Duties toward One Another (ROM 13:8-14)

[13:8] Be under obligation to no one—the only obligation you have is to love one another. Whoever does this has obeyed the Law.

[13:9] The commandments, “Do not commit adultery; do not commit murder; do not steal; do not desire what belongs to someone else”—all these, and any others besides, are summed up in the one command, “Love your neighbor as you love yourself.”

[13:10] If you love others, you will never do them wrong; to love, then, is to obey the whole Law.

[13:11] You must do this, because you know that the time has come for you to wake up from your sleep. For the moment when we will be saved is closer now than it was when we first believed.

[13:12] The night is nearly over, day is almost here. Let us stop doing the things that belong to the dark, and let us take up weapons for fighting in the light.

[13:13] Let us conduct ourselves properly, as people who live in the light of day—no orgies or drunkenness, no immorality or indecency, no fighting or jealousy.

[13:14] But take up the weapons of the Lord Jesus Christ, and stop paying attention to your sinful nature and satisfying its desires.

Do Not Judge Others (ROM 14:1-12)

[14:1] Welcome those who are weak in faith, but do not argue with them about their personal opinions.

[14:2] Some people's faith allows them to eat anything, but the person who is weak in the faith eats only vegetables.

[14:3] The person who will eat anything is not to despise the one who doesn't; while the one who eats only vegetables is not to pass judgment on the one who will eat anything; for God has accepted that person.

[14:4] Who are you to judge the servants of someone else? It is their own Master who will decide whether they succeed or fail. And they will succeed, because the Lord is able to make them succeed.

[14:5] Some people think that a certain day is more important than other days, while others think that all days are the same. We each should firmly make up our own minds.

[14:6] Those who think highly of a certain day do so in honor of the Lord; those who will eat anything do so in honor of the Lord, because they give thanks to God for the food. Those who refuse to eat certain things do so in honor of the Lord, and they give thanks to God.

[14:7] We do not live for ourselves only, and we do not die for ourselves only.

[14:8] If we live, it is for the Lord that we live, and if we die, it is for the Lord that we die. So whether we live or die, we belong to the Lord.

[14:9] For Christ died and rose to life in order to be the Lord of the living and of the dead.

[14:10] You then, who eat only vegetables—why do you pass judgment on others? And you who eat anything—why do you despise other believers? All of us will stand before God to be judged by him.

[14:11] For the scripture says, “As surely as I am the living God, says the Lord, everyone will kneel before me, and everyone will confess that I am God.”

[14:12] Every one of us, then, will have to give an account to God.

Do Not Make Others Fall (ROM 14:13-23)

[14:13] So then, let us stop judging one another. Instead, you should decide never to do anything that would make others stumble or fall into sin.

[14:14] My union with the Lord Jesus makes me certain that no food is of itself ritually unclean; but if you believe that some food is unclean, then it becomes unclean for you.

[14:15] If you hurt others because of something you eat, then you are no longer acting from love. Do not let the food that you eat ruin the person for whom Christ died!

[14:16] Do not let what you regard as good get a bad name.

[14:17] For God's Kingdom is not a matter of eating and drinking, but of the righteousness, peace, and joy which the Holy Spirit gives.

[14:18] And when you serve Christ in this way, you please God and are approved by others.

[14:19] So then, we must always aim at those things that bring peace and that help strengthen one another.

[14:20] Do not, because of food, destroy what God has done. All foods may be eaten, but it is wrong to eat anything that will cause someone else to fall into sin.

[14:21] The right thing to do is to keep from eating meat, drinking wine, or doing anything else that will make other believers fall.

[14:22] Keep what you believe about this matter, then, between yourself and God. Happy are those who do not feel guilty when they do something they judge is right!

[14:23] But if they have doubts about what they eat, God condemns them when they eat it, because their action is not based on faith. And anything that is not based on faith is sin.

Please Others, Not Yourselves (ROM 15:1-6)

[15:1] We who are strong in the faith ought to help the weak to carry their burdens. We should not please ourselves.

[15:2] Instead, we should all please other believers for their own good, in order to build them up in the faith.

[15:3] For Christ did not please himself. Instead, as the scripture says, “The insults which are hurled at you have fallen on me.”

[15:4] Everything written in the Scriptures was written to teach us, in order that we might have hope through the patience and encouragement which the Scriptures give us.

[15:5] And may God, the source of patience and encouragement, enable you to have the same point of view among yourselves by following the example of Christ Jesus,

[15:6] so that all of you together may praise with one voice the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ.

The Gospel to the Gentiles (ROM 15:7-13)

[15:7] Accept one another, then, for the glory of God, as Christ has accepted you.

[15:8] For I tell you that Christ's life of service was on behalf of the Jews, to show that God is faithful, to make his promises to their ancestors come true,

[15:9] and to enable even the Gentiles to praise God for his mercy. As the scripture says, “And so I will praise you among the Gentiles; I will sing praises to you.”

[15:10] Again it says, “Rejoice, Gentiles, with God's people!”

[15:11] And again, “Praise the Lord, all Gentiles; praise him, all peoples!”

[15:12] And again, Isaiah says, “A descendant of Jesse will appear; he will come to rule the Gentiles, and they will put their hope in him.”

[15:13] May God, the source of hope, fill you with all joy and peace by means of your faith in him, so that your hope will continue to grow by the power of the Holy Spirit.

Paul's Reason for Writing So Boldly (ROM 15:14-21)

[15:14] My friends: I myself feel sure that you are full of goodness, that you have all knowledge, and that you are able to teach one another.

[15:15] But in this letter I have been quite bold about certain subjects of which I have reminded you. I have been bold because of the privilege God has given me

[15:16] of being a servant of Christ Jesus to work for the Gentiles. I serve like a priest in preaching the Good News from God, in order that the Gentiles may be an offering acceptable to God, dedicated to him by the Holy Spirit.

[15:17] In union with Christ Jesus, then, I can be proud of my service for God.

[15:18] I will be bold and speak only about what Christ has done through me to lead the Gentiles to obey God. He has done this by means of words and deeds,

[15:19] by the power of miracles and wonders, and by the power of the Spirit of God. And so, in traveling all the way from Jerusalem to Illyricum, I have proclaimed fully the Good News about Christ.

[15:20] My ambition has always been to proclaim the Good News in places where Christ has not been heard of, so as not to build on a foundation laid by someone else.

[15:21] As the scripture says, “Those who were not told about him will see, and those who have not heard will understand.”

Paul's Plan to Visit Rome (ROM 15:22-33)

[15:22] And so I have been prevented many times from coming to you.

[15:23] But now that I have finished my work in these regions and since I have been wanting for so many years to come to see you,

[15:24] I hope to do so now. I would like to see you on my way to Spain, and be helped by you to go there, after I have enjoyed visiting you for a while.

[15:25] Right now, however, I am going to Jerusalem in the service of God's people there.

[15:26] For the churches in Macedonia and Achaia have freely decided to give an offering to help the poor among God's people in Jerusalem.

[15:27] That decision was their own; but, as a matter of fact, they have an obligation to help them. Since the Jews shared their spiritual blessings with the Gentiles, the Gentiles ought to use their material blessings to help the Jews.

[15:28] When I have finished this task and have turned over to them all the money that has been raised for them, I shall leave for Spain and visit you on my way there.

[15:29] When I come to you, I know that I shall come with a full measure of the blessing of Christ.

[15:30] I urge you, friends, by our Lord Jesus Christ and by the love that the Spirit gives: join me in praying fervently to God for me.

[15:31] Pray that I may be kept safe from the unbelievers in Judea and that my service in Jerusalem may be acceptable to God's people there.

[15:32] And so I will come to you full of joy, if it is God's will, and enjoy a refreshing visit with you.

[15:33] May God, our source of peace, be with all of you. Amen.

Personal Greetings (ROM 16:1-16)

[16:1] I recommend to you our sister Phoebe, who serves the church at Cenchreae.

[16:2] Receive her in the Lord's name, as God's people should, and give her any help she may need from you; for she herself has been a good friend to many people and also to me.

[16:3] I send greetings to Priscilla and Aquila, my fellow workers in the service of Christ Jesus;

[16:4] they risked their lives for me. I am grateful to them—not only I, but all the Gentile churches as well.

[16:5] Greetings also to the church that meets in their house. Greetings to my dear friend Epaenetus, who was the first in the province of Asia to believe in Christ.

[16:6] Greetings to Mary, who has worked so hard for you.

[16:7] Greetings also to Andronicus and Junia, fellow Jews who were in prison with me; they are well known among the apostles, and they became Christians before I did.

[16:8] My greetings to Ampliatus, my dear friend in the fellowship of the Lord.

[16:9] Greetings also to Urbanus, our fellow worker in Christ's service, and to Stachys, my dear friend.

[16:10] Greetings to Apelles, whose loyalty to Christ has been proved. Greetings to those who belong to the family of Aristobulus.

[16:11] Greetings to Herodion, a fellow Jew, and to the Christians in the family of Narcissus.

[16:12] My greetings to Tryphaena and Tryphosa, who work in the Lord's service, and to my dear friend Persis, who has done so much work for the Lord.

[16:13] I send greetings to Rufus, that outstanding worker in the Lord's service, and to his mother, who has always treated me like a son.

[16:14] My greetings to Asyncritus, Phlegon, Hermes, Patrobas, Hermas, and all the other Christians with them.

[16:15] Greetings to Philologus and Julia, to Nereus and his sister, to Olympas and to all of God's people who are with them.

[16:16] Greet one another with the kiss of peace. All the churches of Christ send you their greetings.

Final Instructions (ROM 16:17-23)

[16:17] I urge you, my friends: watch out for those who cause divisions and upset people's faith and go against the teaching which you have received. Keep away from them!

[16:18] For those who do such things are not serving Christ our Lord, but their own appetites. By their fine words and flattering speech they deceive innocent people.

[16:19] Everyone has heard of your loyalty to the gospel, and for this reason I am happy about you. I want you to be wise about what is good, but innocent in what is evil.

[16:20] And God, our source of peace, will soon crush Satan under your feet. The grace of our Lord Jesus be with you.

[16:21] Timothy, my fellow worker, sends you his greetings; and so do Lucius, Jason, and Sosipater, fellow Jews.

[16:22] I, Tertius, the writer of this letter, send you Christian greetings.

[16:23] My host Gaius, in whose house the church meets, sends you his greetings; Erastus, the city treasurer, and our brother Quartus send you their greetings.

Concluding Prayer of Praise (ROM 16:25-27)

[16:25] Let us give glory to God! He is able to make you stand firm in your faith, according to the Good News I preach about Jesus Christ and according to the revelation of the secret truth which was hidden for long ages in the past.

[16:26] Now, however, that truth has been brought out into the open through the writings of the prophets; and by the command of the eternal God it is made known to all nations, so that all may believe and obey.

[16:27] To the only God, who alone is all-wise, be glory through Jesus Christ forever! Amen.