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| A study of Romans: The Righteousness of God #11 “The Christless World"
Romans 3:9-18: "What then? Are we Jews out ahead? By no means. For we have already charged all Jews and Greeks with being under the power of sin, as it stands written: "There is none righteous, no not one. There is no man of understanding. There is none who seeks the Lord. All have swerved out of the way, and all together have gone bad. There is none whose acts are good, not one single one. Their throat is an open tomb. They practise fraud with their tongues. The poison of asps is under their lips. Their mouths are laden with curses and bitterness. Their feet are swift to shed blood. Destruction and wretchedness are in their ways, and they have not known the way of peace. There is no fear of God before their eyes."
Romans 3:9-18 (NIV) "What shall we conclude then? Are we any better ? Not at all! We have already made the charge that Jews and Gentiles alike are all under sin. {10} As it is written: "There is no one righteous, not even one; {11} there is no one who understands, no one who seeks God. {12} All have turned away, they have together become worthless; there is no one who does good, not even one." {13} "Their throats are open graves; their tongues practice deceit." "The poison of vipers is on their lips." {14} "Their mouths are full of cursing and bitterness." {15} "Their feet are swift to shed blood; {16} ruin and misery mark their ways, {17} and the way of peace they do not know." {18} "There is no fear of God before their eyes.""
In the last passage Paul had insisted that, in spite of everything, the Jew had a special position in the economy of God. Not unnaturally the Jewish objector then asks if that means that the Jews are out ahead of other peoples. Paul's answer is that Jew and Gentile alike, so long as they are without Christ, are under the dominion of sin.
The Greek phrase that he uses for under sin is very suggestive, hupo hamartian. In this sense hupo means in the power of, under the authority of. In Matthew 8:9 the centurion says: "I have soldiers hupo emauton, under me." That is, I have soldiers under my command. A schoolboy is hupo paidagogon, under the direction of the slave who is in control of him. A slave is hupo zugon, under the yoke of his master. In the Christless state a man is under the control of sin, and helpless to escape from it.
There is one other interesting word in this passage. It is the word in verse 12 which we have translated. "They have gone bad." The word is achreioo, which literally means to render useless. One of its uses is of milk that has gone sour. Human nature without Christ is a soured and useless thing.
We see Paul doing here what Jewish Rabbis customarily did. In verses 10-18 he has strung together a collection of Old Testament texts. He is not quoting accurately, because he is quoting from memory, but he includes quotations from Psalm 14:1-3; Psalm 5:9; Psalm 140:3; Psalm 10:7; Isaiah 59:7, 8; Psalm 36:1. It was a very common method of Rabbinic preaching to string texts together like this. It was called charaz, which literally means stringing pearls.
It is a terrible description of human nature in its Christless state. Vaughan has pointed out that these Old Testament quotations describe three things. (i) A character whose characteristics are ignorance, indifference, crookedness and unprofitableness. (ii) A tongue whose notes are destructive, deceitful, malignant. (iii) A conduct whose marks are oppression, injuriousness, implacability. These things are the result of disregard of God.
No one saw so clearly the evil of human nature as Paul did; but it must always be noted that the evil of human nature was to him, not a call to hopelessness, but a challenge to hope. When we say that Paul believed in original sin and the depravity of human nature, we must never take that to mean that he despaired of human nature or looked on it with cynical contempt. Once, when William Jay of Bath was an old man, he said: "My memory is failing, but there are two things that I never forget-that I am a great sinner and that Jesus Christ is a great Saviour."
Paul never underrated the sin of man and he never underrated the redeeming power of Jesus Christ. Once, when he was a young man, William Roby, the great Lancashire Independent, was preaching at Malvern. His lack of success drove him to despair, and he wished to leave the work. Then came a seasonable reproof from a certain Mr Moody, who asked him, "Are they, then, too bad to be saved?" The challenge sent William Roby back to his work. Paul believed men without Christ to be bad, but he never believed them too bad to be saved. He was confident that what Christ had done for him Christ could do for any man.
Men like to believe they are basically good and that belief is continually reinforced by psychologists, counselors, and a great many religious leaders.
But deep in his heart man knows there is a problem with the way he is, that something is wrong. No matter whom or what he may try to blame for that feeling, he cannot escape it. He feels guilt, not only about things he has done that he knows are wrong but also about the kind of person he is on the inside.
A popular newspaper advice columnist wrote, “One of the most painful, self-mutilating, time- and energy-consuming exercises in the human experience is guilt.… It can ruin your day—or your week or your life—if you let it. It turns up like a bad penny when you do something dishonest, hurtful, tacky; selfish, or rotten.… Never mind that it was the result of ignorance, stupidity, laziness, thoughtlessness, weak flesh, or clay feet. You did wrong and the guilt is killing you. Too bad. But be assured,” she concluded, “the agony you feel is normal.… Remember guilt is a pollutant and we don’t need any more of it in the world” (The Ann Landers Encyclopedia [New York: Doubleday, 1978], pp. 514-17). With that, she went on to another subject.
The ancient Roman philosopher Seneca wrote that every guilty person is his own hangman. No matter how often a man tells himself he is good, he inevitably sees that he cannot help thinking, saying, and doing wrong things and feeling guilty about it. Guilt drives people to alcohol, drugs, despair, insanity, and more and more frequently to suicide. After playing psychological games about blaming his environment or other people or society in general, man still cannot escape the feeling of his own guilt. In fact, societies with sophisticated psychological services seem even more guilt ridden. People want to get rid of their guilty feelings but they do not know how. And the more they probe for solutions, the more guilty they feel.
Men feel guilty because they are guilty. The guilt feeling is only the symptom of the real problem, which is sin. All of the psychological counseling in the world cannot relieve a person of his guilt. At best it can only make him feel better, superficially and temporarily, by placing the blame on someone else or something else. That, of course, only intensifies the guilt, because it adds dishonesty to the sin that caused the guilt feeling in the first place.
Man’s guilt has only one cause—his own sin—and unless his sin is removed, his guilt cannot be. That is why the first element of the gospel is confronting men with the reality of their sin. The word gospel means “good news.” But the good news it offers is the way of salvation from sin, and until a person is convicted of his sin, the gospel has nothing to offer. The gospel therefore begins by declaring that all men are fundamentally sinful and that the greatest need of their lives is to have that sin removed through trust in the Lord Jesus Christ and baptism for remission of sins.
As Paul has already forcefully declared in the first two chapters of Romans, both the pagan Gentile and the religious Jew are sinful and stand condemned before a holy God. But human nature strongly resists that truth. Dr. Donald Grey Barnhouse said, “It is only stubborn self-pride that keeps man from the confession to God that would bring release, but that way he refuses to take. Man stands before God today like a little boy who swears with crying and tears that he has not been anywhere near the jam jar, and who with an air of outraged innocence, pleads the justice of his position, in total ignorance of the fact that a good spoonful of the jam has fallen on his shirt under his chin and is plainly visible to all but himself” (God’s Wrath: Romans 2-3:1-20 [Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1953], p. 191).
The apostle Paul was well aware of man’s disposition to deny his sin. Therefore, from creation, from history; from reason and logic, and from conscience, Paul has already presented powerful testimony of man’s sinfulness. Now he presents the ultimate testimony, the testimony of Scripture. Beginning with verse 10 and continuing through verse 18, Paul introduces before the court, as it were, the testimony of God’s own Word as revealed in the Old Testament. Verses 9-20 summarize God’s divine and perfect view of man and they continue in a trial motif: the arraignment (v. 9), the indictment (vv. 10-17), the motive (v. 18), and the verdict (vv. 19-20).
(3:9-20) Man and Salvation: in looking at such passages as this, a person must keep in mind the whole point of the passage. The point is not to charge man with sin, nor to berate man; it is not to look upon man with cynical contempt. The point is not to call man to hopelessness and despair, leaving him with a hanged head and low self-esteem. The point is to give man hope: to challenge man to seek a right relationship with God through the Lord Jesus Christ. Man must never minimize his sin, lest he ignore or neglect the right way to God. But neither must he minimize the redeeming power of Jesus Christ, lest he hang his head in hopelessness, or wallow in self-pity, or roam the world in despair. 1. The charge: all men are under sin (v.9). 2. The case of a sinful nature (v.10-12). 3. The case of a sinful tongue (v.13-14). 4. The case of sinful acts (v.15-18). 5. The case of the law (v.19-20). The third declaration was obvious, for Paul had already proved (charged) both Jews and Gentiles to be guilty before God. Next he declared that all men were sinners, and proved it with several quotations from the Old Testament. Note the repetition of the words "none" and "all," which in themselves assert the universality of human guilt.
His first quotation was from Psalm 14:1-3. This psalm begins with, "The fool hath said in his heart, ‘There is no God.’" The words "there is" are in italics, meaning they were added by the translators; so you can read the sentence, "The fool hath said in his heart, ‘No, God!’" This parallels the description of man’s devolution given in Romans 1:18-32, for it all started with man saying no to God.
These verses indicate that the whole of man’s inner being is controlled by sin: his mind ("none that understandeth"), his heart ("none that seeketh after God"), and his will ("none that doeth good"). Measured by God’s perfect righteousness, no human being is sinless. No sinner seeks after God. Therefore, God must seek the sinner (Gen. 3:8-10; Luke 19:10). Man has gone astray, and has become unprofitable both to himself and to God. Our Lord’s parables in Luke 15 illustrate this perfectly.
(3:9) Sin—Man: all men are under sin. The words "under sin" (hupo hamartian) mean to be subject to the power of or under the authority of. A man outside of Jesus Christ is under the power of sin and he is helpless to escape from it (cp. Galatians 3:10, 25; Galatians 4:2, 21; Galatians 5:18; 1 Tim. 6:1).
The Arraignment The charge begins with two questions. The first is simply What then? The idea is, “What is the point of further testimony?” Paul has already condemned the immoral pagan, the moral pagan, and then both the moral and immoral Jew. Anticipating what some of his readers would think, his second question asks rhetorically, Are we better than they? That is, “Do we have a better basic nature than those who have just been shown to be condemned? Are we made from a different mold, cut from a different piece of cloth than they?”
The ones to whom we refers is not absolutely clear. Some commentators believe Paul is speaking of his fellow Jews. But he has already dealt in verses 1-8 with the question most Jews would ask, declaring that they do indeed have a spiritual advantage above Gentiles by having been “entrusted with the oracles of God,” that is, the Old Testament Scriptures. He had previously pointed out, however, that their greater advantage also brought greater accountability (2:17-25). Nowhere else in the epistle does Paul identify himself with his fellow Jews by the use of we.
It seems better to take this we to refer
to himself and his fellow believers in Rome, both Jew and Gentile. The question
would then mean, “Are we Christians, in ourselves, better than the other
groups of people already shown to be condemned before God? Are we intrinsically
superior to those others? Were we saved because our basic human nature was on a
higher plane than theirs?” Immediately answering his own question, Paul
unequivocally asserts, Not at all. “No, we are not in ourselves any
better than others,” he says. He has already
Proaitiaomai (already charged) was often used as a legal term to designate a person previously indicted for a given offense. Hupo (under) was a common Greek term that frequently meant not simply to be beneath but to be totally under the power, authority, and control of something or someone. That is obviously the sense Paul has in mind here: Every human being, both Jews and Greeks are all under, completely subservient and in bondage to, the dominion of sin.
Such an idea was preposterous to most Jews. In
his rebuke of Peter for succumbing to the Judaizers, Paul referred to the common
belief of Jews that they were righteous before God simply by virtue of being
Jewish, members of
If a Jew was poverty stricken, handicapped, or
otherwise seriously afflicted, it was assumed that either he or his parents had
committed some unusually heinous sin, for which, for a generation or so, they
forfeited their normally high standing before God. That belief is reflected in
the story of the blind man whom Jesus and the disciples passed just outside the
Temple one day. Noticing the man’s condition, the disciples asked the Lord,
“Rabbi, who sinned, this man or his parents, that he should be born blind?”
(John 9:2). After Jesus corrected the disciples’ wrong assumption, He restored
the man’s sight. When the man was talking with the Pharisees a short while
later, they vehemently voiced the same wrong assumption the Twelve had
expressed. When the man said to them of
People who are very religious tend to think of themselves as being inherently better than others and favored by God because of their goodness and religiosity. Even Christians are sometimes tempted to think that God saved them because they were somehow more deserving of salvation than others. But if a person ever becomes right before God it is never because he is innately better than anyone else or because he has managed to bring his life up to God’s standards or because he zealously observes certain religious practices. It is only because he has acknowledged his sin and helplessness and prostrated himself in humble faith before the Lord Jesus Christ for forgiveness and cleansing.
Despite great differences in outward behavior and attitudes among people, every Christless person is sinful in nature and is under the dominion and control of Satan. The entire unredeemed world, John declares, “lies in the power of the evil one” (1 John 5:19) and is therefore arraigned, as it were, before God’s bar of justice.
The religionist (Jew) is "under sin" just as much as other men are "under sin." The Scripture has just declared that being religious does not make men acceptable to God (cp. Romans 2:17-28). Religionists are shocked: "What then! Are we not better—do we not have any advantage over other men? Are we not better if we... · have the Bible?" · profess God?" · know God’s will?" · approve the best things?" · study the Word of God?" · guide and teach others?" · know the truth?"
The answer is a strong exclamation: "No! Not at all! Not in any way are you better than other people. Both Jews and Gentiles, both religionists and non-religionists—you are all under sin."
Now note. This has been the point of all that has been said in Romans... · God has a case against all ungodliness and unrighteousness of men (Romans 1:18-22). · God has a case against the moralist (Romans 2:1-16). · God has a case against the religionist (Jew) (Romans 2:17-3:8). Scripture shows that God has a case against all men. All men are "under sin." And the fact is clearly seen by any person who will honestly look at man and his world. "For all have sinned, and come short of the glory of God" (Romans 3:23).
"Wherefore, as by one man sin entered into the world, and death by sin; and so death passed upon all men, for that all have sinned" (Romans 5:12).
"But the scripture hath concluded all under sin, that the promise by faith of Jesus Christ might be given to them that believe" (Galatians 3:22).
"If we say that we have no sin, we deceive ourselves, and the truth is not in us" (1 John 1:8). "And we know that we are of God, and the whole world lieth in wickedness" (1 John 5:19).
(3:10-12) Man—Sin-the character of the accused: Paul now presents an appalling thirteen-count indictment against fallen mankind. To reinforce the inclusiveness of the indictment, he reiterates the fact that all of fallen humanity, Jew and Gentile alike, is under sin (see v. 9). In verses 10-18, he uses the term none (and its equivalent, not even one) six times in referring to man’s absolute lack of righteousness before God.
The indictment comes directly from Old Testament Scripture, to which it is written refers. Both Jesus and Satan used that phrase to introduce quotations from the Old Testament during the temptation in the wilderness (Matt. 4:4, 6-7, 10). It is written translates the Greek perfect tense, indicating the continuity and permanence of what was written and implying its divine authority, which every faithful Jew and every faithful Christian, whether Jew or Gentile, acknowledged.
The thirteen charges of the indictment are presented in three categories—the first concerning the character (vv. 10-12), the second concerning the conversation (vv. 13-14), and the third concerning the conduct (vv. 15-17) of the accused. (Remember that the term “sinful nature” is not referring to original sin or the idea of John Calvin that all men are born as sinners. It is referring, rather, to the idea that man follows after the flesh.
Under the heading of what could be called character, Paul lists the first six of the thirteen charges. Because of their fallen natures, men are universally evil (v. 10b). spiritually ignorant (v. 11a), rebellious (v. 11b), wayward (v. 12a), spiritually useless (v. 12b), and morally corrupt (v. 12c).
First, mankind is universally evil, there being absolutely no exceptions. Quoting from the Psalms, Paul declares, There is none righteous, not even one. The full text of Psalm 14:1 is, “The fool has said in his heart, There is no God.’ They are corrupt, they have committed abominable deeds; there is no one who does good.”
Righteousness is a major theme of the book of Romans, appearing in one form or another more than thirty times. Other terms from the same Greek root are usually translated “justified,” “justification,” or the like. Together they are used more than sixty times in the book of Romans. It is not surprising, therefore, that the first charge Paul makes in his indictment is that of mankind’s unrighteousness.
Paul is using the term righteous in its
most basic sense of being right before God, of being as God created man to be.
Obviously, people are able do many things that are morally right. Even the most
vile person may occasionally do something commendable. But the apostle is not
speaking of specific acts or even general patterns of behavior, but of man’s
inner character. His point is that there is not a single person who has
ever lived, apart from the sinless Lord Jesus Christ (cf. 2 Cor. 5:21), whose
innermost being could be characterized as righteous by
As already noted, there are obviously vast differences among people as to their kindness, love, generosity, honesty, truthfulness, and the like. But not even one person besides Christ has come remotely close to righteous perfection, which is the only standard acceptable to God. God’s standard of righteousness for men is the righteousness that He Himself possesses, which was manifest in Christ. “You are to be perfect,” Jesus declared, “as your heavenly Father is perfect” (Matt. 5:48).
In other words, a person who is not as good as God is not acceptable to God. As Paul makes clear later in the epistle, and as the New Testament teaches throughout, men can become perfectly righteous, when the righteousness of Christ is imputed to them. The very truth that makes the gospel the “good news” is that God has provided a way for men to become perfect, divinely perfect. But that perfection comes entirely by God’s grace in response to faith in His Son, Jesus Christ.
Paul is here speaking of men, all men, who are apart from Christ. In God’s sight, there are no levels of righteousness as far as salvation is concerned. There is either perfect righteousness in Christ or perfect sinfulness apart from Christ.
As mentioned above, from man’s perspective there
are vast moral and spiritual differences among people. But men’s achieving God’s
standard of righteousness on their own may be compared to a group of people
trying to jump from the shore of a south seas island to the United States. A
good athlete could jump twenty-five feet or more. Many could jump ten or fifteen
feet, and a few might be in such poor shape that they could barely jump five.
Measured against each other, therefore, their efforts would be considerably
different. But measured against the distance from those islands to the United
States, the differences among them would be undetectable and their efforts would
be equally futile. Almost as if commenting on such a contest, Paul declares a
few verses later: “All
Second, man not only is universally evil but also spiritually ignorant. Quoting again from the Psalms, Paul says, There is none who understands (see Pss. 14:2; 53:3). Even if men somehow had the ability to achieve God’s perfect righteousness, they would not know what it is or how to go about attaining it. To use the south seas island example again, they would have no idea as to which way to jump.
Man has no innate ability to fully comprehend God’s truth or His standard of righteousness. From God’s magnificent creation, man has sufficient evidence of His “invisible attributes, His eternal power and divine nature” to make every person “without excuse” for not honoring and glorifying God (Rom. 1:20). But apart from the ability to see that general revelation of His power and majesty, man has no spiritual capacity to know or understand God, because the “natural man does not accept the things of the Spirit of God; for they are foolishness to him, and he cannot understand them, because they are spiritually appraised” (1 Cor. 2:14).
In his letter to the Ephesians, the apostle points out that man’s spiritual ignorance is not due to unfortunate outward circumstances or lack of opportunity. Unsaved persons are “darkened in their understanding, excluded from the life of God, because of the ignorance that is in them, because of the hardness of their heart” (Eph. 4:18). Men are not sinful and hardened against God because they are ignorant of Him, but, to the contrary, they are ignorant of Him because of their sinful and hardened disposition. People have a certain sense about God through the testimony of creation, as already noted, and also through the witness of their consciences (Rom. 2:15). But their willfully sinful nature blocks out that testimony and witness. The natural man is thereby hardened in his heart and darkened in his mind. He not only does not understand God but has no inclination to do so.
Third, in addition to being universally evil and spiritually ignorant, fallen man is rebellious. There is none who seeks for God, Paul declares, alluding again to Psalm 14:2. Judging from the vast number of religions in the world with millions of zealous adherents, one would think that a great many people are diligently seeking after God. But Scripture makes clear, in this passage and in many others, that all religious systems and efforts are, in reality, attempts to escape the true God and to discover or manufacture false gods of one’s own liking.
God has given the absolute assurance that anyone who seeks Him with his heart will find Him (Jer. 29:13). Jesus offers the divine promise that everyone who sincerely asks of Him will receive, that everyone who sincerely seeks Him will find Him, and that everyone who sincerely knocks on the door of heaven will have it opened to him (Matt. 7:8). But the Lord knows that man’s sinful inclination is not to seek Him, and He therefore seeks individuals out to draw them to Himself.
During the council at Jerusalem in the early days of the church, James reminded the gathering of apostles and elders of God’s ancient promises that “after these things I will return, and I will rebuild the Tabernacle of David which has fallen, and I will rebuild its ruins, and I will restore it, in order that the rest of mankind may seek the Lord” (Acts 15:16-17). Peter gives assurance in the clearest possible words that the Lord does not wish “for any to perish but for all to come to repentance” (2 Pet. 3:9).
But man-made religions are demon-inspired efforts to escape from God, not to find Him. Every person who comes to Jesus Christ for salvation has been sent to Him through the divine initiative of God the Father (John 6:37). “No one can come to Me,” Jesus goes on to say, “unless the Father who sent Me draws him” (v. 44). The only person, therefore, who seeks God is the person who has responded positively to God’s seeking him.
The person who truly seeks for God is like David, who declared, “I have set the Lord continually before me” (Ps. 16:8). Such a person seeks first the kingdom of God and His righteousness (Matt. 6:33). God becomes the focus of everything, the source of everything, the beginning and end of everything. To truly seek for God is to respect and adore His sovereign majesty and to feed on the truth of His Word. It is to obey His commandments, to speak to Him in prayer, to live consciously in His presence with a desire to please Him. No one can do such things naturally but only by the Spirit of God working through him. The natural inclination of men is to “seek after their own interests” (Phil. 2:21).
Fourth, Paul charges that men are naturally wayward. Continuing to quote from the Psalms (14:3), he declares that all have turned aside from God. The person who is naturally evil, naturally ignorant of God’s truth, and naturally rebellious against God, will inevitably naturally live apart from God’s will. Turned aside is from ekklinoô, and has the basic meaning of leaning in the wrong direction. In a military context it referred to a soldier’s running the wrong way in other words deserting in the midst of battle.
Speaking of the universal human inclination to go against God’s way, Isaiah wrote, “All of us like sheep have gone astray each of us has turned to his own way” (Isa. 53:6). In the early church the gospel was sometimes called “the Way” (Acts 9:2). and Christians were often referred to as followers of the Way.
Jesus said of Himself, “I am the way and the truth, and the life” (John 14:6). Even the demon who had given a certain slave girl the power of divination acknowledged through her that Paul and his companions were “bond-servants of the Most High God, who are proclaiming to you the way of salvation” (Acts 16:17, emphasis added). Luke referred to some Jewish opponents of Paul’s ministry in Ephesus as men who were “speaking evil of the Way” (Acts 19:9), and because of that opposition, “there arose no small disturbance concerning the Way” (v. 23).
In his defense before the governor Felix, Paul said, “This I admit to you, that according to the Way which they call a sect I do serve the God of our fathers, believing everything that is in accordance with the Law and that is written in the Prophets” (Acts 24:14). The writer of Hebrews spoke of Christ’s atoning work as “a new and living way which He inaugurated for us through the veil, that is, His flesh” (Heb. 10:20). Peter spoke of false teachers who had infiltrated the church as those who had forsaken “the right way” of the true gospel, which is “the way of righteousness” (2 Pet. 2:15, 21).
On the other hand, the basic pattern of living of the natural man is characterized as “the evil way” (Prov. 8:13), the “way which seems right to a man, but [whose] end is the way of death” (Prov. 14:12).
Fifth, Paul charges that the natural man is spiritually worthless. Together, that is, all of fallen mankind, they have become useless. The Hebrew equivalent of the Greek term translated here as useless was often used to describe milk that had turned sour and rancid, thereby becoming unfit to drink or to be used to make butter, cheese, or anything else edible. In ancient Greek literature the word was even used of the senseless laughter of a moron.
Apart from a saving relationship to Jesus Christ, a person is a spiritually dead branch, totally unable to produce any fruit. As such, it is lifeless and worthless, fit only to be thrown into the fire to be burned (John 15:6). Paul’s letter to Titus emphasizes the same tragic reality when it reflects on the utter worthlessness of even religious men (Titus 1:16). The natural man is useless for the purposes of God and, much like the worthless dead branch, is destined for the fires of hell.
Sixth, the natural man is charged with being corrupt, which is both a repetition of the first charge and something of a summary of the previous five charges. There is none who does good, Paul says, there is not even one.
Chreôstoteôs
(does good) refers to what is upright, specifically to what is morally
upright. Measured by God’s perfect standard of righteousness, the natural man
has no ability to do anything upright and good. As already
(3:13-14) Tongue—Man, Nature: In Romans 3:13-18, Paul gave us an X-ray study of the lost sinner, from head to foot. His quotations are as follows: verse 13a—Psalm 5:9; verse 13b—Psalm 140:3; verse 14—Psalm 10:7; verses 15-17—Isaiah 59:7-8; verse 18—Psalm 36:1. These verses need to be read in their contexts for the full impact.
Romans 3:13 and 14 emphasize human speech—the throat, tongue, lips, and mouth. The connection between words and character is seen in Matthew 12:34: "For out of the abundance of the heart the mouth speaketh." The sinner is spiritually dead by nature (Eph. 2:1-3), therefore only death can come out of his mouth. The condemned mouth can become a converted mouth and acknowledge that "Jesus Christ is Lord" (Rom. 10:9-10). "For by thy words thou shalt be justified, and by thy words thou shalt be condemned" (Matt. 12:37).
There is the case of a sinful tongue. 1. A sinful tongue is foul and corrupt (Romans 3:13; cp. Psalm 5:9): "Their throat is an open sepulchre [grave]." An open grave is foul, and it is a symbol of corruption. So is a man with a sinful mouth. The obscene mouth may range from off-colored humor to dirty jokes, from immoral suggestions to outright propositions. But no matter, a man with a foul mouth stinks just like an open grave; his filthiness causes corruption, the decay of character. The filth from his mouth eats and eats away at his character and at the character of his listeners so much that he becomes as offensive as that of a decayed corpse. The foul, filthy mouth kills character, its attractiveness, trust, faithfulness, morality, honor, and godliness.
2. A sinful tongue is deceitful (Romans 3:13; cp. Psalm 5:9): "They have used deceit." The Hebrew says, "They make smooth their tongue." A deceitful person has...
The word "deceit" (edoliousan) is continuous action: "They kept on deceiving." Man is not only guilty of deceiving, but of constantly deceiving. He is constantly hiding and camouflaging his true thoughts and feelings and behavior, seeking to protect himself or to get whatever he is after.
3. A sinful tongue is piercing and poisonous (Romans 3:13; cp. Psalm 140:3): "The poison of asps is under their lips." The asp (aspidon) is the cobra, a deadly snake. God charges men with having tongues that are just as piercing and poisonous as the tongue of the deadly cobra. The idea is that the tongues of some people have a diabolical nature; they are filled with so much malice that they set out to inflict punishment. A poisonous tongue...
4. A sinful tongue is full of cursing and bitterness (Romans 3:14; cp. Psalm 10:7): "Whose mouth is full of cursing and bitterness." Cursing is sin; a cursing tongue is a sinful tongue. a. Men use profanity; in fact, their mouth is full of cursing and swearing. They curse both God and men. Their cursing may range from what society considers to be a mild word of slang to using God’s name in vain. No matter how mild or how acceptable to society, it is sin. God’s case against man is that his mouth is full of cursing (cp. James 3:8-10). b. Man’s mouth is also full of bitterness. His tongue is often...
Any expression involving any of these is sin to God. God desires men to be filled with love and joy and peace and to express such. Anything less than the expression of these is sin. This is God’s case against men: a tongue full of cursing and bitterness.
A person’s character will inevitably manifest itself in his conversation. Jesus declared that “the mouth speaks out of that which fills the heart. The good man out of his good treasure brings forth what is good; and the evil man out of his evil treasure brings forth what is evil” (Matt. 12:34-35). On another occasion He taught the same truth in slightly different words: “The things that proceed out of the mouth come from the heart” (15:18).
The writer of Proverbs said, “The mouth of the righteous flows with wisdom, but the perverted tongue will be cut out. The lips of the righteous bring forth what is acceptable, but the mouth of the wicked, what is perverted” (Prov. 10:31-32). He also wrote, “The tongue of the wise makes knowledge acceptable, but the mouth of fools spouts folly … The heart of the righteous ponders how to answer, but the mouth of the wicked pours out evil things” (Prov. 15:2, 28).
Continuing to quote from the Psalms, Paul illustrates the truths about a person’s character as they are reflected in his conversation. In doing so, he adds four more charges to the divine indictment against the unregenerate man.
Commenting on Paul’s use of human anatomy to illustrate how man’s evil character manifests itself, one writer paraphrased the psalmist’s and the apostle’s words in this way: “His tongue is tipped with fraud, his lips are tainted with venom, his mouth full of gall [bitterness],… his tongue a sword to run men through, and his throat a sepulchre in which to bury them.”
The seventh charge of Paul’s indictment is that by nature fallen mankind is spiritually dead, demonstrated by the metaphor of their throat being an open grave (c. Ps. 5:9). A spiritually dead heart can generate only spiritually dead words.
The throat is to the heart as an open grave is to the corpse within it. Where embalming is not available, a corpse is placed in the ground and then covered up—not only to show respect for the deceased but also to protect passersby from viewing the disfigurement and smelling the stench of decay. But the natural man keeps his throat wide open, and in so doing continually testifies to his spiritual death by the foulness of his words.
The eighth charge is that by nature fallen mankind is deceitful: with their tongues they keep deceiving. Doliooô, from which keep deceiving is derived, has the basic meaning of luring and was used of baiting a hook by covering it with a small piece of food to disguise its danger. When a fish bites the food, thinking he will get a meal, he instead becomes a meal for the fisherman. The imperfect Greek tense of the verb indicates continual, repetitive deceit. For the natural man, lying and other forms of deceit are a habitual and normal part of his life.
Psalm 5:9 describes flatterers, whose words of praise are really a means of serving themselves rather than the one they are praising. And because praise appeals to human nature, it also leads the flattered person into pride and false self-confidence. A flatterer therefore both uses and abuses others.
David declares that man’s sinfulness can also lead to self-deceit and self-flattery. “Transgression speaks to the ungodly within his heart; there is no fear of God before his eyes. For it flatters him in his own eyes, concerning the discovery of his iniquity and the hatred of it. The words of his mouth are wickedness and deceit” (Ps. 36:1-3).
Isaiah wrote, “Behold, the Lord’s hand is not so short that it cannot save; neither is His ear so dull that it cannot hear.” But he follows those comforting words with the awesome declaration: “But your iniquities have made a separation between you and your God, and your sins have hidden His face from you, so that He does not hear. For your hands are defiled with blood, and your fingers with iniquity; your lips have spoken falsehood, your tongue mutters wickedness” (Isa. 59:1-3).
Jeremiah also exposed man’s natural deceitfulness, saying of the wicked, “‘They bend their tongue like their bow; lies and not truth prevail in the land; for they proceed from evil to evil, and they do not know Me,’ declares the Lord. ‘Let everyone be on guard against his neighbor, and do not trust any brother; because every brother deals craftily and every neighbor goes about as a slanderer. And everyone deceives his neighbor, and does not speak the truth, they have taught their tongue to speak lies’” (Jer. 9:3-5).
The ninth charge in Paul’s indictment of the unconverted man is closely related to the previous one. Quoting from part of Psalm 140:3, he says of ungodly men that the poison of asps is under their lips. The psalmist precedes that charge with the observation that “they sharpen their tongues as a serpent.” Because of the spiritually damning false doctrines and the deceitful character of most of the religious leaders in Jesus’ day, both He and John the Baptist described them as broods of vipers (Matt. 3:7; 12:34).
In describing asps, one writer says, “The fangs of such a deadly snake ordinarily lie folded back in the upper jaw but when the snake throws his head to strike, these hollow fangs drop down, and when the snake bites, the fangs press a sac of deadly poison hidden under the lips, ejecting venom into the victim.”
Even those who belong to the Lord can succumb to terrible deceit. David, the divinely anointed king of Israel and a man after God’s own heart, became enamored of Bathsheba when he happened to see her bathing. Although he was told she was married, he nevertheless summoned her to the palace and had sexual relations with her. When she became pregnant and notified David, the king flashed the fangs of deceit by inviting her husband, Uriah, to a sumptuous banquet, giving the impression that this man was a valued friend. But David was determined to have Bathsheba for his own wife, and the next morning he sent her husband to the battlefront with a sealed note to the commander that contained Uriah’s own death warrant (see 2 Sam. 11:1-15).
The tenth charge in the indictment continues the imagery of speaking, describing the ungodly as those whose mouth is full of cursing and bitterness (see Ps. 10:7).
Ara
(cursing) carries the idea of intense malediction, of desiring the worst
for a person and making that desire public through open criticism and
defamation.
Pikria
(bitterness) was not used so much in regard to physical
David described cursing, bitter persons as those
who “have sharpened their tongue like a sword … aimed bitter speech as their
arrow to shoot from concealment at the blameless; suddenly they shoot him, and
do not fear” (Ps.
(3:15-18) Man, Nature: there is the case of sinful acts. n Romans 3:15 and 16, Paul pictured the sinner’s feet. Just as his words are deceitful, so his ways are destructive. The Christians’ feet are shod with the Gospel of peace (Eph. 6:15); but the lost sinner brings death, destruction, and misery wherever he goes. These tragedies may not occur immediately, but they will come inevitably. The lost sinner is on the broad road that leads to destruction (Matt. 7:13-14); he needs to repent, trust Jesus Christ, and get on the narrow road that leads to life.
Romans 3:17 deals with the sinner’s mind: he does not know the way of God’s peace. This is what caused Jesus to weep over Jerusalem (Luke 19:41-44). The sinner does not want to know God’s truth (Rom. 1:21, 25, 28); he prefers to believe Satan’s lie. God’s way of peace is through Jesus Christ: "Therefore being justified by faith, we have peace with God through our Lord Jesus Christ" (Rom. 5:1).
In Romans 3:18, which cites Psalm 36:1, the sinner’s arrogant pride is prescribed: "There is no fear of God before their eyes." The entire psalm should be read to get the full picture. The ignorance mentioned in Romans 3:17 is caused by the pride of verse 18; for it is "the fear of the Lord" that is the beginning of knowledge (Prov. 1:7).
These quotations from God’s Law, the Old Testament Scriptures, lead to one conclusion: the whole world is guilty before God! There may be those who want to argue, but every mouth is stopped. There is no debate or defense. The whole world is guilty, Jews and Gentiles. The Jews stand condemned by the Law of which they boast, and the Gentiles stand condemned on the basis of creation and conscience.
The last three charges in Paul’s indictment relate to the conduct of the natural man. The eleventh charge is that the ungodly are innately murderous: their feet are swift to shed blood.
The cannibalism that still exists in a few
primitive tribes and the mass executions of innocent civilians that have taken
place in numerous “developed” countries in modern times are but extreme
manifestations of the basically
Even in the United States, with its Christian
heritage, since the turn of the twentieth century twice as many of its citizens
have been slain in private acts of murder than have been killed in all the wars
of its entire history. According to researcher Arnold Barnett of the
Massachusetts Institute of Technology, a child born today in any one of the
fifty largest cities in the United States has the chance of one in fifty of
being murdered. Dr. Barnett estimated that a baby born in the 1980s is more
likely to be murdered than an American soldier in World
Whether in peace or in war, man kills man. The mass exterminations by Nazis and Marxists in our own century have their counterparts in past history. The notorious terrorist Chang Hsien-chung in seventeenth-century China killed practically all the people in the Szechwan province. During that same century in Hungary, a certain countess systematically tortured and murdered more than six hundred young girls.
Obviously most people are far from possessing such extreme brutality. But Scripture makes clear that the seed of murder is one of a multitude of evil seeds that are universally found in the human heart and that, to some degree, inevitably grow and bear fruit.
The twelfth charge in the overall indictment, and the second one that is manifested in man’s conduct, is that of general destructiveness. Destruction and misery are in their paths. Suntrimma (destruction) is a compound word that denotes breaking in pieces and completely shattering, causing total devastation. The manifestation of wanton destruction is becoming more and more evident in much of modern society. Victims are often robbed or raped and then beaten or murdered for no reason other than sheer brutality. The terms “abused children” and “abused wives” have become common in contemporary vocabularies. Special divisions of many police departments and social service agencies are devoted specifically to dealing with the crimes and victims that those terms relate to.
Misery is a general term that denotes the resulting harm that is always in the wake of man’s acts of destruction against his fellow man. His destructiveness inevitably leaves a trail of pain and despair.
The thirteenth and last of the charges in Paul’s indictment of condemned man is that of his peacelessness: And the path of peace have they not known. The apostle is not speaking of the lack of inner peace—although that is certainly a characteristic of the ungodly person—but of man’s essential inclination away from peace. This charge is therefore something of a counterpart to the previous one.
Peace has never been more highly extolled than in our own day. But few would argue that peace, whether personal or international, actually characterizes our times. Nevertheless, as in Jeremiah’s day, many modern leaders are trying to heal the brokenness of their people superficially crying, “Peace; peace,” when obviously there is no peace (see Jer. 6:14).
God’s Word gives much counsel as to what makes for peace, and those individuals and societies who have chosen to follow His guidance have experienced relative times of peacefulness. But Scripture makes clear that peace will never dominate human society until the Prince of Peace returns to establish His kingdom on earth.
Note this gripping description of sin: It is a
debt, a burden, a thief, a sickness, a leprosy; a plague, poison, a serpent, a
sting; everything that man hates it is; a load of curses, and calamities beneath
whose crushing most intolerable pressure, the whole creation groaneth.… Who is
the hoary sexton that digs man a grave? Who is the
Who, by a more hideous metamorphosis than Ovid even fancied, changes gentle children into vipers, tender mothers into monsters and their fathers into worse than Herods, the murderers of their own innocents?—Sin.
Who casts the apple of discord on household hearts? Who lights the torch of war, and bears it blazing over trembling lands? Who by divisions in the church, rends Christ’s seamless robe?—Sin.
Who is this Delilah that sings the Nazirite
asleep and delivers up the strength of God into the hands of the uncircumcised?
Who with winning smiles on her face, honey flattery on her tongue,
Who turns the soft and gentlest heart to stone? Who hurls reason from her lofty throne, and impels sinners, mad as Gadarene swine, down the precipice, into a lake of fire?—Sin. (Cited in Elon Foster’s New Cyclopedia of Prose Illustrations [New York: T. Y. Crowell, 1877], p.696)
1. Sinful acts are murderous acts (Romans 3:15; cp. Isaiah 59:7): "Their feet are swift to shed blood." Note the word "swift." Men jump to kill; they are ready to spill and pour out blood... · out of hurt and shame. · to have their own way. · to get what they want. Men are cruel; they have natures that are prideful and selfish and greedy. They seek and seek to possess, even if it means turning against others and inflicting...
God’s case against man is that he is a murderer. His feet are "swift to shed blood."
2. Sinful acts are oppressive acts that destroy and cause misery (Romans 3:16; cp. Isaiah 59:7): "Destruction and misery are in their ways." Man is oppressive; he destroys and causes misery wherever he goes. Because of his pride, selfishness, and greed, man destroys...
He destroys and causes misery wherever he goes, even within his own family, neighborhood, and city. Whether by simple argument within his own family or by war, he is so destructive and full of misery that he brings destruction and misery wherever he goes.
3. Sinful acts are restless, disturbing and warring acts (Romans 3:17; cp. Isaiah 59:8): "And the way of peace have they not known." The idea is that men do not experience peace. They do not possess peace within themselves nor among others. They do not know peaceful ways, do not know... · how to secure peace. · how to keep peace.
Men are not peaceful within; they are restless. Their own soul is a civil war that experiences constant conflict. Therefore, men fail to secure peace not only within themselves, but among others. Wherever men are, they disturb and bring faction and war to others. This is God’s case against men.
4. Sinful acts are godless, irreverent, disrespectful acts (Romans 3:18; cp. Psalm 36:1): "There is no fear of God before their eyes." Their eyes and their attention are focused upon other things. They ignore and neglect God, living as though there is no God. They sense little if any responsibility toward God. They do not fear God; they do not fear His anger or wrath or judgment against them. They sense little desire or need to worship God or to study His Word and will. They seldom if ever praise and honor Him or do as He commands. The fear of God is not before their eyes; therefore, this is God’s case against men.
There is no fear of God before their eyes.” (3:18) The motive for man’s sinfulness is his built-in godlessness. The basic sinful condition of men and of their spiritual deadness is evidenced by the fact that, for the unsaved, there is no fear of God before their eyes. The full text of Psalm 36:1, from which Paul here quotes, reads:
“Transgression speaks to the ungodly within his heart; there is no fear of God before his eyes.” Because men’s ears are attuned to the lies of sin rather than to the truth of righteousness, they have an inadequate concern about and no fear of God.
Fearing God has both positive and negative elements. In a positive way, every true believer has reverential fear of God—an awesome awareness of His power, His holiness, and His glory. Proper worship always includes that kind of fear of the Lord. Reverential fear of God is the beginning of spiritual wisdom (Prov. 9:10). That kind of fear is a necessary element in one’s being led to salvation, as with Cornelius (Acts 10:2), and motivates new believers in their spiritual growth.
The negative aspect of the fear of God has to do with dread and terror. Even believers should have a measure of that kind of fear, which acts as a protection from sinning. The writer of Proverbs observed, “By the fear of the Lord one keeps away from evil” (16:6). For the very reason they are God’s children, believers are subject to His chastisement (see Heb. 12:5-11). Sometimes His dealing with disobedient believers can be severe, as with Ananias and Sapphira, who lost their lives for lying to the Holy Spirit. God used that punishment to produce godly fear and obedience within the early church (see Acts 5:1-11). Some of the believers in the church at Corinth also died or became ill by the direct infliction of God’s chastisement for their sin (1 Cor. 11:30).
Ideally, Christians should live holy lives out of love for God and gratitude for His grace and blessings. But it often takes God-given hardship and pain to pry believers from a sin, or it takes the prospect of punishment to keep them from getting into it in the first place.
Unbelievers, however, should have fear of God in its most intense and terrifying sense. The Old Testament is replete with stories of the Lord wreaking destruction and death as punishment for sins of all kinds. He destroyed Sodom and Gomorrah because of their indescribable immorality and turned Lot’s wife into a pillar of salt for simply looking back disobediently on that horrifying scene. Because of its unrelenting wickedness, God destroyed the whole human race through the Flood, saving only eight people. He drowned the entire Egyptian army when it tried to capture the children of Israel and bring them back to slavery in Egypt. The Lord ordered Moses to have the Levites slay some three thousand Israelite men who had erected and worshiped a golden calf while Moses was on the mountain receiving the tablets of the law from God.
On one occasion a group of Jews asked Jesus, in effect, why God had allowed Pilate to kill some Galileans and mingle their blood with their sacrifices and why eighteen people were killed when a tower at Siloam toppled over on them. He replied that those people did not die because they were more wicked than others, and then proceeded to warn His inquirers, “Unless you repent, you will all likewise perish” (Luke 13:1-5).
I once heard of a minister who was known for his emphasis on worship and had even written a book on the subject. One day when some members of his congregation were helping him move his office, they discovered a large box filled with pornographic magazines. One wonders if such a man could be a Christian; but it was obvious that he had little real fear of God’s righteous judgment or reverence for His honor and glory.
Robert Haldane, mentioned above, wrote, It is astonishing that men, while they acknowledge that there is a God, should act without any fear of His displeasure. Yet this is their character. They fear a worm of the dust like themselves, but disregard the Most High.… They are more afraid of man than of God—of his anger, his contempt, or ridicule. The fear of man prevents them from doing many things from which they are not restrained by the fear of God.… They love not His character, not rendering to it that veneration which is due; they respect not His authority. Such is the state of human nature while the heart is unchanged. (Exposition of Romans, p.121)
(3:19-20) Law: there is the case of the law or Scripture.
Here Paul declares God’s verdict on fallen, unrepentant mankind.
Oida (know) refers to knowledge that is certain and complete. We know with absolute certainty, Paul was saying, that whatever the Law says, it speaks to those who are under the Law, that every mouth may be closed, and all the world may become accountable to God. That declaration allows no exceptions. Every unredeemed human being, Jew or Gentile, is under the Law of God and accountable to God.
As Paul has already declared, the Jew is under God’s written law delivered through Moses, and the Gentile is under the equally God-given law written in his heart (Rom. 2:11-15). God is the Creator, Sustainer, and Lord of the entire universe, and it is therefore impossible for anyone or anything to be outside His control or authority.
The final verdict, then, is that unredeemed mankind has no defense whatever and is guilty of all charges. The defense must rest, as it were, before it has opportunity to say anything, because the omniscient and all-wise God has infallibly demonstrated the impossibility of any grounds for acquittal.
Absolute silence is the only possible response, just as there will be utter silence in heaven when the Lord Jesus Christ will one day break the seventh seal and release the seven trumpet judgments upon the condemned earth (see Rev. 8:1-6).
In anticipation of the argument that perhaps a few exceptionally zealous people might live up to the perfect standard of God’s law the apostle adds: by the works of the Law no flesh will be justified in His sight. There is no salvation through the keeping of God’s law because sinful man is utterly incapable of doing so. He has neither the ability nor the inclination within himself to obey God perfectly.
As Paul goes on to say, apart from the law, through the grace of God acting through the sacrifice of His Son, salvation and eternal life are made possible (Rom. 3:21-22). But under the law there can be no sentence but death.
Note five points. 1. The law or Scripture speaks to all. Note the words "we know." Paul means that this is an obvious truth, a clear truth that cannot be missed. All that has just been said has been quoted from Scripture (Romans 3:9-18), and Scripture speaks and is intended for everyone. Therefore, all are guilty before God, both Jew and Gentile. Scripture charges everyone with sin, declaring that "all are under sin"—all are subject to its power and authority. No one escapes the charge of God’s law. The case of God’s law is against everyone, both religionist and heathen.
2. The law or Scripture stops all boasting, every mouth that acts self-sufficient and declares the goodness of men. In light of man’s sinful nature and tongue and behavior, who can boast? Who can declare man’s goodness and righteousness and capabilities? Who can say anything against God’s case against men? Scripture declares that no man is good, leaving only One who could be good, and that is God. God alone is good; God alone deserves praise and honor and glory. Man can boast in God and in God alone. Man is silenced; he has no reason and no right to boast in himself. The law, God’s case against man, stops his mouth.
3. The law or Scripture makes all the world guilty before God. God’s law declares: "There is none righteous, no, not one" (Romans 3:10).
"There is none that doeth good [not perfectly], no, not one" (Romans 3:12).
"For as many as are of the works of the law are under the curse: for it is written, Cursed is every one that continueth not in all things which are written in the book of the law to do them" (Galatians 3:10).
"The whole world lieth in wickedness" (1 John 5:19).
No one escapes. All the world stands face to face before God—stands imperfect, stands short of His glory, stands guilty of sin.
4. The law justifies no sinful nature. Note carefully what is being said. · No law and no deed of the law will ever justify a man (make him acceptable to God). · Man cannot be justified by keeping any law or work. · Man cannot be justified by any righteousness or good deed of his own. · No sinful nature, no man, will be justified in God’s sight, not by the law.
5. The law shows man that he is sinful. The purpose of the law is not to justify, but to point out sin, to tell a man that he is a sinner. The law was given to make a man aware of his sin. Why? So that man would know he is sinful and that he needs to seek God for forgiveness and salvation. The word "therefore" in Romans 3:20 carries the meaning of "because," and gives the reason why the whole world is guilty. No sinful nature can obey God’s Law and be justified (declared righteous) in His sight. It is true that "the doers of the Law shall be justified" (Rom. 2:13), but nobody can do what the Law demands! This inability is one way that men know they are sinners. When they try to obey the Law, they fail miserably and need to cry out for God’s mercy. Neither Jew nor Gentile can obey God’s Law; therefore God must save sinners by some other means. The explanation of that means by which man can be saved occupied Paul for the rest of his letter.
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