
聖經 (和合本) 新約:羅馬書 (Romans)
Romans stands as perhaps the most intellectually ambitious book in the New Testament, a systematic treatise on what it means to be made right with God. Written by the apostle Paul to a Christian community he had not yet visited, the letter builds with relentless logic from the diagnosis of universal human sinfulness through the revolutionary doctrine of justification by faith alone. It addresses the profound mystery of God's purposes for Israel, the relationship between law and grace, and the cosmic scope of redemption through Christ. For two thousand years, this letter has shaped Christian theology more than any other single text, forming the foundation for Augustine's thought, Luther's reformation, and Calvin's Institutes. Yet Romans is not merely abstract theology. Its later chapters turn to practical ethics, exploring what it means to live as God's holy people in a broken world. The book demands everything from its readers, but offers in return a vision of human existence and divine grace of unmatched depth and power.