Romans 7:8
“But sin, taking occasion by the commandment, wrought in me all manner of concupiscence. For without the law sin was dead. For I was alive without the law once: but when the commandment came, sin revived, and I died."
I REMEMBER once reading a chapter of a book which commenced with this heading, “The Inside
of the World.” The book, of course, was occupied very much with geology and to speculations about the
interior of the globe. Tonight I want you to consider not the inside of the world, but the little world
within us, that microcosm, the human heart, and some strange things that happen therein—and
especially one singular and mysterious work which goes on in the minds of those who become the
children of God. They are brought from one state into another by a very remarkable process; a process
which, while they are undergoing it, they do not understand. And for need of knowing what it is and
what God is driving at, some of them are often driven to very great despondency—some even to despair.
Whereas if they would see in the text what I shall try to hold up and expound—a kind of mirror in which
they might see a reflection of their hearts and their own experience—they might, perhaps, come into
light and liberty all the sooner. May it be so, even now!
We shall first speak of the words of the Apostle in this way. Here is life without the law of God. Here
is, secondly, sin coming to the light of God. And here is, thirdly, the man himself—death brought by the
law to him. And, first, let me speak of—
I. LIFE WITHOUT THE LAW OF GOD.
The Apostle says that sin was at one time dead in him and he was alive without the law of God.
Now, when he says, “without the law,” he does not mean that he never heard the law of God read, for it
was read in the synagogue every Sabbath. He does not mean that he did not know it, for he was probably
acquainted with every letter of it. He sat at the feet of Gamaliel and he was a Pharisee of the Pharisees
according to his own profession—and they were a sect much addicted to the study not only of the law of
God, but of the jots and tittles of it—they held, in fact, constant discussions and disputes with one
another about the minute particulars of that law.
He knew the law in the letter of it, and understood it so far as it could be understood from his point
of view, but yet he says he was alive without the law, by which he means this—the law had never come
home to his heart and to his conscience. It was because of this, therefore, that he was living in a state of
false security. He thought he had kept it. He believed that if anyone in the world had kept the
commandments from his youth up, he, Saul of Tarsus, was that man! He did not dread dying, or standing
before the judgment-seat of God—he felt himself perfectly ready for that. Wrapped up in his own lawkeeping,
he felt himself perfectly secure. He was at ease and peace. Nothing disturbed him. He did not
lie sleepless on his bed at night, thinking of his iniquity—on the contrary, he lulled himself to sleep with
some such a prayer as this—“God, I thank You I am not as other men are—an adulterer or extortioner,
or even as this Publican. I fast twice in the week. I pay tithes of all I possess.” He thought he was
perfectly safe! He thought that he was doing all he ought to do, leaving nothing undone that he ought to
have done! He thought that he was, in fact, in excellent repute in heaven, and he was certainly on the
very best possible terms with himself! The consequence of this was that he was alive without the law of
God.
In another sense his security brought him pride—he looked down upon all others. If by chance a
Publican met him in the street, he gave him all the room he could. If he ever passed by a woman that was a sinner, he took care to look quite another way, or to let her see how scornfully he thought of her.
If, perchance, he mentioned a Gentile, he called him a dog—for this great one, Saul of Tarsus, had so
kept the law of God, and felt so quiet and peaceful within, that he could afford to stand on the very
pinnacle of eminence and look down with derision on those poorer mortals who were not so good as he
was!
The next step that Paul, who was a thorough-going one, took—he indulged in persecution—for as
soon as you think yourself better than others, you become the judge of others! And the next step is to
carry out your own sentence upon others. And inasmuch as this Saul of Tarsus heard that there were
some who did not believe that they were as good as he, who did not profess to be saved, as he expected
to be by his own works, but who talked of one Jesus, who was the Son of God, who had died for their
sins and who had risen from the dead and given them pardon—when he heard that they were trusting to
the merits of this glorious One, whom, they said, had ascended to the right hand of God, he was
exceedingly angry with them! Why, they were opposed to his theory of his own excellence! They were
practically protesting against his very comfortable state of mind! They were, in fact, setting up
altogether an opposition doctrine which laid the axe to the root of the tree of his belief and might fell the
goodly tree beneath which he found such shelter! So he began at once to haul them to prison, to compel
them to blaspheme in the name of Christ, if he could, and when he had harried them through Jerusalem,
and punished them with all his might in his own country! Then he must seek letters from the high priest
that he might go to Damascus to carry out the same measures there! Paul was indeed alive! He was not
only as good as he ought to be, but he was rather better—and he now set out to make other people better.
If he could not make men better by his talking to them, he would make them better by scourging and
killing them! Great “I,” how lofty it stood! How it held up its head! “I was alive,” he said. But alas, Paul,
you did not understand the law of God that soon would have cut you down and killed you, and killed
your, “I,” and brained you and left you dead on the spot!
Now in what respect was Paul alive without the law? To answer this we will not speak so much of
Paul as of many others who are in the same state. Some are alive without the law of God because they
have never seen the spirituality of it. Their notion was that, “you shall not commit adultery” meant
simply an act of uncleanness. Therefore they felt perfectly innocent. But if they had known that it meant
a great deal more—that the law of God condemned them if there had been even an unclean thought, and
that uncleanness of heart was as obnoxious to God as uncleanness of life, then their life would soon
have come to an end—their life of pride and security—for they would have found that the law would not
give them the shelter, though they thought it did. “You shall not kill.” Why, there is no man here, I
suppose, but what would say, “I am clear there. I have never killed anybody.” But, my dear friend, I can
understand your being alive without the law of God, if you do not know as you ought to know that that
commandment means that even anger is murder—and he who is angry with his brother, has killed him
in his heart! What if you have never struck him? Have you ever wanted to? What if it never came to
actually knocking him to the ground? Yet if you have spoken bitter words—these show what you would
have done and this is set down in God’s Book as being a sin—a sin for which He will require you to
give an account at the last great day!
Now Paul had never seen this, but once upon a time, and that was through the little window of that
commandment, “You shall not covet,” Paul saw the light of God and he said to himself, “What? Does
this law condemn me for having a covetous desire?” “Ah, then,” he said, “I am not as secure as I
thought I was! I cannot afford to be proud. I cannot afford to judge others. I must judge myself.” He
lived in that proud, haughty life because he did not understand the law of God.
There are many others who are living in the same self-righteous way—good self-righteous people,
wrapping themselves up in the garment of their goodness because they have really been very careless
about what the law is. They have not looked into it. Whether there is a law of God or not, has really
never been thoroughly and deeply considered by them. They know it as a matter of religious teaching,
but nothing more. O sir, how easily ought your conscience to convict you, for when a subject does not
even care to know whether a king has a law or not, what a traitor he is! When he says, “It is no business
of mine to know the king’s will. I do not care what the king’s will is”—why, if he has committed no overt offense, that of itself is an offense! He stands out as one convicted of being a traitor and guilty of
sedition and treason against his king!
There are others who say in their heart, if they won’t put it into words, for most fools, according to
David, are not such fools as to speak out loud—“The fool has said in his heart,” says David—they say
in their heart, “How does God know, and is there knowledge with the Most High? What if we do break
His law—does He care about it?” And then they cap it all by saying, “Is He not very merciful? He won’t
be severe with us poor creatures. What if we have offended? We will whisper a prayer or two when we
are dying—and all will be blotted out.” You think that God is such an one as yourself! Because you can
trifle with sin, you imagine Jehovah can do so! Oh, if you did but know His law, did but understand how
inflexible it is and how true is His declaration that He will by no means spare the guilty, which means
He will by no means spare you, you would soon lay aside this easy-going life of yours and no longer
could you live as you now live! You would be slain by the word of the Lord!
In addition to these, I have no doubt that there are many professors of religion who are living
without the law of God. I mean that they are living reputable, respectable Christian lives and they,
themselves, believe they are converted, but they are alive without the law. That is, there is mingled with
their faith in Christ some sort of trust in themselves. They have never seen that the law puts an end to all
human power, strength and merit as any assistance to Christ in the matter of salvation. I have sometimes
wished that some of our younger brothers and sisters who do not seem to have felt very deeply in their
hearts the work of Christ, might for once feel what it is for the commandment to come into their souls
and lay them prostrate, for if it ever did, then their new life which they would receive from Christ would
be of a deeper and, I trust, of a more effective power on their hearts and lives, and upon their general
walk towards Christ and His Church.
You see then, dear friends, there is such a thing as being alive without the law of God. A man may
be in such a state as to think it is all right because he does not know the law—and let me say there is no
more foolish and dangerous condition in the world than this! A man who has never cared about the law
of God and does not know it and, therefore, concludes that he is righteous, is like a person who thinks he
is rich, or tries to think he is—and keeps up a large house and his carriage with a large expenditure. Can
he afford it? How about his books? Well, he has had some few difficulties but he met one debt by a loan,
and when that loan comes due he will meet that with another. He says he is all right—he believes he is
all right—he thinks he is all right! Does he ever look at his books? Oh, no! He says they are very dry
reading. He does not need any stock taking—he does not want anybody to look into his affairs. Now
without any kind of guesswork, every business man knows how that will end! He knows that it means
bankruptcy—ruin. So it does! With a man who says, “All right, I do not care to enquire about my soulaffairs.
I dare say it is as I hope it is—I think it is, and I am not going to concern myself about it.” It will
end in everlasting bankruptcy, my dear hearer—sure to, sure to—it cannot be anything else! You are like
a ship at sea that ought to have been long ago given up to the ship breaker. There she is out at sea. The
captain does not care to enquire whether the timbers are sound, or whether they are well caulked, or
whether the pumps will work well or not. She has seemed to go very well in fair weather and he does not
care to know anything else. There is none of us who would like to go to sea in a vessel like that! We
would want to know whether the vessel would stand the strain of a storm, whether she was seaworthy
and, if she were not so, we would rather stay on shore! Many of you are in rotten vessels tonight—ships
that are worm-eaten through and through, and you will find them go to pieces when once a storm comes
up! God have mercy upon you and deliver you from these false hopes, and this living without His law!
And may the law of God come on board your vessel even now, and begin to test the timbers, and if you
should stand by and discover that the thing is only fit to be broken up, why, then I trust you will get on
board a better vessel, a vessel that shall stand all storms, of whom Christ is the Captain—a vessel which,
indeed, is Christ, Himself. Now we must pass on to the second point.
II. THE REVIVAL OF SIN.
Paul says, “The commandment came, and sin revived.” It seemed to him before as if it were quite
dead. He did not believe he had any great sin in him. Other people might have, but Saul of Tarsus was so
good there could not be much sin in him. “But when the commandment came, sin revived.” What does it mean by the commandment coming? It means this, that he understood its meaning. He never saw it
before—that it had respect to his thoughts, his wishes and desires. Now that he saw this, sin revived in
him! It means, next, that he saw that the law was not a thing to be trifled with, that the law of God was
not meant to be written and there to lie like a dead letter, but that God had sworn by Himself that He
would carry out that law and would not spare those who dared to break it! That He would execute
judgment upon all those who defy Him to His face and break His commandments. When Saul saw that,
the commandment had come, and sin revived. But best of all, this Saul of Tarsus felt, as I know many of
you have, the power of the law working on the soul. There is no sharper instrument with which to lance
the soul than the broken law of God! There is no harrow that can tear the soul like that harrow of the ten
commandments. There is no arrow that can go forth and slay the soul’s self-satisfaction as God’s
commandments do when we see that they are holy, just, good—and that we have broken every one of
them—broken them a thousand times, and that every breach of the law is calling out for vengeance
against us! It is a dreadful thing, but a necessary thing, that we should all of us have the Commandments
thus coming home to us. Paul thought they were buried. But as soon as the commandments came, sin
revived. He means by that that he now saw that sins that had laid buried without monuments suddenly
burst their cerements and rose up like the dead on the day of resurrection. “There they are,” he seemed
to say—“the commandments have come, and my sins, like a great cloud, have revived—they live, and
every one points at and accuses me as the law of God condemns me.”
Then sin revived in another sense, for Paul said to himself, “How could God have given me such a
law? How can He be so stern and strict? I do not love this law—neither do I love God.” He thought he
did until then. When he understood the law, he found that he did not either love God or the law—and the
rebellion which had always been in his spirit now began to show itself—and He began to feel in his
heart a hatred against the law of God that condemned him, and against the God whom he had offended.
Sin revived! The very display of the law produced it and yet though it was thus manifested, it had
always been there! Saul did not know it, but sin had always been there—all that the law did was to come
with a candle and just show him what he never thought was there! A person goes down into a cellar that
has been shut up for a long time and there are lots of foul creatures on the floor and spiders on the walls.
He goes down without a candle, and he does not see them. But another time he takes the candle—and
how soon he wishes to get out of the place! Now the candle shows him the spiders and the other
loathsome things, but it does not make them, it only shows what existed before. The law of God does
that. Perhaps those loathsome creatures were all quiet while there was darkness, but when the candle
came, there they scurried to and fro to escape its light! All the things which otherwise had slept. And
when the law comes, it just does that—it lets out all the loathsomeness of our sinful nature which had
been dammed up before—it lets it go forth and we find out that it was there, already, and always there,
and then, like the writer of this memorable Epistle, we say, “Sin revived and I died.”
“A strange experience!” you will tell me, but I assure you it is only the usual experience of the
children of God! It is the way in which we have been brought to Christ! The law of God has come to us,
and sin has revived in us, and we have died. Now the third point is to show what Paul means by saying
he “died.”
III. THE MEANING OF DEATH THROUGH THE LAW.
What died in Paul was that which ought never to have lived. It was that great, “I,” in Paul—“sin
revived, and I died”—that, “I,” that used to say, “I thank You that I am not as other men”—that, “I,” that
folded its arms in satisfied security—that, “I” that bent its knee in prayer, but never bowed down the
heart in penitence—that, “I,” died! The law of God killed it. It could not live in such light as that. It was
a creature only fit for darkness—and when the law came, this great, “I,” died!
And I think it means this. First, he died in this respect—he saw he was condemned to die. He heard
pronounced upon himself the sentence of condemnation! He had just thought so—he would have felt
insulted if anybody had told him so, but now he seemed to see the great Judge of all summoning him
before Him and accusing him of having broken His commands and saying, “Depart you cursed one, for
you have broken My law.” He died, then, in the sense that he felt condemnation pronounced upon him.
A dreadful feeling, that!
Then next, all his hopes from his past life died. He used to look back with great comfort upon his
fasting, his alms-giving and temple attendance—but now he felt, “What an awful hypocrite I have been
all along, for I have only been there with my body—my heart never went there—I was keeping God’s
laws, I thought, but I never loved that law at all. I find now I hated it. Or, if I had understood what it
was, I would have hated it. I only loved the shell of it. I did not know its kernel. I merely loved its
outward breath because I hoped to gain by it, but the law, itself, I did not love, nor did I love God,
either.” So all the past withered up, and the Paul—the Saul—the, “I,” that had been so great as to his
past, died.
And then again, all his hopes as to the future died. Before, when he had fallen into any outward sin,
he had always said to himself, “Never mind, we will do better next time. We shall mend this matter
yet—we will keep the law in future—we will make the phylacteries wider and the garments broader. But
now he saw that—
“Could his tears forever flow,
Could his zeal no respite know,
All for sin could not atone.”
He had broken the law of God and all attempts to keep it in the future could not mend the past breaches
and transgressions! And he knew that as he had broken it in the past, he would be sure to break it in the
future—and in that respect he died.
And then again, all his powers seemed to die. Formerly he had said, “I can keep the law,” but now,
when he saw the blaze of this mysterious holiness, when he perceived that every thought, word and wish
would condemn him, he sat at the foot of Sinai and trembled and entreated that those words might not be
spoken to him anymore. He felt the law was too great, too terrible for him to ever hope to keep it! And
he fell at the feet of the law as one that was dead. So died all his hopes. Now he felt that he was
condemned forever. The last ray of hope was gone. And mark, there is no despair that is more deep than
the despair of one who was once quite secure, and even boastful! Many have I seen who were once selfrighteous—and
I have pitied them from my heart. When God has turned His blazing light of truth on all
their life, righteousness has gone! Oh, they have not known what to do—they have wished they had
never been born! Like John Bunyan, they have wished they had been frogs or toads sooner than be men!
They had felt they could have cursed the day of their birth, now that all hope was gone once and for all.
And when they have told me of this, all I could do was to smile in their faces and say, “Thank God! I am
very glad of it,” and then they have thought me cruel, but I have said, “It must be so, for now you will be
saved.” God must clear away all your rubbish before He can give you His grace!
So with this I shall conclude. If there are any of you tonight passing through what I have described—
if you are as one dead tonight because your former hopes have been killed by the law of God, I am so
glad of it! But let me tell you, do not think your case an unusual one. Do not go home and say, “I have
been killed.” Thousands of God’s servants have been the same. Ah, when I had made the discovery that
I had broken God’s law so often, and that I must perish and be cast into hell on account of my sins, I
remember what sin worked in me and what loathing of myself I felt—and that by the space of months
and years together—because I did not hear the gospel fully preached, for, had I, I would have had peace
much sooner! Now you, dear friends, will be helped tonight when I tell you it is nothing unusual. It is a
valley of the shadow of death, but most pilgrims go through it, and all go through it more or less—and
again, I say I am glad of it! When the Countess of Huntingdon said to Whitfield, “What makes you look
so sad, Mr. Whitfield?” he replied, “Oh, I may well look sad, for I am lost.” “Oh,” she said, “Mr.
Whitfield, I am so glad, for Jesus Christ came to seek and save that which was lost.” I could preach all
night if I had a congregation that felt themselves quite lost—because then they would be sure to be
saved! It would be no use preaching otherwise. When the law once preaches, it makes you weep and feel
you are lost. And then, when you are like the soil that is well plowed ready for the seed to be scattered in
the furrows, the precious seed of God will be scattered, and, perhaps, before long, up springs the
harvest—you are blessed and God is glorified!
Let me say to any who have been killed by the law, “It was necessary that you should be. You may
now understand where salvation lies. You have no merits of your own—you do not need any. Christ has all the merits that you need to take you to heaven.” But can you get Christ’s merit? Yes, get it tonight! If
you will, with your heart, believe on the Lord Jesus, and with your mouth make confession of Him, you
shall be saved. If you will trust Him to save you, He will save you and His merit shall be yours! As long
as you have any good in yourself, I know you will have nothing from Christ. But when all your hope
from your own merit is laid at the foot of the law, then what an opportunity there is for the gospel to
come in! It comes, and it says this, “Come unto Me all you that labor and are heavy laden, and I will
give you rest.” It points you to Jesus crucified, who carried your sins, who was punished instead of
you—shows you how God’s justice has been satisfied in Christ. Believe and live! Take the mercy God
freely offers you. Take it without money and without price. Take it without fitness or preparation. Take
it now! Simply take it as God presents it to you. Just as you are without having any plea but the one plea
that Jesus died— just as you are—take Jesus, and put yourself on Him. What can you do otherwise, you
dead one? What can you do otherwise, you filthy one? You are condemned, you are guilty—God has
pronounced your sentence! Touch the silver scepter freely held out to you now. You cannot be saved by
works. Let others try it if they will—you cannot, you know you cannot! Oh, then, be saved by grace!
God freely offers it by His dear Son in the preached gospel. He will not deny it to any one of you,
however filthy you may have been, or however vile you may feel yourself to be! You have but to come,
but to trust, but to believe in Jesus, but to rely upon Him—to throw yourself upon Him, to lean on Him,
to hang on Him, to depend on Him—and you will be saved!
Oh, that the Lord may grant you grace to do so! And I know He will! If you have been slain by the
law, He will make you alive by the gospel—for have you never read the words, “I kill and I make alive.
I wound and I heal”? Oh, the mercy of that, “I heal”! He heals the broken in heart, and binds up their
wounds! He will have regard to the prayer of the destitute. He will not despise their prayers. “I am poor
and needy, yet the Lord thinks about me”—is not that you again? “Though your sins are as scarlet, they
shall be white as snow; though they are red like crimson, they shall be as wool.” Ah, soul, what good
news for you, that if the law has killed you, you did not need the law—you have got Christ, who is
better! You can still have salvation, though you forfeited it by your own works. You can have that from
mercy which you cannot have from justice! You may have that from Jesus which you might never have
from Moses. I want to preach but a short sermon. Sometimes they are all the better remembered. God
bless you, and write His truth on your hearts! Amen.
EXPOSITION BY C. H. SPURGEON:
PSALM 110; ROMANS 2:25-29; 3.
PSALM 110.
Verses 1, 2. The LORD said to my Lord, Sit at My right hand, until I make Your enemies Your
footstool. The Lord shall send the rod of Your strength out of Zion: rule You in the midst of Your
enemies. You do not need a comment upon this Psalm when you remember how our Lord applied it to
Himself. It is David speaking concerning the Son of David, who is also David’s Lord and our King, who
at this hour is sitting at the right hand of Jehovah, the Lord of all, waiting until His monarchy shall be
extended visibly over all creation!
3. Your people shall be willing in the day of Your power, in the beauties of holiness from the womb
of the morning: You have the dew of Your youth. Christ, like the rising sun, shall not come alone in His
brightness, but, as with the sun we see an innumerable company of sparkling dewdrops, so shall the
forces of Christ be as numerous as the drops of the morning dew which spring from the womb of the
morning! God’s infinite grace shall lead forth willing troops when Christ shall come!
4. The Lord has sworn, and will not repent, You are a priest forever after the order of Melchizedek.
That is, a priestly king, a kingly priest—priest and king united in one person!
5. The Lord at Your right hand shall strike through kings in the day of His wrath. No power shall
stand against our coming Lord! When He once comes to the battle, the victory shall be sure!
6, 7. He shall judge among the heathen, He shall fill the places with the dead bodies; He shall
wound the heads over many countries. He shall drink of the brook in the way: therefore shall He lift up
the head. Like a stern warrior that seeks not luxury, like Gideon’s men that lapped, He shall drink of the brook as He marches on to the conflict. And because He scorns self-indulgence and human luxury,
therefore shall He be exalted King of Kings and Lord of Lords.
ROMANS 2:25-29.
Verse 25. For circumcision verily profits, if you keep the law: but if you are a breaker of the law,
your circumcision is made uncircumcision. Paul is dealing with the Jew, who was apt to think that he
must have a preference beyond the Gentiles on account of his circumcision.
26-29. Therefore if the uncircumcision keeps the righteousness of the law, shall not his
uncircumcision be counted for circumcision? And shall not uncircumcision which is by nature, if it
fulfills the law, judge you, who by the letter and circumcision transgress the law? For he is not a Jew,
which is one outwardly; neither is that circumcision, which is outward in the flesh. But he is a Jew,
which is one inwardly; and circumcision is that of the heart, in the spirit, and not in the letter: whose
praise is not of men, but of God. If this principle were fully recognized everywhere, it would certainly
put an end to all that notion of sacramentarianism which some men hold! It is not the outward, not the
external, not the form and ceremony—it is the inward work of the Holy Spirit—it is holiness and change
of heart. Let none of us ever fall into the gross error of those who imagine that there is attached to
certain ceremonies a certain degree of divine grace. It is not so. He is not a Christian who is one
outwardly—he is a Christian who is one inwardly.
ROMANS 3.
Verses 1, 2. What advantage then has the Jew? Or what profit is there of circumcision? Much every
way: chiefly, because that unto them were committed the oracles of God. The Jews of old had a great
advantage, for they had the truth of God when other men had not. The voice of God spoke to them
clearly, when only here and there, to a few chosen ones beside, was the voice of God delivered at all.
3. For what if some did not believe? Shall their unbelief make the faith of God without effect? It was
a privilege to belong to the Jewish people, even though some, and many through their unbelief, did not
avail themselves of the privilege.
4-7. God forbid! Yes, let God be true, but every man a liar; as it is written, That You might be
justified in Your sayings, and might overcome when You are judged. But if our unrighteousness
commends the righteousness of God, what shall we say? Is God unrighteous who takes vengeance? (I
speak as a man). God forbid! For then how shall God judge the world? For if the truth of God has more
abounded through my lie unto His glory: why am I yet also judged as a sinner? Here is another
objection—if it is so that, somehow or other, the sin of man is overruled to magnify the grace of God,
why am I, then, blameworthy? But the Apostle stamps this out as an evil suggestion and a very moral
disease.
8-11. And not rather (as we are slanderously reported, and as some affirm that we say). Let us do
evil, that good may come? Whose damnation is just. What then? Are we better than they? No, in no
wise: for we have before proved both Jews and Gentiles, that they are all under sin. As it is written,
There is none righteous, no, not one: There is none that understands, there is none that seeks after God.
The whole human race has sinned against the Most High and has become alienated in mind from the
great and good Creator!
12. They are all gone out of the way, they are together become unprofitable: there is none that does
good, no not one. What can be more expressive? What can be more plain than this? The whole human
race estranged from God and given up to sin!
13-18. Their throat is an open sepulcher. With their tongues they have used deceit. The poison of
asps is under their lips. Whose mouth is full of cursing and bitterness. Their feet are swift to shed blood.
Destruction and misery are in their ways. And the way of peace have they not known. There is no fear of
God before their eyes. Here is a description of all men. If some say, “Well, my feet were never swift to
shed blood,” you probably have not been put into circumstances which would evoke that cruel passion!
So we thought till lately—we thought we were all so civilized that we were to have no more war.
Believe me, let the trumpet be sounded and cannon be heard, and there is a devil in our humanity which would not soon be awakened, and we, too, might become as fierce as any other nation! It is still true of
men.
19, 20. Now we know that whatever things the Law says, it says to them who are under the law: that
every mouth may be stopped, and all the world may become guilty before God. Therefore by the deeds of
the law there shall no flesh be justified in His sight: for by the law is the knowledge of sin. It is like a
mirror that shows us our blots, but it does not wash them away. The law of God is the standard which
shows us how short we are of God’s glory, but it does not make up our shortcomings. It is a killing, not
a saving thing! By the law, no man ever was, or ever will be saved! By the law, we guilty ones are
condemned!
21, 22. But now the righteousness of God without the law is manifested, being witnessed by the law
and the prophets. Even the righteousness of God which is by faith in Jesus Christ unto all and upon all
them that believe: for there is no difference—No difference, first of all, in the sin. We are all guilty and
all condemned! And no difference in the way of salvation—whoever believes in Jesus is justified by
faith in Jesus—there is no difference.
23-26. For all have sinned, and come short of the glory of God, being justified freely by His grace
through the redemption that is in Christ Jesus, whom God has set forth to be a propitiation through faith
in His blood, to declare His righteousness for the remission of sins that are past, through the
forbearance of God. To declare, I say, at this time His righteousness, that He might be just, and the
justifier of him who believes in Jesus. “Where is boasting then? It is excluded.” It is shut out. If men are
saved not at all by works, but altogether by the free grace of God through the merits of Christ, then
boasting has the gate shut in its face! But by what law is boasting shut out?
27. Where is boasting then? “By works?” No, but by the law of faith.
27. It is excluded. By what law? Of works? No, but by the law of faith. If we were to say God
justified man on the ground of the law of God without their perfectly keeping it, we would make void
the law of God! But when we teach that God justifies men by His free grace and mercy on account of
Christ’s having kept the law and having fulfilled all its demands, we do not make void the law—we
establish it!
Adapted from The C. H. Spurgeon Collection
http://www.spurgeongems.org/
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