|
CENTER FOR CHURCH
ENRICHMENT

ROMANS SURVEY
TEACHING OUTLINE 12
Romans
15:14-16:17
Concluding Remarks
________________________________________________________________________________________________
Introduction
Some scholars suggest that in this concluding section we have at least two
conclusions, possibly three! The suggestion is that someone else, someone
possibly close to Paul, later added some material to Paul’s epistle.
That there does seem to be some
interesting observations regarding the conclusion to the epistle does not
mean that Paul was not the author of the whole epistles.
An interesting fact is that no
copy of Romans has appeared any different form the one we have, raising some
questions of an earlier epistle to which someone added an appendix!
The conclusion includes some
comments as to why Paul wrote the epistle, commendations and greetings to a
variety of Christians in Rome [which suggests that since Paul had not yet
been to Rome that this section which seems to demonstrate a knowledge of the
churches in Rome must have been written by someone other than Paul], and a
doxology.
Rom 15:14-33
Paul’s Future Plans Regarding Rome and Spain
Paul begins by
expressing confidence in the churches in Rome.
He observes that he is writing by way of reminder, demonstrating no superior
attitude toward the Christians in Rome.
He comments on the fact that he was appointed by God to be an apostle to the
Gentiles [see Acts 9:15; Gal 1:16].
Paul mentions his ministry of
taking up a contribution from the Gentile Christians for the Jewish
Christians in Jerusalem [Rom
15:16, 26], which was intended to demonstrate the unity of the faith to the
Jewish and Gentile Christians in Rome.
Paul is concerned over how the
Jewish Christians and Jews in Jerusalem would receive him and asks for the
prayers of the Roman Christians in his behalf for when he arrived in
Jerusalem. Paul knew that should the Jewish Christians rejected the Gentile
gift that it would set his ministry back considerably.
We learn form Acts 21:17 that the Christians in Jerusalem received him
“gladly”.
[See 1 Cor 16:1 - 4; 2 Cor 8:1-5; and 9:1-5 on this contribution].
Paul then (Rom 15:22) discusses the reason he has been detained form
visiting Rome; he was busy elsewhere! He had preached al over Palestine,
Asia, and Eastern Europe [from Jerusalem to Illyricum].
Now that he had completed that ministry he wanted to go on via Rome to
Spain.
It was Paul’s policy not to
become a located preacher or to preach where others had laid a foundation
for Christianity, like the Star Ship Enterprise in Star Trek , Paul wanted
to go where no man had ever gone before!
Rom 15:24 Paul uses a technical
term to indicate that he expected the Christians in Rome, Jew and Gentile,
to pay his expenses for the journey to Spain [sped on my journey,
from the technical term propempo indicates this].
Rom 16:1-23 Personal Commendations and
Greetings
Paul commends by requesting that the Christians in Rome receive Phoebe, a
sister from Cenchreae, near Corinth in Achaia [Greece]. She is a sister
that had been involved as a helper of Paul and many other Christians.
She was a special servant.
The RSV refers to her as a
deaconess.
The NIV, KJV,
and most translations refer to her as a servant.
Our problem is that the Greek word for deacon,
deaconess, and
servant [diakonos]
is exactly the same!
[Diakonos is a unique
word that is both masculine and feminine, only the definite article, the,
which normally might accompany the noun diakonos, would help us
determine whether the word was masculine of feminine gender, and in any case
gender in Greek does not imply gender (male or female) in English!]
Which ever way you interpret or
understand Phoebe, she was
a special servant, which is what the
English word Deacon or deaconess
should imply!
Paul then greets Prisca and Aquila, fellow workers of Paul [they had gone
form Rome to Corinth during the banishment of Jews from Rome by Claudius
(see Acts 18:2, 18, 26; and 1 Cor
16:19; 2 Tim
4:19)].
Aquila and Prisca (Priscilla) were Jewish Christians.
Paul then adds that all the
churches of the Gentiles greet the churches in Rome (Rom 16:4)
Paul then list a number of Christians he knew from travels and other
sources, many of the m are Gentiles and many Jewish. It is difficult to
determine simply by names who were Jewish and who were Gentile since many
Jews adopted Gentile names, or were known by both Jewish and Gentile names
(Paul for example who was also Saul of Tarsus)
It is
also difficult to determine how many groups
(congregations or house churches) are listed in this section, but we
can count at least three. Many scholars find as many as six or more.
[Interestingly, when the Romans permitted Jews to
return to Rome, they forbad them meeting in Synagogues, so they met in
homes. This would have applied also to Christians, hence the many house
churches in Rome, and no apparent large congregation.]
Paul encourages them to greet one another with a holy kiss [the oriental
manner of greeting. In the USA we shake hands as a formal greeting,
sometimes we hug! The charge is to greet one another in the appropriate
manner.
Paul sends greetings from “all the churches of Christ” indicating not a name
for the church, but a definition of ownership, community, or allegiance.
Churches were variously designated by Paul, see 1 Cor 1:1 “the church of God
which is in Corinth”, and 1 Thess 1:1 “the church of the Thessalonians in
God”.
It is good as a sign of fellowship today that we identify ourselves as
churches of Christ, but it is not a doctrinal principle that we must call
ourselves by such nomenclature!
Rom 16:17-18 Paul sternly warns the Christians not to permit those who cause
division [that is the meaning of dissentions and difficulties]
in opposition to doctrine (the teaching of the church) to remain in close
fellowship since they would divide the church. Such persons are to be
avoided as dangerous to the fellowship and unity within the church, and this
is one of the main purposes for Paul having demonstrated that in god there
is no partiality, and that Jews and Gentiles must get along in the church,
or in covenant relationship with one another and with God.
Rom 16:25-27
Doxology
Doxology is a term that praises God for his gracious
work of redemption.
Paul prays that God will strengthen the Christians in Rome, both Jewish and
Gentile, and suggests three ways in which God does
this:
1) according to the preaching of Paul’s Gospel
2) according to the revelation of the mystery, that is that in one body God
reconciles both Jew and Gentile to himself
3) according to the command of the eternal God who desires an obedient
faith.
Three times in Romans Paul has spoken of or alluded to
a faith that must be obedient, Rom 1:5; 6:17; 16:26.
An obedient faith must be something of importance to
Paul!
Paul concludes by acknowledging the wisdom and glory of the eternal God.
Notes:
__________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
__________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
__________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
__________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
__________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
__________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
__________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
__________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
__________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
_________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
_________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
|