Dr Martyn Lloyd-Jones’s sermons on the book of Romans were preached to the congregation at
Westminster Chapel in the heart of central London on Friday evenings between October 1955 to March
1968. These sermons were …
Dr Martyn Lloyd-Jones’s sermons on the book of Romans were preached to the congregation at
Westminster Chapel in the heart of central London on Friday evenings between October 1955 to March
1968. These sermons were preached from the beginning of October until the end of May each year, with
breaks being taken for Christmas and Easter. Dr Lloyd-Jones began his ministry at Westminster Chapel in
1938, and his ministry there lasted for thirty years until his retirement in 1968. As such, his Romans series
came at the end of his preaching career. Spanning 366 sermons over twelve years, his series on the book
of Romans is the longest expositional series Dr Lloyd-Jones ever did.
Dr Lloyd-Jones regarded the book of Romans as the ‘first in importance’ among the New Testament
epistles. 1 Indeed, it is likely that Dr Lloyd-Jones saw his exposition of the book of Romans as his most
important work, as evidenced by the fact that he chose his Romans sermons as the first of his many
sermons to be published following his retirement. His official biographer Iain Murray writes;
Many hundreds of unrevised manuscript copies of sermons thus existed by 1968,
of which, for reasons already noted, comparatively few had appeared in print.
He did not hesitate in choosing to put his Romans sermons first for publication in
book form, to be followed by those on Ephesians.
Dr Lloyd-Jones’s hope for these sermons on the book of Romans was that they will ‘not only help
Christian people to understand more clearly the great doctrines of our Faith, but that they will also fill
them with a joy “unspeakable and full of glory” and bring them into a condition in which they will be
“Lost in wonder, love, and praise”’.