Romans 7 is a much-debated passage in the New Testament. Is the person Paul describes in verses 14–25 (the one who cries out, “the good I want to do I do not do, but the evil I do not want to do, this I keep on doing”) a believer or an unbeliever? A regenerate Christian or someone still under the power of sin without the Spirit?
John Calvin had a clear, carefully argued answer. And in an age when his words are frequently paraphrased, misattributed, or fabricated outright, it is worth going back to what he actually wrote in his Commentary on Romans.
The five quotes below are drawn verbatim from the Beveridge translation and can be verified at the Christian Classics Ethereal Library (CCEL). No paraphrase. No composite. Just Calvin.
Quote 1 Romans 7 Describes the Regenerate, Not the Natural Man
Calvin begins by dismantling the interpretation, common in his day and still heard today, that Paul is describing the experience of someone apart from grace. His position is direct:
But Paul, as I have said already, does not here set before us simply the natural man, but in his own person describes what is the weakness of the faithful, and how great it is.
John Calvin, Commentary on Romans, on Romans 7:15 (Beveridge translation)
This is Calvin’s interpretive anchor for the entire passage. The struggle Paul describes is not the frustrated moral effort of someone without the Spirit, but the interior battle of a genuine believer. The conflict itself is evidence of regeneration, not a sign of its absence.
Quote 2 Even Augustine Changed His Mind
One of the most striking features of Calvin’s commentary here is his appeal to Augustine’s own intellectual history. Augustine initially read Romans 7 as describing the unregenerate person, and then reversed that position entirely. Calvin records it this way:
Augustine was for a time involved in the common error; but after having more clearly examined the passage, he not only retracted what he had falsely taught, but in his first book to Boniface, he proves, by many strong reasons, that what is said cannot be applied to any but to the regenerate.
John Calvin, Commentary on Romans, on Romans 7:15 (Beveridge translation)
Calvin is pointing his readers to Augustine’s Epistle to Boniface, where the great North African bishop walked back his earlier view. The regenerate reading of Romans 7 is not a Reformation invention; it is the conclusion that careful engagement with the text drove even Augustine to embrace.
Quote 3 The Carnal Man Has No Real Inner Conflict
To sharpen the distinction between the regenerate and the unregenerate, Calvin makes a pointed contrast. The person without the Spirit does not experience the deep, internal war of Romans 7, because there is nothing in them to resist sin:
It has therefore been justly said, that the carnal man runs headlong into sin with the approbation and consent of the whole soul; but that a division then immediately begins for the first time, when he is called by the Lord and renewed by the Spirit.
John Calvin, Commentary on Romans, on Romans 7:15–17 (Beveridge translation)
This is both a theological distinction and a pastoral one. If you are fighting against your sin, truly fighting and not merely feeling guilty, that battle is itself a mark of the Spirit’s presence. The unconverted soul does not war against its lusts; it flows with them.
Quote 4 The Divided Heart of the Godly
Here is Calvin at his most pastorally alive. He paints a portrait of the Christian life that is honest about its difficulty without abandoning its hope:
The godly, on the other hand, in whom the regeneration of God is begun, are so divided, that with the chief desire of the heart they aspire to God, seek celestial righteousness, hate sin, and yet they are drawn down to the earth by the relics of their flesh: and thus, while pulled in two ways, they fight against their own nature, and nature fights against them.
John Calvin, Commentary on Romans, on Romans 7:15 (Beveridge translation)
The phrase relics of their flesh is Calvin’s term for the remaining corruption that persists in the believer throughout this life. Note what he says: the chief desire of the regenerate heart is toward God, toward righteousness, toward hating sin. The downward drag is real, but it is not the defining direction of the soul. This is the Christian struggle, not Christian defeat.
Quote 5 Regeneration Only Begins in This Life
Calvin’s final word in this section is a sober but clarifying one. It explains why the struggle never fully resolves on this side of glory:
For regeneration only begins in this life; the relics of the flesh which remain, always follow their own corrupt propensities, and thus carry on a contest against the Spirit.
John Calvin, Commentary on Romans, on Romans 7:15–17 (Beveridge translation)
Sanctification is real, but it is not complete. Every believer carries within them the beginning of new life and the remnants of the old. The tension between these two (the Spirit’s work and the flesh’s resistance) is not a sign that something has gone wrong. It is the ordinary shape of the Christian life until Christ returns or calls us home.
Why These Quotes Matter
In a time when Calvin is frequently quoted from secondary sources, paraphrased without attribution, or cited from passages that have been fabricated entirely, going back to the primary source matters. The five statements above represent Calvin’s actual voice: precise, pastoral, and deeply grounded in the text of Scripture.
The regenerate reading of Romans 7 is not simply a Reformed distinctive. It is the conclusion that careful exegetes from Augustine to Calvin to the Westminster Divines arrived at when they took the passage seriously. More than that, it is a reading that has brought genuine comfort to struggling believers for centuries, the comfort of knowing that the conflict you feel is not evidence that God has abandoned you, but that he has begun his work in you.
The fight is the proof.
Primary Source All five quotes are drawn verbatim from: John Calvin, Commentary on Romans, on Romans 7:14–25, Beveridge translation. Available freely online at the Christian Classics Ethereal Library: ccel.org/ccel/calvin/calcom38
