Commentaries on Romans are common, and all of the commentaries create a great wealth of resources. Creating another one, therefore needs some justification. The justification is based on two observations. First popularized commentaries on Romans often miss the profundities of what Paul wrote because of the broad sweep of the popular approach. Secondly, what are considered the better commentaries, one based on the Greek language, often swamp the reader in details and the cumulative argument of Paul is lost on the mass of material. The approach this volume uses is a "problem-solution" commentary based on a close reading of the Greek text.