23. But I see another--it should be "a different"
law in my members--(See on
Ro 7:5).
warring against the law of my mind, and bringing me into captivity
to the law of sin which is in my members--In this important verse,
observe, first, that the word "law" means an inward principle of
action, good or evil, operating with the fixedness and regularity of a
law. The apostle found two such laws within him; the one "the law
of sin in his members," called (in
Ga 5:17, 24)
"the flesh which lusteth against the spirit," "the flesh with the
affections and lusts," that is, the sinful principle in the regenerate;
the other, "the law of the mind," or the holy principle of the renewed
nature. Second, when the apostle says he "sees" the one of these
principles "warring against" the other, and "bringing him into
captivity" to itself, he is not referring to any actual rebellion
going on within him while he was writing, or to any captivity to his
own lusts then existing. He is simply describing the two
conflicting principles, and pointing out what it was the inherent
property of each to aim at bringing about. Third, when the apostle
describes himself as "brought into captivity" by the triumph of
the sinful principle of his nature, he clearly speaks in the person of
a renewed man. Men do not feel themselves to be in captivity in
the territories of their own sovereign and associated with their own
friends, breathing a congenial atmosphere, and acting quite
spontaneously. But here the apostle describes himself, when drawn under
the power of his sinful nature, as forcibly seized and reluctantly
dragged to his enemy's camp, from which he would gladly make his
escape. This ought to settle the question, whether he is here speaking
as a regenerate man or the reverse.
JFB.
Picture Study Bible