Overview of Chapter: Romans 6 takes you beneath the surface of forgiveness and into the hidden depth of union with Christ. Paul shows that grace does not merely cancel guilt; it transfers you out of an old dominion and into a new life. Baptism is revealed as participation in Christ’s death and resurrection, the “old man” is exposed as the old Adamic identity under sin’s rule, and the body is reclaimed from being sin’s instrument to becoming an offering of righteousness. The chapter moves through the imagery of burial, planting, kingship, warfare, slavery, fruit, wages, and gift, unveiling a new Exodus in which the believer leaves the old tyrant behind to serve the living God. Here you see the already-present life of the age to come working within mortal flesh, producing sanctification now and moving toward eternal life in Christ Jesus our Lord.
Verses 1-4: Through the Waters into Christ’s Death and Life
1 What shall we say then? Shall we continue in sin, that grace may abound? 2 May it never be! We who died to sin, how could we live in it any longer? 3 Or don’t you know that all we who were baptized into Christ Jesus were baptized into his death? 4 We were buried therefore with him through baptism into death, that just as Christ was raised from the dead through the glory of the Father, so we also might walk in newness of life.
- Grace is never permission:
Paul opens by tearing down the fleshly misuse of grace. Grace does not create a safe room for sin; grace severs the believer from sin’s realm. The question itself exposes a shallow reading of the gospel. If grace is understood only as pardon, sin appears tolerable. If grace is understood as union with the crucified and risen Christ, continuing in sin becomes a contradiction of identity.
- Baptism is a burial before it is a badge:
Paul does not treat baptism as a bare outward marker. He joins it directly to Christ’s death. The believer is not merely said to admire Christ’s cross, but to be brought into it. The waters signify a grave, an ending, a decisive break with the former life. Baptism therefore proclaims that conversion is not cosmetic improvement but a death sentence upon the old order.
- The waters gather up the old redemptive crossings:
Throughout Scripture, waters mark moments when God judges, delivers, and brings his people into a new stage of covenant life. The flood separated a judged world from a preserved remnant. The sea separated Israel from Pharaoh. The Jordan marked entry into inheritance. Paul gathers those patterns and centers them in Christ. In baptism, the believer passes through the greater Exodus, leaving the old tyrant behind through the death of the true Deliverer.
- Resurrection glory creates a new walk:
Christ was raised “through the glory of the Father,” meaning the Father’s majesty, holiness, and life-giving power were openly displayed in the overturning of the grave. This is not abstract splendor but active divine power. That same resurrection reality defines the believer’s path. “Walk” is covenant language for daily life, so newness of life is not a passing spiritual feeling; it is a new mode of existence produced by resurrection power.
- Newness is the quality of the new creation:
Paul does not speak only of a later life after death, but of a kind of life that already bears the character of the coming world. This newness is not merely recent in time; it is different in order, marked by the life of the risen Christ. What will fill the new creation at the end has already begun to work in you now, so your daily obedience becomes an early manifestation of the world to come.
- Newness is present before it is complete:
Paul speaks of a walk you enter now, even while full bodily transformation awaits the resurrection to come. The age to come has already broken into the present through Christ’s rising. Believers therefore live in holy tension: still in this age’s mortal conditions, yet already animated by the life of the coming kingdom.
Verses 5-7: The Old Man Crucified
5 For if we have become united with him in the likeness of his death, we will also be part of his resurrection; 6 knowing this, that our old man was crucified with him, that the body of sin might be done away with, so that we would no longer be in bondage to sin. 7 For he who has died has been freed from sin.
- Union with Christ is organic, not merely external:
“United with him” carries the sense of being grown together or planted together. Paul is not describing mere imitation, as though Christ dies over there and you try to copy him from a distance. He is describing participation. The believer is joined to Christ in a living union, so that the pattern of his death becomes the pathway of the believer’s own transformation, and the power of his resurrection becomes the source of new life. This organic union also harmonizes with the wider biblical imagery of life joined to a living source, where what is rooted in Christ begins to bear the life of Christ.
- The old man is the old humanity in Adam:
“Our old man” is more than your former bad habits. It is the self as defined by the old fallen order, the humanity shaped by Adam’s rebellion, guilt, corruption, and alienation. Paul says that old man was crucified with Christ. He is declaring a decisive break with the former corporate identity under sin. What ruled you in Adam has been judged in the cross of Christ.
- The body is not evil, but captured territory:
“The body of sin” does not mean the physical body is inherently sinful. Scripture never teaches that created embodiment is evil. Rather, Paul speaks of the body as the arena that sin had occupied and used. Sin had turned the body into its operational base. In Christ, that occupation is broken, and the body is reclaimed for righteous service and future resurrection glory.
- Sin is dethroned before it is absent:
When Paul says the body of sin might be “done away with,” he speaks of sin’s mastery being rendered powerless, not of all struggle disappearing at once. The tyrant has lost the throne, even though resistance still remains. This is why the Christian fights sin seriously without fighting as a hopeless captive. The battle continues, but the dominion has changed.
- Death breaks the old master’s claim:
“He who has died has been freed from sin” uses the same justification language Paul has already employed in the letter. Death with Christ is not only release from a cruel master; it is also a judicial verdict. Sin’s legal claim has been dismissed. The cross is therefore not only a place of forgiveness; it is also the courtroom where sin’s authority over the believer is nullified.
Verses 8-11: Once for All, Alive to God
8 But if we died with Christ, we believe that we will also live with him; 9 knowing that Christ, being raised from the dead, dies no more. Death no longer has dominion over him! 10 For the death that he died, he died to sin one time; but the life that he lives, he lives to God. 11 Thus consider yourselves also to be dead to sin, but alive to God in Christ Jesus our Lord.
- Shared death guarantees shared life:
Paul moves from union in death to certainty of life. The believer’s future is not suspended in uncertainty because it rests in Christ’s own risen life. Since union with him is real, resurrection life is not a poetic idea but the settled trajectory of everyone joined to him. This includes present spiritual vitality and reaches forward to the full resurrection of the body.
- Death has lost its lordship in Christ:
Paul uses dominion language. Death once exercised rule over fallen humanity as the visible sign of sin’s reign. But Christ, having been raised, stands forever beyond death’s jurisdiction. This is the reversal of the old curse. The risen Christ is not merely alive again; he is the death-conquering Lord whose life can never again be touched by the grave.
- Christ died to sin without ever being sinful:
When Paul says Christ “died to sin one time,” he does not mean Christ had personal sin from which he needed release. He means that Christ entered the realm where sin’s penalty operated, bore its judgment, and exhausted its claim in a once-for-all death. Sin brought all its force against him, and in that very act its condemning power was broken for those who are in him.
- The once-for-all death of Christ carries priestly finality:
Paul’s stress on the single, unrepeatable character of Christ’s death shows that his sacrifice does not belong to an endless cycle of repetition. What old sacrifices could only anticipate, Christ fulfilled decisively. His death stands complete, sufficient, and unsurpassable, so the believer’s confidence rests in a finished work and the believer’s self-offering rises only from that accomplished redemption.
- The life of Christ is Godward life:
“The life that he lives, he lives to God.” The risen life of Christ is wholly oriented toward the Father in unbroken victory, obedience, and communion. To be alive to God in Christ is therefore to share, by grace, in the Son’s own Godward life. The Christian life is not self-generated spirituality; it is participation in the risen Lord’s relation to the Father.
- Reckoning is faith’s holy arithmetic:
“Consider yourselves” does not mean pretending something is true when it is not. It means counting as true what God has accomplished in Christ. Faith agrees with God’s verdict and begins to live from it. You are not told to die to sin by your own power so that one day you might belong to Christ; you are told to reckon yourself dead to sin because, in Christ, that decisive breach has already been made.
Verses 12-14: A New Reign in the Mortal Body
12 Therefore don’t let sin reign in your mortal body, that you should obey it in its lusts. 13 Also, do not present your members to sin as instruments of unrighteousness, but present yourselves to God as alive from the dead, and your members as instruments of righteousness to God. 14 For sin will not have dominion over you. For you are not under law, but under grace.
- Sin seeks a throne in mortal flesh:
Paul now speaks in royal terms. Sin wants to reign, to exercise kingly authority through bodily desires. This exposes sin as more than isolated acts; it is a usurping power that seeks command. The believer must therefore recognize temptation not merely as weakness but as an attempted restoration of a dethroned ruler.
- Mortal does not mean forsaken:
Paul says “mortal body,” not evil body. The body is still subject to death in the present age, which means the believer lives in real weakness. Yet that same mortal body is addressed as the place where obedience now matters. Resurrection life has entered a still-mortal frame. This keeps you from despair on one side and false triumphalism on the other.
- Your members are weapons in a holy war:
The word translated “instruments” can carry the sense of weapons or implements of warfare. Hands, eyes, tongue, mind, and feet are not neutral. They become armaments either for unrighteousness or for righteousness. Paul reveals the hidden battlefield of daily life: ordinary bodily actions are caught up into a spiritual conflict over which lord will be served.
- Presentation is priestly consecration:
“Present yourselves to God” sounds like offering language. The body is no longer to be handed over to sin’s service but laid before God as belonging to him. This gives the whole passage a temple-like depth. The believer, alive from the dead, becomes an embodied offering, with every member consecrated for holy use.
- Grace is a new regime, not a relaxed standard:
“Not under law, but under grace” does not mean God has ceased to care about holiness. It means the believer is no longer under law as a condemning regime that exposes sin without liberating from its mastery. Under grace, the same God who justifies also empowers. Grace does not lower righteousness; it establishes a new dominion in which righteousness can finally be pursued from life, not from condemnation.
Verses 15-19: From the Mold of Sin to the Form of Truth
15 What then? Shall we sin, because we are not under law, but under grace? May it never be! 16 Don’t you know that when you present yourselves as servants and obey someone, you are the servants of whomever you obey; whether of sin to death, or of obedience to righteousness? 17 But thanks be to God, that, whereas you were bondservants of sin, you became obedient from the heart to that form of teaching to which you were delivered. 18 Being made free from sin, you became bondservants of righteousness. 19 I speak in human terms because of the weakness of your flesh, for as you presented your members as servants to uncleanness and to wickedness upon wickedness, even so now present your members as servants to righteousness for sanctification.
- No one remains masterless:
Paul rejects the fantasy of autonomous freedom. Human life always bends toward a lord. The only question is whether one serves sin unto death or obedience unto righteousness. This exposes the moral illusion of neutrality. Every repeated act of obedience is an act of allegiance, revealing whose servant one is becoming.
- God stoops to teach weak flesh:
Paul says he is speaking “in human terms because of the weakness of your flesh.” This is pastoral condescension in the best sense: divine truth is brought down to a form we can grasp. The slavery analogy is not the full measure of the mystery, but it is a fitting way to expose how total lordship and transfer of ownership really are.
- Heart obedience fulfills the new covenant promise:
Paul thanks God that believers became “obedient from the heart.” True obedience is not merely external compliance but inward transformation. God’s saving work reaches the center of desire, affection, and will. This is the deep fulfillment of covenant renewal: the law of God no longer stands only over the person, but begins to be written within.
- Doctrine is a mold, not a shelf:
The phrase “that form of teaching to which you were delivered” is striking. Paul does not merely say teaching was delivered to you; he says you were delivered to it. The image is that of a pattern or mold shaping what is placed into it. Sound doctrine is therefore not dead information stored in the mind. It is living truth that presses the believer into the shape of Christ.
- Grace is a new Exodus into holy service:
The movement from bondage to sin into service to righteousness echoes the great Exodus pattern. God does not free his people into self-rule. He liberates them from the false master so they may belong to the true one. Sin is the harsher Pharaoh, and righteousness is not a new tyranny but the fitting service of the redeemed.
- Sin trains the body downward, righteousness trains it upward:
Paul says there was once “wickedness upon wickedness,” showing that sin compounds itself. Repeated surrender hardens patterns, deepens uncleanness, and forms habits of death. In the same way, presenting your members to righteousness forms a contrary pattern that leads to sanctification. Holiness is not accidental; it is cultivated through repeated embodied obedience under grace.
Verses 20-23: Two Fruits, Two Payments, Two Destinies
20 For when you were servants of sin, you were free from righteousness. 21 What fruit then did you have at that time in the things of which you are now ashamed? For the end of those things is death. 22 But now, being made free from sin and having become servants of God, you have your fruit of sanctification and the result of eternal life. 23 For the wages of sin is death, but the free gift of God is eternal life in Christ Jesus our Lord.
- Sin’s freedom is counterfeit freedom:
To be “free from righteousness” is not liberty but ruin. It is the so-called freedom of a branch cut off from the tree, or of a nation emancipated from its rightful king only to fall under a destroyer. Paul unmasks sinful freedom as a hollow autonomy that can reject righteousness but cannot produce life.
- Fruit reveals the root:
Paul asks about fruit because fruit makes hidden realities visible. Whatever root governs the life will eventually show itself in what is produced. The old life yielded shame and death because its root was sin. The new life yields sanctification because its root is service to God. The chapter began with burial and now ends with harvest, showing that what is planted in union with Christ grows into holy fruit. In this way, the visible fruit of a life discloses the hidden lord of the heart.
- Shame is grace-awakened memory:
The believer can now look back with shame because grace has taught the heart to see rightly. Shame here is not despairing self-condemnation but clear-eyed recognition of what sin truly was. The things once pursued as pleasure are now exposed as deforming and deadly. This changed moral vision is itself evidence of renewal.
- Sanctification is present fruit, eternal life is the ripened end:
Paul distinguishes between present fruit and final result. Sanctification is the holy growth already appearing in the believer’s life, while eternal life is the full consummation toward which that life moves. This preserves the biblical tension: eternal life is already yours in Christ, and yet it also stands ahead in its unveiled fullness.
- Wages and gift belong to different kingdoms:
“The wages of sin is death” means sin pays exactly what it earns and exactly what it produces. Death is the fitting outcome of rebellion because sin carries death within itself. But eternal life is “the free gift of God,” because no sinner can earn participation in the life of God. One kingdom runs on earned compensation from a cruel master; the other overflows with sheer divine generosity.
- Eternal life is life in the Son, not mere endless duration:
Paul does not say eternal life exists in isolation. It is “in Christ Jesus our Lord.” Eternal life is therefore not simply unending existence; it is communion with God through union with the risen Christ. Its quality is as important as its duration: it is the life of the new creation, the life of fellowship, righteousness, holiness, and deathless joy in the Lord.
Conclusion: Romans 6 reveals that salvation reaches deeper than forgiveness alone. In Christ, you pass through the waters of death and resurrection, leave behind the old humanity, and enter a new dominion where grace empowers what law could never produce. Your body is no longer sin’s occupied territory but God’s consecrated instrument. Your obedience is not a denial of grace but the fruit of being delivered into the form of the gospel itself. The chapter sets before you two masters, two fruits, two economies, and two ends, and it calls you to live from what is already true in Christ Jesus our Lord: dead to sin, alive to God, and moving toward the full harvest of eternal life.
