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Text -- Romans 11:20-36 (NET)
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Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Robertson -> Rom 11:20; Rom 11:20; Rom 11:21; Rom 11:21; Rom 11:22; Rom 11:22; Rom 11:22; Rom 11:22; Rom 11:22; Rom 11:23; Rom 11:23; Rom 11:24; Rom 11:24; Rom 11:25; Rom 11:25; Rom 11:25; Rom 11:25; Rom 11:25; Rom 11:25; Rom 11:26; Rom 11:26; Rom 11:26; Rom 11:27; Rom 11:27; Rom 11:28; Rom 11:28; Rom 11:28; Rom 11:28; Rom 11:29; Rom 11:30; Rom 11:30; Rom 11:30; Rom 11:31; Rom 11:32; Rom 11:32; Rom 11:32; Rom 11:33; Rom 11:33; Rom 11:33; Rom 11:34; Rom 11:34; Rom 11:34; Rom 11:35; Rom 11:35; Rom 11:36; Rom 11:36; Rom 11:36; Rom 11:36; Rom 11:36
Robertson: Rom 11:20 - -- Well ( kalōs ).
Perhaps ironical, though Paul may simply admit the statement (cf. Mar 12:32) and show the Gentile his real situation.
Well (
Perhaps ironical, though Paul may simply admit the statement (cf. Mar 12:32) and show the Gentile his real situation.
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Robertson: Rom 11:20 - -- By unbelief ( tēi apistiāi )
- by faith (pistei ). Instrumental case with both contrasted words (by unbelief, by belief).
By unbelief (
- by faith (
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Robertson: Rom 11:21 - -- Be not highminded ( mē hupsēla phronei ).
"Stop thinking high (proud) thoughts."
Be not highminded (
"Stop thinking high (proud) thoughts."
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Robertson: Rom 11:21 - -- Of God spared not ( ei gar ho theos ouk epheisato ).
It is not ei mē (unless), but the ouk negatives the verb epheisato (first aorist middle ...
Of God spared not (
It is not
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Robertson: Rom 11:22 - -- The goodness and the severity of God ( chrēstotēta kai apotomian theou ).
See Rom 2:2 for chrēstotēs , kindness of God. Apotomia (here alon...
The goodness and the severity of God (
See Rom 2:2 for
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Robertson: Rom 11:22 - -- If thou continue ( ean epimenēis ).
Third class condition, ean and present active subjunctive.
If thou continue (
Third class condition,
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Robertson: Rom 11:22 - -- Otherwise ( epei ).
Ellipse after epei , "since if thou dost not continue."
Otherwise (
Ellipse after
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Robertson: Rom 11:22 - -- Shalt be cut off ( ekkopēsēi ).
Second future passive of ekkoptō , to cut out.
Shalt be cut off (
Second future passive of
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Robertson: Rom 11:23 - -- If they continue not in their unbelief ( ean mē epimenōsi tēi apistiāi ).
Third class condition with the same verb used in Rom 11:22 of the G...
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Robertson: Rom 11:23 - -- For God is able ( dunatos gar estin ho theos ).
See this use of dunatos estin in Rom 4:21 rather than dunatai . This is the crux of the whole ma...
For God is able (
See this use of
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Robertson: Rom 11:24 - -- Contrary to nature ( para phusin ).
This is the gist of the argument, the power of God to do what is contrary to natural processes. He put the wild o...
Contrary to nature (
This is the gist of the argument, the power of God to do what is contrary to natural processes. He put the wild olive (Gentile) into the good olive tree (the spiritual Israel) and made the wild olive (contrary to nature) become the good olive (
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Robertson: Rom 11:24 - -- Into their own olive tree ( tēi idiāi elaiāi ).
Dative case. Another argument a fortiori , "how much more"(pollōi mallon ). God can graft ...
Into their own olive tree (
Dative case. Another argument a fortiori , "how much more"(
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Robertson: Rom 11:25 - -- This mystery ( to mustērion touto ).
Not in the pagan sense of an esoteric doctrine for the initiated (from mueō , to blink, to wink), unknown se...
This mystery (
Not in the pagan sense of an esoteric doctrine for the initiated (from
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Robertson: Rom 11:25 - -- Wise in your own conceits ( en heautois phronimoi ).
"Wise in yourselves."Some MSS. read par' heautois (by yourselves). Negative purpose here (hina...
Wise in your own conceits (
"Wise in yourselves."Some MSS. read
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Robertson: Rom 11:25 - -- A hardening ( pōrōsis ).
Late word from pōroō (Rom 11:7). Occurs in Hippocrates as a medical term, only here in N.T. save Mar 3:5; Eph 4:18...
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Robertson: Rom 11:25 - -- In part ( apo merous ).
Goes with the verb gegonen (has happened in part). For apo merous , see note on 2Co 1:14; 2Co 2:5; Rom 15:24; for ana meros...
In part (
Goes with the verb
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Robertson: Rom 11:25 - -- Until the fulness of the Gentiles be come in ( achri hou to plērōma tōn ethnōn eiselthēi ).
Temporal clause with achri hou (until which t...
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Robertson: Rom 11:25 - -- For fulness of the Gentiles ( to plērōma tōn ethnōn )
seeRom 11:12, the complement of the Gentiles.
For fulness of the Gentiles (
seeRom 11:12, the complement of the Gentiles.
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Robertson: Rom 11:26 - -- And so ( kai houtōs ).
By the complement of the Gentiles stirring up the complement of the Jews (Rom 11:11.).
And so (
By the complement of the Gentiles stirring up the complement of the Jews (Rom 11:11.).
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Robertson: Rom 11:26 - -- All Israel ( pās Israēl ).
What does Paul mean? The immediate context (use of pās in contrast with apo merous , plērōma here in contra...
All Israel (
What does Paul mean? The immediate context (use of
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Robertson: Rom 11:26 - -- The Deliverer ( ho ruomenos ).
Present middle articular participle of ruomai , to rescue, to deliver. See note on 1Th 1:10; 2Co 1:10. The Hebrew Goe...
The Deliverer (
Present middle articular participle of
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Robertson: Rom 11:27 - -- My covenant ( hē par' emou diathēkē ).
"The from me covenant,""my side of the covenant I have made with them"(Sanday and Headlam). Cf. Jer 31:3...
My covenant (
"The from me covenant,""my side of the covenant I have made with them"(Sanday and Headlam). Cf. Jer 31:31. Not a political deliverance, but a religious and ethical one.
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Robertson: Rom 11:27 - -- When I shall take away ( hotan aphelōmai ).
Second aorist middle subjunctive of aphaireō , old and common verb, to take away.
When I shall take away (
Second aorist middle subjunctive of
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Robertson: Rom 11:28 - -- As touching the gospel ( kata to euaggelion ).
"According to (kata with the accusative) the gospel"as Paul has shown in Rom 11:11-24, the gospel or...
As touching the gospel (
"According to (
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Robertson: Rom 11:28 - -- Enemies ( echthroi ).
Treated as enemies (of God), in passive sense, because of their rejection of Christ (Rom 11:10), just as agapētoi (beloved)...
Enemies (
Treated as enemies (of God), in passive sense, because of their rejection of Christ (Rom 11:10), just as
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Robertson: Rom 11:28 - -- As touching the election ( kata tēn eklogēn ).
"According to the election"(the principle of election, not as in Rom 11:5. the elect or abstract f...
As touching the election (
"According to the election"(the principle of election, not as in Rom 11:5. the elect or abstract for concrete).
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Robertson: Rom 11:29 - -- Without repentance ( ametamelēta ).
See note on 2Co 7:10 for this word (a privative and metamelomai , to be sorry afterwards). It is not ametanoe...
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Robertson: Rom 11:30 - -- Were disobedient ( epeithēsate ).
First aorist active indicative of apeitheō , to disbelieve and then to disobey. "Ye once upon a time disobeyed ...
Were disobedient (
First aorist active indicative of
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Robertson: Rom 11:30 - -- By their disobedience ( tēi toutōn apeithiāi ).
Instrumental case, "by the disobedience of these"(Jews). Note "now"(nun ) three times in this ...
By their disobedience (
Instrumental case, "by the disobedience of these"(Jews). Note "now"(
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Robertson: Rom 11:31 - -- By the mercy shown to you ( tōi humeterōi eleei ).
Objective sense of humeteros (possessive pronoun, your). Proleptic position also for the wor...
By the mercy shown to you (
Objective sense of
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Robertson: Rom 11:32 - -- Hath shut up ( sunekleisen ).
First aorist active indicative of sunkleiō , to shut together like a net (Luk 5:6). See note on Gal 3:22 for this wor...
Hath shut up (
First aorist active indicative of
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All (
"The all"(both Gentiles and Jews).
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Robertson: Rom 11:32 - -- That he might have mercy ( hinȧ̇eleēsēi ).
Purpose with hina and aorist active subjunctive. No merit in anyone, but all of grace. "The all"a...
That he might have mercy (
Purpose with
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Robertson: Rom 11:33 - -- O the depth ( O bathos ).
Exclamation with omega and the nominative case of bathos (see note on 2Co 8:2; Rom 8:39). Paul’ s argument concernin...
O the depth (
Exclamation with omega and the nominative case of
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Robertson: Rom 11:33 - -- Unsearchable ( anexeraunēta ).
Double compound (a privative and ex ) verbal adjective of ereunaō (old spelling ̇eu̇ ), late and rare word...
Unsearchable (
Double compound (
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Robertson: Rom 11:33 - -- Past tracing out ( anexichniastoi ).
Another verbal adjective from a privative and exichniazō , to trace out by tracks (ichnos Rom 4:12). Late ...
Past tracing out (
Another verbal adjective from
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Robertson: Rom 11:34 - -- Who hath known? ( tis egnō̇ ).
Second aorist active indicative of ginōskō , a timeless aorist, did know, does know, will know. Quotation from ...
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Robertson: Rom 11:34 - -- Counsellor ( sumboulos ).
Old word from sun and boulē . Only here in N.T.
Counsellor (
Old word from
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Robertson: Rom 11:34 - -- His ( autou ).
Objective genitive, counsellor to him (God). Some men seem to feel competent for the job.
His (
Objective genitive, counsellor to him (God). Some men seem to feel competent for the job.
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Robertson: Rom 11:35 - -- First driven to him ( proedōken autōi ).
First aorist active indicative of prodidōmi , to give beforehand or first. Old verb, here alone in N.T...
First driven to him (
First aorist active indicative of
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Robertson: Rom 11:35 - -- Shall be recompensed ( antapodothēsetai ).
First future passive of double compound antapodidōmi , to pay back (both anti and apo ), old word i...
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Robertson: Rom 11:36 - -- Of him ( ex autou )
, through him (di' autou ), unto him (eis auton ). By these three prepositions Paul ascribes the universe (ta panta ) with...
Of him (
, through him (
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Robertson: Rom 11:36 - -- For ever ( eis tous aiōnas ).
"For the ages."Alford terms this doxology in Rom 11:33-36 "the sublimest apostrophe existing even in the pages of ins...
For ever (
"For the ages."Alford terms this doxology in Rom 11:33-36 "the sublimest apostrophe existing even in the pages of inspiration itself."
Vincent: Rom 11:20 - -- Well ( καλῶς )
Admitting the fact. Thou art right. Compare Mar 12:32. Some take it as ironical.
Well (
Admitting the fact. Thou art right. Compare Mar 12:32. Some take it as ironical.
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Vincent: Rom 11:22 - -- Goodness and severity ( χρηστότητα καὶ ἀποτομίαν )
For goodness , see on Rom 3:12. Ἁποτομία severity ...
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Vincent: Rom 11:25 - -- Mystery ( μυστήριον )
In the Septuagint only in Daniel. See Dan 2:18, Dan 2:19, Dan 2:27, Dan 2:28, Dan 2:30, of the king's secret. It...
Mystery (
In the Septuagint only in Daniel. See Dan 2:18, Dan 2:19, Dan 2:27, Dan 2:28, Dan 2:30, of the king's secret. It occurs frequently in the apocryphal books, mostly of secrets of state, or plans kept by a king in his own mind. This meaning illustrates the use of the word in passages like Mat 13:11, " mysteries of the kingdom of heaven" - secret purposes or counsels which God intends to carry into effect in His kingdom. So here; Rom 16:25; Eph 1:9; Eph 3:9; Col 1:26, Col 1:27; Col 2:2; Col 4:3; Rev 10:7. In Justin Martyr (second century) it is commonly used in connection with
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Vincent: Rom 11:25 - -- Wise ( φρόνιμοι )
See on the kindred noun φρόνησις wisdom , Luk 1:17. Mostly in the New Testament of practical wisdom, pr...
Wise (
See on the kindred noun
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Vincent: Rom 11:25 - -- In part ( ἀπὸ μέρους )
Μέρος part is never used adverbially in the Gospels, Acts, and Revelation. In the Epistles it is r...
In part (
Construe here with hath happened : has partially befallen. Not partial hardening, but hardening extending over a part.
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Vincent: Rom 11:26 - -- The deliverer ( ὁ ῥυόμενος )
The Hebrew is goel redeemer , avenger . The nearest relative of a murdered person, on whom devolv...
The deliverer (
The Hebrew is
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Vincent: Rom 11:29 - -- Without repentance ( ἀμεταμέλητα )
Only here and 2Co 7:10. See on repented , Mat 21:29. Not subject to recall.
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Vincent: Rom 11:32 - -- Concluded ( συνέκλεισεν )
Only here, Luk 5:6; Gal 3:22, Gal 3:23. A very literal rendering, etymologically considered; con togeth...
Concluded (
Only here, Luk 5:6; Gal 3:22, Gal 3:23. A very literal rendering, etymologically considered; con together , claudere to shut . The A.V. followed the Vulgate conclusit . So Hooker: " The person of Christ was only touching bodily substance concluded within the grave." The word has lost this sense. Rev., hath shut up . Some explain in the later Greek sense, to hand over to a power which holds in ward .
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Vincent: Rom 11:32 - -- All ( τοὺς πάντας )
Lit., the all. The totality, Jews and Gentiles, jointly and severally.
All (
Lit., the all. The totality, Jews and Gentiles, jointly and severally.
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Vincent: Rom 11:33 - -- O the depth of the riches both of the wisdom and knowledge. So both A.V. and Rev., making depth govern riches , and riches govern wisdom and kn...
O the depth of the riches both of the wisdom and knowledge. So both A.V. and Rev., making depth govern riches , and riches govern wisdom and knowledge . Others, more simply, make the three genitives coordinate, and all governed by depth: the depth of the riches and wisdom and knowledge . " Like a traveler who has reached the summit of an Alpine ascent, the apostle turns and contemplates. Depths are at his feet, but waves of light illumine them, and there spreads all around an immense horizon which his eye commands" (Godet). Compare the conclusion of ch. 8.
" Therefore into the justice sempiternal
The power of vision which your world receives
As eye into the ocean penetrates;
Which, though it see the bottom near the shore,
Upon the deep perceives it not, and yet
'Tis there, but it is hidden by the depth.
There is no light but comes from the serene
That never is o'ercast, nay, it is darkness
Or shadow of the flesh, or else its poison."
Dante, " Paradiso ," xix . 59-62 .
Compare also Sophocles:
" In words and deeds whose laws on high are set
Through heaven's clear ether spread,
Whose birth Olympus boasts,
Their one, their only sire,
Whom man's frail flesh begat not,
Nor in forgetfulness
Shall lull to sleep of death;
In them our God is great,
In them he grows not old forevermore."
" Oedipus Tyrannus ," 865-871 .
Wisdom - knowledge (
Used together only here, 1Co 12:8; Col 2:3. There is much difference of opinion as to the precise distinction. It is agreed on all hands that wisdom is the nobler attribute, being bound up with moral character as knowledge is not. Hence wisdom is ascribed in scripture only to God or to good men, unless it is used ironically. See 1Co 1:20; 1Co 2:6; Luk 10:21. Cicero calls wisdom " the chief of all virtues." The earlier distinction, as Augustine, is unsatisfactory: that wisdom is concerned with eternal things, and knowledge with things of sense; for
As applied to human acquaintance with divine things,
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Vincent: Rom 11:33 - -- Past finding out ( ἀνεξιχνίαστοι )
Only here and Eph 3:8. Appropriate to ways or paths . Lit., which cannot be tracked...
Past finding out (
Only here and Eph 3:8. Appropriate to ways or paths . Lit., which cannot be tracked .
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Vincent: Rom 11:34 - -- Who hath known, etc.
From Isa 40:13. Heb., Who hath measured the Spirit ? Though measured may be rendered tried , proved , regulate...
Who hath known, etc.
From Isa 40:13. Heb., Who hath measured the Spirit ? Though measured may be rendered tried , proved , regulated . Compare the same citation in 1Co 2:16. This is the only passage in the Septuagint where
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Vincent: Rom 11:35 - -- Who hath first given, etc.
From Job 41:3. Heb., Who has been beforehand with me that I should repay him ? Paul here follows ...
Who hath first given, etc.
From Job 41:3. Heb., Who has been beforehand with me that I should repay him ? Paul here follows the Aramaic translation. The Septuagint is: Who shall resist me and abide ?
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Vincent: Rom 11:36 - -- Of - through - to ( ἐξ - διά - εἰς )
Of , proceeding from as the source: through , by means of, as maintainer, preserver, r...
Of - through - to (
Of , proceeding from as the source: through , by means of, as maintainer, preserver, ruler: to or unto , He is the point to which all tends. All men and things are for His glory (1Co 15:28). Alford styles this doxology " the sublimest apostrophe existing even in the pages of inspiration itself."
Wesley: Rom 11:20 - -- Both conditionally, not absolutely: if absolutely, there might have been room to boast.
Both conditionally, not absolutely: if absolutely, there might have been room to boast.
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The free gift of God, which therefore ought to humble thee.
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Wesley: Rom 11:21 - -- We may observe, this fear is not opposed to trust, but to pride and security.
We may observe, this fear is not opposed to trust, but to pride and security.
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Also, who now "standest by faith," be both totally and finally cut off.
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Wesley: Rom 11:24 - -- For according to nature, we graft the fruitful branch into the wild stock; but here the wild branch is grafted into the fruitful stock.
For according to nature, we graft the fruitful branch into the wild stock; but here the wild branch is grafted into the fruitful stock.
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Wesley: Rom 11:25 - -- St. Paul calls any truth known but to a few, a mystery. Such had been the calling of the gentiles: such was now the conversion of the Jews.
St. Paul calls any truth known but to a few, a mystery. Such had been the calling of the gentiles: such was now the conversion of the Jews.
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Wesley: Rom 11:25 - -- Puffed up with your present advantages; dreaming that ye are the only church; or that the church of Rome cannot fail. Hardness in part is happened to ...
Puffed up with your present advantages; dreaming that ye are the only church; or that the church of Rome cannot fail. Hardness in part is happened to Israel, till - Israel therefore is neither totally nor finally rejected.
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Till there be a vast harvest amongst the heathens.
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Wesley: Rom 11:26 - -- Being convinced by the coming of the gentiles. But there will be a still larger harvest among the gentiles, when all Israel is come in.
Being convinced by the coming of the gentiles. But there will be a still larger harvest among the gentiles, when all Israel is come in.
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To the gospel, to God, and to themselves, which God permits.
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That part of them who believe, they are beloved.
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Wesley: Rom 11:29 - -- God does not repent of his gifts to the Jews, or his calling of the gentiles.
God does not repent of his gifts to the Jews, or his calling of the gentiles.
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Wesley: Rom 11:32 - -- Suffering each in their turn to revolt from him. First, God suffered the gentiles in the early age to revolt, and took the family of Abraham as a pecu...
Suffering each in their turn to revolt from him. First, God suffered the gentiles in the early age to revolt, and took the family of Abraham as a peculiar seed to himself. Afterwards he permitted them to fall through unbelief, and took in the believing gentiles. And he did even this to provoke the Jews to jealousy, and so bring them also in the end to faith. This was truly a mystery in the divine conduct, which the apostle adores with such holy astonishment.
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Wesley: Rom 11:33 - -- In the ninth chapter, St. Paul had sailed but in a narrow sea: now he is in the ocean. The depth of the riches is described, Rom 11:35; the depth of w...
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Wesley: Rom 11:33 - -- With regard to believers. His ways are more upon a level; His judgments "a great deep." But even his ways we cannot trace.
With regard to believers. His ways are more upon a level; His judgments "a great deep." But even his ways we cannot trace.
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Wesley: Rom 11:36 - -- As the ultimate end, are all things. To him be the glory of his riches, wisdom, knowledge.
As the ultimate end, are all things. To him be the glory of his riches, wisdom, knowledge.
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Wesley: Rom 11:36 - -- A concluding word, in which the affection of the apostle, when it is come to the height, shuts up all.
A concluding word, in which the affection of the apostle, when it is come to the height, shuts up all.
JFB -> Rom 11:19-21; Rom 11:20; Rom 11:20; Rom 11:20; Rom 11:20; Rom 11:21; Rom 11:21; Rom 11:22-23; Rom 11:22-23; Rom 11:22-23; Rom 11:23; Rom 11:23; Rom 11:24; Rom 11:24; Rom 11:25; Rom 11:25; Rom 11:25; Rom 11:25; Rom 11:25; Rom 11:25; Rom 11:25; Rom 11:26-27; Rom 11:26-27; Rom 11:26-27; Rom 11:27; Rom 11:27; Rom 11:27; Rom 11:28-29; Rom 11:28-29; Rom 11:28-29; Rom 11:29; Rom 11:29; Rom 11:30-31; Rom 11:30-31; Rom 11:30-31; Rom 11:30-31; Rom 11:31; Rom 11:31; Rom 11:31; Rom 11:31; Rom 11:32; Rom 11:32; Rom 11:33; Rom 11:33; Rom 11:34-35; Rom 11:34-35; Rom 11:35; Rom 11:35; Rom 11:36; Rom 11:36; Rom 11:36
JFB: Rom 11:19-21 - -- As a plea for boasting.
The branches were broken off, that I might be grafted in.
As a plea for boasting.
The branches were broken off, that I might be grafted in.
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JFB: Rom 11:21 - -- A mere wild graft. The former might, beforehand, have been thought very improbable; but, after that, no one can wonder at the latter.
A mere wild graft. The former might, beforehand, have been thought very improbable; but, after that, no one can wonder at the latter.
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JFB: Rom 11:22-23 - -- "God's goodness" is the true reading, that is, His sovereign goodness in admitting thee to a covenant standing who before wert a "stranger to the cove...
"God's goodness" is the true reading, that is, His sovereign goodness in admitting thee to a covenant standing who before wert a "stranger to the covenants of promise" (Eph 2:12-20).
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In believing dependence on that pure goodness which made thee what thou art.
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JFB: Rom 11:23 - -- This appeal to the power of God to effect the recovery of His ancient people implies the vast difficulty of it--which all who have ever labored for th...
This appeal to the power of God to effect the recovery of His ancient people implies the vast difficulty of it--which all who have ever labored for the conversion of the Jews are made depressingly to feel. That intelligent expositors should think that this was meant of individual Jews, reintroduced from time to time into the family of God on their believing on the Lord Jesus, is surprising; and yet those who deny the national recovery of Israel must and do so interpret the apostle. But this is to confound the two things which the apostle carefully distinguishes. Individual Jews have been at all times admissible, and have been admitted, to the Church through the gate of faith in the Lord Jesus. This is the "remnant, even at this present time, according to the election of grace," of which the apostle, in the first part of the chapter, had cited himself as one. But here he manifestly speaks of something not then existing, but to be looked forward to as a great future event in the economy of God, the reingrafting of the nation as such, when they "abide not in unbelief." And though this is here spoken of merely as a supposition (if their unbelief shall cease)--in order to set it over against the other supposition, of what will happen to the Gentiles if they shall not abide in the faith--the supposition is turned into an explicit prediction in the verses following.
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JFB: Rom 11:24 - -- This is just the converse of Rom 11:21 : "As the excision of the merely engrafted Gentiles through unbelief is a thing much more to be expected than w...
This is just the converse of Rom 11:21 : "As the excision of the merely engrafted Gentiles through unbelief is a thing much more to be expected than was the excision of the natural Israel, before it happened; so the restoration of Israel, when they shall be brought to believe in Jesus, is a thing far more in the line of what we should expect, than the admission of the Gentiles to a standing which they never before enjoyed."
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JFB: Rom 11:25 - -- The word "mystery," so often used by our apostle, does not mean (as with us) something incomprehensible, but "something before kept secret, either who...
The word "mystery," so often used by our apostle, does not mean (as with us) something incomprehensible, but "something before kept secret, either wholly or for the most part, and now only fully disclosed" (compare Rom 16:25; 1Co 2:7-10; Eph 1:9-10; Eph 3:3-6, Eph 3:9-10).
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As if ye alone were in all time coming to be the family of God.
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That is, hath come partially, or upon a portion of Israel.
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JFB: Rom 11:25 - -- That is, not the general conversion of the world to Christ, as many take it; for this would seem to contradict the latter part of this chapter, and th...
That is, not the general conversion of the world to Christ, as many take it; for this would seem to contradict the latter part of this chapter, and throw the national recovery of Israel too far into the future: besides, in Rom 11:15, the apostle seems to speak of the receiving of Israel, not as following, but as contributing largely to bring about the general conversion of the world--but, "until the Gentiles have had their full time of the visible Church all to themselves while the Jews are out, which the Jews had till the Gentiles were brought in." (See Luk 21:24).
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JFB: Rom 11:26-27 - -- To understand this great statement, as some still do, merely of such a gradual inbringing of individual Jews, that there shall at length remain none i...
To understand this great statement, as some still do, merely of such a gradual inbringing of individual Jews, that there shall at length remain none in unbelief, is to do manifest violence both to it and to the whole context. It can only mean the ultimate ingathering of Israel as a nation, in contrast with the present "remnant." (So THOLUCK, MEYER, DE WETTE, PHILIPPI, ALFORD, HODGE). Three confirmations of this now follow: two from the prophets, and a third from the Abrahamic covenant itself. First, as it is written, There shall come out of Sion the Deliverer, and
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Or, according to what seems the true reading, without the "and"--"He shall"
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JFB: Rom 11:26-27 - -- The apostle, having drawn his illustrations of man's sinfulness chiefly from Psa 14:1-7 and Isa. 59:1-21, now seems to combine the language of the sam...
The apostle, having drawn his illustrations of man's sinfulness chiefly from Psa 14:1-7 and Isa. 59:1-21, now seems to combine the language of the same two places regarding Israel's salvation from it [BENGEL]. In the one place the Psalmist longs to see the "salvation of Israel coming out of Zion" (Psa 14:7); in the other, the prophet announces that "the Redeemer (or, 'Deliverer') shall come to (or 'for') Zion" (Isa 59:20). But as all the glorious manifestations of Israel's God were regarded as issuing out of Zion, as the seat of His manifested glory (Psa 20:2; Psa 110:2; Isa 31:9), the turn which the apostle gives to the words merely adds to them that familiar idea. And whereas the prophet announces that He "shall come to (or, 'for') them that turn from transgression in Jacob," while the apostle makes Him say that He shall come "to turn away ungodliness from Jacob," this is taken from the Septuagint version, and seems to indicate a different reading of the original text. The sense, however, is substantially the same in both. Second,
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Rather, "and" (again); introducing a new quotation.
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Literally, "this is the covenant from me unto them."
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JFB: Rom 11:27 - -- This, we believe, is rather a brief summary of Jer 31:31-34 than the express words of any prediction, Those who believe that there are no predictions ...
This, we believe, is rather a brief summary of Jer 31:31-34 than the express words of any prediction, Those who believe that there are no predictions regarding the literal Israel in the Old Testament, that stretch beyond the end of the Jewish economy, are obliged to view these quotations by the apostle as mere adaptations of Old Testament language to express his own predictions [ALEXANDER on Isaiah, &c.]. But how forced this is, we shall presently see.
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JFB: Rom 11:28-29 - -- That is, they are regarded and treated as enemies (in a state of exclusion through unbelief, from the family of God) for the benefit of you Gentiles; ...
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Even in their state of exclusion for the fathers' sakes.
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JFB: Rom 11:29 - -- "not to be," or "cannot be repented of." By the "calling of God," in this case, is meant that sovereign act by which God, in the exercise of His free ...
"not to be," or "cannot be repented of." By the "calling of God," in this case, is meant that sovereign act by which God, in the exercise of His free choice, "called" Abraham to be the father of a peculiar people; while "the gifts of God" here denote the articles of the covenant which God made with Abraham, and which constituted the real distinction between his and all other families of the earth. Both these, says the apostle, are irrevocable; and as the point for which he refers to this at all is the final destiny of the Israelitish nation, it is clear that the perpetuity through all time of the Abrahamic covenant is the thing here affirmed. And lest any should say that though Israel, as a nation, has no destiny at all under the Gospel, but as a people disappeared from the stage when the middle wall of partition was broken down, yet the Abrahamic covenant still endures in the spiritual seed of Abraham, made up of Jews and Gentiles in one undistinguished mass of redeemed men under the Gospel--the apostle, as if to preclude that supposition, expressly states that the very Israel who, as concerning the Gospel, are regarded as "enemies for the Gentiles' sakes," are "beloved for the fathers' sakes"; and it is in proof of this that he adds, "For the gifts and the calling of God are without repentance." But in what sense are the now unbelieving and excluded children of Israel "beloved for the fathers' sakes?" Not merely from ancestral recollections, as one looks with fond interest on the child of a dear friend for that friend's sake [DR. ARNOLD]--a beautiful thought, and not foreign to Scripture, in this very matter (see 2Ch 20:7; Isa 41:8) --but it is from ancestral connections and obligations, or their lineal descent from and oneness in covenant with the fathers with whom God originally established it. In other words, the natural Israel--not "the remnant of them according to the election of grace," but THE NATION, sprung from Abraham according to the flesh--are still an elect people, and as such, "beloved." The very same love which chose the fathers, and rested on the fathers as a parent stem of the nation, still rests on their descendants at large, and will yet recover them from unbelief, and reinstate them in the family of God.
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JFB: Rom 11:30-31 - -- That is, yielded not to God "the obedience of faith," while strangers to Christ.
That is, yielded not to God "the obedience of faith," while strangers to Christ.
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JFB: Rom 11:31 - -- Here is an entirely new idea. The apostle has hitherto dwelt upon the unbelief of the Jews as making way for the faith of the Gentiles--the exclusion ...
Here is an entirely new idea. The apostle has hitherto dwelt upon the unbelief of the Jews as making way for the faith of the Gentiles--the exclusion of the one occasioning the reception of the other; a truth yielding to generous, believing Gentiles but mingled satisfaction. Now, opening a more cheering prospect, he speaks of the mercy shown to the Gentiles as a means of Israel's recovery; which seems to mean that it will be by the instrumentality of believing Gentiles that Israel as a nation is at length to "look on Him whom they have pierced and mourn for Him," and so to "obtain mercy." (See 2Co 3:15-16).
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JFB: Rom 11:32 - -- That is, those "all" of whom he had been discoursing; the Gentiles first, and after them the Jews [FRITZSCHE, THOLUCK, OLSHAUSEN, DE WETTE, PHILIPPI, ...
That is, those "all" of whom he had been discoursing; the Gentiles first, and after them the Jews [FRITZSCHE, THOLUCK, OLSHAUSEN, DE WETTE, PHILIPPI, STUART, HODGE]. Certainly it is not "all mankind individually" [MEYER, ALFORD]; for the apostle is not here dealing with individuals, but with those great divisions of mankind, Jew and Gentile. And what he here says is that God's purpose was to shut each of these divisions of men to the experience first of an humbled, condemned state, without Christ, and then to the experience of His mercy in Christ.
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JFB: Rom 11:33 - -- The apostle now yields himself up to the admiring contemplation of the grandeur of that divine plan which he had sketched out.
The apostle now yields himself up to the admiring contemplation of the grandeur of that divine plan which he had sketched out.
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JFB: Rom 11:33 - -- Many able expositors render this, "of the riches and wisdom and knowledge," &c. [ERASMUS, GROTIUS, BENGEL, MEYER, DE WETTE, THOLUCK, OLSHAUSEN, FRITZS...
Many able expositors render this, "of the riches and wisdom and knowledge," &c. [ERASMUS, GROTIUS, BENGEL, MEYER, DE WETTE, THOLUCK, OLSHAUSEN, FRITZSCHE, PHILIPPI, ALFORD, Revised Version]. The words will certainly bear this sense, "the depth of God's riches." But "the riches of God" is a much rarer expression with our apostle than the riches of this or that perfection of God; and the words immediately following limit our attention to the unsearchableness of God's "judgments," which probably means His decrees or plans (Psa 119:75), and of "His ways," or the method by which He carries these into effect. (So LUTHER, CALVIN, BEZA, HODGE, &c.). Besides, all that follows to the end of the chapter seems to show that while the Grace of God to guilty men in Christ Jesus is presupposed to be the whole theme of this chapter, that which called forth the special admiration of the apostle, after sketching at some length the divine purposes and methods in the bestowment of this grace, was "the depth of the riches of God's wisdom and knowledge" in these purposes and methods. The "knowledge," then, points probably to the vast sweep of divine comprehension herein displayed; the "wisdom" to that fitness to accomplish the ends intended, which is stamped on all this procedure.
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JFB: Rom 11:35 - -- See Job 35:7; Job 41:11. These questions, it will thus be seen, are just quotations from the Old Testament, as if to show how familiar to God's ancien...
See Job 35:7; Job 41:11. These questions, it will thus be seen, are just quotations from the Old Testament, as if to show how familiar to God's ancient people was the great truth which the apostle himself had just uttered, that God's plans and methods in the dispensation of His Grace have a reach of comprehension and wisdom stamped upon them which finite mortals cannot fathom, much less could ever have imagined, before they were disclosed.
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JFB: Rom 11:36 - -- Thus worthily--with a brevity only equalled by its sublimity--does the apostle here sum up this whole matter. "OF Him are all things," as their eterna...
Thus worthily--with a brevity only equalled by its sublimity--does the apostle here sum up this whole matter. "OF Him are all things," as their eternal Source: "THROUGH HIM are all things," inasmuch as He brings all to pass which in His eternal counsels He purposed: "To Him are all things," as being His own last End; the manifestation of the glory of His own perfections being the ultimate, because the highest possible, design of all His procedure from first to last.
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JFB: Rom 11:36 - -- A remnant larger than their own drooping spirits could easily believe (Rom 11:1-5). (2) The preservation of this remnant, even as their separation at ...
A remnant larger than their own drooping spirits could easily believe (Rom 11:1-5). (2) The preservation of this remnant, even as their separation at the first, is all of mere grace (Rom 11:5-6). (3) When individuals and communities, after many fruitless warnings, are abandoned of God, they go from bad to worse (Rom 11:7-10). (4) God has so ordered His dealings with the great divisions of mankind, "that no flesh should glory in His presence." Gentile and Jew have each in turn been "shut up to unbelief," that each in turn may experience the "mercy" which saves the chief of sinners (Rom. 11:11-32). (5) As we are "justified by faith," so are we "kept by the power of God through faith"--faith alone--unto salvation (Rom 11:20-32). (6) God's covenant with Abraham and his natural seed is a perpetual covenant, in equal force under the Gospel as before it. Therefore it is, that the Jews as a nation still survive, in spite of all the laws which, in similar circumstances, have either extinguished or destroyed the identity of other nations. And therefore it is that the Jews as a nation will yet be restored to the family of God, through the subjection of their proud hearts to Him whom they have pierced. And as believing Gentiles will be honored to be the instruments of this stupendous change, so shall the vast Gentile world reap such benefit from it, that it shall be like the communication of life to them from the dead. (7) Thus has the Christian Church the highest motive to the establishment and vigorous prosecution of missions to the Jews; God having not only promised that there shall be a remnant of them gathered in every age, but pledged Himself to the final ingathering of the whole nation assigned the honor of that ingathering to the Gentile Church, and assured them that the event, when it does arrive, shall have a life-giving effect upon the whole world (Rom 11:12-16, Rom 11:26-31). (8) Those who think that in all the evangelical prophecies of the Old Testament the terms "Jacob," "Israel," &c., are to be understood solely of the Christian Church, would appear to read the Old Testament differently from the apostle, who, from the use of those very terms in Old Testament prophecy, draws arguments to prove that God has mercy in store for the natural Israel (Rom 11:26-27). (9) Mere intellectual investigations into divine truth in general, and the sense of the living oracles in particular, as they have a hardening effect, so they are a great contrast to the spirit of our apostle, whose lengthened sketch of God's majestic procedure towards men in Christ Jesus ends here in a burst of admiration, which loses itself in the still loftier frame of adoration (Rom 11:33-36).
Clarke -> Rom 11:20; Rom 11:21; Rom 11:22; Rom 11:22; Rom 11:23; Rom 11:23; Rom 11:24; Rom 11:24; Rom 11:25; Rom 11:25; Rom 11:25; Rom 11:25; Rom 11:26; Rom 11:26; Rom 11:27; Rom 11:28; Rom 11:29; Rom 11:30; Rom 11:30; Rom 11:30; Rom 11:31; Rom 11:32; Rom 11:33; Rom 11:34; Rom 11:35; Rom 11:36; Rom 11:36
Clarke: Rom 11:20 - -- Well; because of unbelief, etc. - This statement is all true; but then, consider, why is it that they were cast out? Was it not because of their unb...
Well; because of unbelief, etc. - This statement is all true; but then, consider, why is it that they were cast out? Was it not because of their unbelief? And you stand by faith: you were made partakers of these blessings by faith; be not high-minded; let this humble, not exalt you in your own estimation; for if the blessings were received by faith, consequently not by works; and if not by works, you have no merit; and what you have received is through the mere mercy of God. They once stood by faith; they gave place to unbelief, and fell: you stand now by faith; but it is as possible for you to be unfaithful as it was for them, and consequently you may fall under the Divine displeasure, as they have done; be not high-minded, but fear; watch over yourselves with godly jealousy.
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Clarke: Rom 11:21 - -- For if God spared not the natural branches - If He, in his infinite justice and holiness, could not tolerate sin in the people whom he foreknew, who...
For if God spared not the natural branches - If He, in his infinite justice and holiness, could not tolerate sin in the people whom he foreknew, whom he had so long loved, cherished, miraculously preserved and blessed; take heed lest he also spare not thee. Be convinced that the same righteous principle in him will cause him to act towards you as he has acted towards them, if you sin after the similitude of their transgression; and to this, self-sufficiency and self-confidence will soon lead you. Remember, therefore, the rock whence you were hewn, and the hole of the pit whence ye were digged. Depend incessantly on God’ s free grace, that ye may abide in his favor.
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Clarke: Rom 11:22 - -- Behold therefore the goodness - The exclamation, Behold the goodness of God! is frequent among the Jewish writers, when they wish to call the attent...
Behold therefore the goodness - The exclamation, Behold the goodness of God! is frequent among the Jewish writers, when they wish to call the attention of men to particular displays of God’ s mercy, especially towards those who are singularly unworthy. See several instances in Schoettgen
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Clarke: Rom 11:22 - -- And severity of God - As χρηστοτης, goodness, signifies the essential quality of the Divine nature, the fountain of all good to men and an...
And severity of God - As
Nam qua se medio trudunt de cortice gemmae
Et tenues rumpunt tunicas, angustus in ips
Fit nodo sinus: huc aliena ex arbore germe
Includunt, udoque docent inolescere libro
For where the tender rinds of trees disclos
Their shooting gems, a swelling knot there grows
Just in that space a narrow slit we make
Then other buds from bearing trees we take
Inserted thus, the wounded rind we close
In whose moist womb the admitted infant grows
Dryden
In all countries the principle is the same, though the mode is various
The apostle, having adopted this metaphor as the best he could find to express that act of God’ s justice and mercy by which the Jews were rejected, and the Gentiles elected in their stead, and, in order to show that though the Jewish tree was cut down, or its branches lopped off, yet it was not rooted up, he informs the Gentile believers that, as it is customary to insert a good scion in a bad or useless stock, they who were bad, contrary to the custom in such cases, were grafted in a good stock, and their growth and fruitfulness proclaimed the excellence and vegetative life of the stock in which they were inserted. This was the goodness of the heavenly gardener to them; but it was severity,
The reader will observe that this term belongs to engrafting: often, in this operation, a part of a branch is cut off; in that part which remains in connection with the tree a little slit is made, and then a small twig or branch taken from another tree is, at its lower end, shaved thin, wedge-like, and then inserted in the cleft, after which the whole is tied together, clayed round, etc., and the bark unites to bark; and the stock and the scion become thus one tree, the juices of the whole stock circulating through the tubes of the newly-inserted twig; and thus both live, though the branch inserted bears a very different fruit from that which the parent stock bore. I have often performed this operation, and in this very way, with success: and I cannot conceive that the apostle could have chosen a more apt or more elegant metaphor. The Jewish tree does not bring forth proper fruit; but it will answer well to ingraft a proper fruit-bearing tree on. The Gentiles are a wild olive, which is a tree that bears no fruit; but it may be made to bear if grafted on the Jewish stock. Some of the branches were cut off, that the branches of this wild olive might be inserted: the act by which this insertion is made is termed
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Clarke: Rom 11:23 - -- If they abide not in unbelief - So, we find that their rejection took place in consequence of their wilful obstinacy: and, that they may return into...
If they abide not in unbelief - So, we find that their rejection took place in consequence of their wilful obstinacy: and, that they may return into the fold, the door of which still stands open
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Clarke: Rom 11:23 - -- For God is able to graft them in again - Fallen as they are and degraded, God can, in the course of his providence and mercy, restore them to all th...
For God is able to graft them in again - Fallen as they are and degraded, God can, in the course of his providence and mercy, restore them to all their forfeited privileges; and this will take place if they abide not in unbelief: which intimates that God has furnished them with all the power and means necessary for faith, and that they may believe on the Lord Jesus whenever they will. The veil now continues on their heart; but it is not a veil which God has spread there, but a veil occasioned by their own voluntary and obstinate unbelief: and, when they shall turn to the Lord, (Jesus), the veil shall be taken away. See what the apostle has said, 2Co 3:6-18.
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Clarke: Rom 11:24 - -- The olive tree, which is wild by nature - Which is κατα φυσιν, naturally, wild and barren; for that the wild olive bore no fruit is suff...
The olive tree, which is wild by nature - Which is
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Clarke: Rom 11:24 - -- And wert grafted contrary to nature - Παρα φυσιν, contrary to all custom; for a scion taken from a barren or useless tree is scarcely ever...
And wert grafted contrary to nature -
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Clarke: Rom 11:25 - -- I would not - that ye should be ignorant of this mystery - Mystery, μυστηριον, signifies any thing that is hidden or covered, or not fully...
I would not - that ye should be ignorant of this mystery - Mystery,
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Clarke: Rom 11:25 - -- Lest ye should be wise in your own conceits - It seems from this, and from other expressions in this epistle, that the converted Gentiles had not be...
Lest ye should be wise in your own conceits - It seems from this, and from other expressions in this epistle, that the converted Gentiles had not behaved toward the Jews with that decorum and propriety which the relation they bore to them required. In this chapter the apostle strongly guards them against giving way to such a disposition
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Clarke: Rom 11:25 - -- Blindness in part is happened to Israel - Partial blindness, or blindness to a part of them; for they were not all unbelievers: several thousands of...
Blindness in part is happened to Israel - Partial blindness, or blindness to a part of them; for they were not all unbelievers: several thousands of them had been converted to the Christian faith; though the body of the nation, and especially its rulers, civil and spiritual, continued opposed to Christ and his doctrine
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Clarke: Rom 11:25 - -- Until the fullness of the Gentiles be come in - And this blindness will continue till the Church of the Gentiles be fully completed - till the Gospe...
Until the fullness of the Gentiles be come in - And this blindness will continue till the Church of the Gentiles be fully completed - till the Gospel be preached through all the nations of the earth, and multitudes of heathens every where embrace the faith. The words
We should not restrict the meaning of these words too much, by imagining
1. That the fullness must necessarily mean all the nations of the universe, and all the individuals of those nations: probably, no more than a general spread of Christianity over many nations which are now under the influence of Pagan or Mohammedan superstition may be what is intended
2. We must not suppose that the coming in here mentioned necessarily means, what most religious persons understand by conversion, a thorough change of the whole heart and the whole life: the acknowledgment of the Divine mission of our Lord, and a cordial embracing of the Christian religion, will sufficiently fulfill the apostle’ s words. If we wait for the conversion of the Jews till such a time as every Gentile and Mohammedan soul shall be, in this especial sense, converted to God, then - we shall wait for ever.
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Clarke: Rom 11:26 - -- And so all Israel shall be saved - Shall be brought into the way of salvation, by acknowledging the Messiah; for the word certainly does not mean et...
And so all Israel shall be saved - Shall be brought into the way of salvation, by acknowledging the Messiah; for the word certainly does not mean eternal glory; for no man can conceive that a time will ever come in which every Jew then living, shall be taken to the kingdom of glory. The term saved, as applied to the Israelites in different parts of the Scripture, signifies no more than their being gathered out of the nations of the world, separated to God, and possessed of the high privilege of being his peculiar people. And we know that this is the meaning of the term, by finding it applied to the body of the Israelites when this alone was the sum of their state. See the Preface, Part II
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Clarke: Rom 11:26 - -- As it is written - The apostle supports what he advances on this head by a quotation from Scripture, which, in the main, is taken from Isa 59:20 : T...
As it is written - The apostle supports what he advances on this head by a quotation from Scripture, which, in the main, is taken from Isa 59:20 : The Deliverer shall come out of Zion, and turn away ungodliness from Jacob. Now this cannot be understood of the manifestation of Christ among the Jews; or of the multitudes which were converted before, at, and for some time after, the day of pentecost; for these times were all past when the apostle wrote this epistle, which was probably about the 57th or 58th year of our Lord; and, as no remarkable conversion of that people has since taken place, therefore the fulfillment of this prophecy is yet to take place. In what manner Christ is to come out of Zion, and in what way or by what means he is to turn away transgression from Jacob, we cannot tell; and to attempt to conjecture, when the time, occasion, means, etc., are all in mystery, would be more than reprehensible.
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Clarke: Rom 11:27 - -- For this is my covenant unto them, when I shall take away their sins - The reader on referring to Isa 59:20, Isa 59:21, will find that the words of ...
For this is my covenant unto them, when I shall take away their sins - The reader on referring to Isa 59:20, Isa 59:21, will find that the words of the original are here greatly abridged. They are the following: -
And the Redeemer shall come to Zion, and unto them that turn from transgression in Jacob, saith the Lord. As for me, this is my covenant with them, saith the Lord, My Spirit that is upon thee, and my words which I have put in thy mouth, shall not depart out of thy mouth, nor out of the mouth of thy seed, nor out of the mouth of thy seed’ s seed, saith the Lord, from henceforth and for ever
For the manner in which St. Paul makes his quotation from Scripture, see the observations at the end of the preceding chapter, (Rom 10:21 (note), Part I.). The whole of these two verses should be read in a parenthesis, as I have marked them in the text; for it is evident that the 25th verse should be immediately connected with the 28th
It may not be amiss to subjoin here a collection of those texts in the Old Testament that seem to point out a restoration of the Jewish commonwealth to a higher degree of excellence than it has yet attained. Isa 2:2-5; Isa 19:24, Isa 19:25; Isa 25:6, etc.; Isa 30:18, Isa 30:19, Isa 30:26; Isaiah 60:1-22; Isa 65:17-25; Jer 31:10-12; Jer 46:27, Jer 46:28; Eze 20:34, Eze 20:40, etc.; Eze 28:25, Eze 28:26; Eze 34:20, etc.; Eze 36:8-16; Eze 37:21-28; Eze 39:25, etc.; Joe 3:1, Joe 3:2, Joe 3:17, Joe 3:20, Joe 3:21; Amo 9:9-15; Oba 1:17, Oba 1:21; Mic 4:3-7; Mic 7:18-20; Zep 3:19, Zep 3:20.
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Clarke: Rom 11:28 - -- As concerning the Gospel - The unbelieving Jews, with regard to the Gospel which they have rejected, are at present enemies to God, and aliens from ...
As concerning the Gospel - The unbelieving Jews, with regard to the Gospel which they have rejected, are at present enemies to God, and aliens from his kingdom, under his Son Jesus Christ, on account of that extensive grace which has overturned their peculiarity, by admitting the Gentiles into his Church and family: but with regard to the original purpose of election, whereby they were chosen and separated from all the people of the earth to be the peculiar people of God, they are beloved for the fathers’ sake; he has still favor in store for them on account of their forefathers the patriarchs.
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Clarke: Rom 11:29 - -- For the gifts and calling of God, etc. - The gifts which God has bestowed upon them, and the calling - the invitation, with which he has favored the...
For the gifts and calling of God, etc. - The gifts which God has bestowed upon them, and the calling - the invitation, with which he has favored them he will never revoke. In reference to this point there is no change of mind in him; and therefore the possibility and certainty of their restoration to their original privileges, of being the people of God, of enjoying every spiritual blessing with the fullness of the Gentiles, may be both reasonably and safely inferred
Repentance, when applied to God, signifies simply change of purpose relative to some declarations made subject to certain conditions. See this fully explained and illustrated by himself, Jer 18:7-9.
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Clarke: Rom 11:30 - -- For as ye in times past - The apostle pursues his argument in favor of the restoration of the Jews. As ye, Gentiles, in times past - for many ages b...
For as ye in times past - The apostle pursues his argument in favor of the restoration of the Jews. As ye, Gentiles, in times past - for many ages back
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Clarke: Rom 11:30 - -- Have not believed - Were in a state of alienation from God, yet not so as to be totally and for ever excluded
Have not believed - Were in a state of alienation from God, yet not so as to be totally and for ever excluded
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Clarke: Rom 11:30 - -- Have now obtained mercy - For ye are now taken into the kingdom of the Messiah; through their unbelief - by that method which, in destroying the Jew...
Have now obtained mercy - For ye are now taken into the kingdom of the Messiah; through their unbelief - by that method which, in destroying the Jewish peculiarity, and fulfilling the Abrahamic covenant, has occasioned the unbelief and obstinate opposition of the Jews.
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Clarke: Rom 11:31 - -- Even so have these also - In like manner the Jews are, through their infidelity, shut out of the kingdom of God: -
That through your mercy - Bu...
Even so have these also - In like manner the Jews are, through their infidelity, shut out of the kingdom of God: -
That through your mercy - But this exclusion will not be everlasting; but this will serve to open a new scene when, through farther displays of mercy to you Gentiles, they also may obtain mercy - shall be received into the kingdom of God again; and this shall take place whenever they shall consent to acknowledge the Lord Jesus, and see it their privilege to be fellow heirs with the Gentiles of the grace of life
As sure, therefore, as the Jews were once in the kingdom, and the Gentiles were not; as sure as the Gentiles are now in the kingdom, and the Jews are not; so surely will the Jews be brought back into that kingdom.
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Clarke: Rom 11:32 - -- For God hath concluded them all in unbelief - Συνεκλεισε γαρ ὁ Θεος, God hath shut or locked them all up under unbelief. This ...
For God hath concluded them all in unbelief -
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Clarke: Rom 11:33 - -- O the depth of the riches both of the wisdom and knowledge of God! - This is a very proper conclusion of the whole preceding discourse. Wisdom may h...
O the depth of the riches both of the wisdom and knowledge of God! - This is a very proper conclusion of the whole preceding discourse. Wisdom may here refer to the designs of God; knowledge, to the means which he employs to accomplish these designs. The designs are the offspring of infinite wisdom, and therefore they are all right; the means are the most proper, as being the choice of an infinite knowledge that cannot err; we may safely credit the goodness of the design, founded in infinite wisdom; we may rely on the due accomplishment of the end, because the means are chosen and applied by infinite knowledge and skill.
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Clarke: Rom 11:34 - -- For who hath known the mind of the Lord? - Who can pretend to penetrate the counsels of God, or fathom the reasons of his conduct? His designs and h...
For who hath known the mind of the Lord? - Who can pretend to penetrate the counsels of God, or fathom the reasons of his conduct? His designs and his counsels are like himself, infinite; and, consequently, inscrutable. It is strange that, with such a scripture as this before their eyes, men should sit down and coolly and positively write about counsels and decrees of God formed from all eternity, of which they speak with as much confidence and decision as if they had formed a part of the council of the Most High, and had been with him in the beginning of his ways! A certain writer, (Mr. Perkins), after having entered into all these counsels, and drawn out his black-lined scheme of absolute and eternal reprobation, with all its causes and effects; and then his light-lined scheme of absolute and eternal Election, with all its causes and effects, all deduced in the most regular and graduated order, link by link; concludes with Rom 11:33 : O the depth of the riches both of the wisdom and knowledge of God! how Unsearchable are his judgments, and his ways Past Finding Out! But this writer forgot that he had searched out God’ s judgments in the one case, and found out his ways in the other: and that he had given, as a proof of the success of his researches, a complete exhibition of the whole scheme! This conduct is worthy of more than mere reprehension; and yet he who differs from such opinions gives, in the apprehension of some, this proof of his being included in some of the links of the black list! We may rest with the conviction, that God is as merciful and good in all his ways, as he is wise and just. But as we cannot comprehend him, neither can we his operations, it is our place, who are the objects of his infinite mercy and kindness, to adore in silence, and to obey with alacrity and delight.
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Clarke: Rom 11:35 - -- Or, who hath first given to him - Who can pretend to have any demands upon God? To whom is he indebted? Have either Jews or Gentiles any right to hi...
Or, who hath first given to him - Who can pretend to have any demands upon God? To whom is he indebted? Have either Jews or Gentiles any right to his blessings? May not he bestow his favors as he pleases, and to whom he pleases? Does he do any injustice to the Jews in choosing the Gentiles! And was it because he was under obligation to the Gentiles that he has chosen them in the place of the Jews? Let him who has any claim on God prefer it; and he shall be compensated
But how can the Creator be indebted to the creature? How can the Cause be dependent on the effect? How can the Author of providence, and the Father of every good and perfect gift, be under obligation to them for whom he provides, and who are wholly dependent on his bounty?
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Clarke: Rom 11:36 - -- For of him, etc. - This is so far from being the case, for εξ αυτου, of him, as the original designer and author; and δι ’ αυ...
For of him, etc. - This is so far from being the case, for
The Emperor Marcus Antoninus (
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Clarke: Rom 11:36 - -- To whom be glory - And let him have the praise of all his works, from the hearts and mouths of all his intelligent creatures, for ever - throughout ...
To whom be glory - And let him have the praise of all his works, from the hearts and mouths of all his intelligent creatures, for ever - throughout all the generations of men. Amen - so be it! Let this be established for ever
I. The apostle considers the designs of God inscrutable, and his mode of governing the world incomprehensible. His designs, schemes, and ends are all infinite, and consequently unfathomable. It is impossible to account for the dispensations either of his justice or mercy. He does things under both these characters which far surpass the comprehension of men. But though his dispensations are a great deep, yet they are never self-contradictory: though they far surpass our reason, yet they never contradict reason; nor are they ever opposite to those ideas which God has implanted in man, of goodness, justice, mercy, and truth. But it is worthy of remark, that we can more easily account for the dispensations of his justice than we can for the dispensations of his mercy. We can every where see ten thousand reasons why he should display his justice; but scarcely can we find one reason why he should display his mercy. And yet, these displays of mercy for which we can scarcely find a reason, are infinitely greater and more numerous than his displays of justice, for which the reasons are, in a vast variety of cases, as obvious as they are multiplied. The sacrifice of Christ is certainly an infinite reason why God should extend, as he does, his mercy to all men; but Jesus Christ is the gift of God’ s love: who can account for the love that gave him to redeem a fallen world? The Jews have fallen under the displeasure of Divine justice: why they should be objects of this displeasure is at once seen in their ingratitude, disobedience, unbelief, and rebellion. But a most especial providence has watched over them, and preserved them in all their dispersions for 1700 years: who can account for this? Again, these very persons have a most positive promise of a future deliverance, both great and glorious: why should this be? The Gentile world was long left without a Divine revelation, while the Jews enjoyed one: who can account for this? The Jews are now cast out of favor, in a certain sense, and the reasons of it are sufficiently obvious; and the Gentiles, without any apparent reason, are taken into favor. In all these things his judgments are unsearchable, and his ways past finding out
II. Once more: Let it be remarked that, although God is every where promising and bestowing the greatest and most ennobling privileges, together with an eternal and ineffable glory, for which we can give no reason but his own endless goodness, through the death of his Son; yet, in no case does he remove those privileges, nor exclude from this glory, but where the reasons are most obvious to the meanest capacity
III. This epistle has been thought by some to afford proofs that God, by an eternal decree, had predestinated to eternal perdition millions of millions of human souls before they had any existence, except in his own purpose, and for no other reason but his sovereign pleasure! But such a decree can be no more found in this book, than such a disposition in the mind of Him who is the perfection, as he is the model, of wisdom, goodness, justice, mercy, and truth. May God save the reader from profaning his name, by suppositions at once so monstrous and absurd!
Calvin: Rom 11:21 - -- 21.For if God has not spared the natural branches, etc This is a most powerful reason to beat down all self-confidence: for the rejection of the Jews...
21.For if God has not spared the natural branches, etc This is a most powerful reason to beat down all self-confidence: for the rejection of the Jews should never come across our minds without striking and shaking us with dread. For what ruined them, but that through supine dependence on the dignity which they had obtained, they despised what God had appointed? They were not spared, though they were natural branches; what then shall be done to us, who are the wild olive and aliens, if we become beyond measure arrogant? But this thought, as it leads us to distrust ourselves, so it tends to make us to cleave more firmly and steadfastly to the goodness of God.
And here again it appears more evident, that the discourse is addressed generally to the body of the Gentiles, for the excision, of which he speaks, could not apply to individuals, whose election is unchangeable, based on the eternal purpose of God. Paul therefore declares to the Gentiles, that if they exulted over the Jews, a reward for their pride would be prepared for them; for God will again reconcile to himself the first people whom he has divorced.
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Calvin: Rom 11:22 - -- 22.See then, etc By laying the case before their eyes he more clearly and fully confirms the fact, — that the Gentiles had no reason to be proud. T...
22.See then, etc By laying the case before their eyes he more clearly and fully confirms the fact, — that the Gentiles had no reason to be proud. They saw in the Jews an example of God’s severity, which ought to have terrified them; while in themselves they had an evidence of his grace and goodness, by which they ought to have been stimulated to thankfulness only, and to exalt the Lord and not themselves. The words import the same, as though he had said, — “If thou exultest over their calamity, think first what thou hast been; for the same severity of God would have impended over thee, hadst thou not been delivered by his gratuitous favor: then consider what thou art even now; for salvation shall not continue to thee, except thou humbly recognisest the mercy of God; for if thou forgettest thyself and arrogantly exultest, the ruin, into which they have fallen, awaits thee: it is not indeed enough for thee to have once embraced the favor of God, except thou followest his call through the whole course of thy life.” They indeed who have been illuminated by the Lord ought always to think of perseverance; for they continue not in the goodness of God, who having for a time responded to the call of God, do at length begin to loathe the kingdom of heaven, and thus by their ingratitude justly deserve to be blinded again.
But he addresses not each of the godly apart, as we have already said, but he makes a comparison between the Gentiles and the Jews. It is indeed true that each individual among the Jews received the reward due to his own unbelief, when they were banished from the kingdom of God, and that all who front among the Gentiles were called, were vessels of God’s mercy; but yet the particular design of Paul must be borne in mind. For he would have the Gentiles to depend on the eternal covenant of God, so as to connect their own with the salvation of the elect people, and then, lest the rejection of the Jews should produce offense, as though their ancient adoption were void, he would have them to be terrified by this example of punishment, so as reverently to regard the judgment of God. For whence comes so great licentiousness on curious questions, except that we almost neglect to consider those things which ought to have duly taught us humility?
But as he speaks not of the elect individually, but of the whole body, a condition is added, If they continued in his kindness I indeed allow, that as soon as any one abuses God’s goodness, he deserves to be deprived of the offered favor; but it would be improper to say of any one of the godly particularly, that God had mercy on him, when he chose him, provided he would continue in his mercy; for the perseverance of faith, which completes in us the effect of God’s grace, flows from election itself. Paul then teaches us, that the Gentiles were admitted into the hope of eternal life on the condition, that they by their gratitude retained possession of it. And dreadful indeed was the defection of the whole world, which afterwards happened; and this dearly proves, that this exhortation was not superfluous; for when God had almost in a moment watered it with his grace, so that religion flourished everywhere, soon after the truth of the gospel vanished, and the treasure of salvation was taken away. And whence came so sudden a change, except that the Gentiles had fallen away from their calling?
Otherwise thou also shalt be cut off, etc We now understand in what sense Paul threatens them with excision, whom he has already allowed to have been grafted into the hope of life through God’s election. For, first, though this cannot happen to the elect, they have yet need of such warning, in order to subdue the pride of the flesh; which being really opposed to their salvation, ought justly to be terrified with the dread of perdition. As far then as Christians are illuminated by faith, they hear, for their assurance, that the calling of God is without repentance; but as far as they carry about them the flesh, which wantonly resists the grace of God, they are taught humility by this warning, “Take heed lest thou be cut off.” Secondly, we must bear in mind the solution which I have before mentioned, — that Paul speaks not here of the special election of individuals, but sets the Gentiles and Jews in opposition the one to the other; and that therefore the elect are not so much addressed in these words, as those who falsely gloried that they had obtained the place of the Jews: nay, he speaks to the Gentiles generally, and addresses the whole body in common, among whom there were many who were faithful, and those who were members of Christ in name only.
But if it be asked respecting individuals, “How any one could be cut off from the grafting, and how, after excision, he could be grafted again,” — bear in mind, that there are three modes of insition, and two modes of excision. For instance, the children of the faithful are ingrafted, to whom the promise belongs according to the covenant made with the fathers; ingrafted are also they who indeed receive the seed of the gospel, but it strikes no root, or it is choked before it brings any fruit; and thirdly, the elect are ingrafted, who are illuminated unto eternal life according to the immutable purpose of God. The first are cut off, when they refuse the promise given to their fathers, or do not receive it on account of their ingratitude; the second are cut off, when the seed is withered and destroyed; and as the danger of this impends over all, with regard to their own nature, it must be allowed that this warning which Paul gives belongs in a certain way to the faithful, lest they indulge themselves in the sloth of the flesh. But with regard to the present passage, it is enough for us to know, that the vengeance which God had executed on the Jews, is pronounced on the Gentiles, in case they become like them.
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Calvin: Rom 11:23 - -- 23.For God is able, etc. Frigid would this argument be to the profane; for however they may concede power to God, yet as they view it at a distance, ...
23.For God is able, etc. Frigid would this argument be to the profane; for however they may concede power to God, yet as they view it at a distance, shut up as it were in heaven, they do for the most part rob it of its effect. But as the faithful, whenever they hear God’s power named, look on it as in present operation, he thought that this reason was sufficient to strike their minds. We may add, that he assumes this as an acknowledged axiom, — that God had so punished the unbelief of his people as not to forget his mercy; according to what he had done before, having often restored the Jews, after he had apparently banished them from his kingdom. And he shows at the same time by the comparison, how much more easy it would be to reverse the present state of things than to have introduced it; that is, how much easier it would be for the natural branches, if they were again put in the place from which they had been cut off, to draw substance from their own root, than for the wild and the unfruitful, from a foreign stock: for such is the comparison made between the Jews and the Gentiles.
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Calvin: Rom 11:25 - -- 25.I would not, etc Here he rouses his hearers to a greater attention, while he avows that he is going to declare something that was secret. Nor did ...
25.I would not, etc Here he rouses his hearers to a greater attention, while he avows that he is going to declare something that was secret. Nor did he do this without reason; for he wished to conclude, by a brief or plain sentence, a very perplexed question; and yet he declares what no one could have expected. But the words, Lest ye should be proud in yourselves, 361 show what was his designed object; and that was, to check the arrogance of the Gentiles, lest they should exult over the Jews. This admonition was also necessary, lest the defection of that people should immoderately disturb the minds of the weak, as though the salvation of them all was to be forever despaired of. The same is still not less useful to us at this day, so that we may know, that the salvation of the remnant, whom the Lord will at length gather to himself, is hid, sealed as it were by his signet. And whenever a long delay tempts us to despair, let us remember this word mystery; by which Paul clearly reminds us, that the mode of their conversion will neither be common nor usual; and hence they act absurdly who attempt to measure it by their own judgment; for what can be more unreasonable than to regard that as incredible which is far removed from our view? It is called a mystery, because it will be incomprehensible until the time of its revelation. 362 It is, however, made known to us, as it was to the Romans, that our faith may be content with the word, and support us with hope, until the event itself come to light.
That blindness in part, etc “In part,” I think, refers not simply to time, nor to the number, but means, in a manner, or in a measure; by which expression he intended, as it seems to me, only to qualify a declaration which in itself was severe. Until does not specify the progress or order of time, but signifies the same thing, as though he had said, “That the fullness of the Gentiles,” etc. The meaning then is, — That God had in a manner so blinded Israel, that while they refused the light of the gospel, it might be transferred to the Gentiles, and that these might occupy, as it were, the vacated possession. And so this blindness served the providence of God in furthering the salvation of the Gentiles, which he had designed. And the fullness of the Gentiles is to be taken for a great number: for it was not to be, as before, when a few proselytes connected themselves with the Jews; but such was to be the change, that the Gentiles would form almost the entire body of the Church. 363
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Calvin: Rom 11:26 - -- 26.And so all Israel, etc Many understand this of the Jewish people, as though Paul had said, that religion would again be restored among them as bef...
26.And so all Israel, etc Many understand this of the Jewish people, as though Paul had said, that religion would again be restored among them as before: but I extend the word Israel to all the people of God, according to this meaning, — “When the Gentiles shall come in, the Jews also shall return from their defection to the obedience of faith; and thus shall be completed the salvation of the whole Israel of God, which must be gathered from both; and yet in such a way that the Jews shall obtain the first place, being as it were the first-born in God’s family.” This interpretation seems to me the most suitable, because Paul intended here to set forth the completion of the kingdom of Christ, which is by no means to be confined to the Jews, but is to include the whole world. The same manner of speaking we find in Gal 6:16. The Israel of God is what he calls the Church, gathered alike from Jews and Gentiles; and he sets the people, thus collected from their dispersion, in opposition to the carnal children of Abraham, who had departed from his faith.
As it is written, etc He does not confirm the whole passage by this testimony of Isaiah, (Isa 59:20,) but only one clause, — that the children of Abraham shall be partakers of redemption. But if one takes this view, — that Christ had been promised and offered to them, but that as they rejected him, they were deprived of his grace; yet the Prophet’s words express more, even this, — that there will be some remnant, who, having repented, shall enjoy the favor of deliverance.
Paul, however, does not quote what we read in Isaiah, word for word;
“come,” he says, “shall a Redeemer to Sion, and to those who shall repent of iniquity in Jacob, saith the Lord.” (Isa 59:20.)
But on this point we need not be very curious; only this is to be regarded, that the Apostles suitably apply to their purpose whatever proofs they adduce from the Old Testament; for their object was to point but passages, as it were by the finger, that readers might be directed to the fountain itself.
But though in this prophecy deliverance to the spiritual people of God is promised, among whom even Gentiles are included; yet as the Jews are the first-born, what the Prophet declares must be fulfilled, especially in them: for that Scripture calls all the people of God Israelites, is to be ascribed to the pre-eminence of that nation, whom God had preferred to all other nations. And then, from a regard to the ancient covenant, he says expressly, that a Redeemer shall come to Sion; and he adds, that he will redeem those in Jacob who shall return from their transgression. 364 By these words God distinctly claims for himself a certain seed, so that his redemption may be effectual in his elect and peculiar nation. And though fitter for his purpose would have been the expression used by the Prophet, “shall come to Sion;” yet Paul made no scruple to follow the commonly received translation, which reads, “The Redeemer shall come forth from Mount Sion.” And similar is the case as to the second part, “He shall turn away iniquities from Jacob:” for Paul thought it enough to regard this point only, — that as it is Christ’s peculiar office to reconcile to God an apostate and faithless people, some change was surely to be looked for, lest they should all perish together.
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Calvin: Rom 11:27 - -- 27.And, this is my covenant with them, etc Though Paul, by the last prophecy of Isaiah, briefly touched on the office of the Messiah, in order to rem...
27.And, this is my covenant with them, etc Though Paul, by the last prophecy of Isaiah, briefly touched on the office of the Messiah, in order to remind the Jews what was to be expected especially from him, he further adds these few words from Jeremiah, expressly for the same purpose; for what is added is not found in the former passage. 365 This also tends to confirm the subject in hand; for what he said of the conversion of a people who were so stubborn and obstinate, might have appeared incredible: he therefore removes this stumblingblock, by declaring that the covenant included a gratuitous remission of sins. For we may gather from the words of the Prophet, — that God would have no more to do with his apostate people, until he should remit the crime of perfidy, as well as their other sins.
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Calvin: Rom 11:28 - -- 28.With regard indeed to the gospel, etc He shows that the worst thing in the Jews ought not to subject them to the contempt of the Gentiles. Their c...
28.With regard indeed to the gospel, etc He shows that the worst thing in the Jews ought not to subject them to the contempt of the Gentiles. Their chief crime was unbelief: but Paul teaches us, that they were thus blinded for a time by God’s providence, that a way to the gospel might be made for the Gentiles; 368 and that still they were not for ever excluded from the favor of God. He then admits, that they were for the present alienated from God on account of the gospel, that thus the salvation, which at first was deposited with them, might come to the Gentiles; and yet that God was not unmindful of the covenant which he had made with their fathers, and by which he testified that according to his eternal purpose he loved that nation: and this he confirms by this remarkable declaration, — that the grace of the divine calling cannot be made void; for this is the import of the words, —
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Calvin: Rom 11:29 - -- 29.The gifts and calling of God are without repentance He has mentioned gifts and calling; which are to be understood, according to a figure in gramm...
29.The gifts and calling of God are without repentance He has mentioned gifts and calling; which are to be understood, according to a figure in grammar, 369 as meaning the gift of calling: and this is not to be taken for any sort of calling but of that, by which God had adopted the posterity of Abraham into covenant; since this is especially the subject here, as he has previously, by the word, election, designated the secret purpose of God, by which he had formerly made a distinction between the Jews and the Gentiles. 370 For we must bear this in mind, — that he speaks not now of the election of individuals, but of the common adoption of the whole nation, which might seem for a time, according to the outward appearance, to have failed, but had not been cut up by the roots. As the Jews had fallen from their privilege and the salvation promised them, that some hope might remain to the remnant, Paul maintains that the purpose of God stands firm and immovable, by which he had once deigned to choose them for himself as a peculiar nation. Since then it cannot possibly be, that the Lord will depart from that covenant which he made with Abraham,
“I will be the God of thy seed,” (Gen 17:7,)
it is evident that he has not wholly turned away his kindness from the Jewish nation.
He does not oppose the gospel to election, as though they were contrary the one to the other, for whom God has chosen he calls; but inasmuch as the gospel had been proclaimed to the Gentiles beyond the expectation of the world, he justly compares this favor with the ancient election of the Jews, which had been manifested so many ages before: and so election derives its name from antiquity; for God had in past ages of the world chosen one people for himself.
On account of the Fathers, he says not, because they gave any cause for love, but because God’s favor had descended from them to their posterity, according to the tenor of the covenant, “Thy God and the God of thy seed.” How the Gentiles had obtained mercy through the unbelief of the Jews, has been before stated, namely, that God, being angry with the Jews for their unbelief, turned his kindness to them. What immediately follows, that they became unbelievers through the mercy manifested to the Gentiles, seems rather strange; and yet there is in it nothing unreasonable; for Paul assigns not the cause of blindness, but only declares, that what God transferred to the Gentiles had been taken away from the Jews. But lest what they had lost through unbelief, should be thought by the Gentiles to have been gained by them through the merit of faith, mention is made only of mercy. What is substantially said then is, — that as God purposed to show mercy to the Gentiles, the Jews were on this account deprived of the light of faith.
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Calvin: Rom 11:32 - -- 32.For God has shut up, etc A remarkable conclusion, by which he shows that there is no reason why they who have a hope of salvation should despair o...
32.For God has shut up, etc A remarkable conclusion, by which he shows that there is no reason why they who have a hope of salvation should despair of others; for whatever they may now be, they have been like all the rest. If they have emerged from unbelief through God’s mercy alone, they ought to leave place for it as to others also. For he makes the Jews equal in guilt with the Gentiles, that both might understand that the avenue to salvation is no less open to others than to them. For it is the mercy of God alone which saves; and this offers itself to both. This sentence then corresponds with the testimony of Hosea, which he had before quoted, “I will call those my people who were not my people.” But he does not mean, that God so blinds all men that their unbelief is to be imputed to him; but that he hath so arranged by his providence, that all should be guilty of unbelief, in order that he might have them subject to his judgment, and for this end, — that all merits being buried, salvation might proceed from his goodness alone. 371
Paul then intends here to teach two things — that there is nothing in any man why he should be preferred to others, apart from the mere favor of God; and that God in the dispensation of his grace, is under no restraint that he should not grant it to whom he pleases. There is an emphasis in the word mercy; for it intimates that God is bound to none, and that he therefore saves all freely, for they are all equally lost. But extremely gross is their folly who hence conclude that all shall be saved; for Paul simply means that both Jews and Gentiles do not otherwise obtain salvation than through the mercy of God, and thus he leaves to none any reason for complaint. It is indeed true that this mercy is without any difference offered to all, but every one must seek it by faith.
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Calvin: Rom 11:33 - -- 33.Oh! the depth, etc Here first the Apostle bursts into an exclamation, which arose spontaneously from a devout consideration of God’s dealings wi...
33.Oh! the depth, etc Here first the Apostle bursts into an exclamation, which arose spontaneously from a devout consideration of God’s dealings with the faithful; then in passing he checks the boldness of impiety, which is wont to clamor against the judgments of God. When therefore we hear, Oh! the depth, this expression of wonder ought greatly to avail to the beating down of the presumption of our flesh; for after having spoken from the word and by the Spirit of the Lord, being at length overcome by the sublimity of so great a mystery, he could not do otherwise than wonder and exclaim, that, the riches of God’s wisdom are deeper than our reason can penetrate to. Whenever then we enter on a discourse respecting the eternal counsels of God, let a bridle be always set on our thoughts and tongue, so that after having spoken soberly and within the limits of God’s word, our reasoning may at last end in admiration. Nor ought we to be ashamed, that if we are not wiser than he, who, having been taken into the third heaven, saw mysteries to man ineffable, and who yet could find in this instance no other end designed but that he should thus humble himself.
Some render the words of Paul thus, “Oh! the deep riches, and wisdom, and knowledge of God!” as though the word
How incomprehensible, etc By different words, according to a practice common in Hebrew, he expresses the same thing. For he speaks of judgments, then he subjoins ways, which mean appointments or the mode of acting, or the manner of ruling. But he still continues his exclamation, and thus the more he elevates the height of the divine mystery, the more he deters us from the curiosity of investigating it. Let us then learn to make no searchings respecting the Lord, except as far as he has revealed himself in the Scriptures; for otherwise we shall enter a labyrinth, from which the retreat is not easy. It must however be noticed, that he speaks not here of all God’s mysteries, but of those which are hid with God himself, and ought to be only admired and adored by us.
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Calvin: Rom 11:34 - -- 34.Who has known the mind of the Lord? He begins here to extend as it were his hand to restrain the audacity of men, lest they should clamor against ...
34.Who has known the mind of the Lord? He begins here to extend as it were his hand to restrain the audacity of men, lest they should clamor against God’s judgments, and this he does by stating two reasons: the first is, that all mortals are too blind to take a view of God’s predestination by their own understanding, and to reason on a thing unknown is presumptuous and absurd; the other is, that we can have no cause of complaint against God, since no mortal can boast that God is a debtor to him; but that, on the contrary, all are under obligations to him for his bounty. 375
Within this limit then let every one remember to keep his own mind, lest he be carried beyond God’s oracles in investigating predestination, since we hear that man can distinguish nothing in this case, any more than a blind man in darkness. This caution, however, is not to be so applied as to weaken the certainty of faith, which proceeds not from the acumen of the human mind, but solely from the illumination of the Spirit; for Paul himself in another place, after having testified that all the mysteries of God far exceed the comprehension of our minds, immediately subjoins that the faithful understand the mind of the Lord, because they have not received the spirit of this world, but the Spirit which has been given them by God, by whom they are instructed as to his goodness, which otherwise would be incomprehensible to them.
As then we cannot by our own faculties examine the secrets of God, so we are admitted into a certain and clear knowledge of them by the grace of the Holy Spirit: and if we ought to follow the guidance of the Spirit, where he leaves us, there we ought to stop and as it were to fix our standing. If any one will seek to know more than what God has revealed, he shall be overwhelmed with the immeasurable brightness of inaccessible light. But we must bear in mind the distinction, which I have before mentioned, between the secret counsel of God, and his will made known in Scripture; for though the whole doctrine of Scripture surpasses in its height the mind of man, yet an access to it is not closed against the faithful, who reverently and soberly follow the Spirit as their guide; but the case is different with regard to his hidden counsel, the depth and height of which cannot by any investigation be reached.
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Calvin: Rom 11:35 - -- 35.Who has first given to him, etc Another reason, by which God’s righteousness is most effectually defended against all the accusations of the ung...
35.Who has first given to him, etc Another reason, by which God’s righteousness is most effectually defended against all the accusations of the ungodly: for if no one retains him bound to himself by his own merits, no one can justly expostulate with him for not having received his reward; as he, who would constrain another to do him good, must necessarily adduce those deeds by which he has deserved a reward. The import then of Paul’s words is this — “God cannot be charged with unrighteousness, except it can be proved, that he renders not to every one his due: but it is evident, that no one is deprived by him of his right, since he is under obligation to none; for who can boast of any thing of his own, by which he has deserved his favor?” 376
Now this is a remarkable passage; for we are here taught, that it is not in our power to constrain God by our good works to bestow salvation on us, but that he anticipates the undeserving by his gratuitous goodness. But if we desire to make an honest examination, we shall not only find, that God is in no way a debtor to us, but that we are all subject to his judgment, — that we not only deserve no layout, but that we are worthy of eternal death. And Paul not only concludes, that God owes us nothing, on account of our corrupt and sinful nature; but he denies, that if man were perfect, he could bring anything before God, by which he could gain his favor; for as soon as he begins to exist, he is already by the right of creation so much indebted to his Maker, that he has nothing of his own. In vain then shall we try to take from him his own right, that he should not, as he pleases, freely determine respecting his own creatures, as though there was mutual debt and credit.
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Calvin: Rom 11:36 - -- 36.For from him and through him, etc A confirmation of the last verse. He shows, that it is very far from being the case, that we can glory in any go...
36.For from him and through him, etc A confirmation of the last verse. He shows, that it is very far from being the case, that we can glory in any good thing of our own against God, since we have been created by him from nothing, and now exist through him. He hence infers, that our being should be employed for his glory: for how unreasonable would it be for creatures, whom he has formed and whom he sustains, to live for any other purpose than for making his glory known? It has not escaped my notice, that the phrase,
To him be glory, etc The proposition being as it were proved, he now confidently assumes it as indubitable, — That the Lord’s own glory ought everywhere to continue to him unchangeably: for the sentence would be frigid were it taken generally; but its emphasis depends on the context, that. God justly claims for himself absolute supremacy, and that in the condition of mankind and of the whole world nothing is to be sought beyond his own glory. It hence follows, that absurd and contrary to reason, and even insane, are all those sentiments which tend to diminish his glory.
Defender: Rom 11:22 - -- God's "severity" is a subject studiously avoided by many modern scholars who prefer to believe in a God who will take everyone to heaven. The Scriptur...
God's "severity" is a subject studiously avoided by many modern scholars who prefer to believe in a God who will take everyone to heaven. The Scriptures clearly reveal otherwise. Jesus said only a few are on the road that "leadeth unto life" (Mat 7:14), while many are on the broad "way, that leadeth to destruction" (Mat 7:13). All those that "know not God, and that obey not the gospel of our Lord Jesus Christ ... shall be punished with everlasting destruction from the presence of the Lord" (2Th 1:8, 2Th 1:9). Sadly also, many who profess to know the Lord will be dismayed at the judgment to hear Him say: "I never knew you: depart from me, ye that work iniquity" (Mat 7:23). God can be severe."
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Defender: Rom 11:25 - -- Israel has been judicially blinded (Rom 11:7, Rom 11:8) but only "in part." Only "some of the branches be broken off" (Rom 11:17). Through every year ...
Israel has been judicially blinded (Rom 11:7, Rom 11:8) but only "in part." Only "some of the branches be broken off" (Rom 11:17). Through every year in this age of the church, there has been "a remnant according to the election of grace" (Rom 11:5). Many Christian leaders, beginning with the apostles, have been Jews.
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Defender: Rom 11:25 - -- God is now "[visiting] the Gentiles, to take out of them a people for his name" (Act 15:14). When the full number (known only to God) has been reached...
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Defender: Rom 11:26 - -- The complete restoration of Israel will climax the purging trials of "the time of Jacob's trouble" (Jer 30:7). Paul refers here to Isa 59:20. This wil...
The complete restoration of Israel will climax the purging trials of "the time of Jacob's trouble" (Jer 30:7). Paul refers here to Isa 59:20. This will take place when Christ returns to earth to establish His millennial kingdom centered in Jerusalem (Zec 12:8-10; Zec 13:1; Zec 14:9), following the great tribulation period (Mat 24:29-31). The surviving and resurrected Jews will all acknowledge Jesus Christ as their Messiah and Savior in that day."
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Defender: Rom 11:33 - -- All the treasures of both wisdom and knowledge are found in Christ (Col 2:3), for He is the Creator and Sustainer of all things (Col 1:16, Col 1:17; H...
All the treasures of both wisdom and knowledge are found in Christ (Col 2:3), for He is the Creator and Sustainer of all things (Col 1:16, Col 1:17; Heb 1:3). In fact, "the fear of the Lord is the [very] beginning" (Pro 1:7; Pro 9:10) of both "knowledge" (awareness and comprehension of facts) and "wisdom" (correlation and application of facts).
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Defender: Rom 11:33 - -- God is not accessible to scientific research. "Canst thou by searching find out God? canst thou find out the Almighty unto perfection?" (Job 11:7). Th...
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Defender: Rom 11:34 - -- This phrase is quoted from Isa 40:13, which is also quoted in 1Co 2:16. Though we cannot know the mind of the Lord by human wisdom, Paul says "we have...
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Defender: Rom 11:35 - -- All of God's gifts are by grace, not for recompense. He needs nothing from us, but gives us all things in Christ (Rom 8:32)."
All of God's gifts are by grace, not for recompense. He needs nothing from us, but gives us all things in Christ (Rom 8:32)."
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Defender: Rom 11:36 - -- Christ created all things, sustains all things and reconciles all things (Col 1:16-20). God's Son "made the worlds" (Heb 1:2) in the past, is "upholdi...
Christ created all things, sustains all things and reconciles all things (Col 1:16-20). God's Son "made the worlds" (Heb 1:2) in the past, is "upholding all things by the word of his power" (Heb 1:3) in the present, and will be heir of all things in the future (Heb 1:4). Jesus Christ is "Alpha and Omega, the beginning and the end, the first and the last" (Rev 22:13), "the Lord, which is, and which was, and which is to come, the Almighty" (Rev 1:8)."
TSK: Rom 11:20 - -- Well : Joh 4:17, Joh 4:18; Jam 2:19
because : Rom 3:3; Act 13:46, Act 13:47, Act 18:6; Heb 3:12, Heb 3:19, Heb 4:6, Heb 4:11
and : Rom 5:1, Rom 5:2; 2...
Well : Joh 4:17, Joh 4:18; Jam 2:19
because : Rom 3:3; Act 13:46, Act 13:47, Act 18:6; Heb 3:12, Heb 3:19, Heb 4:6, Heb 4:11
and : Rom 5:1, Rom 5:2; 2Ch 20:20; Isa 7:9; 1Co 16:13; 2Co 1:24; Col 2:7; 1Pe 5:9, 1Pe 5:12
Be : Rom 11:18, Rom 12:16; Psa 138:6; Pro 28:26; Isa 2:11, Isa 2:17; Hab 2:4; Zep 3:11; Luk 18:14; 2Co 10:5; 2Th 2:4; 2Ti 3:3-5; Jam 4:6; 1Pe 5:5, 1Pe 5:6; Rev 3:17; Rev 18:7
but : Pro 28:14; Isa 66:2; 1Co 10:12; Phi 2:12; Heb 4:1; 1Pe 1:17
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TSK: Rom 11:21 - -- if God : Rom 11:17, Rom 11:19, Rom 8:32; Jer 25:29, Jer 49:12; 1Co 10:1-12; 2Pe 2:4-9; Jud 1:5
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TSK: Rom 11:22 - -- therefore : Rom 2:4, Rom 2:5, Rom 9:22, Rom 9:23; Num 14:18-22; Deu 32:39-43; Jos 23:15, Jos 23:16; Psa 58:10,Psa 58:11; Psa 78:49-52, Psa 136:15-22; ...
therefore : Rom 2:4, Rom 2:5, Rom 9:22, Rom 9:23; Num 14:18-22; Deu 32:39-43; Jos 23:15, Jos 23:16; Psa 58:10,Psa 58:11; Psa 78:49-52, Psa 136:15-22; Isa 66:14
severity : The term severity
if thou : Rom 2:7; Luk 8:15; Joh 8:31, Joh 15:4-10; Act 11:23, Act 14:22; 1Co 15:2; Gal 6:9; 1Th 3:5, 1Th 3:8; Heb 3:6, Heb 3:14, Heb 10:23, Heb 10:35-39; 1Jo 2:19; Jud 1:20,Jud 1:21
otherwise : Eze 3:20, Eze 18:24, Eze 33:17-19; Mat 3:9, Mat 3:10; Joh 15:2; Rev 2:5
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TSK: Rom 11:25 - -- I would : Psa 107:43; Hos 14:9; 1Co 10:1, 1Co 12:1; 2Pe 3:8
this : Rom 16:25; Eph 3:3, Eph 3:4, Eph 3:9; Rev 10:7
lest : Rom 12:16; Pro 3:5-7, Pro 26:...
I would : Psa 107:43; Hos 14:9; 1Co 10:1, 1Co 12:1; 2Pe 3:8
this : Rom 16:25; Eph 3:3, Eph 3:4, Eph 3:9; Rev 10:7
lest : Rom 12:16; Pro 3:5-7, Pro 26:12, Pro 26:16; Isa 5:21
blindness : or, hardness, Rom 11:7, Rom 11:8; 2Co 3:14-16
until : Psa 22:27, Psa 72:8-14, Psa 72:17, Psa 127:1; Isa 2:1-8, 60:1-22, Isa 66:18-23; Mic 4:1, Mic 4:2; Zec 8:20-23, Zec 14:9-21; Luk 21:24; Rev 7:9, Rev 11:15, Rev 20:2-4
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TSK: Rom 11:26 - -- all : Isa 11:11-16, Isa 45:17, Isa 54:6-10; Jer 3:17-23, Jer 30:17-22, Jer 31:31-37; Jer 32:37-41, Jer 33:24-26; Eze 34:22-31, Eze 37:21-28, Eze 39:25...
all : Isa 11:11-16, Isa 45:17, Isa 54:6-10; Jer 3:17-23, Jer 30:17-22, Jer 31:31-37; Jer 32:37-41, Jer 33:24-26; Eze 34:22-31, Eze 37:21-28, Eze 39:25-29; Ezek. 40:1-48:35; Hos 3:5; Joe 3:16-21; Amo 9:14, Amo 9:15; Mic 7:15-20; Zep 3:12-20; Zec 10:6-12
There : Psa 14:7, Psa 106:47; Isa 59:20
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TSK: Rom 11:27 - -- this : Isa 55:3, Isa 59:21; Jer 31:31-34, Jer 32:38-40; Heb 8:8-12, Heb 10:16
when : Isa 27:9, Isa 43:25; Jer 50:20; Eze 36:25-29; Hos 14:2; Joh 1:29
this : Isa 55:3, Isa 59:21; Jer 31:31-34, Jer 32:38-40; Heb 8:8-12, Heb 10:16
when : Isa 27:9, Isa 43:25; Jer 50:20; Eze 36:25-29; Hos 14:2; Joh 1:29
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TSK: Rom 11:28 - -- are enemies : Rom 11:11, Rom 11:30; Mat 21:43; Act 13:45, Act 13:46, Act 14:2, Act 18:6; 1Th 2:15, 1Th 2:16
but : Rom 11:7; Isa 41:8, Isa 41:9
are bel...
are enemies : Rom 11:11, Rom 11:30; Mat 21:43; Act 13:45, Act 13:46, Act 14:2, Act 18:6; 1Th 2:15, 1Th 2:16
but : Rom 11:7; Isa 41:8, Isa 41:9
are beloved : Gen 26:4, Gen 28:14; Lev 26:40-42; Deu 4:31, Deu 7:7, Deu 7:8, Deu 8:18, Deu 9:5, Deu 10:15; Psa 105:8-11; Jer 31:3; Mic 7:20; Luk 1:54, Luk 1:68-75
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TSK: Rom 11:30 - -- as ye : 1Co 6:9-11; Eph 2:1, Eph 2:2, Eph 2:12, Eph 2:13, Eph 2:19-21; Col 3:7; Tit 3:3-7
believed : or, obeyed
obtained : Rom 11:31; 1Co 7:25; 2Co 4:...
as ye : 1Co 6:9-11; Eph 2:1, Eph 2:2, Eph 2:12, Eph 2:13, Eph 2:19-21; Col 3:7; Tit 3:3-7
believed : or, obeyed
obtained : Rom 11:31; 1Co 7:25; 2Co 4:1; 1Ti 1:18; 1Pe 2:10
through : Rom 11:11-19
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TSK: Rom 11:32 - -- God : Rom 3:9, Rom 3:22; Gal 3:22
concluded them all : or, shut them all up together, Joh 1:7, Joh 12:32; 1Ti 2:4-6
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TSK: Rom 11:33 - -- the depth : Psa. 107:8-43; Pro 25:3; Eph 3:18
riches : Rom 2:4, Rom 9:23; Eph 1:7, Eph 2:7, Eph 3:8, Eph 3:10,Eph 3:16; Col 1:27, Col 2:2, Col 2:3
how...
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TSK: Rom 11:36 - -- of him : 1Ch 29:11, 1Ch 29:12; Psa 33:6; Pro 16:4; Dan 2:20-23, Dan 4:3, Dan 4:34; Mat 6:13; Act 17:25, Act 17:26, Act 17:28; 1Co 8:6; Eph 4:6-10; Col...
of him : 1Ch 29:11, 1Ch 29:12; Psa 33:6; Pro 16:4; Dan 2:20-23, Dan 4:3, Dan 4:34; Mat 6:13; Act 17:25, Act 17:26, Act 17:28; 1Co 8:6; Eph 4:6-10; Col 1:15-17; Rev 21:6
to whom : Gr. to him, Rom 16:27; Psa 29:1, Psa 29:2, Psa 96:7, Psa 96:8, Psa 115:1; Isa 42:12; Luk 2:14, Luk 19:38; Gal 1:5; Eph 3:21; Phi 4:20; 1Ti 1:17, 1Ti 6:16; 2Ti 4:18; Heb 13:21; 1Pe 5:11; 2Pe 3:18; Jud 1:25; Rev 1:5, Rev 1:6, Rev 4:10,Rev 4:11, Rev 5:12-14, Rev 7:10, Rev 19:1, Rev 19:6, Rev 19:7
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes: Rom 11:20 - -- Well - True. It is true they were broken off; but in order to show that there was no occasion for boasting, he adds that they were not rejected...
Well - True. It is true they were broken off; but in order to show that there was no occasion for boasting, he adds that they were not rejected in order to admit others, but because of their unbelief, and that their fate should have a salutary impression on those who had no occasion for boasting, but who might be rejected for the same cause. This is an instance of remarkable tact and delicacy in an argument, admitting the main force of the remark, but giving it a slight change in accordance with the truth, so as to parry its force, and give it a practical bearing on the very point which he wished to enforce.
Thou standest by faith - The continuance of these mercies to you depends on your fidelity. If you are faithful, they will be preserved; if, like the Jews, you become unbelieving and unfruitful, like them you will be also rejected. This fact should repress boasting, and excite to anxiety and caution.
Be not high-minded - Do not be elated in the conception of your privileges, so as to produce vain self-confidence and boasting.
But fear - This fear stands opposed to the spirit of boasting and self-confidence, against which he was exhorting them. It does not mean terror or horror, but it denotes humility, watchfulness, and solicitude to abide in the faith. Do not be haughty and high-minded against the Jew, who has been cast off, but "demean yourself as a humble believer, and one who has need to be continually on his guard, and to fear lest he may fall through unbelief, and be cast off."(Stuart.) We may here learn,
(1) That there is danger lest those who are raised to eminent privileges should become unduly exalted in their own estimation, and despise others.
(2)\caps1 t\caps0 he tendency of faith is to promote humility and a sense of our dependence on God.
(3)\caps1 t\caps0 he system of salvation by faith produces that solicitude, and careful guarding, and watchfulness, which is necessary to preserve us from apostasy and ruin.
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Barnes: Rom 11:21 - -- For if God ... - If God did not refrain from rejecting the Jews who became unbelievers, assuredly he will not refrain from rejecting you in the...
For if God ... - If God did not refrain from rejecting the Jews who became unbelievers, assuredly he will not refrain from rejecting you in the same circumstances. It may be supposed that he will be quite as ready to reject the ingrafted branches, as to cast off those which belonged to the parent stock. The situation of the Gentiles is not such as to give them any security over the condition of the rejected Jew.
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Barnes: Rom 11:22 - -- Behold, therefore ... - Regard, or contemplate, for purposes of your own improvement and benefit, the dealings of God. We should look on all hi...
Behold, therefore ... - Regard, or contemplate, for purposes of your own improvement and benefit, the dealings of God. We should look on all his dispensations of judgment or of mercy, and derive lessons from all to promote our own steadfast adherence to the faith of the gospel.
The goodness - The benevolence or mercy of God toward you in admitting you to his favor. This calls for gratitude, love, confidence. It demands expressions of thanksgiving. It should be highly prized, in order that it may excite to diligence to secure its continuance.
The severity of God - That is, toward the Jews. The word "severity"now suggests sometimes the idea of harshness, or even of cruelty. (Webster.) But nothing of this kind is conveyed in the original word here. It properly denotes "cutting off,"
On them which fell, severity - On the Jews, who had been rejected because of their unbelief.
But towards thee, goodness - Toward the Gentile world, benevolence. The word "goodness"properly denotes benignity or benevolence. Here it signifies the kindness of God in bestowing these favors on the Gentiles.
If thou continue in his goodness - The word "his"is not in the original. And the word "goodness"may denote integrity, probity, uprightness, as well as favor; Rom 3:12, "There is none that doeth good."The Septuagint often thus uses the word; Psa 13:1, Psa 13:3, etc. This is probably the meaning here; though it may mean "if thou dost continue in a state of favor;"that is, if your faith and good conduct shall be such as to make it proper for God to continue his kindness toward you. Christians do not merit the favor of God by their faith and good works; but their obedience is an indispensable condition on which that favor is to be continued. It is thus that the grace of God is magnified, at the same time that the highest good is done to man himself.
Otherwise thou also shalt be cut off - Compare Joh 15:2. The word "thou"refers here to the Gentile churches. In relation to them the favor of God was dependent on their fidelity. If they became disobedient and unbelieving, then the same principle which led him to withdraw his mercy from the Jewish people would lead also to their rejection and exclusion. And on this principle, God has acted in numberless cases. Thus, his favor was withdrawn from the seven churches of Asia Rev. 1\endash 3, from Corinth, from Antioch, from Philippi, and even from Rome itself.
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Barnes: Rom 11:23 - -- And they also - The Jews. If they bide not ... - If they do not continue in willful obstinacy and rejection of the Messiah. As their unbe...
And they also - The Jews.
If they bide not ... - If they do not continue in willful obstinacy and rejection of the Messiah. As their unbelief was the sole cause of their rejection, so if that be removed, they may be again restored to the divine favor.
For God is able ... - He has,
(1) Power to restore them, to bring them back and replace them in his favor.
(2)\caps1 h\caps0 e has not bound himself utterly to reject them, and forever to exclude them.
In this way the apostle reaches his purpose, which was to show them that God had not cast away his people or finally rejected the Jewish nation; Rom 11:1-2. That God has this power, the apostle proceeds to show in the next verse.
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Barnes: Rom 11:24 - -- For if thou - If you who are Gentiles. Wert cut out of - Or, if thou wert of the cutting of the wild olive-tree. Which is wild by na...
For if thou - If you who are Gentiles.
Wert cut out of - Or, if thou wert of the cutting of the wild olive-tree.
Which is wild by nature - Which is uncultivated and unfruitful. That is, if you were introduced into a state of favor with God from a condition which was one of enmity and hostility to him. The argument here is, that it was in itself as difficult a thing to reclaim them, and change them from opposition to God to friendship, as it would seem difficult or impossible to reclaim and make fruitful the wild olive-tree.
And were graffed contrary to nature - Contrary to your natural habits, thoughts, and practices. There was among the Gentiles no inclination or tendency toward God. This does not mean that they were physically depraved, or that their disposition was literally like the wild olive; but it is used, for the sake of illustration, to show that their moral character and habits were unlike those of the friends of God.
How much more ... - The meaning of this whole verse may be thus expressed; "If God had mercy on the Gentiles, who were outcasts from his favor, shall he not much rather on those who were so long his people, to whom had been given the promises, and the covenants, and the Law, whose ancestors had been so many of them his friends, and among whom the Messiah was born?"In some respects, there are facilities among the Jews for their conversion, which had not existed among the Gentiles. They worship one God; they admit the authority of revelation; they have the Scriptures of the Old Testament; they expect a Messiah; and they have a habit of professed reverence for the will of God.
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Barnes: Rom 11:25 - -- Ignorant of this mystery - The word "mystery"means properly what is "concealed, hidden, or unknown."And it especially refers, in the New Testam...
Ignorant of this mystery - The word "mystery"means properly what is "concealed, hidden, or unknown."And it especially refers, in the New Testament, to the truths or doctrines which God had reserved to himself, or had not before communicated. It does not mean, as with us often, that there was anything unintelligible or inscrutible in the nature of the doctrine itself, for it was commonly perfectly plain when it was made known. Thus, the doctrine, that the division between the Jews and the Gentiles was to be broken down, is called a mystery, because it had been, to the times of the apostles, concealed, and was then revealed fully for the first time; Rom 16:25; Col 1:26-27; compare 1Co 15:51; Mar 4:11; Eph 1:9; Eph 3:3. Thus, the doctrine which the apostle was stating was one that until then had been concealed, or had not been made known. It does not mean that there was anything unintelligible or incomprehensive in it, but until then it had not been made known.
Lest ye should be wise in your own conceits - Paul communicated the truth in regard to this, lest they should attempt to inquire into it; should speculate about the reason why God had rejected the Jews; and should he elated with the belief that they had, by their own skill and genius, ascertained the cause. Rather than leave them to vain speculations and self-gratulation, he chose to cut short all inquiry, by stating the truth about; their present and future state.
Blindness - Or hardness; see Rom 11:7.
In part - Not totally, or entirely. They are not absolutely or completely blinded. This is a qualifying expression; but it does not denote what part or portion, or for what time it is to continue. It means that the blindness in respect to the whole nation was only partial. Some were then enlightened, and had become Christians; and many more would he.
To Israel - To the Jews.
Until the fulness of the Gentiles ... - The word "fulness"in relation to the Jews is used in Rom 11:12. It means until the abundance or the great multitude of the Gentiles shall be converted. The word is not used elsewhere in respect to the Gentiles; and it is difficult to fix its meaning definitely. It doubtless refers to the future spread of the Gospel among the nations; to the time when it may be said that the great mass, the abundance of the nations, shall be converted to God. At present, they are, as they were in the times of the apostle, idolators, so that the mass of mankind are far from God. But the Scriptures have spoken of a time when the gospel shall spread and prevail among the nations of the earth; and to this the apostle refers. He does not say, however, that the Jews may not be converted until all the Gentiles become Christians; for he expressly supposes Rom 11:12-15 that the conversion of the Jews will have an important influence in extending the gospel among the Gentiles. Probably the meaning is, that this blindness is to continue until great numbers of the Gentiles shall be converted; until the gospel shall be extensively spread; and then the conversion of the Jews will be a part of the rapid spread of the gospel, and will be among the most efficient and important aids in completing the work. If this is the case, then Christians may labor still for their conversion. They may seek that in connection with the effort to convert the pagan; and they may toil with the expectation that the conversion of the Jews and Gentiles will not be separate, independent, and distinct events; but will be inter-mingled, and will be perhaps simultaneous. The word "fulness"may denote such a general turning to God, without affirming that each individual shall be thus converted to the Christian faith.
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Barnes: Rom 11:26 - -- And so - That is, in this manner; or when the great abundance of the Gentiles shall be converted, then all Israel shall be saved. All Isra...
And so - That is, in this manner; or when the great abundance of the Gentiles shall be converted, then all Israel shall be saved.
All Israel - All the Jews. It was a maxim among the Jews that "every Israelite should have part in the future age."(Grotius.) The apostle applies that maxim to his own purpose; and declares the sense in which it would be true. He does not mean to say that every Jew of every age would be saved; for he had proved that a large portion of them would be, in his time, rejected and lost. But the time would come when, as a people, they would be recovered; when the nation would turn to God; and when it could be said of them that, as a nation, they were restored to the divine favor. It is not clear that he means that even then every individual of them would be saved, but the body of them; the great mass of the nation would be. Nor is it said when this would be. This is one of the things which "the Father hath put in his own power;"Act 1:7. He has given us the assurance that it shall be done to encourage us in our efforts to save them; and he has concealed the time when it shall be, lest we should relax our efforts, or feel that no exertions were needed to accomplish what must take place at a fixed time.
Shall be saved - Shall be recovered from their rejection; be restored to the divine favor; become followers of the Messiah, and thus be saved as all other Christians are.
As it is written - Isa 59:20. The quotation is not literally made, but the sense of the passage is preserved. The Hebrew is, "There shall come to Zion a Redeemer, and for those who turn from ungodliness in Jacob."There can be no doubt that Isaiah refers here to the times of the gospel.
Out of Zion - Zion was one of the bills of Jerusalem. On this was built the city of David. It came thus to denote, in general, the church, or people of God. And when it is said that the Redeemer should come out of Zion, it means that he should arise among that people, be descended from themselves, or should not be a foreigner. The Septuagint, however render it, "the Redeemer shall come on account of Zion."So the Chaldee paraphrase, and the Latin Vulgate.
And shall turn away ... - The Hebrew is, "to those forsaking un godliness in Jacob."The Septuagint has rendered it in the same manner as the apostle.
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Barnes: Rom 11:27 - -- For this is my covenant ... - This expression is found immediately following the other in Isa 59:21. But the apostle connects with it a part of...
For this is my covenant ... - This expression is found immediately following the other in Isa 59:21. But the apostle connects with it a part of another promise taken from Jer 31:33-34; or rather he abridges that promise, and expresses its substance, by adding "when I shall take away their sins."It is clear that he intended to express the general sense of the promises, as they were well known to the Jews, and as it was a point concerning which he did not need to argue or reason with them, that God had made a covenant with them, and intended to restore them if they were cast off, and should then repent and turn to him. The time and manner in which this shall be, is not revealed. It may be remarked, however, that that passage does not mean that the Redeemer shall come personally and preach to them, or re-appear for the purpose of recalling them to himself; nor does it mean that they will be restored to the land of their fathers. Neither of these ideas is contained in the passage. God will doubtless convert the Jews, as he does the Gentiles, by human means, and in connection with the prayers of his people; so that the Gentiles shall yet repay the toil and care of the ancient Jews in preserving the Scriptures, and preparing the way for the Messiah; and both shall rejoice that they were made helps in spreading the knowledge of the Messiah.
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Barnes: Rom 11:28 - -- As concerning the gospel - So far as the gospel is concerned; or, in order to promote its extension and spread through the earth. They are...
As concerning the gospel - So far as the gospel is concerned; or, in order to promote its extension and spread through the earth.
They are enemies - The word "enemies"here stands opposed to "beloved;"and as in one respect, to wit, on account of "election,"they were still beloved, that is, beloved by God, so in another respect they were his enemies, i. e., opposed to him, or cast off from him. The enemies of God denote all who are not his true friends; Col 1:21; Rom 5:10; compare Rom 11:8. The word here is applied to the Jews because they had rejected the Messiah; had become opposed to God; and were therefore rejected by him.
For your sakes - For your advantage. Their rejection has become the occasion by which the gospel has been preached to you; compare Rom 11:11, Rom 11:19-20.
As touching the election - So far as the purpose of election is concerned. That is, the election of their fathers and of the nation to be the special people of God.
They are beloved - God still regards them with interest; has purposes of mercy toward them; intends still to do them good. This does not, mean that he approved of their conduct or character, or that he had for them the same kind of affection which he would have had if they had been obedient. God does not love a sinful character; but he may have still purposes of mercy, and regard people with deep interest on whom he intends yet to bestow mercy.
For the fathers’ sakes - Compare Deu 10:15. He had chosen their fathers to be His special people. He had made many promises to Abraham respecting his seed, and extended these premises to his remotest posterity. Though salvation is by grace, and not from human merit, yet God has respect to his covenant made with the fathers, and will not forget his promises. It is not on account of any merit of the fathers or of ancient saints, but solely because God had made a covenant with them; and this purpose of election would be manifest to their children in the latest times. As those contemplated in the covenant made with Abraham, God retained for them feelings of special interest; and designed their recovery to himself. It is clear here that the word "election"does not refer to external privileges; for Paul is not teaching the doctrine that they shall be restored to the external privileges of Jews, but that they shall be truly converted to God. Yet this should not be abused by others to lead them to security in sin. No man has any security of happiness, and of the favor of God, but he who complies with the terms of his mercy. His commands are explicit to repent and believe, nor can there be safety except in entire compliance with the terms on which he is willing to bestow eternal life.
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Barnes: Rom 11:29 - -- For the gifts - The favors or benefits which God bestows on men. The word χάρισμα charisma properly denotes any benefit which is...
For the gifts - The favors or benefits which God bestows on men. The word
And calling of God - The word "calling"
Without repentance - This does not refer to man, but to God. It does not mean that God confers his favors on man without his exercising repentance, but that God does not repent, or change, in his purposes of bestowing his gifts on man. What he promises he will fulfil; what he purposes to do, he will not change from or repent of. As he made promises to the fathers, he will not repent of them, and will not depart from them; they shall all be fulfilled; and thus it was certain that the ancient people of God, though many of them had become rebellious, and had been cast off, should not be forgotten and abandoned. This is a general proposition respecting God, and one repeatedly made of him in the Scriptures; see Num 23:19, "God is not a man, that he should lie; neither the son of man, that he should repent: hath he not said, and shall he not do it? hath he spoken, and shall he not make it good?"Eze 24:14; 1Sa 15:29; Psa 89:35-36; Tit 1:2; Heb 6:18; Jam 1:17. It follows from this,
(1) That all the promises made to the people of God shall be fulfilled.
\caps1 (2) t\caps0 hat his people need not be discouraged or desponding, in times of persecution and trial.
\caps1 (3) t\caps0 hat none who become his true friends will be forsaken, or cast off. God does not bestow the gift of repentance and faith, of pardon and peace, on people, for a temporary purpose; nor does he capriciously withdraw them, and leave the soul to ruin. When he renews a soul, it is with reference to his own glory; and to withdraw those favors, and leave such a soul once renewed to go down to hell, would be as much a violation of all the principles of his nature as it would be to all the promises of the Scripture.
\caps1 (4) f\caps0 or God to forsake such a soul, and leave it to ruin, would imply that he did repent. It would suppose a change of purpose and of feeling. It would be the character of a capricious being, with no settled plan or principles of action; no confidence could be reposed in him, and his government would be unworthy the affections and trust of his intelligent creation.
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Barnes: Rom 11:30 - -- For as ye - You who were Gentiles. In times past - Before the gospel was preached. This refers to the former idolatrous and sinful state ...
For as ye - You who were Gentiles.
In times past - Before the gospel was preached. This refers to the former idolatrous and sinful state of the pagan world; compare Eph 2:2; Act 14:16.
Have not believed God - Or have not obeyed God. This was the character of all the pagan nations.
Yet have now obtained mercy - Have been pardoned and admitted to the favor of God.
Through their unbelief - By means of the unbelief and rejection of the Jews; see the note at Rom 11:11.
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Barnes: Rom 11:31 - -- Even so have these ... - That is, the Jews. That through your mercy ... - The immediate effect of the unbelief of the Jews was to confer ...
Even so have these ... - That is, the Jews.
That through your mercy ... - The immediate effect of the unbelief of the Jews was to confer salvation on the Gentiles, or to open the way for the preaching of the gospel to them. But its remote effect would be to secure the preaching of the gospel again to the Jews. Through the mercy, that is, the compassion or deep feeling of the converted Gentiles; through the deep and tender pity which they would feel for the blinded and degraded Jews: the gospel should be again carried to them, and they should be recalled to the long lost favor of God. Each party should thus cause salvation to come to the other - the Jews to the Gentiles by their unbelief; but the Gentiles, in their turn, to the Jews by their belief. We may here learn,
(1) That the Jews are to be converted by the instrumentality of the Gentiles. It is not to be by miracle, but by the regular and common way in which God blesses people.
(2)\caps1 t\caps0 hat this is to be done by the mercy, or compassion of the Gentiles; by their taking pity on the lost and wretched condition of the Jewish people.
(3)\caps1 i\caps0 t is to be when the abundance of the Gentiles - that is, when great numbers of the Gentiles - shall be called in.
It may be asked here whether the time is not approaching for the Gentiles to make efforts to bring the Jews to the knowledge of the Messiah. Hitherto those efforts have been unsuccessful; but it will not always be so; the time is coming when the promises of God in regard to them shall be fulfilled. Christians shall be moved with deep compassion for the degraded and forsaken Jews, and they shall be called into the kingdom of God, and made efficient agents in extending the gospel through the whole world. May the time soon come when they shall feel as they should, for the rejected and forsaken children of Abraham, and when their labors for their conversion shall be attended with success.
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Barnes: Rom 11:32 - -- For God hath concluded ... - The word translated here "concluded"sunekleise, is rendered in the margin "shut them all up together."It is proper...
For God hath concluded ... - The word translated here "concluded"sunekleise, is rendered in the margin "shut them all up together."It is properly used in reference to those who are shut up in prison, or to those in a city who are shut up by a besieging army; 1 Macc. 5:5; 6:18; 11:65; 15:25; Jos 6:6; Isa 45:1. It is used in the New Testament of fish taken in a net; Luk 5:6, "They enclosed a great multitude of fishes;"Gal 3:22, "But the Scripture hath concluded all under sin, that the promise, etc."In this place the Scripture is declared to have shut them up under sin, that is, declared them to be sinners; gave no hope of rescue by any works of their own; and thus kept them Rom 11:23 "shut up unto the faith which should afterward be revealed."All are represented, therefore, as in prison, enclosed or confined by God, and to be liberated only in his own way and time. In regard to the agency of God in this, we may remark:
(1) That the word does not mean that God compelled them to disbelieve the gospel. When, in Gal 3:22, the Scripture is said to have included all under sin, it is not meant that the Scripture compelled them not to believe.
\caps1 (2) t\caps0 he word does not imply that the sin and unbelief for which they were shut up were not voluntary. Even when a man is committed to prison, the crime which brought him there is voluntary, and for it he is responsible.
\caps1 (3) t\caps0 he keeper of a prison does no wrong in confining a criminal; or the judge in condemning him; or the executioner in fulfilling the sentence of the Law. So of God. What he does is not to compel people to remain under unbelief, but to declare that they are so; so to encompass them with the proof of it that they shall realize that there is no escape from the evidence of it, and thus to press on them the evidence of their need of a Saviour. This he does in relation to all sinners who ever become converted.
\caps1 (4) y\caps0 et God permitted this; suffered Jews and Gentiles to fall into unbelief, and to be concluded under it, because he had a special purpose to answer in leaving man to the power of sin and unbelief. One of those purposes was, doubtless, to manifest the power of his grace and mercy in the plan of redemption.
\caps1 (5) i\caps0 n all this, and in all other sin man is voluntary. He chooses his course of evil; and God is under no obligation to compel him to do otherwise. Being under unbelief, God declares the fact, and avails himself of it, in the plan of salvation by grace.
Them all - Both Jews and Gentiles.
In unbelief -
That he might have mercy upon all - Mercy is favor shown to the undeserving. It could not have been shown to the Jews and the Gentiles unless it was before proved that they were guilty. For this purpose proof was furnished that they were all in unbelief. It was clear, therefore, that if favor was shown to either, it must be on the same ground, that of mere undeserved mercy. Thus, all people were on a level; and thus all might be admitted to heaven without any invidious distinctions, or any dealings that were not in accordance with mercy and love. "The emphasis in this verse is on the word "mercy."It signifies that God is under obligation to no one, and therefore that all are saved by grace, because all are equally ruined."(Calvin.) It does not prove that all people will be saved; but that those who are saved shall be alike saved by the mercy of God; and that He intends to confer salvation on Jews and Gentiles on the same terms. This is properly the close of the argument of this Epistle. By several independent trains of reasoning, the apostle had come to the same conclusion, that the Jews had no special privileges in regard to religion, that all people were on a level, and that there was no hope of salvation for any but in the mercy of a sovereign God. This conclusion, and the wonderful train of events which had led to this state of things, give rise to the exclamations and ascriptions of praise with which the chapter closes.
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Barnes: Rom 11:33 - -- O the depth ... - This passage should have been translated "O the depth of the riches, and of the wisdom, and of the knowledge of God."The apos...
O the depth ... - This passage should have been translated "O the depth of the riches, and of the wisdom, and of the knowledge of God."The apostle has three subjects of admiration. Our translation, by the word "both"introduced here, confines it to two. The apostle wishes to express his admiration of the riches and the wisdom, and the knowledge of God. So the Syriac, Arabic, etc. Our translation has followed the Latin Vulgate. The word "depth"is applied in the Scriptures to anything vast and incomprehensible. As the abyss or the ocean is unfathomable, so the word comes to denote what words cannot express, or what we cannot comprehend; Psa 36:6, "Thy judgments are a great deep;"1Co 2:10,"The Spirit searcheth ...the deep things of God;"Rev 2:24, "The depths of Satan"- the deep, profound, cunning, and wicked plans of Satan.
Riches - See the note at Rom 11:12. The word denotes the abundant blessings and mercies which had been conferred on sinful people by the gospel. These were vast and wonderful. The pardon of sin; the atonement; the hope of heaven; the peace of the gospel; all bestowed on the sinful, the poor, the wretched, and the dying; all bespeak the great mercy and rich grace of God. So every pardoned sinner may still exclaim. The grace of God which pardons him is felt to be indeed wonderful, and past comprehension. It is beyond the power of language to express; and all that the Christian can do, is to follow the example of the apostle, and sit down in profound admiration of the rich grace of God. The expression "the depth of the riches"is a Hebraism, meaning the deep or profound riches.
The wisdom - Wisdom is the choice of the best means to accomplish the best ends. The end or design which God had in view was to bestow mercy on all; i. e., to save people by grace, and not by their own works; Rom 11:32. He intended to establish a glorious system that should present his mercy as the prominent attribute, standing out in living colors in all the scheme of salvation. This was to be alike shown in relation to Jews and Gentiles. The wonderful wisdom with which this was done, is the object of the apostle’ s profound admiration. This wisdom was seen,
(1) In adapting the plan to the condition of man. All were sinners. The apostle in this Epistle has fully shown that all had come short of the glory of God. Man had no power to save himself by his own wisdom. The Jews and Gentiles in different ways had sought to justify themselves, and had both failed God had suffered both to make the experiment in the most favorable circumstances. He had left the world for four thousand years to make the trial, and then introduced the plan of divine wisdom, just so as to meet the manifest wants and woes of people.
\caps1 (2) t\caps0 his was shown in his making the Jews the occasion of spreading the system among the Gentiles. They were cast off, and rejected; but the God of wisdom had made even this an occasion of spreading his truth.
\caps1 (3) t\caps0 he same wisdom was yet to be seen in his appointing the Gentiles to carry the gospel back to the Jews. Thus, they were to be mutual aids; until all their interests should be blended, and the entire race should be united in the love of the same gospel, and the service of the same God and Saviour. When, therefore, this profound and wonderful plan is contemplated, and its history traced from the commencement to the end of time, no wonder that the apostle was fixed in admiration at the amazing wisdom of him who devised it, and who has made all events subservient to its establishment and spread among people.
And knowledge - That is, foreknowledge, or omniscience. This knowledge was manifest,
(1) In the profound view of man, and acquaintance with all his wants and woes.
(2)\caps1 i\caps0 n a view of the precise scheme that would be suited to recover and save.
(3)\caps1 i\caps0 n a view of the time and circumstances in which it would be best to introduce the scheme.
(4)\caps1 i\caps0 n a discernment of the effect of the rejection of the Jews, and of the preaching of the gospel among the Gentiles.
Who but God could see that such effects would follow the rejection of the Jews? Who but he could know that the gospel should yet prevail among all the nations? We have only to think of the changes in human affairs; the obstacles to the gospel; the difficulties to be surmounted; and the vast work yet to be done, to be amazed at the knowledge which can adapt such a scheme to people, and which can certainly predict its complete and final spread among all the families of man.
How unsearchable - The word "unsearchable"means what cannot be investigated or fully understood.
His judgments - This word in this place evidently means his arrangement, his plan, or proceeding. It sometimes refers to laws; at other times to the decision or determination of God; at others to the inflictions of his justice. In this last sense it is now commonly used. But in the case before us, it means his arrangements for conferring the gospel on people compare Psa 36:7,"His judgments are a great deep."
His ways - The word rendered "ways"properly denotes a path, or road on which one travels. Hence, it comes also to denote the course or manner of life in which one moves; or his principles, or morals; his doctrine, or teaching, etc. Applied to God, it denotes his mode or manner of doing things; the order, etc. of his divine Providence; his movements, in his great plans, through the universe; Act 13:10, "Wilt thou not cease to pervert the right ways of the Lord?"to oppose, or to render vain, his plan of guiding and saving man; Heb 3:10,"They have not known my ways;"Psa 77:19, "Thy way is in the sea, thy footsteps are not known."Here it refers particularly to his way or plan of bringing all nations within the reach of his mercy in the gospel.
Past finding out - Literally, which cannot be tracked or traced out. The footsteps cannot be followed. As if his path were in the sea Psa 77:19, and the waves closed immediately, leaving no track, it cannot be followed or sought out. It is known that he has passed, but there is no way of tracing his goings. This is a beautiful and striking figure. It denotes that God’ s plans are deep, and beyond our comprehension. We can see the proofs that he is everywhere; but how it is, we cannot comprehend. We are permitted to see the vast movements around us; but the invisible hand we cannot see, nor trace the footsteps of that mighty God who performs his wonders on the ocean and on the land,
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Barnes: Rom 11:34 - -- For who hath known? ... - This verse is a quotation, with a slight change, from Isa 40:13, "Who hath directed the Spirit of the Lord, or being ...
For who hath known? ... - This verse is a quotation, with a slight change, from Isa 40:13, "Who hath directed the Spirit of the Lord, or being his counsellor hath taught him?"It is designed to express the infinite wisdom and knowledge of God, by affirming that no being could teach him, or counsel him. Earthly monarchs have counsellors of state, whom they may consult in times of perplexity or danger. But God has no such council. He sits alone; nor does he call in any or all of his creatures to advise him. All created beings are not qualified to contribute anything to enlighten or to direct him. It is also designed to silence all opposition to his plans, and to hush all murmurings. The apostle had proved that this was the plan of God. However mysterious and inscrutable it might appear to the Jew or the Gentile, yet it was his duty to submit to God, and to confide in his wisdom, though he was not able to trace the reason of his doings.
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Barnes: Rom 11:35 - -- Or who hath ... - The sentiment in this verse is found substantially in Job 41:11. "Who hath prevented me, that I should repay him."The Hebrew ...
Or who hath ... - The sentiment in this verse is found substantially in Job 41:11. "Who hath prevented me, that I should repay him."The Hebrew word "prevented"means to anticipate, to go before; and God asks who has anticipated me; who has conferred favors on me before I have on him; who has thus laid me under obligation to him."This is the sense in which the apostle uses the word here. Who has, by his services, laid God under obligation to recompense or pay him again? It is added in Job, "Whatsoever is under the whole heaven is mine."Thus Paul, contrary to the prevailing doctrine of the Jews, shows that no one could plead his own merits, or advance with a claim on God. All the favors of salvation must be bestowed by mercy or grace. God owned them all; and he had a right to bestow them when and where he pleased. The same claim to all things is repeatedly made by God; Exo 19:5; Deu 10:14; Psa 24:1; Psa 50:12.
Shall be recompensed - Repaid as a matter of debt. None of God’ s mercies can be conferred in that way; if they could, man could bring God under obligation, and destroy the freeness and benevolence of his favors.
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Barnes: Rom 11:36 - -- For of him - εξ αὐτοῦ ex autou ; compare 1Co 1:30; 1Co 8:6. This expression doubtless means that he is the original source and ...
For of him -
And through him -
To him -
All things - The universe; the creation, or still more particularly, the things of which the apostle is discoursing. He does not affirm that he is the author of sin or of sinful thoughts; not that he creates evil, or that evil is designed to promote his glory. The apostle is not discoursing of these, but of his method of bestowing his favors; and he says that these are to be conferred in such a way as to promote his honor, and to declare the praise of hint who is the original source, the creator, and the proprietor of all things.
To whom be glory - This ascription of praise is the appropriate close of the argumentative part of the Epistle, as well as appropriate to the train of remarks into which the apostle had fallen. It expresses his hearty amen in concurrence with this view; the deep desire of a pious man that all might be to God’ s glory and honor. He had not merely come to it by reasoning, but it was the sincere desire of his soul that it might be so. The Christian does not merely admit this doctrine; he is not merely driven to it by argument, but it finds a hearty response in his bosom. He rejoices in it; and sincerely desires that all may be to the honor of God. Sinners are often compelled by argument to admit it, but they do not love it. They would rejoice were it otherwise, and be glad if they were permitted rather to seek their own glory than that of the living God.
Glory - Praise, honor.
Forever - Not merely amid transitory events now, but ever onward to eternity. This will be the case. There never will be a time when the affairs of the universe shall not be conducted with reference to the glory of God. That honor and glory shall shine brighter and brighter, and all worlds shall be perfectly adapted to show his praise, and to evince his greatness, goodness, power, and love forever and ever. Thus, let it be, is the language of everyone that truly loves him.
This closes the argumentative part of the Epistle. From the close of this chapter we may make the following observations.
1. God is infinitely wise, and just, and good. This is seen in all his plans and doings, and especially in the glorious plan of saving people.
2. It becomes man to be humble. He can see but few of the reasons of the doings of an infinite God. He is not qualified to sit in judgment on his plans. He is not suited to arraign him. There is nothing more absurd than for a man to contend with God, or to find fault with his plans; and yet there is nothing more common. Man speaks, and thinks, and reasons on the great things pertaining to the divine mind and plan, as if he were qualified to counsel the being of infinite wisdom, and to arraign at the bar of his own reason the being of infinite goodness.
3. It is our duty to be submissive to God. His plans may often require him to cross the path of our pleasures, or to remove some of our enjoyments. He tries us by requiring us to put confidence in him where we cannot see the reason of his doings, and to believe that he is qualified for universal empire. In all such cases it is our duty to submit to his will. He is seeking a grander and nobler object than our private good. He is seeking the welfare of a vast universe; and he best knows in what way that can be promoted.
4. God is the creator and proprietor of all things. It would be possible to prove this from his works. But his word unequivocally asserts it. He has formed, and he upholds, and he directs all things for his glory. He who formed all has a right to all. He who is the source of life has the right to direct it, or to withdraw the gift. He on whom all depend has a right to homage and praise.
5. He has formed a universe that is eminently adapted to declare his glory. It evinces infinite power in its creation; and it is suited to fill the mind with ever-growing wonder and gladness in its contemplation. The sacred writers were filled with rapture when they contemplated it; and all the discoveries of astronomy, and geology, and science in general, in modern times, are suited to carry forward the wonder, and fill the lips with new expressions of praise. The universe is vast and grand enough to occupy the thoughts forever. How little do we know of the wonders of his creation, even pertaining to this little world; to our own bodies and souls; to the earth, the ocean, the beast and the reptile, the bird and the insect; how much less of that amazing view of worlds and systems which modern astronomy has opened to our view, the vast starry frame which the eye can penetrate for millions and millions of miles, and where it finds world piled on world, and system rising above system, in wonderful order and grandeur, and where the utmost power of the telescore can as yet find no bounds.
6. Equally true is this in his moral government. The system is such as to excite our wonder and praise. The creation and control of free, and active, and mighty minds is as wonderful as the creation and control of matter, even the vast masses of the planetary systems. Creation is filled with minds. God has peopled the worlds with conscious, free, and active intelligences. The wonderful wisdom by which he controls them; the amazing moral power by which he guards and binds them to himself, by which he restrains and awes the rebellious; and the complete subjection by which he will bring all yet at his feet, is as much replete with wonder as the wisdom and skill by which he framed the heavens. To govern mind requires more wisdom and skill than to govern matter. To control angels and human beings evinces more glory than to roll the streams or the ocean, or than to propel and guide the planets. And especially is this true of the plan of salvation. That wondrous scheme is adapted to call forth eternal, praise, and to show forever the wisdom and mercy of God. Without such a plan, we cannot see how the Divinity could be fully manifested; with that, we see God as God, vast, grand, mighty, infinite; but still seeking to do good, and having power to enter any vast mass of iniquity, and to diffuse purity and peace over the face of an alienated and dying world.
7. The salvation of sinners is not to promote their own glory primarily, but that of God. "He is first, and he is last; he is midst, and without end,"in their salvation. God seeks his own honor, and seeks it by their return and their obedience. But if they will not promote his glory in that way, they must be made to promote it in their ruin.
8. It is the duty of people to seek the honor of this infinitely wise and holy God. It commends itself to every man’ s conscience. God has formed us all; and man can have no higher destiny and honor than to be permitted to promote and spread abroad through all the universe the knowledge of a Being whose character is infinitely lovely, whose government is right, and whose presence and favor will diffuse blessings of salvation and eternal peace on all the wide creation that will be obedient to his will.
Poole -> Rom 11:19-20; Rom 11:21; Rom 11:22; Rom 11:23; Rom 11:24; Rom 11:25; Rom 11:26; Rom 11:27-28; Rom 11:29; Rom 11:30-31; Rom 11:32; Rom 11:33; Rom 11:34; Rom 11:35; Rom 11:36
Poole: Rom 11:19-20 - -- Ver. 19,20. Here he brings in the Gentiles, alleging a reason for their insulting over the Jews; because the Jews were broken off, that they might gi...
Ver. 19,20. Here he brings in the Gentiles, alleging a reason for their insulting over the Jews; because the Jews were broken off, that they might give place, or make way, for them; and the less worthy do always give place to the more worthy. To this he answers, first, by way of concession: Well, (saith he), it is true, and I do not deny it, that the Jews
were broken off that the Gentiles might be grafted in. But then he further adds, by way of correction or negation, that the worthiness of the Gentiles was not the cause why the Jews were broken off; but it was because of their own unbelief; they would not accept of Christ, Joh 1:11 ; they went about to establish their own righteousness, and would not submit themselves to the righteousness of God, as it is in Rom 10:3 . Therefore, if you Gentiles shall reason after this manner, you plainly put a fallacy upon yourselves, and take that for a cause which is none: you do not distinguish between the cause and the event; it fell out, indeed, that the Jews, being cast off, the Gentiles were received in, but this was not the cause of that.
And thou standest by faith: q.d. Neither is thy worthiness the cause of thy present standing in the room of the Jews, or of having thy station in the church of Christ; but it is thy believing in that Christ whom the Jews rejected. By faith thou wast first ingrafted, and still continuest in the good olive tree.
Be not high-minded, but fear: q.d. Be advised, and take heed of being self-conceited and secure; if thou fall into their fault, thou mayst expect the same fate. Therefore stand in awe, and sin not; thou art subject to unbelief and apostacy, as well as they.
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Poole: Rom 11:21 - -- This verse is a reason of the forementioned admonition: q.d. If God proceeded with so much severity against his ancient people the Jews, you Gentile...
This verse is a reason of the forementioned admonition: q.d. If God proceeded with so much severity against his ancient people the Jews, you Gentiles may in reason expect as great severity, if you take not heed to yourselves, and to your standing.
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Poole: Rom 11:22 - -- In this verse, he further persuades the Gentiles to humility and godly fear, and suggesteth several reasons for it. The first is taken from the exam...
In this verse, he further persuades the Gentiles to humility and godly fear, and suggesteth several reasons for it. The first is taken from the example of God’ s
severity to the Jews; they falling into apostacy and unbelief, are generally cut off and cast away. A second reason is taken from the free grace and undeserved goodness of God to the poor Gentiles, who were mercifully planted or grafted in the room of the Jews. A third reason is taken from the condition of their present standing, which is, if they
continue in his goodness i.e. if they continue in that state wherein his goodness hath set them. Some think the cause is here put for the effect, the goodness of God for faith, which was wrought in them by the goodness or grace of God. The antithesis, in the next verse, shows this to be the sense; for there he speaks of the Jews not continuing or abiding still in unbelief. A fourth reason is from the danger that would follow; if, through pride and security, they should fall and miscarry, they would be cut off, as the Jews, the natural branches, are. Some observe the change of the word; the Jews are said to be broken off, but the Gentiles would be cut off; they would, as it were, be stocked up by the roots: but that seems too critical and curious.
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Poole: Rom 11:23 - -- Here he adds another argument, to repress the arrogance and insulting of the Gentiles; and it is taken from the hope of the Jews’ restoration....
Here he adds another argument, to repress the arrogance and insulting of the Gentiles; and it is taken from the hope of the Jews’ restoration. Though for the present they seem to be in a desperate and forlorn condition, yet the restoring and re-ingrafting of them into the church is not impossible. The great obstacle is their unbelief, which God is able to remove. The same God that rejected them is able to restore them; to him all things are possible, he can cause dead and dry bones to live. An argument from the power of God (and that in the very words of this text) is frequently made use of in Scripture, to excite hope and assurance. Rom 4:21 14:4 2Co 9:8 2Ti 1:12 Heb 2:18 11:19 .
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Poole: Rom 11:24 - -- He here shows the probability, as well as possibility, of the Jews’ conversion, because God hath done that which is more unlikely: q.d. If the...
He here shows the probability, as well as possibility, of the Jews’ conversion, because God hath done that which is more unlikely: q.d. If the Gentiles, which were a kind of wild olive branches, were grafted into a good olive tree, the church of God, which is contrary to nature, seeing men use to graft a good scion into a wild stock, (as an apple into a crab), and not a wild scion into a good stock; how much more shall the Jews, which are the natural branches, yea, branches of that olive tree into which the Gentiles are now ingrafted, be grafted into their own olive tree, to which formerly they did belong! According to the custom of grafting which was common amongst them, to graft one tree upon another of the same kind; and grounded on Lev 19:19 .
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Poole: Rom 11:25 - -- Here he shows there is not only a possibility and probability, but a certainty of the Jews’ conversion and calling. This he calleth a
mystery...
Here he shows there is not only a possibility and probability, but a certainty of the Jews’ conversion and calling. This he calleth a
mystery or a secret; though it was revealed in the Scripture, (as you will hear), yet it was not understood; nay, the manner, the number, and the time of their conversion, is still concealed and hid from us. The calling of the Gentiles was a mystery, and a great secret; see Eph 3:3 ; and so is the calling and restoration of the Jews. There are three particulars of this mystery, which he makes known to the Gentiles (and he doth it the rather, lest they should swell with a high conceit of themselves, and proudly despise the Jews): two of them are in this verse; and the first is,
that blindness is happened to Israel in part only; i.e. they were not all blinded or hardened; or this blindness should not last always, but for a time. The latter sense agrees best with the word mystery; for it was no secret that some of the Jews believed; this was told them before, Rom 11:2,5,7 . Secondly, another part of this mystery was, that this blindness of the Jews should continue till
the fulness of the Gentiles came in By fulness here, (as in Rom 11:12 ), understand a great number or multitude of the Gentiles; greater, by far, than was in the apostles’ days. There is another exposition of this clause, which I submit to consideration: by the Gentiles, here, you may understand the Romans, or the Roman monarchy and power; see Act 4:27 21:11and by the coming in of their fulness may be understood, the full time of their reign and continuance; after which their ruin follows. And so here is foretold the time of the calling of the Jews, which will be soon after the destruction of antichrist and the Roman monarchy.
Query: Whether this doth not agree with the prediction of our Saviour? Luk 21:24 .
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Poole: Rom 11:26 - -- Here is a third and chief part of the aforementioned mystery, that in the end,
all Israel shall be saved By Israel is not meant the whole chu...
Here is a third and chief part of the aforementioned mystery, that in the end,
all Israel shall be saved By Israel is not meant the whole church of God, consisting of Jews and Gentiles; so that word is used, Gal 6:16 , and elsewhere; for then, what he spake would have been no mystery at all: but by Israel here (as in the precedent verse) you must understand, the nation and people of the Jews. And by
all Israel is not meant every individual Israelite, but many, or (it may be) the greatest part of them. So all is to be taken in Scripture: see Joh 6:45 1Ti 2:6 , and elsewhere. Look, as when he speaks of the conversion of the Gentiles, and the coming in of their fulness, there are many (too many of them) still unconverted; so, notwithstanding the general calling of the Jews, a great many of them may remain uncalled.
As it is written the apostle had this by revelation, but he proves it also by Scripture. All are not agreed from whence these testimonies are taken; the former is found (with some little variation) in Isa 59:20 : as for the latter, some think it is taken from Jer 31:33 . Others think, that he joineth two places in Isaiah together, (as he did before, Rom 11:8 ), and the last words are taken out of Isa 27:9 . The Seventy have the very words used by the apostle. These prophecies and promises, though they were in part fulfilled when Christ came in the flesh, see Act 3:26yet there will be a more full and complete accomplishment thereof upon the Jewish nation and people towards the end of the world.
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Poole: Rom 11:27-28 - -- Ver. 27,28. Here an objection is obviated: the Gentiles might object and say, The Jews can never return and be saved, forasmuch as they have rejected...
Ver. 27,28. Here an objection is obviated: the Gentiles might object and say, The Jews can never return and be saved, forasmuch as they have rejected the gospel, and are therefore hated of God. To this he answers by way of concession, that it was true indeed, they had rejected the gospel, and for this they were rejected and hated of God; but this happened well to the Gentiles, and was to their advantage. for the Jews’ refusal of the gospel brought it sooner to them: see Rom 11:11 . Or else the meaning is: They are enemies of God, and of his gospel; and the rather reject it, because you Gentiles embrace it; they think the worse of the gospel because you believe and profess it. Then he adds by way of correction, that they were not yet in such desperate circumstances; but in regard of
election, they are beloved for the fathers’ sakes By election he means, either God’ s choosing them to eternal life; or rather, his choosing that nation and people, above all other nations and people of the world, to be his peculiar people: see Deu 7:6 Psa 135:4 Act 13:46 . And by God’ s love to them, he means his love of good will which he had to that people still, for their fathers’ sakes: not because of the merit of their fathers, but because of the covenant made with their fathers; because they are descended of those fathers, to whom God had promised, that he would be their God, and the God of their seed after them; aye, and of their seed’ s seed for ever; which promises of God, the infidelity of many of them cannot wholly frustrate.
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Poole: Rom 11:29 - -- These words, considered simply and abstractedly, afford this truth; That the special gifts of God, his election, justification, adoption, and in par...
These words, considered simply and abstractedly, afford this truth; That the special gifts of God, his election, justification, adoption, and in particular effectual calling, are irrevocable. God never repents of giving, nor we of receiving them. It is otherwise with common gifts and graces, 1Sa 15:11 . But if you consider these words relatively, as you respect what went before, the sense seems to be this; That
the gifts and calling of God whereby he was pleased to adopt the posterity of Abraham, and to engage himself by covenant to them, are inviolable, and are such as shall never be reversed or repented of.
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Poole: Rom 11:30-31 - -- Ver. 30,31. This is the last argument, to prove the conversion and calling of the Jews, which is further confirmed, Rom 11:32 . The argument is taken...
Ver. 30,31. This is the last argument, to prove the conversion and calling of the Jews, which is further confirmed, Rom 11:32 . The argument is taken from the like dealing of God with the Gentiles; after a long time of infidelity, he received them to mercy; therefore he will also at last receive the Jews. He argues from the less to the greater; If the infidelity of the Jews was the occasion of mercy to the Gentiles, much more shall the mercy showed to the Gentiles be an occasion of showing mercy to the Jews: q.d. There is more force in that which is good, to produce a good effect, than in that which is evil, to have a good event: therefore, if the unbelief of the Jews had so good an event, as to occasion the conversion of the Gentiles, why may we not think, that the calling of the Gentiles will contribute to the conversion of the Jews? See Rom 11:11,14 . When the Jews shall see the Gentiles’ mercy, i.e. God’ s mercy to them; how the whole world flourisheth under the profession of Christianity; how the Messias is in vain expected by them; how their nation is dispersed, &c.; then they shall at last come in and cleave to Christ, and be mercifully received by him.
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Poole: Rom 11:32 - -- q.d. God hath, in just judgment, shut up both Jews and Gentiles, equally and successively, in unbelief, as in a prison, that so, in his own time, he...
q.d. God hath, in just judgment, shut up both Jews and Gentiles, equally and successively, in unbelief, as in a prison, that so, in his own time, he might fulfil the counsel of his will, in showing undeserved mercy unto all: i.e. unto both Jews and Gentiles; first the Jews, and then the Gentiles; and then at last, both to Jews and Gentiles. By all here he means, those that shall believe, whether of one sort or of the other, as appears from that parallel place, Gal 3:22 . Luther, in a very great conflict, had much support from this text.
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Poole: Rom 11:33 - -- In this and the following verses is the conclusion of all that he had delivered, especially in this and the two preceding chapters. He had spoken of...
In this and the following verses is the conclusion of all that he had delivered, especially in this and the two preceding chapters. He had spoken of many profound mysteries, and answered many critical questions; and here he makes a pause, and falls into an admiration of God, his abundant wisdom and knowledge. He seems here to be like a man that wades into the waters, till he begins to feel no bottom, and then he cries out:
Oh the depth! and goes no farther.
Oh the depth of the riches both of the wisdom and knowledge of God! i.e. the unmeasurable, inconceivable abundance of his wisdom and knowledge. Some distinguish these two; others take them for the same: see Col 2:3 .
How unsearchable are his judgments, and his ways past finding out! Some distinguish betwixt the judgments and ways of God; by the former, understanding his decrees and purposes concerning nations or persons; by the latter, the methods of his providence in his dealings with them: others think the same thing is meant, by an ingemination, which is familiar amongst the Hebrews. He says of God’ s judgments, that they are unsearchable; therefore not to be complained of, censured, or to be narrowly pried into; and of his ways, that they are past finding out; the same in sense with unsearchable: it is a metaphor from hounds, that have no footstep or scent of the game which they pursue: nor can men trace the Lord, or find out the reason of his doings; as none can line out the way of a ship in the sea, or an eagle in the air, &c. Some restrain the sense to the ways of God in disposing and ordering the election and rejection of men.
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Poole: Rom 11:34 - -- i.e. Who knoweth what God is about to do? Or who hath given his advice about the doing of it? This is taken out of Isa 40:13,14 .
i.e. Who knoweth what God is about to do? Or who hath given his advice about the doing of it? This is taken out of Isa 40:13,14 .
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Poole: Rom 11:35 - -- q.d. If any man hath obliged God, by any thing he hath done for him, he shall have an ample reward: alluding (as some think) to Job 41:11 . But seei...
q.d. If any man hath obliged God, by any thing he hath done for him, he shall have an ample reward: alluding (as some think) to Job 41:11 . But seeing this cannot be, and that God is indebted unto none, therefore the salvation of all is of mere grace and mercy; and there is no cause of complaining, if he deal more bountifully with some than with others.
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Poole: Rom 11:36 - -- For of him, and through him, and to him, are all things i.e. all things are of him, as the efficient cause; through him, as the disposing cau...
For of him, and through him, and to him, are all things i.e. all things are of him, as the efficient cause; through him, as the disposing cause; to him, as the final cause. They are of him, without any other motive; through him, without any assistance; and to him, without any other end, i.e. for his sake alone.
To whom be glory for ever. Amen: a usual doxology in Scripture: see Gal 1:5 2Ti 4:18 Heb 13:21 1Pe 5:11 .
PBC: Rom 11:21 - -- I thought about God’s people among the Jewish Nation who had the very oracles of God committed unto them. Yet, in spite of this " light of truth" g...
I thought about God’s people among the Jewish Nation who had the very oracles of God committed unto them. Yet, in spite of this " light of truth" given them by their God, because of their unbelief, they rejected this light of knowledge, rejecting the very Lord of Glory as the true Messiah, and went about establishing their own righteousness and refused to submit themselves unto the righteousness of God. For this very reason, they invited the divine judgment of God upon themselves. So, " God blinded their eyes, and hardened their heart; that they should not see with their eyes, nor understand with their heart, and be converted, and I should heal them." Joh 12:40
Then, with great conviction of heart and soul, I turned my eyes inward to personal self, looked in the mirror of my own heart, trembled greatly, and then seriously pondered the very beauty and preciousness of God’s revealed truth as the glorious Gospel reveals the righteousness of God from the body of God’s revealed faith to the faith He sovereignly put in my heart in regeneration. It is only by this given faith of God to which I am debtor and obligated to live a sanctified life of righteousness, glory, and honor to Jehovah God, my Glorious Redeemer. His precious, inspired, preserved, and revealed word is not a toy with which we can play, turn, twist, and wrestle to suit our own preconceived ideas and notions over which to contest and war in a rash political manner just for personal prestige.
32
Let us compare the above with Ga 5:15.
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PBC: Rom 11:26 - -- " And so all Israel shall be saved." {Ro 11:26}
Then Moses sang at the Red Sea, it was his joy to know that all Israel were safe. Not a drop of spra...
" And so all Israel shall be saved." {Ro 11:26}
Then Moses sang at the Red Sea, it was his joy to know that all Israel were safe. Not a drop of spray fell from that solid wall until the last of God’s Israel had safely planted his foot on the other side the flood. That done, immediately the floods dissolved into their proper place again, but not till then. Part of that song was, " Thou in thy mercy hast led forth the people which thou hast redeemed." In the last time, when the elect shall sing the song of Moses, the servant of God, and of the Lamb, it shall be the boast of Jesus, " Of all whom thou hast given me, I have lost none." In heaven there shall not be a vacant throne.
For all the chosen race Shall meet around the throne, Shall bless the conduct of his grace, And make his glories known.
As many as God hath chosen, as many as Christ hath redeemed, as many as the Spirit hath called, as many as believe in Jesus, shall safely cross the dividing sea. We are not all safely landed yet:
Part of the host have crossed the flood, And part are crossing now.
The vanguard of the army has already reached the shore. We are marching through the depths; we are at this day following hard after our Leader into the heart of the sea. Let us be of good cheer: the rearguard shall soon be where the vanguard already is; the last of the chosen ones shall soon have crossed the sea, and then shall be heard the song of triumph, when all are secure. But O! if one were absent- oh! if one of his chosen family should be cast away- it would make an everlasting discord in the song of the redeemed, and cut the strings of the harps of paradise, so that music could never be extorted from them. C. H. Spurgeon
And so all Israel shall be saved—This is the real, elect, spared nation of the future, —" those written unto life." {Da 12:1; Isa 4:3, margin} The mystery comprehends this fact (as we have said above, and as the apostle amplifies in Ro 11:31) for the salvation of national Israel was impossible, except on purely grace lines. God had given them the Law: that was necessary to reveal sin. But they utterly failed. Now comes in the fulness of the Gentiles—by grace: and so, after that, and on the same grace line as were the Gentiles, all Israel shall be saved! Most of that earthly nation will perish under Divine judgments, and the Antichrist: but the Remnant will be " accounted as a generation." Our Lord told His disciples that this present unbelieving generation of Israel would not pass away till all the terrible judgments He foretold would be fulfilled. But that that generation— " Israel after the flesh" will pass away we know; and a believing generation take their place. See Ps 22:30; 102:18. Jehovah at last " arises, and has pity on her, —for the set time has come!" So we read the Psalmist’s words: " This shall be written for the generation to come; And a people which shall be created shall praise Jehovah." This is the real Israel of God, of whom it is written, " All Israel shall be saved." William Newell
Haydock: Rom 11:25-26 - -- I would not have you ignorant, brethren, of this mystery, this hidden truth of God's justice and mercy, that blindness in part hath happened in Isra...
I would not have you ignorant, brethren, of this mystery, this hidden truth of God's justice and mercy, that blindness in part hath happened in Israel, or to part of them, until the fulness of the Gentiles should come in, by the conversion of all nations: and then all Israel should be saved, when they shall submit to the faith of Christ: as it is written by the prophet Isaias, (lix. 20.) there shall come out of Sion he that shall deliver; that is, their Redeemer, Christ Jesus, who is indeed come already, but who shall then come to them by his powerful grace. This is my covenant with them. (Witham)
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Haydock: Rom 11:28 - -- According to the gospel, indeed, they are enemies for your sake. That is, enemies both to you, because they see the gospel preached and received b...
According to the gospel, indeed, they are enemies for your sake. That is, enemies both to you, because they see the gospel preached and received by you, and enemies of God, because he has rejected them at present for their wilful blindness: yet according to election, God having once made them his elect, and because of their forefathers, the patriarchs, they are most dear for the sake of the fathers: for the gifts and the calling of God are without repentance, in as much as God is unchangeable, and his promises, made absolutely, cannot fail. (Witham)
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Haydock: Rom 11:30 - -- As you also in times past did not believe God, but now have obtained mercy through their unbelief, which was an occasion of God's sending his preache...
As you also in times past did not believe God, but now have obtained mercy through their unbelief, which was an occasion of God's sending his preachers to you: but the cause of your salvation is God's mercy. ---
That they also may obtain mercy. That is, God has permitted their incredulity, that being a greater object of pity, he may shew greater mercy in converting them by the free gift of his grace. ---
For God hath concluded [2] all, that is, has permitted at different times, both Gentiles and Jews, to fall into a state of unbelief, that the salvation of all may be known to come, not from themselves, but as an effect of his mercy and grace. (Witham) ---
He hath found all nations, both Jews and Gentiles, in unbelief and sin; not by his causing, but by the abuse of their own free-will; so that their calling and election are purely owing to his mercy. (Challoner)
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[BIBLIOGRAPHY]
Conclusit omnia. Greek: pantas.
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Haydock: Rom 11:33-36 - -- O the depth, &c. After he hath spoken of the mysteries of God's grace and predestination, of his mercy and justice, which we must not pretend to div...
O the depth, &c. After he hath spoken of the mysteries of God's grace and predestination, of his mercy and justice, which we must not pretend to dive into, he concludes this part of his epistle, by an exclamation, to teach us submission of our judgment, as to the secrets of his providence, which we cannot comprehend. ---
How incomprehensible are his judgments, &c. ---
Who hath first given to him, and recompense shall be made him? That is, no one, by any merit on his part, can first deserve God's favours and mercy, by which he prevents us. ---
For of him, from God, or from Jesus Christ, as God, and by him, who made, preserves, and governs all things, and in him, is our continual dependance: for in him we live, we move, and exist. In the Greek, it is unto him, [3] to signify he is also our last end. See the notes, John chap. i. (Witham) ---
All things are from God, as their first cause and creator; all things are by God, as the ruler and governor of the universe; and all things are in God, or (as the Greek has it) for God, because they are all directed to his honour and glory. For the hath made all things for himself. (Psalm xvi; St. Basil, lib. de Spiritu sto. chap. 5.)
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[BIBLIOGRAPHY]
Et in ipso, Greek: kai eis auton.
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Gill: Rom 11:20 - -- Well,.... To this the apostle answers, by approving and granting in, part what was said, that the unbelieving Jews were broken off and rejected, and t...
Well,.... To this the apostle answers, by approving and granting in, part what was said, that the unbelieving Jews were broken off and rejected, and that the Gentiles that believed in Christ were grafted in among the Jews that professed his name; but then he tacitly denies that it was for their sakes, and their account, they were broken off, but for their own incredulity:
because of unbelief they were broken off; because of their unbelief and contempt of the Messiah, they were rejected of God, and died in their sins; that which excluded their forefathers from the land of Canaan, shut them out of the Gospel church state, and the kingdom of heaven:
and thou standest by faith; which is not of a man's self, but the gift of God; so that it was not by their merits, and better deservings, but by the grace of God that they were in the situation they were; they were blessed with faith in Christ, and having made a profession of it were admitted to Gospel ordinances, and into a Gospel church; and being helped hitherto to hold the profession of their faith in a becoming manner they stood their ground, and continued in their church relation; and therefore ought not to give way to a vain boasting spirit, but to be humble, modest, and dependent; wherefore he gives them this proper pertinent, and wholesome advice,
be not highminded, but fear. The apostle would have them not be elated with their gifts, privileges, and enjoyments, and look over others, or down upon them with contempt and disdain, considering that all they had and enjoyed were owing to the goodness of God, and not to any deserts of theirs; and therefore should fear the Lord and his goodness; for not a fear of hell and damnation, or a distrust of the grace of God, is here meant; but a fear of offending him, and that not from a dread of punishment, but from a sense of his grace and goodness; and also designs humility of soul, in opposition to pride, haughtiness, and elation of mind, a lowly carriage and behaviour to others, and an humble dependence on grace and strength from above, to enable to persevere and hold out to the end; for "let him that thinks he stands take heed lest he fall" into sin, 1Co 10:12; so as to dishonour God and Christ grieve the Holy Spirit, wound his own conscience, and bring himself under the censure of the church, and to be cut off from the good olive tree, the root and fatness of which he now partakes.
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Gill: Rom 11:21 - -- For if God spared not the natural branches,.... That is, executed his righteous judgments, inflicted due punishment upon the Jews, unchurched them, an...
For if God spared not the natural branches,.... That is, executed his righteous judgments, inflicted due punishment upon the Jews, unchurched them, and stripped them of those privileges they enjoyed in a church state; who were the natural descendants of Abraham; were naturally, and as born into the world, in a national church state and in that national covenant God made with that people; to whom belonged a national adoption, in which sense they were the sons of God, his firstborn; they were chosen by him as a special and peculiar people, to very great favours and privileges; they were Christ's own, he came of them according to the flesh, and was particularly sent unto them, and ministered among them; wherefore, if, at last, God did not spare this people, though he had for a long time done it, but stirred up all his wrath against them, they disbelieving his Son, rejecting and despising the Messiah, and salvation by him, this should awaken the fear, care, and caution of the Gentiles in a church state, lest if they behave not well, he should deal in like manner with them:
take heed lest he also spare not thee; for whatever was done to the Jews in former or latter times, are written for the instruction and admonition of Gentiles; and the use they are to make thereof is, to be careful and cautious, lest by imbibing principles derogatory from the grace of God and glory of Christ, or by an unbecoming walk and conversation they provoke the Lord to unchurch them as he has done the Jews before them; and which they may the rather fear, since the Jews were the natural branches, and they formerly strangers and aliens.
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Gill: Rom 11:22 - -- Behold therefore the goodness, and severity of God,.... The consideration of both the grace and kindness of God to some, and his severity or strict ju...
Behold therefore the goodness, and severity of God,.... The consideration of both the grace and kindness of God to some, and his severity or strict justice towards others, is recommended by the apostle as very proper to abate pride, vain glory, and haughtiness of spirit; and to engage to humility, fear, care, and caution;
on them which fell, severity: the Jews who stumbled at Christ and his Gospel, and fell by unbelief, God in strict justice and righteous judgment not only destroyed, as afterwards their nation, city, and temple, and scattered them abroad in the world to be a reproach, a proverb, a taunt, and a curse in all places; but cast them off as his people, broke his covenant with them, took away his Gospel from them, left them out of a Gospel church state, except a few, and gave up the generality of them to blindness and hardness of heart; so that wrath is come upon them to the uttermost, both with respect to things civil and religious, and they continue as living standing monuments of God's severity and justice, to be beheld by us Gentiles with pity and concern, and to excite in us the fear of God, and caution as to our conduct and behaviour in the world, and in the church:
but towards thee, goodness; the Gentiles, who not only share in the goodness and grace of God, displayed in the election of many of them to eternal life, in their redemption by Christ, and the effectual calling of them by the grace of God; but in their church state, they being made fellow citizens with the saints, fellow heirs, and of the same body, and having a place and a name in God's house, better than that of sons and daughters; and therefore under great obligation to fear the Lord, and his goodness, and to walk worthy of the calling wherein they are called, in all humility and lowliness of mind:
if thou continue in his goodness; meaning not the love, grace, and free favour of God, or the grace of the Spirit, a continuance in which no "if" is to be put upon; for such who are interested in the love of God always continue in it, and nothing can separate them from it; and such as have the graces of the Spirit implanted in them, as faith, hope, and love, can never lose them; these always remain in them, and they in the possession of them, though not always in the exercise of them; but the goodness of God in a church state is here meant, as the means of grace and comfort, the ministration of the word and ordinances; and the sense is, if thou dost not despise the riches of divine goodness in a church relation, if thou dost not abuse it, or walk unworthy of it, if thou abidest by it, and retainest a value for it, thou wilt still share the advantages of it:
otherwise thou also shall be cut off; from the good olive tree, the Gospel church state, into which the Gentiles were taken; and which, with respect to particular persons, may intend the act of excommunication by the church, expressed in Scripture by purging the old leaven, putting away the wicked person, withdrawing from such that are disorderly, and rejecting heretics, that is, from the communion of the church; and with respect to whole bodies and societies, an entire unchurching of them by removing the Gospel, and the ordinances of it; which threatening has been awfully fulfilled in many Gentile churches, in Asia, Africa, and Europe; and therefore may serve to awaken our fear, care, and caution, lest we should be treated in like manner.
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Gill: Rom 11:23 - -- And they also, if they abide not still in unbelief,.... The apostle suggests that the Jews also might be recovered and brought into a Gospel church st...
And they also, if they abide not still in unbelief,.... The apostle suggests that the Jews also might be recovered and brought into a Gospel church state, provided they did not continue in infidelity; but inasmuch as they seem to lie under invincible ignorance, obstinacy, and unbelief, and were such bitter enemies to the Gospel, and abhorrers of Gospel ordinances, and a Gospel church state; yea, that they must and will abide in unbelief, unless the Spirit of God convinces them of it, and it is given to them to believe in Christ, and they are powerfully drawn by the Father to come to the Son, there is no possibility or likelihood that they
shall be grafted in, or taken into a Gospel church state; to which the apostle answers, and argues for their ingrafting, and the possibility of it from the power of God:
for God is able to graft them in again; as many of them were in the times of the apostles, and some since, for nothing is impossible with God; he can remove their unbelief, knock off the shackles and fetters in which they are held, and bring, them out of the prison of infidelity, in which they are shut up; he is able to take away the blindness of their minds, and the hardness of their hearts, the veil that is over them, and turn them to the Lord; he can by his mighty power work faith in them, and cause them to look on him whom they have pierced, and mourn in an evangelical manner; he can bring them to Christ, and into his churches, and among his people, and fold them with the rest of his sheep; so that there one fold of Jew and Gentile, under one shepherd, Jesus Christ.
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Gill: Rom 11:24 - -- For if thou wert cut out of the olive tree,.... As the apostle argues the possibility of bringing the Jews into a Gospel church state, from the power ...
For if thou wert cut out of the olive tree,.... As the apostle argues the possibility of bringing the Jews into a Gospel church state, from the power of God; so here the probability of it, or the easiness and likelihood of its being performed, from the ingrafting of the Gentiles; who were originally like an olive tree,
which is wild by nature, grows in the field, bears no fruit, and is useless and unprofitable; so they by nature were sinners of the Gentiles, children of wrath, full of unrighteousness, without any fruit of holiness; being not within the pale of the Jewish church and commonwealth; but in the wide field of the world, worthless, and of no account; and yet many were "cut out of" this wild olive tree; were, through the ministration of the Gospel, by the power of divine grace separated from the rest of the world; were effectually called and brought into a Gospel church state; God took out from among them a people for his name. This their being cut out of the wild olive, as it expresses the power and grace of God towards them, it might teach them humility, as it led them to observe their original state and condition:
and wert grafted, contrary to nature, into a good olive tree: for an olive tree being full of fatness, will not admit of ingrafting; nor was it ever usual to ingraft upon olive; hence the Jews say y
how much more shall these which be the natural branches, be grafted into their own olive tree? that there is a greater likelihood, and more easily may it be, according to all appearance of things, that the Jews, the natural branches or descendants of Abraham, should be brought into a Gospel church state, which first began among them, and which at first only consisted of some of their nation. The Gospel church is called "their own olive tree", in allusion to Israel, or the Jewish church, which is often so called in their writings.
"Says z R. Joshua ben Levi, to what are the Israelites like?
and says another a of their writers,
"as oil ascendeth above all liquids, and is not mixed with them; so the Israelites ascend above all nations, and are not mixed with them; and there is an intimation that they are even like
It is easy to see from whence this simile is borrowed.
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Gill: Rom 11:25 - -- For I would not, brethren,.... The apostle in order to raise the attention of the Gentiles to what he was about to deliver to them, not only styles th...
For I would not, brethren,.... The apostle in order to raise the attention of the Gentiles to what he was about to deliver to them, not only styles them "brethren", expressing his affection for them, and their relation to him and other believing Jews, and to one another, being all one in Christ Jesus, partakers of the same grace, and heirs of the same glory; but also tells them, that what he had to acquaint them with was a "mystery", a thing secret and hidden, which had not been heard of and known, at least not so fully and clearly as he was about to reveal it; and because of his great respect for them, he was unwilling, as he says,
that ye should be ignorant of this mystery; he was desirous that they should abound and improve in all spiritual knowledge and judgment, and, among the rest, be better informed of this particular article, the call of the Jews: and his view in apprizing them of it is expressed in the following clause,
lest ye should be wise in your own conceits: lest they should imagine that they were the only wise and knowing persons, and be elated in their minds with their knowledge and understanding, and look with contempt upon the poor, blind, ignorant Jews, as if they were always to remain in such a state of darkness and infidelity. The thing he had to inform them of is,
that blindness in part is happened to Israel, until the fulness of the Gentiles be come in; by Israel is meant the Jews, the descendants of Jacob, whose name was Israel. Philo the Jew observes b, that this name signifies
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Gill: Rom 11:26 - -- And so all Israel shall be saved,.... Meaning not the mystical spiritual Israel of God, consisting both of Jews and Gentiles, who shall appear to be s...
And so all Israel shall be saved,.... Meaning not the mystical spiritual Israel of God, consisting both of Jews and Gentiles, who shall appear to be saved in the Lord with an everlasting salvation, when all God's elect among the latter are gathered in, which is the sense many give into; but the people of the Jews, the generality of them, the body of that nation, called "the fulness" of them, Rom 11:12, and relates to the latter day, when a nation of them shall be born again at once; when, their number being as the sand of the sea, they shall come up out of the lands where they are dispersed, and appoint them one head, Christ, and great shall be the day of Jezreel; when they as a body, even the far greater part of them that shall be in being, shall return and seek the Lord their God, and David their King; shall acknowledge Jesus to be the true Messiah, and shall look to him, believe on him, and be saved by him from wrath to come. There is a common saying among them c,
"that hell fire will have no power over the transgressors of Israel;''
fancying, that every individual person of their nation will be saved; though they sometimes except such who deny the resurrection of the dead, and that the law is from heaven, or is an epicure, and he that reads foreign books, or is an enchanter, or pronounces the ineffable name: but the apostle is not to be understood with such a latitude; he refers to the last times, and to a very general conversion of them to the Messiah:
as it is written, Isa 59:20,
there shall come out of Zion the Deliverer: the words of the prophet are, "and the Redeemer shall come to Zion": by the Redeemer, or Deliverer, words of the same signification, is meant the Messiah, as the Jews e themselves own, and apply this passage to him; who is the "Goel", or near kinsman of his people, to whom the right of their redemption belongs as man; and who as God was able to effect it, and, as God-man and Mediator, was every way qualified for it, and has obtained it for them: and whereas, in the prophet Isaiah, he is said to "come to", and by the apostle, "out of Zion", this may be reconciled by observing, that the servile letter
and shall turn away ungodliness from Jacob; in the prophet it is, "and unto them that turn from transgression in Jacob", Isa 59:20. The apostle follows the translation of the Septuagint, and which is favoured by the Chaldee paraphrase, which runs thus; "the Redeemer shall come to Zion, and to turn the rebellious ones of the house of Jacob to the law"; so that the Jew f has no reason to charge the apostle with a perversion of the prophet's words, when they are cited so agreeably to their own Targumist: and the sense of them relates not to what Christ did on the cross, when the iniquities of his people were laid on him, and he bore them, and removed them all in one day from them; but to what he will do to the Jews in the latter day, in consequence thereof; he will convince them of their ungodliness, give them repentance for it and remission of it.
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Gill: Rom 11:27 - -- For this is my covenant unto them,.... This is what God has promised to them in covenant, and he will be as good as his word; his covenant will never ...
For this is my covenant unto them,.... This is what God has promised to them in covenant, and he will be as good as his word; his covenant will never be broken, it will always remain sure and inviolable; so that there is not only a possibility, and a probability, but even a certainty, of the call and conversion of the Jews; which promise and covenant will have their accomplishment,
when I, saith the Lord,
shall take away their sins: some think that the apostle alludes to Jer 31:34; others, that he takes this passage out of Isa 27:9; where in the Septuagint version the selfsame phrase is used; though it may be no citation, or reference, but the apostle's own words, explaining what is meant by "turning away ungodliness from Jacob", Rom 11:26; and as before; regards not the taking away of their sins by the sacrifice of Christ, which is done already, and is what the blood of bulls and goats could not do; but of the removing of their sins from themselves, from their consciences, by the application of the blood of Christ, and the imputation of his righteousness.
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Gill: Rom 11:28 - -- As concerning the Gospel,.... Whereas it might be objected to the call and conversion of the Jews, their implacable enmity to the Gospel, the apostle ...
As concerning the Gospel,.... Whereas it might be objected to the call and conversion of the Jews, their implacable enmity to the Gospel, the apostle replies, by granting, that with respect to that,
they were enemies to God and Christ, to the Gospel, and the ministers of it, and particularly to the apostle:
for your sakes; the Gentiles, to whom it was preached, and by whom it was received, and which greatly irritated and provoked the Jews; or the sense is, that they were suffered to reject the Gospel, and treat it with hatred and virulence, that by this means it might be taken away from them, and carried to the Gentiles; so that the present enmity of the Jews to the Gospel, turned to the advantage of the Gentiles, and should not hinder the future conversion of God's elect among them in the latter day:
but as touching the election, they are beloved for the fathers' sakes; as many of them as belong to the election of grace, are beloved of God; and will appear to be so, when they are called by grace, as they will be, for the confirming of the promises concerning their future restoration made unto their fathers; not one of which shall ever fall to the ground, or they be deprived of any gifts and blessings of grace, which God has purposed for them, or promised to them, as is clear from what follows:
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Gill: Rom 11:29 - -- For the gifts and calling of God,.... By "gifts" are meant, not the gifts of nature and providence, as life, health, strength, riches, and honour, whi...
For the gifts and calling of God,.... By "gifts" are meant, not the gifts of nature and providence, as life, health, strength, riches, and honour, which God sometimes gives, and repents of, and takes away; as he repented that he had made man upon earth, and Saul king of Israel; which must be understood by an "anthropopathy", after the manner of men, and that not of a change of the counsel of his mind, but of the course of his providence: nor do gifts here design external gifts of grace, or such gifts of the Spirit, which qualify men for ministerial work, for public service in the church; for these may be taken away, as the "parable" of the "talents" shows, Mat 25:29; see 1Co 13:8; but the special and spiritual gifts of God's free grace, which relate to the spiritual and eternal welfare of the souls of men, even that, grace which was given to God's elect in Christ before the world was, and all those spiritual blessings wherewith they were then blessed in him: these
are without repentance; that is, they are immutable and unalterable; God never revokes them, or calls them in again, or takes them away from the persons to whom he has made such a previous donation: the reasons are, because that his love from whence they spring is always the same; it admits of no distinction, nor of any degrees, nor of any alteration; and electing grace, according to which these gifts are bestowed, stands sure and immovable; not upon the foot of works, but of the sovereign will of God, and always has its sure and certain effect; and the covenant of grace, in which they are secured, remains firm and inviolable; and indeed, these gifts are no other than the promises of it, which are all yea and amen in Christ, and the blessings of it, which are the sure mercies of David. Whatever God purposes, or promises to give, or really does give to his people, whether into the hands of Christ for them, or into their own, he never repents of or reverses. Agreeably to these words of the apostle, the Jews say g.
"that the holy blessed God, after
the meaning is, that what is once given to men from heaven, is never taken away from them up into heaven: and elsewhere i they ask,
"is there any servant to whom his master gives a gift, and returns and takes it away from him?''
Moreover, the apostle here says the same of the "calling of God", as of gifts; by which is meant, not a bare external call by the ministry of the word, which oftentimes is without effect, and may be where persons are neither chosen, nor converted, nor saved; but an internal effectual call, by special, powerful, and efficacious grace; and designs either actual calling, to which are inseparably annexed final perseverance in grace, and eternal glorification; or rather the purpose of God from eternity, to call his people in time, and which is never repented of, or changed. The apostle's argument here is this, that since there are a number of people among the Jews whom God has loved, and has chosen to everlasting salvation, and has in covenant promised to them, and secured and laid up gifts for them, and has determined to call them by his grace; and since all these are unchangeable and irreversible, the future call and conversion of these persons must be sure and certain.
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Gill: Rom 11:30 - -- For as ye in times past have not believed God,.... The times referred to, are the times of ignorance, idolatry, and superstition; when God suffered th...
For as ye in times past have not believed God,.... The times referred to, are the times of ignorance, idolatry, and superstition; when God suffered the Gentiles, for many hundreds of years, to walk in their own ways; while the Jews were his favourite people, were chosen by him above all people, separated from them, and distinguished by his goodness; had his word and oracles, his judgments and his statutes to direct them, and many other valuable blessings: the times before the coming of the Messiah are here meant, when these people sat in darkness, and in the region of the shadow of death; till Christ, who came to lighten the Gentiles, sent his Gospel among them, and which has been attended with great success; in these times they were in a state of incredulity: they either, as some of them, did not believe there was a God, or that there was but one God, at least but very few believed it; and these did not know who he was; nor did they glorify him as God, or perform any true spiritual worship to him: the far greater part believed there were more gods, and did service to them which by nature were no gods, and fell down to idols of gold, and silver, and wood, and stone:
and yet have now obtained mercy through their unbelief; that is, they were regenerated, effectually called and converted, through the rich and abundant mercy of God; repentance unto life was granted to them; and faith in our Lord Jesus, as a free grace gift, was bestowed upon them; and they had an application of pardoning grace and mercy, through the blood of Christ, made unto them; and all this through the unbelief of the Jews: not that their unbelief could be the cause of their obtaining mercy; but the Jews not believing in the Messiah, but rejecting him, and contradicting and blaspheming his Gospel, it was taken away from them, and carried to the Gentiles; which was the means of their believing in Christ, and obtaining mercy; so that the unbelief of the Jews was the occasion and means, in Providence, of bringing the Gospel to the Gentiles, whereby faith came; see Rom 11:11. This mercy they are said to enjoy "now"; for the present time of the Gospel is the dispensation of mercy to the Gentiles.
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Gill: Rom 11:31 - -- Even so have these also now not believed,.... Now is the time of the Jews' unbelief, blindness has happened to them, the vail is over their hearts; as...
Even so have these also now not believed,.... Now is the time of the Jews' unbelief, blindness has happened to them, the vail is over their hearts; as the Gentiles formerly did not believe God, so the Jews do not now; though they believe there is a God, and that there is but one God, yet they do not believe God in Christ; nor that he is the Father of Christ; or that Christ is the Son of God, the true Messiah, and Saviour of the world: they do not believe, as some read the words, connecting them with the next clause, and so they stand in the original text, "in your mercy"; meaning either Christ, in whom the Gentiles obtained mercy; or the Gospel, the means of it; or the sense is, that they do not believe that mercy belongs to the Gentiles, having entertained a notion, treat the Messiah, and the blessings of mercy and goodness by him, are peculiar to Israel: but our version after Beza, who follows Theophylact, connects the clause with the following,
that through your mercy they may obtain mercy; not through the mercy the Gentiles show to others, but which they have received of God; and principally intends faith, which springs from the mercy of God, and is a gift of his pure, free, rich grace; and stands opposed to the unbelief of the Jews, through which the Gentiles are said to obtain mercy; and the meaning: is, that in time to come, the Jews, observing the mercy obtained and enjoyed by the Gentiles, will be provoked to jealousy, and stirred up to an emulation of them, to seek for the same mercy at the same hands, and in the same way, they have had it; see Rom 11:11; The apostle's argument in favour of the call and conversion of the Jews, upon the whole is this, that since the unbelief of the Gentiles was no bar to their obtaining mercy, and that through the infidelity of the Jews; then it cannot be thought, that the present blindness, hardness of heart, enmity, and unbelief, which now attend the Jews, can be any obstacle to their obtaining mercy in the same way the Gentiles have; but as the one has been, the other also will be.
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Gill: Rom 11:32 - -- For God hath concluded them all in unbelief,.... Both Jews and Gentiles, particularly God's elect among them: some think the metaphor is taken from th...
For God hath concluded them all in unbelief,.... Both Jews and Gentiles, particularly God's elect among them: some think the metaphor is taken from the binding up of sheaves in bands; and that Jews and Gentiles are the sheaves, and unbelief the band, in which they are bound together; but the apostle is not speaking of their being together in unbelief, but as separate, first the Gentiles, and now the Jews: rather it seems to be taken from a prison, and Jews and Gentiles are represented as prisoners, and unbelief the prison, in which they are shut up by God: not that God is the author of unbelief, or of any other sin in men; he does not put it into them, or them into that, but finding them in unbelief, concludes them in it, or leaves them in such a state, and does not as yet however deliver out of it, or say to the prisoners, go forth: moreover, to be "concluded in unbelief", is the same as to be "concluded under sin", Gal 3:22; that is, to be thoroughly convinced of it; and to be held and bound down by such a sense of it in the conscience, as to see no way to escape deserved punishment, or to obtain salvation, but by fleeing to the mercy of God in Christ:
that he might have mercy upon all: not upon all the individuals of Jews and Gentiles; for all are not concluded in, or convinced of the sin of unbelief, but only such who are eventually believers, as appears from the parallel text, Gal 3:22; and designs all God's elect among the Jews, called "their fulness", Rom 11:12; and all God's elect among the Gentiles, called "the fulness of the Gentiles", Rom 11:25; for whom he has mercy in store, and will bestow it on them; and in order to bring them to a sense of their need of it, and that he may the more illustriously display the riches of it, he leaves them for a while in a state of unbelief, and then by his Spirit thoroughly convinces them of it, and gives them faith to look to, and believe in, the mercy of our Lord Jesus Christ, unto eternal life.
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Gill: Rom 11:33 - -- O the depth of the riches, both of the wisdom and knowledge of God,.... These words are the epilogue, or conclusion of the doctrinal part of this epis...
O the depth of the riches, both of the wisdom and knowledge of God,.... These words are the epilogue, or conclusion of the doctrinal part of this epistle, and relate to what is said throughout the whole of it hitherto; particularly to the doctrines of salvation by Christ, justification by his righteousness, predestination, the calling of the Gentiles, the rejection of the Jews, and their restoration in the latter day; upon the whole of which, the apostle breaks forth into this pathetic exclamation; the design of which is to show, how much of the wisdom and knowledge of God is displayed in these doctrines, and how small a part of it is known by the best of men, and therefore ought not to be cavilled at and objected to, because of some difficulties attending them, but to be received upon the testimony of divine revelation: and if there was a depth in these things unsearchable and past finding out by so great a man as the apostle, who had by revelation such knowledge in the mysteries of grace, and who had been caught up into the third heaven, and heard things unutterable, how much less is it to be fathomed by others, and therefore should be silent: by "the wisdom and knowledge of God", one and the same thing is meant; and design not so much the perfections of the divine nature, which are infinite and unsearchable, the understanding of which is too high for creatures, and not be attained to by them; nor the display of them in the works of creation and providence, in which there are most glorious and amazing instances; but rather the effects of them, the counsels and decrees of God; which are so wisely formed and laid, as not to fail of their accomplishment, or to be frustrated of their end; and the doctrines of grace relating to them, in which are treasures, riches, that is, an abundance of wisdom and knowledge; and a depth, not to be reached to the bottom of, in this imperfect state, and in which the knowledge and wisdom of God are wonderfully displayed: thus in the doctrine of redemption and salvation by Christ, wherein God has abounded in all wisdom and prudence; in the person fixed upon to be the Saviour, his own Son; who by the assumption of human nature, being God and man in one person, was very fit and proper to be a Mediator between God and man, to transact the affair of salvation; was every way qualified for it, and able to do it: so likewise in the manner in which it is accomplished, being done in a way which glorifies all the divine perfections; in which the rights of God's justice and the honour of his holiness are secured, as well as his love, grace, and mercy, displayed; in which Satan is most mortified, sin condemned, and the sinner saved; and also in the persons, the subjects of it, ungodly sinners, enemies, the chief of sinners, whereby the grace of God is the more illustrated, and all boasting in the creature excluded. The wisdom of God manifestly appears, in the doctrine of a sinner's justification; which though it proceeds from grace, yet upon the foot of redemption and satisfaction, in a way of strict justice; so that God is just, whilst he is the justifier; it is of persons ungodly, and without a righteousness in themselves, and yet by a perfect and complete righteousness, answerable to all the demands of law and justice; and the grace of faith is wisely made the recipient of this blessing, that it might appear to be of free grace, and not of works, and that the justified ones might have solid peace, joy, and comfort, from it. The doctrine of predestination is full of the wisdom and knowledge of God; his choice of some to everlasting life in his Son, through sanctification of the Spirit, and belief of the truth, for the glorifying of his grace and mercy, in a way of righteousness; and his passing by others, leaving them to themselves, and in their sins, justly to perish for them, for the glorifying of his justice, are acts of the highest wisdom, and done according to the counsel of his will. The account just given of the call of the Gentiles, and the rejection of the Jews, is an astonishing scheme of infinite wisdom; that, on the one hand salvation should come to the Gentiles, through the fall of the Jews, and they should obtain mercy through their unbelief; and on the other hand that the restoration of the Jews should be as life from the dead to the Gentiles; and the Jews, through their mercy, obtain mercy; and that both, in their turns, should be shut up in unbelief by God, that he might have mercy on them all, "O the depth", &c. To which is added,
how unsearchable are his judgments! which are not to be understood of his awful judgments on wicked men in particular, nor of the administrations of his providence in general; though these are a great deep, and in many instances are unsearchable, and cannot be counted for in the present state, but will hereafter be made manifest; nor of the commands of God, sometimes called his judgments, which are all plain, and may be easily searched out in his word; but rather of the counsels and purposes of God, and the doctrines of grace relating thereunto; which are the deep things of God, and are only searched out by the Spirit of God, who reveals them to us:
and his ways past finding out! not the methods and course of his providence, though his way in this respect is often in the deep, his footsteps are not to be known, discerned, and traced, by finite creatures; but rather the goings forth and steps of his wisdom from everlasting, in his purposes and decrees, council and covenant, which are higher than the ways of men, even as the heavens are higher than the earth; and which are all mercy and truth to his chosen people, and strict justice to others, and not to be found out by any; particularly his ways and methods, and dealings, with both Jews and Gentiles; that he should for so many hundred years leave the Gentiles in blindness and unbelief; and now for as many years his favourite people the Jews in the same, and yet gather in his elect out of them both; these are things out of our reach and comprehension.
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Gill: Rom 11:34 - -- For who hath known the mind of the Lord,.... The intentions of his mind, the thoughts of his heart, and the counsels of his will: these could never ha...
For who hath known the mind of the Lord,.... The intentions of his mind, the thoughts of his heart, and the counsels of his will: these could never have been known, if he had not revealed them; nor can the doctrines relating to them, though externally revealed, be known by the natural man, or by the mere dint of nature, but only by the light of the Spirit of God; who searches them, and makes them known in a spiritual manner to spiritual men, who have a spiritual discerning of them; and yet even by these they are not known perfectly, only in part, and are seen through a glass darkly:
or who hath been his counsellor? or was of his council, when all things were fixed according to his sovereign will: when the scheme of man's salvation was consulted and agreed upon between the eternal Three, there was no creature, angel, or man there; no created angel, only the eternal One, "the Counsellor", Isa 9:6; or as the Septuagint there style him,
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Gill: Rom 11:35 - -- Or who hath first given to him,.... See Job 41:11; no man can give God anything, which he has not first given him, or which he has not a prior right t...
Or who hath first given to him,.... See Job 41:11; no man can give God anything, which he has not first given him, or which he has not a prior right to, or a claim upon him for; Adam, in innocence, was not able to give God anything, nor are the angels in heaven, much less sinful men on earth; their bodies and souls, and all their enjoyments, all that is good in them, or done by them, are from the Lord; men by all their good works, best duties and services, give nothing to God, nor lay him under any manner of obligation to them: hence no man can merit anything at the hands of God, if he could,
it shall be recompensed to him again; but it is impossible there should be merit in a creature, who has nothing but what he has from God, and does nothing but what he is obliged to do; and that not by his own strength, but by the grace and strength of God; and therefore there is no retribution made by God as of debt, but of grace: hence it follows, that God is indebted to, and obliged by none, and may do what he will with his own; love Jacob and hate Esau; choose one and not another; reject the Jews, and call the Gentiles; save and justify some, and not others; none can call him to account, or say unto him, what dost thou?
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Gill: Rom 11:36 - -- For of him, and through him, and to him are all things,.... Not only all things in nature and providence, he being the Maker and efficient cause of th...
For of him, and through him, and to him are all things,.... Not only all things in nature and providence, he being the Maker and efficient cause of things, and the preserver and supporter of them their beings, and to whose glory they are all designed and directed; but all things in grace owe their original to him, as their first cause; they are produced by him, and make for his glory; they all spring from his sovereign will, are brought about by his almighty power, and tend to the glory of his grace; as does every thing in election, redemption, and regeneration: particularly the counsels and purposes of God respecting men may be here meant; which all rise out of his own heart, without any motive or inducement to them in the creature; are accomplished by his divine power, notwithstanding all the opposition of men and devils; and all issue in his glory, even such of them as may seem to carry in them severity to some of his creatures: and since this is the case, the following doxology, or ascription of glory to God, is justly and pertinently made,
to whom be glory for ever; and which will be given to him by angels and men to all eternity, for the perfection of his being, the counsels of his will, and the works of his hands, both of nature and grace; to which the, apostle annexes his
amen, so be it, assenting to it, wishing for it, and believing of it.
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expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes: Rom 11:20 Grk “well!”, an adverb used to affirm a statement. It means “very well,” “you are correct.”
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NET Notes: Rom 11:26 It is not clear whether the phrase καὶ οὕτως (kai Joutws, “and so”) is to be understood in a mod...
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NET Notes: Rom 11:31 Some important Alexandrian and Western mss (א B D*,c 1506 pc bo) read νῦν (nun, “now”) here. A few other mss (33 365...
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Geneva Bible: Rom 11:20 Well; because of unbelief they were broken off, and thou standest by faith. Be not highminded, but ( t ) fear:
( t ) See that you stand in awe of God...
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Geneva Bible: Rom 11:21 For if God spared not the ( u ) natural branches, [take heed] lest he also spare not thee.
( u ) He calls them natural, not because they had any holi...
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Geneva Bible: Rom 11:22 ( 11 ) Behold therefore the ( x ) goodness and severity of God: on them which fell, severity; but toward thee, goodness, if thou continue in [his] ( y...
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Geneva Bible: Rom 11:23 ( 12 ) And they also, if they abide not still in unbelief, shall be graffed in: for God is able to graff them in again.
( 12 ) Many are now for a sea...
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Geneva Bible: Rom 11:24 For if thou wert cut out of the olive tree which is wild by ( z ) nature, and wert graffed contrary to nature into a ( a ) good olive tree: how much m...
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Geneva Bible: Rom 11:25 ( 13 ) For I would not, brethren, that ye should be ignorant of this mystery, lest ye should be wise in your ( b ) own conceits; that blindness in par...
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Geneva Bible: Rom 11:28 ( 14 ) As concerning the ( d ) gospel, [they are] enemies for your sakes: but as touching the ( e ) election, [they are] beloved for the fathers' sake...
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Geneva Bible: Rom 11:29 ( 15 ) For the gifts and calling of God [are] without repentance.
( 15 ) The reason or proof: because the covenant made with that nation of everlasti...
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Geneva Bible: Rom 11:30 ( 16 ) For as ye in times past have not believed God, yet have now obtained mercy through their unbelief:
( 16 ) Another reason: because even though ...
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Geneva Bible: Rom 11:32 For God hath concluded them ( f ) all in unbelief, that he might have mercy upon all.
( f ) Both Jews and Gentiles.
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Geneva Bible: Rom 11:33 ( 17 ) O the depth of the riches both of the wisdom and knowledge of God! how unsearchable [are] his ( g ) judgments, and his ( h ) ways past finding ...
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Geneva Bible: Rom 11:34 ( 18 ) For who hath known the mind of the Lord? or who hath been his counsellor?
( 18 ) He bridles the wicked boldness of man in three ways: firstly,...
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Geneva Bible: Rom 11:35 Or who hath ( i ) first given to him, and it shall be recompensed unto him again?
( i ) This saying overthrows the doctrine of foreseen works and mer...
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Geneva Bible: Rom 11:36 For of him, and through him, and to ( k ) him, [are] all things: to whom [be] glory for ever. Amen.
( k ) That is, for God, to whose glory all things...
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expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Rom 11:1-36
TSK Synopsis: Rom 11:1-36 - --1 God has not cast off all Israel.7 Some were elected, though the rest were hardened.16 There is hope of their conversion.18 The Gentiles may not exul...
MHCC: Rom 11:11-21 - --The gospel is the greatest riches of every place where it is. As therefore the righteous rejection of the unbelieving Jews, was the occasion of so lar...
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MHCC: Rom 11:22-32 - --Of all judgments, spiritual judgments are the sorest; of these the apostle is here speaking. The restoration of the Jews is, in the course of things, ...
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MHCC: Rom 11:33-36 - --The apostle Paul knew the mysteries of the kingdom of God as well as ever any man; yet he confesses himself at a loss; and despairing to find the bott...
Matthew Henry -> Rom 11:1-32; Rom 11:33-36
Matthew Henry: Rom 11:1-32 - -- The apostle proposes here a plausible objection, which might be urged against the divine conduct in casting off the Jewish nation (Rom 11:1): " Hath...
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Matthew Henry: Rom 11:33-36 - -- The apostle having insisted so largely, through the greatest part of this chapter, upon reconciling the rejection of the Jews with the divine goodne...
Barclay: Rom 11:13-24 - --It is to the Jews that Paul has been talking up to this time, and now he turns to the Gentiles. He is the apostle to the Gentiles, but he cannot ev...
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Barclay: Rom 11:25-32 - --Paul is coming to the end of his argument. He has faced a bewildering, and, for a Jew, a heartbreaking situation. Somehow he has had to find an e...
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Barclay: Rom 11:33-36 - --Paul never wrote a more characteristic passage than this. Here theology turns to poetry. Here the seeking of the mind turns to the adoration of the ...
Constable: Rom 9:1--11:36 - --V. THE VINDICATION OF GOD'S RIGHTEOUSNESS chs. 9--11
A major problem concerning God's righteousness arises out o...
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Constable: Rom 11:1-36 - --C. Israel's future salvation ch. 11
In chapter 9 Paul glorified God's past grace in sovereignly electing...
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Constable: Rom 11:11-24 - --2. Israel's rejection not final 11:11-24
Now Paul put the remnant aside and dealt with Israel as a whole. Even while Israel resists God's plan centere...
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Constable: Rom 11:25-32 - --3. Israel's restoration assured 11:25-32
Paul previously laid the groundwork for this section. His point so far was that God is able to restore Israel...
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Constable: Rom 11:33-36 - --4. Praise for God's wise plan 11:33-36
This doxology corresponds to the one at the end of chapter 8 where Paul concluded his exposition of God's plan ...
College -> Rom 11:1-36
College: Rom 11:1-36 - --IV. THE SALVATION OF
GOD'S TRUE ISRAEL (11:1-32)
Thus far in chs. 9-10 Paul has painted a very dark picture of Israel. He has implied that they are ...
McGarvey: Rom 11:20 - --Well [A form of partial and often ironical assent: equal to, very true, grant it, etc. It was not strictly true that God had cast off the Jew to make ...
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McGarvey: Rom 11:21 - --for if God spared not the natural branches, neither will he spare thee . [Faith justified no boast, yet faith constituted the only divinely recognized...
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McGarvey: Rom 11:22 - --Behold then the goodness and severity of God: toward them [the Jews] that fell, severity [for lack of faith, not want of merit]; but toward thee [O Ge...
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McGarvey: Rom 11:23 - --And they [the unbelieving mass of Israel] also [together with you], if they continue not in their unbelief [for it is not a question of any comparativ...
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McGarvey: Rom 11:24 - --For if thou wast cut out of that which is by nature a wild olive tree, and wast grafted contrary to nature into a good olive tree; how much more shall...
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McGarvey: Rom 11:25 - --["The future conversion of Israel," says Gifford, "having been proved to be both possible and probable, is now shown to be the subject of direct revel...
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McGarvey: Rom 11:26 - --and so [that is, in this way; namely, by abiding till this determinate time] all Israel [the national totality, the portion hardened; a round-number e...
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McGarvey: Rom 11:27 - --And this is my covenant [lit. the covenant from me] unto them, When I shall take away their sins . [Isa 27:9 . (Comp. Jer 31:31-34) Verse 26 is quoted...
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McGarvey: Rom 11:28 - --As touching the gospel, they [the unbelieving Israelites] are [regarded by God as] enemies for your sake [that their fall might enrich you. See Rom 11...
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McGarvey: Rom 11:29 - --For the gifts and the calling of God are not repented of . [A corollary growing out of the axiom that the all-wise God makes no mistakes and consequen...
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McGarvey: Rom 11:30 - --For as ye [Gentiles] in time past were disobedient to God [Rom 1:16-32 ; Act 17:30], but now have obtained mercy by their [the Jews'] disobedience [Ro...
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McGarvey: Rom 11:31 - --even so have these [the Jews] also now been disobedient, that by the mercy shown to you they also may now obtain mercy . [How the Gentile received ble...
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McGarvey: Rom 11:32 - --For God hath shut up all unto disobedience, that he might have mercy upon all . [The verb "shut up" is, as Barnes observes, "properly used in referenc...
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McGarvey: Rom 11:33 - -- [Guided by the revelations imparted by the Holy Spirit, the apostle has made known many profound and blessed mysteries, and has satisfactorily answer...
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McGarvey: Rom 11:34 - --For who hath known the mind of the Lord? or who hath been his counsellor? [Isa 40:13 ; Jer 23:18 . "Judgments" and "mind" have reference to God's wisd...
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McGarvey: Rom 11:35 - --or who hath first given to him, and it shall be recompensed unto him again? [Job 41:11 . This question emphasizes the riches of God, introduced at ver...
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McGarvey: Rom 11:36 - --For of him, and through him, and unto him, are all things . [Summary statement of the all-comprehensive riches of God. 1. God, in the beginning or pas...
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expand allCommentary -- Other
Critics Ask: Rom 11:26 ROMANS 11:26-27 —How can there be a future for the nation of Israel since they rejected the Messiah? PROBLEM: The nation of Israel clearly reje...
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