STUDYING THE BOOK

Introduction and summary of

Romans

Among Paul's 13 New Testament letters, Romans is the most influential. As the first great Christian theology, no other biblical book presents sin and salvation in this extensive, structured way.

What is it? A letter Paul wrote to Christians in Rome (1:1, 7).

Where is it? Between Acts and 1 Corinthians.

Who wrote it and why? Paul was converted to Jesus and assigned as an apostle to the Gentiles. Paul wrote to give the church in Rome - crossroads of the Empire - fuller understanding of Christ's gospel and to prepare them for his visit (1:1-6, 8-15; 11:13; 15:15, 16-21, 22-33).

Compared with others? Romans shares much with 1 Corinthians, matching its 16 chapters. Its teachings about law and grace are also in Galatians, but condensed and impassioned.

Warning! Studying Romans has brought dramatic, permanent change of thought and life to Augustine, Luther, Wesley, Barth, and many others. There's no telling what may happen if you read and study it!

Its content? A systematic study of the Christian gospel:

  • doctrine of sin (1 - 3a)
  • doctrine of salvation (3b - 8)
  • doctrine of Israel (9 - 11)
  • the Christian life (12 - 16)

Sin . . .

Salvation has several close synonyms:

Salvation proceeds from justification through sanctification to glorification.

Salvation is summarized in key paragraphs:

 Two basic facts about God:

  • God reveals His wrath (1:18 - 3:20). We shouldn't think God's wrath is like human anger: rising tempers, louder arguments, final explosion. God's wrath isn't fickle emotion; it is fixed hatred of sin and active determination to treat humans according to the evil they've done (1:18; 2:5, 8; 4:15; 5:9; 9:22). Modern teaching minimizes this, presenting only God's love.
  • God reveals His righteousness (1:17; 3:21 - 8:39). God's righteousness isn't holiness and moral conduct, but His determination to set wrong things right and treat men according to His good will. This understanding released Martin Luther from spiritual bondage and unleashed the Protestant Reformation in 1517. Righteousness and justification are the same, both received by faith (1:17; 3:22, 28; 4:3, 13; 5:1; 10:6)

Consider the goodness and severity of God (11:22). They seem to oppose each other: God's wrath demands sin be punished; God's righteousness demands sinners be received. What will He do? God is holy and just; can He also be loving and merciful?

This "divine dilemma" is resolved by Christ's death on the cross, which fully demonstrated both God's wrath and His righteousness. In God's wrath sin was punished "that He might be just." In God's righteousness a substitute was offered for sinners "that He might be the justifier of the one who has faith in Jesus." God's holy justice and His loving mercy met at the cross (3:24-26)!

Israel

Christian life

Practical portions for easy picking:

Doctrinal issues for deeper study:

Great final words, doxologies: 8:31-39; 11:33-36; 15:13, 33; 16:25-27

Complete these verses:

Paul's theme - "For I am not ashamed . . ." (1:16).
Universal sin - "For all have sinned . . ." (3:23).
God's initiative - "But God demonstrates His love . . ." (5:8).
Our choice - "For the wages of sin . . ." (6:23).
Assurance - "There is therefore now no condemnation . . ." (8:1).
Holy lives - "I beseech you therefore, brethren . . ." (12:1).

 Romans in a sentence: While God's wrath is revealed in the downward spiral of sin and death, His grace is revealed in the gospel of Christ through which Jew and Gentile receive right standing with God, live faithfully by the Spirit, and hope for final glory.