Romans 14:8

Romans 14:8

For whether we live, we live unto the Lord; and whether we die, we die unto the Lord: whether we live therefore, or die, we are the Lord’s.

King James Version (KJV)

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Context

In Romans 14 Paul urges believers not to judge one another over disputable matters, grounding mutual acceptance in their shared belonging to the Lord.

What Does Romans 14:8 Mean?

Paul lifts a dispute about food and special days into a far larger truth: believers do not live or die for themselves. Whether in life or in death, we belong to the Lord. The repetition drives the point home -- "we live unto the Lord," "we die unto the Lord" -- until it lands on the firm conclusion: "we are the Lord's." Our existence, in every condition, is oriented toward Him and held by Him.

This reframes how we judge one another over secondary matters, which is Paul's immediate concern. If each believer lives unto the Lord and answers to Him, then we have no business setting ourselves up as judges over a fellow servant. But the verse reaches further than the dispute that prompted it. It speaks to the deepest human fear -- death -- and answers it with belonging. Death does not transfer us out of the Lord's hands; even there, we are His. For the reader, this is profound comfort and clear direction: live consciously for the One to whom you belong, release others to the same Lord they serve, and face even death knowing that nothing alters whose you are.

In the Original Language

The repeated phrase "unto the Lord" (to kurio) is a dative of belonging and orientation, expressing that the believer's whole existence is referred to Christ.

Application

Live each day mindful that you belong to the Lord in both life and death, and let that belonging free you from fear and from judging fellow servants.

Keep Studying Romans 14

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