” (9:8-9), regardless of their ethnicity.
The verses that finish Romans 9 have often too largely been read
through a Calvinistic grid of God choosing or electing some
individuals for salvation, and other individuals for
damnation. This idea would have been quite foreign to First Century
Jews, who saw election more in terms of their ethnicity guaranteeing
them a place in God's Kingdom (m.Sanhedrin 10:1). A closer
reading of the text shows that a corporate election for God's
purposes is what is primarily being considered, and not how He has
chosen some for condemnation, but rather how He has been merciful
and patient toward His own in spite of their rebellion.
Paul discusses whether God is just to allow judgment on His people.
He uses examples for the Roman Believers to seriously recognize how
throughout the history of His people, it is often only been a
remnant that has been faithful to Him—in spite of the larger people
being chosen by Him as a conduit of His blessings. Is it fair, if
Paul's own Jewish brethren have largely rejected Yeshua, for the
mission given to God's people to now largely be accomplished by
non-Jews (cf. 11:25-32)? Paul provides a number of examples from the
Tanach for the Roman Believers to be aware of, as another stage of
His plan appears to have unfolded.
Paul begins by describing how God had promised Rebekah that her
older son, Esau, would serve her younger son, Jacob (9:10-13;
Genesis 25:23; Malachi 1:2-3). God's choosing of the line of Jacob
was “not by works” (9:12), because if it truly were then one who
shortchanged his brother of his birthright, and who was a swindler
and cheat, would surely not have been chosen by an impartial God.
Jacob's line was, rather, the better of the two for Him to fulfill
His long-term purposes. The fact that groups of people, and not the
individuals Jacob and Easu, are really what is in view here, is seen
by Paul's quotation of Malachi 1:2-3: “Jacob I loved, but Esau I
hated” (9:13). This speaks of the people of Israel and the people of
Edom, respectively.
The motif continues as the question could be asked, “Is God unjust”?
(9:14). Why does it seem that some have to fall? Paul answers this
by referring to what happened immediately after the Ancient
Israelites worshipped the golden calf, quoting Exodus 33:19: “I will
have mercy on whom I will have mercy, and I will have compassion on
whom I will have compassion” (9:15). Moses intercedes for the
people, after they had worshipped the golden calf, and so God says
He will demonstrate a degree of mercy. Similarly, in a demonstration
of His mercy (9:16), the example of Pharaoh is appealed to: “I
raised you up for this very purpose, that I might display my power
in you and that my name might be proclaimed in all the earth” (9:17;
Exodus 9:16). The issue is God demonstrating mercy and God
hardening people (9:18) so that He might accomplish His objectives.
He is not just doing it for some reason of “random choice.” And, it
could be observed that God's demonstration of mercy, rather
than immediate judgment, is a sign of the rebellious being
given a chance to repent (cf. Ephesians 2:3-4).
To further demonstrate God's mercy shown to those who are in
defiance of His will, a pre-exilic example is considered. Allusions
are made to God as the potter and human beings as clay (9:19-21; cf.
Isaiah 29:16; 45:9; Jeremiah 18:6). Those who rebelled against Him
were appropriate “objects of wrath,” yet Paul previously notes that
God “bore [them] with great patience” (9:22), and with the specific
intent no less “to make the riches of his glory known to the objects
of his mercy, whom he prepared in advance for glory” (9:23). Far be
it from this being a group of individuals predestined for salvation,
Paul uses these references to speak to his generation and to the
Romans, asserting “even us, whom he also called” (9:24a). These are
people who are loyal to Him, have recognized Yeshua as Messiah, and
who have thus received His mercy. Most importantly this was “not
only from the Jews but also from the Gentiles” (9:24b).
To this mixed group of people, Paul applies Hosea 2:23, speaking of
the scattered Northern Kingdom: “I will call them ‘my people' who
are not my people; and I will call her ‘my loved one' who is not my
loved one” (9:25). Does he apply this prophecy to non-Jewish
Believers in his Roman audience, somehow recognizing them or
some of them as a part of those scattered people? Perhaps it is best
to understand this applied prophecy in a broad(er) sense as God's
mercy is the prime issue, but this factor cannot be excluded. The
reason it cannot be excluded is that it is coupled with two similar
prophecies: Hosea 1:10 in Romans 9:26, and Isaiah 10:22-23 in Romans
9:27. The most we can say for certain is that God's mixed people of
Jew and non-Jew in Messiah Yeshua is some kind of manifestation of
the greater restoration of Israel foreseen by Israel's Prophets. The
specifics were something God had to determine in the eschaton, but
the focus of His mercy and acceptance of the people was the broad
message taking root in Paul's day. The “Israel” being considered is
the one determined by belief, not just ethnicity. This did
involve more than just ethnic Jews, something that the Jewish
Believers might have difficulty recognizing if not placed into some
kind of prophetic expectation witnessed in the Tanach.
Why all of these complicated arguments? (And arguments surely worthy
of more detailed examination.) Paul specifically wants the
non-Jewish Believers in Rome to understand that God is being very
gracious to his own Jewish contemporaries who have currently
rejected Yeshua. God has shown patience and mercy to people,
giving them an opportunity to repent, as He presently was doing to
First Century Jews who had heard the good news and yet spurned it.
Their widescale rejection of Yeshua is a major cause of the
widescale non-Jewish acceptance of Him! The non-Jewish Believers in
Rome need to recognize this, and not at all be prideful as a
consequence of most of the Jews' problem (further discussed in ch.
11). God is not merciless to let all of Paul's Jewish brethren
reject His Messiah, referring to a Kingdom of Judah that was not
completely wiped out as sinful Sodom and Gomorrah were (9:29; Isaiah
1:9).
So what has been the problem with Paul's Jewish brethren, who have
largely rejected Yeshua? Paul attempts to explain this to the Roman
Believers. He says, “What then shall we say? That the Gentiles, who
did not pursue righteousness, have obtained it, a righteousness that
is by faith; but Israel, who pursued a law of righteousness, has not
attained it” (9:30-31). The righteousness that Paul's own Jewish
brethren should have been naturally seeking did not find it, whereas
the nations, who would not have been naturally seeking such
righteousness, did find it. And the reason is, “Because they pursued
it not by faith but as if it were by works” (9:32), perhaps an echo
of the misuse of the Torah into “works of law” (3:20). So, by
seeking God's righteousness of their own human effort, Paul's Jewish
brethren—whom he still calls “Israel” as a sign of great honor and
respect—have stumbled over their own Messiah (9:33; Isaiah
10:22-23).
Primarily addressing the non-Jewish Believers in Rome, Paul tells
them, “Brethren, my heart's desire and prayer for the Israelites is
that they may be saved. For I can testify about them that they are
zealous for God, but their zeal is not based on knowledge. Since
they did not know the righteousness that comes from God and sought
to establish their own, they did not submit to God's righteousness”
(10:1-3). The problem with too many of Paul's own Jewish brethren is
that they sought a righteousness independent of God's righteousness,
and were unable to see the Messiah when He came. Romans 10:4 can be
a tough verse for many to understand, because as most Bibles render
it, “Christ is the end of the law....” Many view this as God's Torah
being the problem, and thus Jesus had to come and abolish it. Yet
this does not fit the context of the passage very well, because
immediately prior Paul expresses how God's Torah is indeed “a law of
righteousness” (9:31), something unable to be seen via human error.
So how is Romans 10:4 to be understood? Most of you probably have a
footnote in your Bibles that reads something along the lines of “Or,
goal,”[6]
expressing the fact that there is some degree of disagreement among
translators as to how the verse should be translated. Many are in
legitimate agreement that the Greek telos should be rendered
as “goal,” or perhaps as it is rendered in the relatively new TNIV,
“culmination.” This would mean then, rather than Yeshua coming as
the termination of the Torah, He is “the culmination of the law so
that there may be righteousness for everyone who believes” (10:4,
TNIV).[7]
Romans 10:4 does not say that the Messiah terminates the Torah, but
it does reaffirm that the Torah alone is not enough. Paul details
how, “Moses describes in this way the righteousness that is by the
law...” (10:5; Leviticus 18:5). This is not enough, especially now
that the Messiah has come. Paul uniquely considers Deuteronomy
30:12-13, where Moses admonished Ancient Israel that following God's
Torah was not to be that difficult. Yet to many Jews of his
generation, the Torah was made to be too difficult, and it skewed
the ability of many to see Messiah Yeshua. Such an approach can lead
to people thinking that Yeshua was neither incarnated nor was He
resurrected (10:6-7). On the contrary, though, if understood and
followed properly—with Yeshua as the goal—then Moses' words can be
realized: “The word is near you; it is in your mouth and in your
heart” (10:8a; Deuteronomy 30:14). Paul is here associating the
Torah pointing to Yeshua—a message Moses seemingly proclaimed as His
Teaching would point to the future Redeemer (10:4). The whole
package is designated as “the word of faith we are proclaiming”
(10:8b), as we should be specifically reminded of how all are
called “to the obedience that comes from faith” (1:5). God's
Torah points to Yeshua, and salvation in Yeshua will follow with
proper obedience.
This word of faith begins with acknowledging “Yeshua as Lord,”[8]
God Himself made manifest in human flesh, and that He was
resurrected from the dead—providing salvation to the repentant
(10:9, 13; Joel 2:23). Such a declaration for salvation is something
that Believers can be confident of (10:10-11; Isaiah 28:16), and
most especially for the Romans, “there is no difference between Jew
and [Greek]—the same Lord is Lord of all, and richly blesses all who
call on him” (10:12).
There is certainly the Biblical need for God's chosen Jewish people
to hear the message of the good news. Paul asks, “How, then can they
call on the one they have not believed in? And how can they believe
in the one of whom they have not heard? And how can they hear
without something preaching to them?” (10:14). Hearing the good news
of God's deliverance is something that was certainly true in the
Tanach (10:15; Isaiah 52:7). Yet even when the message is declared,
not all receive it, something also true in the Tanach (10:16; Isaiah
53:1). And, a great many Jews of Paul's generation did hear the
gospel message (10:18; Psalm 19:4).
The Apostle Paul very much considers his own people worthy of being
called “Israel,” but is forced to recognize that in his
day—especially with the widescale non-Jewish recognition of Yeshua
as Messiah—that some passages seen in the Tanach were beginning to
take shape. He asks, “Did Israel not understand?” To this, “Moses
says “I will make you envious by those who are not a nation...”
(10:19; Deuteronomy 32:21). Likewise, “Isaiah boldly says, ‘I was
found by those who did not seek me; I revealed myself to those who
did not ask for me” (10:20; Isaiah 65:1). God's forebearance is seen
in Isaiah's further word, “All day long I have held out my hands to
a disobedient and obstinate people” (10:21; Isaiah 65:2).
Apparently, Paul's Jewish people largely rejecting the Messiah, and
the message going out to those not considered a nation, was
something to be expected in Israel's Scriptures.
Yet while one could expect Paul to say that God no longer considers
this chosen people of His to be important, Paul immediately steps in
and stops such a thought in the Romans' minds: “I ask them: Did not
reject his people? By no means!” (11:1a). If God really did
totally reject these people, then Paul's own salvation would be
somewhat of a contradiction (11:1b). Here, we are dealing with a
corporate people's widescale rejection of the Messiah, not Jewish
individuals like Paul who have recognized Him, and were beginning to
see God's plan for the nations take shape. For Paul, his own Jewish
people largely rejecting Yeshua as Messiah—but a remnant recognizing
Him (11:5-6)—is no different than the seven-thousand during the time
of the Prophet Elijah who did not worship Baal (11:2-4; 1 Kings
19:10, 14). The bulk of Paul's people, having rejected Yeshua, will
be “hardened”—but the ones who accept Yeshua will be “elect”
(11:7-8). This is again something consistent with God's dealings
with people in the Tanach (11:8-10; Deuteronomy 29:4; Isaiah 29:10;
Psalm 69:22-23).
So are Paul's Jewish brethren, who had presently rejected Yeshua,
beyond all help? Paul anticipates the non-Jewish Romans asking, “Did
they stumble so as to fall beyond recovery?” Paul answers, “Not at
all!”, asserting that what has happened was a part of God's plan, so
“because of their transgression, salvation has come to the Gentiles
to make Israel envious” (11:11). The non-Jewish Believers have a
responsibility to make the Jewish Believers—again, worthy of the
designation “Israel”—“jealous” (NASU). They have to be part of
the solution to the problem. Paul instructs, “if their
transgression means riches for the world, and their loss means
riches for the Gentiles, how much greater riches will their fullness
bring!” (11:12). Even though Paul is the designated Apostle to the
nations (11:13), he still very much has “the hope that I may somehow
arouse my own people to envy and save some of them. For if their
rejection is the reconciliation of the world, what will their
acceptance be but life from the dead?” (11:14-15).
As the Apostle to the nations, what role did Paul see them playing
in the salvation of his own Jewish people? He expresses how “If the
part of the dough offered as firstfruits is holy, then the whole
batch is holy; if the root is holy, so are the branches” (11:16).
What follows is an analogy of Israel to an olive tree, a metaphor
from the Tanach (Jeremiah 11:16), and the people who make up this
olive tree being considered branches (11:17-24).
It is important to note that the branches of this olive tree are
holy (11:16), and Paul says “If some of the branches have been
broken off”—holy branches nonetheless—“and you, though a wild olive
shoot, have been grafted in among the others”—non-Jewish
Believers—“and now share in the nourishing sap...do not boast over
those branches” (11:17-18a). The Jewish people who have rejected
Messiah Yeshua are still to be considered chosen of God, and cannot
be shown any dishonor or disrespect, as non-Jewish Believers were
grafted in to their olive tree of Israel. And, even though
considered “wild” to some degree, these non-Jewish Believers are
still olives, not another species of plant, making them a
part of Israel.[9]
The Apostle Paul wanted the non-Jewish Believers in Rome to very
clearly know that they had no business boasting over the significant
misfortune that many of his Jewish brethren had rejected Yeshua. He
instructed, “You do not support the root”—that is, the root of
Israel—“but the root supports you” (11:18b). He anticipates some
saying, “Branches were broken off so that I could be grafted in.” He
answers, “Granted. But they were broken off because of unbelief, and
you stand by faith. Do not be arrogant, but be afraid. For if God
did not spare the natural branches, he will not spare you either”
(11:19-21). If God is willing to break off the natural Jewish
branches of Israel's olive tree, He will surely be willing to
break off prideful and arrogant grafted-in branches of the nations!
Paul urges the non-Jewish Believers in Rome to consider God's
kindness and sternness (11:22), urging them to consider how
necessary it is that natural branches be re-grafted back “into their
own olive tree” (11:23-24).
So what is happening, from Paul's vantage point? He writes the
Romans, “I do not want you to be ignorant of this mystery, brothers,
so that you will not be conceited” (11:25a). This is directed toward
the non-Jewish Believers, and the role that they play in Israel's
grand salvation. The NIV (and similarly other versions) says “Israel
has experienced a hardening in part until the full number of the
Gentiles has come in” (11:25b). Some conclude that this is speaking
of a set, predestined number of non-Jewish people for salvation, and
once this number is reached, then final salvation will come to the
Jewish people. Another way of looking at to plērōma tōn ethnōn
is as “the fullness of the Gentiles” (NASU) or nations, speaking of
a spiritual maturity for non-Jewish Believers to reach for. When
they have attained this level of maturity—a significant
trajectory to reach for—then the final grand salvation of Israel
will take place. And, the closest Tanach equivalent of to plērōma
tōn ethnōn appears in Genesis 48:19, where the Patriarch Jacob
refers to Ephraim's descendants as becoming melo ha'goyim.[10]
Having just labeled this as a “mystery” is important to grasp
(11:25a), because there may be some important layers of what he
expects that some Bible readers may (purposefully) overlook. He is
likely—while primarily considering the spiritual character of
the nations' salvation—once again be setting it in the context of
Israel's prophesied restoration (cf. 9:25-28). Paul references
critical Tanach passages that detail the Deliverer coming to Zion
and the promised New Covenant, things promised to Israel that
non-Jewish Believers were benefitting more from than Paul's own
Jewish people (11:26-27; Isaiah 59:20; Jeremiah 31:33). There is
a responsibility that goes along with this reality.
While Jews who reject Yeshua “are enemies” because of their
rejection of the gospel, “as far as election is concerned, they are
loved on account of the patriarchs” (11:28). The Jewish people
possess a calling that is irrevocable (11:29), and non-Jewish
Believers have a responsibility to recognize that they too need
the same mercy that they had been shown (11:30-32). They can
by no means just snub their noses at Jewish people who have rejected
Yeshua, but instead do what they can to make sure that such a
special calling upon them is honored[11]—and
even more so if they are to largely appropriate such a calling as a
part of God's people, accomplishing the tasks of being a Kingdom of
priests and intermediaries between God and the world (Exodus 19:5-6;
Isaiah 42:6; cf. 1 Peter 2:9). How a growing and demographically
changing Messianic movement learns to do this will be a huge
challenge for us to consider (as some have sought to redefine
Torah observance and the Messianic lifestyle outside of any
Jewish tradition).
There have been a great many proposals made in recent days as to
what Romans 11:25-32 actually means, especially with the rise of the
Two-House sub-movement in the past decade. I think that there is
more than meets the eye to the mystery that Paul details, but I
would not at all be prepared to claim that every non-Jewish
Believer is a part of scattered Israel as some are. Instead, I would
say that Paul recognized that “the fullness of the nations”
principally involved their spiritual character, but could very well
have involved people of scattered Israel coming back in fulfillment
of Tanach prophecies. As this is all a “mystery,” we would do best
to refine our understanding of this passage—pay greater attention to
detail—and in so doing not come to quick conclusions like “the full
number of the Gentiles” (11:25, RSV, NIV, et. al.) equaling some
predetermined number of people for salvation. We need to instead
sit down and carefully discuss the interpretational possibilities.
Paul recognizes this as a mystery, because all he can end this
section of his letter with is a doxology praising God (11:33-36;
Isaiah 40:13; Job 35:7; 41:11). I think that for many people,
particularly some of today's Messianic Jews, some elements of Romans
11:25-32 may come as a shock to them when Paul's expectation really
does come to pass in the end-times.
The remainder of Paul's Epistle to the Romans (chs. 12-15), unlike
the significant theology which has preceded it, largely regards some
practical issues that concerned the assembly or assemblies of
Roman Believers. How were Jewish and non-Jewish Believers to
function as one in Messiah Yeshua? What were some of the areas of
dispute among these people, some made into too big of an issue than
necessary? When sub-congregations around Rome met together, how were
they to have unity? What do we need to read a little more closely,
placing the actual issues into their First Century context?
Romans 12:1 is a frequently-quoted verse, in almost every Christian
or Messianic context I have seen: “Therefore, I urge you, brothers,
in view of God's mercy, to offer your bodies as living sacrifices.”
We are all surely to present ourselves as a living sacrifice to God,
living properly, like an animal of high blameless quality was to be
offered before Him in the Tabernacle or Temple. Yet there is a major
missing component that many of us overlook, especially concurrent
with Paul's desire for the Roman Believers to be unified and not
split over minor issues. Paul does not say for them to be living
sacrifices; the Greek thusian is singular. Paul urges the
Romans to be “a holy and living sacrifice” (NASU), indicating that
their individual selves, or even individual assemblies, were to come
together in corporate unity and serve their world at large
sacrificially. How many of us miss this because of our Western
predisposition toward individualism?[12]
If the Roman Believers can learn to come together as one in the
Lord, then they will demonstrate a spiritual character that is not
“of the pattern of this world,” and they will be empowered to
fulfill His will for them (12:2). The corporate dynamic of the
sacrifice Paul envisions for them is readily seen as he issues
instructions as to how they might all respect one another. “Do not
think of yourself more highly than you ought...Just as each of us
has one body with many members, and these members do not all have
the same function, so in Messiah we who are many form one body, and
each member belongs to all the others” (12:3-5). The bodies join
into a single corporate body. Each has been given different
gifts that can serve to meet specific needs (12:6-7), requiring
mutual respect and appreciation for fellow Believers.
How is this to take place? What Paul says should be no surprise:
love. “Love must be sincere. Hate what is evil; cling to what is
good. Be devoted to one another in brotherly love. Honor one another
above yourselves...Share with God's people who are in need. Practice
hospitality...Live in harmony with one another. Do not be proud, but
be willing to associate with people of low position. Do not be
conceited” (12:9-10, 13, 16). Serving as a corporate living
sacrifice also extends to how one interacts with outsiders: “Bless
those who persecute you; bless and do not curse...Do not repay
anyone evil for evil. Be careful to do what is right in the eyes of
everybody. If it is possible, as far as it depends on you, live at
peace with everyone” (12:14, 17-18). God is the One who will avenge
for any misdeeds that have been committed against His people (12:19;
Leviticus 19:18). The job of Believers is to instead help one's
enemy (12:20; Proverbs 15:21), as they are to “overcome evil with
good” (12:21).
To a major degree, the Apostle Paul says “Everyone must submit
himself to the governing authorities” (13:1a), recognizing that
there is a degree of establishment in the secular government by God,
and that to reject this authority is to reject Him (13:1b-2).
Believers need not live in fear of the government if they do what is
just and upright (13:3-5). Paul is not instructing the Romans to
blindly follow the Imperial government in all matters, but was
probably necessitated by some issues pertaining to taxes. “[Y]ou pay
taxes, for the authorities are God's servants, who give their full
time to government. Give everyone what you owe him: If you owe
taxes, pay taxes; if revenue, then revenue; if respect, then
respect; if honor, then honor” (13:6-7). Wanting the Believers to be
honest taxpayers may be a reflection of Jewish problems in Rome
regarding taxation,[13]
which could have then been compounded by additional controversies
caused by the Jewish community in Rome when the gospel hit, causing
Claudius to actually expel the Jews from the city (Acts 18:2).[14]
Paul simply did not want the Roman Believers to be burdened with any
further such problems.
Instead of being labeled as disloyal tax cheats, the Roman Believers
were instead to only have “the continuing debt of love to one
another” (13:8a). And lest anyone think that the Apostle Paul was
against the Roman Believers following the Torah, he appeals directly
to the Torah, “for he who loves his fellowman has fulfilled the law.
The commandments, ‘Do not commit adultery,' ‘Do not murder,' ‘Do not
steal,' ‘Do not covet,' and whatever other commandment there may be,
are summed up in this one rule: ‘Love your neighbor as yourself.'
Love does no harm to its neighbor. Therefore love is the fulfillment
of the law” (13:8b-10; Exodus 20:13-15, 17; Deuteronomy 5:17-19, 21;
Leviticus 19:18). Furthermore, Paul instructs the Romans, “And do
this...” (13:11a), urging them to follow such righteous
commandments. By doing this and by spurning darkness, the Roman
Believers can show themselves to be men and women of the light
(13:12-13). Paul admonishes, “clothe yourselves with the Lord Yeshua
the Messiah, and do not think about how to gratify the desires of
the sinful nature” (13:14).
Continuing in his final instructions to the Romans, Paul speaks to
those who may be classified as weak, and those who may be classified
as strong. Romans 14 is another difficult section of the epistle for
today's Messianics to deal with, often because it has been
traditionally interpreted that those who keep the Sabbath and kosher
dietary laws are “weak” brethren, and those who do not keep them are
“strong” brethren. This is another part of Paul's letter that needs
to be read rather closely, so we can properly determine what the
actual issues are.
Paul instructed the Romans, “Accept him whose faith is weak, without
passing judgment on disputable matters” (14:1). Would matters of
God's Torah be considered disputable or “doubtful” (NKJV) issues? Is
the ongoing validity of certain commandments really the issue here?
Those approaching Romans from an anti-Torah bias would approach ch.
14 from this vantage point. Torah observant Messianics, who believe
that thusfar Paul has not spoken against the standard of holiness in
God's Law, would argue instead that “disputable matters” relate more
to halachah and Torah application. It would be such
halachah and practices that are not only “disputable,” relegated
to the classification of “opinions” (RSV/NASU), but those that
caused unnecessary divisions among the Roman Believers with one
group improperly judging another.
Paul states what the first set of opinions regards: “One man's faith
allows him to eat everything, but another man, whose faith is weak,
eats only vegetables” (14:2). It is not difficult to see how one
side, the weak side, is a side that has adopted vegetarianism. The
other side, the strong side, eats “everything.” But what is
“everything” to include? Most interpreters conclude all meats.
There is no avoiding the fact that “food” is an issue in the larger
cotext (14:20). But, would this “food” include anything that moves,
or would it include food that God has designated as okel/brōma
on the lists of Leviticus 11 and Deuteronomy 14? I would suggest
that we need to understand “food” by God's definition, and so when
Paul says later in this section “All food is clean [katharos],
but it is wrong for a man to eat anything that causes someone else
to stumble” (14:20), it is in a context not totally divorced from
God's Torah. It rather involves opinions regarding acceptable,
legitimate clean meats to be eaten—and those who do not wish to eat
of such meats for specific reasons important to them.
The NIV rendering of 14:3 continues the motif of “eats everything,”
even though panta does not appear in this verse as it does in
14:2.[15]
Instead, the second issue is prefaced, expanding Paul's instruction,
as he gives a specific reason as to why it is inappropriate to
unnecessarily judge on eating: “The one who eats is not to regard
with contempt the one who does not eat, and the one who does not eat
is not to judge the one who eats, for God has accepted him” (NASU).
Here, “eating” is referred to in more general terms.[16]
Paul instructs, “Who are you to judge someone else's servant? To his
own master he stands or falls. And he will stand, for the Lord is
able to make him stand” (14:4). This could be viewed that those who
harshly condemn such brethren do not have the Lord as their Master,
because these brethren are convicted that what they do is right in
His sight and such harsh judgment is not becoming of His servant.
The people who only eat vegetables also observe special days, which
to them are very important, and they need not be unnecessarily
judged.
The second disputable matter is now specifically listed by Paul:
“One man considers one day more sacred than another; another man
considers every day alike. Each one should be fully convinced in his
own mind. He who regards one day as special, does so to the Lord”
(14:5-6a). Many readers immediately draw the conclusion that the
Sabbath is the day Paul mentions here, even though “Sabbath” is not
stated explicitly in the text. Due to the unspecific nature of
“day,” Biblical ordinances like the Sabbath or appointed times need
not be the issue here. Few consider the possibility that “eats” in
14:3 could be introducing the sacred days specified in 14:5. When
this is taken into consideration, we see that there were, in fact,
various fixed days for fasting on the Jewish religious calendar,
such as those remembering the fall of Jerusalem and destruction of
the First Temple. I would submit that when “he who eats, does so for
the Lord, for he gives thanks to God; and he who eats not, for the
Lord he does not eat, and gives thanks to God” (14:6b, NASU),[17]
is discussing optional fast days, as opposed to eating meat—the
second part of Paul's argument on disputable matters.
Just as it would be inappropriate to judge fellow Believers who only
eat vegetables, so would it also be inappropriate to judge fellow
Believers who might observe special fast days for reasons that are
very important to them. Why? “For none of us lives to himself alone
and none of us dies to himself alone. If we live, we live to the
Lord; and if we die, we die to the Lord. So, whether we live or die,
we belong to the Lord” (14:8). Those who might be vegetarian and
observe certain days—out of their opinion—are doing it unto the
Lord. The Roman Believers would likely be sensitive to those in
their ranks who would fast on a day like the Ninth of Av, so why
would they not similarly be sensitive to those who have a vegetarian
diet? Paul emphasizes the fact that all will stand before God
(14:9-11; Isaiah 45:23), in an effort to point out the weight of
one's personal responsibility “of himself to God” (14:12).
The Apostle Paul desired there to be unity among the Roman
Believers: “Therefore let us stop passing judgment on one another.
Instead, make up your mind not to put any stumbling block or
obstacle in your brother's way” (14:13). These are valid words
when disputable matters or opinions are the issue. But then Paul
says something that can get many of today's Messianic confused. Most
versions like the NIV say, “in the Lord Jesus, I am convinced that
no food is unclean in itself. But if anyone regards something as
unclean, then for him it is unclean” (14:14). For most readers, Paul
now considers the kosher dietary laws to be a matter of opinion,
something which he can disregard and relegate as “weak.” What
most miss is that “unclean” is not the term used in Romans 14:14.
In the Torah's list of clean and unclean meats (Leviticus 11;
Deuteronomy 14), the Hebrew term for “unclean” is tamei,
rendered in the Greek LXX as akathartos. But akathartos
is not used in Romans 14:14; it is instead koinos, speaking
“of that which ordinary people eat, in contrast to those of more
refined tastes” (BDAG).[18]
“Common food” is not the same as unclean food, but is
Biblically clean food (14:20) that is unacceptable for eating
according to those of a particular high standard. In a First Century
Roman context, this would have likely included Jewish Believers who
had adopted vegetarianism (14:2), who for some reason or another
would not eat clean meat that had been properly butchered in the
Roman marketplace. Of these people Paul would say, “I know and am
persuaded in the Lord Jesus that nothing by itself is common;
except to the one deeming anything to be common, it is
common” (14:14, LITV). Remember that this regards a disputable
opinion (14:1), and Bible readers have to ask themselves if things
like the kosher dietary laws are disputable opinions or not. And,
they have to understand “common food” in the context of First
Century Judaism, and how non-Jewish Believers may react to the
eating habits of certain highly conservative Jewish Believers.[19]
The weak brethren in Rome were Jews who were unable to eat so-called
common meat, that is, clean and acceptable meat available from the
Roman marketplace. This meat may have been served at certain
fellowship gatherings. Paul says that this is not to be an issue of
division in the Body of Messiah (14:15-16), because “the kingdom of
God is not a matter of eating and drinking, but of righteousness,
peace and joy in the Holy Spirit, because anyone who serves Messiah
in this way is pleasing to God and approved by men. Let us therefore
make every effort to do what leads to peace and mutual edification”
(14:17-19), noting that while clean meat remains clean (14:20), “It
is better not to eat meat or drink wine or to do anything else that
will cause your brother to fall” (14:21). If there are strong
Believers able to eat “common meat,” they need to keep any opinions
to themselves (14:22) if their weaker vegetarian brethren somehow
might feel condemned by such opinions (14:23). The issue is not big
enough for it to cause gross divisions.
The greater concerns of the Body of Messiah are that “We who are
strong ought to bear with the failings of the weak and not to please
ourselves. Each of us should please his neighbor for his good, to
build him up” (15:1-2). In spite of the opinions or disputable
matters that may be present among the Roman Believers, the stronger
Believers were to emulate the Messiah (15:3; Psalm 69:9). This would
come as a part of their obedience to the Torah, as Paul asserts,
“everything that was written in the past was written to teach us, so
that through endurance and encouragement of the Scriptures [i.e.,
the Tanach] we might have hope” (15:4). As the Roman Believers would
properly do this, greater unity would come to them, and they would
be able to join one another in worship before God's Throne (15:5-6).
This was a worship that was to involve all (15:7), and non-Jewish
Believers had a responsibility to understand “that Messiah has
become a servant of the Jews on behalf of God's truth, to confirm
the promises made to the patriarchs so that the Gentiles may glorify
God for his mercy” (15:8-9a), something anticipated and expected in
Israel's Scriptures as the nations were to worship the One True God
(15:9b-12; Psalm 19:49; Deuteronomy 32:43; Psalm 117:1; Isaiah
11:10). The bond that was to unite all of the Believers in Rome was
to come in their worship of the God who sent His Son Yeshua to die
for their sins, and in worship of Him the Roman Believers would be
filled “with all joy and peace,” overflowing “with hope by the power
of the Holy Spirit” (15:13). Once in such a venue, would the
disputable matters dividing them seem pretty insignificant.
Paul knows what the calling God has given him is, and he recognizes
that the Romans are inherently good people who will do the right
things. Paul exhorts, “I myself am convinced, my brothers, that you
yourselves are full of goodness, complete in knowledge and competent
to instruct one another. I have written you quite boldly on some
points” (15:14-15a), as he does need to assert his position as God's
Apostle to the nations (15:15b-16). In this sacred calling, Paul has
been guided by the Holy Spirit to see the nations come to faith in
Israel's Messiah, and witness great miracles via the gospel
(15:17-19). He summarizes by telling them, “It has always been my
ambition to preach the gospel where Messiah was not known, so that I
would not be building on someone else's foundation (15:20ff; Isaiah
52:15), noting “This is why I have often been hindered from coming
to you” (15:22).
The time had now come for Paul to visit Rome, and to move into the
Western Roman Empire where the good news had yet to really been
declared (15:23-24). Until Paul can make his way to Rome, though, he
notes that it is his intention to take up a collection for the poor
among the saints in Jerusalem (15:25-26), because “if the Gentiles
have shared in the Jews' spiritual blessings, they owe it to the
Jews to share with them in their material blessings” (15:27)[20].Once
completed, Paul will be making his way to Rome and then onto Spain
(15:28), and so he is sure to say “I know that when I come, I will
come in the full measure of the blessing of Messiah” (15:29), asking
the Romans to pray for his struggles in God's service (15:30-33).
It is easy for many readers to stop reading Romans at the end of ch.
15, but ch. 16 need not be overlooked. While it is true that Paul
has not personally visited the Romans before, ch. 16 shows us that
he did have a wide familiarity with many of the Believers, extending
them greetings. Furthermore, the people that he extends greetings to
gives us a wide array of data on the makeup of the Roman
Believers—those who might have been Jewish, non-Jewish, male,
female, aristocratic, merchants, slaves, and how sub-congregational
leaders may be greeted. Of considerable discussion in recent years
has been how women played a substantial role in the leadership of
the Roman assemblies. Phoebe was not only Paul's patroness, but also
the one entrusted with his letter to read it to the Romans and
explain it should they have questions (16:1-2). The listing of the
Apostle Junia (16:7) has also become a hot topic of academic
discussion, as a male name “Junias,” as appearing in older Bible
versions, is noticeably absent from ancient history unlike the
female name “Junia.”
Preparing to visit the Romans, the Apostle Paul is very excited, but
he urges them once again to be united, staying away from those who
would seek to divide them (16:17-18). He expresses confidence,
telling them “Everyone has heard about your obedience, so I am full
of joy over you; but I want you to be wise over what is good, and
innocent about what is evil” (16:19). Satan will be defeated,
because God is One of peace, especially through the Lord Yeshua who
brings His grace to light (16:20).
Today's emerging Messianic movement is not unlike any new religious
movement since the Protestant Reformation: at one point or another
we have to encounter the text of Romans, and deal with its message
and Paul's teachings. Unlike many in the past, we are unique in that
the Jewish and non-Jewish issues of Romans—which previous
generations may have scratched their heads about—much of what Romans
tells us is relevant not only for our theology, but for on the
ground issues in our congregations. We face many of the same
Jewish and non-Jewish questions that Romans asks. Further
examination of the issues Romans addresses, consideration of its
ancient First Century setting, and new proposals made in Pauline
scholarship will surely fuel a great deal of the progress the Lord
intends to make through us in the years and decades to come. So just
like Paul, even though I may have to speak boldly on various issues
or problems from time to time (15:15a), I would still express every
confidence that today's Messianic Believers will ultimately make the
right choice. We will be a united people in worship before God
(15:8-13), and via the power of His Spirit accomplish the
imperatives of the gospel for all!
J.K. McKee (B.A.,
University of Oklahoma; M.A., Asbury Theological Seminary) is the
editor of TNN Online (www.tnnonline.net) and is a Messianic
apologist. He is author of several books, including: The New
Testament Validates Torah, Torah In the Balance, Volume I, and
When Will the Messiah Return?. He has also written many
articles on the Two Houses of Israel and Biblical theology, and is
presently focusing on Messianic commentaries on various books of the
Bible.
NOTES
[1]
Note that the clause en nomō, appearing in 2:12, is
correctly rendered as “in law.”
[2]
Grk.
dia pisteōs Iēsou Christou; “the faith of Jesus Christ”
(YLT).
[3]
For a
further discussion, consult the editor's article “What
Are ‘Works of the Law'?”
[4]
Do note
how the text says that via the sin of Adam, death spread
eis pantas anthrōpous or “to all humans” that would
follow. Adam and Eve's sin only affected the human race,
which means that possible animal death (present in the
geological record) before their Fall is something a bit
different.
[5]
For a
summary of this, consult J.M. Everts, “Conversion and Call
of Paul,” in Gerald F. Hawthorne, Ralph P. Martin, and
Daniel G. Reid, eds., Dictionary of Paul and His Letters
(Downers Grove, IL: InterVarsity, 1993), 158.
Do note
that while many Romans commentators today recognize the
strong possibility that the “I” in Romans 7 is not Paul
speaking about himself, there are many different conclusions
drawn as to what is being specifically communicated if this
is not autobiographical material.
[6]
Spiros
Zodhiates, ed., Hebrew-Greek Key Study Bible, New
American Standard (Chattanooga: AMG Publishers, 1994), 1498.
[7]
N.T.
Wright actually suggests that “climax” is the best rendering
for telos (“The Letter to the Romans,” in Leander E.
Keck, ed., et. al., New Interpreter's Bible, Vol. 10
[Nashville: Abingdon, 2002], 658).
[8]
This is
not just a recognition of Yeshua as “Master.” As C.E.B.
Cranfield validly notes, “The usage of
kurioß
[Kurios] more than six thousand times in the LXX to
represent the Tetragrammaton [YHWH] must surely be regarded
of decisive importance here” (International Critical
Commentary: Romans 9-16 [London: T&T Clark, 1979], 529),
indeed indicating that acknowledging Yeshua the Messiah as
God Incarnate is required for salvation.
[9]
We should
be reminded how the Torah forbids the sowing of two
different kinds of seed together (Leviticus 19:19;
Deuteronomy 22:2).
[10]
The
Methodist commentator Adam Clarke once noted, “The words
plhrwma twn eqnwn
may be borrowed from the
~ywgh alm
melo haggoyim, a multitude of nations, which the Septuagint
translate by
plhqoß eqnwn.
By the
plhrwma,
or fullness, a great multitude may be intended, which should
be so dilated on every hand as to fill various regions” (Adam
Clarke's Commentary on the Bible.
E-Sword
8.0.5.
MS Windows 9x. Franklin, TN: Equipping Ministries
Foundation, 2008).
[11]
For a
further discussion, consult the editor's article “The
Proper Protocol.”
[12]
The
closest I have seen a major Romans commentator consider this
is Douglas J. Moo, who indicates in a footnote, “The shift
from the plural
swmata
(‘bodies') to the singular
qusian
(‘sacrifice') could indicate that Paul thinks of this
presentation as having a corporate dimension, involving the
service of the entire Christian community together” (New
International Commentary on the New Testament: The Epistle
to the Romans
[Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1996], 750, fn. 24). Yet he does
not examine it any further.
I would
respectfully submit that this same kind of individualism has
negatively impacted much of today's Messianic movement.
Consult the editor's
McHuey Blog post from 27 December, 2008, “Chanukah
and Encountering Worldly Philosophies.”
[13]
Such as,
“the money-grubbing instincts of the Claudian period”
(Cornelius Tacitus: The Histories, trans. Kenneth
Wellesley [London: Penguin Books, 1992], 278).
[14]
The Roman
historian Suetonius records, “Because the Jews at Rome
caused continuous disturbances at the instigation of
Chrestus, [Claudius] expelled them from the city” (Life
of Claudius 25.2; Suetonius: The Twelve Caesars,
trans. Robert Graves [London: Penguin Books, 1957], 202). A
number of Romans commentators are agreed that this
“Chrestus” is none other than a reference to the good news
about “the Christ,” Yeshua the Messiah, making its way into
the Roman synagogues and causing a ruckus so big that
Claudius' government expelled the Jewish population from the
city.
[15]
All that
the Greek has is the participle esthiōn.
[16]
With this
in mind, 4:3-12, perhaps discussing optional fast days, is
embedded within the argument discussing why vegetarianism
was adopted by some of the Roman Believers in 4:1-2, 13-23.
[17]
The NIV
adds “meat” in 14:6b, even though it does not appear in the
source text.
[18]
Frederick William Danker, ed., et. al.,
A
Greek-English Lexicon of the New Testament and Other Early
Christian Literature,
third edition (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2000),
552.
[19]
This is
examined in more detail in the editor's article “To
Eat or Not to Eat?”
[20]
Cf. Isaiah
2:2-4; 60:6-7, 11; Micah 4:13.
Unless otherwise noted, Scripture quotations are from the New
International Version (NIV), ©
1984, published by International Bible Society. |