3, 4. For what the law could not do, &c.--a difficult and much
controverted verse. But it is clearly, we think, the law's inability to
free us from the dominion of sin that the apostle has in view;
as has partly appeared already (see on
Ro 8:2),
and will more fully appear presently. The law could irritate our sinful
nature into more virulent action, as we have seen in
Ro 7:5,
but it could not secure its own fulfilment. How that is accomplished
comes now to be shown.
in that it was weak through the flesh--that is, having to address
itself to us through a corrupt nature, too strong to be influenced by
mere commands and threatenings.
God, &c.--The sentence is somewhat imperfect in its structure, which
occasions a certain obscurity. The meaning is, that whereas the law
was powerless to secure its own fulfilment for the reason given, God
took the method now to be described for attaining that end.
sending--"having sent"
his own Son--This and similar expressions plainly imply that
Christ was God's "OWN SON"
before He was sent--that is, in His own proper Person, and
independently of His mission and appearance in the flesh (see on
Ro 8:32
and
Ga 4:4);
and if so, He not only has the very nature of God, even as a son
of his father, but is essentially of the Father, though in a
sense too mysterious for any language of ours properly to define (see
on the first through fourth chapters). And this peculiar relationship
is put forward here to enhance the greatness and define the
nature of the relief provided, as coming from beyond the
precincts of sinful humanity altogether, yea, immediately from
the Godhead itself.
in the likeness of sinful flesh--literally, "of the flesh of sin"; a
very remarkable and pregnant expression. He was made in the reality of
our flesh, but only in the likeness of its sinful condition. He took
our nature as it is in us, compassed with infirmities, with nothing to
distinguish Him as man from sinful men, save that He was without sin.
Nor does this mean that He took our nature with all its properties save
one; for sin is no property of humanity at all, but only the
disordered state of our souls, as the fallen family of Adam; a disorder
affecting, indeed, and overspreading our entire nature, but still purely
our own.
and for sin--literally, "and about sin"; that is, "on the business of
sin." The expression is purposely a general one, because the design was
not to speak of Christ's mission to atone for sin, but in virtue of
that atonement to destroy its dominion and extirpate it altogether
from believers. We think it wrong, therefore, to render the words
(as in the Margin) "by a sacrifice for sin"
(suggested by the language of
the Septuagint and approved by CALVIN, &c.);
for this sense is too
definite, and makes the idea of expiation more prominent than it is.
condemned sin--"condemned it to lose its power over men"
[BEZA,
BENGEL,
FRASER,
MEYER,
THOLUCK,
PHILIPPI,
ALFORD]. In this glorious
sense our Lord says of His approaching death
(Joh 12:31),
"Now is the judgment of this world; now shall the prince of this
world be cast out," and again (see on
Joh 16:11),
"When He (the Spirit) shall come, He shall convince the world of
. . . judgment, because the prince of this world is
judged," that is, condemned to let go his hold of men, who,
through the Cross, shall be emancipated into the liberty and power to
be holy.
in the flesh--that is, in human nature, henceforth set free from the
grasp of sin.
JFB.
Picture Study Bible