Romans 3
No one is righteous, not one (Psalm 14:3 and 53:3), Paul declares, moving from the particular failures of Jews and Gentiles to the cosmic indictment: the whole world stands under the accountability (hypodikos) of God's judgment, for all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God—that divine image-bearing splendor toward which humanity was created but from which it has departed. The law's function (ergon) is not justification but the knowledge of sin; it reveals transgression but cannot redeem it. Here Paul announces the gospel proper: the righteousness of God (dikaiosynē theou) has been revealed through faith in Jesus Christ for all who believe, apart from works of the law—a justification that is freely given (dōrean) through divine grace by means of the redemption (apolytrōsis) accomplished in Christ Jesus. His blood, offered as the propitiation (hilastērion, recalling the mercy seat of the tabernacle, a term that bridges cultic expiation and salvific transformation), demonstrates God's righteous justice in passing over the sins of the past. Boasting is excluded, not by human achievement but by God's design; the one God justifies both the circumcised and the uncircumcised through faith, establishing faith (not ethnicity, not works) as the instrument of righteousness for all.
Romans 3:15
Their feet are swift to shed blood. From Isaiah 59:7. Violence characterizes the human race; destruction comes swiftly (tachus). The progression from spiritual blindness to speech to violent action traces sin's destructive cascade.
Romans 3:16
Ruin and misery mark their ways. From Isaiah 59:7. Ruin (suntrimma) and misery (kakopatheia) are the inevitable consequences of sin-shaped lives. The path of sin leads inexorably to destruction.
Romans 3:17
And the way of peace they do not know. From Isaiah 59:8. Peace (eirēnē)—the shalom of right relationship with God and others—remains unknown to sinful humanity. Sin forecloses the possibility of peace; it is incompatible with reconciliation.
Romans 3:18
There is no fear of God before their eyes. From Psalm 36:1. The fear (phobos) of God—reverent awe before the holy God—is absent. Without this foundational posture, all other corruption becomes intelligible. The catalogue concludes where it should have begun: with the failure to acknowledge God's transcendence and authority.
Romans 3:1
What advantage, then, is there in being a Jew, or what value is there in circumcision? The question anticipated by chapter 2 is now directly posed. If Jews who disobey are no better than Gentiles, what profit (perisseuo) or benefit (ōpheleō) remains to Jewish identity? The question is not whether it is real but what it is in light of universal accountability before God.
Romans 3:2
Much in every way! First of all, the Jews have been entrusted with the very words of God. Paul affirms that Jewish advantage is real and substantial. Entrusted (pisteuō) with the oracles of God (logia theou) places Israel in a unique position as the guardian and custodian of divine revelation. This privilege is not grounds for boasting but for responsibility. The word of God creates obligation, not exemption.