Verse explainer

What does Romans 5:1 really mean?

Justification by faith doesn't just clear the record — it ends the war between a guilty soul and a holy God.

KJV

Therefore being justified by faith, we have peace with God through our Lord Jesus Christ:

BSB

Therefore, since we have been justified through faith, we have peace with God through our Lord Jesus Christ,

Paul has spent four chapters proving that right standing before God comes through faith, not law-keeping. Now in v.1 he draws the first and most immediate consequence: peace with God. This isn't a feeling of calm — it's an objective change of status. Before justification, the sinner stands in enmity with God, not merely estranged but opposed. The moment that guilt is removed through Christ's atoning work, the hostility has no more ground to stand on. The peace is real and present ('we have' — not 'we may earn'). It flows entirely through Christ as mediator, not through the believer's moral effort. Verse 2 extends this: we also have access — a leading-in — to the very grace of God, where we now stand. The logic of the passage is cumulative: justification → peace → access → hope. The 'therefore' matters. It announces that everything from here flows out of what was established in chapters 1–4.

"Peace with God" means feeling calm or spiritually at ease. Many people read 'peace with God' as an emotional state — a sense of spiritual serenity that comes from prayer, clean living, or religious sincerity. On that reading, peace fluctuates with feelings and can be lost on a bad day. But Paul's argument in Romans 1–4 has been entirely forensic: God declares the ungodly righteous on the basis of Christ's atoning work received through faith. The peace in v.1 is the direct consequence of that declaration — it is a change in standing, not in mood. The underlying Greek eirēnē in this context means the hostility between a guilty sinner and a holy God has been resolved. It cannot be undone by a bad week, because it was not created by a good one. Matthew Henry makes the point sharply: it is sin that breeds the quarrel, and justification removes the guilt that sustained it. Verse 2 confirms the objective nature of this — believers now 'stand' in grace, a posture of confirmed dignity, not anxious striving. The peace is real before it is felt, and it is felt only because it is first real.
Matthew Henryearly 18th c. · PD

Henry emphasizes that sin creates not merely strangeness but active enmity between the soul and a holy God, and that justification removes the guilt which was the sole obstacle to peace. The peace that follows is no mere cessation of hostilities — God becomes friend, not simply non-enemy. Henry notes that this peace is sustained through Christ as mediator, the 'Day's-man' who has laid his hand upon both parties, and that unlike slippery places in earthly courts, standing in God's favour is secure.

Adam Clarkeearly 19th c. · PD

Clarke stresses that Paul treats the case as already proven and now moves to its fruits. The peace here has two dimensions: an outward reconciliation with God — the enmity shown in our rebellion and transgression being ended — and an inward peace of conscience, the terror of guilt replaced by the quiet of forgiveness. Clarke calls peace 'generally the first-fruits of our justification,' with Christ's passion and death as the sole cause of the whole reconciliation.

John Gill18th c. · PD

Gill carefully distinguishes faith's role: it is not the efficient, moving, or material cause of justification — God justifies freely, by grace, through Christ's righteousness — but faith is the means by which the justified person perceives and enjoys that standing. The peace that follows is therefore not grounded in the quality of one's believing but in the atoning sacrifice and imputed righteousness of Christ, which faith simply lays hold of. Gill identifies this peace with the 'peace of God that passes all understanding' in Philippians 4:7.

εἰρήνη eirēnē

'Peace.' In secular Greek simply the absence of war, but in Paul's usage it carries the full Hebrew sense of shalom — wholeness, restored relationship, well-being. Crucially it is not a subjective mood but an objective condition: the hostility between the sinner and God has been legally resolved. The present tense 'we have' (echomen) declares a present reality, not a future aspiration. The word appears immediately after 'justified,' signaling that peace is the direct consequence of a changed legal standing, not of improved behavior.