Commentaries:
Adam Clarke
Who shall separate us from the love of Christ? - I do think that this question has been generally misunderstood. The apostle is referring to the persecutions and tribulations to which genuine Christians were exposed through their attachment to Christ, and the gracious provision God had made for their support and final salvation. As in this provision God had shown his infinite love to them in providing Jesus Christ as their sin-offering, and Jesus Christ had shown his love in suffering death upon the cross for them; so, here, he speaks of the love of the followers of God to that Christ who had first loved them. Therefore the question is not, Who shall separate the love of Christ from us? or prevent Christ from loving us? but, Who shall separate us from the love of Christ? Who or what shall be able to remove our affection from him? And the questions that immediately follow show that this is the sense of the passage; for the tribulation, distress, etc., which he enumerates, are things by which they might be affected, but by which Christ could not be affected; and, consequently, the question most evidently refers to their love to him who had first loved them, and, while it affords a strong presumption of their perseverance, furnishes a most powerful argument against apostasy.
Shall tribulation? - , grievous affliction, or distress of any kind; from , to compress, oppress, straiten, etc.; any thing by which a man is rendered miserable.
Or distress? - , a word of nearly the same import with the former, but more intense in its signification. It signifies straitness, being hemmed in on every side, without the possibility of getting out or escaping; from , strait or narrow, and , a place.
Or persecution? - , from , to pursue, press upon, prosecute, signifies such pursuing as an enemy uses in order to overtake the object of his malice, that he may destroy him.
Or famine? - , from , to fail; the total want of bread, and all the necessaries of life.
Or nakedness? - , being absolutely without clothing; forcibly expressed by the derivation of the word , having one' s limbs only, being totally unclothed.
Or peril? - , a state of extreme and continued danger, perplexing and distressing with grievous forebodings and alarms; derived from , it excites anguish; because much evil is felt, and much more feared.
Or sword? - , slaughter; the total destruction of life, and especially beheading, and such like, done by the order of the civil magistrate; for the word is used in this epistle, Romans 13:4, to signify the authority and power which he has of judicially terminating life; i.e. of inflicting capital punishment.
Other commentary entries containing this verse:
Romans 8:12
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