15. But--"Yet," "Howbeit."
not as the offence--"trespass."
so also is the free gift--or "the gracious gift," "the gift of grace."
The two cases present points of contrast as well as resemblance.
For if, &c.--rather, "For if through the offense of the one the
many died (that is, in that one man's first sin), much more did the
grace of God, and the free gift by grace, even that of the one man,
Jesus Christ, abound unto the many." By "the many" is meant the
mass of mankind represented respectively by Adam and Christ, as
opposed, not to few, but to "the one" who represented them. By
"the free gift" is meant (as in
Ro 5:17)
the glorious gift of justifying righteousness; this is expressly
distinguished from "the grace of God," as the effect from the
cause; and both are said to "abound" towards us in Christ--in
what sense will appear in
Ro 5:16, 17.
And the "much more," of the one case than the other, does not mean that
we get much more of good by Christ than of evil by Adam (for it is not
a case of quantity at all); but that we have much more reason to
expect, or it is much more agreeable to our ideas of God, that the many
should be benefited by the merit of one, than that they should suffer
for the sin of one; and if the latter has happened, much more
may we assure ourselves of the former [PHILIPPI,
HODGE].
JFB.
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