Verse explainer
Every gift is a grace — not a rank. Use what you have been given, fully and humbly, within its proper measure.
Having then gifts differing according to the grace that is given to us, whether prophecy, let us prophesy according to the proportion of faith;
BSBWe have different gifts according to the grace given us. If one's gift is prophecy, let him use it in proportion to his faith;
The plain meaning
Paul has just told the Roman believers not to think of themselves more highly than they ought (v. 3) and pictured the church as one body with many members, each serving differently (vv. 4–5). Now he gets specific. Every gift — prophecy, service, teaching, leading — comes from grace, not from the recipient's merit or effort. That means no gift confers superiority, and none permits laziness. The phrase 'proportion of faith' (Greek analogia tēs pisteōs) is the pivot: a preacher or teacher should exercise their gift in line with the actual measure of light, conviction, and capacity God has given them — not inflating beyond it, not holding back below it. This rules out two opposite errors: the person who exaggerates their insight and teaches beyond their genuine understanding, and the person who, out of false modesty, withholds the real gift they have been given. The context of vv. 3–8 keeps pressing the same point from every angle: sober self-knowledge, faithful deployment, mutual service.
The common misreading
What the commentators say
Clarke takes the 'proportion of faith' to mean the measure of light and grace actually received from God. His practical point: let every preacher do it in proportion to the grace and knowledge he has received, never arrogating to himself insight he does not possess, never indulging fanciful interpretation. The warning against pride and the warning against underuse are two sides of the same coin — keep soberly within your own sphere.
Gill emphasizes that 'prophesying' here means expounding and preaching the Scriptures, not foretelling. He stresses that a Gospel minister must firmly believe what he proclaims — no scepticism about the main principles of the faith — and must preach up to the full measure of conviction and knowledge given him, never falling short of it. The 'proportion of faith' is both a personal measure and a check against teaching anything out of step with the consistent scheme of Scripture.
JFB insists that all the gifts of believers alike are 'communications of mere grace,' and that the proportion is keyed to the individual's own faith and capacity rather than to some abstract creed-standard. The whole context, they note, is designed to prevent boasting: because the gift is grace and its measure is set by God, neither puffed-up superiority nor envious comparison makes any sense.
The word behind it
'Proportion' or 'correspondence.' Used only here in the New Testament. In classical Greek it described the right ratio between related quantities — nothing more, nothing less than what properly belongs. Applied to a preacher's gift, it means: speak and teach in exact correspondence to the faith and understanding God has actually given you. Over-reaching beyond that measure is presumption; holding back below it is waste. The word rules out both.
Related verses