Paul expresses his great sorrow for the unbelief and
obstinacy of the Jews, 1-3. Whose high privileges he enumerates,
4, 5. Points out the manner in which God has chosen to communicate
the
knowledge of his name to both Jews and Gentiles; and how he deals,
whether in judgment or mercy, with individuals; and produces
the cases of Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, Esau, and Pharaoh, 6-17. God shows
mercy
and judgment as he thinks proper, and none have a right to find
fault with his proceedings, 18-20. He has the same power over the human
race
as the potter has over the clay, 21-23. The prophets predicted
the calling of the Gentiles, and the rejection of the Jews, 24-29.
The
Gentiles have attained to the knowledge of Gods method of saving
sinners; while the Jews have not attained this knowledge, 30, 31. The
reason
why the Jews have not attained the salvation provided for them
in the Gospel, 32, 33.
NOTES ON CHAPTER 9 -
To this and the tenth chapter, Dr. Taylor has prefixed
the following judicious summary:
The apostle has largely proved in the preceding chapters,
that the grace of God extends to the Gentiles as well as to the Jews;
and that the dispensation of Gods mercy was absolutely, and in itself,
free to all who believe, whether Jews or Gentiles, in opposition
to the merit of any works, or of conformity to any law whatever;
and that the Gentiles have, by faith, a good title to the blessings
of Gods covenant, to which blessings the Jews cannot have a title
any other way. Hitherto the apostle has not considered the Jews as
rejected, except in an indirect way, but that they had the possibility
of continuing in the Church, from entering into which they should
not attempt to prevent the Gentiles, but allow them to be sharers
in the mercies of God; and hence his language is in sum this: Why
may not believing Gentiles be admitted, pardoned, and saved, as well
as you?
But in this chapter, and the two following, the apostle
considers the reception of the Gentiles into the kingdom and covenant
of God
under the notion of calling or invitation, and of election or choice:
which shows that he views the two parties in a light different to
that in which he had before placed them. The Gentiles he considers
as invited into the kingdom of God, and as chosen to be his people;
and the Jews he considers as left out and rejected; for as the main
body of them had now rejected the Gospel of Christ, he saw that God
was about to unchurch them, overturn their polity, destroy their
temple, and disperse them over the face of the earth. Thus he knew
they would be accursed, or anathematized from Christ, and reduced
to a level with the heathen nations of the world. And the event has
proved that his declarations were dictated by the Spirit of truth.
It is observable that, agreeably to his delicate manner of writing,
and his nice and tender treatment of his countrymen, he never mentions
their rejection-a subject extremely painful to his thoughts-otherwise
than in a wish that he himself were accursed from Christ for them,
or to prevent them from being accursed from Christ, (Romans 9:3,)
till he comes to Rom. 11, where he has much to say in their favor,
even considered, as at present, rejected. But it is very evident
that his arguments in this chapter rest on the supposition that the
main body of the Jewish nation would be cast out of the visible kingdom
of God; and it is for this reason that in this and the two following
chapters he considers the reception of any people into the kingdom
and covenant of God under the relative notion of inviting and choosing,
or of calling and election. The Jews were rejected and reprobated;
the Gentiles were chosen and called, or elected. As this is most
obviously the apostles meaning, it is strange that any should apply
his doctrine to the particular and unconditional reprobation and
election of individuals.
It is upon this rejection of the Jews that the calling and
election of the Gentiles rest. If the Jews be not rejected,
but are still
the visible Church and kingdom of God, then the Gentiles,
according to the most proper inference from the apostles
doctrine, have no
right to the blessings of the kingdom. Instead of being invited
or called, they are intruders at the heavenly feast; and
this the unbelieving
Jews labored to prove, and thus unhinge the believing Gentiles
by persuading them that they were not duly taken into the
Church of
God; that the Jews were, and ever must continue to be, the
only Church and kingdom of God, and that they could not
be cast off so long as
God was faithful to his promise to Abraham; and that the
Gentiles were most miserably deceived when they supposed
they were brought
into that kingdom by faith in Christ, whereas there was no
way of entering it, or of being entitled to its privileges,
but by submitting
to the law of Moses. This being the fixed opinion of the
Jews, and the ground on which they opposed the Gentiles
and endeavored to sap
the foundation of their hope of salvation from the Gospel
of Christ, it was therefore a matter of the utmost importance
to be able to
prove that the Jews, by rejecting Christ and his Gospel,
were themselves cast out of the Church, and this in a way
perfectly consistent with
the truth of the promise made to Abraham. He had slightly
touched on this subject at the beginning of the third chapter;
but it would
have broken in too much on the thread of his discourse to
have pursued the argument there, for which reason he appears
to have reserved
it to this place, where he (1) solemnly declares his tenderest
affection for his countrymen, and his real grief of heart
for their infidelity and consequent rejection, Romans 9:1-5;
(2) Answers objections against
this rejection, Romans 9:6-23; (3) Proves the calling of
the Gentiles from their own Scriptures, Romans 9:24-30;
(4) Gives the true state
and reasons of the rejection of the Jews and the calling
of the Gentiles, Romans 9:30 to Romans 10:14; (5) Proves
the necessity of the apostolic
mission to the Gentiles in order to their salvation, Romans
10:14-21.
And all this was intended at once to vindicate the Divine dispensations;
to convince the infidel Jew; to satisfy the believing Gentile that
his calling or invitation into the Church of God was valid; to
arm him against the cavils and objections of the unbelieving Jews,
and
to dispose the Christian Jew to receive and own the believing Gentile
as a member of the family and kingdom of God, by Divine right,
equal to any to which he himself could pretend. See Taylors notes,
p. 321,
etc.
Verse 1. I say the truth in Christ, I lie not This is one of
the most solemn oaths any man can possibly take. He appeals to Christ
as the searcher of hearts that he tells the truth; asserts that his
conscience was free from all guile in this matter, and that the Holy
Ghost bore him testimony that what he said was true. Hence we find
that the testimony of a mans own conscience, and the testimony of the
Holy Ghost, are two distinct things, and that the apostle had both
at the same time.
As the apostle had still remaining a very awful part of his commission
to execute, namely, to declare to the Jews not only that God had
chosen the Gentiles, but had rejected them because they had rejected
Christ
and his Gospel, it was necessary that he should assure them that
however he had been persecuted by them because he had embraced the
Gospel,
yet it was so far from being a gratification to him that they had
now fallen under the displeasure of God, that it was a subject of
continual
distress to his mind, and that it produced in him great heaviness
and continual sorrow.
Verse 3. For I could wish that myself were accursed from Christ This
and the two preceding verses are thus paraphrased by Dr. Taylor:
I am so far from insisting on the doctrine (of the rejection of
the Jews)
out of any ill-will to my countrymen, that I solemnly declare,
in the sincerity of my heart, without the least fiction or dissimulation-and
herein I have the testimony of my own conscience, enlightened and
directed
by the Spirit of God-that I am so far from taking pleasure in the
rejection of the Jewish nation, that, contrariwise, it gives me
continual
pain
and uneasiness, insomuch that, as Moses formerly (when God proposed
to cut them off, and in their stead to make him a great nation,
Exodus 32:10) begged that he himself should rather die than that
the children
of Israel should be destroyed, Exodus 32:32, so I could even wish
that the exclusion from the visible Church, which will happen to
the Jewish
nation, might fall to my own share, if hereby they might be kept
in it and to this I am inclined by natural affection, for the Jews
are
my dear brethren and kindred.
Very few passages in the New Testament have puzzled critics and
commentators more than this. Every person saw the perfect absurdity
of understanding
it in a literal sense, as no man in his right mind could wish himself
eternally damned in order to save another, or to save even the
whole world. And the supposition that such an effect could be produced
by such a sacrifice, was equally absurd and monstrous. Therefore
various
translations have been made of the place, and different solutions
offered. Mr. Wakefieid says: I see no method of solving the difficulty
in this
verse, which has so exercised the learning and ingenuity of commentators,
but by the eucomai einai of Homer, I profess myself to be; and
he
translates the passage in a parenthesis, thus: (for I also was
once an alien from
Christ) on account of my brethren, etc. But how it does appear
that Saul of Tarsus was ever an alien from Christ on account of
his kinsmen,
is to me perfectly indiscernible. Let us examine the Greek text. hucomhn
gar autov egw anaqema einai apo tou cristou upertwn adelfwn mou,
For I did wish myself to be an anathema FROM Christ (upo, BY Christ,
as some ancient MSS. read) for my brethren. As hucomhn is the 1st
per. sing. of the imperfect tense, some have been led to think
that St.
Paul is here mentioning what had passed through his own mind when
filled with the love of God, he learned the rejection of the Jews;
and that
he only mentions it here as a thing which, in the effusions of
his loving zeal, had been felt by him inconsiderately, and without
any
Divine afflatus leading him to it; but that he does not intimate
that now he felt any such unreasonable and preposterous wish. I
am afraid
this is but ill calculated to solve the difficulty.
The Greek word anaqema, anathema, properly signifies any thing
devoted to God, so as to be destroyed: it answers to the Hebrew
rj cherem,
which the Septuagint translate by it, and means either a thing
or person separated from its former state or condition, and devoted
to destruction.
In this sense it is used, Deuteronomy 7:25, 26; Joshua 6:17,
18; 7:12.
It is certain that the word, both among the Hebrews and Greeks,
was used to express a person devoted to destruction for the
public safety.
In Midrash hanneelam, in Sohar Chadash, fol. 15, Rabbi Chaijah
the elder said: There is no shepherd found like unto Moses,
who was willing
to lay down his life for the sheep; for Moses said, Exodus
32:32, If thou wilt not pardon their sin, blot me, I pray thee, out
of thy book
which thou hast written. Such anathemas, or persons devoted
to
destruction for the public good, were common among all ancient
nations. See the
case of M. Curtius and Decius among the Romans. When a plague
took place, or any public calamity, it was customary to take
one of
the lowest or most execrable of the people, and devote him
to the Dii
Manes or infernal gods. See proofs in Schleusner, and see the
observations at the end of the chapter. This one circumstance
is sufficient
to explain
the word in this place. Paul desired to be devoted to destruction,
as the Jews then were, in order to redeem his countrymen from
this most terrible excision. He was willing to become a sacrifice
for
the public safety, and to give his life to redeem theirs. And,
as Christ
may be considered as devoting them to destruction, (see Matthew
24,) Paul is willing that in their place Christ should devote
him: for
I could wish myself, anaqema eimai apo (or, as some excellent
MSS. have
it, upo) tou cristou, to be devoted BY Christ, to that temporal
destruction to which he has adjudged the disobedient Jews,
if by doing so I might
redeem them. This, and this alone, seems to be the meaning
of the apostles wish.
Verse 4. Who are Israelites Descendants of Jacob,
a man so highly favored of God, and from whom he received his name
Israel-a prince of God, Genesis 32:28; from which name his descendants
were called Israelites, and separated unto God for his glory and
praise. Their very name of Israelites implied their very high dignity;
they were a royal nation; princes of the most high God.
The adoption The Israelites were all taken into
the family of God, and were called his sons and first-born, Exodus
4:22; Deuteronomy 14:1; Jeremiah 31:9; Hosea 11:1; and this adoption
took place when God made the covenant with them at Horeb.
The glory The manifestation of God among them;
principally by the cloud and pillar, and the Shekinah, or Divine presence,
appearing between the cherubim over the mercy-seat. These were peculiar
to the Jews; no other nation was ever thus favored.
The covenants The covenants made with Abraham,
both that which relates to the spiritual seed, and that which was peculiar
to his natural descendants, Galatians 3:16, 17; which covenants were
afterwards renewed by Moses, Deuteronomy 29:1. Some suppose that the
singular is here put for the plural, and that by covenants we are to
understand the decalogue, which is termed tyrb berith, or covenant,
Deuteronomy 4:13. But it is more likely that the apostle alludes to
the great covenant made with Abraham, and to its various renewals and
extensions at different times afterwards, as well as to its twofold
design-the grant of the land of Canaan, and the rest that remains for
the people of God. The giving of the law The revelation of God by God
himself, containing a system of moral and political precepts. This
was also peculiar to the Jews; for to no other nation had he ever given
a revelation of his will.
The service latreia. The particular ordinances, rites, and
ceremonies of their religious worship, and especially the sacrificial
system,
so expressive of the sinfulness of sin and the holiness of God.
The promises The land of Canaan, and the blessings of the
Messiah and his kingdom; which promises had been made and often
repeated to
the patriarchs and to the prophets.
Verse 5. Whose are the fathers Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, Joseph,
the twelve patriarchs, Moses, Joshua, Samuel, David, etc., etc.,
without controversy, the greatest and most eminent men that ever
flourished
under heaven. From these, is an uninterrupted and unpolluted
line, the Jewish people had descended; and it was no small glory
to be
able to reckon, in their genealogy, persons of such incomparable
merit and
excellency. And of whom, as concerning the flesh Christ came These
ancestors were the more renowned, as being the progenitors of
the human nature of the MESSIAH. Christ, the Messiah, kata sarka,
according
to
the flesh, sprang from them. But this Messiah was more than man,
he is God over all; the very Being who gave them being, though
he appeared
to receive a being from them.
Here the apostle most distinctly points out the twofold nature
of our Lord-his eternal Godhead and his humanity; and all the
transpositions of particles, and alterations of points in the
universe, will not
explain
away this doctrine. As this verse contains such an eminent
proof of the deity of Christ, no wonder that the opposers of his
divinity
should
strive with their utmost skill and cunning to destroy its force.
And it must be truly painful to a mind that has nothing in
view but
truth,
to see the mean and hypocritical methods used to elude the
force of this text. Few have met it in that honest and manly way
in
which Dr.
Taylor, who was a conscientious Arian, has considered the subject.
Christ, says he, is God over all, as he is by the Father appointed
Lord, King, and Governor of all. The Father hath committed
all judgement to the Son, John 5:22; has given all things into his
hands, Matthew
28:18; he is Lord of all, Acts 10:36. God has given him a name
above every name, Philippians 2:9; above every name that is
named,
not
only in this world, but also in that which is to come; and
has put all things
(himself excepted, 1 Corinthians 15:27) under his feet and
given him to be head over all things, Ephesians 1:21, 22. This is
our
Lords supreme
Godhead. And that he is euloghtov, blessed for ever, or the
object of everlasting blessing, is evident from Revelation 5:12,
13:
Worthy is the Lamb that was slain to receive power-and blessing
and honor
be unto him that sitteth upon the throne, and unto the Lamb
for ever and ever. Thus it appears the words may be justly applied
to our
blessed Lord. Notes, p. 329. Yes, and when we take other scriptures
into the
account, where his essential Godhead is particularly expressed,
such as Colossians 1:16, 17: For by him were all things created,
that
are in heaven, and that are in earth, visible and invisible,
whether they
be thrones, or dominions, or principalities, or powers: all
things
were created BY him, and FOR him: and he is BEFORE all things,
and BY him do all things consist; we shall find that he is
not God by
investiture or office, but properly and essentially such; for
it is impossible
to convey in human language, to human apprehension, a more
complete and finished display of what is essential to Godhead, indivisible
from it, and incommunicable to any created nature, than what
is contained in the above verses. And while these words are
allowed
to make a
part
of Divine revelation, the essential Godhead of Jesus Christ
will continue to be a doctrine of that revelation.
I pass by the groundless and endless conjectures about reversing
some of the particles and placing points in different positions,
as they
have been all invented to get rid of the doctrine of Christs
divinity, which is so obviously acknowledged by the simple
text; it is enough
to state that there is no omission of these important words
in any MS. or version yet discovered.
Verse 6. Not as though the word of God hath taken none effect.
A Jew might have objected, as in Romans 3:3: Is not God
bound by his faithfulness to continue the Jews as his peculiar
Church and
people,
notwithstanding the infidelity of the major part of them?
If they are brought to a level with the Gentiles, will
it not
follow that
God hath
failed in the performance of his promise to Abraham? Genesis
17:7, 8: I will establish my covenant between me and thee
for an everlasting
covenant, to be a God unto thee, and thy seed after thee.
To which it may be answered: This awful dispensation of
God towards
the
Jews is not inconsistent with the veracity of the Divine
promise; for
even the whole body of natural born Jews are not the whole
of the Israelites
comprehended in the promise. Abraham is the father of many
nations; and his seed is not only that which is of the
law, but that also
which is of the faith of Abraham, Romans 4:16, 17. The
Gentiles were included
in the Abrahamic covenant as well as the Jews; and therefore
the Jews have no exclusive right to the blessings of Gods
kingdom.
Verse 7. Neither because they are the seed of Abraham, etc.
Nor can they conclude, because they are the natural descendants
of Abraham, that therefore they are all of them, without
exception, the children in whom the promise is to be
fulfilled.
But, in Isaac shall thy seed be called. The promise
is not confined to immediate natural descent, but may
be accomplished in any part of
Abrahams posterity. For Abraham had several sons besides
Isaac, Genesis 25:1, 2, particularly Ishmael, who was
circumcised before
Isaac was
born, and in whom Abraham was desirous that the promise
should be fulfilled, Genesis 17:18, and in him God
might have fulfilled
the
promise, had
he so pleased; and yet he said to Abraham, Genesis
21:12: Not
in
Ishmael, but in Isaac, shall thy seed be called.
Verse 8. That is, They which are the children of the flesh Whence
it appears that not the children who descend from
Abrahams loins, nor those who were circumcised as he was, nor
even those whom
he might
expect and desire, are therefore the Church and people
of God; but those who are made children by the good
pleasure and promise
of God,
as Isaac was, are alone to be accounted for the seed
with whom the covenant was established.
Verse 9. For this is the word of promise, etc.
That is, this is evidently implied in the promise
recorded Genesis
18:10:
At this
time I will come, saith God, and exert my Divine
power, and Sarah, though fourscore and ten years
old, shall
have a son;
which shows
that it is the sovereign will and act of God alone,
which singles out and
constitutes the peculiar seed that was to inherit
the promise made to Abraham.
It should be considered that the apostle, in this
and the following quotations, does not give us
the whole
of the
text which he
intends should be taken into his argument, but
only a hint or reference
to the passages to which they belong; directing
us to recollect or peruse
the whole passage, and there view and judge of
the argument.
That he is so to be understood appears from the
conclusion he draws, Romans 9:16: So then,
it is not of him
that willeth, nor
of him
that runneth, but of God that showeth mercy.
In his arguments, Romans
9:7, 8, etc., he says not one word of Abrahams
willing Ishmael to be the
seed in whom the promise might be fulfilled;
nor of Isaacs willing Esau; nor of Moses willing
and
interceding
that
the Israelites
might be spared; nor of Esaus running for venison;
but by introducing these
particulars into his conclusion, he gives us
to understand that his quotations are to be
taken in connection
with the whole story,
of
which they are a part; and without this the
apostles meaning cannot be apprehended.
The same may be said of his conclusion, Romans
9:18: Whom he will he hardeneth: hardeneth
is not in his
argument, but it
is in the
conclusion.
Therefore hardening is understood in the
argument, and he evidently refers to the case of Pharaoh.
The generality
of
the Jews were
well acquainted with the Scripture, and a
hint was sufficient to revive
the memory of a whole passage. Taylor, p.
330.
Verse 10. And not only this A Jew
might object: Ishmael was rejected, not
by the sovereign
will of
God, but because
he was the
son of the handmaid, or bond-woman, and
therefore unworthy to be the peculiar seed; but observe,
this was not
the only limitation
of the
seed of Abraham with regard to inheriting
the promise, for when Rebecca was with
child by
that one person
of Abrahams issue to
whom the promise
was made, namely, our father Isaac, she
went to inquire of
the Lord, Genesis 25:22, 23: And the Lord
said unto her, Two nations
are in
thy womb, and two manner of PEOPLE shall
be separated from thy bowels; and the one
PEOPLE
shall be
stronger than the
other PEOPLE;
and the
elder shall serve the younger. That is,
the posterity of the younger
shall be a nation much more prosperous
and happy than the posterity of the elder.
Verse 11. For the children being not yet born As
the word children is not in the text,
the word nations would
be more proper;
for it is
of nations that the apostle speaks, as
the following verses show, as well as
the history
to which
he refers. Neither having done any
good To merit the distinction of
being made the peculiar people of God;
nor evil,
to deserve
to be
left out of
this covenant, and
the distinguishing national blessings
which it conferred; that the purpose
of God according to election might stand-that
such distinctions might appear to depend
on nothing but Gods free choice,
not of works, or
any desert in the people or nations thus
chosen; but of the mere purpose of him
who calleth
any people he
pleases,
to
make them
the depositories
of his especial blessings, and thus to
distinguish them from all others.
Verse 12. The elder shall serve the younger These
words, with those of Malachi, Jacob have I loved, and Esau have I hated,
are cited by the apostle to prove,
according to their typical signification,
that
the purpose of
God, according
to election,
does and will stand,
not of works, but of him that calleth;
that is, that the purpose of God, which
is the
ground of that election
which
he makes
among men,
unto the honor of being Abrahams seed,
might appear to remain unchangeable
in him; and
to be even the
same which
he had
declared unto Abraham.
That these words are used in a national and not in
a personal sense,
is evident from this: that, taken in
the latter sense they are not true, for Jacob never did exercise any power over Esau, nor was
Esau ever subject to him. Jacob, on the contrary, was rather subject
to Esau, and was sorely afraid of him; and,
first, by his messengers, and afterwards
personally, acknowledged
his
brother
to be his lord,
and himself to be his servant; see
Genesis 32:4; 33:8, 13. And hence it
appears
that neither Esau
nor Jacob,
nor even
their
posterities, are brought here by the
apostle as instances of any personal
reprobation
from eternity: for, it is very certain
that very many, if not the far greatest
part,
of Jacobs
posterity were
wicked,
and
rejected by God;
and it is not less certain that some
of Esaus posterity were partakers
of the faith of their father Abraham.
From these premises the true sense
of the words immediately following, Jacob
have I loved, and Esau have I hated,
Malachi 1:2, 3, fully appears; that
is, that what he
had already
cited from Moses
concerning the
two nations, styled by the names
of their respective heads,
Jacob and Esau,
was but the same in substance with
what was spoken many years after
by the Prophet
Malachi.
The
unthankful Jews
had, in
Malachis time,
either in words or in their heart,
expostulated with God, and demanded
of him wherein
he had loved them? I have loved you, saith the Lord:
yet ye say, Wherein hast thou loved us? Malachi
1:2-5. To this the Lord answers: Was not Esau Jacobs brother? Yet I loved Jacob
and hated Esau, and laid his mountains and his heritage waste for the
dragons of the wilderness. Whereas Edom saith, We are impoverished,
but we will return and build the desolate places; thus saith the Lord
of hosts, They shall build, but I will throw down; and they shall call
them, The border of wickedness, and, The people against whom the Lord
hath indignation for ever. And your eyes shall see, and ye shall say,
The Lord will be magnified from the border of Israel.
-
It incontestably appears from these passages that the prophet
does not speak at all of the person of Jacob or
Esau, but of their respective posterities. For it was not Esau in
person that
said,
We are impoverished; neither were his mountains
nor heritage laid waste. Now, if the prophet speaks neither of the
person
of the
one nor of the person of the other, but of their
posterity only, then it is evident that the apostle speaks of them
in the same
way.
-
If neither the prophet nor the apostle speaks of the persons
of Jacob or Esau, but of their posterity, then
it is evident that neither the love of God to Jacob, nor the hatred
of God
to Esau,
were such, according to which the eternal states
of men, either in happiness or misery, are to be determined; nor
is there here
any Scriptural or rational ground for the decree
of unconditional personal election and reprobation, which, comparatively,
modern times have endeavored to build on these scriptures.
- For, It is here proved that Esau is not mentioned under
any personal consideration, but
only as the head of his posterity.
- The testimony of Scripture amply proves that all Esaus posterity
were not, even in this sense, reprobated;
nor all Jacobs posterity elected.
- Neither does that service, or
subjugation
to Jacob, which the Divine oracle
imposed on Esau, import any such reprobation
as some contend for; as the servant
may be elected, while
the master himself is in a state of reprobation.
- Were it even granted that servitude did import such a reprobation,
yet it is certain that Esau, in
person, never did serve Jacob.
- Nor does the hatred of God against Esau import any such
reprobation of the person of Esau,
because it is demonstrable that it related,
not to Esau personally, but to
his posterity.
- The scope of the apostles reasoning is to show that God
is the sovereign of his own ways,
has a right to dispense his
blessings as he chooses, and to
give salvation to mankind, not in the ways of their devising, but
in that way that
is most suitable to his infinite
wisdom and goodness.
- Therefore, He chose the Jewish people from all others, and
revealed himself to them. Thus they were the elect, and all the
nations of mankind reprobate.
- When the fullness of the time came he revealed himself also
to the Gentiles, who gladly received the Gospel: and the Jews
rejecting it, were cast off. Thus the elect became reprobate,
and the reprobate, elect.
- He published to all mankind that the pardon of sin
could and should be obtained ONLY by faith in his Son
Jesus, and not by
any obedience to any law. And the Jews, the descendants
of Jacob, who rejected this way of salvation, became
precisely like the
Edomites, the descendants of Esau; they builded, but
God pulled down; their mountains and heritage are NOW
laid waste for the
dragons of the wilderness; and they properly may now
be called the border of wickedness, a people against
whom the Lord hath
indignation for ever: they have rejected the Lord that
bought them, and so have brought upon themselves swift
destruction.
-
That no personal, absolute, eternal reprobation
of Esau can have been intended, we learn from this; that
he was most amply reconciled to his brother, who had so
deeply wronged
and offended him, by depriving him of his birthright and
his blessing: and his having forgiven his brother his
trespasses,
was no mean proof that God had forgiven him. See our Lords
words, Matthew 6:14. Therefore there can be assigned no
competent ground
of his damnation, much less of his personal reprobation
from all eternity.
-
And were such a personal reprobation intended,
is it not shocking to suppose that the God of endless mercy,
in whose sight his pious parents had found favor, should
inform them, even before their child was born, that he
had absolutely
consigned him, by an irrevocable decree to eternal damnation?
A message of such horrid import coming immediately from
the mouth of God, to a tender, weak, and delicate woman,
whose hour of
travail with two children was just at hand, could not have
failed to produce abortion, and destroy her life. But the
parents perfectly
understood their God, and saw no decree of reprobation
in his message; two manner of nations are in thy womb-and
the elder
shall serve the younger.
-
There is no reason, worthy the most wise and
gracious God, why he should make known to the world such
a thing concerning Esau, who was yet unborn, that he had
reprobated him
from all eternity. Such a revelation could be of no spiritual
advantage or edification to mankind, but rather of a malignant
influence, as directly occasioning men to judge hardly
of their Maker, and to conceive of him as no faithful Creator;
as having
no care, no love, no bowels of compassion towards the workmanship
of his own hands. See Goodwins Exposition: and see my notes
on Gen. 27.
Verse 14. What shall we say then? To what conclusion
shall we come on the facts before us? Shall we suggest that Gods bestowing
peculiar
privileges in this unequal manner, on those who otherwise are in equal
circumstances, is inconsistent with justice and equity? By
no means. Whatever God does is right, and he may dispense his blessings
to whom and or what terms he pleases. (editor's note: See Finney's
article on "Is God's
Sovereign Will the foundation of Moral Obligation?" for
an examination of what sense we may declare that "whatever God
does is right".)
Verse 15. For he saith to Moses, I will have mercy, etc. The
words of God to Moses, Exodus 33:19, show that God has a right to dispense
his blessings as he pleases; for, after he had declared that he would
spare the Jews of old, and continue them in the relation of his peculiar
people, when they had deserved to have been cut off for their idolatry,
he said: I will make all my goodness pass before thee; and I will proclaim
the name of the Lord before thee; and I will have mercy on whom I will
have mercy; and I will have compassion on whom I will have compassion.
As if he had said: I will make such a display of my perfections as
shall convince you that my nature is kind and beneficent; but know,
that I am a debtor to none of my creatures. My benefits and blessings
are merely from my own good will: nor can any people, much less a rebellious
people, challenge them as their due in justice or equity. And therefore
I now spare the Jews; not because either you, who intercede for them
or they themselves have any claim upon my favor, but of my own free
and sovereign grace I choose to show them mercy and compassion. I will
give my salvation in my own way and on my own terms. He that believeth
on my Son Jesus shall be saved; and he that believeth not shall be
damned. This is Gods ultimate design; this purpose he will never change;
and this he has fully declared in the everlasting Gospel. This is the
grand DECREE of reprobation and election.
Verse 16. So then it is not of him that willeth, etc. I conclude,
therefore, from these several instances, that the making or continuing
any body of men the peculiar people of God, is righteously determined;
not by the judgment, hopes, or wishes of men, but by the will and wisdom
of God alone. For Abraham judged that the blessing ought, and he willed,
desired, that it might be given to Ishmael; and Isaac also willed,
designed, it for his first-born, Esau: and Esau, wishing and hoping
that it might be his, readily went, ran a hunting for venison, that
he might have the blessing regularly conveyed to him: but they were
all disappointed - Abraham and Isaac, who willed, and Esau who ran:
for God had originally intended that the blessing of being a great
nation and distinguished people should, of his mere good pleasure,
be given to Isaac and Jacob, and be confirmed in their posterity; and
to them it was given. And when by their apostasy they had forfeited
this privilege, it was not Moses willing, nor any prior obligation
God was under, but his own sovereign mercy, which continued it to them.
Verse 17. For the Scripture saith unto Pharaoh Instead of showing
the Israelites mercy he might justly have suffered them to have gone
on in sin, till he should have signalized his wisdom and justice in
their destruction; as appears from what God in his word declares concerning
his dealings with Pharaoh and the Egyptians, Exodus 9:15, 16: For
now, saith the Lord, I had stretched forth my hand, (in the plague
of boils and blains,) and I had smitten thee and thy people with the
pestilence; and thou hadst (by this plague) been cut off from the earth;
(as thy cattle were by the murrain;) but in very deed for this cause
have I raised thee up-I have restored thee to health by removing the
boils and blains, and by respiting thy deserved destruction to a longer
day, that I may, in thy instance, give such a demonstration of my power
in thy final overthrow, that all mankind may learn that I am God, the
righteous Judge of all the earth, the avenger of wickedness. See
this translation of the original vindicated in my notes on Exodus 9:15,
16; and, about the hardening of Pharaoh, see the notes on those places
where the words occur in the same book.
Verse 18. Therefore hath he mercy on whom he will This is the
apostles conclusion from the facts already laid down: that God, according
to his own will and wisdom, in perfect righteousness, bestows mercy;
that is to say, his blessings upon one part of mankind, (the Jews of
old, and the Gentiles of the present time,) while he suffers another
part (the Egyptians of old, and the Jews of the present day) to go
on in the abuse of his goodness and forbearance, hardening themselves
in sin, till he brings upon them a most just and exemplary punishment,
unless this be prevented by their deep repentance and general return
to God through Jesus the promised, the real Messiah.
Verse 19. Why doth he yet find fault? The apostle
here introduces the Jew making an objection similar to that in Romans
3:7: If the truth of God hath more abounded through my lie unto
his glory, that is, if Gods faithfulness is glorified by my wickedness,
why yet am I also judged as a sinner? Why am I condemned for that which
brings so much glory to him? The question here is: If Gods glory
be so highly promoted and manifested by our obstinacy, and he suffers
us to proceed in our hardness and infidelity, why does he find fault
with us, or punish us for that which is according to his good pleasure?
Verse 20. Nay but, O man, who art thou As if he had said: Weak,
ignorant man, darest thou retort on the infinitely good and righteous
GOD? Reflect on thyself; and tell me, after thou hast abused the grace
of God, and transgressed his laws, wilt thou cavil at his dispensations? God
hath made, created, formed the Jewish nation; and shall the thing formed,
when it hath corrupted itself, pretend to correct the wise and gracious
Author of its being, and say, Why hast thou made me thus? Why hast
thou constituted me in this manner? Thou hast done me wrong in giving
me my being under such and such conditions.
Old John Goodwins note on this passage is at least curious: I scarce
(says he) know any passage of the Scripture more frequently abused
than this. When men, in the great questions of predestination
and reprobation, bring forth any text of Scripture which they conceive
makes for their
notion, though the sense which they put upon it be ever so uncouth
and dissonant from the true meaning of the Holy Ghost, yet, if
any man contradict, they frequently fall upon him with-Nay but,
O man;
who art thou? As if St. Paul had left them his heirs and successors
in the infallibility of his spirit! But when men shall call a
solid answer to their groundless conceits about the meaning of
the Scriptures,
a replying against God, it savours more of the spirit who was
seen falling like lightning from heaven, than of His, who saw him
in this
his fall.
Verse 21. Hath not the potter power over the clay The apostle
continues his answer to the Jew. Hath not God shown, by the parable
of the potter, Jeremiah 18:1, etc., that he may justly dispose of nations,
and of the Jews in particular, according as he in his infinite wisdom
may judge most right and fitting; even as the potter has a right, out
of the same lump of clay, to make one vessel to a more honorable and
another to a less honorable use, as his own judgment and skill may
direct; for no potter will take pains to make a vessel merely that
he may show that he has power to dash it to pieces? For the word
came to Jeremiah from the Lord, saying, Arise, and go down to the potters
house, and there I will cause thee to hear my words. Then I went down
to the potters house, and, behold, he wrought a work upon the wheels.
And the vessel that he made of clay was marred in the hands of the
potter: so he made it again another vessel, as seemed good to the potter
to make it. It was not fit for the more honorable place in the mansion,
and therefore he made it for a less honorable place, but as necessary
for the masters use there, as it could have been in a more honorable
situation. Then the word of the Lord came to me, saying, O house of
Israel, cannot I do with you as this potter? Behold, as the clay is
in the potters hand, so are ye in mine hand, O house of Israel. At
what instant I shall speak concerning a nation, and concerning a kingdom,
to pluck up, and to pull down, and to destroy it; if that nation, against
whom I have pronounced, turn from their evil, I will repent of
the evil that I thought to do unto them. And at what instant I shall
speak concerning a nation-to build and to plant it; is it do evil in
my sight, that it obey not my voice, then I will repent of the
good wherewith I said I would benefit them. The reference to this
parable shows most positively that the apostle is speaking of men,
not individually, but nationally; and it is strange that men should
have given his words any other application with this scripture before
their eyes.
Verse 22. What if God, willing to show his wrath The apostle
refers here to the case of Pharaoh and the Egyptians, and to which
he applies Jeremiahs parable of the potter, and, from them, to the
then state of the Jews. Pharaoh and the Egyptians were vessels of wrath-persons
deeply guilty before God; and by their obstinate refusal of his grace,
and abuse of his goodness, they had fitted themselves for that destruction
which the wrath, the vindictive justice of God, inflicted, after he
had endured their obstinate rebellion with much long-suffering; which
is a most absolute proof that the hardening of their hearts, and their
ultimate punishment, were the consequences of their obstinate refusal
of his grace and abuse of his goodness; as the history in Exodus sufficiently
shows. As the Jews of the apostles time had sinned after the similitude
of the Egyptians, hardening their hearts and abusing his goodness,
after every display of his long-suffering kindness, being now fitted
for destruction, they were ripe for punishment; and that power, which
God was making known for their salvation, having been so long and so
much abused and provoked, was now about to show itself in their destruction
as a nation. But even in this case there is not a word of their final
damnation; much less that either they or any others were, by a sovereign
decree, reprobated from all eternity; and that their very sins, the
proximate cause of their punishment, were the necessary effect of that
decree which had from all eternity doomed them to endless torments.
As such a doctrine could never come from God, so it never can be found
in the words of his apostle.
Verse 23. And that he might make known God endured with much
long-suffering the vessels of wrath:
-
To show his wrath, and to make his power known. And
also,
- That he might make known the riches of his glory on the vessels
of mercy.
Which he had afore prepared unto glory The Jews
were fitted for destruction long before; but the fittest time
to destroy them was after he had prepared the believing Gentiles unto
glory. For
the rod of the Messiahs strength was to be sent out of Zion,
Psalm 110:2. The Jewish nation was to supply the first preachers of the
Gospel,
and from Jerusalem their sound was to go forth into all the
earth. Therefore the Jewish state, notwithstanding its corruptions, was
to
be preserved till the Messiah came, and even till the Gospel
preached by the apostles had taken deep root in the Gentile world. Another
thing
which rendered the time when the Jewish polity was overthrown
the most proper, was this, because then the immediate occasion of it
was the
extensiveness of the Divine grace. They would not have the
Gentiles admitted into the Church of God; but contradicted, and blasphemed,
and rejected the Lord that bought them: thus, then, the extensiveness
of the Divine grace occasioned their infidelity, Romans 9:33;
10:3;
11:11, 12, 15, 28, 30. Thus the Jews were diminished by that
abundance of grace which has enriched the Gentiles. And so the grace
of God was
illustrated; or, so God made known the riches of his glory
on the vessels of mercy-the apostles and primitive believers among the
Jews, and the
Gentile world, which received the Gospel by the preaching of
the apostles and their successors.
Verse 24. Even us, whom he hath called All the Jews and Gentiles
who have been invited by the preaching of the Gospel to receive justification
by faith in our Lord Jesus Christ, and have come to the Gospel feast
on this invitation.
Verse 25. As he saith also in Osee It is a cause of not a little
confusion, that a uniformity in the orthography of the proper names
of the Old and New Testaments has not been preserved. What stranger
to our sacred books would suppose that the Osee above meant the Prophet
Hosea, from whom, Hosea 2:23, this quotation is taken: I will have
mercy on her that had not obtained mercy; and I will say to them which
were not my people, Thou art my people. The apostle shows that
this calling of the Gentiles was no fortuitous thing, but a firm purpose
in the Divine mind, which he had largely revealed to the prophets;
and by opposing the calling of the Gentiles, the Jews in effect renounced
their prophets, and fought against God.
Verse 26. And it shall come to pass, etc. These quotations are
taken out of Hosea, Hosea 1:10, where (immediately after God had rejected
the ten tribes, or kingdom of Israel, Hosea 1:9, then saith God, Call
his name Lo-ammi; for ye are not my people, and I will not be your
God,) he adds, yet the number of the children of Israel shall be as
the sand of the sea, which cannot be measured nor numbered: and it
shall come to pass, that in the place in which it was said unto them,
Ye are not my people; there it shall be said unto them, Ye are the
sons of the living God. As if he had said: The decrease of numbers
in the Church, by Gods utterly taking away the ten tribes, (Hosea 1:6,)
shall be well supplied by what shall afterwards come to pass, by calling
the Gentiles into it. They, the rejected Jews, which had been the people
of God, should become a Lo-ammi-not my people. On the contrary, they,
the Gentiles, who had been a Lo-ammi-not my people, should become the
children of the living God. Again, Hosea 2:23: I will sow her (the
Jewish Church) unto me in the earth, (alluding probably to the dispersion
of the Jews over all the Roman empire; which proved a fruitful cause
of preparing the Gentiles for the reception of the Gospel,) and, or
moreover, I will have mercy upon her, the body of the believing Gentiles,
that had not obtained mercy. See Taylor.
Verse 27. Esaias also crieth The apostle pursues his argument,
which had for its object the proof that God, for their infidelity,
had rejected the great body of the Jews, and that but a few of them
would embrace the Gospel, and be saved from that besom of destruction
which was now coming to sweep them and their state away. Dr. Taylor
paraphrases this and the following verses thus: And that but a small
remnant of the Jews shall now be taken into the Church, is agreeable
to former dispensations; for the Prophet Isaiah expressly declares
concerning the Israelites, Isaiah 10:22, 23: Though the number of the
children of Israel be as the sand of the sea, (for the promise to Abraham
has been amply fulfilled,) only a remnant shall be saved; the consumption
decreed shall overflow in righteousness. For the Lord God of hosts
shall make a consumption, even determined in the midst of all the land.
Verse 28. For he will finish the work, and cut it short, etc. These
appear to be forensic terms, and refer to the conclusion of a judicial
proceeding; the Lord has tried and found them guilty, and will immediately
execute upon them the punishment due to their transgressions.
Verse 29. And as Esaias said before What God designs to do with
the Jews at present, because of their obstinacy and rebellion, is similar
to what he has done before, to which the same prophet refers, Isaiah
1:9: Except the Lord of hosts had left unto us a very small remnant,
we should have been as Sodom, and we should have been like unto Gomorrah:
i.e. had not God, who commands and overrules all the powers in heaven
and earth, in mercy preserved a very small remnant, to keep up the
name and being of the nation, it had been quite cut off and extinct,
as Sodom and Gomorrah were. Thus we learn that it is no new thing with
God to abandon the greatest part of the Jewish nation, when corrupt,
and to confine his favor and blessing to a righteous, believing few.
Instead of remnant, sarid, both the Septuagint and the apostle have
sperma, a seed, intimating that there were left just enough of
the righteous to be a seed for a future harvest of true believers.
So the
godly were not destroyed from the land; some remained, and the
harvest was in the days of the apostles.
Verse 30. What shall we say then? What is the final conclusion
to be drawn from all these prophecies, facts, and reasonings? This:
That the Gentiles which followed not after righteousness, etc. This,
with the succeeding verses, together with what belongs to the same
subject in the beginning of the following chapter, I have explained
at large in the notes on Romans 1:17, to which I must refer the reader;
and shall content myself in this place with Dr. Taylors general paraphrase.
We may suppose the apostle to express himself to the following effect.
Thus I have vindicated the rejection of the Jews and the calling of
the Gentiles, with regard to the Divine veracity and justice. Now let
us turn our thoughts to the true reason and state of the affair considered
in itself. And, in the first place, what just notion ought we to have
of the calling of the Gentiles and the rejection of the Jews? I answer:
The true notion of the calling or inviting of the Gentiles is this:
whereas they had no apprehension of being reinstated in the privileges
of Gods peculiar kingdom, and consequently used no endeavors to obtain
that blessing, yet, notwithstanding, they have attained to justification,
to the remission of sins, and the privileges of Gods people: not on
account of their prior worthiness and obedience, but purely by the
grace and mercy of God, received by faith on their part. And so, by
embracing the scheme of life published by the Gospel, they are adopted
into the family and Church of God. Thus the Gentiles are called or
invited.
Verse 31. But Israel, which followed after But the Jews, who
have hitherto been the people of God, though they have been industrious
in observing a rule by which they supposed they could secure the blessings
of Gods peculiar kingdom, yet have not come up to the true and only
rule by which those blessings can be secured.
Verse 32. Wherefore? And where lies their mistake? Being ignorant
of Gods righteousness-of his method of saving sinners by faith in Christ,
they went about to establish their own righteousness-their own method
of obtaining everlasting salvation. They attend not to the Abrahamic
covenant, which stands on the extensive principles of grace and faith;
but they turn all their regards to the law of Moses. They imagine that
their obedience to that law gives them a right to the blessings of
the Messiahs kingdom. But, finding that the Gospel sets our special
interest in God and the privileges of his Church on a different footing,
they are offended, and refuse to come into it.
Verse 33. As it is written, Behold, I lay in Sion Christ, the
Messiah, is become a stone of stumbling to them: and thus what is written
in the prophecy of Isaiah is verified in their case, Isaiah 8:14; 28:16:
Behold, I lay in Sion, i.e. I shall bring in my Messiah; but he shall
be a widely different person from him whom the Jews expect; for, whereas
they expect the Messiah to be a mighty secular prince, and to set up
a secular kingdom, he shall appear a man of sorrows and acquainted
with griefs; and redeem mankind, not by his sword or secular power,
but by his humiliation, passion, and death. Therefore they will be
offended at him and reject him, and think it would be reproachful to
trust in such a person for salvation.
And whosoever believeth on him But so far shall any be from confusion
or disappointment who believes in Christ; that on the contrary, every
genuine believer shall find salvation-the remission of sins here, and
eternal glory hereafter. See the notes on Romans 1:16, 17, and Dr.
Taylors paraphrase and notes.
1. ON the subject of vicarious punishment, or rather the case of one
becoming an anathema or sacrifice for the public good, in illustration
of Romans 9:3, I shall make no apology for the following extracts,
taken from an author whose learning is vast, and whose piety is unblemished.
When mankind lost sight of a beneficent Creator, the God of purity,
and consecrated altars to the sun, the moon, the stars; to demons;
and to hero gods, under the names of Moloch, Ashtaroth and Baalim;
these objects of their worship led them to the most horrid acts of
cruelty, and to every species of obscenity; even their sons and their
daughters they burnt in the fire to their gods, more especially in
seasons of distress. Such was the conduct of the king of Moab; for,
when he was besieged in his capital, and expected he should fall into
the hands of his enemies, he took his eldest son, who should have reigned
in his stead, and offered him for a burnt offering on the wall.
With these facts thus related from the Scriptures, all accounts,
ancient and modern, exactly correspond. Homer, who it must be
recollected wrote
more than nine hundred years before the Christian era, although
he describes chiefly the common sacrifices of quadrupeds, yet
gives one
account of human victims. But in succeeding generations, when
it was conceived that one great and most malignant spirit was
the proper object
of their fear, or that subordinate provincial gods, equally malignant,
nesciaque humanis precibus mansuescere corda, disposed of all
things in our world, men bound their own species to the altar,
and in circumstances
of national distress presented such as they valued most, either
their children or themselves. Herodotus informs us that, when
the army of
Xerxes came to the Strymon, the magi offered a sacrifice of white
horses to that river. On his arrival at the Scamander, the king
ascended the
citadel of Priam; and having surveyed it, he ordered a thousand
oxen to be sacrificed to the Trojan Minerva. But on other occasions
he chose
human victims; for we are informed that, when, having passed
the Strymon, he reached the nine ways, he buried alive nine young
men and as many
virgins, natives of the country. In this he followed the example
of his wife, for she commanded fourteen Persian children, of
illustrious
birth, to be offered in that manner to the deity who reigns beneath
the earth. Thus, in the infancy of Rome we see Curtius, for the
salvation of his country, devoting himself to the infernal gods,
when, as it
appears, an earthquake occasioned a deep and extensive chasm
in the forum, and the augurs had declared that the portentous
opening would
never close until what contributed most to the strength and power
of the Romans should be cast into it; but that by such a sacrifice
they would obtain immortality for their republic. When all men
were at a
loss how to understand this oracle, M. Curtius, armed as for
battle, presented himself in the forum, and explained it thus:
What is more
valuable to Rome than her courage and her arms? So saying, he
urged forward his impetuous steed, and buried himself in the
abyss. His grateful
countrymen admired his fortitude, and attributed the increasing
splendor of their state to the sacrifice he made. Animated by
this example,
Decius, in the war between Rome and Latium, having solemnly offered
himself as an expiatory sacrifice, rushed single into the thickest
ranks of the astonished Latins, that by his death he might appease
the anger of the gods, transfer their indignation to the enemy,
and secure the victory to Rome. Conspectus ab utroque acie aliquanto
augustior
humano visu, sicut Caelo missus, piaculum omnis deorum irae,
qui pestem ab suis aversam in hostes ferret.
Here we see distinctly marked the notion of vicarious suffering, and
the opinion that the punishment of guilt may be transferred from the
guilty to the innocent. The gods call for sacrifice-the victim bleeds-atonement
is made-and the wrath of the infernal powers falls in its full force
upon the enemy. Thus, while Themistocles at Salamine was offering sacrifice,
three captives, the sons of Sandance, and nephews to Xerxes, all distinguished
for their beauty, elegantly dressed and decked, as became their birth,
with ornaments of gold, being brought on board his galley, the augur,
Euphrantides, observing at the very instant a bright flame ascending
from the altar, whilst one was sneezing on the right, which he regarded
as a propitious omen, he seized the hand of Themistocles, and commanded
that they should all be sacrificed to Bacchus, (wmhsth dionusw-cruel
and relentless Bacchus! Homer has the same expression,) predicting,
on this occasion, safety and conquests to the Greeks. Immediately the
multitude with united voices called on the god, and led the captive
princes to the altar, and compelled Themistocles to sacrifice them.
So when AEneas was to perform the last kind office for his friend Pallas,
he sacrificed (besides numerous oxen, sheep, and swine) eight captives
to the infernal gods. In this he followed the example of Achilles,
who had caused twelve Trojans of high birth to bleed by the sacerdotal
knife, over the ashes of his friend Patroclus.
A hundred feet in length, a hundred wide,
The glowing structure spreads on every side,
High on the top the manly course they lay,
And well-fed sheep and sable oxen slay;
Achilles covered with their
fat the dead,
And the piled victims round the body spread;
Then jars of honey and
of fragrant oil
Suspends around, low bending oer the pile.
Four sprightly coursers with
a deadly groan
Pour forth their lives, and on the pyre are thrown
Of nine large dogs,
domestic at his board,
Fell two, selected to attend their lord:
The last of all, and horrible
to tell,
Sad sacrifice! twelve Trojan captives fell;
On these the rage of fire
victorious preys,
Involves and joins them in one common blaze.
Smeared with the bloody
rites, he stands on high,
And calls the spirit with a cheerful cry,
All hail, Patroclus! let
thy vengeful ghost
Hear, and exult on Plutos dreary coast.
POPES Homer, IL. xxiii. ver.
203
How much was it to be lamented, that even civilized natures
should forget the intention for which sacrifices were originally instituted!
The bad effects, however, would not have been either so extensive or
so great, had they not wholly lost the knowledge of Jehovah; and taken,
as the object of their fear, that evil and apostate spirit whose name,
with the utmost propriety is called Apollyon, or the destroyer, and
whose worship has been universally diffused at different periods among
all the nations of the earth.
The practice of shedding human blood before the altars of their gods
was not peculiar to the Trojans and the Greeks; the Romans followed
their example. In the first ages of their republic they sacrificed
children to the goddess Mania; in later periods, numerous gladiators
bled at the tombs of the patricians, to appease the manes of the deceased.
And it is particularly noticed of Augustus, that, after the taking
of Perusia, he sacrificed on the ides of March, three hundred senators
and knights to the divinity of Julius Caesar.
(Editor's Note: I have omitted several paragraphs
in which Dr. Clarke presents cases from various countries to illustrate
the point of the above paragraph. Those interested may see the
complete discussion in his Commentary on the New Testament.)
Though in the preceding notes I have endeavored to make every point
as clear and plain as possible; yet it may be necessary, in order to
see the scope of the apostles design more distinctly, to take a general
survey of the whole. No man has written with more judgment on this
epistle than Dr. Taylor, and from his notes I borrow the principal
part of the following observations.
The principal thing that requires to be settled in this chapter is,
what kind of election and reprobation the apostle is arguing about:
whether election, by the absolute decree and purpose of God, to eternal
life; and reprobation, by a like absolute decree, to eternal misery;
or only election to the present privileges and external advantages
of the kingdom of God in this world; and reprobation, or rejection,
as it signifies the not being favored with those privileges and advantages.
I think it demonstrably clear that it is the latter election and rejection
the apostle is discoursing on, and not the former; as the following
considerations appear to me to demonstrate.
I. The subject of the apostles argument is manifestly such privileges
as are enumerated, Romans 9:4, 5: Who are Israelites, to whom pertains
the adoption, etc. From these privileges he supposes the Jews had fallen,
or would fall; or, that for a long time they would be deprived of the
benefit of them. For it is with regard to the loss of those privileges
that he was so much concerned for his brethren, his kinsmen according
to the flesh, Romans 9:2, 3. And it is with reference to their being
stripped of these privileges that he vindicates the word and righteousness
of God, Romans 9:24. Not as though the word of God had taken no effect,
or failed, etc.; proving that God, according to his purpose of election,
was free to confer them upon any branch of Abrahams family: consequently,
those privileges were the singular blessings which by the purpose of
God according to election, not of works, but of him that calleth, were
conferred upon Jacobs posterity. But those privileges were only such
as the whole body of the Israelites enjoyed in this world, while they
were the Church and people of God, and such privileges as they might
afterwards lose, or of which they might be deprived; therefore the
election of Jacobs posterity to those privileges was not an absolute
election to eternal life.
II. Agreeably to the purpose of God according to election, it was said
unto Rebecca, The elder shall serve the younger, meaning the posterity
of the elder and the younger; Genesis 25:23: The Lord said unto her,
two NATIONS are in thy womb, and two manner of PEOPLE shall be separated
from thy bowels; and the one PEOPLE shall be stronger than the other
PEOPLE; and the elder shall serve the younger. These are the words
which signify the purpose of God according to election: therefore the
election refers to Jacobs posterity, or the whole nation of Israel.
But all the nation of Israel were not absolutely elected to eternal
life: therefore the purpose of God according to election referred to
temporal and not to eternal blessings, and was a privilege of which
they might be deprived.
III. Agreeably to the purpose of God according to election, it was
said to Rebecca, The elder shall serve the younger; but to serve, in
Scripture, never meant to be eternally damned in the world to come:
consequently the opposite blessing, bestowed upon the posterity of
the younger, could not be eternal salvation, but certain privileges
in this life; therefore the purpose according to election refers to
those privileges, and the servitude does not imply everlasting perdition.
IV. The election the apostle speaks of is not of works, Romans 9:11,
but of the mere will of God, who calls and invites, and refers to no
qualifications in the persons thus elected and called. But in no part
of the sacred writings is final salvation said to be given to any who
are not qualified by holiness to receive and enjoy it; therefore election
to eternal glory cannot be what the apostle speaks of in this epistle.
V. The election of which the apostle speaks took place, first in Abraham
and his seed, before his seed was born; and then (secluding Ishmael
and all his posterity) in Isaac and his seed before they were born.
And then, secluding Esau and all his posterity, in Jacob and his seed
before they were born. But the Scripture no where represents eternal
life as bestowed upon any family or race of men in this manner; therefore
this election mentioned by the apostle cannot be an election unto eternal
life.
VI. Vessels of mercy, Romans 9:23, are manifestly opposed to vessels
of wrath, Romans 9:22. The vessels of mercy are the whole body of the
Jews and Gentiles, who were called or invited into the kingdom of God
under the Gospel, Romans 9:24; consequently, the vessels of wrath are
the whole body of the unbelieving Jews. So in Romans 9:30, 31, the
whole body of believing Gentiles, who, according to Gods purpose of
election, had attained justification, are opposed to the whole body
of the Israelites, who came short of it. But men shall not be received
into eternal life or subjected to eternal damnation at the last day
in collective bodies, but according as particular persons in those
bodies have acted well or ill; therefore, this election is not of these
particular bodies unto eternal life, etc.
VII. Whoever carefully peruses the ninth, tenth, and eleventh chapters,
will find that those who have not believed, Romans 11:31, are the present
rejected Jews, or that Israel to whom blindness hath happened in part,
Romans 11:25; the same who fell, and on whom God hath shown severity,
Romans 11:22; the same with the natural branches whom God spared not,
Romans 11:21; who were broken off from the olive tree, Romans 11:20,
19, 17; who were cast away, Romans 11:15; who were diminished and fallen,
Romans 11:12; who had stumbled, Romans 11:11; who were a disobedient
and, gainsaying people, Romans 10:21; who, being ignorant of Gods righteousness,
went about to establish their own, Romans 10:3; because they sought
righteousness, not by faith, but as it were by the works of the law,
Romans 9:32, and therefore had not attained to the law of righteousness,
Romans 9:31; the same people spoken of in all these places, are the
vessels of wrath fitted for destruction, Romans 9:22, and the same
for whom Paul had great heaviness and continual sorrow of heart, Romans
9:2, 3; -in short, they are the unbelieving nation, or people of Israel;
and it is with regard to the reprobation or rejection of this people
that he is arguing and vindicating the truth, justice, and wisdom of
God in this ninth chapter.
Now, if we turn back and review those three chapters, we shall find
that the apostle, Romans 11:1, heartily desired and prayed that those
same reprobated and rejected people of Israel might be saved; he affirms
that they had not stumbled so as to fall finally and irrecoverably,
Romans 11:11; that they should have again a fullness, Romans 11:12;
that they should be received again into the Church, Romans 11:16; that
a holiness still belonged to them, Romans 11:16; that if they did not
still abide in unbelief, they should be graffed into their own olive
tree again, Romans 11:23, 24; that blindness had happened unto them
only for a time, till the fullness of the Gentiles be come in, Romans
11:25; and then he proves from Scripture, that all Israel-all those
nations at present under blindness, shall be saved, Romans 11:26, 27;
that, as touching the (original) election, they were still beloved
for the fathers, the patriarchs, sake, Romans 11:28; that, in their
case, the gifts and calling of God were without repentance, Romans
11:29; that through our (the believing Gentiles) mercy, they shall
at length obtain mercy, Romans 11:31. All these several things are
spoken of that Israel, or the body of people concerning whose rejection
the apostle argues in the ninth chapter. And therefore the rejection
which he there argues about cannot be absolute reprobation to eternal
damnation, but to their being, as a nation, stripped of those honors
and privileges of Gods peculiar Church and kingdom in this world, to
which, at a certain future period, they shall again be restored.
VIII. Once more: whoever carefully peruses those three chapters will
find that the people who in times past believed not God, but
have NOW obtained mercy through the unbelief of the Jews, Romans
11:30, are
the whole body of the believing Gentiles; the same who were cut
out of the olive tree which is wild by nature, and were graffed,
contrary
to nature, into the good olive tree, Romans 11:24, 17; the same
to whom God hath shown goodness, Romans 11:22; the WORLD that was
reconciled,
Romans 11:15; the GENTILES who were enriched by the diminishing
of the Jews, Romans 11:12; to whom salvation came through their
fall,
Romans 11:11; the Gentiles who had attained to righteousness,
(justification,) Romans 9:30; who had not been Gods people, nor
believed; but now were
his people, beloved, and children of the living God, Romans 9:25,
26; even US whom he hath called, not of the Jews only, out also
of the
Gentiles, Romans 9:24, who are the vessels of mercy, on whom
God has made known the riches of his glory, Romans 9:23; the vessels
made unto
honor, Romans 9:21. He speaks of the same body of men in all
these places; namely, of the believing Gentiles principally, but
not excluding
the small remnant of the believing Jews, who were incorporated
with them. And it is this body of men, whose calling and election
he is
proving, in whose case the purpose of God according to election
stands good, Romans 9:11, and who are the children of the promise
that are
counted for the seed, Romans 9:8: these are the election, or
the elect.
Now, concerning this called or elect body of people, or any particular
person belonging to this body, the apostle writes thus, Romans 11:20-22:
Well, because of unbelief, they (the Jews) were broken off, (reprobated,
rejected,) and thou standest (in the Church among Gods called and elect)
by faith; be not high minded, but fear. For if God spared not the natural
branches, (the Jews,) take heed, lest he also spare not thee, (the
Gentiles.) Behold therefore the goodness and severity of God: on them
(the Jews) which fell, severity; but towards thee (believing Gentiles)
goodness, if thou continue in his goodness; otherwise thou also shalt
be cut off, rejected, reprobated. This proves that the calling, and
election, for which the apostle is arguing in the ninth chapter, is
not absolute election unto eternal life, but to the present privileges
of the Church-the honors and advantages of Gods peculiar people; which
election, through unbelief and misimprovement, may be rendered void
and come to nothing. See Dr. Taylor, p. 330, etc.
From thus carefully considering the apostles discourse, and taking
in his scope and design, and weighing the different expressions he
uses, in connection with the Scripture facts and Scripture phrases
employed in describing those facts, we must be fully convinced that
the doctrines of eternal, absolute, unconditional election and reprobation
have no place here, and that nothing but a pre-established creed, and
a total inattention to the apostles scope and design, could ever have
induced men to bend these scriptures to the above purpose, and thus
to endeavor to establish as articles of faith, doctrines which, far
from producing glory to God in the highest, and peace and good will
among men, have filled the Church of God with contention, set every
mans sword against his brother, and thus done the work of Apollyon
in the name of Christ. If men will maintain these and such like for
Scriptural doctrines, it is but reasonable to request that it be done
in the spirit of the Gospel.