The Epistle to the RomansWm. B. Eerdmans Publishing, 14. jul. 2018 - 736 sider Careful scholarship and spiritual insight characterize this enduring commentary by John Murray on Romans, first published in 1959 as part of the New International Commentary on the New Testament series. After a brief introduction to the authorship, occasion, setting, and message of the epistle, Murray provides a verse-by-verse exposition of Romans that is deeply penetrating in its elucidation of the text. In ten appendices he gives special attention to select themes and scholarly debates—the meaning of justification, Isaiah 53:11 in relation to Romans, Karl Barth on Romans 5, the interpretation of the “weak brother” in Romans 14, and more. Murray’s classic commentary on Romans in this new edition will continue to be valuable to pastors, students, and scholars everywhere. |
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... flesh will be justified” before God: “for through the law is the knowledge of sin” (Rom. 3:20). When Paul unfolds the antithesis between grace and law, faith and works, he writes of an antithesis which had been reflected in the contrast ...
... flesh” (Rom. 9:3). The extent to which the grand theme of the epistle is concerned with the characteristic sin of Jewry, a sin with which he directly charges the Jew in Rom. 2:17–29, makes it inevitable, we might say, that Paul should ...
... flesh. So even this passage cannot be enlisted as a clear instance of the inclusive sense of the term “nations” (cf. Gal. 3:8, 9). In Rom. 16:4 it is more natural to render the relevant expression as “all the churches of the Gentiles ...
... flesh, 4 who was declared to be the Son of God with power, according to the spirit of holiness, by the resurrection from the dead; even Jesus Christ our Lord, 5 through whom we received grace and apostleship, unto obedience of faith ...
... flesh to appeal to the Old Testament and particularly significant in this connection is Luke 24:25–32, 44–47. The apostles followed the same pattern. In this epistle we shall find that a very considerable part of Paul's argument in ...
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ROMANS V | v |
ROMANS VI | vi |
ROMANS VII | 2 |
The Contradiction in the Believer | 12 |
Justification | 56 |
INDEXES | 72 |
Isaiah 5311 | 79 |
Karl Barth on Romans 5 | 5 |
The Analogy | viii |