Verses 1-3
Romans 11:1-3. I say then, &c. —
As if he had said, We have just
seen how the perverseness of the
Jews and the calling of the
Gentiles have been foretold; but
do I say then that God hath
entirely cast off his whole
people, so as to have mercy on
none of them? God forbid — In no
wise; for I should then
pronounce a sentence of
reprobation upon myself; for I
also am an Israelite — As it is
well known; of the seed of
Abraham, &c. — To whom, through
the tribe of Benjamin, I can
trace my genealogy; yet I am not
cast off; I am still one of
God’s people, by believing in
Christ. God hath not cast off
that part of his people whom he
foreknew, as repenting and
believing. The apostle speaks
after the manner of men. For in
fact, knowing and foreknowing
are the same thing with God, who
knows or sees all things at
once, from everlasting to
everlasting. Wot ye not — Know
ye not, that in a parallel case,
amid a general apostacy, when
Elijah thought the whole nation
was fallen into idolatry, God
knew there was a remnant of true
worshippers. How he maketh
intercession — Or complaineth,
as the verb ενυγχανει, here
used, evidently signifies, Acts
25:24, where Festus says, The
Jews, ενετυχον μοι, complained
to me concerning Paul; against
Israel — The ten tribes, who had
generally revolted to idolatry;
saying, Lord, they have killed
thy prophets — See note on 1
Kings 19:10; 1 Kings 19:14; and
digged down thine altars — Built
upon extraordinary occasions by
special dispensation, and with
the authority of the Lord’s
prophets; altars which pious
people attended who could not go
up to Jerusalem, and would not
worship the calves, nor Baal;
these separate altars, though
breaking in upon the unity of
the church, yet being erected
and attended by those that
sincerely aimed at the glory of
God, and served him faithfully,
God was pleased to own for his
altars, as well as that at
Jerusalem; and the pulling of
them down is mentioned and
charged upon Israel by Elijah as
a heinous sin. And I am left
alone — Of all thy prophets who
boldly and publicly plead thy
cause; and they seek my life —
Send murderers in pursuit of me
from place to place.
Verses 4-6
Romans 11:4-6. But what saith
the answer — Recollect the
answer which God gave to this
doleful complaint; I have
reserved to myself — To maintain
my honour and true worship, I
have preserved by my providence
and grace not fewer than seven
thousand; who have not bowed the
knee to Baal — Nor to the golden
calves, nor complied with any of
those idolatrous rites which
have been established by
iniquitous laws. Even so at this
present time — As it was then,
so it is now; bad as this
generation of Israelites is,
there is a remnant who continue
faithful to God; according to
the election of grace —
According to that gracious
purpose of God, whereby he hath
chosen those, whether Jews or
Gentiles, for his people, that
break off their sins by
repentance, and believe on
Jesus, as the true Messiah and
Saviour of the world, with their
hearts unto righteousness. Among
those who thus repented and
believed, in the first age of
Christianity, were many
thousands of Jews. Of the
election here spoken of, see
notes on Romans 8:28-30. And if
by grace, then it is no more of
works — That is, of the merit of
works, whether ceremonial or
moral; whether of the Mosaic or
any other law, except that of
faith. In other words, it is no
more an election according to
any covenant of justice, like
that made with our first parents
before the fall, which required
unsinning obedience, but
according to the covenant of
grace, made with man since the
fall, which makes provision for
pardoning his past sins, and
renewing his fallen nature, and
by which alone a sinful creature
can be saved: otherwise grace is
no more grace — The very nature
of grace is lost. But if it be
of the merit of works, then it
is no more grace, otherwise work
is no more work — No longer
deserving the name, or is no
longer meritorious, but the very
nature of it is destroyed. There
is something so absolutely
inconsistent between the being
justified by grace, and the
being justified by the merit of
works, that if you suppose
either, you of necessity exclude
the other. For what is given to
works is the payment of a debt;
whereas grace implies an
unmerited favour. So that the
same benefit cannot, in the very
nature of things, be derived
from both.
Verses 7-10
Romans 11:7-10. What then — What
is the conclusion from the
whole? It is this, that Israel,
in general, hath not obtained
that which he seeketh — Namely,
justification, acceptance with
God, and the blessings
consequent thereon. But the
election — Those of them only
who repent and believe, and
therefore are chosen of God to
be his people; have obtained it,
and the rest were blinded — By
their own wilful prejudice,
arising from their worldly
spirit, which caused them to
reject Jesus on account of his
poverty, mean appearance, and
state of suffering. The word
επωρωθησαν, here rendered, were
blinded, signifies properly,
were hardened, being a
metaphorical expression taken
from the skin of the hand, made
hard by labour. In general it
denotes, in Scripture, both
hardness of heart, and blindness
of understanding. “The apostle’s
meaning is, that the unbelieving
Jews, through the influence of
their own evil dispositions,
were so blinded, that they did
not discern the force of the
evidence by which God confirmed
the mission of his Son, and so
were excluded from his covenant
and church.” — Macknight.
According as it is written —
Here the apostle refers to two
passages of Isaiah, chap. Isaiah
29:10; Romans 6:9, &c. God hath
given them the spirit of slumber
— Or deep sleep, as the word
κατανυξεως signifies, being used
with an allusion to the
stupifying potions which were
sometimes given to persons who
were to suffer torture or death,
to render them insensible. The
meaning here is, God hath at
length withdrawn his Spirit, and
for their wilful impenitence,
unbelief, and obstinacy, hath
given them up to a state of
blindness and insensibility,
whereby they slumber, as it
were, on the brink of ruin, and
are careless about their
salvation; while the wrath of
God hangs over theft heads, and
the divine judgments are ready
to break forth upon them, in a
most awful manner. Eyes that
they should not see — Here the
apostle alludes to Deuteronomy
29:4, where see the note. As if
the apostle had said, Being
forsaken of God, they are like
to a man bereft of his senses:
or he has given them up to such
stupidity of mind, that though
they have eyes yet they see not.
Unto this day — So it was then,
and so it is still. And — To
show the causes and consequences
of that spiritual blindness;
David saith — Speaking
prophetically of the Messiah’s
enemies; Let their table be made
a snare — Or, as the words may
be rendered, Their table shall
be for a snare to them, &c. That
is, the plentiful provision God
has made for the supply of their
wants, ghostly or bodily, being
abused, shall become an occasion
of sin and mischief to them; and
their blessings shall be turned
into curses, by reason of their
depravity. The metaphors of a
snare and a trap are taken from
birds and beasts, which are
allured into snares and traps to
their destruction, by meat laid
in their way. Stumbling-blocks
occasion falls, which sometimes
wound to death. And a recompense
— A punishment as a recompense
of their preceding wickedness.
Thus sin is punished by sin; and
thus the gospel, which should
have fed and strengthened their
souls, becomes a means of
destroying them. Let their eyes,
&c. — As if he had said, And in
them the following words are
also fulfilled: Their eyes shall
be darkened — Not the eyes of
their bodies, (for in that sense
the prediction was neither
fulfilled in David’s nor in
Christ’s enemies,) but of their
minds, so that they will not
discern God’s truth nor their
own duty, nor the way of peace
and salvation. And bow down
their back alway — Under a
perpetual weight of sorrows,
which they will not be able to
support, and which will be a
just punishment upon them for
their having rejected so easy a
yoke. The darkening of the eyes,
and the bowing down of the back,
denote the greatest affliction.
For grief is said to make the
eyes dim, Lamentations 5:17; and
a most miserable slavery is
represented by walking with the
back bowed down, as under a yoke
or heavy burden, Psalms 146:8.
They loved darkness rather than
light, and therefore were
permitted by the righteous
judgment of God to go on in
darkness, while the blind led
the blind. And such still
continues to be the state of the
Jews, notwithstanding the
intolerable load of wo which in
all ages, since their rejection
of the Messiah, has bowed down
their backs to the earth. By
quoting these prophecies, the
apostle showed the Jews that
their rejection and punishment
for crucifying the Messiah, was
long ago foretold in their own
Scriptures. It is justly
observed by Macknight here, that
“God’s ancient Israel, given up
to deep sleep, to blind eyes,
and deaf ears, and with the back
bowed down continually, is an
example which ought to terrify
all who enjoy the gospel, lest
by abusing it they bring
themselves into the like
miserable condition.”
Verse 11-12
Romans 11:11-12. Have they
stumbled that, as a nation, they
should fall — Totally and
finally? No: though they have
taken such offence at Christ and
the gospel that they are
rejected by God at present, yet
they are not fallen into
irrecoverable ruin, so as never
more to be owned by God as his
people: but rather, through
their fall, salvation, that is,
the gospel, which is the means
of salvation, is come unto the
Gentiles — Not but that
salvation might have come to the
Gentiles if they had stood, but
it was the divine appointment
that the gospel should be
preached to the Gentiles, upon
its being rejected by the Jews.
Thus in the parable, Matthew
22:8-9, they that were bidden
were not worthy; Go ye therefore
into the highways, &c. See also
Luke 14:21; and so the apostles
acted. It was necessary, said
St. Paul, Acts 13:46, that the
word of God should first be
spoken to you, Jews: but seeing
that you put it from you, lo! we
turn to the Gentiles. See also
Acts 18:6. Add to this, that the
persecution of the Christians in
Judea drove them into other
countries, into which, whether
private Christians or public
teachers, they carried the
gospel with them, and by
conversation or preaching,
communicated the knowledge of it
to such as they found willing to
receive it. See Acts 8:4. To
provoke them to jealousy — That
is, to excite them to a holy
emulation of sharing the
blessings to be expected from
their own Messiah, when they
shall see so many heathen
nations enjoying them. For the
word παραζηλοω is evidently to
be taken here in a good sense,
and signifies, to excite others
to emulate those who enjoy
advantages which they themselves
do not possess. “The admission
of the Gentiles into the church
erected by Christ, was a very
proper means of exciting the
Jews to emulation; because, when
they saw the Gentiles endued
with the gifts of the Spirit,
and with miraculous powers, and
observed the holiness of their
lives, and the favour which God
showed them; in short, when they
found all the blessings and
privileges of the people of God
bestowed on the Gentiles, they
would naturally conclude that
the Christian was now the only
church of God, and be excited to
imitate the Gentiles by entering
into it, that they might share
with them in these privileges,
Romans 11:14; as it is probable
a number of them actually did,
especially after the destruction
of Jerusalem.” — Macknight.
Thus, as the rejection of the
Jews became an occasion of the
calling of the Gentiles, so this
calling of the Gentiles will
prove an occasion of the
restoration of the Jews. For, if
the fall of them — That is,
their rejecting the gospel, and
so falling from the honour and
happiness of being God’s people,
be the riches of the world — The
occasion of God’s spreading the
light of his truth and the
riches of his grace over all the
world. And the diminishing of
them — Greek, το ηττημα, the
diminution or the lessening of
them, by stripping them of their
privileges; the riches of the
Gentiles — The occasion of his
manifesting his abundant mercy
in pardoning and saving the
heathen; how much more their
fulness — That Isaiah , 1 st,
The general conversion of them,
which the word πληρωμα, here
rendered fulness, undoubtedly
implies; since the general
conversion of the Gentiles is
expressed by the same word,
Romans 11:25. 2d, The restoring
them to their forfeited
privileges, and thereby raising
them even to more than their
former greatness, which is fifty
called their fulness, because it
will render both themselves and
the Christian church complete.
For the word πληρωμα, fulness,
is properly that which, being
added to another thing, makes it
complete. Thus Matthew 9:16, the
patch with which a torn garment
is mended, or made complete, has
this name given it: and in this
sense the church is called,
Ephesians 1:23, το πληρωμα, the
fulness of him who filleth all
in all; because without the
church, which is his body,
Christ would not be complete.
“The apostle’s meaning is, that
a general conversion of the Jews
will take place before the end
of the world, and will afford to
the Gentiles the completest
evidence of the truth of the
gospel, by showing them that it
is the finishing of a grand
scheme, which God has been
carrying on for the salvation of
mankind, by means of his
dispensation toward the Jews.”
Indeed so many prophecies refer
to this grand event, that it is
surprising any Christian should
doubt of it. And these are
greatly confirmed by the
wonderful preservation of the
Jews, as a distinct people, to
this day. When it is
accomplished, it will be so
strong a demonstration both of
the Old and New Testament
revelation, as will doubtless
convince many thousands of
Deists, in countries professedly
Christian; of whom, under such
corrupt establishments as
generally prevail, there will,
of course, be increasing
multitudes among merely nominal
Christians. And this will be a
means of swiftly propagating the
gospel among Mohammedans and
Pagans; who would probably have
received it long ago, had they
conversed only with real
Christians.
Verse 13-14
Romans 11:13-14. For, or now, I
speak to you Gentiles — You
believing Romans, and thus make
known to you the present
rejection of the Jews, and the
happiness of the Gentiles in
their future restoration, for
your caution as well as comfort;
inasmuch as I am the apostle of
the Gentiles — By a special
designation of divine providence
and grace, and am accordingly
under an indispensable
obligation to communicate to
them whatever will be for their
profit; I magnify my office —
Far from being ashamed of
ministering to them, I glory
therein, and esteem it the most
signal honour of my life to be
so employed. And the rather, if
by any means — Especially by
converting the Gentiles; I may
provoke to emulation — To a
striving to partake of the
privileges of the gospel, as
well as the Gentiles; them which
are my flesh — My kinsmen; and
might save some of them — Might
bring them to believe in Jesus,
and so to be saved. Here, by a
most popular and affectionate
turn, the apostle represents
himself as zealous in converting
the Gentiles, from his great
love to the Jews.
Verse 15
Romans 11:15. For — As if he had
said, Their general conversion
ought to be desired, because of
the admirable benefit which will
come to mankind thereby: for if
the casting away of them — Their
rejection, as signified above;
be the reconciling of the world
— An occasion of sending the
gospel to the Gentiles in all
parts of the world, and so
bringing them to faith in
Christ, whereby they obtain the
pardon of their sins, and
reconciliation with God; what
shall the receiving of them into
God’s favour and into his church
be, but life from the dead — A
miraculous work, and productive
of the greatest joy to the
converted Gentiles; a joy like
that which one would feel on
receiving a beloved friend back
from the dead. As, in the
following verse, the apostle
speaks of God’s church under the
emblem of a tree, Dr. Macknight
thinks, in using the words η
αποβολη, the casting away, “he
may perhaps allude to the
practice of gardeners, who cut
off from vines and olive-trees
such branches as are barren or
withered, and cast them away.
According to this notion of
casting away, the reconciling of
the world, or Gentiles, is the
same thing with the ingrafting
of them, mentioned Romans 11:17.
In this passage the unbelief and
rejection of the Jews is justly
represented as the means of the
reception of the Gentiles. For,
although the unbelief of the
Jews may seem to have been an
obstacle to the conversion of
the Gentiles, it hath greatly
contributed to that event.
Besides the reason mentioned in
a preceding note, it is to be
considered, that the rejection
of the Jews was the punishment
of their unbelief, and that both
events were foretold by Moses
and by Christ. Wherefore these
events, as the fulfilment of
prophecy, have strengthened the
evidences of the gospel, and
thereby contributed to the
conversion of the Gentiles.” Add
to this, there are many other
predictions in the Old
Testament, which demonstrate the
truth of the gospel, but which
derive their strength from their
being in the possession of the
Jews, in whose hands they have
continued from the beginning,
and who have preserved them with
the greatest care, carrying them
with them in all their
dispersions, wherever they go.
In all countries, therefore, the
Jews are living witnesses to the
antiquity and genuineness of the
whole of the prophecies by which
the gospel is confirmed. And
their testimony, which is always
at hand, cannot be called in
question; because, having shown
themselves from the beginning
bitter enemies of Christ and of
his gospel, no suspicion can be
entertained that they have
either forged these prophecies,
or altered them to favour us. As
little can it be suspected that
we have forged or altered these
prophecies. For if any of us had
been disposed so to do, it would
have served no purpose while our
enemies, the Jews, maintained
the integrity of their copies.
Verse 16-17
Romans 11:16-17. And their
conversion will surely be
effected, For if the first-
fruit of them, the patriarchs,
be holy — He alludes to the
waved sheaf, which was said to
be holy, because it was accepted
of God, in token of his giving
the appointed weeks of the
harvest: and by the first-fruit,
he either means the patriarchs,
who were called and separated to
the service of God from all the
people of the earth; or, as many
commentators understand him, the
first converts to Christianity
from among the Jews, teaching
that they were most acceptable
to God, as being the first
members of the newly- erected
Christian church. The lump is
also holy — The lump, φυραμα,
(which was the meal tempered
with water, and kneaded for
baking,) here denotes the mass
of which the two wave-loaves
were made, mentioned Leviticus
23:17. And as these were offered
at the conclusion of the
harvest, seven weeks after the
offering of the first-fruits,
they represented the whole
fruits of the earth newly
gathered in, as sanctified
through that offering for the
people’s use, during the
following year. By this latter
similitude, therefore, the
apostle intends the whole mass,
or body of the nation, to be
hereafter converted, and
rendered acceptable to God, as
members of his true church. And
if the root of them, namely,
Abraham, was holy and beloved of
God, so are the branches still
beloved for the father’s sake,
and so will be once more, in his
good time, admitted to his
favour. There seems here to be
an allusion to Jeremiah 2:16,
where the Jewish nation, made
the visible church of God by
virtue of the covenant at Sinai,
are represented under the figure
of a green olive-tree, of which
Abraham was the root, and his
descendants by Isaac the
branches. Hence the thrusting
the Jews out of the covenant of
God, is here represented by the
breaking off of the branches;
and the admission of the
Gentiles into that covenant, so
as to make them members of God’s
church, is set forth under the
idea of their being ingrafted
into the stock of the green
olive-tree; and the advantages
which they enjoyed thereby, are
expressed by their partaking of
the root and fatness of the
olive-tree. The expression, a
wild olive-tree, means here, a
branch of a wild olive-tree, for
branches only are ingrafted. The
Gentiles are called a wild
olive, because God had not
cultivated them as he did the
Jews, who on that account were
called, Romans 11:24, the good
or garden olive.
Verse 18
Romans 11:18. Boast not against
the branches — Attribute not thy
being ingrafted into the good
olive to thy own merits, as if
thou wert worthy of the
blessing. But if thou boast — To
humble thy pride, consider, thou
bearest not the root, but the
root thee — The Jewish church is
not ingrafted into the Gentile,
but the Gentile into the Jewish;
the members thereof being by
faith made children of Abraham,
who was constituted by God’s
covenant the father of all
believers, receiving on their
behalf the promises. The
apostle’s meaning is, that
Abraham and his posterity
derived no advantage from any
covenant which God made with any
of the Gentile nations: but the
Gentiles have derived many
benefits from the covenants
which God made with Abraham and
the Jews. “Because the converted
Gentiles began very early to
despise and hate the unbelieving
Jews, on account of their
opposition to the gospel, and
because the apostle foresaw that
in after-times the Jews would be
treated with great cruelty and
contempt by Christians of all
denominations, he wrote this
passage; in which, by mentioning
the great obligations which the
Gentiles are under to the Jews,
he shows it to be injustice,
ingratitude, and impiety, to
despise and hate this people;
and much more to plunder,
persecute, and kill them. They
were the original church and
people of God. They preserved
the knowledge of God when all
the world was sunk in idolatry.
To them we owe the Scriptures of
the New Testament, as well as
those of the Old; for the holy
and honourable fellowship of the
prophets and apostles were Jews.
Of them, as concerning the
flesh, Christ, the Saviour of
the world, came. All the
knowledge of religion,
therefore, which we enjoy, is
derived from them. And surely
something of kindness and
gratitude is due for such
obligations.” — Macknight.
Verses 19-21
Romans 11:19-21. Thou wilt say —
Thou wilt object; The branches
were broken off — For their
infidelity and rejection of
Jesus and his gospel; that I
might be graffed in — And
therefore we may glory over them
as they once did over us. Well;
take this thought at least along
with thee, Because of unbelief
they were broken off — It was
not undeservedly, by an act of
absolute sovereignty and
prerogative, but because of
unbelief: by which it appears,
it is possible for whole
churches, as well as
individuals, that have long
stood by faith, to fall into
such a state of infidelity as
may prove their ruin. Now thou
art liable to the same infirmity
and corruption that they fell
by. For thou standest — Hast a
place in God’s favour and
family; by faith — A grace
which, in the very nature of it,
implies dependance on God, and
is itself the free, undeserved
gift of God. Thou dost not stand
in or by any strength of thy
own, of which thou mightest be
confident: thou art only what
the free grace of God makes
thee; and his grace is his own,
which he gives or withholds at
pleasure. Therefore be not
high-minded, but fear — Be not
too confident of thy own
strength. A holy fear is an
excellent preservative against
high-mindedness; happy is the
man that thus feareth always. We
need not fear lest God should
not be true to his word; all the
danger is, lest we should be
false to our own: let us
therefore fear, lest a promise
being left, to persevering
believers, of entering into his
rest, we should come short of
it, through not continuing in
the faith, grounded and settled;
but being moved therefrom, and
from the hope of the gospel,
Colossians 1:23. If God spared
not the natural branches — Of
the good olive-tree, namely, the
Jews, so called because they
sprang from Abraham, the root of
that tree, and consequently by
their descent from him were
naturally members of the Jewish
Church; if God proceeded with so
much severity against them, take
heed lest he spare not thee —
Or, as the Syriac translates the
clause, perhaps neither will he
spare thee. They, observe, were
natural branches, and as such
had a peculiar interest in
Abraham’s covenant, and in the
promises, being descended from
his loins; and yet, when they
sunk into unbelief, neither
prescription, nor long usage,
nor the faithfulness of their
ancestors, could secure them,
but God cast them off. Take
heed, therefore, lest thy
unbelief and barrenness expose
thee, who art not a natural
branch, but a scion from a
foreign stock, to the punishment
of excision, after all the great
obligations which he hath laid
thee under by his unparalleled
goodness.
Verse 22-23
Romans 11:22-23. Behold,
therefore — In this
dispensation; the goodness and
severity of God — Consider them
maturely, and lay them deeply to
heart: on them which fell — The
unbelieving Jews, who took
offence at the mean appearance
of Jesus, and so fell into
unbelief, and were cut off for
it; severity — Or the exercise
of strict justice; for God laid
righteousness to the line, and
judgment to the plummet, and
dealt with them according to
their sins, after many ages of
astonishing patience and
long-suffering exercised toward
them. Observe, reader, God is
most severe toward those who
have been most distinguished by
advantages on the one hand, and
the abuse of them on the other.
Divine patience, and privileges
abused, turn to the greatest
wrath. The word αποτομια, here
rendered severity, literally
means, a cutting off; the effect
being put for severity, the
cause. But toward thee — Who art
called to faith in Christ,
without any merit in thyself;
goodness — Benignity and
gentleness, as χρηστοτης
signifies; if thou continue in
his goodness — That is, walk
worthy of this privilege, into
which thou art brought by God’s
goodness: or, if thou be careful
to maintain thine interest in
God’s favour by continuing to
depend upon, and comply with the
design of his free grace, and
endeavouring to please him
continually: otherwise thou also
shalt be cut off — From
communion with God and his
people. And they also — The
Jewish nation; if they abide not
in unbelief — And thereby
continue to reject Christ; shall
be grafted in — Restored to
union with Christ and his
church; for God is able to graft
them in again — And willing
also, as the word δυνατος is
frequently taken: (see Romans
4:21; Romans 14:4; Hebrews 2:18
:) for it was to no purpose to
mention God’s ability to graft
in the Jews, unless it had been
accompanied with willingness.
Locke says, “This grafting in
again seems to import, that the
Jews shall be a flourishing
nation again, professing
Christianity in the land of
promise; for that is to be
reinstated again in the promise
made to Abraham, Isaac, and
Jacob. This Paul might, for good
reasons, be withheld from
speaking out here. But in the
prophets there are very plain
intimations of it.”
Verse 24
Romans 11:24. For, &c. — As if
he had said, And it appears that
he will do it, because he has
done that which was more
unlikely, as being contrary to
nature: if thou wert cut out of
the tree wild by nature, &c. —
If thou wert admitted into the
family of God, though descended
from parents that were strangers
and enemies, how much more shall
they who were children of the
covenant, to whom the promises
originally belonged, be taken
into covenant with him. In other
words, God will not seem to do
so wonderful a thing, in
restoring them to what might
appear the privilege of their
birthright, and in saving the
seed of Abraham his friend, as
he hath done in calling you
sinners of the Gentiles, to
participate the blessings of
which you had not the least
notion, and to which you cannot
be supposed to have had any
imaginable claim. This reasoning
is certainly very just; the
conversion of the Jews, though
it hath not yet happened,
appearing much more probable
than did the conversion of the
Gentiles, before that event took
place. Some understand the
expression, grafted contrary to
nature, as signifying contrary
to the usual way of ingrafting;
which is, not to insert a wild
scion into a good stock, but a
good scion into a wild stock, to
which it communicates its
changing efficacy, causing it to
bear good fruit. But that
circumstance appears not to have
been at all regarded by the
apostle; nor was it necessary,
as Doddridge justly observes,
that the simile taken from
ingrafting should hold in all
its particulars: and certainly
the engagement to humility
arises, in a considerable
degree, from the circumstances
of the ingrafting here supposed
being the reverse of that
commonly used. Indeed, had the
scion been nobler than the stock
into which it was inserted, its
dependance on it for life and
nourishment would have rendered
it unreasonable that it should
boast against it; how much more
when the case was the reverse of
that in use, and the wild olive
was ingrafted on the good.
Verses 25-27
Romans 11:25-27. For, &c. — And
this I now declare, because I
would not have you ignorant of
this mystery — Of the mysterious
dispensation under
consideration, which, on the
first view of it, may appear
very unaccountable; lest you
should be wise in your own
conceits — Should have too high
an opinion of yourselves, on
account of your being made the
people of God in place of the
Jews. The apostle calls the
rejection of the Jews for a
time, and their restoration
after the conversion of the
Gentiles is completed, a
mystery; because it was a matter
of the greatest importance to
mankind, and because it had
hitherto been kept a secret,
like the doctrine of the
mysteries among the Greeks,
which was discovered to none but
the initiated. See on Ephesians
1:9. That blindness in part —
That is, as to the greatest part
of them, a remnant only being
now brought to the faith; is
happened to Israel — For a
certain time, for Israel is
neither totally nor finally
rejected; until the fulness of
the Gentiles be come in — Here
the Christian Church is
represented as a great temple,
erected for all nations to
worship in. And the coming of
the Gentiles into this temple,
or church, to worship, signifies
their conversion to
Christianity; a conversion which
has hitherto only taken place in
a small degree. For, as Whitby
observes, (Appen. to Romans xi,)
“If the known regions of the
world be divided into thirty
parts, the Christian part is
only as five, the Mohammedan as
six, and the idolatrous as
nineteen.” And, alas! of the
part said to be Christian, how
few are Scriptural Christians,
possessed of the Spirit of
Christ, without which we are
none of his! And so all Israel
shall be saved — Shall be
brought to believe in Jesus as
the true Messiah, and so shall
be put into the way of obtaining
salvation, being convinced of
the truth by the coming in of
the Gentiles. As it is written,
Isaiah 59:20, There shall come
out of Sion the Deliverer —
Being the son of David, he is
said, by the apostle, to come
out of Sion, the city of David,
and the seat of his kingdom,
rather than ενεκεν σιων, for the
sake of Sion, the words used by
the LXX.; whose translation of
this passage, in other respects,
the apostle adopts. It differs,
however, in some degree, from
the Hebrew original, both in
this and the next clause; for
that is, the Redeemer shall come
to Sion, and unto them that turn
from transgression in Jacob,
which, no doubt, was the exact
sense of the prophet’s words.
But since the coming of Christ
as a deliverer to the Jews was
all that the apostle’s argument
required, he quotes the passage
merely to prove that point, and
does not notice the variation of
the Greek translation from the
original Hebrew. It being
certain, however, that the
general tenor of God’s covenant
with Israel gave no hope of
their deliverance and
restoration, after rejection and
chastisement, but in a way of
repentance and reformation, the
apostle properly observes, that
when the deliverer came, he
should turn away ungodliness
from Jacob — Which, as it was
not done by Christ at his first
coming, will doubtless be
accomplished in some future
period by an extraordinary
display of his mercy and grace.
For this is my covenant unto —
Or rather with them, when I
shall take away their sins —
That is, when their sins, as a
nation, are remitted, it shall
be to bring them again into
covenant with myself.
Verse 28-29
Romans 11:28-29. As concerning
the gospel — That is, in
reference to the gospel; they
are enemies for your sakes —
They reject it with the greater
hatred, because you embrace it,
or rather, (for they generally
rejected the gospel before the
Gentiles were called,) they
reject the gospel, and thereby
show that they are enemies to
it, to God, and to themselves,
which God permits for your
sakes, and which turns to your
advantage: (see on Romans 11:11;
Romans 11:19; Romans 11:30 :)
but as touching the election,
that part of them who believe,
and therefore are chosen of God
to be his people along with the
believing Gentiles; they are
beloved for the fathers’ sakes —
God’s gracious regard to the
memory of their pious ancestors,
engages him peculiarly to love
and favour them. Or, the
election here spoken of may be
that national election, whereby
the Jews were made the church
and people of God. See on chap,
Romans 9:11. In respect of that
election, the Jews, though
unbelieving, and enemies in
respect of the gospel, as is
said in the former clause, are
still beloved with a love of
compassion and goodwill, for the
special love God bore to Abraham
and the rest of the patriarchs,
from whom they are descended:
and, in consequence of the
promises made to their fathers,
they shall, as a people, in some
future period, become the people
of God, by believing the gospel.
It is justly observed by Whitby,
that there is a two-fold
election of the Jews spoken of
in this chapter; one whereby
they were made the people of
God, through their natural
descent from the fathers, and
which Moses has described,
Deuteronomy 7:6-8. The other,
whereby such of them as believed
on Christ, were made the people
of God under the gospel
dispensation. This election is
mentioned Romans 11:7. For the
gifts and calling of God, &c. —
“The blessings which God freely
bestowed on Abraham and his
seed, and his calling, or making
them his people, God will never
repent of; but will restore to
his natural seed the honour of
being his people, after the
Redeemer hath turned away their
ungodliness of unbelief, Ezekiel
16:60-62.” — Macknight.
Verses 30-32
Romans 11:30-32. For as ye —
Believing Gentiles; in times
past — Before Christ was
preached to you; have not
believed God — Did not believe
in the living and true God: or
rather, as the words ποτε
ηπειθησατε τω θεω signify, were
once disobedient to God, and
were buried in ignorance and
superstition; but now have
obtained mercy — Namely, to be
converted and pardoned; through
their unbelief — τη τουτων
απειθεια, through, or on
occasion of, their disobedience.
The apostle does not mean that
the Gentiles would not have been
admitted into the covenant and
church of God, by having the
gospel preached to them, if the
whole Jewish nation had embraced
the gospel, the title of the
Gentiles to all the blessings of
the covenant with Abraham being
established by the covenant
itself. But his meaning is, as
is explained in the note on
Romans 11:11. Even so have these
—
As if he had said, As you
obtained mercy after a long time
of disobedience, so shall the
Jews, who now, since the
preaching of the gospel, have
not believed, ηπειθησαν, have
disobeyed; that through your
mercy — The mercy shown to you
in the conversion of so many of
you, being provoked to
emulation, Romans 11:11; they
also may obtain mercy — May be
brought to believe in Christ,
and so partake of mercy. “The
disobedience of the Jews
consisted in their rejecting the
gospel, notwithstanding it was
preached to them, as the
fulfilment of the prophecies
contained in their own sacred
records. And by obtaining mercy,
is meant the being admitted into
the covenant and church of God,
which is called mercy, because
it proceeded entirely from the
mercy of God, Romans 9:15.” For
God hath concluded them all in
unbelief — Suffered the main
body both of the Jews and
Gentiles, successively, for some
time, to continue under the
power of their unbelief, or
disobedience rather, that, in
his own time, he might fulfil
the great counsel of his
goodness, in showing undeserved
mercy both to Jews and Gentiles.
See John 12:32. First, God
suffered the Gentiles, in the
early ages of the world, to
revolt from him, and took the
family of Abraham, as a peculiar
seed, to himself: afterward he
permitted them to fall through
unbelief, disobedience,
idolatry, and, at last, the
rejection of their own Messiah,
and took the believing Gentiles
for his people. And he did even
this to provoke the Jews to
emulation, and so bring them
also, in the end, to faith in,
and obedience to, the gospel.
This was truly a mystery in the
divine conduct, which the
apostle adores with such holy
astonishment.
Verses 33-36
Romans 11:33-36. O the depth —
The unsearchable, inconceivable
abundance; of the riches, &c. —
In the ninth chapter, Paul had
sailed but in a narrow sea, now
he is in the immense ocean: of
the wisdom and knowledge of God
— The depth of his knowledge is
described in the latter part of
this verse; the depth of wisdom
in Romans 11:34. Wisdom directs
all things to the best end;
knowledge sees that end, and the
way that leads to it. Or, the
divine wisdom was exercised in
contriving and ordering these
dispensations, and knowledge in
foreseeing the effects which
they would produce. By applying
the word depth to the riches of
the wisdom and knowledge of God,
the apostle represents those
perfections as forming a vast
ocean. How unsearchable are his
judgments — With regard to
unbelievers; and his ways — With
regard to believers; are past
finding out — Or being traced.
The word ανεξιχνιαστοι comes
from ιχνιον, which signifies the
mark of a foot. The metaphor is
taken from animals which pursue
and find out their prey by
tracing their footsteps. By
judgments here, Macknight
understands God’s
determinations, or “methods of
directing and governing all
things, both generally and
particularly. Agreeably to which
interpretation of κριματα,
judgments, the apostle adds, and
his ways are past finding out.
Men are not capable of
penetrating into the depths of
the divine wisdom, because
revelation hath made known only
what God hath willed, and said,
and done, without disclosing the
reasons either of his general or
his particular conduct. The
knowledge of whatever is above
our present childish conceptions
is to be sought for, not here,
but in the future state.” The
apostle, in this part of the
conclusion of his discourse, as
Locke observes, “had an especial
regard to the Jews, whom, in an
elegant but inoffensive manner,
he rebuked for their presumption
in finding fault with the divine
dispensations; as if God had
done them an injury in admitting
the Gentiles into his covenant
and church.” For who hath known
the mind of the Lord — Before,
or any further than he has
revealed it; or who hath known
what he intends to do, or hath
comprehended all the reasons of
his determinations or
proceedings, so as to be able to
judge of them? Or who hath been
his counsellor? — Who hath given
him advice respecting either the
planning or managing of the
affairs of the universe? Or, who
hath first given to him either
wisdom or power, or any thing,
or conferred any obligation upon
him? Let him show the
obligation, and make out the
claim, and we may answer for it
that it shall be exactly repaid
him again. “The apostle here
very properly asks the Jews, if
God was in their debt for any
obligation they had conferred on
him? Or, if he was, let them say
for what, and they should have
an ample remuneration made to
them.” For of him — As the
Creator; through him — As the
Preserver; to him — As the
ultimate end, are all things: to
whom be — η δοξα, the glory, of
his power, knowledge, wisdom,
and of the effects thereof, the
creation, preservation, and
government of the universe, and
the redemption and salvation of
mankind, for ever. Amen — A
concluding word, in which the
affection of the apostle, when
it is come to the height, shuts
up all. |