By Charles R Erdman
C. THE PROBLEM OF ISRAEL'S REJECTION. Chs. 9 to 11 The ninth, tenth, and eleventh chapters of the epistle form what is termed a "theodicy," a vindication of God, a justification of his dealings with men. The particular problem which confronted Paul was the fate of Israel. This was God's chosen people, his elect nation; how then could the people of Israel be under the wrath of God, as the epistle has declared them to be? How can this choice of God be reconciled with his condemnation of Israel? Then, too, through his inspired prophets, God had promised that Israel should be a blessing to all the nations of the earth; this blessing was to consist not merely in giving to the world a Saviour, a Messiah, but in accepting this Saviour and in fellowship with this Messiah. In fact. however, Israel had rejected Christ, the Saviour; and while Israel was being set aside, Gentiles were receiving all the blessings of justification and new life and eternal glory, through faith in Christ. How, then, can the promises of God be reconciled with the unbelief and consequent rejection of Israel? In these three chapters Paul makes his reply. First, the promises of God were never intended for all who were Israelites by birth, but for such as were true children of God by faith, and at the present time those who were truly God's chosen people from among both Jews and Gentiles were receiving the greatest of all blessings, the righteousness provided by God. Ch. 9. Secondly, the rejection of Israel as a nation was due entirely to the fault of Israel. The way of salvation appointed by God, even through faith in Christ, was offered to all, and had been made perfectly plain to Israel. Their rejection, therefore, was not arbitrary on the part of God, but was due to their stubborn and willful unbelief. Ch. 10. Thirdly, the rejection of Israel, while only partial, was likewise only temporary. A time would come when Israel as a nation would repent and accept Christ as their Messiah and become a blessing to all the nations of the world. Ch. 11. The nature of this reply, therefore, shows the place which these chapters occupy in the epistle. They are not a digression, not a parenthesis, not an appendix, but a necessary part, indeed the very climax of the argument, the completion of the doctrinal teaching which: the epistle sets forth. From the first, Paul had been writing with his Jewish kindred in mind. He had declared his gospel to be "the power of God unto salvation . . . . to the Jew first, and also to the Greek." He had demonstrated how much the Jew needed the righteousness which the gospel revealed. He had shown, from the Jewish Scriptures, the way of righteousness by faith. He had answered the various objections which a Jew might make to a righteous ness which was "apart from the law." It was absolutely necessary, then, that Paul should deal with the historic and pathetic situation in which the Jews, as a nation, were rejecting the righteousness which God had provided; and further that Paul should show how this present unbelief on the part of Israel was related to the salvation of Gen tiles, and how this salvation of Gentiles was destined to stir up Israel to jealousy and to the acceptance of the Messiah. These three chapters, therefore, contain Paul's philosophy of history, and show that the "justification by faith" of which he has been writing is absolutely universal in its application, and that his gospel is yet to bring salvation to all the nations of the world. These chapters are difficult, possibly the most difficult to interpret of any which Paul ever penned. Their chief obscurities are in connection with his statements of divine sovereignty and "election." It should be noted, however, that he is discussing national conversion and not individual salvation. If the latter were in view, he probably would have been more explicit and comprehensive in his statements.
Then, again, care should be
taken to note all that he says
even here. It is possible to
form quite wrong opinions by
reading detached and isolated
statements; the three
chapters must be read as a unit. Paul does
state the sovereignty of God, but also, quite as clearly, the free agency and
moral responsibility of man. The three chapters form a trilogy: The first deals
with divine sovereignty, the second with human responsibility, the third with
universal blessing; the first with "election," the second with "rejection,"
the third with "restoration"; the first with the past, the second with the
present, the third with the future. They open with a cry of anguish as Paul
looks upon the unbelief and loss of the kinsmen he so truly loves; they close
with a doxology of praise in view of the mercy which overarches all the
mysterious providences of God, whose "judgments" are "unsearchable,'" whose
"ways past tracing."
The discussion is intensely practical. Paul makes no
endeavor to reconcile the facts of divine predestination and human freedom,
nor to explain the relation of the will of God to the will of man. While
stating, in startling terms, the sovereignty of God, he none the less holds
Israel responsible for its impenitent unbelief, and warns the "Gentiles
against: pride, self-confidence, and loss of faith. In fact, the practical
aspect of the discussion is its main feature. Israel is regarded not merely as
Israel but as representing all that vast mass of men who in all time are seeking
salvation by works of law, by human effort, by a righteousness of their own. The
presentation of the doctrine of justification by faith here reaches its climax.
The peril and plight of Israel is that of every man who refuses the salvation
freely offered through faith in Christ.
God does promise blessings to those who do right and
keep his law, but this is divinely conditioned upon faith in him, and upon a
heart full of submission and trust, not upon any mere outward conformity to law.
Ch. 9.
Again, no matter how moral one is trying to be, he is really guilty of
fatal fault, if he is willfully refusing the way of goodness and life, of pardon
and purity, provided in Jesus Christ, ch. 10.
Then, too, all men will come ultimately to see that God's way of salvation is
the only way. Jew and Gentile
at last will turn in faith to Christ, and will praise the goodness and grace of
God. Ch. 11.
It may be added that there is practical help in reading any true "theodicy.""
At times, we all need to have the dealings of God explained. His providences are
full of mystery; the fulfillments of his promises are long delayed. We must be
encouraged to trust in his sovereign grace, to " be faithful and submissive to
Christ, and to look forward to a glorious future when at last we shall
understand "the riches both of the wisdom and the knowledge of God! . . . To
him be the glory for ever. Amen."
1. The Rejection of Israel Is Not Complete. Ch. 9:1-29
a. Paul's Sorrow for
Israel. Ch. 9:1-5
1 I say the truth in Christ, I lie not, my conscience bearing witness with me in
the Holy Spirit, 2 that I have great sorrow and unceasing pain in my heart. 3
For I could wish that I myself were anathema from Christ for my brethren's sake,
my kinsmen according to the flesh: 4 who are Israelites; whoseis the adoption,
and the glory, and the covenants, and the giving of the law, and the service of
God, and the promises; 5 whose are the fathers, and of whom is Christ as
concerning the flesh, who is over all, God blessed for ever. Amen.
The Christian Church would never lack converts if all its members or even its
ministers felt for their friends and fellow countrymen the deep concern expressed by the
Apostle Paul for his kinsmen the Jews.
He has been gazing with rapture upon the present blessedness and future glory of
Christian believers; and as he now turns to consider the unbelief of his own
people, Israel, the contrast causes him to cry out with anguish of heart. He
attests the truth of his statement by affirming that he speaks as one whose life
is centered "in Christ" and whose "conscience" is under the direct influence of
"the Holy Spirit."
The intensity of his feeling is emphasized by, describing it as "great
sorrow," and as "unceasing pain" of heart. He does not specify the cause of
his grief, but leaves it to be implied; and he solemnly attests his sincerity by
stating
that, if thus he might secure his salvation of his people, he could wish himself
"anathema," "accursed," and so separated "from Christ." He does not assert
that such a wish is actual or that such an end could be accomplished by such
means. Here we must avoid "the error of explaining the language of feeling as
though it were that of reasoning and reflection." Paul thus expresses his
unmeasured devotion. He was like Moses, who prayed for his guilty people, "Yet
now, if thou wilt forgive their sin ; and if not, blot me, I pray thee, out of
thy book which "thou hast written.'" So the apostle is expressing his
willingness to make any sacrifice to accomplish the salvation of Israel.
"He states two grounds for his intense passion. The first is that the Jews are
his "brethren," his "kinsmen according to the flesh." They are not members of
that even dearer Christian brotherhood which is "according to'" the Spirit.
Nevertheless, Paul here recognizes and glorifies those human ties of blood and
kinship which are ever to be held
sacred, which Paul refuses to renounce in spite of the Jewish hatred which has
caused him constant pain and peril. He never forgot the claims of nature. He
loved his people just because they were his people.
However, there is a second cause for his passionate concern; it consists in the
special privileges which have been given to the Jews as the chosen people of
God. He cannot endure the thought that those so highly favored are perishing
for lack of faith. They are "Israelites,' and as bearers of that sacred name,
they are partakers of the promises made to Jacob, to whom the name " Israel' was
first given. They are the descendants and heirs of Israel: can it be that they
are shut off from the blessings God assured to his seed? They are a people in
covenant relation with God: has God cast them off?
Theirs is "the adoption," the status of an adopted son, for from among all the
nations of the world God chose Israel to be his peculiar people, his "son," his "firstborn."
Ex. 4:22; Hos. 11:1.
Theirs is "the glory," the Shekinah, the visible presence of God in the
tabernacle and in the Temple of old: had this presence been permanently
withdrawn?
Theirs are "the covenants," repeatedly renewed, binding them as a people to God.
To them had been given "the law,' by direct revelation and amidst circumstances
of peculiar awe and splendor.
Theirs is the Temple "service," a ritual of divine appointment and of
unparalleled significance and solemnity.
Theirs are "the promises," pointing forward to a coming Messiah in whom they,
and through them all the nations, are to be blest.
Theirs are "the fathers," the ancient Patriarchs, who as saintly ancestors cast
a glory over all the generations of Jews.
Last of all, their supreme privilege and distinction is this, that from them has
come Christ, of their own blood so far as his assumed humanity is concerned, but
in his eternal "being" "over all, God blessed for ever."
It is true that many devout scholars prefer to read the last clause as a
doxology: He "who is over all, God be blessed forever." If that reading is
accepted, still it can be remembered that there are many other New Testament passages which assert the deity of our Lord; but it is probably safe to follow
the Authorized and the Revised Version
and to regard this as the most positive statement of the divine nature of Christ
found in all the writings of Paul.
Such peculiar privileges, culminating in their gift to the world, even Christ,
their promised Messiah, are enough to explain Paul's love for his Jewish
kinsmen, and his anguish of heart at their unbelief.
The paragraph, however, serves as an admirable introduction to the three
chapters which it opens, for while Paul is to set forth the responsibility and
the guilt of Israel, such an opening expression of passionate love disarms any
suspicion of prejudice or of hostility on his part; and at the same time, this
recital of the high privileges of Israel only emphasizes the problem of Israel's
rejection. Each item of the long list indicates that the nation has been chosen
of God and is peculiarly precious to him. How can such a people fail to enjoy
the salvation which has been provided by God? This is the problem Paul is now to
discuss.
However, on turning from this inspired catalogue of Jewish privileges, it may be
well for Christians to consider how the larger privileges which they enjoy may
be associated with these same terms.
The Jews bore the name of "Israelites."" What is the fuller and more glorious
significance of the name " Christians?" Theirs, as a nation, was "the
adoption," but all who accept the gospel message, are "heirs of God, and
joint-heirs with Christ," and theirs is the spirit of sonship whereby they cry
to God, "Abba, Father." Theirs is "the glory" which shines from the face of
Jesus Christ, the supreme revelation of God to men. Theirs is a "new covenant"
in the blood of Christ, "poured out for many unto remission of sins." Theirs is
the gift of the Spirit of God by whose power can be fulfilled "the law" of God.
Theirs, too, are "precious and exceeding great promises," by which they "become
partakers of the divine nature." Theirs, too, are the "fathers,"" and they
are ever inspired by the consciousness that they belong to the great company of
saints, apostles, prophets, martyrs, whose lives have hallowed the earth, with
whom they shall be united in heaven. "Christ" is theirs and they are his, and
having him they have all things.
Such exalted privileges imply sacred obligations. Should not all Christians feel
"great sorrow and unceasing pain" for those whose hearts are hardened, who in
blind unbelief are rejecting the salvation of God?
b. Israel's Rejection and God's Promise. Ch. 9:6-13
6 But it is not as though the word of God hath come to nought. For they are not all
Israel, that are of Israel: 7 neither, because they are Abraham's seed, are they
all children: but, In Isaac shall thy seed be called. 8 That is, it is not the
children of the flesh that are children of God; but the children of the promise
are reckoned for a seed. 9 For this is a word of promise, according to this
season will I come, and Sarah shall have a son. 10 And not only so; but Rebecca
also having conceived by one, even by our father Isaac"11 for the children being
not yet born, neither having done anything good or bad, that the purpose of God
according to election might stand,
not of works, but of him that calleth, 12 it was said unto her, The elder shall
serve the younger. 13 Even as it is written, Jacob I loved, but Esau I hated.
Paul has been voicing his sorrow for the people of Israel, a sorrow deepened by
the fact that they are his own kindred, and further, that they have been the
recipients of divine promises and have enjoyed unparalleled privileges as the
chosen people of God. He has not stated, however, the cause of his sorrow. This
has been implied. His pain of heart is due to the rejection of Israel; they have
been cast off; they are not receiving the blessings which Gentiles are enjoying
through faith in Christ. It would seem, then, that God had broken his promise,
that God was unfaithful to his word.
Paul at once replies that the case is not such, "as though the word of God hath
come to nought," for the promises made to Israel were never intended for all
who were descended from Jacob, any more than the promise made to Abraham was
intended for all his sons. Among the latter, Ishmael was older than Isaac, yet
when Abraham had cast forth Hagar and her son, there came to him the divine
word, "In Isaac shall thy seed be called." This shows that the right to be the
children of God and heirs of his promises does not depend upon the mere accident
of birth but upon the action of the divine will in accordance with the divine
word. The promise is the important matter, not mere physical birth. Thus before
Isaac was born, the promise was made, "According to this season will I come, and
Sarah shall have a son." Thus Isaac was a child of promise, born not only in
accord with the promise but because of the will of God which the promise
expressed, and because of Abraham's faith in God which rested on the promise of
God.
Therefore, the promises of God to the nation of Israel are not being broken even
though Israelites are being rejected for their unbelief and Gentiles are being
saved through their faith in the Saviour whom God has sent. Some Israelites are
being saved. Israel's rejection is not complete; but "they are not all Israel,
that are of Israel."
Or take an even more startling example of rejection.
The two sons of Isaac, unlike Isaac and Ishmael, had the same mother as well as
the same father; indeed they were twins. Yet before their birth and thus before
they had "done anything good or bad" God rejected one and accepted the other as
heir of the promises. He declared, "The elder shall serve the younger," and the
whole course of history, as related to these sons and the nations which sprang
from them, could be summed up in the words of the Prophet Malachi, "I loved
Jacob; but Esau I hated."
It is true that the "profane," faithless character of Esau justified God in
rejecting him; nevertheless the action of God preceded his birth and was
absolutely free and quite independent of any claims based upon birth or good
works. It illustrates "the purpose of God according to election," showing that
the choices of God, while always righteous and holy, are absolutely sovereign
and not determined by human claims of birth or merit.
It also illustrates the fact that while the promises were made to Israel, God
does not disregard his promises when he determines to accept some and to reject
others from among those who are Israelites merely by natural descent.
Of course Paul does here bring to mind the mysteries of divine election and does
intimate that the careers of Jacob and Esau were in some way determined before
their birth; yet it is quite aside from the point to argue from these words that
the eternal salvation or perdition of individual souls is determined by a divine
decree "which has no relation to what they are or do."
The purpose of Paul is plain and practical. It is to warn any Israelite against
supposing that simply because of his birth and his outward obedience to Jewish
law he can claim from God a share in the promises made to Israel; and further,
Paul thus definitely shows that God is faithful to his promises even when
rejecting the present unbelieving masses of his chosen race.
That practical purpose of the apostle bears a message to men of all races
to-day. No one should suppose that birth or blood gives one a right to the
privileges of a child of God; one "must be born again."" No one should allow
his position in a Christian community or in a godly family to make him careless as to his personal relation to Christ. No one should claim
that membership in a church or participation in the sacraments can make him an
heir to
the glory of God; it is only by vital faith in Jesus Christ that we become.
Abraham's seed, and heirs according to promise.
c. Israel's Rejection and God's Justice., Ch. 9: 14-29
14 What shall we say then? Is there unrighteousness with God? God forbid. 15 For
he saith to Moses, I will have mercy on whom I have mercy, and I will have
compassion on whom I have compassion. 16 So then it is not of him that willeth,
nor of him that runneth, but of God that hath mercy. 17 For the scripture saith
unto Pharaoh, For this very purpose did I raise thee up, that I might show "in
thee my power, and that my name might be published abroad in all the earth. 18
So then he se mercy on whom he will, and whom he will he hardeneth.
19 Thou wilt say then unto me, Why doth he still find fault? For who
withstandeth his willP 20 Nay but, O man, who art thou that repliest against
God? Shall the thing formed say to him that formed it, Why didst thou make me
thus? 21 Or hath not the potter a right over the clay, from the same lump to
make one part a vessel unto honor, and another unto dishonor? 22 What if God,
willing to show his wrath, and to make his power known, endured with much
longsuffering vessels of wrath fitted unto destruction: 23 and that he might
make known the riches of his glory upon vessels of mercy, which he afore
prepared unto glory, 24 even us, whom he also called, not from the Jews only,
but also from the Gentiles?
25 As he saith also in Hosea,
I will call that my people, which was not my people; And her beloved, that was
not beloved.
26 And it shall be,
that in the place where it was said unto them,
Ye are not my people, There shall they be called sons of the living God.
27 And
Isaiah crieth concerning Israel, If the number of the children of Israel be as
the sand of the sea, it is the remnant that shall be saved: 28 for the Lord will
execute his word upon the earth, finishing it and cutting it short. 29 And, as
Isaiah hath said before,
Except the Lord of Sabaoth had left us a seed,
We
had become as Sodom, and had been "made like unto Gomorrah.
The hardening of Pharaoh's heart has proved a stubborn problem, if not an actual
stumblingblock to many readers of the Old Testament story. It has been supposed
that God hardened Pharaoh's heart and then unjustly punished Pharaoh for his
hardness.
However, it should be noted, first, that if God is
said to have hardened Pharoah's heart, it is said quite as distinctly that Pharaoh hardened his own
heart. Secondly, God was working through natural laws, and the heart of Pharaoh
was hardened as a result of his own free, defiant, and cruel choices and-acts.
Thirdly, it is evident that the story is not correctly interpreted if it is
supposed to show injustice on the part of God, for Paul is here quoting the
story with the one purpose of proving the justice of God. The very matter under
discussion is that of divine justice. The question is just this: In saving
certain Jews and many Gentiles, while most Jews are allowed to continue in
unbelief, is not God exercising an unjust choice? On the contrary, Paul shows
that according to Scripture, God
himself asserts his freedom of choice in two similar or typical cases, namely, in showing mercy toward Moses and severity toward Pharaoh.
In the case of Moses it was not due to human will or effort, it was "not of him
that willeth, nor of him that runneth," but it was due wholly to the sovereign
grace of God that his great mercy was shown. So in the case of Pharaoh, it was
the sovereign choice of God that selected him to be the historic example of
God's resistless power and of his certainty to punish defiant and rebellious
disobedience. Paul does not here mention the complementary truths of faith and
fault on the part of men; he is asserting only the sovereign freedom of God,
whether in showing mercy or in hardening, whether in the cases of Moses and
Pharaoh, or in the case of the believing and unbelieving Jews in the days of
Paul. The choices and actions of God are not capricious or unjust, but they are
absolutely free and uncontrolled. Vs. 14-18.
If, however, God is sovereign and carries out his purposes through or in spite
of the will of man, how can God blame men for disobedience or unbelief? Does not
divine
sovereignty abolish all human responsibility? Would not God be unjust if he
punished those who rejected Christ?
Paul replies by another appeal to the Old Testament Scriptures. He cites the
familiar parable of the potter. If the relation of God to men is that of the
potter to the vessels he forms from the clay, how can man, the creature, find
fault with the Creator? The potter has a right to make of the same clay one
vessel for an honorable use, another for a dishonorable; can man, therefore,
charge God with injustice if he chooses to show his severity towards those who
merit his displeasure, and his mercy toward chosen objects of his grace?
Indeed, as creatures of God, men could hardly sit in judgment upon God and
accuse him of injustice if he had been arbitrary and capricious and severe; but
how can anyone accuse God of injustice in view of the way he actually has dealt
with men? He has been patient and long-suffering toward his impenitent people,
Israel, and has purposed to show all the wealth of his glory toward the objects
of his mercy, chosen not only from among the Jews, his covenant people, but even
from among the Gentiles? The sovereignty of God is absolute; yet it is never
exercised in condemning men who ought to be saved, but rather it has resulted in
the salvation of men who deserved to be lost. Surely no one can regard God as
unjust if he is rejecting impenitent and unbelieving Israelites and is saving
Gentiles who turn to him in penitence and faith. Vs. 19-24.
This salvation of Gentiles and rejection of Israel had indeed been predicted by
the prophets, and thus, in further establishing the justice of God, Paul again
appeals to Scripture. In the case of the Gentiles he quotes the beautiful words
of Hosea, spoken in reference to the apostate and idolatrous Ten Tribes but
involving the same principle of divine pardon and mercy:
"I will call that my people, which was not my people; And her beloved, that was
not beloved."
And further, as these tribes were to be restored to their sown land, so that the
scene of their new adoption would
be the same as that of their sin; thus the words spoken of them by Hosea are
applied by Paul to Gentiles, who, in the lands where they had lived in ignorance
of God or in disobedience to his will, would know the blessedness of being his
children: "There shall they be called sons of the living God."
In the case of Israel, Paul quotes from Isaiah to show that it has been
predicted that, for a time at least, the whole nation would be rejected and only
a small remnant be saved. Because of their unbelief, God would cut off his
people, exercising his sharp and decisive sentence upon them, although in his
mercy he would save some. The prophet was probably describing the punishment of
Israel in his own day, and the remnant which was to escape from the devastating
hosts of Assyria; but Paul applies the words to those in Israel who at the time
he was writing were being saved by the gospel message. So he applies, in a
similar way, an earlier prediction of Isaiah to the effect that the whole
apostate nation would be blotted out and forgotten were it not that the Lord of
hosts, in his mercy, would save some to preserve their seed and name:
"Except the Lord of Sabaoth had left us a seed, We had become as Sodom, and had
been made: like unto Gomorrah."
From Sodom only four souls escaped; Gomorrah was utterly destroyed. Thus from the
mouth of the Old Testament prophets Paul establishes the fact that God is not
only just but merciful, even in his present rejection of Israel. Vs. 25-29.
In the next paragraph, vs. 30-33, he shows that in this rejection, prophecy has
merely passed into history: Gentiles are being saved while Israel as a nation is
being set aside. The latter, however, is due to the fault of Israel. The
paragraph properly belongs, therefore, to the next chapter, which deals with
Israel's responsibility even as chapter nine has been setting forth God's
sovereignty. It serves, however, as a climax to the present phase of the
argument which is establishing God's justice. Even
though he is acting in sovereign freedom, yet he is acting justly in setting
aside a nation which is rejecting Christ, refusing God's way of salvation, and
neglecting his offer of grace. The doctrines of election and divine sovereignty
do perplex and baffle the mind of man; yet no little relief is found when one
faces the complementary truths of human freedom and responsibility. Paul has not
hesitated to speak boldly and without qualification in "setting forth the
sovereignty of God in the rejection of Israel; he will now speak with equal
unreserve in revealing Israel's guilt,
which after all is the occasion of Israel's rejection.
2. The Rejection of Israel Is Not Arbitrary. Chs. 9:30 to 10:21
a. Israel's Failure to Accept Christ. Ch. 9: 30-33
30 What shall we say then? That the Gentiles, who followed not after
righteousness, attained to righteousness, even the righteousness which is of
faith: 31 but Israel, following after a law of righteousness, did not arrive at
that law. 32 Wherefore? Because they sought it not by faith, but as it were by
works. They stumbled at the stone of stumbling; 33 even as it is written,
Behold, I lay in Zion a stone of stumbling and a rock of offence:
And he that
believeth on him shall not be put to shame.
It is a remarkable but familiar fact of religious history that men who most
eagerly have sought to win for themselves the favor of God by fasts and forms
and sacrifices and obedience to law have failed to secure either peace of
conscience or victory over sin, while others, who long have been indifferent to
religion and unmindful of God, by an act of simple faith, of surrender and
trust, have obtained a
sense of pardon and a consciousness of invincible moral power. Many men to-day
who think and talk the most about religion lack peace and purity and love, while
others, comparatively ignorant of religious problems and processes, so abandon
themselves to God that they enjoy his presence and find fulfilled in their lives
all his promises of
blessedness and grace.
This great fact Paul found illustrated on a national scale in the case of
unbelieving Israel and the contrasted converts from among the Gentiles. He is
discussing in chapters nine, ten, and eleven, the problem of Israel's rejection;
and as he passes to a new phase of his argument he practically restates the
problem, but with an element which increases its perplexity. He has been
attempting to reconcile with the promises of God and the justice of God the fact
that the chosen people are being lost while Gentiles are being saved. He now
adds the consideration that the very people who are failing to attain salvation
are earnestly seeking for salvation. "What shall we say then?" asks the
apostle. What is the state of the case? What is the problem we are stating? It
is this: Gentiles, not all but many Gentiles, "who followed not after
righteousness," who did not make the attainment of righteousness their chief
concern" these "attained to righteousness"; but Israel, as a nation, "following
after a law of righteousness," seeking to obey the law which would win for them
righteousness, "did not arrive at that law" but failed to attain what that law
promised and enjoined.
"Wherefore?" asks Paul, "Because they sought it not by faith, but as it were by
works." This is the explanation. This is the real answer to the problem. Israel
is being rejected because of Israel's guilty and stubborn unbelief. There has
been on the part of Israel no real submission to God, no actual abandonment to
his will. Israel has been attempting to put God under obligation by formal
observance of his law. Israel has failed because seeking for righteousness not
by faith but by works. In the preceding portion of this chapter, Paul has viewed
the problem of Israel's rejection in the light of God's sovereignty, which made
it impossible for anyone to place God under obligation to save him; Paul now
enters upon that portion of his discussion where he dwells upon Israel's
responsibility, and shows that Israel's rejection is not arbitrary on the part
of God but is due to Israel's unbelief. Chs. 9:30 to 10:21
This unbelief has been given its supreme manifestation in Israel's rejection of
the Messiah. Christ came as the
One on whom Israel might have founded all their hopes of salvation, but he
proved to be for them "a stone of stumbling and a rock of offence." If Israel
has fallen it is Israel's fault.
In referring to Christ, Paul does not at once name him, but quotes and mingles
two Old Testament prophecies in which God's appointed King, and even God
himself, is designated as the hope of Israel but also as "a rock of offence'" to
those who showed themselves to him. Paul finds the fulfillment of the prophecies
in Christ, and refers to him the blessed assurance that "he that believeth on
him shall not be put to shame."
So Christ is presented to men to-day. The refusal to accept him as God's
appointed Saviour is to reveal the fact that one does not really wish to submit
to the will of God. One who rests on him for righteousness, for salvation, for
eternal life, will never be disappointed, will never "De put to shame"; but one
who depends on his own goodness and righteousness, and therefore rejects Christ,
condemns himself and finds Christ to be for him "a stone of stumbling and a rock
of offence." The rejection or acceptance of Christ is still the proof of the
attitude of a soul toward God, as being either guilty unbelief or saving faith.
b. Israel's Refusal of God's Righteousness. Ch. 10:1-15
1 Brethren, my heart's desire and my supplication to God is for them, that they
may be saved. 2 For I bear them witness that they have a zeal for God, but not
according to knowledge. 3 For being ignorant of God's righteousness, and seeking
to establish their own, they did not subject themselves to the righteousness of
God. 4 For Christ is the end of the law unto righteousness to every one that
believeth. 5 For Moses writeth that the man that doeth the righteousness which
is of the law shall live thereby. 6 But the righteousness which is of faith
saith thus, Say not in thy heart, Who shall ascend into heaven? (that is, to
bring Christ down:) 7 or, Who shall descend into the abyss? (that is, to bring
Christ up from the dead.) 8 But what saith it? The word is nigh thee, in thy
mouth, and in thy heart: that is, the word of faith, which we preach: 9 because
if thou shalt confess with thy mouth
Jesus as Lord, and shalt believe in thy heart that God raised him from the dead,
thou shalt be saved: 10 for with the heart man believeth unto righteousness; and
with the mouth confession is made unto salvation. 11 For the scripture saith,
Whosoever believeth on him shall not be put to shame. 12. For there is no
distinction between Jew and Greek: for the same Lord is Lord of all, and is rich
unto all that call upon him: 13 for, Whosoever shall call upon the name of the
Lord shall be saved. 14 How then shall they call on him in whom they have not
believed? and how shall they believe in him whom they have not heard? and how
shall they hear without a preacher? 15 and how shall they preach, except they be
sent? even as it is written, How beautiful are the feet of them that bring glad
tidings of good things!
There would be no lack of converts to the Christian faith if all who profess to
follow Christ felt for the spiritual welfare of their fellow countrymen the deep
concern expressed by Paul for his own people: " Brethren, my heart's desire and
my supplication to God is for them, that they may be saved."
This expression, of deep solicitude for their salvation is due to the fact that
he is about to emphasize even more severely his previous intimation that the
rejection of Israel is due to the fault of the Israelites. His concern for them
is deepened by the consideration that they really have a zeal for God and are
making painful efforts to win his approval. Their zeal, however, is not
according to true spiritual knowledge. They are seeking to attain a
righteousness of their own and are thus refusing the righteousness which God
provides.
Their own way of salvation, one indeed which men seem to prefer naturally, is by
the way of strict observance of laws by which one achieves merit for himself.
This way has come to its end in Christ. As a way of salvation it finds its
termination in him; for everyone who has found peace and pardon through faith in
him has abandoned the old way of seeking righteousness by works of the law.
That the old way was difficult, if not impossible, was implied by the lawgiver
Moses when he wrote, " Ye shall therefore keep my statutes; . . . which if a man
do, he shall live in them"; by which he meant that life in all its
fullness, here and hereafter, was to be attained by undeviating obedience to
legal rules. Such an obedience, however, Paul earlier in this epistle has shown
to be impossible.
We are not to conclude, however, that Moses deceived or mocked his people. In
his day, and under his system, men could be right with God; but it was by the
way of faith, which regarded the law as an expression of God's will and trusted
in God for pardon and grace. Now that God has revealed himself more fully in
Christ, true faith places no reliance upon the self-righteousness which consists
in the formal observance of rules, but accepts the salvation, the power, and
peace, the new life, which are offered in Christ.
In contrast with that old way of salvation, "the righteousness which is of
faith'" is supposed by Paul to speak and to say that it is near and accessible
to all. It employs familiar words of Scripture to which it gives new meaning:
There is no need to say who will go up to heaven to bring Christ down, or who
will ascend into the deep to bring Christ from the dead, for the Christ who is
the object of true faith is one who has already come to earth in the form of
man, and has already been raised from the dead. The gospel message centers in
such an incarnate and risen Christ. It is a message which is familiar to each
one, "in thy mouth, and in thy heart."
The substance of the message is this: "Confess with your mouth Jesus as your
Lord and believe in your heart that God has raised him from the dead and you
shall be saved, for real faith of the heart results in righteousness and will
naturally express itself in open confession." Paul refers here to incarnation
and resurrection not as exclusive but as typical truths, as intimating a
necessary belief in the divine person and saving work of Christ.
This way of salvation is now supported by a quotation
from Scripture: "Whosoever believeth on him shall not be put to shame." The
universal application of these words of Isaiah is warranted because no
difference is made between Jews and Gentiles in the bestowal of righteousness
upon believers, because the same Lord of all, even Jesus Christ, is rich in his
bestowal of grace and salvation upon
all who call upon him in faith and trust. That salvation is certain to be
granted to all who so call upon Christ is shown by a quotation from Joel
describing the deliverance to be granted in the Kingdom of the Messiah before
the great day of the Lord.
A way of salvation so universal in its application demands a world- wide
proclamation. This fact Paul emphasizes by a series of four significant
questions: "How then shall they call on him in whom they have not believed? and
how shall they believe in him whom they have not heard? and how shall they hear
without a preacher? and how shall they preach except they be sent?"
This universal character of the gospel has always been a valid and cogent
argument for Christian missions. It should be noted, however, that in this
passage the Lord who hear the "messengers really hear "him i in whose name they
speak, and by hearing come to believe in him and to call upon him for salvation.
The glory of this mission is such that Paul describes it in words borrowed from
Isaiah when depicting the messengers who carried the glad tidings of restoration
from the Captivity in Babylon. Thus indeed the messengers of Christ are carrying
into all the world the good news of deliverance from sin and death, of a return
to God, of the glorious Jerusalem above, of the joys of the ransomed, of the
eternal blessings of the redeemed.
c. Israel's Neglect of the Gospel Message. Ch. 10:16-21
16 But
they did not all hearken to the glad tidings. For Isaiah saith, Lord, who
hath believed our report? 17 So belief cometh of hearing, and hearing by the
word of Christ. 18 But I say, Did they not hear? Yea, verily,
Their sound went out into all the
earth,
And their words unto the ends of the world.
19 But I say, Did Israel not know? First Moses saith,
I will provoke you to
jealousy with that which is no nation,
With a nation void of understanding will
I anger you.
20 And Isaiah is very bold, and saith,
I was found of them that sought me not;
I became manifest unto them that asked not of me. 21 But as to Israel he saith,
All the day long did I spread out my hands unto a disobedient and gainsaying
people.
Religious opportunities are too frequently neglected. Multitudes of men who are
quite familiar with the gospel are indifferent to its message, while others who
for the first time hear its glad tidings eagerly accept the salvation it offers
in the name of Christ. Of the former class were the Jews of Paul's day. In
proving that Israel's rejection is due to Israel's fault, Paul here shows that
the people are without excuse, and that their rejection is due to their proud,
stubborn, willful unbelief.
The "glad tidings of good things" were proclaimed to all, "but they did not all
hearken"; far from it; Israel practically as a nation had rejected Christ. This
was the tragic fact; and this guilty unbelief had been predicted by Isaiah in
his pathetic words, "Lord, who hath believed our report?" The message had been
sent and should have been received. The opportunity for faith had been given,
for "belief cometh of hearing, and hearing by the word of Christ." That is, the
gospel is not a matter of intuition or imagination or conjecture or reverie, but
of revelation. It is a message given by God to men; its sum and substance is the
person and work of Christ; and faith consists in a humble, grateful acceptance
of this message.
Israel could not plead as an excuse that this message had not been heard, for
the gospel had been preached throughout the whole Roman world. So wide was this
proclamation that Paul quotes in reference to it the words of the psalmist
written of the revelation of God in nature:
"Their sound went out into all the earth,
And their words unto the ends of the
world."
As the silent voices of the skies proclaim to the whole world the power of the
Creator, so the voices of Christian heralds are declaring in all lands the glory
of the redeeming Christ.
Nor can the excuse be given that the gospel message has
not been understood. That it was designed for other nations, and that Israel
would be slow to accept it, had been predicted from the earliest days of
Israel's history. Even Moses had declared that heathen would be given a share in
the blessings of God's people and would thus excite the jealousy and anger of
the Jews:
"I will provoke you to jealousy with that which is no nation,
With a nation void
of understanding will I anger you."
The words were in the ancient days a warning to the idolatrous people of Israel.
If they continued to be untrue to Jehovah, he would provoke their jealousy by
showing mercy to nations who were, from the Jewish point of view, no real
nations, and void of religious knowledge. Such a situation was paralleled in
Paul's day by the rejection of Israel and the call of the Gentiles.
The same truth was set forth boldly by Isaiah, in spite of the natural
displeasure of his people at such a prediction. Words which referred first of
all to apostate Jews are applied in principle to Gentiles:
"I was found of them that sought me not;
I became manifest unto them that asked
not of me."
Finally Paul makes another quotation from the prophet to show that God's love
had been unique and exhaustless. He had ever sought to bring Israel back into
fellowship with himself. He had stood with outstretched hands. He had called
them to him by the voices of pleading messengers. Last of all he had sent his
Son. If Israel was still unsaved"if, for the time, the nation was rejected—it
was only because of Israel's fault. The people of Israel were disobedient and
rebellious. In truth God could say to them, "All the day long did I spread out
my hands unto a disobedient and gainsaying people."
How tenderly God is dealing to-day with many who are refusing his gospel!
Patiently he is pleading; his offers are full of grace and mercy. Where will the
fault lie in the case of those who reject his messages of love?
3. The Rejection of Israel Is Not Final. Ch. 11
a. The Present Election of Grace. Ch. 11:1-10
1 I say then, Did God cast off his people? God forbid. For I also am an
Israelite, of the seed of Abraham, of the tribe of Benjamin. 2 God did not cast
off his people which he foreknew. Or know ye not what the scripture saith of
Elijah? how he pleadeth with God against Israel: 3 Lord, they have killed thy
prophets, they have digged down thine altars; and I am left alone, and they seek
my life. 4 But what saith the answer of God unto him? I have left for myself
seven thousand men, who have not bowed the knee to Baal. 5 Even so then at this
present time also there is a remnant according to the election of grace. 6 But
if it is by grace, it is no more of works: otherwise grace is no more grace. 7
What then? That which Israel seeketh for, that he obtained not; but the election
obtained it, and the rest were hardened: 8 according as it is written, God gave
them a spirit of stupor, eyes that they should not see, and ears that they
should not hear, unto this very day. 9 And David saith,
Let their table be made a snare, and a trap,
And a stumblingblock, and a recompense unto them:
10 Let their eyes be darkened,
that they may not see,
And bow thou down their back always.
Can Jews be converted to faith in Christ? Is Jewish evangelization a futile and
impertinent enterprise on the part of the Christian Church? Is the spiritual
condition of Israel hopeless? To these important and searching questions of the
present day, Paul here gives his inspired reply.
It is not difficult to trace the train of thought which has given rise to these
questions. Paul has been discussing the problem of Israel's rejection; that is,
he has been attempting to reconcile the Old Testament predictions of Israel's
godliness and glory with Israel's present failure to share in the salvation
which the Messiah is bringing to Gentile believers. The ninth chapter of the
epistle has shown that Israel's present rejection is not inconsistent with the
inspired prediction or with the justice of God; chapter ten
has shown that Israel's rejection is due to Israel's stubborn unbelief; chapter
eleven reveals that Israel's rejection is neither complete, vs. 1-10, nor final,
vs. 11-32, but is to issue in such a national restoration as will result in
universal blessing. Paul closes the discussion with adoration and praise. Vs.
33-36.
Chapter nine has emphasized God's sovereignty ; chapter ten, Israel's sin;
chapter eleven declares that according to the providence of God even Israel's
sin is to be overruled to further the redemption of the whole world.
"I say then, Did God cast off his people?" One might have so concluded from the
solemn arraignment of rebellious and unbelieving Israel with which the previous
chapter had closed. "God forbid," cries the apostle, and he at once explains
why he rejects with horror the very idea as impious and incredible. "I also am
an Israelite, of the seed of Abraham, of the tribe of Benjamin.'" He is himself
a Jew by birth and not a proselyte, a lineal descendant of Abraham, and a member of the tribe
which, with Judah, formed the restored nation after the exile and became the
hope of the world. No wonder that he sovehemently denies that God has repudiated his people! "God did not cast off his people which he foreknew."" It is true that the
case of Israel seems desperate, but the
situation is exactly like that which existed in the days of Elijah. The poor
disheartened prophet had stood on the slopes of lonely Horeb and had cried out in despair, "The children of Israel
have forsaken thy covenant, thrown down thine altars, and slain thy prophets
with the sword: and I, even I only, am left; and they seek my life, to take
it away,'" but God had made answer " Yet will I leave me seven thousand in
Israel, .. . which have not bowed unto
Baal." Thus Paul concludes, "Even so then at this present time also there is a remnant according to the election of
grace."
It was not due to their merit or their own attainments that such a saved remnant
existed; it was due wholly to the grace of God. Yet it did exist. Jewish
converts formed a very considerable fraction of the church at Rome, and a larger
fraction still of the Church throughout the world.
No Jewish convert to-day must allow himself to be overwhelmed by his loneliness;
nor must the Church look upon the conversion of Jews as an impossible task. In
proportion to the efforts made, more converts are being secured from among the
Jews than from among any other race. Nor should we feel discouraged in any
work to which God has called us. When doubt and denial seem universal and the
cause of the Church appears desperate, let no prophet of God take too gloomy a
view of the situation; let no one take himself too seriously and suppose that
he is the only soul loyal to the Lord. There are always the seven thousand
faithful ones, always "a remnant according to the election of grace," always
a
church within the Church through which God is working for the redemption of the
world.
On the other hand, it cannot be denied that the Jews as a nation are stubbornly
fixed in their unbelief. "What then?" writes the apostle. Although this remnant
does exist, what are we to say about the people as a whole? We cannot but admit
the fact that "that which Israel seeketh for, that he obtained not; but the
election obtained it, and the rest were hardened." This, too, is in accordance
with the predictions of the prophet. He declared that the people of Israel
failed to receive the very righteousness they sought and that because of their
sin and unbelief they were judicially hardened so that they could not believe:
"God gave them a spirit of stupor, eyes that they should not see, and ears that
they should not hear, unto this very day." Or, as the psalmist declared, "Let
their table be made a snare," that is, let the place in which they feel secure,
or the very objects in which they delight, prove to be the source of their
downfall and the occasion of their ruin.
Paul recognized the noble but misguided efforts of the Jews to attain
righteousness and to win the favor of God. The law in which they delighted
proved to be their "snare," their "trap," their "stumblingblock"; because of
false confidence in their ability to keep its precepts and their stubborn
rejection of Christ, it became their "recompense," that is to say, their
perverse attitude toward the
gospel reacted in an incapacity to understand and to receive it. In consequence
they were in spiritual blindness and bondage, groping for light and bending
beneath burdens too heavy to be borne.
Such is the pathetic picture of many serious men to-day. They earnestly seek to
live right lives, but trusting to their own strength and righteousness they
reject the grace that is offered in Christ; they- refuse to accept the pardon
and peace and power which he is ready to give. They stumble along in darkness,
they struggle in weakness and weariness, when in him they might find rest for
their souls.
b. The Future Salvation of Israel. Ch. 11:11-32
11 I say then, Did they stumble that they might fall? God forbid: but by their
fall salvation is come unto the Gentiles, to provoke them to jealousy. 12 Now if
their fall is the riches of the world, and their loss the riches of the
Gentiles; how much more their fulness? 13 But I speak to you that are Gentiles.
Inasmuch then as I am an apostle of Gentiles, I glorify my ministry; 14 if by
any means I may provoke to jealousy them that are my flesh, and may save some of
them. 15 For if the casting away of them is the reconciling of the world, what
shall the receiving
of them be, but life from the dead? 16 And if the first-fruit
is holy, so is the lump: and if the root is holy, so are the branches. 17 But if
some of the branches were broken off, and thou, being a wild olive, wast grafted
in among them, and didst become partaker with them of the root of the fatness of
the olive tree; 18 glory not over the branches: but if thou gloriest, it is not
thou that bearest the root, but the root thee. 19 Thou wilt say then, Branches
were broken off, that I might be grafted in. 20 Well; by their unbelief they
were broken off, and thou standest by thy faith. Be not high-minded, but fear:
21 for if God spared not the natural branches, neither will he spare thee. 22
Behold then the goodness and severity of God: toward them that fell, severity;
but toward thee, God's goodness, if thou continue in his goodness: otherwise
thou also shalt be cut off. 23 And they also, if they continue not in their
unbelief, shall be grafted in: for God is able to graft them in again. 24 For if
thou wast cut out of that which is by nature a wild olive tree, and wast grafted
contrary to nature into a good olive tree; how much more shall these, which are
the natural branches, be grafted into their own olive tree?
25 For I would not, brethren, have you ignorant of this mystery, lest ye be wise
in your own conceits, that a hardening in part hath befallen Israel, until the
fulness of the Gentiles be come in; 26 and so all Israel shall be saved: even as
it is written, There shall come out of Zion the Deliverer;
He shall turn away ungodliness from Jacob: 27 And this is my covenant unto them,
When I shall take away their sins.
28 As touching the gospel, they are enemies
for your sake: but as touching the election, they are beloved for the fathers'
sake. 29 For the gifts and the calling of God are not repented of. 30 For as ye
in time past were disobedient to God, but now have obtained mercy by their
disobedience, 31 even so have these also now been disobedient, that by the mercy
shown to you they also may now obtain mercy. 32 For God hath shut up all unto
disobedience, that he might have mercy upon all.
What is to be the future of the Jewish people? By intermarriage and by the
abandonment of distinguishing customs are they to be amalgamated and lost among
the other races of the world? Or, as is now true of many, are they to lose their
ancestral faith and, as a people possessing great elements of power and yet
lacking moral restraint, are they to become a menace to civilization? Or again,
is the dream of Zionism to be realized, is a Jewish state to be established in
Palestine, is the nation to be reborn, and is it to add another problem and
peril to the international politics of the world? Far different from any of
these alternatives is the prediction of the Apostle Paul. He asserts that the
present rejection of Israel is being overruled for the salvation of Gentiles;
that the latter should be warned against unbelief by the present condition of
Israel, and also warned against pride in view of the future restoration of
Israel which is to result in the spiritual renewal of the whole human race.
The providential purpose served by the present unbelief of Israel is twofold:
first, the rejection of the gospel by the Jews has resulted in the preaching of
the gospel to the Gentiles; and secondly, spiritual blessings thus brought to
the Gentiles will ultimately stir the Jews to emulation,
will result in their conversion, and will issue in universal blessing.
"I say then, Did they stumble that they might fall?" Is the condition of Israel
incurable? Is their repudiation final? Is their ruin complete? "God forbid,'
writes the apostle, "but by their fall salvation is come unto the Gentiles," and
this is in order to arouse unbelieving Israel to emulation and so to bring them
back to the place which rightfully belongs to them.
"Therefore," continues the apostle, "if the fall of Israel has brought to the
world a wealth of spiritual blessing, by giving the gospel to the world and if
their defection has thus enriched the world, what. will result when they all are
brought to Christ?" Or, as one has paraphrased the sentence, "If the Gentiles
have been enriched in a sense through the very miscarriage and disaster of
Israel, what wealth is in store for them in the great return, when all Israel
shall be saved "when God hath made the pile complete!"
Why the future of the Jew is of such deep concern to Paul, the apostle of the
Gentiles, he now explains. It is because his mission to the Gentiles is vitally
related to his own countrymen. The more successful he can make his mission, the more
faithfully he can discharge it, the greater will be the certainty that some Jews
will be stirred to jealousy and be saved, and all who are saved go to make up
that promised "fulness" of the Jews which will result in universal blessing.
"For if the casting away" of the Jews, continues the apostle, has been the means
of reconciling the world to God, by diverting the gospel to the Gentiles, in
what will the restoration of Israel result but in a spiritual revival for all
mankind, in a veritable "life from the dead?"
That there is to be such a national restoration of the Jews, Paul argues from
their actual relationship to God. He employs two figures of speech. The
"first-fruit" which is offered to God makes holy the entire mass from which it is
taken; it indicates that the whole belongs to God. So, too, the root of a tree
gives life and character to the branches, and "if the root is holy, so are the
branches." Vs. 11-16.
Thus it is with Israel. The ancient patriarchs from which the race sprang
belonged to God; they were chosen of him, and therefore the people which came
from them were holy; they are the people of God, and in spite of temporary
unbelief and rejection, they will yet appear in their real character and will
manifest that relation to God which is theirs by right, and is in accordance
with his changeless purpose.
Is there not in all this a message of cheer and comfort for all those who have
been "sanctified in*Christ Jesus" and "called to be saints?" Does not God show
himself able to overrule for good even their failures and their faults, and when
in penitence they are brought back to him, does he not use them in enlarging
spheres of service, and make them of wider blessing to the world?
Paul's reference to the Jewish race as branches from a holy root might be
employed by Gentile Christians as an argument to disprove the predicted
restoration of Israel and as a ground for their own self-confidence, because the
casting away of the Jews and the creation of a Gentile Church might indicate
that this new people of God had permanently displaced rejected Israel.
This is a very common misconception among Christians to-day. They disregard as
visionary all predictions concerning the national future of Israel, and they
appropriate to themselves all the blessings promised to the ancient people of
God.
All this Paul anticipates; and from the simile of the root and the branches he
draws two special lessons: one of humility, for Gentile believers; another of
hope, for Israel.
The people of God, as forming one continuous body, according to a figure taken
from the prophecy of Jeremiah, are pictured as "a green olive-tree, fair with
goodly fruit." The root, or stock, from which Jews and Gentiles all receive
their spiritual strength and nourishment is found in the patriarchs and other
believers from whom the people of God have sprung. The branches are the
individuals who derive their life from the body to which they belong. These
branches are of two kinds: first, the original branches representing the Jews,
some of which have been "cut off"
because of unbelief; and second, branches from a wild olive, which have been
grafted in, representing the Gentile Church. Such grafting, Paul insists, is a
wholly unnatural process. Shoots from a wild tree are never grafted into a
cultivated stock; only the reverse process would produce good fruit. Paul has
been' accused of ignorance of horticulture because of his suggesting such
grafting as is "contrary to nature"; but that is the very point of his argument.
Gentile Christians are reminded that any virtues or blessings that they possess
are due wholly to the grace of God and not to any merit of their own. These
favors have been received through faith and, at best, Gentile believers only
share a life drawn from a Jewish root. If Jewish branches "were broken off" that
Gentile believers might be grafted in, this is no reason for pride and
self-confidence on the part of these Gentiles. On the contrary, they should be
warned, by the breaking off of the Jewish branches, of the peril of unbelief. At
any time they themselves may be cut off; it would be a much less violent process
to break off the wild olive branches than it was to break off those which
belonged originally to the cultivated tree. The Gentile Christians, therefore,
should observe and take to heart the goodness of God shown toward themselves and
the severity of God shown toward Israel, and they should be warned that such
goodness can be enjoyed only by those who continue-in faith, loyal to God and
dependent upon his will.
On the other hand, the second lesson is still more impressive, the lesson of
hope for Israel. If the bringing of Gentiles into fellowship with the people of
God was as unnatural as the grafting of wild olive branches into a cultivated
stock, much more easily will God be able to restore to their original place
these Jewish branches and to graft them into "their own olive tree."" Vs.
16-24.
Such lessons are greatly needed to-day. What could be more unworthy or more
unreasonable than for Gentile Christians to despise unbelieving Jews? Christians
have merely inherited the blessings which through Jews have been brought to the
whole world. The words of Christ, "Salvation is from the Jews," should never be
forgotten.
Nor must Gentile believers be skeptical about the conversion of Israel. The
surprising thing is not that Jews can be brought back into the body of God's
true people; they have every spiritual and religious advantage. The strange
thing is that Gentiles can be saved in spite of their inheritance of pantheism
and atheism and idolatry. The conversion of a heathen may be regarded ,as a
marvel. What is more natural on the part of a Jew than his return to the real
faith of his fathers and his acceptance of the Messiah predicted by his
prophets, of the Redeemer who came first of all to save his own people?
Paul now distinctly predicts the conversion of Israel. He indicates the
importance of the event by using, to introduce his prediction, a characteristic
phrase which he frequently employs for this purpose: "I would not, brethren,
have you ignorant." He indicates further that this event has been divinely
disclosed to him, for he describes it as a "mystery," by which Paul always means
a secret once hidden but now revealed. Still further he states his desire to
have the Roman church know of this coming conversion of Israel, lest this church
might be wise in its own conceits and might imagine that it was to retain
permanently the religious supremacy of the world.
How strangely the Roman Church still labors under that delusion, and how surprisingly Protestants imitate Rome in their
appraisal of the Jew! The fact is, as Paul declares, that the unbelief of
Israel is only partial: "a hardening in part hath befallen Israel"; it is only
temporary: "until the fulness of the Gentiles be come in," that is,
until the "full complement of the Gentiles," or the Gentile nations as a whole,
are converted or brought into the Christian Church; and so, in consequence, all Israel shall be saved.
Evidently Paul is speaking here of Israel as a nation; he is not referring to
every individual Israelite; just as in speaking of the "fulness of the Gentiles'
he does not mean to indicate every individual in the Gentile world. Nor yet does
he refer to the dead; nor to those who are to die before this salvation of
Israel comes to pass. Paul is speaking here of nations and he is pointing to a
time when
Gentile kingdoms and the people of Israel shall be united in the blessings of a
redeemed world.
Paul confirms his prediction by a quotation from Isaiah, in which it is stated
that a Deliverer "shall come out of Zion" who "shall turn away ungodliness from
Jacob," who will secure for Israel the benefits of a new covenant of grace and
of forgiveness. Whether the reference here is to the first or the second coming
of the Messiah is not made plain. The hope of Israel is in Christ, who surely
has come and is now giving deliverance from sin to all who put their trust in
him.
If Israel now especially seems to need such a deliverance, this should only make
one more certain that the prophecy will be fulfilled, for in the divine plan,
according to which the good tidings of salvation have been preached, the Jews in
their unbelief have been treated as enemies of God in order that Gentiles might
be saved; but this does not alter the fact that the people of Israel are the
chosen people of God, and "beloved for the fathers' sake." God has given them
special blessings, he has called them to a high destiny, and he never revokes
his choice. That there is a parallel in the case of the Gentile Church to the
case of Israel, Paul further points out, and it is mentioned as a ground of
universal hope. It was through Israel's disobedience and rejection of the gospel
that the mercy of God came to the Roman believers; even so, the mercy now shown
to Gentile believers will be the occasion of Israel's repentance and of Israel's
enjoyment of divine favor. In both cases God's universal plan and purpose of
salvation is being carried out. God, so to speak, has locked up in the prison
house of hopeless unbelief and sin all mankind, both Jews and Gentiles, that he
might show toward all in their absolute hopelessness his free and unmerited
grace. This does not mean that Jews and Gentiles are not responsible for the
unbelief and sin which resulted in their helplessness and hopelessness; nor does
it mean that ultimately every individual will be saved; nor yet that any
individual is saved without faith. These truths are elsewhere safeguarded. Paul
is here reaching the great climax of his epistle and is affirming not only that
Israel
is yet to be saved in spite of present unbelief and rejection but also that
ultimately all nations are to be included in the blessings which by his mercy
and grace God is providing through Jesus Christ our Lord. Vs. 25-32.
c. The Doxology. Ch. 11:33-36
33 O the depth of the riches both of the wisdom and the knowledge of God! how
unsearchable are his judgments, and his ways past tracing out! 34 For who hath
known the mind of the Lord? or who hath been his counsellor? 35 or who hath
first given to him, and it shall be recompensed unto him again? 36 For of him,
and through him, and unto him, are all things. To him be the glory for ever.
Amen.
The doxologies which occur not infrequently in the Pauline Epistles are stately,
majestic, sublime, and yet apparently quite spontaneous. They seem to arise
naturally from the emotions of a heart stirred by the contemplation of the
matchless grace and goodness of God. Thus when the apostle has clearly set forth
the way of salvation which God has prepared in Jesus Christ for all mankind,
when he has shown that men are justified freely, that the rejection is due to
the fault of Israel, that this rejection has been overruled for the salvation of
Gentiles and ultimately will give place to a national restoration which will
result in universal blessing, no wonder that the survey of such a vast panorama
of divine providence is succeeded by a hymn of praise to "the depth of the
riches both of the wisdom and the knowledge of God!"
Possibly it is best to regard these great words as co6rdinate and to read, as in
the margin, "O the depth of the riches and the wisdom and the knowledge of
God!" The riches of God would thus refer to " the wealth of love that enables
God to meet, and far more than meet, the appalling necessities of the world."
In any case, "the wisdom and the knowledge" which Paul adores refer to God's
comprehensive view of all things and his penetrating perception of details,
which enable him to adapt his love to all the forces and conditions of the
world, even to failure and unbelief and sin, and to work out his plans and
purposes of grace.
His "judgments,"" whether of punishment or of salvation, are "unsearchable";
his "ways" of dealing with men are "past tracing out." This is the reason for
worship; this is the occasion for faith. We know only in part. However, if in
one case, as in that of Israel, his mysterious providence has been vindicated,
therefore in other cases, we can await his explanations and the ultimate
demonstration of his love.
Surely God's ways are "past tracing out," for, to quote from the Old Testament,
no one has been his "counsellor" so as "to know how he would proceed to attain
his purposes, and so rich is he that he needs nothing at the hands of man; all
that he gives must be the expression of grace, as none can merit anything from
him; and this is true because in this vast universe, and specifically in the
sphere of salvation, all things have their source in him, through him they flow
as he upholds, rules, and directs; he is their final cause, their exalted goal;
they serve his eternal purpose, his gracious ends. Therefore, "to him be the
glory for ever."
This is the expression of a faith which trusts where it cannot understand, which
loves when it cannot explain, which reasons wisely that nothing but good can
ultimately come from God to those who accept the grace he has revealed in the
gift of his Son, our Saviour and our Lord.
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