Romans - 7:16



16 But if what I don't desire, that I do, I consent to the law that it is good.

Verse In-Depth

Explanation and meaning of Romans 7:16.

Differing Translations

Compare verses for better understanding.
If then I do that which I will not, I consent to the law, that it is good.
But if what I do not will, this I practise, I consent to the law that it is right.
But if I do that which I do not desire to do, I admit the excellence of the Law,
But, if I do that which I have no mind to do, I am in agreement with the law that the law is good.
But when I do what I want not to do, I am admitting that the Law is right.
Si vero quod nolo, hoe facio, consentio Legi Dei quod sit bona.

*Minor differences ignored. Grouped by changes, with first version listed as example.


Historical Commentaries

Scholarly Analysis and Interpretation.

But if what I desire not, I do, I consent to the law, etc.; that is, "When my heart acquiesces in the law, and is delighted with its righteousness, (which certainly is the case when it hates the transgression of it,) it then perceives and acknowledges the goodness of the law, so that we are fully convinced, experience itself being our teacher, that no evil ought to be imputed to the law; nay, that it would be salutary to men, were it to meet with upright and pure hearts." But this consent is not to be understood to be the same with what we have heard exists in the ungodly, who have expressed words of this kind, "I see better things and approve of them; I follow the worse." Again, "What is hurtful I follow; I shun what I believe would be profitable." For these act under a constraint when they subscribe to the righteousness of God, as their will is wholly alienated from it, but the godly man consents to the law with the real and most cheerful desire of his heart; for he wishes nothing more than to mount up to heaven. [1]

Footnotes

1 - "I consent -- consentio -- sumphemi, I say with, assent to, agree with, confirm." -- Ed.

I consent unto the law - The very struggle with evil shows that it is not loved, or approved, but that the Law which condemns it is really loved. Christians may here find a test of their piety. The fact of struggling against evil, the desire to be free from it, and to overcome it, the anxiety and grief which it causes, is an evidence that we do not love it, and that there. fore we are the friends of God. Perhaps nothing can be a more decisive test of piety than a long-continued and painful struggle against evil passions and desires in every form, and a panting of the soul to be delivered from the power and dominion of sin.

If then I do that which I would not, etc. - Knowing that the law condemns it, and that therefore it must be evil. I consent unto the law; I show by this circumstance that I acknowledge the law to be good.

If then I do that which I would not,.... This is a corollary, or an inference from what he had related of his own experience; that since what he did, though it was contrary to the law of God, yet was what he did not will nor allow of, but hated, it must be a clear point, that he
consented to the law, that it was good; lovely and amiable; that it forbad those things which were hateful, and commanded those things which were desirable to a good man; and so is acknowledged to be a very beautiful rule of obedience, walk, and conversation.

If then I do that which I would not--"But if what I would not that I do,"
I consent unto the law that it is good--"the judgment of my inner man going along with the law."

It is good - This single word implies all the three that were used before, Romans 7:12, "holy, just, and good."

*More commentary available at chapter level.


Discussion on Romans 7:16

User discussion of the verse.






*By clicking Submit, you agree to our Privacy Policy & Terms of Use.