969 lines
74 KiB
XML
969 lines
74 KiB
XML
<div2 id="Rom.xii" n="xii" next="Rom.xiii" prev="Rom.xi" progress="37.74%" title="Chapter XI">
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<h2 id="Rom.xii-p0.1">R O M A N S.</h2>
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<h3 id="Rom.xii-p0.2">CHAP. XI.</h3>
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<p class="intro" id="Rom.xii-p1">The apostle, having reconciled that great truth of
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the rejection of the Jews with the promise made unto the fathers,
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is, in this chapter, further labouring to mollify the harshness of
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it, and to reconcile it to the divine goodness in general. It might
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be said, "Hath God then cast away his people?" The apostles
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therefore sets himself, in this chapter, to make a reply to this
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objection, and that two ways:—I. He shows at large what the mercy
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is that is mixed with this wrath, <scripRef id="Rom.xii-p1.1" osisRef="Bible:Rom.11.1-Rom.11.32" parsed="|Rom|11|1|11|32" passage="Ro 11:1-32">ver. 1-32</scripRef>. II. He infers thence the
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infinite wisdom and sovereignty of God, with the adoration of which
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he concludes this chapter and subject, <scripRef id="Rom.xii-p1.2" osisRef="Bible:Rom.11.33-Rom.11.36" parsed="|Rom|11|33|11|36" passage="Ro 11:33-36">ver. 33-36</scripRef>.</p>
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<scripCom id="Rom.xii-p1.3" osisRef="Bible:Rom.11" parsed="|Rom|11|0|0|0" passage="Ro 11" type="Commentary"/>
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<scripCom id="Rom.xii-p1.4" osisRef="Bible:Rom.11.1-Rom.11.32" parsed="|Rom|11|1|11|32" passage="Ro 11:1-32" type="Commentary"/><div class="Commentary" id="Bible:Rom.11.1-Rom.11.32">
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<h4 id="Rom.xii-p1.5">The State of the Jews; The State of the
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Gentiles; The Gentiles Warned; The Future Conversion of the
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Jews. (<span class="smallcaps" id="Rom.xii-p1.6">a.
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d.</span> 58.)</h4>
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<p class="passage" id="Rom.xii-p2">1 I say then, Hath God cast away his people? God
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forbid. For I also am an Israelite, of the seed of Abraham,
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<i>of</i> the tribe of Benjamin. 2 God hath not cast away
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his people which he foreknew. Wot ye not what the scripture saith
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of Elias? how he maketh intercession to God against Israel, saying,
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3 Lord, they have killed thy prophets, and digged down thine
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altars; and I am left alone, and they seek my life. 4 But
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what saith the answer of God unto him? I have reserved to myself
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seven thousand men, who have not bowed the knee to <i>the image
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of</i> Baal. 5 Even so then at this present time also there
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is a remnant according to the election of grace. 6 And if by
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grace, then <i>is it</i> no more of works: otherwise grace is no
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more grace. But if <i>it be</i> of works, then is it no more grace:
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otherwise work is no more work. 7 What then? Israel hath not
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obtained that which he seeketh for; but the election hath obtained
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it, and the rest were blinded 8 (According as it is written,
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God hath given them the spirit of slumber, eyes that they should
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not see, and ears that they should not hear;) unto this day.
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9 And David saith, Let their table be made a snare, and a trap, and
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a stumblingblock, and a recompence unto them: 10 Let their
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eyes be darkened, that they may not see, and bow down their back
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alway. 11 I say then, Have they stumbled that they should
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fall? God forbid: but <i>rather</i> through their fall salvation
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<i>is come</i> unto the Gentiles, for to provoke them to jealousy.
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12 Now if the fall of them <i>be</i> the riches of the
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world, and the diminishing of them the riches of the Gentiles; how
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much more their fulness? 13 For I speak to you Gentiles,
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inasmuch as I am the apostle of the Gentiles, I magnify mine
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office: 14 If by any means I may provoke to emulation
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<i>them which are</i> my flesh, and might save some of them.
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15 For if the casting away of them <i>be</i> the reconciling of the
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world, what <i>shall</i> the receiving <i>of them be,</i> but life
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from the dead? 16 For if the firstfruit <i>be</i> holy, the
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lump <i>is</i> also <i>holy:</i> and if the root <i>be</i> holy, so
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<i>are</i> the branches. 17 And if some of the branches be
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broken off, and thou, being a wild olive tree, wert graffed in
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among them, and with them partakest of the root and fatness of the
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olive tree; 18 Boast not against the branches. But if thou
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boast, thou bearest not the root, but the root thee. 19 Thou
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wilt say then, The branches were broken off, that I might be
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graffed in. 20 Well; because of unbelief they were broken
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off, and thou standest by faith. Be not high-minded, but fear:
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21 For if God spared not the natural branches, <i>take
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heed</i> lest he also spare not thee. 22 Behold therefore
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the goodness and severity of God: on them which fell, severity; but
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toward thee, goodness, if thou continue in <i>his</i> goodness:
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otherwise thou also shalt be cut off. 23 And they also, if
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they abide not still in unbelief, shall be graffed in: for God is
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able to graff them in again. 24 For if thou wert cut out of
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the olive tree which is wild by nature, and wert graffed contrary
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to nature into a good olive tree: how much more shall these, which
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be the natural <i>branches,</i> be graffed into their own olive
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tree? 25 For I would not, brethren, that ye should be
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ignorant of this mystery, lest ye should be wise in your own
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conceits; that blindness in part is happened to Israel, until the
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fulness of the Gentiles be come in. 26 And so all Israel
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shall be saved: as it is written, There shall come out of Sion the
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Deliverer, and shall turn away ungodliness from Jacob: 27
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For this <i>is</i> my covenant unto them, when I shall take away
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their sins. 28 As concerning the gospel, <i>they are</i>
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enemies for your sakes: but as touching the election, <i>they
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are</i> beloved for the fathers' sakes. 29 For the gifts and
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calling of God <i>are</i> without repentance. 30 For as ye
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in times past have not believed God, yet have now obtained mercy
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through their unbelief: 31 Even so have these also now not
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believed, that through your mercy they also may obtain mercy.
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32 For God hath concluded them all in unbelief, that he
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might have mercy upon all.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Rom.xii-p3">The apostle proposes here a plausible
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objection, which might be urged against the divine conduct in
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casting off the Jewish nation (<scripRef id="Rom.xii-p3.1" osisRef="Bible:Rom.11.1" parsed="|Rom|11|1|0|0" passage="Ro 11:1"><i>v.</i> 1</scripRef>): "<i>Hath God cast away his
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people?</i> Is the rejection total and final? Are they all
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abandoned to wrath and ruin, and that eternal? Is the extent of the
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sentence so large as to be without reserve, or the continuance of
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it so long as to be without repeal? Will he have no more a peculiar
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people to himself?" In opposition to this, he shows that there was
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a great deal of goodness and mercy expressed along with this
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seeming severity, particularly he insists upon three things:—1.
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That, though some of the Jews were cast off, yet they were not all
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so. 2. That, though the body of the Jews were cast off, yet the
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Gentiles were taken in. And, 3. That, though the Jews were cast off
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at present, yet in God's due time they should be taken into his
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church again.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Rom.xii-p4">I. The Jews, it is true, were many of them
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cast off, but not all. The supposition of this he introduces with a
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<i>God forbid.</i> He will by no means endure such a suggestions.
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God had made a distinction between some of them and others.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Rom.xii-p5">1. There was a chosen remnant of believing
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Jews, that obtained righteousness and life by faith in Jesus
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Christ, <scripRef id="Rom.xii-p5.1" osisRef="Bible:Rom.11.1-Rom.11.7" parsed="|Rom|11|1|11|7" passage="Ro 11:1-7"><i>v.</i> 1-7</scripRef>.
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These are said to be such as he <i>foreknew</i> (<scripRef id="Rom.xii-p5.2" osisRef="Bible:Rom.11.2" parsed="|Rom|11|2|0|0" passage="Ro 11:2"><i>v.</i> 2</scripRef>), that is, had thoughts of love
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to, before the world was; for whom he thus foreknew he did
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predestinate. her lies the ground of the difference. They are
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called the <i>election</i> (<scripRef id="Rom.xii-p5.3" osisRef="Bible:Rom.11.7" parsed="|Rom|11|7|0|0" passage="Ro 11:7"><i>v.</i>
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7</scripRef>), that is, the elect, God's chosen ones, whom he calls
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the election, because that which first distinguished them from the
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dignified them above others was God's electing love. Believers are
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the <i>election,</i> all those and those only whom God hath chosen.
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Now,</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Rom.xii-p6">(1.) He shows that he himself was one of
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them: <i>For I also am an Israelite;</i> as if he had said, "Should
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I say that all the Jews are rejected, I should cut off my own
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claims, and see myself abandoned." Paul was a chosen vessel
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(<scripRef id="Rom.xii-p6.1" osisRef="Bible:Acts.9.15" parsed="|Acts|9|15|0|0" passage="Ac 9:15">Acts ix. 15</scripRef>), and yet he
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was of the <i>seed of Abraham,</i> and particularly of the tribe of
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Benjamin, the least and youngest of all the tribes of Israel.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Rom.xii-p7">(2.) He suggests that as in Elias's time,
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so now, this chosen remnant was really more and greater than one
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would think it was, which intimates likewise that it is no new nor
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unusual thing for God's grace and favour to Israel to be limited
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and confined to a remnant of that people; for so it was in Elijah's
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time. The scripture saith it of Elias, <b><i>en Elia</i></b>—<i>in
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the story of Elias,</i> the great reformer of the Old Testament.
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Observe, [1.] His mistake concerning Israel; as if their apostasy
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in the days of Ahab was so general that he himself was the only
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faithful servant God had in the world. He refers to <scripRef id="Rom.xii-p7.1" osisRef="Bible:1Kgs.19.14" parsed="|1Kgs|19|14|0|0" passage="1Ki 19:14">1 Kings xix. 14</scripRef>, where (it is here
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said) <i>he maketh intercession to God against Israel.</i> A
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strange kind of intercession: <b><i>entynchanei to Theo kata tou
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Israel</i></b>—<i>He deals with God against Israel;</i> so it may
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be read; so <b><i>entynchano</i></b> is translated, <scripRef id="Rom.xii-p7.2" osisRef="Bible:Acts.25.24" parsed="|Acts|25|24|0|0" passage="Ac 25:24">Acts xxv. 24</scripRef>. The Jews
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<b><i>enetychon moi</i></b>—<i>have dealt with me.</i> In prayer
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we deal with God, commune with him, discourse with him: it is said
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of Elijah (<scripRef id="Rom.xii-p7.3" osisRef="Bible:Jas.5.17" parsed="|Jas|5|17|0|0" passage="Jam 5:17">Jam. v. 17</scripRef>) that
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he <i>prayed in praying.</i> We are then likely to pray in praying,
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to make a business of that duty, when we pray as those that are
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dealing with God in the duty. Now Elijah in this prayer spoke as if
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there were one left faithful in Israel but himself. See to what a
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low ebb the profession of religion may sometimes be brought, and
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how much the face of it may be eclipsed, that the most wise and
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observing men may give it up for gone. So it was in Elijah's time.
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That which makes the show of a nation is the powers and the
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multitude. The powers of Israel were then persecuting powers: They
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have <i>killed thy prophets, and digged down thine altars,</i> and
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they <i>seek my life.</i> The multitude of Israel were then
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idolatrous: <i>I am left alone.</i> Thus those few that were
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faithful to God were not only lost in the crowd of idolaters, but
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crushed and driven into corners by the rage of persecutors. <i>When
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the wicked rise, a man is hidden,</i> <scripRef id="Rom.xii-p7.4" osisRef="Bible:Prov.28.12" parsed="|Prov|28|12|0|0" passage="Pr 28:12">Prov. xxviii. 12</scripRef>.—<i>Digged down thine
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altars;</i> not only neglected them, and let them go out of repair,
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but digged them down. When altars were set up for Baal, it is no
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wonder if God's altars were pulled down; they could not endure that
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standing testimony against their idolatry. This was his
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intercession <i>against Israel;</i> as if he had said, "Lord, is
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not this a people ripe for ruin, worthy to be cast off? What else
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canst thou do for thy great name?" It is a very sad thing for any
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person or people to have the prayers of God's people against them,
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especially of God's prophets, for God espouses, and sooner or later
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will visibly own, the cause of his praying people. [2.] The
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rectifying of this mistake by the answer of God (<scripRef id="Rom.xii-p7.5" osisRef="Bible:Rom.11.4" parsed="|Rom|11|4|0|0" passage="Ro 11:4"><i>v.</i> 4</scripRef>): <i>I have reserved.</i> Note,
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<i>First,</i> Things are often much better with the church of God
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than wise and good men think they are. They are ready to conclude
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hardly, and to give up all for gone, when it is not so.
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<i>Secondly,</i> In times of general apostasy, there is usually a
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remnant that keep their integrity—some, though but a few; all do
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not go one way. <i>Thirdly,</i> That when there is a remnant who
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keep their integrity in times of general apostasy it is God that
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reserves to himself that remnant. If he had left them to
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themselves, they had gone down the stream with the rest. It is his
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free and almighty grace that makes the difference between them and
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others.—<i>Seven thousand:</i> a competent number to bear their
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testimony against the idolatry of Israel, and yet, compared with
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the many thousands of Israel, a very small number, one of a city,
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and two of a tribe, like the grape-gleanings of the vintage.
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Christ's flock is but a little flock; and yet, when they come all
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together at last, they will be a great and innumerable multitude,
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<scripRef id="Rom.xii-p7.6" osisRef="Bible:Rev.7.9" parsed="|Rev|7|9|0|0" passage="Re 7:9">Rev. vii. 9</scripRef>. Now the
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description of this remnant is that <i>they had not bowed the knee
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to the image of Baal,</i> which was then the reigning sin of
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Israel. In court, city, and country, Baal had the ascendant; and
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the generality of people, more or less, paid their respect to Baal.
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The best evidence of integrity is a freedom from the present
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prevailing corruptions of the times and places that we live in, to
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swim against the stream when it is strong. Those God will own for
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his faithful witnesses that are bold in bearing their testimony to
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the <i>present</i> truth, <scripRef id="Rom.xii-p7.7" osisRef="Bible:2Pet.1.12" parsed="|2Pet|1|12|0|0" passage="2Pe 1:12">2 Pet. i.
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12</scripRef>. This is thank-worthy, not to bow to Baal when every
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body bows. Sober singularity is commonly the badge of true
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sincerity. [3.] The application of this instance to the case in
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hand: <i>Even so at this present time,</i> <scripRef id="Rom.xii-p7.8" osisRef="Bible:Rom.11.5-Rom.11.7" parsed="|Rom|11|5|11|7" passage="Ro 11:5-7"><i>v.</i> 5-7</scripRef>. God's methods of dispensation
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towards his church are as they used to be. As it has been, so it
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is. In Elijah's time there was a remnant, and so there is now. If
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then there was a remnant left under the Old Testament, when the
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displays of grace were less clear and the pourings out of the
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Spirit less plentiful, much more now under the gospel, when the
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grace of God, which bringeth salvation, appears more
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illustrious.—<i>A remnant,</i> a few of many, a remnant of
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believing Jews when the rest were obstinate in their unbelief. This
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is called <i>a remnant according to the election of grace;</i> they
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are such as were chosen from eternity in the counsels of divine
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love to be vessels of grace and glory. Whom he did predestinate
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those he called. If the difference between them and others be made
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purely by the grace of God, as certainly it is (<i>I have reserved
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them,</i> saith he, <i>to myself</i>), then it must needs be
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according to the election; for we are sure that whatever God does
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he does it according to the counsel of his own will. Now concerning
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this remnant we may observe, <i>First,</i> Whence it takes its
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rise, from the free grace of God (<scripRef id="Rom.xii-p7.9" osisRef="Bible:Rom.11.6" parsed="|Rom|11|6|0|0" passage="Ro 11:6"><i>v.</i> 6</scripRef>), that grace which excludes works.
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The eternal election, in which the difference between some and
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others is first founded, is purely of grace, free grace; not for
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the sake of works done or foreseen; if so, it would not be
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<i>grace. Gratia non est ullo modo gratia, si non sit omni modo
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gratuita—It is not grace, properly so called, if it be not
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perfectly free.</i> Election is purely according to the good
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pleasure of his will, <scripRef id="Rom.xii-p7.10" osisRef="Bible:Eph.1.5" parsed="|Eph|1|5|0|0" passage="Eph 1:5">Eph. i.
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5</scripRef>. Paul's heart was so full of the freeness of God's
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grace that in the midst of his discourse he turns aside, as it
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were, to make this remark, <i>If of grace, then not of works.</i>
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And some observe that faith itself, which in the matter of
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justification if opposed to works, is here included in them; for
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faith has a peculiar fitness to receive the free grace of God for
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our justification, but not to receive that grace for our election.
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<i>Secondly,</i> What it obtains: that which Israel, that is, the
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body of that people, in van sought for (<scripRef id="Rom.xii-p7.11" osisRef="Bible:Rom.11.7" parsed="|Rom|11|7|0|0" passage="Ro 11:7"><i>v.</i> 7</scripRef>): <i>Israel hath not obtained that
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which he seeketh for,</i> that is, justification, and acceptance
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with God (see <scripRef id="Rom.xii-p7.12" osisRef="Bible:Rom.9.31" parsed="|Rom|9|31|0|0" passage="Ro 9:31"><i>ch.</i> ix.
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31</scripRef>), but the <i>election have obtained it.</i> In them
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the promise of God has its accomplishment, and God's ancient
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kindness for that people is remembered. He calls the remnant of
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believers, not the elect, but the <i>election,</i> to show that the
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sole foundation of all their hopes and happiness is laid in
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election. They were the persons whom God had in his eye in the
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counsels of his love; they are the election; they are God's choice.
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Such was the favour of God to the chosen remnant. But,</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Rom.xii-p8">2. <i>The rest were blinded,</i> <scripRef id="Rom.xii-p8.1" osisRef="Bible:Rom.11.7" parsed="|Rom|11|7|0|0" passage="Ro 11:7"><i>v.</i> 7</scripRef>. Some are chosen and
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called, and the call is made effectual. But others are left to
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perish in their unbelief; nay, they are made worse by that which
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should have made them better. The gospel, which to those that
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believed was the savour of life unto life, to the unbelieving was
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the savour of death unto death. The same sun softens wax and
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hardens clay. Good old Simeon foresaw that the child Jesus was set
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for the fall, as well as for the rising again, of many in Israel,
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<scripRef id="Rom.xii-p8.2" osisRef="Bible:Luke.2.34" parsed="|Luke|2|34|0|0" passage="Lu 2:34">Luke ii. 34</scripRef>.—<i>Were
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blinded;</i> <b><i>eporothesan</i></b>—<i>they were hardened;</i>
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so some. They were seared, and made brawny and insensible. They
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could neither see the light, nor feel the touch, of gospel grace.
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Blindness and hardness are expressive of the same senselessness and
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stupidity of spirit. They shut their eyes, and would not see; this
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was their sin: and then God, in a way of righteous judgment,
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blinded their eyes, that they could not see; this was their
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punishment. This seemed harsh doctrine: to qualify it, therefore,
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he vouches two witnesses out of the Old Testament, who speak of
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such a thing.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Rom.xii-p9">(1.) Isaiah, who spoke of such a judgment
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in his day, <scripRef id="Rom.xii-p9.1" osisRef="Bible:Isa.29.10 Bible:Isa.6.9" parsed="|Isa|29|10|0|0;|Isa|6|9|0|0" passage="Isa 29:10;Isa 6:9"><i>ch.</i> xxix.
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10; vi. 9</scripRef>. The <i>spirit of slumber,</i> that is, an
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indisposedness to mind either their duty or interest. They are
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under the power of a prevailing unconcernedness, like people that
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are slumbering and sleeping; not affected with any thing that is
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said or done. They were resolved to continue as they were, and
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would not stir. The following words explain what is meant by the
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spirit of slumber: <i>Eyes, that they should not see, and ears,
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that they should not hear.</i> They had the faculties, but in the
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things that belonged to their peace they had not the use of those
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faculties; they were quite infatuated, they saw Christ, but they
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did not believe in him; they heard his word, but they did not
|
||
receive it; and so both their hearing and their seeing were in
|
||
vain. It was all one as if they had neither seen nor heard. Of all
|
||
judgments spiritual judgments are the sorest, and most to be
|
||
dreaded, though they make the least noise.—<i>Unto this day.</i>
|
||
Ever since Esaias prophesied, this hardening work has been in the
|
||
doing; some among them have been blind and senseless. Or, rather,
|
||
ever since the first preaching of the gospel: though they have had
|
||
the most convincing evidences that could be of the truth of it, the
|
||
most powerful preaching, the fairest offers, the clearest calls
|
||
from Christ himself, and from his apostles, yet to this day they
|
||
are blinded. It is still true concerning multitudes of them, even
|
||
to this day in which we live; they are hardened and blinded, the
|
||
obstinacy and unbelief go by succession from generation to
|
||
generation, according to their own fearful imprecation, which
|
||
entailed the curse: <i>His blood be upon us and upon our
|
||
children.</i></p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Rom.xii-p10">(2.) David (<scripRef id="Rom.xii-p10.1" osisRef="Bible:Rom.11.9-Rom.11.10" parsed="|Rom|11|9|11|10" passage="Ro 11:9,10"><i>v.</i> 9, 10</scripRef>), quoted from <scripRef id="Rom.xii-p10.2" osisRef="Bible:Ps.69.22-Ps.69.23" parsed="|Ps|69|22|69|23" passage="Ps 69:22,23">Ps. lxix. 22, 23</scripRef>, where David
|
||
having in the Spirit foretold the sufferings of Christ from his own
|
||
people the Jews, particularly that of their giving him <i>vinegar
|
||
to drink</i> (<scripRef id="Rom.xii-p10.3" osisRef="Bible:Rom.11.21" parsed="|Rom|11|21|0|0" passage="Ro 11:21"><i>v.</i> 21</scripRef>,
|
||
which was literally fulfilled, <scripRef id="Rom.xii-p10.4" osisRef="Bible:Matt.27.48" parsed="|Matt|27|48|0|0" passage="Mt 27:48">Matt.
|
||
xxvii. 48</scripRef>), an expression of the greatest contempt and
|
||
malice that could be, in the next words, under the form of an
|
||
imprecation, he foretels the dreadful judgments of God upon them
|
||
for it: <i>Let their table become a snare,</i> which the apostle
|
||
here applies to the present blindness of the Jews, and the offence
|
||
they took at the gospel, which increased their hardness. This
|
||
teaches us how to understand other prayers of David against his
|
||
enemies; they are to be looked upon as prophetic of the judgments
|
||
of God upon the public and obstinate enemies of Christ and his
|
||
kingdom. His prayer that it might be so was a prophecy that it
|
||
should be so, and not the private expression of his own angry
|
||
resentments. It was likewise intended to justify God, and to clear
|
||
his righteousness in such judgments. He speaks here, [1.] Of the
|
||
ruin of their comforts: <i>Let their table be made a snare,</i>
|
||
that is, as the psalmist explains it, Let that which should be for
|
||
their welfare be a trap to them. The curse of God will turn meat
|
||
into poison. It is a threatening like that in <scripRef id="Rom.xii-p10.5" osisRef="Bible:Mal.2.2" parsed="|Mal|2|2|0|0" passage="Mal 2:2">Mal. ii. 2</scripRef>, <i>I will curse your
|
||
blessings.</i> Their table a snare, that is, an occasion of sin and
|
||
an occasion of misery. Their very food, that should nourish them,
|
||
shall choke them. [2.] Of the ruin of their powers and faculties
|
||
(<scripRef id="Rom.xii-p10.6" osisRef="Bible:Rom.11.10" parsed="|Rom|11|10|0|0" passage="Ro 11:10"><i>v.</i> 10</scripRef>), their eyes
|
||
darkened, their backs bowed down, that they can neither find the
|
||
right way, nor, if they could, are they able to walk in it. The
|
||
Jews, after their national rejection of Christ and his gospel,
|
||
became infatuated in their politics, so that their very counsels
|
||
turned against them, and hastened their ruin by the Romans. They
|
||
looked like a people designed for slavery and contempt, their backs
|
||
bowed down, to be ridden and trampled upon by all the nations about
|
||
them. Or, it may be understood spiritually; their backs are bowed
|
||
down in carnality and worldly-mindedness. <i>Curvæ in terris
|
||
animæ—They mind earthly things.</i> This is an exact description
|
||
of the state and temper of the present remainder of that people,
|
||
than whom, if the accounts we have of them be true, there is not a
|
||
more worldly, wilful, blind, selfish, ill-natured, people in the
|
||
world. They are manifestly to this day under the power of this
|
||
curse. Divine curses will work long. It is a sign we have our eyes
|
||
darkened if we are bowed down in worldly-mindedness.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Rom.xii-p11">II. Another thing which qualified this
|
||
doctrine of the rejection of the Jews was that though they were
|
||
cast off and unchurched, yet the Gentiles were taken in (<scripRef id="Rom.xii-p11.1" osisRef="Bible:Rom.11.11-Rom.11.14" parsed="|Rom|11|11|11|14" passage="Ro 11:11-14"><i>v.</i> 11-14</scripRef>), which he applies
|
||
by way of caution to the Gentiles, <scripRef id="Rom.xii-p11.2" osisRef="Bible:Rom.11.17-Rom.11.22" parsed="|Rom|11|17|11|22" passage="Ro 11:17-22"><i>v.</i> 17-22</scripRef>.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Rom.xii-p12">1. The rejection of the Jews made room for
|
||
the reception of the Gentiles. The Jews' leavings were a feast for
|
||
the poor Gentiles (<scripRef id="Rom.xii-p12.1" osisRef="Bible:Rom.11.11" parsed="|Rom|11|11|0|0" passage="Ro 11:11"><i>v.</i>
|
||
11</scripRef>): "<i>Have they stumbled that they should fall?</i>
|
||
Had God no other end in forsaking and rejecting them than their
|
||
destruction?" He startles at this, rejecting the thought with
|
||
abhorrence, as usually he does when any thing is suggested which
|
||
seems to reflect upon the wisdom, or righteousness, or goodness of
|
||
God: <i>God forbid!</i> no, <i>through their fall salvation is come
|
||
to the Gentiles.</i> Not but that salvation might have come to the
|
||
Gentiles if they had stood; but by the divine appointment it was so
|
||
ordered that the gospel should be preached to the Gentiles upon the
|
||
Jews' refusal of it. Thus in the parable (<scripRef id="Rom.xii-p12.2" osisRef="Bible:Matt.22.8-Matt.22.9" parsed="|Matt|22|8|22|9" passage="Mt 22:8,9">Matt. xxii. 8, 9</scripRef>), <i>Those that were</i>
|
||
first <i>bidden were not worthy—Go ye therefore into the
|
||
highways,</i> <scripRef id="Rom.xii-p12.3" osisRef="Bible:Luke.14.21" parsed="|Luke|14|21|0|0" passage="Lu 14:21">Luke xiv. 21</scripRef>.
|
||
And so it was in the history (<scripRef id="Rom.xii-p12.4" osisRef="Bible:Acts.13.46" parsed="|Acts|13|46|0|0" passage="Ac 13:46">Acts
|
||
xiii. 46</scripRef>): <i>It was necessary that the word of God
|
||
should first have been spoken to you; but, seeing you put it from
|
||
you, lo, we turn to the Gentiles;</i> so <scripRef id="Rom.xii-p12.5" osisRef="Bible:Acts.18.6" parsed="|Acts|18|6|0|0" passage="Ac 18:6">Acts xviii. 6</scripRef>. God will have a church in the
|
||
world, will have the wedding furnished with guests; and, if one
|
||
will not come, another will, or why was the offer made? The Jews
|
||
had the refusal, and so the tender came to the Gentiles. See how
|
||
Infinite Wisdom brings light out of darkness, good out of evil,
|
||
meat out of the eater, and sweetness out of the strong. To the same
|
||
purport he says (<scripRef id="Rom.xii-p12.6" osisRef="Bible:Rom.11.12" parsed="|Rom|11|12|0|0" passage="Ro 11:12"><i>v.</i>
|
||
12</scripRef>), <i>The fall of them was the riches of the
|
||
world,</i> that is, it hastened the gospel so much the sooner into
|
||
the Gentile world. The gospel is the greatest riches of the place
|
||
where it is; it is better than thousands of gold and silver. Or,
|
||
The riches of the Gentiles was the multitude of converts among
|
||
them. True believers are God's jewels. To the same purport
|
||
(<scripRef id="Rom.xii-p12.7" osisRef="Bible:Rom.11.15" parsed="|Rom|11|15|0|0" passage="Ro 11:15"><i>v.</i> 15</scripRef>): <i>The
|
||
casting away of them is the reconciling of the world.</i> God's
|
||
displeasure towards them made way for his favour towards the
|
||
Gentiles. God was in Christ <i>reconciling the world,</i> <scripRef id="Rom.xii-p12.8" osisRef="Bible:2Cor.5.19" parsed="|2Cor|5|19|0|0" passage="2Co 5:19">2 Cor. v. 19</scripRef>. And therefore he took
|
||
occasion from the unbelief of the Jews openly to disavow and disown
|
||
them, though they had been his peculiar favourites, to show that in
|
||
dispensing his favours he would now no longer act in such a way of
|
||
peculiarity and restriction, but that in every nation he that
|
||
feared God and wrought righteousness should be accepted of him,
|
||
<scripRef id="Rom.xii-p12.9" osisRef="Bible:Acts.10.34-Acts.10.35" parsed="|Acts|10|34|10|35" passage="Ac 10:34,35">Acts x. 34, 35</scripRef>.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Rom.xii-p13">2. The use that the apostle makes of this
|
||
doctrine concerning the substitution of the Gentiles in the room of
|
||
the Jews.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Rom.xii-p14">(1.) As a kinsman to the Jews, here is a
|
||
word of excitement and exhortation to them, to stir them up to
|
||
receive and embrace the gospel-offer. This God intended in his
|
||
favour to the Gentiles, to provoke the Jews to jealousy (<scripRef id="Rom.xii-p14.1" osisRef="Bible:Rom.11.11" parsed="|Rom|11|11|0|0" passage="Ro 11:11"><i>v.</i> 11</scripRef>), and Paul endeavours to
|
||
enforce it accordingly (<scripRef id="Rom.xii-p14.2" osisRef="Bible:Rom.11.14" parsed="|Rom|11|14|0|0" passage="Ro 11:14"><i>v.</i>
|
||
14</scripRef>): <i>If by any means I might provoke to emulation
|
||
those who are my flesh.</i> "Shall the despised Gentiles run away
|
||
with all the comforts and privileges of the gospel, and shall not
|
||
we repent of our refusal, and now at last put in for a share? Shall
|
||
not we believe and obey, and be pardoned and saved, as well as the
|
||
Gentiles?" See an instance of such an emulation in Esau, <scripRef id="Rom.xii-p14.3" osisRef="Bible:Gen.28.6-Gen.28.9" parsed="|Gen|28|6|28|9" passage="Ge 28:6-9">Gen. xxviii. 6-9</scripRef>. There is a
|
||
commendable emulation in the affairs of our souls: why should not
|
||
we be as holy and happy as any of our neighbours? In this emulation
|
||
there needs no suspicion, undermining or countermining; for the
|
||
church has room enough, and the new covenant grace and comfort
|
||
enough, for us all. The blessings are not lessened by the
|
||
multitudes of the sharers.—<i>And might save some of them.</i> See
|
||
what was Paul's business, to save souls; and yet the utmost he
|
||
promises himself is but to save some. Though he was such a powerful
|
||
preacher, spoke and wrote with such evidence and demonstration of
|
||
the Spirit, yet of the many he dealt with he could but save some.
|
||
Ministers must think their pains well bestowed if they can but be
|
||
instrumental to save some.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Rom.xii-p15">(2.) As an apostle to the Gentiles, here is
|
||
a word of caution for them: "<i>I speak to you Gentiles.</i> You
|
||
believing Romans, you hear what riches of salvation are come to you
|
||
by the fall of the Jews, but take heed lest you do any thing to
|
||
forfeit it." Paul takes this, as other occasions, to apply his
|
||
discourse to the Gentiles, because he was the apostle of the
|
||
Gentiles, appointed for the service of their faith, to plant and
|
||
water churches in the Gentile nations. This was the purport of his
|
||
extraordinary mission, <scripRef id="Rom.xii-p15.1" osisRef="Bible:Acts.22.21" parsed="|Acts|22|21|0|0" passage="Ac 22:21">Acts xxii.
|
||
21</scripRef>, <i>I will send thee far hence unto the Gentiles;</i>
|
||
compare <scripRef id="Rom.xii-p15.2" osisRef="Bible:Acts.9.15" parsed="|Acts|9|15|0|0" passage="Ac 9:15">Acts ix. 15</scripRef>. It was
|
||
likewise the intention of his ordination, <scripRef id="Rom.xii-p15.3" osisRef="Bible:Gal.2.9" parsed="|Gal|2|9|0|0" passage="Ga 2:9">Gal. ii. 9</scripRef>. Compare <scripRef id="Rom.xii-p15.4" osisRef="Bible:Acts.13.2" parsed="|Acts|13|2|0|0" passage="Ac 13:2">Acts xiii. 2</scripRef>. It ought to be our great and
|
||
special care to do good to those that are under our charge: we must
|
||
particularly mind that which is our own work. It was an instance of
|
||
God's great love to the poor Gentiles that he appointed Paul, who
|
||
in gifts and graces excelled all the apostles, to be the apostle of
|
||
the Gentiles. The Gentile world was a wider province; and the work
|
||
to be done in it required a very able, skilful, zealous, courageous
|
||
workman: such a one was Paul. God calls those to special work whom
|
||
he either sees or makes fit for it.—<i>I magnify my office.</i>
|
||
There were those that vilified it, and him because of it. It was
|
||
because he was the apostle of the Gentiles that the Jews were so
|
||
outrageous against him (<scripRef id="Rom.xii-p15.5" osisRef="Bible:Acts.22.21-Acts.22.22" parsed="|Acts|22|21|22|22" passage="Ac 22:21,22">Acts xxii.
|
||
21, 22</scripRef>), and yet he thought never the worse of it,
|
||
though it set him up as the butt of all the Jewish rage and malice.
|
||
It is a sign of true love to Jesus Christ to reckon that service
|
||
and work for him truly honourable which the world looks upon with
|
||
scorn, as mean and contemptible. The office of the ministry is an
|
||
office to be <i>magnified.</i> Ministers are ambassadors for
|
||
Christ, and stewards of the mysteries of God, and for their work's
|
||
sake are to be esteemed highly in love.—<i>My office;</i>
|
||
<b><i>ten diakonian mou</i></b>—<i>my ministry,</i> my service,
|
||
not my lordship and dominion. It was not the dignity and power, but
|
||
the duty and work, of an apostle, that Paul was so much in love
|
||
with. Now two things he exhorts the Gentiles to, with reference to
|
||
the rejected Jews:—</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Rom.xii-p16">[1.] To have a respect for the Jews,
|
||
notwithstanding, and to desire their conversion. This is intimated
|
||
in the prospect he gives them of the advantage that would accrue to
|
||
the church by their conversion, <scripRef id="Rom.xii-p16.1" osisRef="Bible:Rom.11.12 Bible:Rom.11.15" parsed="|Rom|11|12|0|0;|Rom|11|15|0|0" passage="Ro 11:12,15"><i>v.</i> 12, 15</scripRef>. It would be as life from
|
||
the dead; and therefore they must not insult and triumph over those
|
||
poor Jews, but rather pity them, and desire their welfare, and long
|
||
for the receiving of them in again.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Rom.xii-p17">[2.] To take heed to themselves, lest they
|
||
should stumble and fall, as they Jews had done, <scripRef id="Rom.xii-p17.1" osisRef="Bible:Rom.11.17-Rom.11.22" parsed="|Rom|11|17|11|22" passage="Ro 11:17-22"><i>v.</i> 17-22</scripRef>. Here observe,</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Rom.xii-p18"><i>First,</i> The privilege which the
|
||
Gentiles had by being taken into the church. They were grafted in
|
||
(<scripRef id="Rom.xii-p18.1" osisRef="Bible:Rom.11.17" parsed="|Rom|11|17|0|0" passage="Ro 11:17"><i>v.</i> 17</scripRef>), as a branch
|
||
of a wild olive into a good olive, which is contrary to the way and
|
||
custom of the husbandman, who grafts the good olive into the bad;
|
||
but those that God grafts into the church he finds wild and barren,
|
||
and good for nothing. Men graft to mend the tree; but God grafts to
|
||
mend the branch. 1. The church of God is an olive-tree, flourishing
|
||
and fruitful as an olive (<scripRef id="Rom.xii-p18.2" osisRef="Bible:Ps.52.8 Bible:Hos.14.6" parsed="|Ps|52|8|0|0;|Hos|14|6|0|0" passage="Ps 52:8,Ho 14:6">Ps.
|
||
lii. 8; Hos. xiv. 6</scripRef>), the fruit useful for the honour
|
||
both of God and man, <scripRef id="Rom.xii-p18.3" osisRef="Bible:Judg.9.9" parsed="|Judg|9|9|0|0" passage="Jdg 9:9">Judg. ix.
|
||
9</scripRef>. 2. Those that are out of the church are as wild
|
||
olive-trees, not only useless, but what they do produce is sour and
|
||
unsavoury: <i>Wild by nature,</i> <scripRef id="Rom.xii-p18.4" osisRef="Bible:Rom.11.24" parsed="|Rom|11|24|0|0" passage="Ro 11:24"><i>v.</i> 24</scripRef>. This was the state of the poor
|
||
Gentiles, that wanted church privileges, and in respect of real
|
||
sanctification; and it is the natural state of every one of us, to
|
||
be wild by nature. 3. Conversion is the grafting in of wild
|
||
branches into the good olive. We must be cut off from the old
|
||
stock, and be brought into union with a new root. 4. Those that are
|
||
grafted into the good olive-tree partake of the root and fatness of
|
||
the olive. It is applicable to a saving union with Christ; all that
|
||
are by a lively faith grafted into Christ partake of him as the
|
||
branches of the root—receive from his fulness. But it is here
|
||
spoken of a visible church-membership, from which the Jews were as
|
||
branches broken off; and so the Gentiles were grafted in,
|
||
<b><i>autois</i></b>—<i>among those</i> that continued, or in the
|
||
room of those that were broken off. The Gentiles, being grafted
|
||
into the church, partake of the same privileges that the Jews did,
|
||
<i>the root and fatness.</i> The olive-tree is the visible church
|
||
(called so <scripRef id="Rom.xii-p18.5" osisRef="Bible:Jer.11.16" parsed="|Jer|11|16|0|0" passage="Jer 11:16">Jer. xi. 16</scripRef>);
|
||
the root of this tree was Abraham, not the root of communication,
|
||
so Christ only is the root, but the root of administration, he
|
||
being the first with whom the covenant was so solemnly made. Now
|
||
the believing Gentiles partake of this root: <i>he also is ason of
|
||
Abraham</i> (<scripRef id="Rom.xii-p18.6" osisRef="Bible:Luke.19.9" parsed="|Luke|19|9|0|0" passage="Lu 19:9">Luke xix. 9</scripRef>),
|
||
the <i>blessing of Abraham comes upon the Gentiles</i> (<scripRef id="Rom.xii-p18.7" osisRef="Bible:Gal.3.14" parsed="|Gal|3|14|0|0" passage="Ga 3:14">Gal. iii. 14</scripRef>), the same fatness of the
|
||
olive-tree, the same for substance, special protection, lively
|
||
oracles, means of salvation, a standing ministry, instituted
|
||
ordinances; and, among the rest, the visible church-membership of
|
||
their infant seed, which was part of the fatness of the olive-tree
|
||
that the Jews had, and cannot be imagined to be denied to the
|
||
Gentiles.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Rom.xii-p19"><i>Secondly,</i> A caution not to abuse
|
||
these privileges. 1. "Be not proud (<scripRef id="Rom.xii-p19.1" osisRef="Bible:Rom.11.18" parsed="|Rom|11|18|0|0" passage="Ro 11:18"><i>v.</i> 18</scripRef>): <i>Boast not against the
|
||
branches.</i> Do not therefore trample upon the Jews as a reprobate
|
||
people, nor insult over those that are broken off, much less over
|
||
those that do continue." Grace is given, not to make us proud, but
|
||
to make us thankful. The law of faith excludes all boasting either
|
||
of ourselves or against others. "Do not say (<scripRef id="Rom.xii-p19.2" osisRef="Bible:Rom.11.19" parsed="|Rom|11|19|0|0" passage="Ro 11:19"><i>v.</i> 19</scripRef>): <i>They were broken off that I
|
||
might be grafted in;</i> that is, do not think that thou didst
|
||
merit more at the hand of God than they, or didst stand higher in
|
||
his favour." "But remember, <i>thou bearest not the root, but the
|
||
root thee.</i> Though thou art grafted in, thou art still but a
|
||
branch borne by the root; nay, and an engrafted branch, brought
|
||
into the good olive <i>contrary to nature</i> (<scripRef id="Rom.xii-p19.3" osisRef="Bible:Rom.11.24" parsed="|Rom|11|24|0|0" passage="Ro 11:24"><i>v.</i> 24</scripRef>), not free-born, but by an act
|
||
of grace enfranchised and naturalized. Abraham, the root of the
|
||
Jewish church, is not beholden to thee; but thou art greatly
|
||
obliged to him, as the trustee of the covenant and the father of
|
||
many nations. Therefore, <i>if thou boast,</i> know (this word must
|
||
be supplied to clear the sense) <i>thou bearest not the root but
|
||
the root thee.</i>" 2. "Be not secure (<scripRef id="Rom.xii-p19.4" osisRef="Bible:Rom.11.20" parsed="|Rom|11|20|0|0" passage="Ro 11:20"><i>v.</i> 20</scripRef>): <i>Be not high-minded, but
|
||
fear.</i> Be not too confident of your own strength and standing."
|
||
A holy fear is an excellent preservative against high-mindedness:
|
||
happy is the man that thus feareth always. We need not fear but God
|
||
will be true to his word; all the danger is lest we be false to
|
||
ours. <i>Let us therefore fear,</i> <scripRef id="Rom.xii-p19.5" osisRef="Bible:Heb.4.1" parsed="|Heb|4|1|0|0" passage="Heb 4:1">Heb. iv. 1</scripRef>. The church of Rome now boasts of a
|
||
patent of perpetual preservation; but the apostle here, in his
|
||
epistle to that church when she was in her infancy and integrity,
|
||
enters an express caveat against that boast, and all claims of that
|
||
kind.—<i>Fear</i> what? "Why fear lest thou commit a forfeiture as
|
||
they have done, lest thou lose the privileges thou now enjoyest, as
|
||
they have lost theirs." The evils that befal others should be
|
||
warnings to us. <i>Go</i> (saith God to Jerusalem <scripRef id="Rom.xii-p19.6" osisRef="Bible:Jer.7.12" parsed="|Jer|7|12|0|0" passage="Jer 7:12">Jer. vii. 12</scripRef>), and <i>see what I did
|
||
to</i> Shiloh; so now, let all the churches of God go and see what
|
||
he did to Jerusalem, and what is become of the day of their
|
||
visitation, that we may hear and fear, and take heed of Jerusalem's
|
||
sin. The patent which churches have of their privileges is not for
|
||
a certain term, nor entailed upon them and their heirs; but it runs
|
||
as long as they carry themselves well, and no longer. Consider,
|
||
(1.) "How they were broken off. It was not undeservedly, by an act
|
||
of absolute sovereignty and prerogative, but <i>because of
|
||
unbelief.</i>" It seems, then, it is possible for churches that
|
||
have long stood by faith to fall into such a state of infidelity as
|
||
may be their ruin. Their unbelief did not only provoke God to cut
|
||
them off, but they did by this cut themselves off; it was not only
|
||
the meritorious, but the formal cause of their separation. "Now,
|
||
thou art liable to the same infirmity and corruption that they fell
|
||
by." Further observe, They were <i>natural branches</i> (<scripRef id="Rom.xii-p19.7" osisRef="Bible:Rom.11.21" parsed="|Rom|11|21|0|0" passage="Ro 11:21"><i>v.</i> 21</scripRef>), not only interested in
|
||
Abraham's covenant, but descending from Abraham's loins, and so
|
||
born upon the premises, and thence had a kind of tenant-right: yet,
|
||
when they sunk into unbelief, God did not spare them. Prescription,
|
||
long usage, the faithfulness of their ancestors, would not secure
|
||
them. It was in vain to plead, though they insisted much upon it,
|
||
that they were Abraham's seed, <scripRef id="Rom.xii-p19.8" osisRef="Bible:Matt.3.9 Bible:John.8.33" parsed="|Matt|3|9|0|0;|John|8|33|0|0" passage="Mt 3:9,Joh 8:33">Matt. iii. 9; John viii. 33</scripRef>. It is
|
||
true they were the husbandmen to whom the vineyard was first let
|
||
out; but, when they forfeited it, it was justly taken from them,
|
||
<scripRef id="Rom.xii-p19.9" osisRef="Bible:Matt.21.41 Bible:Matt.21.43" parsed="|Matt|21|41|0|0;|Matt|21|43|0|0" passage="Mt 21:41,43">Matt. xxi. 41, 43</scripRef>. This
|
||
is called here <i>severity,</i> <scripRef id="Rom.xii-p19.10" osisRef="Bible:Rom.11.22" parsed="|Rom|11|22|0|0" passage="Ro 11:22"><i>v.</i> 22</scripRef>. God laid righteousness to the
|
||
line and judgment to the plummet, and dealt with them according to
|
||
their sins. Severity is a word that sounds harshly; and I do not
|
||
remember that it is any where else in scripture ascribed to God;
|
||
and it is here applied to the unchurching of the Jews. God is most
|
||
severe towards those that have been in profession nearest to him,
|
||
if they rebel against him, <scripRef id="Rom.xii-p19.11" osisRef="Bible:Amos.3.2" parsed="|Amos|3|2|0|0" passage="Am 3:2">Amos iii.
|
||
2</scripRef>. Patience and privileges abused turn to the greatest
|
||
wrath. Of all judgments, spiritual judgments are the sorest; for of
|
||
these he is here speaking, <scripRef id="Rom.xii-p19.12" osisRef="Bible:Rom.11.8" parsed="|Rom|11|8|0|0" passage="Ro 11:8"><i>v.</i>
|
||
8</scripRef>. (2.) "How thou standest, thou that art engrafted in."
|
||
He speaks to the Gentile churches in general, though perhaps
|
||
tacitly reflecting on some particular person, who might have
|
||
expressed some such pride and triumph in the Jews' rejection.
|
||
"Consider then," [1.] "By what means thou standest: <i>By
|
||
faith,</i> which is a depending grace, and fetches in strength from
|
||
heaven. Thou dost not stand in any strength of thy own, of which
|
||
thou mightest be confident: thou art no more than the free grace of
|
||
God makes thee, and his grace is his own, which he gives or
|
||
withholds at pleasure. That which ruined them was unbelief, and by
|
||
faith thou standest; therefore thou hast no faster hold than they
|
||
had, thou standest on no firmer foundation than they did." [2.] "On
|
||
what terms (<scripRef id="Rom.xii-p19.13" osisRef="Bible:Rom.11.22" parsed="|Rom|11|22|0|0" passage="Ro 11:22"><i>v.</i> 22</scripRef>):
|
||
<i>Towards thee goodness, if thou continue in his goodness,</i>
|
||
that is, continue in a dependence upon and compliance with the free
|
||
grace of God, the want of which it was that ruined the Jews—if
|
||
thou be careful to keep up thine interest in the divine favour, by
|
||
being continually careful to please God and fearful of offending
|
||
him." The sum of our duty, the condition of our happiness, is to
|
||
keep ourselves in the love of God. <i>Fear the Lord and his
|
||
goodness.</i> <scripRef id="Rom.xii-p19.14" osisRef="Bible:Hos.3.5" parsed="|Hos|3|5|0|0" passage="Ho 3:5">Hos. iii.
|
||
5</scripRef>.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Rom.xii-p20">III. Another thing that qualified this
|
||
doctrine of the Jews' rejection is that, though for the present
|
||
they are cast off, yet the rejection is not final; but, when the
|
||
fulness of time is come, they will be taken in again. They are not
|
||
cast off for ever, but mercy is remembered in the midst of wrath.
|
||
Let us observe,</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Rom.xii-p21">1. How this conversion of the Jews is here
|
||
described. (1.) It is said to be their fulness (<scripRef id="Rom.xii-p21.1" osisRef="Bible:Rom.11.12" parsed="|Rom|11|12|0|0" passage="Ro 11:12"><i>v.</i> 12</scripRef>), that is, the addition of them
|
||
to the church, the filling up again of that place which became
|
||
vacant by their rejection. This would be the enriching of the world
|
||
(that is, the church in the world) with a great deal of light and
|
||
strength and beauty. (2.) It is called the receiving of them. The
|
||
conversion of a soul is the receiving of that soul, so the
|
||
conversion of a nation. They shall be received into favour, into
|
||
the church, into the love of Christ, whose arms are stretched out
|
||
for the receiving of all those that will come to him. And this will
|
||
be as <i>life from the dead</i>—so strange and surprising, and yet
|
||
withal so welcome and acceptable. The conversion of the Jews will
|
||
bring great joy to the church. See <scripRef id="Rom.xii-p21.2" osisRef="Bible:Luke.15.32" parsed="|Luke|15|32|0|0" passage="Lu 15:32">Luke xv. 32</scripRef>, <i>He was dead, and is
|
||
alive;</i> and therefore <i>it was meet we should make merry and be
|
||
glad.</i> (3.) It is called the <i>grafting of them in again</i>
|
||
(<scripRef id="Rom.xii-p21.3" osisRef="Bible:Rom.11.23" parsed="|Rom|11|23|0|0" passage="Ro 11:23"><i>v.</i> 23</scripRef>), into the
|
||
church, from which they had been broken off. That which is grafted
|
||
in receives sap and virtue from the root; so does a soul that is
|
||
truly grafted into the church receive life, and strength, and grace
|
||
from Christ the quickening root. They shall be <i>grafted into
|
||
their own olive-tree</i> (<scripRef id="Rom.xii-p21.4" osisRef="Bible:Rom.11.24" parsed="|Rom|11|24|0|0" passage="Ro 11:24"><i>v.</i>
|
||
24</scripRef>); that is, into the church of which they had formerly
|
||
been the most eminent and conspicuous members, to retrieve those
|
||
privileges of visible church-membership which they had so long
|
||
enjoyed, but have now sinned away and forfeited by their unbelief.
|
||
(4.) It is called the <i>saving of all Israel,</i> <scripRef id="Rom.xii-p21.5" osisRef="Bible:Rom.11.26" parsed="|Rom|11|26|0|0" passage="Ro 11:26"><i>v.</i> 26</scripRef>. True conversion may
|
||
well be called salvation; it is salvation begun. See <scripRef id="Rom.xii-p21.6" osisRef="Bible:Acts.2.47" parsed="|Acts|2|47|0|0" passage="Ac 2:47">Acts ii. 47</scripRef>. The adding of them to the
|
||
church is the saving of them: <b><i>tous sozomenous,</i></b> in the
|
||
present tense, <i>are saved.</i> When conversion-work goes on,
|
||
salvation-work goes on.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Rom.xii-p22">2. What it is grounded upon, and what
|
||
reason we have to look for it.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Rom.xii-p23">(1.) Because of the holiness of the
|
||
first-fruits and the root, <scripRef id="Rom.xii-p23.1" osisRef="Bible:Rom.11.16" parsed="|Rom|11|16|0|0" passage="Ro 11:16"><i>v.</i>
|
||
16</scripRef>. Some by the first-fruits understand those of the
|
||
Jews that were already converted to the faith of Christ and
|
||
received into the church, who were as the first-fruits dedicated to
|
||
God, as earnests of a more plentiful and sanctified harvest. A good
|
||
beginning promises a good ending. Why may we not suppose that
|
||
others may be savingly wrought upon as well as those who are
|
||
already brought in? Others by the first-fruits understand the same
|
||
with the root, namely, the patriarchs, Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob,
|
||
from whom the Jews descended, and with whom, as the prime trustees,
|
||
the covenant was deposited: and so they were the root of the Jews,
|
||
not only as a people, but as a church. Now, if they were holy,
|
||
which is not meant so much of inherent as of federal holiness—if
|
||
they were in the church and in the covenant—then we have reason to
|
||
conclude that God hath a kindness for the <i>lump</i>—the body of
|
||
that people; and for the <i>branches</i>—the particular members of
|
||
it. The Jews are in a sense a holy nation (<scripRef id="Rom.xii-p23.2" osisRef="Bible:Exod.19.6" parsed="|Exod|19|6|0|0" passage="Ex 19:6">Exod. xix. 6</scripRef>), being descended from holy
|
||
parents. Now it cannot be imagined that such a holy nation should
|
||
be totally and finally cast off. This proves that the seed of
|
||
believers, as such, are within the pale of the visible church, and
|
||
within the verge of the covenant, till they do, by their unbelief,
|
||
throw themselves out; for, <i>if the root be holy, so are the
|
||
branches.</i> Though real qualifications are not propagated, yet
|
||
relative privileges are. Though a wise man does not beget a wise
|
||
man, yet a free man begets a free man. Though grace does not run in
|
||
the blood, yet external privileges do (till they are forfeited),
|
||
even to a thousand generations. Look how they will answer it
|
||
another day that cut off the entail, by turning the seed of the
|
||
faithful out of the church, and so not allowing the blessing of
|
||
Abraham to come upon the Gentiles. The Jewish branches are reckoned
|
||
holy, because the root was so. This is expressed more plainly
|
||
(<scripRef id="Rom.xii-p23.3" osisRef="Bible:Rom.11.28" parsed="|Rom|11|28|0|0" passage="Ro 11:28"><i>v.</i> 28</scripRef>): <i>They are
|
||
beloved for the fathers' sakes.</i> In this love to the fathers the
|
||
first foundation of their church-state was laid (<scripRef id="Rom.xii-p23.4" osisRef="Bible:Deut.4.37" parsed="|Deut|4|37|0|0" passage="De 4:37">Deut. iv. 37</scripRef>): <i>Because he loved they
|
||
fathers, therefore he chose their seed after them.</i> And the same
|
||
love would revive their privileges, for still the ancient
|
||
loving-kindness is remembered; they are <i>beloved for the fathers'
|
||
sakes.</i> It is God's usual method of grace. Kindness to the
|
||
children for the father's sake is therefore called the <i>kindness
|
||
of God,</i> <scripRef id="Rom.xii-p23.5" osisRef="Bible:2Sam.9.3 Bible:2Sam.9.7" parsed="|2Sam|9|3|0|0;|2Sam|9|7|0|0" passage="2Sa 9:3,7">2 Sam. ix. 3,
|
||
7</scripRef>. Though, as concerning the gospel (namely, in the
|
||
present dispensation of it), they are enemies to it <i>for your
|
||
sakes,</i> that is, for the sake of the Gentiles, against whom they
|
||
have such an antipathy; yet, when God's time shall come, this will
|
||
wear off, and God's love to their fathers will be remembered. See a
|
||
promise that points at this, <scripRef id="Rom.xii-p23.6" osisRef="Bible:Lev.26.42" parsed="|Lev|26|42|0|0" passage="Le 26:42">Lev.
|
||
xxvi. 42</scripRef>. The iniquity of the fathers is visited but to
|
||
the third and fourth generation; but there is mercy kept for
|
||
thousands. Many fare the better for the sake of their godly
|
||
ancestors. It is upon this account that the church is called their
|
||
own <i>olive-tree.</i> Long it had been their own peculiar, which
|
||
is some encouragement to us to hope that there may be room for them
|
||
in it again, for old acquaintance-sake. That which hath been may be
|
||
again. Though particular persons and generations wear off in
|
||
unbelief, yet there having been a national church-membership,
|
||
though for the present suspended, we may expect that it will be
|
||
revived.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Rom.xii-p24">(2.) Because of the power of God (<scripRef id="Rom.xii-p24.1" osisRef="Bible:Rom.11.23" parsed="|Rom|11|23|0|0" passage="Ro 11:23"><i>v.</i> 23</scripRef>): <i>God is able to
|
||
graft them in again.</i> The conversion of souls is a work of
|
||
almighty power; and when they seem most hardened, and blinded, and
|
||
obstinate, our comfort is that God is able to work a change, able
|
||
to graft those in that have been long cast out and withered. When
|
||
the house is kept by the strong man armed, with all his force, yet
|
||
God is stronger than he, and is able to dispossess him. The
|
||
condition of their restoration is faith: <i>If they abide not still
|
||
in unbelief.</i> So that nothing is to be done but to remove that
|
||
unbelief that is the great obstacle; and God is able to take that
|
||
away, though nothing less than an almighty power will do it, the
|
||
same power that raised up Christ from the dead, <scripRef id="Rom.xii-p24.2" osisRef="Bible:Eph.1.19 Bible:Eph.1.29" parsed="|Eph|1|19|0|0;|Eph|1|29|0|0" passage="Eph 1:19,29">Eph. i. 19, 29</scripRef>. Otherwise, can these dry
|
||
bones live?</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Rom.xii-p25">(3.) Because of the grace of God manifested
|
||
to the Gentiles. Those that have themselves experienced the grace
|
||
of God, preventing, distinguishing grace, may thence take
|
||
encouragement to hope well concerning others. This is his argument
|
||
(<scripRef id="Rom.xii-p25.1" osisRef="Bible:Rom.11.24" parsed="|Rom|11|24|0|0" passage="Ro 11:24"><i>v.</i> 24</scripRef>): "If thou
|
||
wast grafted into a good olive, that was wild by nature, much more
|
||
shall these that were the natural branches, and may therefore be
|
||
presumed somewhat nearer to the divine acceptance." This is a
|
||
suggestion very proper to check the insolence of those Gentile
|
||
Christians that looked with disdain and triumph upon the condition
|
||
of the rejected Jews, and trampled upon them; as if he had said,
|
||
"Their condition, bad as it is, is not so bad as yours was before
|
||
your conversion; and therefore why may it not be made as good as
|
||
yours is?" This is his argument (<scripRef id="Rom.xii-p25.2" osisRef="Bible:Rom.11.30-Rom.11.31" parsed="|Rom|11|30|11|31" passage="Ro 11:30,31"><i>v.</i> 30, 31</scripRef>): <i>As you in times past
|
||
have not,</i> &c. It is good for those that have found mercy
|
||
with God to be often thinking what they were in time past, and how
|
||
they obtained that mercy. This would help to soften our censures of
|
||
those that still continue in unbelief, and quicken our prayers for
|
||
them. He argues further from the occasion of the Gentiles' call,
|
||
that is, the unbelief of the Jews; thence it took rise: "<i>You
|
||
have obtained mercy through their unbelief;</i> much more shall
|
||
they obtain mercy through your mercy. If the putting out of their
|
||
candle was the lighting of yours, by that power of God which brings
|
||
good out of evil, much more shall the continued light of your
|
||
candle, when God's time shall come, be a means of lighting theirs
|
||
again." "<i>That through your mercy they might obtain mercy,</i>
|
||
that is, that they may be beholden to you, as you have been to
|
||
them." He takes it for granted that the believing Gentiles would do
|
||
their utmost endeavour to work upon the Jews—that, when God had
|
||
persuaded Japhet, Japhet would be labouring to persuade Shem. True
|
||
grace hates monopolies. Those that have found mercy themselves
|
||
should endeavour that through their mercy others also may obtain
|
||
mercy.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Rom.xii-p26">(4.) Because of the promises and prophecies
|
||
of the Old Testament, which point at this. He quotes a very
|
||
remarkable one, <scripRef id="Rom.xii-p26.1" osisRef="Bible:Rom.11.26 Bible:Isa.59.20-Isa.59.21" parsed="|Rom|11|26|0|0;|Isa|59|20|59|21" passage="Ro 11:26,Isa 59:20,21"><i>v.</i>
|
||
26, from Isa. lix. 20, 21</scripRef>. Where we may observe, [1.]
|
||
The coming of Christ promised: <i>There shall come out of Zion the
|
||
deliverer.</i> Jesus Christ is the great deliverer, which supposes
|
||
mankind in a state of misery and danger. In Isaiah it is, <i>the
|
||
Redeemer shall come to Zion.</i> There he is called the Redeemer;
|
||
here the deliverer; he delivers in a way of redemption, by a price.
|
||
There he is said to come to Zion, because when the prophet
|
||
prophesied he was yet to come into the world, and Zion was his
|
||
first head-quarters. Thither he came, there he took up his
|
||
residence: but, when the apostle wrote this, he had come, he had
|
||
been in Zion; and he is speaking of the fruits of his appearing,
|
||
which shall come <i>out of Zion;</i> thence, as from the spring,
|
||
issued forth those streams of living water which in the everlasting
|
||
gospel watered the nations. <i>Out of Zion went forth the law,</i>
|
||
<scripRef id="Rom.xii-p26.2" osisRef="Bible:Isa.2.3" parsed="|Isa|2|3|0|0" passage="Isa 2:3">Isa. ii. 3</scripRef>. Compare
|
||
<scripRef id="Rom.xii-p26.3" osisRef="Bible:Luke.24.47" parsed="|Luke|24|47|0|0" passage="Lu 24:47">Luke xxiv. 47</scripRef>. [2.] The end
|
||
and purpose of this coming: <i>He shall turn away ungodliness from
|
||
Jacob.</i> Christ's errand into the world was to turn away
|
||
ungodliness, to turn away the guilt by the purchase of pardoning
|
||
mercy, and to turn away the power by the pouring out of renewing
|
||
grace, to save his people from their sins (<scripRef id="Rom.xii-p26.4" osisRef="Bible:Matt.1.21" parsed="|Matt|1|21|0|0" passage="Mt 1:21">Matt. i. 21</scripRef>), to separate between us and our
|
||
sins, that iniquity might not be our ruin, and that it might not be
|
||
our ruler. Especially to turn it away from Jacob, which is that for
|
||
the sake of which he quotes the text, as a proof of the great
|
||
kindness God intended for the seed of Jacob. What greater kindness
|
||
could he do them than to turn away ungodliness from them, to take
|
||
away that which comes between them and all happiness, take away
|
||
sin, and then make way for all good? This is the blessing that
|
||
Christ was sent to bestow upon the world, and to tender it to the
|
||
Jews in the first place (<scripRef id="Rom.xii-p26.5" osisRef="Bible:Acts.3.26" parsed="|Acts|3|26|0|0" passage="Ac 3:26">Acts iii.
|
||
26</scripRef>), to turn people from their iniquities. In Isaiah it
|
||
is, <i>The Redeemer shall come to Zion, and unto those that turn
|
||
from transgression in Jacob,</i> which shown who in Zion were to
|
||
have a share in and to reap benefit by the deliverance promised,
|
||
those and those only that leave their sins and turn to God; to them
|
||
Christ comes as a Redeemer, but as an avenger to those that persist
|
||
in impenitence. See <scripRef id="Rom.xii-p26.6" osisRef="Bible:Deut.30.2-Deut.30.3" parsed="|Deut|30|2|30|3" passage="De 30:2,3">Deut. xxx. 2,
|
||
3</scripRef>. Those that turn from sin will be owned as the true
|
||
citizens of Zion (<scripRef id="Rom.xii-p26.7" osisRef="Bible:Eph.2.19" parsed="|Eph|2|19|0|0" passage="Eph 2:19">Eph. ii.
|
||
19</scripRef>), the right Jacob, <scripRef id="Rom.xii-p26.8" osisRef="Bible:Ps.24.4 Bible:Ps.24.6" parsed="|Ps|24|4|0|0;|Ps|24|6|0|0" passage="Ps 24:4,6">Ps.
|
||
xxiv. 4, 6</scripRef>. Putting both these readings together, we
|
||
learn that none have an interest in Christ but those that turn from
|
||
their sins, nor can any turn from their sins but by the strength of
|
||
the grace of Christ.—<i>For this is my covenant with
|
||
them</i>—this, that the deliverer shall come to them—this, that
|
||
my Spirit shall not depart from them, as it follows, <scripRef id="Rom.xii-p26.9" osisRef="Bible:Isa.59.21" parsed="|Isa|59|21|0|0" passage="Isa 59:21">Isa. lix. 21</scripRef>. God's gracious
|
||
intentions concerning Israel were made the matter of a covenant,
|
||
which the God that cannot lie could not but be true and faithful
|
||
to. They were the <i>children of the covenant,</i> <scripRef id="Rom.xii-p26.10" osisRef="Bible:Acts.3.25" parsed="|Acts|3|25|0|0" passage="Ac 3:25">Acts iii. 25</scripRef>. The apostle adds,
|
||
<i>When I shall take away their sins,</i> which some think refers
|
||
to <scripRef id="Rom.xii-p26.11" osisRef="Bible:Isa.27.9" parsed="|Isa|27|9|0|0" passage="Isa 27:9">Isa. xxvii. 9</scripRef>, or only
|
||
to the foregoing words, to <i>turn away ungodliness.</i> Pardon of
|
||
sin is laid as the foundation of all the blessings of the new
|
||
covenant (<scripRef id="Rom.xii-p26.12" osisRef="Bible:Heb.8.12" parsed="|Heb|8|12|0|0" passage="Heb 8:12">Heb. viii. 12</scripRef>):
|
||
<i>For I will be merciful.</i> Now from all this he infers that
|
||
certainly God had great mercy in store for that people, something
|
||
answerable to the extent of these rich promises: and he proves his
|
||
inference (<scripRef id="Rom.xii-p26.13" osisRef="Bible:Rom.11.29" parsed="|Rom|11|29|0|0" passage="Ro 11:29"><i>v.</i> 29</scripRef>) by
|
||
this truth: <i>For the gifts and callings of God are without
|
||
repentance.</i> Repentance is sometimes taken for a change of mind,
|
||
and so God never repents, for he is in one mind and who can turn
|
||
him? Sometimes for a change of way, and that is here understood,
|
||
intimating the constancy and unchangeableness of that love of God
|
||
which is founded in election. Those gifts and callings are
|
||
immutable; whom he so loves, he loves to the end. We find God
|
||
repenting that he had given man a being (<scripRef id="Rom.xii-p26.14" osisRef="Bible:Gen.6.6" parsed="|Gen|6|6|0|0" passage="Ge 6:6">Gen. vi. 6</scripRef>, <i>It repented the Lord that he had
|
||
made man),</i> and repenting that he had given a man honour and
|
||
power (<scripRef id="Rom.xii-p26.15" osisRef="Bible:1Sam.15.11" parsed="|1Sam|15|11|0|0" passage="1Sa 15:11">1 Sam. xv. 11</scripRef>,
|
||
<i>It repenteth me that I have set up Saul to be king</i>); but we
|
||
never find God repenting that he had given a man grace, or
|
||
effectually called him; those gifts and callings are without
|
||
repentance.</p>
|
||
</div><scripCom id="Rom.xii-p26.16" osisRef="Bible:Rom.11.33-Rom.11.36" parsed="|Rom|11|33|11|36" passage="Ro 11:33-36" type="Commentary"/><div class="Commentary" id="Bible:Rom.11.33-Rom.11.36">
|
||
<h4 id="Rom.xii-p26.17">The Divine Sovereignty. (<span class="smallcaps" id="Rom.xii-p26.18">a.
|
||
d.</span> 58.)</h4>
|
||
<p class="passage" id="Rom.xii-p27">33 O the depth of the riches both of the wisdom
|
||
and knowledge of God! how unsearchable <i>are</i> his judgments,
|
||
and his ways past finding out! 34 For who hath known the
|
||
mind of the Lord? or who hath been his counsellor? 35 Or who
|
||
hath first given to him, and it shall be recompensed unto him
|
||
again? 36 For of him, and through him, and to him,
|
||
<i>are</i> all things: to whom <i>be</i> glory for ever. Amen.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Rom.xii-p28">The apostle having insisted so largely,
|
||
through the greatest part of this chapter, upon reconciling the
|
||
rejection of the Jews with the divine goodness, he concludes here
|
||
with the acknowledgment and admiration of the divine wisdom and
|
||
sovereignty in all this. Here the apostle does with great affection
|
||
and awe adore,</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Rom.xii-p29">I. The secrecy of the divine counsels: <i>O
|
||
the depth!</i> in these proceedings towards the Jews and Gentiles;
|
||
or, in general, the whole mystery of the gospel, which we cannot
|
||
fully comprehend.—<i>The riches of the wisdom and knowledge of
|
||
God,</i> the abundant instances of his wisdom and knowledge in
|
||
contriving and carrying on the work of our redemption by Christ, a
|
||
depth which the angels pry into, <scripRef id="Rom.xii-p29.1" osisRef="Bible:1Pet.1.12" parsed="|1Pet|1|12|0|0" passage="1Pe 1:12">1
|
||
Pet. i. 12</scripRef>. Much more may it puzzle any human
|
||
understanding to give an account of the methods, and reasons, and
|
||
designs, and compass of it. Paul was as well acquainted with the
|
||
mysteries of the kingdom of God as ever any mere man was; and yet
|
||
he confesses himself at a loss in the contemplation, and,
|
||
despairing to find the bottom, he humbly sits down at the brink,
|
||
and adores the depth. Those that know most in this state of
|
||
imperfection cannot but be most sensible of their own weakness and
|
||
short-sightedness, and that after all their researches, and all
|
||
their attainments in those researches, while they are here they
|
||
cannot order their speech by reason of darkness. Praise is silent
|
||
to thee, <scripRef id="Rom.xii-p29.2" osisRef="Bible:Ps.65.1" parsed="|Ps|65|1|0|0" passage="Ps 65:1">Ps. lxv. 1</scripRef>.—
|
||
<i>The depth of the riches.</i> Men's riches of all kinds are
|
||
shallow, you may soon see the bottom; but God's riches are deep
|
||
(<scripRef id="Rom.xii-p29.3" osisRef="Bible:Ps.36.6" parsed="|Ps|36|6|0|0" passage="Ps 36:6">Ps. xxxvi. 6</scripRef>): <i>Thy
|
||
judgments are a great deep.</i> There is not only depth in the
|
||
divine counsels, but riches too, which denotes an abundance of that
|
||
which is precious and valuable, so complete are the dimensions of
|
||
the divine counsels; they have not only depth and height, but
|
||
<i>breadth and length</i> (<scripRef id="Rom.xii-p29.4" osisRef="Bible:Eph.3.18" parsed="|Eph|3|18|0|0" passage="Eph 3:18">Eph. iii.
|
||
18</scripRef>), and that passing knowledge, <scripRef id="Rom.xii-p29.5" osisRef="Bible:Rom.11.19" parsed="|Rom|11|19|0|0" passage="Ro 11:19"><i>v.</i> 19</scripRef>.—<i>Riches of the wisdom and
|
||
knowledge of God.</i> His seeing all things by one clear, and
|
||
certain, and infallible view—all things that are, or ever were, or
|
||
ever shall be,—that all is naked and open before him: there is his
|
||
knowledge. His ruling and ordering all things, directing and
|
||
disposing them to his own glory, and bringing about his own
|
||
purposes and counsels in all; this is his <i>wisdom.</i> And the
|
||
vast extent of both these is such a depth as is past our fathoming,
|
||
and we may soon lose ourselves in the contemplation of them. Such
|
||
<i>knowledge is too wonderful for me,</i> <scripRef id="Rom.xii-p29.6" osisRef="Bible:Ps.139.6" parsed="|Ps|139|6|0|0" passage="Ps 139:6">Ps. cxxxix. 6</scripRef>. Compare <scripRef id="Rom.xii-p29.7" osisRef="Bible:Rom.11.17-Rom.11.18" parsed="|Rom|11|17|11|18" passage="Ro 11:17,18"><i>v.</i> 17, 18</scripRef>.—<i>How unsearchable
|
||
are his judgments!</i> that is, his counsels and purposes: and his
|
||
<i>ways,</i> that is, the execution of these counsels and purposes.
|
||
We know not what he designs. When the wheels are set in motion, and
|
||
Providence has begun to work, yet we know not what he has in view;
|
||
it is <i>past finding out.</i> This does not only overturn all our
|
||
positive conclusions about the divine counsels, but it also checks
|
||
all our curious enquiries. Secret things belong not to us,
|
||
<scripRef id="Rom.xii-p29.8" osisRef="Bible:Deut.29.29" parsed="|Deut|29|29|0|0" passage="De 29:29">Deut. xxix. 29</scripRef>. God's way
|
||
is in the sea, <scripRef id="Rom.xii-p29.9" osisRef="Bible:Ps.77.19" parsed="|Ps|77|19|0|0" passage="Ps 77:19">Ps. lxxvii.
|
||
19</scripRef>. Compare <scripRef id="Rom.xii-p29.10" osisRef="Bible:Job.23.8-Job.23.9 Bible:Ps.97.2" parsed="|Job|23|8|23|9;|Ps|97|2|0|0" passage="Job 23:8,9,Ps 97:2">Job
|
||
xxiii. 8, 9; Ps. xcvii. 2</scripRef>. What he does we know not now,
|
||
<scripRef id="Rom.xii-p29.11" osisRef="Bible:John.13.7" parsed="|John|13|7|0|0" passage="Joh 13:7">John xiii. 7</scripRef>. We cannot
|
||
give a reason of God's proceedings, nor by searching find out God.
|
||
See <scripRef id="Rom.xii-p29.12" osisRef="Bible:Job.5.9 Bible:Job.9.10" parsed="|Job|5|9|0|0;|Job|9|10|0|0" passage="Job 5:9,9:10">Job v. 9; ix. 10</scripRef>.
|
||
The judgments of his mouth, and the way of our duty, blessed be
|
||
God, are plain and easy, it is a high-way; but the judgments of his
|
||
hands, and the ways of his providence, are dark and mysterious,
|
||
which therefore we must not pry into, but silently adore and
|
||
acquiesce in. The apostle speaks this especially with reference to
|
||
that strange turn, the casting off of the Jews and the
|
||
entertainment of the Gentiles, with a purpose to take in the Jews
|
||
again in due time; these were strange proceedings, the choosing of
|
||
some, the refusing of others, and neither according to the
|
||
probabilities of human conjecture. Even so, Father, because it
|
||
seemed good in thing eyes. These are methods unaccountable,
|
||
concerning which we must say, <i>O the depth!</i>—<i>Past finding
|
||
out,</i> <b><i>anexichniastoi</i></b>—<i>cannot be traced.</i> God
|
||
leaves no prints nor footsteps behind him, does not make a path to
|
||
shine after him; but his paths of providence are new every morning.
|
||
He does not go the same way so often as to make a track of it.
|
||
<i>How little a portion is heard of him!</i> <scripRef id="Rom.xii-p29.13" osisRef="Bible:Job.26.14" parsed="|Job|26|14|0|0" passage="Job 26:14">Job xxvi. 14</scripRef>. It follows (<scripRef id="Rom.xii-p29.14" osisRef="Bible:Rom.11.34" parsed="|Rom|11|34|0|0" passage="Ro 11:34"><i>v.</i> 34</scripRef>), <i>For who hath known the mind
|
||
of the Lord?</i> Is there any creature made of his cabinet-council,
|
||
or laid, as Christ was, in the bosom of the Father? Is there any to
|
||
whom he has imparted his counsels, or that is able, upon the view
|
||
of his providences, to know the way that he takes? There is so vast
|
||
a distance and disproportion between God and man, between the
|
||
Creator and the creature, as for ever excludes the thought of such
|
||
an intimacy and familiarity. The apostle makes the same challenge
|
||
(<scripRef id="Rom.xii-p29.15" osisRef="Bible:1Cor.2.16" parsed="|1Cor|2|16|0|0" passage="1Co 2:16">1 Cor. ii. 16</scripRef>): <i>For who
|
||
hath known the mind of the Lord?</i> And yet there he adds, <i>But
|
||
we have the mind of Christ,</i> which intimates that through Christ
|
||
true believers, who have his Spirit, know so much of the mind of
|
||
God as is necessary to their happiness. He that knew the mind of
|
||
the Lord has declared him, <scripRef id="Rom.xii-p29.16" osisRef="Bible:John.1.18" parsed="|John|1|18|0|0" passage="Joh 1:18">John i.
|
||
18</scripRef>. And so, though we know not the mind of the Lord,
|
||
yet, if we have the mind of Christ, we have enough. <i>The secret
|
||
of the Lord is with those that fear him,</i> <scripRef id="Rom.xii-p29.17" osisRef="Bible:Ps.25.14" parsed="|Ps|25|14|0|0" passage="Ps 25:14">Ps. xxv. 14</scripRef>. <i>Shall I hide from Abraham the
|
||
thing which I do?</i> See <scripRef id="Rom.xii-p29.18" osisRef="Bible:John.15.15" parsed="|John|15|15|0|0" passage="Joh 15:15">John xv.
|
||
15</scripRef>.—<i>Or who has been his counsellor?</i> He needs no
|
||
counsellor, for he is infinitely wise; nor is any creature capable
|
||
of being his counsellor; this would be like lighting a candle to
|
||
the sun. This seems to refer to that scripture (<scripRef id="Rom.xii-p29.19" osisRef="Bible:Isa.40.13-Isa.40.14" parsed="|Isa|40|13|40|14" passage="Isa 40:13,14">Isa. xl. 13, 14</scripRef>), <i>Who hath directed
|
||
the Spirit of the Lord, or, being his counsellor, hath taught him?
|
||
With whom took he counsel?</i> &c. It is the substance of God's
|
||
challenge to Job concerning the work of creation (<scripRef id="Rom.xii-p29.20" osisRef="Bible:Job.38.1-Job.38.41" parsed="|Job|38|1|38|41" passage="Job 38:1-41">Job xxxviii.</scripRef>), and is applicable
|
||
to all the methods of his providence. It is nonsense for any man to
|
||
prescribe to God, or to teach him how to govern the world.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Rom.xii-p30">II. The sovereignty of the divine counsels.
|
||
In all these things God acts as a free agent, does what he will,
|
||
because he will, and gives not account of any of his matters
|
||
(<scripRef id="Rom.xii-p30.1" osisRef="Bible:Job.23.13 Bible:Job.33.13" parsed="|Job|23|13|0|0;|Job|33|13|0|0" passage="Job 23:13,33:13">Job xxiii. 13; xxxiii.
|
||
13</scripRef>), and yet there is no unrighteousness with him. To
|
||
clear which,</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Rom.xii-p31">1. He challenges any to prove God a debtor
|
||
to him (<scripRef id="Rom.xii-p31.1" osisRef="Bible:Rom.11.35" parsed="|Rom|11|35|0|0" passage="Ro 11:35"><i>v.</i> 35</scripRef>):
|
||
<i>Who hath first given to him?</i> Who is there of all the
|
||
creatures that can prove God is beholden to him? Whatever we do for
|
||
him, or devote to him, it must be with that acknowledgment, which
|
||
is for ever a bar to such demands (<scripRef id="Rom.xii-p31.2" osisRef="Bible:1Chr.29.14" parsed="|1Chr|29|14|0|0" passage="1Ch 29:14">1
|
||
Chron. xxix. 14</scripRef>): <i>Of thine own we have given
|
||
thee.</i> All the duties we can perform are not requitals, but
|
||
rather restitutions. If any can prove that God is his debtor, the
|
||
apostle here stands bound for the payment, and proclaims, in God's
|
||
name, that payment is ready: <i>It shall be recompensed to him
|
||
again.</i> It is certain God will let nobody lose by him; but never
|
||
any one yet durst make a demand of this kind, or attempt to prove
|
||
it. This is here suggested, (1.) To silence the clamours of the
|
||
Jews. When God took away their visible church-privileges from them,
|
||
he did but take his own: and may he not do what he will with his
|
||
own—give or withhold his grace where and when he pleases? (2.) To
|
||
silence the insultings of the Gentiles. When God sent the gospel
|
||
among them, and gave so many of them grace and wisdom to accept of
|
||
it, it was not because he owed them so much favour, or that they
|
||
could challenge it as a debt, but of his own good pleasure.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Rom.xii-p32">2. He resolves all into the sovereignty of
|
||
God (<scripRef id="Rom.xii-p32.1" osisRef="Bible:Rom.11.36" parsed="|Rom|11|36|0|0" passage="Ro 11:36"><i>v.</i> 36</scripRef>): <i>For
|
||
of him, and through him, and to him, are all things,</i> that is,
|
||
God is all in all. All things in heaven and earth (especially those
|
||
things which relate to our salvation, the things which belong to
|
||
our peace) are of him by way of creation, through him by way of
|
||
providential influence, that they may be to him in their final
|
||
tendency and result. Of God as the spring and fountain of all,
|
||
through Christ, God-man, as the conveyance, to God as the ultimate
|
||
end. These three include, in general, all God's causal relations to
|
||
his creatures: of him as the first efficient cause, through him as
|
||
the supreme directing cause, to him as the ultimate final cause;
|
||
for the Lord hath made all for himself, <scripRef id="Rom.xii-p32.2" osisRef="Bible:Rev.4.11" parsed="|Rev|4|11|0|0" passage="Re 4:11">Rev. iv. 11</scripRef>. If all be of him and through him,
|
||
there is all the reason in the world that all should be to him and
|
||
for him. It is a necessary circulation; if the rivers received
|
||
their waters from the sea, they return them to the sea again,
|
||
<scripRef id="Rom.xii-p32.3" osisRef="Bible:Eccl.1.7" parsed="|Eccl|1|7|0|0" passage="Ec 1:7">Eccl. i. 7</scripRef>. To do all to the
|
||
glory of God is to make a virtue of necessity; for all shall in the
|
||
end be to him, whether we will or no. And so he concludes with a
|
||
short doxology: <i>To whom be glory for ever, Amen.</i> God's
|
||
universal agency as the first cause, the sovereign ruler, and the
|
||
last end, ought to be the matter of our adoration. Thus all his
|
||
works do praise him objectively; but his saints do bless him
|
||
actively; they hand that praise to him which all the creatures do
|
||
minister matter for, <scripRef id="Rom.xii-p32.4" osisRef="Bible:Ps.145.10" parsed="|Ps|145|10|0|0" passage="Ps 145:10">Ps. cxlv.
|
||
10</scripRef>. Paul had been discoursing at large of the counsels
|
||
of God concerning man, sifting the point with a great deal of
|
||
accuracy; but, after all, he concludes with the acknowledgment of
|
||
the divine sovereignty, as that into which all these things must be
|
||
ultimately resolved, and in which alone the mind can safely and
|
||
sweetly rest. This is, if not the scholastic way, yet the Christian
|
||
way, of disputation. Whatever are the premises, let god's glory be
|
||
the conclusion; especially when we come to talk of the divine
|
||
counsels and actings, it is best for us to turn our arguments into
|
||
awful and serious adorations. The glorified saints, that see
|
||
furthest into these mysteries, never dispute, but praise to
|
||
eternity.</p>
|
||
</div></div2> |