17. Now then it is no more I--my renewed self.
that do it--"that work it."
but sin which dwelleth in me--that principle of sin that still
has its abode in me. To explain this and the following statements, as
many do (even
BENGEL
and
THOLUCK),
of the sins of unrenewed men against their better convictions, is to do
painful violence to the apostle's language, and to affirm of the
unregenerate what is untrue. That coexistence and mutual hostility of
"flesh" and "spirit" in the same renewed man, which is so clearly
taught in
Ro 8:4,
&c., and in
Ga 5:16,
&c., is the true and only key to the language of this and the following
verses. (It is hardly necessary to say that the apostle means not to
disown the blame of yielding to his corruptions, by saying, "it is not
he that does it, but sin that dwelleth in him." Early heretics thus
abused his language; but the whole strain of the passage shows that his
sole object in thus expressing himself was to bring more vividly before
his readers the conflict of two opposite principles, and how entirely,
as a new man--honoring from his inmost soul the law of God--he
condemned and renounced his corrupt nature, with its affections and
lusts, its stirrings and its outgoings, root and branch).
JFB.
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