Jamieson Fausset Brown Commentary - Romans 12:21 - 12:21

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Jamieson Fausset Brown Commentary - Romans 12:21 - 12:21


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This Chapter Verse Commentaries:

Be not overcome of evil - for then you are the conquered party.

but overcome evil with good - and then the victory is yours; you have subdued your enemy in the noblest sense.

Note,

(1) The redeeming mercy of God in Christ is, in the souls of believers, the living spring of all holy obedience (Rom 12:1).

(2) As redemption under the Gospel is not by irrational victims, as under the law, but “by the precious blood of Christ” (1Pe 1:18, 1Pe 1:19), and, consequently, is not ritual but real, so the sacrifices which believers are now called to offer are all “living sacrifices”; and these - summed up in self-consecration to the service of God - are “holy and acceptable to God,” making up together “our rational service” (Rom 12:1).

(3) In this light, what are we to think of the so-called “unbloody sacrifice of the mass, continually offered to God as a propitiation for the sins both of the living and the dead,” which the adherents of Rome’s corrupt faith have been taught for ages to believe is the highest and holiest act of Christian worship - in direct opposition to the sublimely simple teaching which the Christians of Rome first received (Rom 12:1) -

(4) Christians should not feel themselves at liberty to be conformed to the world, if only they avoid what is manifestly sinful; but rather, yielding themselves to the transforming power of the truth as it is in Jesus, they should strive to exhibit before the world an entire renovation of heart and life (Rom 12:2).

(5) What God would have men to be, in all its beauty and grandeur, is for the first time really apprehended, when “written not with ink, but with the Spirit of the living God, not on tables of stone, but on the fleshy tables of the heart,” 2Co 3:3 (Rom 12:2).

(6) Self-sufficiency and lust of power are peculiarly unlovely in the vessels of mercy, whose respective graces and gifts are all a divine trust for the benefit of the common body and of mankind at large (Rom 12:3, Rom 12:4).

(7) As forgetfulness of this has been the source of innumerable and unspeakable evils in the Church of Christ, so the faithful exercise by every Christian of his own peculiar office and gifts, and the loving recognition of those of his brethren, as all of equal importance in their own place, would put a new face upon the visible Church, to the vast benefit and comfort of Christians themselves and to the admiration of the world around them (Rom 12:6-8).

(8) What would the world be, if it were filled with Christians having but one object in life, high above every other - to “serve the Lord” - and throwing into this service “alacrity” in the discharge of all duties, and abiding “warmth of spirit” (Rom 12:11)!

(9) Oh, how far is even the living Church from exhibiting the whole character and spirit, so beautifully portrayed in the latter verses of this chapter (Rom 12:12-21)! What need of a fresh baptism of the Spirit in order to this! And how “fair as the moon, clear as the sun, and terrible as an army with banners,” will the Church become, when at length instinct with this Spirit! The Lord hasten it in its time!