Tag Archives: crucifixion

PERSON OF CHRIST: His burial

THE WORDS OF THE BIBLE, THE CHRISTIAN SCRIPTURES, AS FOUND IN THE PROPHECY OF ISAIAH CHAPTER 53, VERSE 9:

53:9  And He made His grave with the wicked, and with the rich in His death; because He had done no violence, neither was any deceit in His mouth.

And He made His grave with the wicked- verses 7 and 8 of Isaiah 53 foretold the way men would treat the Lord Jesus.  They oppressed and afflicted Him, sought to destroy His character, and at last took Him and slaughtered Him on a cross.  In all this it seemed as if they were in control, and that He was the helpless victim of circumstances, but this verse tells us it was not so.  The apostle Peter emphasised this on the day of Pentecost when he declared that the nation of Israel had by means of the wicked hands of the Gentiles crucified Him, and allowed that crucifixion process to continue until He was slain, Acts 2:23; they callously allowed Him to suffer, and only planned to curtail His sufferings because the feast day was near. There was another dimension to this, however, as Peter points out at the same time.  The fact is that He was delivered by the determinate counsel and foreknowledge of God.  Men were only allowed to do what they did because it was part of God’s plan.  Indeed, the basis of God’s plan.

Now Isaiah 53:10 tells us that the pleasure of the Lord prospers in the hand of the Lord Jesus.  As God’s Firstborn Son, as well as His Only begotten Son, He was charged with the task of administering God’s affairs.  Not in any dispassionate way, but personally, and a major part of those affairs involved Him in suffering of different sorts.  He suffered in life, as earlier verses of the chapter have told us; He suffered in the three hours of darkness, as verse 5 has told us; He suffered injustice and cruelty at the hands of men, as verses 7 and 8 clearly show.  But He not only suffered in these ways, as He carried out the will of His Father, He was in control as He did so.  So, for instance, we find verses 7-9 alternate between passive and active.  He was oppressed…He was afflicted, yet He opened not His mouth.  Passive in oppression and affliction, but active in not opening His mouth.  He is brought…He is dumb.  Men bring Him, and He passively allows this, but He actively remained as dumb.  So also in verse 8.  He is taken…He was cut off…stricken.  But then the active, He made.  Each time the active is the answer to the passive.  So when He made His grave with the wicked, He was responding to something that He had passively allowed, but during which He was totally in control.

The question is, of course, in what way was He in control so that He made His grave with the wicked?  And if He was in control in this matter, why did it not happen?  And how can He make His grave with the wicked and with the rich at the same time?  So tightly interwoven is this prophecy that it can be fulfilled in the experience of only one man.

We need to notice that the word wicked is in the plural, and the word rich is in the singular.  So there are wicked men, and there is a rich man.  The word for wicked used here is an actively bad person.  We know that all have sinned, but not all set out to be actively bad.  We are told in verse 12 that the Lord Jesus was “numbered with the transgressors”, and the word transgressors means persons who have broken away in revolt against just authority.  The words are quoted by Mark when he describes the Lord Jesus being crucified between two thieves.  So we begin to see a picture building up of Christ in some way making His grave with wicked men by being crucified.  He submitted Himself to arrest, trial and execution, knowing that normally the end result of that process was to be flung unceremoniously, (and in company with the others crucified with Him), into a pit dug at the foot of the cross.  But even though it is true that He submitted Himself to the process of arrest and all that followed, nonetheless He was in complete control of the situation.  He did not call for the legions of angels that were at His disposal, Matthew 26:53.  He did not allow His followers to try to prevent His arrest, and rebuked Peter for attempting it, and remedied the damage he had done with his sword.  He could have any moment passed through the midst of them and gone His way, as He had done several times during His ministry when the crowds were hostile.  He did none of these things.  And by thus not resisting He ensured that His grave would be with the others crucified with Him, even though this was a distasteful prospect, and normally to be avoided at all costs.

It is interesting to notice that the words “He was numbered with the transgressors” are quoted twice in the gospel records.  Once by Mark as he records the crucifixion, as we have noted, but prior to that by the Lord Jesus as He is about to leave the Upper Room and make His way to Gethsemane, Luke 22:37.  So these words bracket together the whole series of events from the arrest in Gethsemane, to the crucifixion at Golgotha.

There is a big problem, however, with this situation, and it is this.  It is vitally important that the Lord Jesus be put in an easily identified and publicly-known grave, and, moreover, is put there on His own.  If He is buried at the foot of the cross with the two thieves, who is to know whether He has risen from the dead?  In theory those near of kin to the thieves could even come to the place, remove the body of their relative, and claim he had risen from the dead!  And even if this is unlikely to be attempted, the followers of the Lord could be accused of doing the same, and pretending that He had risen.

There is also the consideration that the psalmist prophesied by the Spirit that God would not suffer His Holy One, meaning the Messiah, to see corruption, Psalm 16:10.  There would certainly be corruption in a grave at the foot of the cross, with the remains of many criminals mingling together there.  Now of course whilst the whole of creation is in the bondage of corruption, nonetheless only humans are morally corrupt.  So the requirement is that the Lord Jesus must be buried in a marked grave, which has had no-one else in it before, and has no-one else in it whilst He is there.  Only in this way can it be sure that the One who was put into it is the One who came out.

How is this situation going to come about?  It will be necessary for this grave to be more than a marked grave in the ground.  It will need to be secure and unused.  This involves expense, and the Lord Jesus had not the material resources to arrange for this to happen.  Yet our passage says “He made His grave…with the rich in His death.”  It is certainly not that He had influential friends who could rise to the occasion in this matter.  His followers were poor, as He was.  And yet in a real sense He does arrange this matter, for our passage says “He made His grave…with the rich”.

In the event, the rich individual pinpointed in this passage was Joseph of Arimathea.  He was not a prominent member of the disciples that followed the Lord.  In fact, he was only a disciple secretly, because he feared the Jews, and what they would think of him.  For he was a counsellor, meaning that he was a member of the Sanhedrim, and as such was one of those spoken of in John 12:42,43, which reads, “Nevertheless among the chief rulers also many believed on Him; but because of the Pharisees they did not confess Him, lest they should be put out of the synagogue: for they loved the praise of men more than the praise of God”.  Luke records that “the same had not consented to the counsel and the deed of them”, Luke 23:51.  The “them” referring to his fellow-members of the Sanhedrim.

He was assisted by a Pharisee, Nicodemus, who also was a secret disciple, and who is designated by John as “he that came to Jesus by night”, reminding us of his conversation with the Lord Jesus in John 3.  He presumably was a member of the Sanhedrim since he is described as a ruler of the Jews, John 3:1.  He seems to have had great influence amongst them as we see from John 7:45-53.  The chief priests and Pharisees had sent officers to arrest the Lord Jesus, no doubt on the pretence that He had interrupted the temple services by crying out, “If any man thirst, let him come unto Me and drink”, verse 37.  The officers returned without Him, and when the Pharisees protested at this, Nicodemus said, “Doth our law judge any man, before it hear Him, and know what he doeth?  Thus he showed himself to be prepared to defend the interests of Christ in a small way, and to appeal for justice to be done.  Things have changed, now, however, for he has to make a decision.  He cannot be neutral about Christ any longer, and something makes him side with Christ publicly, like Joseph of Arimathea.

We might well ask ourselves what it is that convinced them of the genuineness of Christ’s claims.  Remember, our answer must be in line with what the prophet said, which was, “He made His grave…with the rich in His death.  We notice that the words “in His death” are only applicable to His grave with the rich.  The prophet did not say “He made His grave with the wicked in His death”.  So to all intents and purposes He was destined for a grave with the wicked; but in the event, and by His own ordering, His grave was actually with the rich in His death.

We are told several things about the character of Joseph.  First, that he was a good man, the direct opposite of the wicked men between whom the Lord Jesus was crucified.  Second, that he was just man, meaning he was diligent in trying to keep the law, in direct contrast to the transgressors, who rebelled against all law.  Third, he waited for the kingdom of God, showing that he had a longing for the fulfilment of the Old Testament prophecies about the Messiah.  Fourth, he was a rich man, so is a candidate for the role marked out in Isaiah 53.  Fifth, he was an honourable counsellor, which implies that, (as indeed was the case), there were members of the Sanhedrim who were not honourable.  Sixth, he was prepared to make sacrifices, for he gave up his own tomb in favour of the carpenter from Nazareth.  And seventh, he came from secret discipleship to open and bold discipleship at last.

It is the first three qualities that we need to focus on.  Now a reading of the gospel records will show that the whole council, meaning the Sanhedrin, of which Joseph was a member, were present at the first trial before Caiaphas.  Matthew 26:59 reads, “Now the chief priests, and elders, and all the council, sought false witness against Jesus, to put Him to death”.  Here is the first test for Joseph.  He is a just man, and he must ask himself whether justice is being done here.  He is a good man, and must ask himself if the prisoner is being treated respectfully.

The following rules governed the arrest of prisoners, and Joseph must know that already those rules have been broken:

1.  The arrest should have been done voluntarily by those who were witnesses to the crime.  It was illegal for the temple guard acting for the High Priest to make the arrest.
2.  The arrest should not have been at night, and constituted an act of violence.  This is why the disciples were preparing to prevent it.  Malchus was probably one of those foremost in the arrest.  If Peter had been preventing a legal arrest, he should have been arrested.  The fact he was not, showed the authorities knew they were in the wrong.
3.  The prisoner was bound, which was unnecessary violence, since he was surrounded by only a few men, and the arrest party consisted of many.
4.  The prisoner was taken to Annas first, but he was not the proper magistrate.
5.  He was interrogated at night, which was prohibited by law.
6.  He was detained in a private house.
7. He was struck gratuitously before any charges had been brought, John 18:22.

And now the first trial before Caiaphas is taking place, and Joseph has further questions to answer, for he is a member of the body that is conducting this trial.  Consider the following:
1. The trial was conducted at night, which was illegal.  All proceedings of law were prohibited at night.
2.  No trial was allowed on a feast day, under penalty of being null and void.
3.  He was ill-treated in a private house, (Matthew 26:67,68), with Caiaphas not preventing it, and before a proper hearing had taken place.  This was against Jewish law.
4.  The trial was conducted by Caiaphas, who was prejudiced, because he had already said that it was expedient for one man (meaning Christ), to die for the nation, John 11:49-52.
5.   Caiaphas acted as judge and accuser.
6.  He allowed the prisoner to be ill-treated, even though no sentence had been passed, Luke 22:63-65.

And then, the morning comes, and Mark tells us “the chief priests held a consultation with the elders and scribes and the whole council”.  So Joseph must be present at this meeting also.  Now further rules are broken, as follows:

1.  Witnesses should come forward voluntarily, but these were “sought”, after the attempt to find honest witnesses against Christ was unsuccessful, Matthew 26:59,60.
2.  Witnesses who did not speak the truth were to be stoned to death.
3.  If witnesses did not agree, the case was to be dismissed immediately.  (This was to ensure no frivolous accusations were made).  This did not happen.
4. To put a prisoner on oath, and therefore, in effect, to force him to incriminate himself, was illegal.
5.  The confession of an individual against himself should not decide a condemnation.
6.   If accused wished to speak, he was to be given the most profound attention.

Now at some time during these proceedings Joseph made a stand.  We read that he “had not consented to the counsel and deed of them”, Luke 23:51, the “them” meaning the other members of the Sanhedrim.  Their deliberations, and what they had done, both by sins of omission and by commission, he disagreed with strongly.  But there was more than the breaking of rules involved here.  The prisoner is special, and is making dramatic claims.  There was something about the way those claims were made that convinced Joseph.  What that was is told us in the next phrases in Isaiah 53:9.  “He made His grave with the wicked, and with the rich in His death, because He had done no violence, neither was any deceit in His mouth”.  The reason why Joseph came forward to offer his tomb, is because there was no violence with Christ, and because he came to believe that when He testified as to His person, there was no deceit in His mouth.

Peter tells us that “when He was reviled, He reviled not again; when He suffered He threatened not”, 1 Peter 2:23.  There was something about the way Christ presented Himself, His poise, His calm, His answers, and His restraint under the most intense provocation that so impressed Joseph, that he was resolved to distance himself from the decision of the Sanhedrim.  It is too late to resign membership, but he can “bring forth works unto repentance” by honouring Christ in His death, in contrast to the dishonour done to Him in His life.

The testimony of the Lord Jesus revolved around His claim to be the Son of God, and the Messiah, and the Son of Man.  Joseph comes to believe that His claims were true, and resolves to act accordingly.  His mind is made up, he must absolve himself from complicity in the crime of murdering the Son of God, by repentance and faith in Him, as Peter exhorted the rest of the nation to do at Pentecost, six weeks later.

Now this is very powerful testimony from within the council-chamber itself, and from one who was present as a member of that council.  It is also a powerful rebuke for those who remained steadfast in their hostility towards Christ after His resurrection.

So it is that after the Lord Jesus had died Joseph steps boldly forward.  Each of the steps in the burial of the Lord Jesus are carefully documented, and there is no room for doubt to any fair-minded person that He who was put, dead, in Joseph’s tomb, was He who rose the third day.

Consider these steps:

1.  The Jewish authorities demanded that the victims be taken down before the Sabbath began at 6 o’clock in the evening.  Neither Jew nor Gentile authority had any interest in taking down anything other than dead bodies.  The Gentiles because their government and power was involved, and the Jews because they wanted above all else to see Christ dead.  So it is that the soldiers hasten the death of two thieves, but find Christ is dead already.  He must be sure however, so what stops him breaking Christ’s legs? The answer is given to us by the apostle John, who was there as a witness.  It is because the Scripture had said that as the true Passover lamb His bones must not be broken.  But still the soldier must be satisfied, and so must the centurion, for he is soon going to be asked by Pilate if the Lord Jesus is dead.  So it is that the side of Christ is pierced, and the evidence that death has recently taken place is seen in the issuing forth of blood and water, no doubt meaning the watery fluid that surrounds the heart.  So it is that there is a unique body in Jerusalem, a crucifixion victim without broken legs, and with a pierced side.  The other two victims have broken legs and un-pierced sides.

2.  Joseph now goes to Pilate, and begs the body of Jesus.  We now have the remarkable sight of a rich man begging, and his request is granted.  As a rich man, Joseph had longed to be able to gain many things; now his only desire is to be associated with a dead body, for he is a changed man, and the things of earth that money can buy have now lost their attraction.

3.  Pilate is surprised that the victim is dead.  It is more than his position is worth for him to allow a body to be taken down from the cross when it is not dead.  The victim may recover, and thus escape justice.  Pilate may even have faced the death penalty himself if this should happen.

4.  He therefore summons the centurion to him, and verifies it from him as the man in charge of the crucifixion, who, as a professional executioner, will certainly know whether a person is dead or not.  He does not simply ask the centurion to send a message, but has a face to face conversation with him.  There is no possibility of a note being forged and passed off as a message from the centurion, or later, a note passed off as a message from Pilate.  This also ensures that the centurion knows who Joseph is, for both are now before Pilate at the same time.

5.  Pilate is now in a position to grant the body to Joseph, but why should he do so?  It was customary to allow close relatives of the deceased victims to take the body if they wished, but Joseph is not one of these.  So why does Pilate allow it?  Of course, one reason is that the Scripture says that Christ will be with the rich in his death; but Pilate has no interest in furthering the fulfilment of Scripture.  Is it because he has a guilty conscience?  His last conversation with Christ had been on the fact that He was Son of God.  Superstitious Pilate was no doubt fearful lest he had killed a “son of the gods”, and would receive Divine vengeance.  Perhaps this is his feeble attempt to repair the damage his clumsy and cowardly dealing during the trial had resulted in.  In any event, he grants the body to Joseph, in effect signing Christ’s death certificate, and thus proclaiming with all the authority of the world-empire of Rome that Jesus of Nazareth was really dead.  Those who suggest otherwise, (Moslems, for instance,)  must produce their valid reasons for contradicting this.  This they have not done.

6.  Not only does Pilate give Joseph leave to have the body, but he also commands the centurion to put this into effect.  So the jurisdiction of Rome still controls the body until the moment Joseph takes it down from the cross.  Every stage of the proceedings depends on the one before.

7.  So it is that well-known man, with the authority of the centurion and through him of Pilate, takes a body certified as dead down from the cross.  This is possibly the only legal act that has been done in Jerusalem that day.  He does this in full view of everyone, for the place of execution was near a highway, xxx.  He does it in full view of the Roman authorities, and also, no doubt, of the Jewish authorities also, who are anxious to ensure that the bodies are taken down before 6 o’clock that evening, when the Sabbath day will start.  They also are commanded to not allow hanged bodies to remain after nightfall, but to ensure they are buried the day they died, Deuteronomy 21:22,23.
So it is also that He is not taken down by one of His long-time followers, who could be said to have an interest in trying to get Scripture fulfilled.  A new convert, who has not spoken to Christ at all as far as the record goes, is now the centre of the action.

8.  The body is buried in the Jewish manner, which means that strips of linen cloth are wound round the body, with fragrant spices between the layers.  Even if the Lord Jesus were still alive, it would be impossible for Him to extricate Himself from these grave clothes.

9.  All this is done outside the sepulchre, for it is not until the process is finished that the body is placed within, as both Matthew 27:59,60, and Mark 15:46, 47 show.  John seems to go further, for he alone tells us the position of the tomb in relation to the place of crucifixion, but mentions the wrapping in linen before saying where the tomb was, thus suggesting that the wrapping was done near the cross, and then the body was taken to the tomb.  In any event, all is under the watchful eye of unbelieving men.  There is no possibility of bodies being switched in transit, with a disciple substituted for Christ, and disappearing from the tomb, with Christ’s dead body buried in a secret location.  All is open and transparent.

10.  Joseph is of Arimathea, a city of the Jews, as Luke carefully tells us.  (Arimathea was in Samaria in Old Testament times, but with boundary changes it was classed  in New Testament times as a city in Judea).  Luke is a world-class historian, and wants us to have the facts in our minds.  He draws attention to this relatively obscure matter so that we realise he is competent.  We can trust Luke even in apparently inconsequential matters like boundary changes, so we can trust him also in the vital matters also.  Yet Joseph’s tomb is not in Arimathea, but Jerusalem.  This shows his strength of commitment to the things of God, for he wishes to be buried near the centre of Messiah’s kingdom, for which he waited, and yet it is ordered of God so that his tomb is near the place of crucifixion for the burying of Christ.

11.  It is not only important that the body of the Lord Jesus should be immediately identifiable, (which was ensured by the fact that He is the only one of the three persons crucified that day who had unbroken legs and a pierced side), but He must be placed in a readily identifiable tomb.  A tomb, moreover, which has no dead bodies in it before Christ’s dead body is placed there, and no dead body in it until He has come forth.  Moses’ burying place is unknown, no doubt lest it be turned into a shrine.  The tomb of Christ must be known, and yet it was not turned into a shrine.  As we  read the Acts of the Apostles we look in vain for any reference to the sepulchre, apart from when the resurrection of Christ is preached.

12.  So it is that, assisted by Nicodemus, Joseph carries the body and lays it in the sepulchre, and then rolls the stone to the entrance.  This was no doubt a stone like a millstone, in a stone channel which sloped towards the entrance, so it was comparatively easy to roll it down, but more difficult to roll it up and away.

13.  Joseph departs, Matthew 27:60, his task completed.  But the authorities are not satisfied.  The chief priests and Pharisees go to Pilate to make a request.  They do so on the Sabbath day, so the urgency of the matter makes them endanger the sanctity of the day.  They had refused to go in to Pilate because it was the Passover, John 18:28, but they are willing to go to a Gentile’s residence on a day of unleavened bread, even though it may contain leaven.  They have a conscience about Christ even when He is dead.  They even command Pilate to act, and he, also with a guilty conscience, agrees to do as they say, even though at other times he would loathe them.  Pilate’s words are “Ye have a watch: go your way, make it as sure as ye can”.  So they had already organised a watch of the tomb, but now have permission to tamper with a private sepulchre.

14.  They went with Pilate’s authority, and seal the stone, and set a watch.  We may be sure that under no circumstances will they seal the tomb without assuring themselves that the body is still there.  They will also be very careful to examine the tomb to make sure that the earthquake that occurred when Christ died, Matthew 27:51,52, and which rent the rocks in the area, has not damaged the rock-hewn tomb of Joseph, thus providing a means of access for disciples without the watch knowing.  (Notice that Matthew is not afraid to tell us about the rending of rocks and the earthquake, which caused graves to be opened.  He is confident that the truth about Christ’s burial and resurrection will not be compromised by those facts).  Having satisfied themselves on these matters, they fasten the stone to the rock-face and place a seal in such a way that any movement of the stone will break the seal.

15.  Despite all these precautions, sometime between 6 o’clock on the Sabbath evening, and 4 o’clock on the first day of the week, (the hour at which it begins to get light in Palestine in April), Jesus of Nazareth, Son of God and Israel’s Messiah, rose triumphantly from among the dead, to die no more.  Death could not hold Him any longer, for He is God’s Holy One.

As  He Himself said,
“Fear not; I am the first, and the last:
I am He that liveth, and was dead;
and behold I am alive for evermore, Amen,
and have the keys of hell and of death”.
Revelation 1:17,18.

ROMANS 6

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Section 9 Romans 6:1-23
The believer’s past and present position

Subject of Section 9
Most of the truth found in the epistles is anticipated by the Lord Jesus in His ministry, and this chapter is a case in point. He had said “And ye shall know the truth, and the truth shall make you free…whosoever committeth sin is the servant of sin…If the Son therefore shall make you free, ye shall be free indeed”, John 8:32,34,36. Romans chapter 6 explains how we may live free from the service of sin, in the freedom into which the Son of God, by His death, burial and resurrection, introduces us. By being buried in the watery grave of baptism, the believer, who has already died with Christ when he was saved, associates himself with the burial and resurrection of Christ, henceforth to live a new sort of life.

Structure of Section 9

9(a) 6:1-11 The doctrine of identification with Christ
9(b) 6:12-23 The application of the doctrine

Special note on Christian baptism
Just before He ascended back to His Father, the Lord Jesus commanded His disciples to preach and teach, and then to baptize those who believed. His words were, “Go ye therefore, and teach all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost: teaching them to observe all things whatsoever I have commanded you: and, lo, I am with you alway, even unto the end of the world.” Matthew 28:19,20.
That the apostles were obedient to His command is clear from the Book of the Acts, for as soon as people believed, they baptized them. We read that on the day of Pentecost, Peter said unto them, “Repent, and be baptized every one of you in the name of Jesus Christ for the remission of sins, and ye shall receive the gift of the Holy Ghost”, Acts 2:38. Note that repentance came first, indicating that those baptised were all of the age of responsibility. Note, too, that every one that repented was required to be baptized.
Because the ones addressed had been guilty of the rejection of Christ, they were required to be baptized to show the genuineness of their conversion before they received the Holy Spirit. Subsequently, the Holy Spirit is given the moment a person believes, or else the argument of the apostle Paul in Galatians 3:2 is destroyed, for he strongly implies there that the Holy Spirit is received when a person initially believes.
After the Ethiopian eunuch was saved, we read, “the eunuch said, See, here is water; what doth hinder me to be baptized? And Philip said, If thou believest with all thine heart thou mayest. And he answered and said, I believe that Jesus Christ is the Son of God. And he commanded the chariot to stand still: and they went down both into the water, both Philip and the eunuch; and he baptized him”, Acts 8:36-38. Note he believed first, then was baptized after both he and Philip had gone down into water, showing it was not sprinkling.
After Saul of Tarsus was converted, we read that he “arose, and was baptized. And when he had received meat, he was strengthened,” Acts 9:18,19. Note Saul was baptized before he had any food, even though he had not eaten for three days. He felt that getting baptized was a matter of urgency.
When Cornelius and his household had believed the gospel and received the gift of the Spirit, Peter said, “Can any man forbid water, that these should not be baptized, which have received the Holy Ghost as well as we? And he commanded them to be baptized in the name of the Lord.” Acts 10:47,48. Note that they received the Holy Spirit before they were baptized.
Such was the practice followed by the apostles, and since believers are required to continue steadfastly in the apostle’s doctrine, such should be our practice today. But what are the principles behind the practice of baptism? For these we shall have to note the teaching of the chapter before us.

9(a)   6:1-15
The doctrine of identification with Christ

6:1
What shall we say then? Shall we continue in sin, that grace may abound?

What shall we say then? This expression, (or one very similar to it), occurs seven times in the epistle. The apostle wants to involve us in his line of reasoning. He is about to respond to the false teaching about the subject of sin that was current in his day.
Shall we continue in sin, that grace may abound? This is the suggestion of those who were drawing a false conclusion from 5:20, where the apostle states that “where sin abounded, grace did much more abound”. Compare 3:8 where a similar argument is used by Paul’s opponents, but there in connection with sins, here in connection with the sin-tendency in man. They were saying, in effect, “Let us give way to sin’s rule, so that God’s grace may be further enhanced”. The whole idea of justification by faith alone could be misunderstood in this way, hence the need for teaching on the matter. To continue in sin is to live in a sinful way even when claiming to be a believer.

6:2
God forbid. How shall we, that are dead to sin, live any longer therein?

God forbid- this is a strong expression of opposition to the idea.
How shall we- the argument does not begin with an exhortation, (that comes from verse 12 onwards, beginning with “let not”), but logical reasoning based on what believers know, which should prevent them from making the suggestion of verse 1. The apostle does not speak of inadvisability, but impossibility; not “we ought not”, but “how can we?” “We” is a pronoun of quality, “such as we, united to Christ; how can people in that position act as if they are still united to Adam?”
That are dead to sin, live any longer therein- for the believer, death to sin is a past event, which is to be worked out in the present. There are two proofs normally that a person is dead, the first being the death certificate, (corresponding to the apostle’s official statement of verse 2), and the second, the burial ceremony, (corresponding in the spiritual realm to the believer’s baptism in verse 4). We died to sin when we believed, not when we were baptized, or else salvation would be completed by the work of being baptized, and not by faith in a crucified Saviour.

6:3
Know ye not, that so many of us as were baptized into Jesus Christ were baptized into his death?

Know ye not? The apostle asks, “Are you ignorant?” Anyone who is aware of the truth of verses 3-5 will not suggest that the believer should continue in sin. As we have noted, the Lord said, “ye shall know the truth, and the truth shall make you free”, but ignorance tends to bondage.
That so many of us- now we have a pronoun of quantity, and the number of persons baptized is the number baptized into Jesus Christ; the act has the same significance for all believers. There might be a suggestion here that those who said believers could continue in sin were not baptized.
As were baptized into Jesus Christ- baptism signifies publicly that we have moved, (when we believed), into the company of which Jesus Christ is the head, and we wish to work that position out in practice. No longer do we wish to be thought of as those who are in Adam. The apostle has already dealt with the headship of Christ and Adam in chapter 5:12-21.
Baptism is also an act of public submission to Christ, in loyalty and commitment, a fact illustrated by the recognition of Moses as the one who had brought the people through the Red Sea, for they were “baptized unto Moses”, 1 Corinthians 10:2, recognising him as leader.
Baptized into his death- we cannot be subject to Christ without the truth of His death. So we are baptized into Him by being baptized into His death. From verse 4 we see that by death is meant Christ’s state of death, not His act of dying. A person is buried because he is dead; he does not die at the burial ceremony.

6:4
Therefore we are buried with him by baptism into death: that like as Christ was raised up from the dead by the glory of the Father, even so we also should walk in newness of life.

Therefore we are buried with him- this is the first conclusion which shows we cannot continue in sin, for buried persons are not able to continue as they did before. We are buried in identification with Him in His burial, with our former life past and gone.
By baptism into death- when Israel passed through the Red Sea with the waters heaped up on either side, it was as if they were in a grave, Exodus 14:22. Christian baptism puts us publicly where we are already ideally in the sight of God, and prepares us practically to walk in a new way.
That like as Christ was raised up from the dead by the glory of the Father- “that” means “in order that”, for our baptism has a purpose; it is not just a negative burial out of sight, but the necessary preparation for re-emergence. There is a direct correspondence between Christ’s emergence from the grave, and ours, but this does not appear to be the case in verse 4, but becomes evident in verse 5. The Father’s glory demanded that such a person as Christ should be raised, He having satisfied the Father in life and death.
We also should walk in newness of life- note the lack of a parallel expression regarding us, for the glory of the Father demanded that we remain in the grave if our life as sinners was in view. For us there needs to be a new sort of life, a life which has the newness of the new man, (a man in character like Christ) about it, see Ephesians 4:20-24; Colossians 3:9-11. The “also” links “buried with him” with “walk in newness of life”. It is not that “we also, (as well as Christ), walk in newness of life”, for He did not need to walk in a different sort of way. The apostle writes “should walk” not in sense of “ought to walk”, but raised in order that it may happen.

6:5
For if we have been planted together in the likeness of his death, we shall be also in the likeness of his resurrection:

For- now comes the explanation of the correspondence between Christ and the believer mentioned in verse 4.
If we have been planted together in the likeness of his death- we are publicly conjoined with Christ in His state of death in the grave. At the moment we are immersed in the water of baptism, we are like He was when in the sepulchre. But the likeness has a spiritual side, for His life on earth was over, and our old life on earth is over, too.
We shall be also in the likeness of his resurrection- some would limit this to the future resurrection, but this robs the passage of much of its present force. The apostle is not dealing with physical resurrection in this passage. Just as the physical position of being in water had the spiritual counterpart of being buried with Christ, so physically coming out of the water has its counterpart of being raised with Christ. The apostle views us as newly emerged from the water, with a new life before us, hence the “shall be”. So it is not “shall be in the future”, but “shall be from the point of baptism onwards”.

6:6
Knowing this, that our old man is crucified with him, that the body of sin might be destroyed, that henceforth we should not serve sin.

Knowing this- those who have been baptized have done so because they have got to know something. We are baptized in the knowledge that our old man is crucified with Christ. According to this, persons should be instructed in the principles given in these verses before they are baptized.
That our old man is crucified with him- the old man is the pre-conversion self considered as to its link with Adam. The new man is the post-conversion self considered as to its link with Christ. When the Romans wished to publicly demonstrate that a criminal was not acceptable in their society, they crucified him. So God has declared publicly that our sinful self is not fit for the society of heaven, by associating it with Christ when He was crucified. “Crucified with” means co-crucified, crucified in company with, for we were in the mind of God when Christ was on the cross. In this way the believer may say with the apostle, “I am crucified with Christ”, Galatians 2:20.
Not only did we renounce the old man in repentance, but we embraced the new man in faith. If the old man is the likeness to Adam that marked us because we had links with him, the new man is likeness to Christ now that we are linked to Him by association with His death, burial, and resurrection. This emphasises the great change that comes about when a person is converted. Instead of living as Adam lived after he sinned, the believer begins to “walk, even as he walked”, that is, to live like Christ, 1 John 2:6.
That the body of sin might be destroyed- that is, in order that the body of sin may be made of no effect. The body of sin is our body considered as the headquarters of the sin-principle within us. As far as God is concerned, just as a criminal’s body was rendered powerless by the process of crucifixion so that he was no longer able to engage in a life of crime, so our body, (that sin used as the base of its operations), has been put out of action. This is the ideal situation, when things are considered from God’s side, whereas in our everyday practice we are not to let sin reign in our mortal body, verse 12, so we are not yet delivered finally from sin. It is not the body itself that is made of no effect, but the body as the instrument that the sin-principle uses. The Christian’s body can be presented to God as a living sacrifice, 12:1, so it is not in itself evil.
That henceforth- that is, no longer, from the point of baptism onwards We should resolve that the principles at work in our baptism should constantly be at work in our lives.
We should not serve sin- the mastery of sin has been broken at the cross, for sin can only dominate living people and we have been crucified. By this means the Son makes free indeed, (that is, free to the very core of our being), John 8:36.

6:7
For he that is dead is freed from sin.

For- the reason for freedom from sin, as verse 6 had been the foundation of freedom.
He that is dead is freed from sin- whilst it is true that dead persons are free from the tendency to sin, this is not the point here. The word for freed used here means justified; freed from obligation. The idea is that those who are dead because they have been crucified with Christ have been justly freed from the obligation to obey the dictates of sin within. Christ has borne the liability which our sin placed upon us. The expression does not mean that we are freed from sin by the removal of that sinful nature, for it is not until the resurrection morning that we shall be able to say, “O death, where is thy sting? O grave, where is thy victory? The sting of death is sin; and the strength of sin is the law.” 1 Corinthians 15:55,56.

6:8
Now if we be dead with Christ, we believe that we shall also live with him:

Now if we be dead with Christ- the believer is associated with the man who for a short while hung dead on a cross, but was then buried.
We believe we shall also live with him- the apostle might very well have simply made an exact parallel by writing “if we be dead with Christ, we shall live with Him”. However, he inserts “we believe.” If we died with Christ, then we are believers, resting in what His crucifixion achieved, for only such are crucified with Christ. But this faith is not limited to things that are past, but lays hold of that which is future, which in this case is life in association with a risen Christ. Again, the apostle is looking at the believer newly emerged from the waters of baptism. We live with Him from that point on. The mention of believing also reminds us that the Christian life is a life of faith.

6:9
Knowing that Christ being raised from the dead dieth no more; death hath no more dominion over him.

Knowing that- here is a third word for knowledge, meaning perception. The believer’s faith is based on the perception of the truth that Christ is risen to die no more.
Christ being raised from the dead dieth no more- unlike Lazarus, for instance, Christ shall never die again, for the reason the apostle now gives.
Death hath no more dominion over him- it is indeed true that Christ laid down His life of Himself, but it is also true that, because He undertook to be made sin, He accepted that this involved death having Him in its power for a short time. His resurrection is proof, however, that death’s power is broken, both for Him, and also for His people in association with Him.

6:10
For in that he died, he died unto sin once: but in that he liveth, he liveth unto God.

For in that he died, he died unto sin once- the first reason the apostle cites to establish that death no longer dominates Christ is the fact that His death unto or in relation to sin was once-for-all in character. What He did by going into death was fully effective, and needs no repetition.
But in that he liveth, he liveth unto God- the second reason is found in the fact that He now lives only in relation to God, having nothing to do with the sin-question any more. Death can only dominate in connection with sin.

6:11
Likewise reckon ye also yourselves to be dead indeed unto sin, but alive unto God through Jesus Christ our Lord.

Likewise reckon ye also yourselves- there is perhaps the implication in the word “reckon” that Christ’s death in relation to sin was the result, on His part, of careful reckoning of the consequences. So likewise, the believer is to seriously reckon with the consequences. Reckon means to make a logical and reasoned calculation.
To be dead indeed unto sin- dead, that is, in reality, (indeed), not simply in theory. We must make the practical application to ourselves of the death of Christ to sin.
But alive unto God- as Christ is alive unto God, the matter of sin forever settled, so we should act on that fact, for we are identified with Him.
Through Jesus Christ our Lord- only because of Christ’s work can we be dead to sin, and only because of His resurrection can we be alive to God, so all depends on Him. The apostle can write “our Lord”, for we have exchanged the lordship of sin for the lordship of Jesus Christ.

9(b)   6:12-23
The application of the doctrine of identification with Christ

6:12
Let not sin therefore reign in your mortal body, that ye should obey it in the lusts thereof.

Let not sin therefore reign in your mortal body- because the dominion of sin has been broken by the death and resurrection of Christ, there is no reason why we should submit to its dictatorship. We are dead to sin as far as God is concerned, verse 2; the body of sin has been destroyed, verse 6; we are legally free from obligation to sin, verse 7; and Christ has once-for-all died in relation to sin, verse 10, and we are identified with Him. These are the reasons why sin need no longer be on the throne of the believer’s heart, as before it was, 5:21. The mortal body is a body still liable to death; a reminder from the apostle that we are not yet delivered from indwelling sin, for that awaits our bodily resurrection, 1 Corinthians 15:56. A warning, too, to be on our guard.
That ye should obey it in the lusts thereof- the reign of sin is expressed by the lusts or strong evil desires which it enables men to gratify. We allow sin to reign when we obey its dictates.

6:13
Neither yield ye your members as instruments of unrighteousness unto sin: but yield yourselves unto God, as those that are alive from the dead, and your members as instruments of righteousness unto God.

Neither yield ye your members- the apostle now concentrates on the varied members of the body which can assist sin in its attempts at domination; we are not to yield to their pressure.
As instruments of unrighteousness unto sin- connect “unto sin” with “yield”; we are not to present our members to be used in relation to sin, for that would be to use them for unrighteous ends.
But yield yourselves unto God- not now the individual members of the body, but the whole person, spirit, soul and body, is to be yielded to God as Christ is, verse 10.
As those that are alive from the dead- in line with the truth that we are risen with Christ. This is the practical outworking of the reckoning of verse 11, translating theory into practice.
And your members as instruments of righteousness unto God- having dealt with the person as a whole, he now gives the parallel to the yielding of individual members unto sin, which results in unrighteousness.

6:14
For sin shall not have dominion over you: for ye are not under the law, but under grace.

For sin shall not have dominion over you- “shall” meaning “from this point onwards”, if the truths of previous verses are heeded and practised.
For ye are not under the law, but under grace- this is the reason why sin will not dominate, for grace brings the death, burial and resurrection of Christ to bear upon our persons, and gives us the resources to live victoriously for God. Law, on the other hand, only gives sin an opportunity to assert itself, as chapter seven will show. Compare also 5:20. This verse introduces the idea of law not being able to enable us to overcome sin. From 6:15 to the end of chapter 7 the apostle deals with the false idea of some that the Christian life should be governed by the law of Moses. There were, and are, those who feel that unless the believer is subject to rules and regulations of a legal nature, he will give way to licentiousness, which is the opposite of legality. But the Christian life is marked by liberty, and that liberty is expressed by subjection to the will of God.
The parable of the prodigal son illustrates three possible states: licence, (the prodigal in the far country), legality, (the elder son working in the field, and not transgressing his father’s commandment), and liberty, (the restored prodigal in the father’s house), see Luke 15:11-32. The power to live a life of liberty is the Spirit of God, but before he can enlarge in chapter 8 on the important theme of the indwelling Spirit, the apostle deals in chapter 7 with the believer’s relationship to the law of Moses. In verses 15 to 23 of chapter 6 however, he shows that a life lived in the good of all that grace has brought us into, will not lapse into sinfulness because there are strong incentives to do otherwise.
Note the way the passage builds up to a climax:
Obey, verse 16.
Obedience unto righteousness, verse 16.
Servants of righteousness, verse 18.
Servants to righteousness unto holiness, verse 19.
Servants to God…fruit unto holiness…the end everlasting life, verse 22.

6:15
What then? shall we sin, because we are not under the law, but under grace? God forbid.

What then? Shall we sin- in verse 1 the suggestion was to continue in a manner of life that obeyed the dictates of the sinful tendency within our hearts. Here the suggestion is of continuing to commit sins because we think grace delivers from the consequences. Both ideas are met with “God forbid”, but whereas the first is answered by the doctrine of the crucifixion, burial and resurrection of Christ, the second is met by an appeal to our Christian knowledge as to what is becoming conduct for a true believer, who is a servant of God.
Because we are not under the law, but under grace. God forbid- does freedom from the law mean freedom to sin? The apostle has already hinted in verse 14 that grace is a superior force than law, for it unlocks the power available in the resurrection of Christ. The next verse will show why we should not sin.

6:16
Know ye not, that to whom ye yield yourselves servants to obey, his servants ye are to whom ye obey; whether of sin unto death, or of obedience unto righteousness?

Know ye not- the same word as verse 9, meaning perception, insight. He expresses surprise that as believers they did not know.
That to whom ye yield yourselves servants to obey, his servants ye are to whom ye obey- being a servant and obeying are not separable. A servant is obedient by definition. The question is, which master is he obeying?
Whether of sin unto death- the pre-conversion condition was one of slavery to sin, expressed in obedience to its commands.
Or of obedience unto righteousness- the apostle combines the two things that were true of our Head in 5:18,19, the one act of righteousness, and the obedience of the One. The believer is to display the same characteristics that his Head does. So who we yield to determines who is our master in practice.

6:17
But God be thanked, that ye were the servants of sin, but ye have obeyed from the heart that form of doctrine which was delivered you.

But God be thanked, that ye were the servants of sin- the thankfulness of the apostle is most easily connected with what follows, he is thankful that they have obeyed from the heart, not that they were slaves.
But ye have obeyed from the heart- this is the secret of a life of service to God, to obey His truth from the heart, that is, willingly and fervently. “Keep thy heart with all diligence; for out of it are the issues of life.” Proverbs 4:23.
That form of doctrine which was delivered you- the truths expressed in the gospel are not just for initial salvation, but ongoing, being the terms on which we are to serve God. “If ye continue in my word, then are ye my disciples indeed; and ye shall know the truth, and the truth shall make you free”, John 8:32. The brass for the pillars at the front of Solomon’s temple took the shape of the mould into which it was poured, 1 Kings 7:41,46, so we should be moulded by the truth.

6:18
Being then made free from sin, ye became the servants of righteousness.

Being then made free from sin- when we believe, the truth as to Christ, His person and work, is applied savingly to our hearts by God. In this way the Son makes us free indeed, John 8:36.
Ye became the servants of righteousness- the same act that freed from sin, made us servants committed to righteousness, because of our obedience to the truth of the gospel, the obedience of faith, Romans 16:26. There is no middle ground, such as being delivered from sin, but made servants to the law.

6:19
I speak after the manner of men because of the infirmity of your flesh: for as ye have yielded your members servants to uncleanness and to iniquity unto iniquity; even so now yield your members servants to righteousness unto holiness.

I speak after the manner of men because of the infirmity of your flesh- the apostle changes from general principles to more detailed illustration. He is being more specific because he knows that the sinful tendencies of the flesh are ready to defeat us.
For as ye have yielded your members servants to uncleanness- each part of our person, before conversion, was surrendered to sin, resulting in uncleanness. As the Lord Jesus said, “For out of the heart proceed evil thoughts, murders, adulteries, fornications, thefts, false witness, blasphemies: These are the things which defile a man”, Matthew 15:19,20.
And to iniquity unto iniquity- the sinner is committed to the principle of lawlessness, (for the carnal mind is not subject to the law of God, 8:7), and that commitment results in lawless deeds. To yield to the principle of iniquity in the flesh, (“to iniquity”), will result in the practice of iniquity, (“unto iniquity”).
Even so now- let there be a correspondingly total surrender now that you are a believer.
Yield your members servants to righteousness unto holiness- the outworking of righteous principles will result in holy practice, because righteousness, which is conformity to the nature of God, teaches us what to avoid and what to engage in. Holiness is separation to what is of God. Commitment to righteousness and holiness will mean lawlessness is renounced and uncleanness is rejected. See Mark 9:43-50 for truth spoken by the Lord Jesus concerning particular members of the body, and the way in which we may misuse them.

6:20
For when ye were the servants of sin, ye were free from righteousness.

For when ye were the servants of sin, ye were free from righteousness- before conversion, there was no relationship with righteousness at all, for “there is none righteous, no, not one”. Again the apostle emphasises that a life of sin, and a life of righteousness are totally distinct in principle; so we should not be tempted to mix them in practice. “Free from righteousness” also has the idea of the sinner being glad to be clear of the demands of righteousness, an attitude which should be foreign to the believer.

6:21
What fruit had ye then in those things whereof ye are now ashamed? for the end of those things is death.

What fruit had ye then in those things whereof ye are now ashamed? By fruit the apostle means “worthwhile result”. There is no glory for God in a life of sin. The believer shows his change of outlook by being disgusted at what he did before.
For the end of those things is death- the prospect before one who lives in sin is one of death, not life. But the believer has life in view. It is sadly true, however, that the believer may engage in pre-conversion sins, a lapse into moral death as 8:13 will explain.

6:22
But now being made free from sin, and become servants to God, ye have your fruit unto holiness, and the end everlasting life.

But now being made free from sin, and become servants to God- the apostle now returns to the basic alternatives he spoke of in verse 16, having enlarged on their outworking in verses 17-21.
Ye have your fruit unto holiness- in contrast to a Christ-less life which is lived in shameful unholiness. They can be said to “have” this fruit in the present, so a life lived apart from the law of Moses does produce results in holiness. The apostle says “your fruit”, as if he expects us to value it, and also because no-one else can produce it for us.
And the end everlasting life- the result of actively being servants to God is that we gain increasing insights into who our God is, for everlasting life enables us to get to know the only true God, John 17:3. The believer has eternal life from the start of his spiritual career, but the end or goal of that career is to constantly gain fresh appreciation of God, and this is possible because having eternal life enables us to get to know God.

6:23
For the wages of sin is death; but the gift of God is eternal life through Jesus Christ our Lord.

For the wages of sin is death- the word used for wages originally meant “money paid to soldiers”. Sinners are at war with God, 8:7, and they are paid wages which reflect that, and which represent their just deserts, for death is the result of having a sinful nature. As the apostle has already said, “death by sin”, 5:12.
But the gift of God is eternal life- whilst this may be connected with the initial gift of eternal life, in context it relates to the gracious way in which God repays service to Himself by granting fresh appreciations of His glories, hence the word “for”, indicating an explanation of the previous verse.
Note that this is not called wages, for all that God gives is out of His gracious heart towards us; even service rendered to Him does not put Him under obligation to us. As the Lord Jesus said, “So likewise ye, when ye shall have done all those things which are commanded you, say, We are unprofitable servants: we have done that which was our duty to do.” Luke 17:10.
Through Jesus Christ our Lord- all the enabling to serve God comes through Him, whether by His death and resurrection, His example of obedient service, or His present ministry of applying the truth to our souls. Grace and truth came, (and are maintained still), by Jesus Christ, so we do not need the law to enable us to please God, John 1:17.