@Ro 11:1-36. SAME SUBJECT CONTINUED AND CONCLUDED--THE ULTIMATE INBRINGING OF ALL ISRAEL, TO BE, WITH THE GENTILES, ONE KINGDOM OF GOD ON THE EARTH.
1. I say then, Hath--"Did"
God cast away his people? God forbid--Our Lord did indeed announce
that "the kingdom of God should be taken from Israel" (@Mt 21:41);
and when asked by the Eleven, after His resurrection, if He would at
that time "restore the kingdom to Israel," His reply is a virtual
admission that Israel was in some sense already out of covenant
(@Ac 1:9). Yet here the apostle teaches that, in two respects, Israel
was not "cast away"; First, Not totally; Second, Not
finally. FIRST, Israel is not wholly cast away.
for I also am an Israelite--See @Php 3:5, and so a living witness
to the contrary.
of the seed of Abraham--of pure descent from the father of the
faithful.
of the tribe of Benjamin--(@Php 3:5), that tribe which, on the
revolt of the ten tribes, constituted, with Judah, the one faithful
kingdom of God (@1Ki 12:21), and after the captivity was, along with
Judah, the kernel of the Jewish nation (@Ezr 4:1 10:9).
2-4. God hath--"did"
not cast away his people--that is, wholly
which he foreknew--On the word "foreknew,"
see on Ro 8:29.
Wot--that is, "Know"
ye not that the scripture saith of--literally, "in," that is, in the
section which relates to
Elias? how he maketh intercession--"pleadeth"
against Israel--(The word "saying," which follows, as also the particle
"and" before "digged down," should be omitted, as without manuscript
authority).
3. and I am left alone--"I only am left."
4. seven thousand, that have not bowed the knee to Baal--not "the image of Baal," according to the supplement of our version.
5. Even so at this present time--"in this present season"; this
period of Israel's rejection. (See @Ac 1:7, Greek).
there is--"there obtains," or "hath remained"
a remnant according to the election of grace--"As in Elijah's time
the apostasy of Israel was not so universal as it seemed to be, and as
he in his despondency concluded it to be, so now, the rejection of
Christ by Israel is not so appalling in extent as one would be apt to
think: There is now, as there was then, a faithful remnant; not however
of persons naturally better than the unbelieving mass, but of persons
graciously chosen to salvation." (See @1Co 4:7 2Th 2:13). This
establishes our view of the argument on Election in @Ro 9:1-29, as
not being an election of Gentiles in the place of Jews, and merely to
religious advantages, but a sovereign choice of some of Israel itself,
from among others, to believe and be saved.
(See on Ro 9:6.)
6. And, &c.--better, "Now if it (the election) be by grace, it is no more of works; for [then] grace becomes no more grace: but if it be of works," &c. (The authority of ancient manuscripts against this latter clause, as superfluous and not originally in the text, though strong, is not sufficient, we think, to justify its exclusion. Such seeming redundancies are not unusual with our apostle). The general position here laid down is of vital importance: That there are but two possible sources of salvation--men's works, and God's grace; and that these are so essentially distinct and opposite, that salvation cannot be of any combination or mixture of both, but must be wholly either of the one or of the other. (See on Ro 4:3, Note 3.)
7-10. What then?--How stands the fact?
Israel hath not obtained that which he seeketh for--better, "What
Israel is in search of (that is, Justification, or acceptance with
God--see on Ro 9:31);
this he found not; but the election (the
elect remnant of Israel) found it, and the rest were hardened," or
judicially given over to the "hardness of their own hearts."
8. as it is written--(@Isa 29:10 De 29:4).
God hath given--"gave"
them the spirit of slumber--"stupor"
unto this day--"this present day."
9. And David saith--(@Ps 69:23), which in such a Messianic psalm
must be meant of the rejecters of Christ.
Let their table, &c.--that is, Let their very blessings prove a curse
to them, and their enjoyments only sting and take vengeance on them.
10. Let their eyes be darkened . . . and bow down their back alway--expressive either of the decrepitude, or of the servile condition, to come on the nation through the just judgment of God. The apostle's object in making these quotations is to show that what he had been compelled to say of the then condition and prospects of his nation was more than borne out by their own Scriptures. But, SECONDLY, God has not cast away His people finally. The illustration of this point extends, @Ro 11:11-31.
11. I say then, Have they stumbled--"Did they stumble"
that they should fall? God forbid; but--the supplement "rather" is
better omitted.
through their fall--literally, "trespass," but here best rendered
"false step" [DE
WETTE]; not "fall," as in our version.
salvation is come to the Gentiles, to provoke them to jealousy--Here,
as also in @Ro 10:19 (quoted from @De 32:21), we see that emulation
is a legitimate stimulus to what is good.
12. Now if the fall of them--"But if their trespass," or "false step"
be the riches of the--Gentile
world--as being the occasion of their accession to Christ.
and the diminishing of them--that is, the reduction of the true Israel to so small a remnant.
the riches of the Gentiles; how much more their fulness!--that is,
their full recovery
(see on Ro 11:26); that is,
"If an event
so untoward as Israel's fall was the occasion of such unspeakable good
to the Gentile world, of how much greater good may we expect an event so
blessed as their full recovery to be productive?"
13, 14. I speak--"am speaking"
to you Gentiles--another proof that this Epistle was addressed to
Gentile believers.
(See on Ro 1:13).
I magnify--"glorify"
mine office--The clause beginning with "inasmuch" should be read as
a parenthesis.
14. If . . . I may provoke, &c.
(See on Ro 11:11.)
my flesh--Compare @Isa 58:7.
15. For if the casting away of them--The apostle had denied that they
were east away (@Ro 11:1); here he affirms it. But both are true;
they were cast away, though neither totally nor finally, and it is
of this partial and temporary rejection that the apostle here speaks.
be the reconciling of the--Gentile
world, what shall the receiving of them be, but life from the dead?--The
reception of the whole family of Israel, scattered as they are among
all nations under heaven, and the most inveterate enemies of the Lord
Jesus, will be such a stupendous manifestation of the power of God upon
the spirits of men, and of His glorious presence with the heralds of the
Cross, as will not only kindle devout astonishment far and wide, but so
change the dominant mode of thinking and feeling on all spiritual things
as to seem like a resurrection from the dead.
16. For--"But"
if the first-fruit be holy, the lump is also holy; and if the root
. . . so the branches--The Israelites were required to offer to God the
first-fruits of the earth--both in their raw state, in a sheaf of newly
reaped grain (@Le 23:10,11), and in their prepared state, made into
cakes of dough (@Nu 15:19-21)--by which the whole produce of that
season was regarded as hallowed. It is probable that the latter of
these offerings is here intended, as to it the word "lump" best applies;
and the argument of the apostle is, that as the separation unto God of
Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, from the rest of mankind, as the parent stem
of their race, was as real an offering of first-fruits as that which
hallowed the produce of the earth, so, in the divine estimation, it was
as real a separation of the mass or "lump" of that nation in all time to
God. The figure of the "root" and its "branches" is of like import--the
consecration of the one of them extending to the other.
17, 18. And if--rather, "But if"; that is, "If notwithstanding this
consecration of Abraham's race to God.
some of the branches--The mass of the unbelieving and rejected
Israelites are here called "some," not, as before, to meet Jewish
prejudice
(see on Ro 3:3, and on "not all"
in @Ro 10:16),
but with the opposite view of checking Gentile pride.
and thou, being a wild olive, wert--"wast"
grafted in among them--Though it is more usual to graft the superior
cutting upon the inferior stem, the opposite method, which is intended
here, is not without example.
and with them partakest--"wast made partaker," along with the branches
left, the believing remnant.
of the root and fatness of the olive tree--the rich grace secured by
covenant to the true seed of Abraham.
18. Boast not against the--rejected
branches. But if thou--"do"
boast--remember that
thou bearest not--"it is not thou that bearest"
the root, but the root thee--"If the branches may not boast over the
root that bears them, then may not the Gentile boast over the seed of
Abraham; for what is thy standing, O Gentile, in relation to Israel, but
that of a branch in relation to the root? From Israel hath come all that
thou art and hast in the family of God; for "salvation is of the Jews"
(@Joh 4:22).
19-21. Thou wilt say then--as a plea for boasting.
The branches were broken off, that I might be grafted in.
20. Well--"Be it so, but remember that"
because of unbelief they were broken off, and thou standest--not as
a Gentile, but solely
by faith--But as faith cannot live in those "whose soul is lifted
up" (@Hab 2:4).
Be not high-minded, but fear--(@Pr 28:14 Php 2:12):
21. For if God spared not the natural branches--sprung from the parent
stem.
take heed lest he also spare not thee--a mere wild graft. The former
might, beforehand, have been thought very improbable; but, after that,
no one can wonder at the latter.
22, 23. Behold therefore the goodness and severity of God: on them that
fell, severity--in rejecting the chosen seed.
but toward thee, goodness--"God's goodness" is the true reading, that
is, His sovereign goodness in admitting thee to a covenant standing who
before wert a "stranger to the covenants of promise" (@Eph 2:12-20).
if thou continue in his goodness--in believing dependence on that pure
goodness which made thee what thou art.
23. And they also--"Yea, and they"
if they abide not still in unbelief, shall be grafted in: for God is
able to graft them in again--This appeal to the power of God to
effect the recovery of His ancient people implies the vast difficulty of
it--which all who have ever labored for the conversion of the Jews are
made depressingly to feel. That intelligent expositors should think that
this was meant of individual Jews, reintroduced from time to time
into the family of God on their believing on the Lord Jesus, is
surprising; and yet those who deny the national recovery of Israel
must and do so interpret the apostle. But this is to confound the two
things which the apostle carefully distinguishes. Individual Jews have
been at all times admissible, and have been admitted, to the Church
through the gate of faith in the Lord Jesus. This is the "remnant,
even at this present time, according to the election of grace," of
which the apostle, in the first part of the chapter, had cited himself
as one. But here he manifestly speaks of something not then
existing, but to be looked forward to as a great future event in the
economy of God, the reingrafting of the nation as such, when they
"abide not in unbelief." And though this is here spoken of merely as a
supposition (if their unbelief shall cease)--in order to set it over
against the other supposition, of what will happen to the Gentiles if
they shall not abide in the faith--the supposition is turned into an
explicit prediction in the verses following.
24. For if thou wert cut--"wert cut off"
from the olive tree, which is wild by nature, and wast grafted contrary
to nature into a good olive tree; how much more shall these, &c.--This
is just the converse of @Ro 11:21: "As the excision of the merely
engrafted Gentiles through unbelief is a thing much more to be
expected than was the excision of the natural Israel, before it
happened; so the restoration of Israel, when they shall be brought to
believe in Jesus, is a thing far more in the line of what we should
expect, than the admission of the Gentiles to a standing which they
never before enjoyed."
25. For I would not . . . that ye should be ignorant of this mystery--The word "mystery," so often used by our
apostle, does not mean (as with
us) something incomprehensible, but "something before kept secret,
either wholly or for the most part, and now only fully disclosed"
(compare @Ro 16:25 1Co 2:7-10 Eph 1:9,10 3:3-6,9,10).
lest ye should be wise in your own conceits--as if ye alone were in
all time coming to be the family of God.
that blindness--"hardness"
in part is happened to--"hath come upon"
Israel--that is, hath come partially, or upon a portion of Israel.
until the fulness of the Gentiles be--"have"
come in--that is, not the general conversion of the world to Christ,
as many take it; for this would seem to contradict the latter part of
this chapter, and throw the national recovery of Israel too far into the
future: besides, in @Ro 11:15, the apostle seems to speak of the
receiving of Israel, not as following, but as contributing largely to
bring about the general conversion of the world--but, "until the
Gentiles have had their full time of the visible Church all to
themselves while the Jews are out, which the Jews had till the Gentiles
were brought in." (See @Lu 21:24).
26, 27. And so all Israel shall be saved--To understand this great
statement, as some still do, merely of such a gradual inbringing of
individual Jews, that there shall at length remain none in unbelief,
is to do manifest violence both to it and to the whole context. It can
only mean the ultimate ingathering of Israel as a nation, in
contrast with the present "remnant." (So THOLUCK,
MEYER,
DE
WETTE,
PHILIPPI,
ALFORD,
HODGE). Three confirmations of this now follow: two
from the prophets, and a third from the Abrahamic covenant itself.
First,
as it is written, There shall come out of Sion the Deliverer, and
shall--or, according to what seems the true reading, without the
"and"--"He shall"
turn away ungodliness from Jacob--The apostle, having drawn his
illustrations of man's sinfulness chiefly from @Ps 14:1-7 and
@Isa 59:1-21, now seems to combine the language of the same two
places regarding Israel's salvation from it
[BENGEL]. In the one
place the Psalmist longs to see the "salvation of Israel coming
out of Zion" (@Ps 14:7); in the other, the prophet announces
that "the Redeemer (or, 'Deliverer') shall come to (or 'for')
Zion" (@Isa 59:20). But as all the glorious manifestations of
Israel's God were regarded as issuing out of Zion, as the seat of His
manifested glory (@Ps 20:2 110:2 Isa 31:9), the turn which the
apostle gives to the words merely adds to them that familiar idea. And
whereas the prophet announces that He "shall come to (or, 'for')
them that turn from transgression in Jacob," while the apostle makes Him
say that He shall come "to turn away ungodliness from Jacob," this
is taken from the Septuagint version, and seems to indicate a
different reading of the original text. The sense, however, is
substantially the same in both. Second,
27. For--rather, "and" (again); introducing a new quotation.
this is my covenant with them--literally, "this is the covenant from
me unto them."
when I shall take away their sins--This, we believe, is rather a brief
summary of @Jer 31:31-34 than the express words of any prediction,
Those who believe that there are no predictions regarding the literal
Israel in the Old Testament, that stretch beyond the end of the Jewish
economy, are obliged to view these quotations by the apostle as mere
adaptations of Old Testament language to express his own predictions
[ALEXANDER on Isaiah, &c.]. But how forced this is, we shall presently
see.
28, 29. As concerning the Gospel they are enemies for your sakes--that
is, they are regarded and treated as enemies (in a state of exclusion
through unbelief, from the family of God) for the benefit of you
Gentiles; in the sense of @Ro 11:11,15.
but as touching, the election--of Abraham and his seed.
they are beloved--even in their state of exclusion
for the fathers' sakes.
29. For the gifts and calling--"and the calling"
of God are without repentance--"not to be," or "cannot be repented of."
By the "calling of God," in this case, is meant that sovereign act
by which God, in the exercise of His free choice, "called" Abraham to be
the father of a peculiar people; while "the gifts of God" here
denote the articles of the covenant which God made with Abraham, and
which constituted the real distinction between his and all other
families of the earth. Both these, says the apostle, are irrevocable;
and as the point for which he refers to this at all is the
final destiny of the Israelitish nation, it is clear that
the perpetuity through all time of the Abrahamic covenant is the
thing here affirmed. And lest any should say that though Israel,
as a nation, has no destiny at all under the Gospel, but as a people
disappeared from the stage when the middle wall of partition was broken
down, yet the Abrahamic covenant still endures in the spiritual seed
of Abraham, made up of Jews and Gentiles in one undistinguished mass of
redeemed men under the Gospel--the apostle, as if to preclude that
supposition, expressly states that the very Israel who, as concerning
the Gospel, are regarded as "enemies for the Gentiles' sakes," are
"beloved for the fathers' sakes"; and it is in proof of this that he
adds, "For the gifts and the calling of God are without repentance." But
in what sense are the now unbelieving and excluded children of Israel
"beloved for the fathers' sakes?" Not merely from ancestral
recollections, as one looks with fond interest on the child of a
dear friend for that friend's sake [DR.
ARNOLD]--a beautiful thought,
and not foreign to Scripture, in this very matter (see
@2Ch 20:7 Isa 41:8)--but it is from ancestral connections and
obligations, or their lineal descent from and oneness in covenant
with the fathers with whom God originally established it. In other
words, the natural Israel--not "the remnant of them according to the
election of grace," but THE NATION, sprung from Abraham according to the
flesh--are still an elect people, and as such, "beloved." The very same
love which chose the fathers, and rested on the fathers as a parent stem
of the nation, still rests on their descendants at large, and will yet
recover them from unbelief, and reinstate them in the family of God.
30, 31. For as ye in times past have not believed--or, "obeyed"
God--that is, yielded not to God "the obedience of faith," while
strangers to Christ.
yet now have obtained mercy through--by occasion of
their
unbelief--(See on Ro 11:11;
Ro 11:15;
Ro 11:28).
31. Even so have these--the Jews.
now not believed--or, "now been disobedient"
that through your mercy--the mercy shown to you.
they also may obtain mercy--Here is an entirely new idea. The apostle
has hitherto dwelt upon the unbelief of the Jews as making way for the
faith of the Gentiles--the exclusion of the one occasioning the
reception of the other; a truth yielding to generous, believing Gentiles
but mingled satisfaction. Now, opening a more cheering prospect, he
speaks of the mercy shown to the Gentiles as a means of Israel's
recovery; which seems to mean that it will be by the instrumentality of
believing Gentiles that Israel as a nation is at length to "look on Him
whom they have pierced and mourn for Him," and so to "obtain mercy."
(See @2Co 3:15,16).
32. For God hath concluded them all in unbelief--"hath shut them all
up to unbelief"
that he might have mercy upon all--that is, those "all" of whom he had
been discoursing; the Gentiles first, and after them the Jews
[FRITZSCHE,
THOLUCK,
OLSHAUSEN,
DE
WETTE,
PHILIPPI,
STUART,
HODGE].
Certainly it is not "all mankind individually" [MEYER,
ALFORD]; for the
apostle is not here dealing with individuals, but with those great
divisions of mankind, Jew and Gentile. And what he here says is that
God's purpose was to shut each of these divisions of men to the
experience first of an humbled, condemned state, without Christ, and
then to the experience of His mercy in Christ.
33. Oh, the depth, &c.--The apostle now yields himself up to the
admiring contemplation of the grandeur of that divine plan which he had
sketched out.
of the riches both of the wisdom and knowledge of God--Many able
expositors render this, "of the riches and wisdom and knowledge," &c.
[ERASMUS,
GROTIUS,
BENGEL,
MEYER,
DE
WETTE,
THOLUCK,
OLSHAUSEN,
FRITZSCHE,
PHILIPPI,
ALFORD,
Revised Version]. The words will certainly
bear this sense, "the depth of God's riches." But "the riches of God" is
a much rarer expression with our apostle than the riches of this or that
perfection of God; and the words immediately following limit our
attention to the unsearchableness of God's "judgments," which
probably means His decrees or plans (@Ps 119:75), and of "His
ways," or the method by which He carries these into effect. (So
LUTHER,
CALVIN,
BEZA,
HODGE, &c.). Besides, all that follows to the end of the
chapter seems to show that while the Grace of God to guilty men in
Christ Jesus is presupposed to be the whole theme of this chapter, that
which called forth the special admiration of the apostle, after
sketching at some length the divine purposes and methods in the
bestowment of this grace, was "the depth of the riches of God's
wisdom and knowledge" in these purposes and methods. The "knowledge,"
then, points probably to the vast sweep of divine comprehension herein
displayed; the "wisdom" to that fitness to accomplish the ends intended,
which is stamped on all this procedure.
34, 35. For who hath known the mind of the Lord?--See
@Job 15:8 Jer 23:18.
or who hath been his counsellor--See @Isa 40:13,14.
35. Or who hath first given to him, and it shall be recompensed to
him--"and shall have recompense made to him"
again--see @Job 35:7 41:11. These questions, it will thus be seen,
are just quotations from the Old Testament, as if to show how familiar
to God's ancient people was the great truth which the apostle himself
had just uttered, that God's plans and methods in the dispensation of
His Grace have a reach of comprehension and wisdom stamped upon them
which finite mortals cannot fathom, much less could ever have imagined,
before they were disclosed.
36. For of him, and through him, and to him, are all things: to whom--"to Him"
be glory for ever. Amen--Thus worthily--with a brevity only equalled
by its sublimity--does the apostle here sum up this whole matter.
"OF
Him are all things," as their eternal Source: "THROUGH
HIM are all
things," inasmuch as He brings all to pass which in His eternal counsels
He purposed: "To Him are all things," as being His own last End; the
manifestation of the glory of His own perfections being the ultimate,
because the highest possible, design of all His procedure from first to
last.
On this rich chapter, Note, (1) It is an unspeakable consolation to know that in times of deepest religious declension and most extensive defection from the truth, the lamp of God has never been permitted to go out, and that a faithful remnant has ever existed--a remnant larger than their own drooping spirits could easily believe (@Ro 11:1-5). (2) The preservation of this remnant, even as their separation at the first, is all of mere grace (@Ro 11:5,6). (3) When individuals and communities, after many fruitless warnings, are abandoned of God, they go from bad to worse (@Ro 11:7-10). (4) God has so ordered His dealings with the great divisions of mankind, "that no flesh should glory in His presence." Gentile and Jew have each in turn been "shut up to unbelief," that each in turn may experience the "mercy" which saves the chief of sinners (@Ro 11:11-32). (5) As we are "justified by faith," so are we "kept by the power of God through faith"--faith alone--unto salvation (@Ro 11:20-32). (6) God's covenant with Abraham and his natural seed is a perpetual covenant, in equal force under the Gospel as before it. Therefore it is, that the Jews as a nation still survive, in spite of all the laws which, in similar circumstances, have either extinguished or destroyed the identity of other nations. And therefore it is that the Jews as a nation will yet be restored to the family of God, through the subjection of their proud hearts to Him whom they have pierced. And as believing Gentiles will be honored to be the instruments of this stupendous change, so shall the vast Gentile world reap such benefit from it, that it shall be like the communication of life to them from the dead. (7) Thus has the Christian Church the highest motive to the establishment and vigorous prosecution of missions to the Jews; God having not only promised that there shall be a remnant of them gathered in every age, but pledged Himself to the final ingathering of the whole nation assigned the honor of that ingathering to the Gentile Church, and assured them that the event, when it does arrive, shall have a life-giving effect upon the whole world (@Ro 11:12-16,26-31). (8) Those who think that in all the evangelical prophecies of the Old Testament the terms "Jacob," "Israel," &c., are to be understood solely of the Christian Church, would appear to read the Old Testament differently from the apostle, who, from the use of those very terms in Old Testament prophecy, draws arguments to prove that God has mercy in store for the natural Israel (@Ro 11:26,27). (9) Mere intellectual investigations into divine truth in general, and the sense of the living oracles in particular, as they have a hardening effect, so they are a great contrast to the spirit of our apostle, whose lengthened sketch of God's majestic procedure towards men in Christ Jesus ends here in a burst of admiration, which loses itself in the still loftier frame of adoration (@Ro 11:33-36).