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Romans: A New Translation with Introduction and Commentary is unavailable, but you can change that!

Outside of the Gospels themselves, there is no single Christian document whose influence has been greater than Paul’s epistle to the Romans. Its explosive character has changed lives—Augustine’s, Martin Luther’s, Karl Barth’s, to name a few—and precipitated revolutions. This full-scale commentary deals with the most important issues of the early Christian church. And it is through the eyes of...

2 One may be convinced that one may eat anything, but the one who is weak eats only vegetables. 3 Let the one who eats not despise the one who abstains; let the one who abstains not pass judgment on the one who eats, for God has welcomed him. 4 Who are you to sit in judgment on the servant of another? Before his own master he stands or falls. And stand he will, for the master is able to make him stand. 5 One person regards one day as more important than another; yet another regards every day as the