Romans 5 moves from verdict to life: peace with God, access to grace, and love poured out by the Spirit, proven at the cross. The Adam–Christ contrast shows how grace overrules sin so that those in Christ reign in life.
Bible Themes and Doctrines
Welcome to the complete exposition of God’s Word. This free resource provides a detailed, chapter-by-chapter study of the entire Bible (1,189 chapters) alongside overview articles for all 66 books. Unlike topical studies, these commentaries walk through the text verse-by-verse, ensuring that we hear the whole counsel of God in context.
Our Interpretive approach allows us to maintain consistency across the entire Bible, these studies utilize a Literal, Grammatical-Historical method of interpretation. This framework ensures:
Contextual Integrity: We respect the original audience and history of each passage.
Israel & The Church: We distinguish between God’s program for National Israel and His distinct calling for the Body of Christ.
Christ-Centeredness: While respecting the timeline, we see Jesus Christ as the center of all history and the only Savior for all ages.
For a detailed explanation of our interpretive method, read Our Theological Framework.
How to Use This Library: The chapter studies below are organized by the traditional divisions of Scripture. Click on a section (like “The Pentateuch” or “The Gospels”) to reveal the individual books and chapter links. Traditional keyword searching is not enabled in this category. This library is designed for browsing. Please locate your study using the book and chapter designations below:
Romans 5 moves from verdict to life: peace with God, access to grace, and love poured out by the Spirit, proven at the cross. The Adam–Christ contrast shows how grace overrules sin so that those in Christ reign in life.
Romans 4 shows how God credits righteousness to those who trust Him, using Abraham and David as witnesses and Christ as the ground. The chapter anchors assurance in the cross and resurrection, making the promise firm to all who believe.
Romans 3 names universal sin and unveils God’s answer in Christ, where justice and mercy meet at the cross. This study traces the argument from law to grace with clear application.
Romans 2 turns the mirror toward the moral and the religious. God judges impartially, His kindness calls us to repent, and the Spirit must change the heart.
Romans 1 opens with the gospel promised in Scripture and reveals why the world needs it now. God’s saving righteousness comes by faith as He rescues worshipers from the deadly exchange of His glory for lesser things.
Paul’s closing chapter turns generosity, travel, teamwork, and greetings into discipleship shaped by grace. Watchful courage and steady love mark a church that waits for the Lord.
Paul calls the church back to the gospel of first importance and defends bodily resurrection with eyewitnesses, Scripture, and hope. Christ is raised, we will be raised, and steady work in His name will never be wasted.
Paul says love must steer the sounds of worship. In 1 Corinthians 14, intelligible, orderly speech builds up the church, reveals God to seekers, and keeps peace.
Paul crowns the discussion of gifts with love—the only power that makes speech, knowledge, faith, and sacrifice truly edifying. Love’s character shapes worship now and will endure when we see the Lord face to face.
God arranges the church like a body and gives every believer a Spirit-empowered role for the common good. Desire gifts eagerly, and let love set their aim.
Paul calls the church to honor God’s design in public worship and to receive the Lord’s Supper without pride or partiality. The result is reverent order and shared joy that proclaim Christ until He comes.
Israel’s history warns the church to flee idolatry, share the Lord’s table with undivided loyalty, and use liberty for edification. Every meal and choice bends toward God’s glory and the salvation of many.
Paul affirms a minister’s right to support yet gladly waives it where love and clarity require. He adapts without compromise and runs with disciplined aim.
Paul weds knowledge to love so that liberty serves the good of the church and the honor of Christ. In 1 Corinthians 8, freedom is real, but love decides how it is used.
Romans 6 Chapter Study
Published by Brother Woody BrohmRomans 6 explains why grace never licenses sin. United to Christ in His death and resurrection, believers count themselves dead to sin and present themselves to God so that holiness grows under grace.