‏ Romans 1

Introduction

1To all in Rome who are dear to God and have been called to become Christ’s people, from Paul, a servant of Jesus Christ, who has been called to become an apostle, and has been set apart to tell God’s good news. 2This good news God promised long ago through his prophets in the sacred scriptures, 3concerning his Son, Jesus Christ, our Lord; who, as to his human nature, was descended from David, 4but, as to the spirit of holiness within him, was miraculously designated Son of God by his resurrection from the dead. 5Through him we received the gift of the apostolic office, to win submission to the faith among all nations for the glory of his name. 6And among these nations are you — you who have been called to belong to Jesus Christ. 7 May God, our Father, and the Lord Jesus Christ bless you and give you peace.

8 First, I thank my God through Jesus Christ about you all, because the report of your faith is spreading throughout the world. 9God, to whom I offer the worship of my soul as I tell the goodness of his Son, is my witness how constantly I mention you when I pray, 10asking that, if he be willing, I may some day at last find the way open to visit you. 11For I long to see you, in order to impart to you some spiritual gift and so give you fresh strength — 12or rather that both you and I may find encouragement in each other’s faith. 13I want you to know, my friends, that I have many times intended coming to see you — but until now I have been prevented — that I might find among you some fruit of my labours, as I have already among the other nations.

Faith the Ground of Acceptance

14 I have a duty to both the Greek and the barbarian, to both the cultured and the ignorant. 15And so, for my part, I am ready to tell the good news to you also who are in Rome. 16 For I am not ashamed of the good news; it is the power of God which brings salvation to everyone who believes in Christ, to the Jew first, but also to the Greek. 17For in it there is a revelation of the divine righteousness resulting from faith and leading on to faith; as scripture says — ‘Through faith the righteous will find life.’

18 So, too, there is a revelation from heaven of the divine wrath against every form of ungodliness and wickedness on the part of those people who, by their wicked lives, are stifling the truth. 19This is so, because what can be known about God is plain to them; for God himself has made it plain. 20For ever since the creation of the universe God’s invisible attributes — his everlasting power and divinity — are to be seen and studied in his works, so that people have no excuse; 21because, although they learned to know God, yet they did not offer him as God either praise or thanksgiving. Their speculations about him proved futile, and their undiscerning minds were darkened. 22Professing to be wise, they showed themselves fools; 23and they transformed the glory of the immortal God into the likeness of mortal humans, and of birds, and beasts, and reptiles.

24 Therefore God abandoned them to impurity, letting them follow the cravings of their hearts, until they dishonoured their own bodies; 25for they had substituted a lie for the truth about God, and had reverenced and worshiped created things more than the Creator, who is to be praised for ever. Amen. 26That, I say, is why God abandoned them to degrading passions. Even the women among them perverted the natural use of their bodies to the unnatural; 27while the men, disregarding that for which women were intended by nature, were consumed with passion for one another. Men indulged in vile practices with men, and incurred in their own persons the inevitable penalty for their perverseness.

28 Then, as they would not keep God before their minds, God abandoned them to depraved thoughts, so that they did all kinds of shameful things. 29They revelled in every form of wickedness, evil, greed, vice. Their lives were full of envy, murder, quarrelling, treachery, malice. 30They became back-biters, slanderers, impious, insolent, boastful. They devised new sins. They disobeyed their parents. 31They were undiscerning, untrustworthy, without natural affection or pity. Well aware of God’s decree, that those who do such things deserve to die, not only are they guilty of them themselves, but they even applaud those who do them.

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