8. For whether we live, we live unto the Lord--the Lord
CHRIST; see
Ro 14:9.
and whether we die, we die unto the Lord; whether we live therefore,
or die, we are the Lord's--Nothing but the most vivid explanation of
these remarkable words could make them endurable to any Christian ear,
if Christ were a mere creature. For Christ is here--in the most
emphatic terms, and yet in the most unimpassioned tone--held up as the
supreme Object of the Christian's life, and of his death too; and that
by the man whose horror of creature worship was such, that when the poor
Lycaonians would have worshipped him, he rushed forth to arrest the
deed, directing them to "the living God," as the only legitimate Object
of worship
(Ac 14:15).
Nor does Paul teach this here, but rather appeals to it
as a known and recognized fact, of which he had only to remind his
readers. And since the apostle, when he wrote these words, had never
been at Rome, he could only know that the Roman Christians would assent
to this view of Christ, because it was the common teaching of all
the accredited preachers of Christianity, and the common faith of all
Christians.
JFB.
Picture Study Bible