17. For if by--"the"
one man's offence death reigned by one--"through the one."
much more shall they which receive--"the"
abundance of grace and of the gift of--justifying
righteousness . . . reign in life by one Jesus
Christ--"through the one." We have here the two ideas of
Ro 5:15
and Ro 5:16
sublimely combined into one, as if the subject had grown upon the
apostle as he advanced in his comparison of the two cases. Here, for
the first time in this section, he speaks of that LIFE which springs out of justification, in contrast
with the death which springs from sin and follows condemnation. The
proper idea of it therefore is, "Right to live"--"Righteous life"--life
possessed and enjoyed with the good will, and in conformity with the
eternal law, of "Him that sitteth on the Throne"; life therefore in its
widest sense--life in the whole man and throughout the whole duration
of human existence, the life of blissful and loving relationship to God
in soul and body, for ever and ever. It is worthy of note, too, that
while he says death "reigned over" us through Adam, he does not say
Life "reigns over us" through Christ; lest he should seem to invest
this new life with the very attribute of death--that of fell and
malignant tyranny, of which we were the hapless victims. Nor does he
say Life reigns in us, which would have been a scriptural enough
idea; but, which is much more pregnant, "We shall reign in
life." While freedom and might are implied in the figure
of "reigning," "life" is represented as the glorious territory or
atmosphere of that reign. And by recurring to the idea of
Ro 5:16,
as to the "many offenses" whose complete pardon shows "the abundance of
grace and of the gift of righteousness," the whole statement is to this
effect: "If one man's one offense let loose against us the tyrant power
of Death, to hold us as its victims in helpless bondage, 'much more,'
when we stand forth enriched with God's 'abounding grace' and in the
beauty of a complete absolution from countless offenses, shall we
expatiate in a life divinely owned and legally secured, 'reigning' in
exultant freedom and unchallenged might, through that other matchless
'One,' Jesus Christ!" (On the import of the future tense in this
last clause, see on
Ro 5:19,
and
Ro 6:5).
JFB.
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