Romans - Introduction
Here is some general introductory information concerning the book of Romans.
The Book of Romans is THE doctrinal book on salvation in the New Testament. The theme of this book is righteousness through faith as the grounds of justification. It teaches that a person is saved by grace through faith. It reveals New Testament salvation, redemption, sanctification, justification, predestination, adoption, regeneration, and glorification.
The Old Testament is quoted directly 30 times in the Book of Romans. Paul teaches ACCORDING to the "scriptures of the prophets" (Romans 16:26).
Time Frame
The Book of Romans was written by the apostle Paul from Corinth in about 58 AD and was delivered to Rome by Phebe (Romans 16:1). It was written sometime before the events described in Acts 25. Paul had not yet visited Rome at the time of this books writing and he goes to Rome for the first time in Acts 25. Paul probably wrote this book sometime around the events we see in Acts 20, 21 and 22.
General Comments
Paul's epistles were not written in the order in which they appear in the bible. The epistles to the Thessalonians were written first in about 54 AD. Galatians probably followed with Romans being written next. The remaining epistles were written between 59 and 67 AD. Bishop James Ussher writes in his "The Annals of the World" that Paul was beheaded in Rome on June 29, 67 AD.
Outline
The general outline for the Book of Romans can be summarized in five points:
Here are the links to each chapter:
Here is some general introductory information concerning the book of Romans.
The Book of Romans is THE doctrinal book on salvation in the New Testament. The theme of this book is righteousness through faith as the grounds of justification. It teaches that a person is saved by grace through faith. It reveals New Testament salvation, redemption, sanctification, justification, predestination, adoption, regeneration, and glorification.
The Old Testament is quoted directly 30 times in the Book of Romans. Paul teaches ACCORDING to the "scriptures of the prophets" (Romans 16:26).
Time Frame
The Book of Romans was written by the apostle Paul from Corinth in about 58 AD and was delivered to Rome by Phebe (Romans 16:1). It was written sometime before the events described in Acts 25. Paul had not yet visited Rome at the time of this books writing and he goes to Rome for the first time in Acts 25. Paul probably wrote this book sometime around the events we see in Acts 20, 21 and 22.
General Comments
Paul's epistles were not written in the order in which they appear in the bible. The epistles to the Thessalonians were written first in about 54 AD. Galatians probably followed with Romans being written next. The remaining epistles were written between 59 and 67 AD. Bishop James Ussher writes in his "The Annals of the World" that Paul was beheaded in Rome on June 29, 67 AD.
Outline
The general outline for the Book of Romans can be summarized in five points:
- Historical (Chapters 1 - 5)
- Doctrinal (Chapters 6 - 8)
- Prophetic (Chapters 9 - 11)
- Practical (Chapters 12 - 14)
- Conclusions (Chapters 15 - 16)
Here are the links to each chapter:
- Romans Chapter One
- Romans Chapter Two
- Romans Chapter Three
- Romans Chapter Four
- Romans Chapter Five
- Romans Chapter Six
- Romans Chapter Seven
- Romans Chapter Eight
- Romans Chapter Nine
- Romans Chapter Ten
- Romans Chapter Eleven
- Romans Chapter Twelve
- Romans Chapter Thirteen
- Romans Chapter Fourteen
- Romans Chapter Fifteen
- Romans Chapter Sixteen
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