Since I discuss a variety of different subjects on this blog, here is one on a disputed interpretation of Romans 7. My wife once told me that as a Christian teen she read Romans 7:14ff in the Living Bible and thought, “That is me!” Was she wrong in her hermeneutics? Is Paul talking about his Christian or pre-Christian experience in this very auto-biographical chapter?
Here are some arguments for both positions. You will be able to tell where I stand.
Describing Paul’s Pre-conversion Experience:
- Prevailing view among Greek Fathers.
- Expressions such as “sold as a slave to sin” and “unspiritual” more fitting as a description of unsaved rather than genuine believers.
- If the “now” of 8:1 means “now” in a temporal sense, Paul is passing from description of unsaved to the saved condition.
- Absence of Holy Spirit from discussion hard to understand if a redeemed experience is under review.
Describing Paul’s Experience as a Christian:
- The conclusion of Augustinian and Reformed interpreters.
- Paul’s change from past tense in Rom.7:1-13 to present tense in Rom.7:14-25 indicates a change from a pre- to a post- conversion description.
- Description of pre-conversion life in Php. 3:6 as a “blameless” condition regarding the law does not square with wretchedness described in this passage.
- Progress of thought in Romans has passed beyond description of unsaved state (1:18-3:20 and 3:21- 4:25) and he is now giving attention to sanctification, etc.
- Conflict described here can and does characterize the Christian life apparent elsewhere in Paul (see Galatians 5:16, 17).
- The power of self-diagnosis at such a penetrating level (Rom.7:22, 23) is beyond capability of an unbeliever.
- Use of ton eso anthrwpon according to which Paul delights in the law of God (Rom. 7:22) is used elsewhere only of a believer (2 Cor. 4:16 and Eph. 3:16).
- A person desiring such holiness of life could only be a believer, since in Romans an unbeliever does not long for God, but is hostile toward Him (see Rom.3:10 ff).
- Last verse acknowledges deliverance in Christ, yet goes on to state that the very problem described in 14-24 as though it continues to be a problem for one who knows the Lord.
10. If the language of Rom.7:24 seems too strong for Paul to apply to himself as a believer, consider the language of 1 Tim. 1:15: “The saying is trustworthy and deserving of full acceptance, that Christ Jesus came into the world to save sinners, of whom I am the foremost.” ( ἁμαρτωλοὺς σῶσαι, ὧν πρῶτός εἰμι ἐγώ)
Leon Morris’ comment: “I do not see how it can be denied that what Paul says refers to the regenerate. But this is not the whole story: Romans 7 leads right into Romans 8. But it is part of the story and an important part. Paul is not talking about the whole of his Christian experience but what happens when the believer sins.” He quotes Packer: “This passage reproduces Paul’s present theological self-knowledge as a Christian: not all of it, but just that part of it which is germane to the subject at hand – namely, the function of the law in giving knowledge of sin.”
John Brown: “as he has proved from his own past experience that the law cannot make a bad man good, he now proves from his present experience that law cannot make a good man better. The law can tell us what we ought to be and do, but it cannot make us what it requires us to be.”