Paul ends this section of Romans by lifting our eyes to the immeasurable wisdom and sovereignty of God. His ways are beyond our ability to calculate or control, and His purposes do not fit into the transactional mindset we often bring to relationships. God is not someone we bargain with or place in our debt. He is the source of all things, the sustainer of all things, and the rightful goal of all things.
It is natural to approach life with a mindset of exchange and fairness, expecting returns for our efforts. When this thinking is applied to God, it subtly turns faith into negotiation. Scripture dismantles that posture by reminding us that God needs nothing from us, while we depend entirely on Him for life, breath, and every good gift. Our obedience does not put God in our debt, and our faithfulness does not obligate Him to repay us on our terms.
This passage invites a shift from bargaining to worship. When we recognize that everything is “from Him and through Him and to Him,” gratitude replaces entitlement. Our lives become a response to grace rather than an attempt to earn it, and worship becomes the fitting posture of those who receive everything from a God who owes us nothing.