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Ángel
Manuel Rodríguez
A.
Introduction
Justification is an image, used to
interpret the significance of Christ's death, taken from the court of
law. Two passages (2 Cor 5:18-21; Rom 5:8-9) bring together reconciliation
and justification by faith. The two terms are almost synonymous; but they
express different ideas. They are brought together because both are actions
of God made possible through the sacrificial death of Christ. Let us concentrate
on the connection between justification by faith and the cross of Christ,
or more precisely the effect of the death of Christ on the human race.
Such study must begin with Rom 5:12-19, where Paul explores the universal
significance of the death of the Lord. This is one of the most controversial
passages in the NT and deserves careful attention.
B.
Analysis of Rom 5:12-21
Romans 5:12-21 seems to serve a double
function. It seems to bring to an end the previous section and introduces
topics to be discussed in the following chapters (6-8). It is usually
recognized that 5:12 introduces a statement that is interrupted and to
which Paul returns possibly, in verse 18. There does seem to be an incomplete
thought in verse 12. Nevertheless, this has been considered to be a very
important passage in the interpretation of the whole section.
1.
Sin and Death Came into the World
Rom
5:12a
Therefore,
just as through one man sin came (eiselthen)
into the world,
and
death through sin,
Several things deserve notice as we
analyze this passage.
a) Originally Sin and Death Were not
Part of the World
Nothing is stated here about the origin
of sin and death because their presence in the world is almost taken for
granted. Nevertheless, one thing is clear, sin and death did not originate
in this world; they came from outside as intruders. Paul is simply describing
how they came into the world and took control of it.
b) Uniqueness of Adam's Sin
The sin of Adam was unique in the
history of the human race in terms of its consequences or results. His
sin opened the door for sin to enter or come into the world.
Sin is almost personified here, waiting at the door of the world for someone
to open it for him. What Adam did led to a universal impact in that he
allowed sin to take control of the world. The preposition dia
("through") is important because it identifies the one who mediated the
entrance of sin into the world. This personification of sin is developed
in Romans 6, where sin is described as a king who enslaved the human race.
c) "World" Designates Creation and
Humanity
The term "world" will include here
not only the world of humanity but everything God created during creation
week. The world is now the place where sin is fully active and in control.
Once Adam let sin in, even the natural world was affected by it (Rom 8:22-23).
The text suggests some kind of solidarity between Adam and the world.
However, in this context the term "world" emphasizes in a more specific
way the world of humankind and establishes a solidarity between Adam and
his descendants.
d) Death Came with Sin
Notice that sin came into the world
accompanied by another power: Death. We find the preposition dia
("through") used twice in the passage. One with the "one man"through
him sin came into the world, and the other with sinthrough
it death had access to the world. Here death is designating physical as
well as spiritual death. The sin of Adam brought separation from Godspiritual
deathand physical death as the consequences of sin.
2.
Death came to All
Rom
5:12b
in
this way death came to all men,
because
all sinned
a) "In this way"
Death is described here and in 12a
as a universal phenomenon that reached all humans as a result of the sin
of one man. The act of one had a universal impact and determined the condition
and fate of the world. Paul does not speculate about the connection between
the act of one and what happened to "all." Rather he describes the connection
in terms of consequences. This is what the phrase "and in this way"(kai
houtos) indicates. It is used in v. 12b to introduce the consequences
of the action of one man. When used in the absolute, without a coordinating
particle, it means "thus/in this way" or "accordingly/therefore" (cf.
Horst Balz, ("Houtos," Exegetical Dictionary of the NT,
vol. 2, edited by Horst Balz and Gerhard Schneider [Grand Rapids, MI:
Eerdmans, 1991], p. 549; C. E. B. Cranfield, Romans, vol. 1 [Edinburgh:
T. & T. Clark, 1975], p. 274). What was experienced by "all" was the
result or the consequence of what the one did. There is no reference
here to the imputation of the sin of Adam to "all". There is clearly
an element of solidarity with him, but it is a solidarity in
result not in the act and that was possible only because Adam
represented the human race. What he did had an impact on his descendants.
The fact that there is no reference to the imputation of sin may explain
why Paul avoids using in this passage the phrase "in Adam." Nowhere
do we find Paul saying "in Adam all sinned;" although he says "in Adam
all die" (1 Cor 15:22).
b) Death for All
The verb dierchomai means
"to go through, to reach" (U. Busse, "Dierchomai," Exegetical
Dictionary of the NT, vol. 1, p. 322) and with the preposition eis
('for, to") it means "reach, arrive at" (ibid.). The prefixed dia
("through"), attached to the verb, increases the force of the verb
suggesting the idea that "death passed through the whole range of human
kind" (James D. G. Dunn. Romans 1-8 [Dallas, TX: Word, 1988],
p. 273). It seems to have a distributive meaning: Death went through each
person, it took hold "of each individual man in turn, as the generations
succeeded one another" (Cranfield, Romans, vol. 1, p.
274). Notice that what reached every human being was not the specific
sin of Adam but death. The issue is not whether the sin of Adam is the
sin of the human race but that because of his sin death took hold of every
person.
c)
Because All Sinned
Possibly the most difficult phrase
in this verse is the last one: "Because all sinned" (NIV). The basic problem
is that in the previous statements Paul described the presence of sin
and death in the world as a result or consequence of the sin of the one,
but here he seems to attribute the death of all to their individual sinning.
The translation "in whom [Adam] all sinned" is today rejected based on
linguistic grounds. The preposition used here is not en ("in")
but epi ("on, for") and the possible antecedent of the pronoun,
"one man," is too far away (eph' ho = epi ho). It is
now recognized that eph' ho is functioning as a conjunction and
that it could mean "for this reason that, because," in a causal sense
(cf. 2 Cor 5:4; Phil 3:12; 4:10). In that case Paul would be saying that
humans die not only because of Adam's sin but also because they themselves
sinned. "Paul only intends to refer to the fact that death has overtaken
all people because they all have sinned (in their own way). For him, sin
is at the same time one's fate and one's act, for which one is responsible.
. . . With and since Adam, death and sin are inescapable. No person can
avoid them" (Peter Stuhlmacher, Paul's Letter to the Romans [Louisville,
KY: Westminster, 1994], p. 86). But eph' ho ("because") could
be also functioning as the equivalent of a consecutive conjunction (like
hoste), meaning "so that, with the result that" (Joseph A. Fitzmyer,
Romans [New York: Doubleday, 1993], p. 416). In that case the
text would be saying that through Adam death has reached every human being
with the result that they all commit sinful acts (Thomas R. Schreiner,
Romans [Grand Rapids, MI: Baker, 1998], pp. 274-277). As we will
see the second view seems to fit the context very well.
d) All Sinned
The next problem is the verb "sinned"
(hamarton). Whose sinning is this? A very common explanation
is that "all sinned" when Adam sinned. That is to say, the reason why
all die is that when Adam sinned "all" were already in Adam. His sin was
the sin of humanity and that explains why death is universal (cf. John
Murray, The Epistle to the Romans [Grand Rapids, MI: Eerdmans,
1959], pp. 182-86). This is different from the idea that Adam's sin is
imputed to each one of his descendants, to all. The argument suggests
that every person was in some realistic way in Adam when he sinned. This
interpretation faces several problems.
First,
it introduces into the passage an idea that is not present in it, namely,
the idea that humanity was in some real sense present "in Adam" when he
sinned, sinning in him. This creates serious theological problems
because it presupposes that every individual already existed or was present
in the person of Adam before he or she was born. Such a view introduces
in the Bible a dualistic view of the human nature.
Second,
the verb hamartano is used by Paul exclusively to refer to the
actual sin of a person or persons, not to their participation in
the sin of Adam. "There is nothing in the context or in the verse to suggest
that hamarton is being used in an unusual sense and that in every
other occurrence of this verb in the Pauline epistles the reference is
quite clearly to actual sin" (Cranfield, Romans, vol. p. 279).
This concrete meaning is present in Rom 2:12 where Paul states that some
people sin apart from the law and others sin under the law, again suggesting
that all are sinners.
Third,
the phrase "all sinned" was used by Paul in 3:23 to refer to the actual
sins of the human race in order to demonstrate that all are under the
power of sin (3:9). The past tense is to be interpreted as a gnomic
aorist, indicating that sin has characterized human experience throughout
history. Stanley E. Porter writes concerning this type of aorist: "One
of the ways in which language users refer to events is to see them not
simply as confined to one temporal sphere (past, present or future) but
as occurring over time and perhaps as representative of the kind of thing
which regularly occurs. . ." (Idioms of the Greek NT (Sheffield:
Sheffield Academic Press, 1994], p. 38). He gives as an example Rom 3:23.
There is not the slightest evidence in that passage to support the idea
that all sinned in Adam. In previous chapters Paul demonstrated that Gentiles
and Jews were sinners and that the only way out of this predicament was
through faith in Jesus (1:18-3:26).
Fourth,
in the next verse (5:13) Paul deals with the question of the period between
Adam and the giving of the Law and how could there have been sin before
the Law was given. If all sinned in Adam "the question of how they
could sin without further commandments just does not arise. It is because
Paul accuses all of having actively sinned against God that he must deal
with the possible objection that God's will was not revealed to men between
Adam and Moses" (A. J. M. Wedderburn, "The Theological Structure of Romans
5:12," New Testament Studies 19 [1972-73]:352).
e) Death and the Inevitability of
Sin
We should therefore take Paul's statement
at face value and conclude that according to him "death came to all with
the result that all sinned." Death, spiritual and physical death, is a
universal phenomenon and sin is also a universal phenomenon. In context
this means that through Adam, sin as an enslaving power came into the
world, and since then no one has been able to escape from its control.
The reason for that is that as a result of the sin of Adam deathspiritual
death as separation from God and physical deathcame into the world
and consequently sinning became inevitable or unavoidable for the human
race ("all sinned"). There is "no one righteous, not even one;" "Jews
and Gentiles alike are all under sin" (3:9,10). Adam's sin separated the
human race from God.
Summarizing,
Paul is stating that as a result of Adam's sin, all are born spiritually
dead, unable to resist the power of sin by themselves, making sin inescapable
for all. "According to Paul, death has entered the world as a
personified power, has penetrated to all humanity like an epidemic (Rom
5:12), and as a result of the fall death has established a domain of sovereignty
(15:21; Rom 5:14, 17), in which in its turn sin came to power (5:21) among
humankind, who deserved the judgment of death through their conduct (1:32)
and had to die (1 Cor 15:22)" (W. Bieder, "Thanatos
death," in Exegetical Dictionary of the NT, vol. 2, p. 130).
It
is important to notice that Paul does not explain the connection between
the sin of the one and the sin of the all. He simply states the facts:
The act of one brought sin as a power into the world, sin brought death
with it and because human beings are born in a state of death, separated
from God and in need of salvation, they are totally unable by themselves
to overcome sin (cf. Rom 8:6-8). As Adventists we do believe that the
sin of Adam weakened human nature making our sinning unavoidable. We have
also taught that because of Adam's sin we exist in a state of separation
from God, in condemnation and needing redemption. Because he was the representative
of the human race, what he did had an impact on all of his descendants.
We exist in solidarity with him as our common ancestor and as such he
determined the fate of the human race. Sin and death invaded the natural
world and especially human nature.
3.
Sin Death and the Law
Rom
5:13-14
For
before the law sin was in the world.
But
sin is not taken into account when there is no law.
Nevertheless,
death reigned from the time of Adam to the time of Moses,
even
over those who did not sin in the likeness of the transgression of Adam,
who
was a type of the one to come.
a)
Universality of Death and the Law: An Objection
Paul is now defending his conclusion
that all sinned. This is the function of the explanatory gar,
"for." The fundamental issue is the one of the universality of death.
The objection that could be raised against his interpretation is that
sin cannot be reckoned to the individual if the law was not in place;
therefore death as a penalty for sin could not have been a universal phenomenon
before the law came in. In order for death to be present there had to
be a nexus between sin and the law. If the two are not present then death
could not be present because sin, defined as a violation of the law, was
not present (cf. Dunn, Romans 1-8, p. 275). In the objection
sin is being defined as transgression of the law and not as a power that
invaded the world and death is considered to be only the result of the
sin of each individual.
Paul
answers back by pointing to the obvious fact that death reigned
from Adam to Moses even over those whose sin was not, like Adam's, a violation
of a specific command. For Paul death is not only the penalty for specific
sins but the consequence or result of the sin of Adam and in that sense
death was present in the world even before the Torah was given to Israel.
This is an irrefutable fact. Humans were under the power of death and
consequently they sinned, but not exactly in the way Adam sinned. He violated
a specific command or prohibition given to him by God. Here it is
obvious that the sin of Adam is not considered to be the sin of all, even
though the consequence of Adam's sin affected all.
For
Paul death is not simply the result of sin defined as a transgression
of the law; death, as a result of Adam's sin, is a universal phenomenon,
a state of alienation from God, a power from whose grasp no one can escape.
The law, Paul will argue in 5:20, gives us knowledge of what is already
there, sin (cf. 3:20; 7:7; Ivan Blazen, "In Christ," [Unpublished paper],
p. 86). "In vv. 13-14, then, Paul is reasserting the universality of death
in the face of an objection to the effect that his own emphasis on the
law as bringing wrath (4:15) would imply the absence of death in the absence
of torah" (Douglas J. Moo, The Epistle to the
Romans [Grand Rapids, MI: Eerdmans, 1996], p. 332).
b) Adam: A Type of Christ
Adam is described as a type of Christ
in the sense that he was at the head of the human race, its representative
and what he did had an impact and determined the fate of the race. In
Adam's case, "the universal impact of his action prefigures the universal
impact of the action of Christ" (Moo, Romans, p. 334). One could
say that "Adam in his universal effectiveness for ruin is the type which-in
God's design-prefigures Christ in His universal effectiveness for salvation.
It is to be noted that it is precisely his parabasis/"disobedience"
(which has just been mentioned) and its results which constitute him the
tupos tou mellontos [a type of the one to come]" (Cranfield,
Romans, vol. 1, p. 283).
Romans
5:13-14 essentially serves to establish the fact that death is a universal
phenomena directly related to the sinful act of Adam in terms of its direct
consequence. The verses that follow contrast the results of Adam's action
with Christ's action and their respective results.
4.
The Gift and the Trespass
Rom
5:15
But
the gift is not like the trespass (paraptoma).
For
if the many (hoi polloi) died for the trespass of the one man,
how
much more did God's grace (charisma)
and
the gift that came by the grace (dorea en chariti) of the one
man, Jesus Christ,
overflow
(eperisseusen) to the many (eis tou polous)!
a)
The Gift is not Like the Trespass
This verse is introduced by the contrasting
particle "but" because Paul has just stated that Adam was a type of Christ
and he now wants to clarify that there are significant differences between
the two of them. He immediately states that, "The free gift is not like
the trespass," that is to say, it is
greater than the trespass. Paul is not saying that the work of Christ
paralleled in some way what Adam did. He is in fact contrasting the two
in order to show that what Christ performed was greater and more meaningful
than what Adam brought as a result of his sin. The parallelism is not
exactly antithetical. We do find a contrast in the first two lines, but
the opposite of "the many died" should have been "the many will be made
alive." Instead, we read, "to the many overflowed." Observe also that
"the many," under Adam, functions grammatically as the
subject of the verb ("the many died"), while under Christ they are the
indirect object introduced by the preposition eis ("for, to"),
which identifies them as the intended target of the action of
the verb. The verb is perisseuo, "to be more
than enough, abound, overflow."
b) The Abundance of the Gift
The verb "overflow" seems
to introduce in the passage the concept of provision
(cf. 2 Cor 1:5a; 4:15; 8:2; 9:8ab; Eph 1:8). It
is not emphasizing the act of justification but the extent of the provision.
This means that, "the action of grace 'overflowing to' the many through
Christ thus has the connotation of an abundant eschatological provision
of righteousness for the many and a presentation of its riches
to them" (David A. Sapp, An Introduction to Adam Christology
in Paul [Ann Arbor, MI: University Microfilms International, 1990],
pp. 324-25). Adam's sin resulted in the fact that the many actually die;
but Christ's act of grace provided more grace
than was needed to deal with the problem created by Adam's trespass.
The provision was greater or larger than the need, and reveals
God's generosity. The gift was greater than the trespass; therefore "the
free gift is not like the trespass."
The
contrast between Adam and Christ in this passage and in the others that
follow make one essential point, namely, that "the single acts of the
two respective persons have comprehensive, all-embracing effects" (Don
Garlington, Faith, Obedience, and Perseverance: Aspects of Paul's
Letter to the Romans [Tübingen: J. C. B. Mohr, 1994], p. 99).
The sinful act, the fall (paraptoma="sin, false step") of one
had a universal impact; the act of grace of the other brought a provision
of grace of such magnitude that it was even more than the many needed.
The abundance of the provision and the fact that it is offered to all
implies that from now on the destiny of all is determined by their response
to the gift that is being offered to them. The human destiny is no longer
determined by the sinful act of Adam!
5.
The Gift and Condemnation
Rom
5:16
Again,
the gift (dorema) not like [the result] of (dia) the
one man's sin:
for
the judgment (krima) from (eks) one [sin]
to
(eis) condemnation (katakrima),
but
the gift (charisma) from (ek) many trespasses (paraptoma)
to
(eis) justification.
The contrast now is "between the gift and what came through Adam, rather
than with Adam's trespass as such" (Dunn, Rom 1-8, p. 280). In
the previous verse the contrast was mainly between the gift and Adam's
sin. Once more we are told that, "The free gift is not like the effect
of that one man's sin." What Christ brought is radically different from
the result of the sin of Adam. His sin brought, as a result of judgment,
condemnation; a negative result. But the gift of grace does not deal only
with the one sin of Adam but with the many transgressions
(paraptoma) and results (eis) in justification
or acquittal for the sinners. The gift is superior! "That one single misdeed
should be answered by judgment, this is perfectly understandable: that
the accumulated sins and guilt of all the ages should be answered by God's
free gift, this is the miracle of miracles, utterly beyond human comprehension"
(Cranfield, Romans, vol. 1, p. 286).
But
the contrast is not only between one transgression versus Christ
dealing with many transgressions. The real contrast is located
in the nature of the result of the actions of Adam and Christ. Adam's
action resulted in condemnation (eis katakrima), the gift of
God results in justification (eis dikaioma). How is the sinner
justified? This is explained in vs 17.
6.
Accepting the Gift
Rom
5:17
For
if, by the trespass of the one man,
death
reigned (ebasileusen) through that one man,
how
much more
will
those who receive God's abundant provision (perisseia) of grace
and
of the gift of righteousness reign (basileusousin) in life
through
the one man, Jesus Christ.
Once
more the contrasts are not exact parallels, but the parallelism present
in the text is basically antithetical. The verse is introduced by the
particle "For" (gar), which introduces a further elaboration
or development of vs 16; this is an explanatory gar. It is important
to observe that the effect of the trespass of Adam is universal: Death
reigned over all. This was already established by Paul (vs 15), but now
he personifies death and makes it an enslaving power. One would expect
Paul to say that the effect of Christ's act of grace was that life reigned
over all, but he does not make that statement.
a) Grace as Justification
The gift of grace mentioned in vs
16 is now identified as justification. In vs 16 Paul did not identify
those for whom the act of grace resulted in justification. This he now
explains in vs 17. In vs 15 Paul stated that the act of grace "overflowed"
(perisseuo) for the "many." One could argue that the "many" are
"those who receive the abundance (perisseia) of grace and justification,"
that is to say, believers. But it is also possible to say that provision
was made for the "many," that is to say for all, but only those who receive
the provision are indeed justified. In order to make a clear conceptual
connection between what he is saying here and in vs 15 he uses a noun
(perisseia, "abundance") derived from the verb perisseuo
("to abound, overflow") used in vs 15. This confirms our conclusion
that the overflow of grace is to be interpreted in terms of provision
that is to be received or appropriated.
b) Grace is to be Accepted
According to vs 16 the act of grace
"has arisen in response to the many trespasses. But not all who have trespassed
will be justified. Only those who actually receive that gracious act and
the abundance of the gift of righteousness that it brings will indeed
be justified" (Sapp, Adam, p. 326). That is probably why the
apostle said that the act of grace is not like the one trespass. One could
even say that "death shows no partiality and extends its dominion 'over'
all (cf. 5:14). But grace freely grants righteousness to those who will
receive it and then receives them as ruling subjects in the kingdom of
grace" (Ibid.). Grace is not an enslaving power that enters into the world
and makes all people subject to its power. This is rather a characteristic
of sin and death. Grace offers itself to humans as a gift from God and
calls sinners to become members of its kingdom, to allow themselves to
be ruled by it. Verse 21 indicates that grace reigns through righteousness,
suggesting once more that "the eschatological lordship of grace is limited
rather than universal in scope. It is a reign of those who receive grace,
that is, who receive the gift of righteousness" (Ibid., p. 323).
The
fact that the grace of righteousness is a gift supports also the idea
that it is universal in its provision but not in its salvific effectiveness
unless all receive it. A gift can only be offered to those for whom it
was obtained. God has this wonderful gift of justification for the human
race and he has revealed it to us in and through Christ (Rom 3:21). But
this is the justification that comes only by faith (3:21-22). We have
to receive it, to say "Yes" to the Lord.
Romans
5:17 is extremely important in the understanding of Paul's argument because
it is a summary of what he has been saying in the previous verses and
forms the basis for what he is going to add in the following verses.
7.
Condemnation and Justification for All
Rom
5:18
Consequently
(ara oun), just as through(dia) one trespass
to
(eis) condemnation
for
(eis) all men,
so
also through (dia) one act of righteousness
to
(eis) justification of life
for
(eis) all men.
a)
Comparison and Contrast: Behavior and Result
Now the main contrast is between the
conduct or behavior of the two representatives of the human race. There
are no verbs in this passage; it is indeed a "masterly compression of
the different aspects picked out in the preceding verses" (Dunn, Romans
1-8, p. 283). This fact makes the interpretation of the verse difficult
and will require from us to look carefully at the context. But first,
let us examine the verse itself. It is formed by prepositional phrases,
two main prepositional phrases introduced by dia, "through."
We also have a comparison in which the protasis is introduced by "as"
and the apodosis by "so." Paul is not simply comparing the behaviors of
Adam and Christ and the respective consequences, but contrasting them:
"Just as through one trespass to/for (eis) all men for (eis)
condemnation, so also through one act of righteousness for/to (eis)
all men for/to (eis) justification of life."
We
also find the preposition eis used twice in each of the prepositional
phrases. The first usage introduces the extension of the action
("to all men"). Since there is no verb in the phrase it is difficult
to determine what is the connection between "the trespass of one" and
the statement "to all men." The same applies to the second prepositional
phrase. The second use of the preposition eis introduces the
ultimate goal or result of both actions--"to condemnation;" "to
justification of life." Paul is stressing "the correspondence between
the two contrasting causes (dia) [disobedience\obedience] and
ultimate ends (eis) [condemnation\justification] and in between
their equivalent extension (eis) [to all men]" (F. Blass and
A. Debrunner, A Greek Grammar of the NT, [Chicago, IL: University
of Chicago Press, 1961], p. 255).
b) Use of the Preposition eis
("to, for")
The first usage of the preposition
eis is quite clear; it serves to identify those "to whom the
act of Adam and Christ extends ('to all'), that is to say, the penalty
or benefits are intended for all" (Sapp, Adam, p. 326). The second
usage is a little more complicated because it indicates purpose or intended
result and it takes not an object but a relationship or a condition--"condemnation,"
"justification." The usage of the preposition does not indicate by
itself whether the purpose it points to is actually realized or simply
aimed at. This is to be decided by the context (M. J. Harris,
"Prepositions and Theology in the Greek NT," New International Dictionary
of NT Theology, vol. 3, edited by Colin Brown [Grand Rapids, MI:
Zondervan, 1978], p. 118; Stanley E. Porter, Idioms, pp. 152-153;
cf. Rom 10:1; 12:3; Col 3:10).
c) Justification and Universalism:
Justification for All
One could argue that the parallel
between Adam and Christ would require the preposition eis ("for,
to") to have the same meaning in both cases. That is to say,
if in the case of Adam its purpose was actually realized-his action resulted
in the condemnation of all-it must have the same meaning with respect
to Christ-his obedience resulted in justification for all. This is a logical
argument but it is valid only if we are willing to embrace universalism.
The condition in which we found ourselves as a result of Adam's sin was
unavoidable and permanent. Therefore, the condition
in which "all" find themselves as a result of the obedience of Jesus has
to be unavoidable and permanent, not related at all
to a personal decision. But this conclusion cannot be supported by the
rest of the Bible and particularly by any of the Pauline Epistles. Universalism
is not a biblical doctrine and there is no reason to introduce it in our
interpretation of Rom 5:18.
d) Legal Universal Justification:
Justification for All
Some have tried to avoid the trap
of universalism, while still emphasizing the parallel between Adam and
Christ, arguing that all were legally justified in Christ independent
of any faith-commitment but that one could reject that legal status through
a personal decision against Christ. This suggestion actually breaks the
parallel between Adam and Christ and destroys the internal logical consistency
of the argument. Let me explain. The actual result of the sin of Adam,
namely condemnation, was not something that we could reject, avoid or
even accept. It was simply ours. Pressing the parallel between Adam and
Christ would mean that the "righteousness of life" that Christ brought
"to all men" was also unavoidable and permanent. By introducing the idea
of a legal universal justification that could be rejected the parallel
between Adam and Christ, on which the argument rests, is broken. Consequently,
Rom 5:18 should not be used to support the theory of legal universal salvation.
The best solution is to acknowledge that in the case of Adam the preposition
eis ("for, to") refers to the actual result of his action-it
brought death for all-, but that in the case of Christ justification is
intended for all but that not all will be justified because it has to
be received, accepted. This is supported by linguistic and contextual
arguments.
e) Contextual Analysis
It is generally accepted that vs 18
is related to vs 12 where we find an inconclusive statement made by Paul.
In vs 18 Paul summarizes what he was saying in vs 12 and then adds the
apodosis to it. But one cannot deny that the intervening verses contribute
to the summary of vs 18 (Garlington, Faith, p. 101: "The verse
draws on two sources, one is vs 12, but the intervening verses contribute
also"). For instance we find some clear linguistic parallels with vs 16:
"condemnation" (katakrima), "trespass" (paraptoma),
and "justification" (dikaioma-dikaiosis). We
should keep in mind that vs 16 is explained in vs 17.
Therefore,
if we were to look for verbs to interpret vs 18 we have to go back to
the previous verses. We will be looking for the following grammatical
structure found in that verse: Verb + the preposition eis
("to, for") + an indirect personal object. This same structure is
used concerning Adam and the result of his sin and Christ and the result
of his salvific act. Of those elements the only one missing in vs 18 is
the verb. If we find the same grammatical structure somewhere else in
the context we could suggest that Paul has the same verb in mind in vs
18. With respect to Adam the only place where we find this grammatical
structure is in 5:12:
|
Preposition
eis |
Indirect
Personal Obj.
pantas anthropous |
Subject
ho thanatos |
Verb
dielthen |
|
to |
all |
men |
death |
spread |
The
connection with vs 12 that we just mentioned allows us to take the verb
it uses to express the same thought that we find in vs 18. Notice the
parallel:
5:12 |
eis
pantas anthropous ho thanatos dielthen |
|
to
all men |
death
spread |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
5:18 |
di'
henos paraptomatos eis pantas anthropous [ho thanatos dielthen] |
|
through
one trespass |
to
all |
men |
[death
spread] |
In
an attempt to be loyal to what Paul is saying it is necessary to use
the phrase "death spread" from vs 12 in vs 18. The passage would then read,
"Therefore, as through one man's trespass [death spread (dierchomai)]
to all men to condemnation . . ." (Suggested by Sapp, Adam,
p. 328). The "one trespass" is the one of Adam as vs 12 indicates: "Through
one man's sin." The second preposition eis expresses the actual
result-condemnation. This fits the context very well, does not violate
the thought expressed by the apostle, and establishes a clear connection
with vs 12.
We
should now deal with vs18b and the verb that needs to be supplied there.
It was the context, as we have seen, that informed us about how the disobedience
of Adam affected all men. We should do the same with respect to the work of God
in Christ. Here we have to look for the same grammatical structure: verb + eis ("for, to") + indirect
personal object. The answer is found in vs 15 which is developed
and clarified in vss 16-17.
| 5:15 |
he
charis. . . eis tous pollous eperisseusen |
|
grace |
to
the many |
abounded |
|
|
|
|
|
|
| 5:18 |
eis
panta athropous [he
charis eperisseusen] |
|
to
all |
men |
[grace
abounded] |
|
It
seems to us that this is what the context suggests. The benefit of this
approach is that there is some control in the selection of the verbs
to be used in vs 18 making it unnecessary for the interpreter to introduce
his or her own preference.
It
is also interesting to notice that the two usages of the preposition eis ("for, to")
+ an impersonal object in
vs 18 finds their parallels in the immediate context, applied once to
Jesus and once to Adam.
| 5:16 |
eis
katakrima (Adam)
to
condemnation |
|
eis
dikaioma (Christ)
for justification |
| |
|
|
|
| 5:18 |
eis
katakrima (Adam)
to
condemnation |
|
eis
dikaiosin tsoes (Christ)
to justification of life |
This
shows that Paul is expressing in vs 18 ideas found already in the previous
verse; he is probably summarizing what he stated before. Nevertheless,
finding a verb for vs 18 is not indispensable for its proper understanding.
The preposition eis ("for, to") can be used, as we already
did, to elucidate the meaning of the verse.
It
is useful to remember that in vs 17 is a development of vs 16. The noun
"abundance," used in vs 17, is associated with justification by faith
and those who receive it. According to vs 17, that abundance of God's
grace is to be received or appropriated by the believer. Therefore,
the second preposition eis in vs 18 points to that which the
act of Christ was aiming. God's grace revealed in Christ does have
universal relevance. God wants every individual to be saved, but the
fact that justification and life are both mentioned in vs 18 and that
both are
"gifts (dorea, 5:15d, 17b) to be received (5:17b) by faith
demonstrates that Christ's death does not result in the justification
of all men" (Sapp, Adam, p. 327). Justification as "life" belongs
only to those who believe. Once more we can see the provision is universal
in its extent but limited in its effect because of human freedom.
8.
Made Sinners Through Adam; Made Righteous Through Christ
Rom
5:19
For
just as through (dia) the disobedience of one man
the
many were made (kathistemi) sinners,
so
also through (dia) the obedience of the one man
the
many will be made (kathistemi) righteous.
a) Meaning of the Verb Kathistemi ("Made")
This passage is not as complicated
as the previous one. The verse emphasizes the kind of people that individuals
have become "as a result of the work of Adam and Christ respectively:
by his disobedience, Adam has turned his posterity into sinners, while
Christ, by his obedience, has made his people righteous" (Garlington,
Faith, p. 103). Notice that the same verb is used in the comparison
or contrast between Adam and Christ. But perhaps more important, when
associated with Adam the verb is in the past tense while when associated
with Christ it is in the future tense. The verb kathistemi in
its passive form means "to be instituted as something, to become something"
and is the equivalent of "to become" (ginomai; see Albrecht Oepke,
"Kathistemi," Theological Dictionary of the NT, vol.
3, edited by Gerhard Kittel [Grand Rapids, MI: Eerdmans, 1965], p. 445).
How did the many become sinners? The answer is given in verses 12 and
13: Because of Adam's sin, death came into the world alienating us from
God and making it impossible for any person to escape the enslaving power
of sin. We are sinners not only because we commit sinful acts but because
we are by nature separated from God. The context does not suggest that
the sin of Adam was imputed to the many. The "many" become righteous when
they accept by faith the gift of justification (v. 17), thus bringing
to an end their alienation from God.
b) Use of "Many" and "All"
Logically, vs 18 provides the basis
for what is said in vs 19 and that is why it is introduced by the explanatory
gar. The shift from "all men" in vs 18 to "the many" is also
significant. In the Semitic languages the totality of a group is referred
to by the term "many." Those languages did not have the adjective "all"
in the sense of "every;" they usually used a noun (kol=the totality;
pas=every, the whole , pl. all things) (see, G. Nebe, "Polus,"
Exegetical Dictionary of the NT, vol. 3, p.132). Instead,
the OT used the pl. of rab="much," "many," "great," rabbim.
In Greek hoi polloi could have an exclusive meaning,
that is, it means "many but not all." However, in the NT the inclusive
meaning prevails--"all." In Romans 5 the term designates the totality
of two groups, those who belong to Adam and those who belong to Christ,
who have received the gift of grace. We also find the expression in vs
18 "all men" which means the totality of humankind. The provision was
made for the human race but the only ones who benefit from it are the
"many," the totality of those who belong to Jesus.
We
can conclude that Rom 5:12-19 describes the event of the cross as an act
of grace of God through Christ. This act has as its goal the totality
of the human race. There is enough grace to save the whole human race
from beginning to end. The cross of Christ revealed that abundance of
grace but the human race has to receive it, to take the gift brought into
existence by God. The gift is in essence the gift of righteousness by
faith. Those who accept it become part of the "many" who are in Christ.
It is therefore important to observe that the comparison between Adam
and Christ is rather a contrast and does not require equivalency of action
or result. In fact what Christ did was greater, larger in its extent and
power than what Adam did.
9.
Law and Sin
Rom
5:20-21
Paul returns now to topic of the law.
He mentions a historical fact-the law was given after sin was in the world-,
and a theological conclusion-the law joined the connection existing between
sin and death with the intention of unmasking sin as sin (Rom 7:3). The
law reveals sin for what it is-a state of rebellion that results in eternal
condemnation. It increases sin in the sense that it identifies it. The
law is totally unable to change the condition created by Adam but makes
it unbearable. This results in something positive: Grace is revealed in
all of its majesty and power as God's loving disposition to forgive sinners.
The
last verse is the conclusion or summary of the discussion. It was the
intention of God's grace to remove the human race from the dominion of
sin and death. Sin reigned accompanied by or in the dominion of (en,
"in") death, but now grace reigns by virtue of/by means of (dia)
the gift of justification that results in (eis) eternal life.
C.
General Remarks and Conclusion
Paul is obviously contrasting the
result of the sin of Adam with the result of the salvific work of Christ.
He is not arguing that the way sin came into the world parallels the way
the gift of God came into the world. The parallel is basically limited
to the fact that what Adam did had a universal impact and what Christ
did also has a universal impact. The implicit reason is that Adam stood
at the head of the human race and what he did determined the fate of his
descendants. Now Christ is the one who stands at the head of the human
race and determines its destiny in terms of the response we give to his
offer of salvation (Rom 5:17). Since Adam could not pass on to his descendants
what he did not posses, the result of his sin was death and sin for all
members of the human race. Grace is not an enslaving power but its benefits
are intended for all human beings (it has a universal dimension) who by
faith receive it. Grace, like sin and death, reigns, but it does it through
righteousness not through fate.
The
idea that every human being was in Adam when he sinned is totally foreign
to the passage under consideration. To argue that when Adam sinned we
all sinned because we were in him is to introduce in the Bible a wrong
understanding of human nature. Implicit in the statement that we were
in Adam is the idea that we pre-existed our natural birth and that therefore
we are also responsible for Adam's sin. Biblical anthropology rejects
any type of anthropological dualism and teaches that a human being is
an indivisible unit for whom it is impossible to exist in a non-physical
form. By insisting that we were in Adam and sinned when he sinned is being
taught, unintentionally, that we are responsible for actions committed
by us outside our personal physical form but inside the body of Adam.
Those who promote this view are not using that language in a metaphorical
way because according to them we actually sinned, became sinners, in the
sin of Adam. Only persons are responsible for their actions, therefore,
we had to exist in some form when Adam sinned in order to be responsible
for his sin. Such ideas are foreign to Rom 5:12-21.
However,
we must acknowledge that the sin of Adam had a universal impact. That
is exactly what Paul is arguing. We are all sinners, we are all separated
from God because of the sin of Adam. Paul explains what he means by saying
that when Adam sinned sin and death came into the world. Certainly, Adam's
sin is not our sin, but he made it impossible for any human being not
to sin because death as a universal power came into the world as a result
of Adam's sin. This is physical and spiritual death.
We were separated from God as a race with a human nature that could not
resist the power of sin. Our sinful condition was followed by sinful acts
because we were spiritually dead. Paul says, "The sinful mind is hostile
to God. It does not submit to God's law, nor can it do so. Those controlled
by the sinful nature cannot please God" (Rom 8:7). It is that natural
condition that we obtained from Adam; "in Adam all die" (1 Cor 15:22).
We are sinners not because when Adam sinned we, who allegedly were in
him, sinned, but because we came under the power of death, separated from
God, making sin unavoidable or inescapable to us.
Ellen
G. White states, "Adam was endowed with a nature pure and sinless, but
he fell because he listened to the suggestions of the enemy. His posterity
became depraved; by one man's disobedience many were made sinners" ("Self-denial,"
Youth Instructor, 04-01-97, pr. 01). She also comments, "Because
man fallen could not overcome Satan with his human strength, Christ came
from his royal courts of heaven to help him with His human and divine
strength combined. Christ knew that Adam in Eden, with his superior advantages,
might have withstood the temptations of Satan, and conquered him. He also
knew that it was not possible for man, out of Eden, separated from the
light and love of God since the fall, to resist the temptations of Satan
in his own strength" (1 Selected Messages, p. 279).
It is that condition that we received from Adam, not his personal sin.
The
gift of grace that came through Christ is sufficient to save every human
being, every sinner. We are constituted righteous by accepting the gift
and then we are empowered by the Spirit to overcome sin in our lives.
The law could not revive us but Christ can: "For if a law had been given
that could impart life, then righteousness would certainly have come by
the law. But the Scripture declares that the whole world is a prisoner
of sin, so that what was promised, being given through faith in Jesus
Christ, might be given to those who believe" (Gal 3:21-22). The gift is
offered to all but is received only by those who believe. Adam's act of
disobedience separated the race from God but Christ's sacrifice brings
forgiveness for our sins and re-unites us with God. Legal universal justification
is not what Paul is teaching in Rom 5:12-21.
The
use of the phrase "in Christ" to support that concept creates serious
theological problems that go against the gospel itself. The phrase "in
Christ" is not found in Rom 5:12-21. This is amazing because Paul uses
it very often in his epistles but avoids it here. If we were to accept
the idea that the whole human race was in Christ as it was in Adam we
create a serious theological problem. The argument that when Adam sinned
we all actually sinned because we were in him would mean that when Christ
died we actually saved ourselves or contribute to our salvation because
we were in him. That is to say, he was not our substitute and our sin
was not transferred to him because we were "in Him;" we actually died
for our sins in the same way that we actually sinned when Adam sinned.
This is an unintentional aberration of the gospel of salvation through
faith in what Christ, and only Christ, did for us on the cross. Those
ideas are clearly absent from Rom 5:12-21.
Paul
describes in Rom 5:12-19 the event of the cross as an act of divine grace.
The manifestation
of this gift has as its only objective the human race. Through Christ
God provided enough grace to save the whole human race, since the time
of Adam to the end of mercy. But this gift must be accepted in order to
be ours. The gift is justification by faith and those who accept it are
the "many" who are in Christ through faith in him.
|
. |