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THE EPISTLE OF
PAUL THE APOSTLE
TO THE ROMANS
Commentary by DAVID BROWN
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CHAPTER 9
@Ro
9:1-33. THE BEARING OF THE FOREGOING TRUTHS UPON THE
CONDITION AND DESTINY OF THE CHOSEN PEOPLE--ELECTION--THE
CALLING OF THE GENTILES.
Too well
aware that he was regarded as a traitor to the dearest
interests of his people (@Ac
21:33 22:22 25:24), the apostle opens this division of
his subject by giving vent to his real feelings with
extraordinary vehemence of protestation.
1, 2.
I say the truth in Christ--as if steeped in the spirit
of Him who wept over impenitent and doomed Jerusalem
(compare @Ro
1:9 2Co 12:19 Php 1:8).
my conscience bearing me
witness in the Holy Ghost--"my conscience as
quickened, illuminated, and even now under the direct
operation of the Holy Ghost."
2.
That I have, &c.--"That I have great grief
(or, sorrow) and unceasing anguish in my heart"--the
bitter hostility of his nation to the glorious Gospel, and
the awful consequences of their unbelief, weighing heavily
and incessantly upon his spirit.
3. For
I could wish that myself were accursed from Christ for--"in
behalf of"
my brethren, my kinsmen
according to the flesh--In proportion as he felt
himself severed from his nation, he seems to have realized
all the more vividly their natural relationship. To
explain away the wish here expressed, as too strong for
any Christian to utter or conceive, some have rendered the
opening words, "I did wish," referring it
to his former unenlightened state; a sense of the words
too tame to be endured: others unwarrantably soften the
sense of the word "accursed." But our version
gives the true import of the original; and if it be
understood as the language rather of "strong and
indistinct emotions than of definite ideas" [HODGE],
expressing passionately how he felt his whole being
swallowed up in the salvation of his people, the
difficulty will vanish, and we shall be reminded of the
similar idea so nobly expressed by Moses (@Ex
32:32).
4. Who
are Israelites--See @Ro
11:1 2Co 11:22 Php 3:5.
to whom pertaineth--"whose
is"
the adoption--It is
true that, compared with the new economy, the old was a
state of minority and pupilage, and so far that of a
bond-servant (@Ga
4:1-3); yet, compared with the state of the
surrounding heathen, the choice of Abraham and his seed
was a real separation of them to be a Family of God
(@Ex
4:22 De 32:6 Isa 1:2 Jer 31:9 Ho 11:1 Mal 1:6).
and the glory--that
"glory of the Lord," or "visible token of
the Divine Presence in the midst of them," which
rested on the ark and filled the tabernacle during all
their wanderings in the wilderness; which in Jerusalem
continued to be seen in the tabernacle and temple, and
only disappeared when, at the Captivity, the temple was
demolished, and the sun of the ancient economy began to go
down. This was what the Jews called the "Shekinah."
and the covenants--"the
covenants of promise" to which the Gentiles before
Christ were "strangers" (@Eph
2:12); meaning the one covenant with Abraham in
its successive renewals (see @Ga
3:16,17).
and the giving of the
law--from Mount Sinai, and the possession of it
thereafter, which the Jews justly deemed their peculiar
honor (@De
26:18,19 Ps 147:19,20 Ro 2:17).
and the service of God--or,
of the sanctuary, meaning the whole divinely instituted
religious service, in the celebration of which they were
brought so nigh unto God.
and the promises--the
great Abrahamic promises, successively unfolded, and which
had their fulfilment only in Christ; (see @Heb
7:6 Ga 3:16,21 Ac 26:6,7).
5.
Whose are the fathers--here, probably, the three great
fathers of the covenant--Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob--by
whom God condescended to name Himself (@Ex
8:6,13 Lu 20:37).
and--most exalted
privilege of all, and as such, reserved to the last.
of whom as concerning
the flesh--(See on Ro 1:3).
Christ came--or,
"is Christ"
who is over all, God--rather,
"God over all."
blessed for ever. Amen--To
get rid of the bright testimony here borne to the supreme
divinity of Christ, various expedients have been adopted:
(1) To place a period, either after the words
"concerning the flesh Christ came," rendering
the next clause as a doxology to the Father--"God who
is over all be blessed for ever"; or after the word
"all"--thus, "Christ came, who is over all:
God be blessed.", &c. [ERASMUS, LOCKE, FRITZSCHE,
MEYER, JOWETT, &c.]. But it is fatal to this view, as
even Socinus admits, that in other Scripture
doxologies the word "Blessed" precedes
the name of God on whom the blessing is invoked (thus:
"Blessed be God," @Ps
68:35; "Blessed be the Lord God, the God of
Israel," @Ps
72:18). Besides, any such doxology here would be
"unmeaning and frigid in the extreme"; the sad
subject on which he was entering suggesting anything but a
doxology, even in connection with Christ's Incarnation
[ALFORD]. (2) To transpose the words rendered "who
is"; in which case the rendering would be,
"whose (that is, the fathers') is Christ according to
the flesh" [CRELLIUS, WHISTON, TAYLOR, WHITBY]. But
this is a desperate expedient, in the face of all
manuscript authority; as is also the conjecture of GROTIUS
and others, that the word "God" should be
omitted from the text. It remains then, that we have here
no doxology at all, but a naked statement of fact, that
while Christ is "of" the Israelitish nation
"as concerning the flesh," He is, in
another respect, "God over all, blessed for
ever." (In @2Co
11:31 the very Greek phrase which is here
rendered "who is," is used in the same sense;
and compare @Ro
1:25, Greek). In this view of the passage, as a
testimony to the supreme divinity of Christ, besides all
the orthodox fathers, some of the ablest modern critics
concur [BENGEL, THOLUCK, STUART, OLSHAUSEN, PHILIPPI,
ALFORD, &c.]
6. Not
as though the word of God had taken none effect--"hath
fallen to the ground," that is, failed: compare @Lu
16:17, Greek.
for they are not all
Israel which are of Israel--better, "for not all
they which are of Israel are Israel." Here the
apostle enters upon the profound subject of ELECTION,
the treatment of which extends to the end of the eleventh
chapter--"Think not that I mourn over the total loss
of Israel; for that would involve the failure of God's
word to Abraham; but not all that belong to the natural
seed, and go under the name of 'Israel,' are the
Israel of God's irrevocable choice." The difficulties
which encompass this subject lie not in the apostle's
teaching, which is plain enough, but in the truths
themselves, the evidence for which, taken by themselves,
is overwhelming, but whose perfect harmony is beyond human
comprehension in the present state. The great source of
error here lies in hastily inferring (as THOLUCK and
others), from the apostle's taking tip, at the close of
this chapter, the calling of the Gentiles in connection
with the rejection of Israel, and continuing this subject
through the two next chapters, that the Election treated
of in the body of this chapter is national, not personal
Election, and consequently is Election merely to religious
advantages, not to eternal salvation. In that
case, the argument of @Ro
9:6, with which the subject of Election opens, would
be this: "The choice of Abraham and his seed has not
failed; because though Israel has been rejected, the
Gentiles have taken their place; and God has a right
to choose what nation He will to the privileges of His
visible kingdom." But so far from this, the Gentiles
are not so much as mentioned at all till towards the close
of the chapter; and the argument of this verse is, that
"all Israel is not rejected, but only a
portion of it, the remainder being the 'Israel'
whom God has chosen in the exercise of His sovereign
right." And that this is a choice not to mere
external privileges, but to eternal salvation, will
abundantly appear from what follows.
7-9.
Neither, because they are the seed of Abraham, are they
all children--"Not in the line of mere fleshly
descent from Abraham does the election run; else Ishmael,
Hagar's child, and even Keturah's children, would be
included, which they were not."
but--the true
election are such of Abraham's seed as God unconditionally
chooses, as exemplified in that promise.
in Isaac shall thy seed
be called--(@Ge
21:12).
10-13.
And not only this; but when Rebecca,
&c.--It might be thought that there was a natural
reason for preferring the child of Sarah, as being
Abraham's true and first wife, both to the child of Hagar,
Sarah's maid, and to the children of Keturah, his second
wife. But there could be no such reason in the case of
Rebecca, Isaac's only wife; for the choice of her son
Jacob was the choice of one of two sons by the same mother
and of the younger in preference to the elder, and before
either of them was born, and consequently before either
had done good or evil to be a ground of preference: and
all to show that the sole ground of distinction lay in the
unconditional choice of God--"not of works, but of
Him that calleth."
14.
What shall we say then? Is there unrighteousness with God?
God forbid--This is the first of two objections to the
foregoing doctrine, that God chooses one and rejects
another, not on account of their works, but purely in the
exercise of His own good pleasure: "This doctrine
is inconsistent with the justice of God." The
answer to this objection extends to @Ro
9:19, where we have the second objection.
15.
For he saith to Moses--(@Ex
33:19).
I will have mercy on
whom I will have--"on whom I have"
mercy, and I will have
compassion on whom I will have--"on whom I
have"
compassion--"There
can be no unrighteousness in God's choosing whom He will,
for to Moses He expressly claims the right to do so."
Yet it is worthy of notice that this is expressed in the
positive rather than the negative form: not, "I will
have mercy on none but whom I will"; but,
"I will have mercy on whomsoever I will."
16. So
then it is not of him that willeth--hath the inward desire
nor of him that runneth--maketh
active effort (compare @1Co
9:24,26 Php 2:16 3:14). Both these are indispensable
to salvation, yet salvation is owing to neither, but is
purely "of God that showeth mercy." See on Php
2:12,13, "Work out your own salvation with fear and
trembling: for it is God which, out of His own good
pleasure, worketh in you both to will and to do."
17.
For the scripture saith to Pharaoh--observe here the
light in which the Scripture is viewed by the apostle.
Even for this same--"this
very"
purpose have I raised--"raised
I"
thee up,
&c.--The apostle had shown that God claims the right
to choose whom He will: here he shows by an example that
God punishes whom He will. But "God did not make
Pharaoh wicked; He only forbore to make him good, by the
exercise of special and altogether unmerited grace"
[HODGE].
that I might--"may"
show my power in thee--It
was not that Pharaoh was worse than others that he was so
dealt with, but "in order that he might become a
monument of the penal justice of God, and it was with a
view to this that God provided that the evil which was in
him should be manifested in this definite form" [OLSHAUSEN].
and that my name might--"may"
be declared--"proclaimed"
in all the earth--"This
is the principle on which all punishment is inflicted,
that the true character of the Divine Lawgiver should be
known. This is of all objects, where God is concerned, the
highest and most important; in itself the most worthy, and
in its results the most beneficent" [HODGE].
18.
Therefore hath he--"So then he hath." The
result then is that He hath
mercy on whom he will
have mercy, and whom he will he hardeneth--by
judicially abandoning them to the hardening influence of
sin itself (@Ps
81:11,12 Ro 1:24,26,28 Heb 3:8,13), and of the
surrounding incentives to it (@Mt
24:12 1Co 15:38 2Th 2:17).
Second
objection to the doctrine of Divine Sovereignty:
19.
Thou shalt say then unto me, Why--"Why then"
is the true reading.
doth he yet find fault?
for who hath resisted--"Who resisteth"
his will?--that is,
"This doctrine is incompatible with human
responsibility"; If God chooses and rejects,
pardons and punishes, whom He pleases, why are those
blamed who, if rejected by Him, cannot help sinning and
perishing? This objection shows quite as conclusively as
the former the real nature of the doctrine objected
to--that it is Election and Non-election to eternal
salvation prior to any difference of personal character;
this is the only doctrine that could suggest the objection
here stated, and to this doctrine the objection is
plausible. What now is the apostle's answer? It is
twofold. First: "It is irreverence and
presumption in the creature to arraign the Creator."
20,
21. Nay but, O man, who art thou that repliest against
God? Shall the thing formed say to him that formed it, Why
hast thou made--"didst thou make"
me thus?--(@Isa
45:9).
21.
Hath not the potter power over the clay; of the same lump
to make one vessel unto honour, and another to dishonour?--"The
objection is founded on ignorance or misapprehension of
the relation between God and His sinful creatures;
supposing that He is under obligation to extend His grace
to all, whereas He is under obligation to none. All are
sinners, and have forfeited every claim to His mercy; it
is therefore perfectly competent to God to spare one and
not another, to make one vessel to honor and another to
dishonor. But it is to be borne in mind that Paul does not
here speak of God's right over His creatures as
creatures, but as sinful creatures: as he
himself clearly intimates in the next verses. It is the
cavil of a sinful creature against his Creator that he is
answering, and be does so by showing that God is under no
obligation to give His grace to any, but is as sovereign
as in fashioning the clay" [HODGE]. But, Second:
"There is nothing unjust in such sovereignty."
22,
23. What if God, willing to show--"designing to
manifest"
his wrath--His holy
displeasure against sin.
and to make his power--to
punish it
known endured with much
long-suffering the vessels of wrath--that is,
"destined to wrath"; just as "vessels of
mercy," in @Ro
9:23, mean "vessels destined to mercy";
compare @Eph
2:3, "children of wrath."
fitted for destruction--It
is well remarked by STUART that the "difficulties
which such statements involve are not to be got rid of by
softening the language of one text, while so many others
meet us which are of the same tenor; and even if we give
up the Bible itself, so long as we acknowledge an
omnipotent and omniscient God we cannot abate in the least
degree from any of the difficulties which such texts
make." Be it observed, however, that if God, as the
apostle teaches, expressly "designed to manifest His
wrath, and to make His power (in the way of wrath)
known," it could only be by punishing some, while He
pardons others; and if the choice between the two classes
was not to be founded, as our apostle also teaches, on
their own doings but on God's good pleasure, the decision
behooved ultimately to rest with God. Yet, even in the
necessary punishment of the wicked, as HODGE observes, so
far from proceeding with undue severity, the apostle would
have it remarked that God "endures with much
long-suffering" those objects of His righteous
displeasure.
23.
And that he might make known the riches of his glory on
the vessels of mercy--that "glorious exuberance
of Divine mercy" which "was manifested in
choosing and eternally arranging for the salvation of
sinners."
24.
even us, whom he hath called, &c.--rather,
"Whom he hath also called, even us," &c. in
not only "afore preparing," but in due
time effectually "calling us."
not of the Jews,
&c.--better, "not from among Jews only, but also
from among Gentiles." Here for the first title in
this chapter the calling of the Gentiles is introduced;
all before having respect, not to the substitution of the
called Gentiles for the rejected Jews, but to the choice
of one portion and the rejection of another of the same
Israel. Had Israel's rejection been total, God's promise
to Abraham would not have been fulfilled by the
substitution of the Gentiles in their room; but Israel's
rejection being only partial, the preservation of a
"remnant," in which the promise was made good,
was but "according to the election of grace."
And now, for the first time, the apostle tells us that
along with this elect remnant of Israel, it is
God's purpose to "take out of the Gentiles a
people for His name" (@Ac
28:14); and that subject, thus introduced, is now
continued to the end of the eleventh chapter.
25. As
he saith also in Osee--"Hosea."
I will call them my
people, which were not my people; and her beloved, which
was not beloved--quoted, though not quite to the
letter, from @Ho
2:23, a passage relating immediately, not to the
heathen, but to the kingdom of the ten tribes; but since
they had sunk to the level of the heathen, who were
"not God's people," and in that sense "not
beloved," the apostle legitimately applies it to the
heathen, as "aliens from the commonwealth of Israel
and strangers to the covenants of promise" (so @1Pe
2:10).
26.
And--another quotation from @Ho
1:10.
it shall come to pass,
that in the place where it was said unto them, Ye are not
my people; there shall they be called the children--"called
sons"
of the living God--The
expression, "in the place where . . .
there," seems designed only to give greater emphasis
to the gracious change here announced, from divine
exclusion to divine admission to the privileges of the
people of God.
27-29.
Esaias also crieth--"But Isaiah crieth"--an
expression denoting a solemn testimony openly borne (@Joh
1:15 7:28,37 12:44 Ac 23:6 24:21).
concerning Israel,
Though the number of the children--"sons"
of Israel be as the sand
of the sea, a--"the"
remnant--that is,
the elect remnant only shall be saved.
28.
For he will finish the work, and cut--"is
finishing the reckoning, and cutting it"
it short in
righteousness; because a short work--"reckoning"
will the Lord make upon
the earth--(@Isa
10:22,23), as in the Septuagint. The sense
given to these words by the apostle may seem to differ
from that intended by the prophet. But the sameness of
sentiment in both places will at once appear, if we
understand those words of the prophet, "the
consumption decreed shall overflow with
righteousness," to mean that while a remnant of
Israel should be graciously spared to return from
captivity, "the decreed consumption" of the
impenitent majority should be "replete with
righteousness," or illustriously display God's
righteous vengeance against sin. The "short
reckoning" seems to mean the speedy completing of His
word, both in cutting off the one portion and saving the
other.
29.
And as Esaias said--"hath said"
before--that is,
probably in an earlier part of his book, namely, @Isa
1:9.
Except the Lord of
Sabaoth--that is, "The Lord of Hosts": the
word is Hebrew, but occurs so in the Epistle of
James (@Jas
5:4), and has thence become naturalized in our
Christian phraseology.
had left us a seed--meaning
a "remnant"; small at first, but in due time to
be a seed of plenty (compare @Ps
22:30,31 Isa 6:12,13).
we had been--"become"
as Sodom,
&c.--But for this precious seed, the chosen people
would have resembled the cities of the plain, both in
degeneracy of character and in merited doom.
30,
31. What shall we say then?--"What now is the
result of the whole?" The result is this--very
different from what one would have expected.
That the Gentiles, which
followed not after righteousness, have attained--"attained"
to righteousness, even
the righteousness of faith--As we have seen that
"the righteousness of faith" is the
righteousness which justifies (see on Ro
3:22, &c.), this verse must mean that "the
Gentiles, who while strangers to Christ were quite
indifferent about acceptance with God, having embraced the
Gospel as soon as it was preached to them, experienced the
blessedness of a justified state."
31.
But Israel, which followed--"following"
after the law of
righteousness, hath not attained--"attained
not"
unto the law of
righteousness--The word "law" is used here,
we think, in the same sense as in @Ro
7:23, to denote "a principle of action";
that is, "Israel, though sincerely and steadily
aiming at acceptance with God, nevertheless missed
it."
32,
33. Wherefore? Because they sought it not by faith,
but as it were--rather simply, "as"
by the works of the law--as
if it were thus attainable, which justification is not:
Since, therefore, it is attainable only by faith, they
missed it.
for--it is doubtful
if this particle was originally in the text.
they stumbled at that
stumbling-stone--better, "against the stone of
stumbling," meaning Christ. But in this they
only did.
33. As
it is written--(@Isa
8:14 28:16).
Behold, &c.--Two
Messianic predictions are here combined, as is not unusual
in quotations from the Old Testament. Thus combined, the
prediction brings together both the classes of whom the
apostle is treating: those to whom Messiah should be only
a stone of stumbling, and those who were to regard Him as
the Cornerstone of all their hopes. Thus expounded, this
chapter presents no serious difficulties, none which do
not arise out of the subject itself, whose depths are
unfathomable; whereas on every other view of it the
difficulty of giving it any consistent and worthy
interpretation is in our judgment insuperable.
Note,
(1) To speak and act "in Christ," with a
conscience not only illuminated, but under the present
operation of the Holy Ghost, is not peculiar to the
supernaturally inspired, but is the privilege, and ought
to be the aim, of every believer (@Ro
9:1). (2) Grace does not destroy, but only intensify
and elevate, the feelings of nature; and Christians should
study to show this (@Ro
9:2,3). (3) To belong to the visible Church of God,
and enjoy its high and holy distinctions, is of the
sovereign mercy of God, and should be regarded with devout
thankfulness (@Ro
9:4,5). (4) Yet the most sacred external distinctions
and privileges will avail nothing to salvation without the
heart's submission to the righteousness of God (@Ro
9:31-33). (5) What manner of persons ought "God's
elect" to be--in humility, when they remember
that He hath saved them and called them, not according to
their works, but according to His own purpose and grace,
given them in Christ Jesus before the world began (@2Ti
1:9); in thankfulness, for "Who maketh
thee to differ, and what hast thou that thou didst not
receive?" (@1Co
4:7); in godly jealousy over themselves;
remembering that "God is not mocked," but
"whatsoever a man soweth that shall he also
reap" (@Ga
6:7); in diligence "to make our calling
and election sure" (@2Pe
1:10); and yet in calm confidence that
"whom God predestinates, and calls, and justifies,
them (in due time) He also glorifies" (@Ro
8:30). (6) On all subjects which from their very
nature lie beyond human comprehension, it will be our
wisdom to set down what God says in His word, and has
actually done in His procedure towards men, as
indisputable, even though it contradict the results at
which in the best exercise of our limited judgment we may
have arrived (@Ro
9:14-23). (7) Sincerity in religion, or a general
desire to be saved, with assiduous efforts to do right,
will prove fatal as a ground of confidence before God, if
unaccompanied by implicit submission to His revealed
method of salvation (@Ro
9:31-33). (8) In the rejection of the great mass of
the chosen people, and the inbringing of multitudes of
estranged Gentiles, God would have men to see a law of His
procedure, which the judgment of the great day will more
vividly reveal that "the last shall be first and the
first last" (@Mt
20:16).
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