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THE EPISTLE OF
PAUL THE APOSTLE
TO THE ROMANS
Commentary by DAVID BROWN
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CHAPTER 10
@Ro
10:1-21. SAME SUBJECT CONTINUED--HOW ISRAEL CAME TO
MISS SALVATION, AND THE GENTILES TO FIND IT.
1.
Brethren, my heart's desire--The word here expresses
"entire complacency," that in which the heart
would experience full satisfaction.
and prayer--"supplication."
to God for Israel--"for
them" is the true reading; the subject being
continued from the close of the preceding chapter.
is, that they may be
saved--"for their salvation." Having before
poured forth the anguish of his soul at the general
unbelief of his nation and its dreadful consequences (@Ro
9:1-3), he here expresses in the most emphatic terms
his desire and prayer for their salvation.
2. For
I bear them record--or, "witness," as he
well could from his own sad experience.
that they have a zeal of--"for"
God, but not according
to knowledge--(Compare @Ac
22:3 26:9-11 Ga 1:13,14). He alludes to this
well-meaning of his people, notwithstanding their
spiritual blindness, not certainly to excuse their
rejection of Christ and rage against His saints, but as
some ground of hope regarding them. (See @1Ti
1:13).
3. For
they being ignorant of God's righteousness--that is,
for the justification of the guilty (see on Ro 1:17).
and going about--"seeking"
to establish their own
righteousness, have not submitted themselves to the
righteousness of God--The apostle views the general
rejection of Christ by the nation as one act.
4. For
Christ is the end--the object or aim.
of the law for--justifying
righteousness to every
one that believeth--that is, contains within Himself
all that the law demands for the justification of such as
embrace Him, whether Jew or Gentile (@Ga
3:24).
5-10.
For Moses describeth the righteousness which is of the
law, That the man that doeth--"hath done"
those things--which
it commands.
shall live in them--(@Le
18:5). This is the one way of justification and
life--by "the righteousness which is of (or, by our
own obedience to) the law."
6. But
the--justifying
righteousness which is
of faith speaketh on this wise--"speaketh
thus"--its language or import is to this effect
(quoting in substance @De
30:13,14).
Say not in thine heart,
Who shall ascend into heaven? that is, to bring Christ
down, &c.--that is, "Ye have not to sigh over
the impossibility of attaining to justification; as if one
should say, oh! if I could but get someone to mount up to
heaven and fetch me down Christ, there might be some hope,
but since that cannot be, mine is a desperate case."
7. Or,
Who shall descend, &c.--another case of
impossibility, suggested by @Pr
30:4, and perhaps also @Am
9:2--probably proverbial expressions of impossibility
(compare @Ps
139:7-10 Pr 24:7, &c.).
8. But
what saith it? It saith--continuing the quotation from
@De
30:14.
The word is nigh thee--easily
accessible.
in thy mouth--when
thou confessest Him.
and in thine heart--when
thou believest on Him. Though it is of the law
which Moses more immediately speaks in the passage quoted,
yet it is of the law as Israel shall be brought to look
upon it when the Lord their God shall circumcise their
heart "to love the Lord their God with all their
heart" (@Ro
10:6); and thus, in applying it, the apostle (as
OLSHAUSEN truly observes) is not merely appropriating the
language of Moses, but keeping in the line of his deeper
thought.
that is, the word of
faith, which we preach--that is, the word which men
have to believe for salvation (compare @1Ti
4:6).
9.
That if thou shalt, &c.--So understanding the
words, the apostle is here giving the language of the true
method of justification; and this sense we prefer (with
CALVIN, BEZA, FERME, LOCKE, JOWETT). But able interpreters
render the words, "For," or "Because if
thou shalt," &c. [Vulgate, LUTHER, DE
WETTE, STUART, PHILIPPI, ALFORD, Revised Version].
In this case, these are the apostle's own remarks,
confirming the foregoing statements as to the simplicity
of the gospel method of salvation.
confess with thy mouth
the Lord Jesus--that is, probably, "If thou shalt
confess Jesus [to be] the Lord," which is the proper
manifestation or evidence of faith (@Mt
10:32 1Jo 4:15). This is put first merely to
correspond with the foregoing quotation--"in thy
mouth and in thine heart." So in @1Pe
1:10 the "calling of believers" is put
before their "election," as that which is first
"made sure," although in point of time it comes
after it.
and shalt believe in
thine heart that God hath raised--"that God
raised"
him from the dead,
&c.--(See on Ro 4:25). In @Ro
10:10 the two things are placed in their natural
order.
10.
For with the heart man believeth unto--justifying
righteousness; and with
the mouth confession is made unto salvation--This
confession of Christ's name, especially in times of
persecution, and whenever obloquy is attached to the
Christian profession, is an indispensable test of
discipleship.
11-13.
For the scripture saith--in @Isa
28:16, a glorious Messianic passage.
Whosoever believeth on
him shall not be ashamed--Here, as in @Ro
9:33, the quotation is from the Septuagint,
which renders those words of the original, "shall not
make haste" (that is, fly for escape, as from
conscious danger), "shall not be put to shame,"
which comes to the same thing.
12.
For there is no difference--or "distinction"
between Jew and Greek;
for the same Lord over all--that is, not God
(as CALVIN, GROTIUS, OLSHAUSEN, HODGE), but Christ,
as will be seen, we think, by comparing @Ro
10:9,12,13 and observing the apostle's usual style on
such subjects. (So CHRYSOSTOM, MELVILLE, BENGEL, MEYER, DE
WETTE, FRITZSCHE, THOLUCK, STUART, ALFORD, PHILIPPI).
is rich--a favorite
Pauline term to express the exuberance of that saving
grace which is in Christ Jesus.
unto all that call upon
him--This confirms the application of the preceding
words to Christ; since to call upon the name of the
Lord Jesus is a customary expression. (See @Ac
7:59,60 9:14,21 22:16 1Co 1:2 2Ti 2:22).
13.
For--saith the scripture
whosoever--The
expression is emphatic, "Everyone whosoever"
shall call upon the name
of the Lord shall be saved--(@Joe
2:32); quoted also by Peter, in his great Pentecostal
sermon (@Ac
2:21), with evident application to Christ.
14,
15. How then shall they call on him in whom they have not
believed? and . . . believe in him of whom they
have not heard? and . . . hear without a
preacher? and . . . preach except
. . . sent?--that is, "True, the same
Lord over all is rich unto all alike that call upon Him.
But this calling implies believing, and believing hearing,
and hearing preaching, and preaching a mission to
preach: Why, then, take ye it so ill, O children of
Abraham, that in obedience to our heavenly mission (@Ac
26:16-18) we preach among the Gentiles the
unsearchable riches of Christ?"
15. as
it is written--(@Isa
52:7).
How beautiful are the
feet of them that preach the gospel of peace,
&c.--The whole chapter of Isaiah from which this is
taken, and the three that follow, are so richly Messianic,
that there can be no doubt "the glad tidings"
there spoken of announce a more glorious release than of
Judah from the Babylonish captivity, and the very feet of
its preachers are called "beautiful" for the
sake of their message.
16,
17. But they have not all obeyed the gospel--that is,
the Scripture hath prepared us to expect this sad result.
For Esaias saith, Lord,
who hath believed our report?--that is,"Where
shall one find a believer?" The prophet speaks as if
next to none would believe: The apostle softens this into
"They have not all believed."
17. So
then faith cometh by hearing, and hearing by the word of
God--"This is another confirmation of the truth
that faith supposes the hearing of the Word, and this a
commission to preach it."
18.
But I say, Have they not heard?--"Did they not
hear?" Can Israel, through any region of his
dispersion, plead ignorance of these glad tidings?
Yes, verily, their sound
went--"their voice went out"
into all the earth, and
their words unto the end of the world--These beautiful
words are from @Ps
19:4. Whether the apostle quoted them as in their
primary intention applicable to his subject (as OLSHAUSEN,
ALFORD, &c.), or only "used scriptural language
to express his own ideas, as is done involuntarily almost
by every preacher in every sermon" [HODGE],
expositors are not agreed. But though the latter may seem
the more natural since "the rising of the Sun of
righteousness upon the world" (@Mal
4:2), "the Dayspring from on high visiting us,
giving light to them that sat in darkness, and guiding our
feet into the way of peace" (@Lu
1:78,79), must have been familiar and delightful to
the apostle's ear, we cannot doubt that the irradiation of
the world with the beams of a better Sun by the universal
diffusion of the Gospel of Christ, must have a mode of
speaking quite natural, and to him scarcely figurative.
19.
But I say, Did not Israel know?--know, from their own
Scriptures, of God's intention to bring in the Gentiles?
First--that is First
in the prophetic line [DE WETTE].
Moses saith,
&c.--"I will provoke you to jealousy ('against')
[them that are] not a nation, and against a nation without
understanding will I anger you" (@De
32:21). In this verse God warns His ancient people
that because they had (that is, in aftertimes would) moved
Him to jealousy with their "no-gods," and
provoked Him to anger with their vanities, He in requital
would move them to jealousy by receiving into His favor a
"no-people," and provoke them to anger by
adopting a nation void of understanding.
20.
But Esaias is very bold, and saith--that is, is still
plainer, and goes even the length of saying.
I was found of them that
sought me not--until I sought them.
I was made--"became"
manifest unto them that
asked not after me--until the invitation from Me came
to them. That the calling of the Gentiles was meant by
these words of the prophet (@Isa
65:1) is manifest from what immediately follows,
"I said, Behold Me, behold Me, unto a nation that was
not called by My name."
21.
But to--rather, "with regard to"
Israel he saith, All day--"All
the day"
long I have stretched
out my hands--"did I stretch forth"
my hands--the
attitude of gracious entreaty.
unto a disobedient and
gainsaying people--These words, which immediately
follow the announcement just quoted of the calling of the
Gentiles, were enough to forewarn the Jews both of God's
purpose to eject them from their privileges, in favor of
the Gentiles, and of the cause of it on their own part.
Note,
(1) Mere sincerity, and even earnestness in
religion--though it may be some ground of hope for a
merciful recovery from error--is no excuse, and will not
compensate, for the deliberate rejection of saving truth,
when in the providence of God presented for acceptance (@Ro
10:1-3; and see on Ro 9:7, Note 7). (2) The
true cause of such rejection of saving truth, by the
otherwise sincere, is the prepossession of the mind by
some false notions of its own. So long as the Jews
"sought to set up their own righteousness," it
was in the nature of things impossible that they should
"submit themselves to the righteousness of God";
the one of these two methods of acceptance being in the
teeth of the other (@Ro
10:3). (3) The essential terms of salvation have in
every age been the same: "Whosoever will" is
invited to "take of the water of life freely," @Re
22:17 (@Ro
10:13). (4) How will the remembrance of the
simplicity, reasonableness, and absolute freeness of God's
plan of salvation overwhelm those that perish from under
the sound of it (@Ro
10:4-13). (5) How piercingly and perpetually should
that question--"HOW SHALL THEY HEAR WITHOUT A
PREACHER?"--sound in the ears of all churches, as but
the apostolic echo of their Lord's parting injunction,
"PREACH THE GOSPEL TO EVERY CREATURE" (@Mr
16:15), and how far below the proper standard of love,
zeal, and self-sacrifice must the churches as yet be, when
with so plenteous a harvest the laborers are yet so few (@Mt
9:37,38), and that cry from the lips of pardoned,
gifted, consecrated men--"Here am I, send me" (@Isa
6:8), is not heard everywhere (@Ro
10:14,15)! (6) The blessing of a covenant relation to
God is the irrevocable privilege of no people and no
Church; it can be preserved only by fidelity, on our part,
to the covenant itself (@Ro
10:19). (7) God is often found by those who apparently
are the farthest from Him, while He remains undiscovered
by those who think themselves the nearest (@Ro
10:20,21). (8) God's dealings even with reprobate
sinners are full of tenderness and compassion; all the day
long extending the arms of His mercy even to the
disobedient and gainsaying. This will be felt and
acknowledged at last by all who perish, to the glory of
God's forbearance and to their own confusion (@Ro
10:21).
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