I have not joined the Calvinists because they
are not completely right about Romans 9. Basically, the
Calvinist believes that Romans 9 teaches that God's design and
purpose is to glorify Himself by predetermining who should
believe and thus predetermining their respective eternal
destinies. This view got started by Augustine about AD 400. As
far as I know, no Christian had this view before him.
St. Peter testifies about some things in
Paul's writings that are hard to understand ( 2 Pet 3:16) and I
think Romans chapter 9 is one of those places. However, if we
submit our preconceptions to following Paul's line of thought
and put ourselves in his circumstances as much as possible, we
may arrive at an understanding.
My approach to Romans 9, in the past, has
been with the preconceptions that I had gained from the rest of
the Bible. I had always approached it thinking that God's grace
and a person's response to that grace, determined one's destiny.
That God also predetermined what my response would willingly be,
never entered my mind until I began listening to Calvinists. I
began to think that maybe I had been blind to some unique
revelation that Paul was making in this text.
As I studied the context of Paul's letter to
the Romans, I slowly began to see Paul's purposes. I saw that
only at Rome and Colossae did churches, not established by Paul,
receive a letter form him. Since the one at Colossae seems to
have been established by disciples of Paul, it leaves the
recipients at Rome in a unique position. Paul plans to visit
them but does not know for sure that they have as good a
foundation in the Gospel as the churches he has personally
founded. Paul frames the purpose of his letter in the words, "in
the gospel a righteousness from God is revealed, a righteousness
that is by faith from first to last, just as it is written: 'The
righteous will live by faith'" ( Rom 1:17, NIV).
He uses almost the whole letter (chapters
1-11) to explain this valid method of man's acceptance with God.
He had probably done this kind of exposition in all the churches
that he had personally founded, and he may have been
anticipating from Rome the response that he had faced in these
churches (e.g. Galatians) where the dominate Jewish approach to
righteousness was one not easily dissociated from works.
In order to affect this ingrained
disposition, Paul would have to prove that God has a right to
justify men according to this "faith" method He has chosen. Paul
apparently can't get by just by stating that by grace we are
saved through faith. Paul first has to clear away assumptions
about God's rightness in doing this. Paul's dealings with Jews
has shown him that they expect God to require some valuable
distinction as a basis for His choosing them; that His mercy
depends on moral distinctives like being keepers of the law, or,
at least, as having the covenant's racial distinctives such as
Jewish circumcision. They think that if God does not base His
choice on this, that He is being unrighteous.
THE THEOLOGY OF ROMANS 9
In this chapter Paul discusses the failure of
the majority of the Jews to see God's revelation concerning true
righteousness. Their questions might have been: "How is it that
God can do such a thing!?" Or; "OK; given that we believe Jesus
to have lived an exemplary and righteous life and that He was,
nevertheless, executed, but vindicated by God; still, how can
God not require works from all the ones He approves?"
These are the questions that had alienated
the dominate Jewish mentality from the new Christian mentality.
The case of Abraham had been cited in Romans 4 to counter Jewish
objections that Abraham's justification was really by works.
"Paul shows that the righteousness reckoned
to him was essentially on the basis of his trust in God. Nor
could anyone claim that Abraham's covenant came through
circumcision, for the promise was given before he was
circumcised. Paul enlarges upon the circumstances in which
Abraham believed God to make abundantly clear that it was not
Abraham's achievements (in which every Jew gloried) but his
faith that was the ground of his justification." [1] But, the
alienating question still lingers: "Is it not possible that God
is unfair not to take into account men's lineage or efforts
(v:4)?" Romans 9 is Paul's answer in two parts. The first part
is that this is the way God does things ( 15,16). The second
part is that it is His decision when to let His mercy give way
to hardening, as was happening with Israel ( 17-23; c.f. 11:25).
In this chapter Paul gives some examples of
where God's favor rested on certain ones in the past in order to
give expression to His purpose to establish His criterion apart
from works. Isaac over Ishmael, illustrates that God's purpose
is to elevate faith and discount works. God did this, as verse
11 states, "in order that the purpose, which corresponds to the
choice of God, might be maintained." The next example does the
same thing since God's favor to Jacob over Esau can't be
attributed to their works; neither having been born yet.
Paul's subject in Romans 9 is primarily God's
method. It is only secondarily the particular historical actions
that gave expression to God's purpose. The true, primary subject
here is God's "modus operandi"; His manner of operating; His
ongoing principle; His "way". It was this purpose of God that
Moses was inquiring about in Exodus 33:13 when he asks God, "let
me know Thy way, that I may know Thee..."
THY WAY
God's answer to Moses has to do with His
freedom from man's choice of works and the nature of God's
choice of mercy: "I will have mercy on whom I have mercy, and I
will have compassion on whom I have compassion." What God speaks
to Moses is an expression of what lies behind the choices He
makes. It is a revelation of His way. This way is echoed by both
Isaiah and Paul who both point to God's choice behind His
specific, illustrating choices that He makes. it is a revelation
of His way. God chooses Abraham ( Ne 9:7), Israelites ( Deut
7:7), the second place one ( Gen 48:14), a tribe ( Ps 78:67,68),
descendants ( Deut 4:37), a place for His glory ( Deut 12:5),
etc. But behind these choices is God's choice for mercy (grace):
"Is this not the fast which I have chosen, to
loosen the bonds of wickedness, to undo the bands of the yoke,
and to let the oppressed go free, and break every yoke? Is it
not to divide your bread with the hungry, and bring the homeless
poor into the house; when you see the naked, to cover him; and
not to hide yourself from your own flesh ( Is 58:6,7)?"
What God chooses magnifies God's glory; "...
then your righteousness will go before you and the glory of the
LORD will be your rear guard ( Is 58:8)."
Paul is vivid about the way God's choices
make nothing, man's glory, and by so doing exalts His own glory;
to paraphrase:
"God has chosen the foolish, weak, base,
despised, and nothings of the world that He might shame the wise
and strong, and nullify the things that are supposedly important
[i.e. man's glory] ( 1 Cor 1:27,28)." "He teaches the humble His
way. All the paths of the LORD are loving kindness [mercy] and
truth... ( Ps 25:9,10)."
WHAT OR WHO QUESTIONS GOD'S WAY
The Calvinist, John Piper, in his work
entitled, _The Justification of God_ (IVP), tries to clarify
what had called God's rightness into question. What he points to
is different than what I point to. I try to show that it was the
recalcitrant attitude of the unbelieving Jews calling God into
question. They sought to keep a self-glory in the achievements
wrought through their unparalleled law ( Rom 2:17-20).
Piper, on the other hand, is apparently not
sure who (or what) had called God's righteousness into question.
He intimates that it is an apparent failure of God's word
concerning His promise to have Israelites as a people and nation
of His own possession ( Deut 7:6; Jer 31:35-40). [2] Most Jews
of the time were, of course, not believing the gospel. Even the
believing Jews may have wished to think that God's election of
Israel as a nation would forever stand. And, yet, Israel was now
being set aside. The Lord had predicted the destruction of their
temple ( Lk 19:43,44; Mk 13:2), their dispersion ( Mt21:21), and
the transfer of their stewardship to others ( Mk 12:9), etc. The
"apparent failure", however, is clarified by Paul who shows the
conditional nature of God's promises to Israel. The promises, he
says, were given to believers; "not all who are descended from
Israel are Israel" (9:6). Not all Israelites are children of the
promise. A child of promise is as Paul had shown in Romans 4:13,
one who owes his existence to the creative power of God's
promise to Abraham; that his children "would be heirs of the
world not through the Law, but through the righteousness of
faith."
The "apparent failure of God's word", then,
is not the matter that questions God's rightness. Jews should
have known this much from what they had learned concerning the
conditional nature of God's choice of them as it impinged on
their idol worship and subsequent captivity (c.f. Rom 3:3; 2 Tim
2:13). The very fact that they now felt they had it all together
concerning their former proclivity to idols, served to blind
them to God's choice against works.
God had used several other occasions in
Jewish history to let His favor give expression to His purpose.
In each case God's promises were not conditioned by human works
but by men's faith. The implicit condition for Cain, for
example, was "belief". Would he have believed God's love for him
and mastered resentment, he would have been saved.
With God's election of Saul as King ( 1 Sam
10:24; 2 Sam 21:6), Israel had seen a conditional nature to
God's election ( 1 Sam 15:11) that involved faith ( 1 Sam
13:13).
Piper's attempt (to show that it is "the
apparent failure of God's word" that questions God's rightness)
is not successful because Israel's history shows that God's
rightness is maintained. The Calvinist's stumbling block is
their a priori assumption that God's continuing grace has no
conditions, whereas the truth is that it only has no conditions
with regard to human works. It is the Jewish "attitude" (which
says that God needs to require works) that questions God's
rightness. Therefore Piper doesn't truly understand Paul's
answer to the question. Paul's answer is also God's answer to
Moses about His way; which is, "I will have mercy on whom I have
mercy, and I will have compassion on whom I have compassion"
(9:15).
How does this quote from Exodus 33:19 support
Paul's claim of God's righteousness or rightness? To begin with,
it shows that God's choice of faith is HIS decision for the way
He will save men -- not ours. The next verse (16) says, "So then
it is not a question of him who wills, nor of him who runs, but
of God who has mercy." This shows that God does what He does
apart from any constraint coming from outside His own will. God
teaches us that grace cannot be grace and be subject to
entitlement. If only Israel would see that the grace of God is
not subject to works or to some kind of entitlement linked to
their nationality.
If the method of salvation were of man's
effort, then the glory would be man's. If, on the other hand,
God dispenses His mercy according to His choice, the glory will
be all God's.
Paul goes on in the next few verses to
illustrate what the Jews already knew, intellectually; that
God's purpose includes the display of His glory -- a glory that
He will not relinquish to another, for then He would not be God
(Is 42:8). If it is right for God to be God, then it is right
for God to chose His own methods. This explains the
righteousness of God in the matter. It also explains the many
times, in Israel's history, why God made particular choices to
favor this one over that one. It was in order that the purpose
which corresponds to the choice of God -- might be maintained
(9:11). His secondary choices of this one or that one, gave
expression to His purpose. And, that purpose, as I have
formulated in other chapters, is to have a people for Himself,
through the work of His Son, who would be to the praise of His
glory, whom He would possess by means of His grace through
faith. When Paul speaks of God's "purpose" in Romans 9, I think
he has something very like this formulation in mind.
Piper always speaks of God's purpose as His
"electing purpose." This is not done by Paul and tends to muddy
the fact that God's choice is grounded in His purpose. Whomever
He favors in particular, it is true, is also a choice. And,
these choices are used by God to give expression to His choice
regarding our way of being saved.
God's favor is not based on the desires of
men to merit it by their moral distinctions ("running") or
national entitlements ("willing"). It is based on a distinction
of God's choosing -- faith. This is God's choice, it is a God-
chosen human distinctive not having any merits or pedigree.
There stands my major difference with the
Calvinist who believes Romans 9 would define God's purpose as
the design to glorify Himself by predetermining the respective
responses (to the gospel) and eternal destinies of all
individuals. Such an interpretation does not satisfy the
historical context of Paul's letter.
THE EXPLANATION OF THE TEXT ("EXEGESIS")
I would like to give an explanation to those
specific texts in Romans 9 in which I differ with John Piper's
explanations. Having a Bible open to Romans 9 I think will
facilitate your analysis of what follows:
The first text is 9:4 "[Paul's kinsmen
according to the flesh, who are separated from Christ] ...are
Israelites of whom [are] the sonship, and the glory, and the
covenants, and the giving of the law, and the service of
worship, and the promises ... (Greek/English Interlinear)." [3]
This verse may seem to be a list of
privileges that belong by rights to national Israel. Piper
believes that all of Romans 9-11 answers why Paul's citation of
this list of privileges does not guarantee the salvation of all
Israelites. Piper's argument seems to be that, yes, these are
reliable and lasting promises, but that they are realized
"eschatologically" (p.46). I think he means that Israel's
possession of these privileges, as lasting promises, awaits a
final return of national Israel (11:26 - even though they were
"not-lasting" historically).
My view is different in that I believe that
Paul sees a condition to the privileges. I will discuss below,
the inadequacy of Piper's no-conditions viewpoint and the
definition of "all Israel" in Romans 11:26.
The next text is Rom. 9:6-13 in general, as
it regards the personal destinies of Ishmael, Isaac, Esau, and
Jacob:
Piper believes that the Old Testament
examples of God's discriminating favor to certain individuals is
the same thing as a predestination of those individuals to
certain eternal destinies. In other words, Calvinists say that
God decided to save Isaac and Jacob and let Ishmael and Esau go
on being forever lost. They make this interpretation because it
gives support to their idea of Romans 9 -- that it is an
argument for God's freedom in selecting people for salvation
apart from any conditions whatsoever.
The counter to this, among theologians, has
been that the favored individuals were predestined to more of
God's historical blessing (e.g. to be heads of a chosen race)
whereas the supplanted ones had relatively more impoverishment.
I agree with this and would also add that God's temporal,
historical favor gave expression to His choice for "faith"
conditions as opposed to human works conditions.
I hold to this counter position because it
fits in well with the way Paul develops his argument for God's
right to by-pass men's merits in granting salvation. I also see
that the temporal favoring of certain OT individuals and their
descendants, parallels the use of typology in scripture (c.f.
Rom. 15:4; 1 Cor 10:11). Because the law is fulfilled in Christ,
OT things are applied now in a new and greater way in the life
of the church. The temporal things become eternal things. The
physical Sabbath, for instance, becomes an even greater
spiritual rest from works-to-save. And, God's OT choice against
the particular works of some men (e.g. the contrived conception
of the "not-promised" Ishmael), becomes, in the NT, the
damnation of those who will not submit to God's choice -- faith
(they were "illustrations": Heb 9:9,14; 4:1,2,10,11).
Romans 9:13 "Just as it is written, 'Jacob I
have loved, but Esau I have hated.'"
Piper thinks this verse supports the view
that God appoints eternal destinies for each child. I see the
verse as a testimony to the fulfillment of the prophecy quoted
in v. 12, "it was said to her, 'The older will serve the
younger.'" As Malachi shows ( Mal 1:2,3), the history of Jacob
and Esau's descendants has borne out the prediction of God's
respective appointments. The difference between the favor of one
and disfavor of the other is cast in Hebrew phrasing similar to
Luke 14:26, "If anyone comes to Me, and does not hate his own
father and mother ... yes, and even his own life, he, cannot be
My disciple." It is an expression of favoring one of two
alternatives and, as such, is what I call a comparison-type
hatred.
Not only does Malachi testify to the
fulfillment of God's historical appointments, but at the same
time he reinforces the notion of God's specific hatred of a
works orientation. Even though a "comparison-type" hatred (but
not a "condemnation-type" hatred) existed before the children
were born and before they had done any works, by the time of
Malachi the Edomites were exhibiting the same kind of
self-sufficient behavior that Paul was exposing in the Jews of
his time. The Edomites were saying, "We have been beaten down,
but we will return and build up the ruins ( Malachi 1:4)." This
self-sufficiency was not of God's appointment, but because of
God's utter hatred of it the Edomites would face judgment. [4]
The Biblically literate Jew of Paul's day
should have made some inferences from this allusion concerning
their own status. The same judgments awaited the "Jacob God
Loved" (corporately) if they continued in their "entitlement
attitude". Conditions for God's favor were given: "those who
fear the LORD and who esteem His name" would be favored (
Malachi 3:16, c.f. Ps 5:11,12 where the "righteous" and "those
who love Thy name" are interchangeable). The implied condition
for God's favor was faith. The alternative was, "lest I come and
smite the land with a curse (4:6);" a reality fast approaching
in Paul's day.
Romans 9:16 "Therefore, it is not of the one
who wills nor of the one who runs but it is of God who has
mercy."
I agree with Piper (p.155) that the subject
of this verse, "it", has to do with the bestowal of mercy, but
in light of Paul's whole argument I would specify that "it"
refers to the way to salvation (which, of course, involves the
bestowal of mercy).
"Runs" has to do with good works and "wills"
has to do with resolve to keep the law, and, together, they
exhibit a human desire to be God's favored ones. Paul is saying
that the way to salvation is not one of these human choices, but
God's choice -- the choice of the One who has mercy.
Because God's chosen way to salvation
includes the "faith" response, Piper is loath to exclude faith
from the meanings he gives to the words "wills" and "runs" p.153
. He wants to label "faith" as a "kind of" good works and thus
he puts "faith" under the category of human "willing" in verse
16. Scripture, however, puts the terms in opposition: "By grace
you have been saved through faith... Not of works..." ( Eph
2:8,9). In spite of this, Piper cites two texts in an attempt to
support his notion that faith is a work (i.e. of merit, as "good
work" was hoped to be). He cites 1 Thess 1:3 which clearly
speaks of works being "of" faith -- not faith itself, but a
result of faith. And, Galatians 5:6 which speaks of "faith
through love working". I have shown above that the term "work"
may be used in the sense of "functioning" (or "operating" or
"expressing itself") when the idea does not involve "good
works." This is obviously Paul's sense of the word, "work" in
Galatians 5:6.
Piper is legitimately afraid of making God
dependent upon man, but to whom it is that God has grace towards
is not dependent on man's faith. God's decision to save a man is
determined by God's decision to save a man who responds to His
grace through faith. As far as it concerns God, "faith" is His
choice. As far as it concerns man, "faith" is the acceptable
response. The mode of salvation certainly is not of him who has
faith; it is of God who determines that He will take men's faith
into account.
If Piper's concern were important -- that
there is no explicit reference to faith in Romans 9 until verse
30, [5] then he would have no grounds for cautioning against the
notion that the terms "wills" and "runs" also include the notion
of "faith''-- an unwarranted caution, from my point of view. The
mode of salvation certainly is not of him who has faith; it is
of God who determines that He will take men's faith into
account.
Romans 9:17,18 "For the Scripture says to
Pharaoh: 'For this very thing I raised you up: that I might
demonstrate by you my power and that my name might be proclaimed
in all the earth.' Therefore, on whom he desires he has mercy
and whom he desires he hardens."
These verses are a logical step in the
progression Paul has been making, but because Piper chooses to
see the argument differently than I do, he must give verses 17
and 18 an "inscrutable" cast. That is, to him it is an example
of God making choices of individuals to save or to damn based
absolutely on His freedom and not giving any account of His
purpose in these matters.
I expect the cogency of what I will show will
convince you that Paul's argument runs differently than Piper
sees it:
Verses 9-13 illustrate God's choice against
man's choice -- faith against works.
Verse 14 poses the question of God's
rightness in His decision regarding this mode of salvation (as
it affects particularly the Jews, but also, everyone).
Verse 15 answers the question by reference to
God's answer to Moses concerning His way (mode). By an answer
like this Paul shows that any of man's choices for ways of
salvation would be honoring to man and dishonoring to God. God
cannot be God and not be honored and glorified. He will give His
glory to no other would-be God, which is what man would be if he
alone could determine his own destiny. And, as Piper rightly
says, "God's righteousness consists in his unswerving commitment
always to act for the glory of his name (p.100)." [6]
Therefore, verse 16 says the choice
concerning the way of salvation is God's not man's. God will be
glorified, not man (except by God's mode of sharing His glory --
c.f. Jn 8:54).
Now, verses 17 and 18 continue the theme of
God's glory and honor by showing that God will be honored even
if man refuses to submit to God's design. The Jews of Paul's day
should have been galled at Paul's implicitly likening them to
Pharaoh. But to drive his point home, Paul must show that even
the unbelieving Jewish stance will bring glory to God just as
Pharaoh's stance did. God, in the first century AD was hardening
the majority of Israelites in their chosen course of action, and
God was doing this to glorify His name. This is the main point
of Paul's larger polemic.
The Calvinist interpretation of this verse
leans hard on their presupposition concerning the inscrutability
of God's will. They think there is no way of knowing who it is
that God will have mercy on or who it is that He will harden.
They rightly assume that God's choice is not dependent on any
good works in man, but they come to the wrong decision for
"inscrutability" because of previous inclinations toward Greek
philosophical notions about God being unable to really respond
to men. They don't see that "by grace through faith" is God's
choice that by-passes man's glory.
We do know, however, for whom it is that God
respectively wills these things. By the revelation of the gospel
we know who it is that God has chosen to harden and we know on
whom it is that He will continue to have mercy. [7] Though God's
thoughts are not our thoughts ( Is 55:8), the mind of Christ
that we have is not inscrutable. It teaches us that the will of
God is to have compassion on repentant ones ( Is 55:7). God's
choice is to save by His grace through faith. We know this by
the good news which reveals "a righteousness that is by faith
from first to last (Rom 1:17)."
Because of what we know of God's glory, we
know that He will not let His mercy be demanded as a ransom by
unbelievers. That would cause God's name and glory to be
dishonored (c.f. all of Malachi; Jer 3:4,5; 5:12,13; 7:9- 11,14;
12:4; Hos 7:2; 12:8). The Jewish entitlement attitude was making
this demand of God's mercy. Although He is long-suffering ( 2
Pet 3:9), God at some point in persistent unbelief, will harden
and cut off ( Luke 13:6-9; Rom 1:28; 2:4,5; 11:20; Gen 6:3; Rev
2:21-23).
I conclude that this well explains that God
shows mercy and hardens, both for the sake of His glory and both
according to His plainly revealed purpose.
Romans 9:19,20 "You will say to me then, 'Why
does he still find fault? For who has ever resisted His will?' 0
man, on the contrary, who are you to dispute with God? Shall the
thing made say to its maker, 'Why did you make me thus?"'
Piper sees here a clear denial of man's
having a part with regard to who becomes a believer. This is
because Calvinists would make the totality of creaturely
activity, wholly and utterly at the disposal of the divine. If
Adam sinned against God, for example, it was by God's
appointment that he did so. God, to the Calvinist, is the author
of sin without being responsible for it. And, to them, He is
also the dispenser of faith to those whom He has selected for
salvation (the rest being "justly" denied that possibility).
Because I believe the Bible teaches that God
has designed man to be metaphysically free in his response to
the gospel, I view this verse differently than Piper does. My
view is built on the character of the "objector" presented in
these verses. The objector in 9:19, 20 also appears under
similar circumstances in 3:7and 6:1. This objector appears to
personify an attitude characterized by the insolence of the
unbelieving Jewish mentality. It is really against God Himself,
not Paul, that he is being disrespectful, rude and even
blasphemous. The objector is voicing his opinion that his
supposed sins might as well be excused since Paul has shown that
God gains greater glory (in bolder relief) against his sin (
3:17).
It is not actually the case, that people not
accepting God's way of things as Paul had defined it, would
really imagine that God was finding fault with them. The
unbelieving Jews didn't really think that they were being
hardened by God, against their will. But, these people were
looking for a way to find fault with the God revealed by Paul
rather than find fault with themselves.
Their objection might be paraphrased like
this: "Well, if I am, as you say, the victim of hardening, like
pharaoh, then how can God blame someone He has victimized --
it's God's fault!"
Paul could have responded, "No, no, it is not
God's fault, it's your fault if you are an unbeliever; God's
hardening follows unbelief." But, that is not Paul's style.
Something stronger was needed for someone so obnoxiously
conceited that they would try to blame God for their sins.
Because Paul sees an impudent rather than an
anguished response from the majority of Jews, he blasts them
first (vv. 20-23) before turning to the fact that they have
misconstrued God's-will-to harden as arbitrary, in verse 18.
Paul turns to correct this in 9:30 - 11:36.
In this later section Paul makes explicit
what he has been alluding to in 9:1-29. It concerns man's
responsibility for making a faith-response to the gospel. Paul
says, "They did not pursue God's righteousness which is by faith
(v.30)."; "they stumbled (v.32)11; "they did not subject
themselves (10:3)11; they ignored the word of faith which was
"near you, in your mouth and in your heart (10:8)11; "they did
not all heed the gospel (10:16)11; "And they also, if they do
not continue in their unbelief, will be grafted in; for God is
able to graft them in again (11:23)."
This makes explicit what God regards and what
the conditions are. Piper and the Calvinists would have us
believe that God hardens individuals without any regard for
anything in the individual. However, the point of Romans 9 is
that it is nothing of merit in an individual for which God has
regard.
Paul's sharp response to the Jewish attitude
shows that it is presumptuous to question the rightness of God's
dealings. The Jewish premise is that unless a man has the power
of self-determination over against God, his sin cannot be justly
faulted. But there lingers in this premise a works-view of
self-determination rather than a humble response that allows
man's destiny to be determined for good. It is not part of the
good news that God holds final sway over who should be
believers. That would be anxiety- filled bad news. How often do
Calvinists preach Romans 9 when they preach the good news about
salvation? Even though the theme of Romans is salvation by faith
( 1:17), I venture that not often is this chapter a part of
their evangelism. But, it really is part of the good news Paul
has for unbelievers; "works are by-passed!"
I have claimed that Paul's response to the
objector shows the insolence of questioning God's right-dealing.
But, it is also true that Paul's answer seems to agree with the
objector's pretended conception of God's appointment to hardness
without regard for anything in the objector. By not disagreeing
with the objector, Paul is not affirming that God predetermines
our sinfulness, but Paul is pointing to the absurdity of a
created thing wanting to direct its own creation, and, by
implication, its own mode of salvation. This, as I have shown,
is the case that Paul is dealing with here. Paul is assuming the
objector's point of view for the sake of the argument. This
means Paul is countering the objector's supposition with a
supposition of his own which he intends to prove.
Romans 9:21 "Or does not the potter have
authority over the clay to make from the same lump one vessel
for honor and another for dishonor?"
Paul continues to question the objector's
authority. Who has the authority, the thing made, or the maker?
The maker, obviously! Suppose God wants to do a thing a certain
way; who can object? Of course, no one can with any effect. If
the objector's objection has any merit on the face of it, this
verse demolishes its pretensions.
For unbelieving Jews to hold to their own
designs regarding salvation would be like the clay deciding in
what way it would become a vessel for honor. The theme, then, of
man's honor verses God's honor continues here from its original
development in verses 15-18 with the key phrase being, "that My
name might be proclaimed throughout the whole earth (c.f. the
"making glory known" of v.23)". God decides what will be honored
and what will be dishonored. He honors faith and dishonors
works. This way, being of God, brings honor to God as I have
shown. If man's choice of works saved, it would be man-honoring.
[8]
Piper's examination of these verses overlooks
God's reasons for doing what He does with His creatures. Piper,
however, is right on when he finds the meaning behind Paul's
potter/clay image in Is 29:16 (p.195). In this text, "perverted"
wise men (c.f. 29:14) in Israel, presume to hide counsel from
God, acting as if they were God. Isaiah says, "You turn things
around! Shall the potter be considered as equal with the clay,
that what is made should say to its maker, 'He did not make me',
or what is formed say to him who formed it, 'He has no
understanding'?" This is exactly the case with Paul's objector
who would decide the mode of his own salvation.
It is not inexplicable that God has the
"right" to decide that one vessel should be honored and another
dishonored. Having the right also implies that He uses it and
decides what our destinies shall be, but the basis for His
decision is not explicitly being dealt with precisely here in
this verse.
Romans 9:22,23 "What if God, while intending
to show forth His wrath, and to make known His power, yet
endured with much long-suffering, vessels of wrath, fit for
destruction? And [what if He did so] in order that He might make
known the wealth of His glory on vessels of mercy, which He
previously prepared for glory?"
"Suppose the scenario of these verses is
true", Paul says, "if God is the final authority, who will bring
Him to task?" This seems to be Paul's implication in these
verses that have an "if/then" construction, but without the
"then" being explicit. I don't think these verses are merely
hypothetical (as I will show), but Paul's choice of words causes
me to come to different conclusions than Piper does.
Piper, it seems, would construe the verses to
mean that both the honored and destroyed vessels were
individually designed for these destinies in the Creator's mind
before He actually created those individuals (pp 212,f). Piper
decides that the two phrases; "vessels fit for destruction" and
"vessels prepared for glory"; both affirm divine agency. He says
it is God that makes each vessel become the way it becomes (p
212).
The word that I rendered as "fit" is a
passive verb (used in reference to vessels of wrath), while the
word "prepared" (used in reference to vessels of mercy) is an
active verb. Because "fit" (or "having been fitted") is passive,
it could be taken to mean that God did the fitting or that man
had made himself fit. Piper says we can only guess why Paul used
different voices for each case. He then offers some
possibilities why (p 213). Given his explanations of the first
part of Romans 9, Piper's guesses look reasonable, but given the
way I have explained Romans 9 I think the following explanations
are more reasonable:
It appears that had Paul's intention been to
teach that God was the cause of men's sinfulness, Paul would
have used an active voice in each case. He, no doubt, intended
to make an important distinction when he used a passive voice
with regard to the "fitting" of the vessels of wrath and then
used the active voice with regard to the vessels of mercy.
Furthermore, it is significant that God's plans for the vessels
of mercy are described as an original plan; a before- hand
preparation, while endurance rather than preparation is God's
initial action with regard to the vessels of wrath. One might
infer that God's intentions (before-hand intentions) were to
have all be vessels for bringing glory to Him through their
reception of His mercy. If Paul really meant to imply that God
designed some men to be sinners for damnation, he could have
been much less ambiguous about it.
Paul's non-Christian contemporaries, the
Essenes, who believed that God caused men to become either
sinners or believers, were well able to articulate their
position unambiguously. Piper quotes their literature (p. 212
f): "Thou hast ordained [the way of every man] before creating
him... the just from his mother's womb... whereas the wicked
Thou hast created [for the time of] Thy [wr]ath and hast set
them apart from their mother's womb for the Day of Massacre..."
Paul's proposal, however, is not the same as
the Qumran tradition of double predetermination of destiny.
Paul's proposal asks, "What if God puts off judging unbelieving
Jews in order to elicit faith in Gentiles (and remnant Jewish
believers) -- what then?" Paul proceeds to show that his
proposal (vv.22,23) is not hypothetical.
What God has a "right" to do with each group
of people, He actually does for the purposes listed: 1) to show
forth His wrath against sin; 2) to make His power known; and 3)
to make known the wealth of His glory on vessels of mercy.
As Paul shows more fully in Romans 11, God is
using an unbelief, that would be dishonoring, to bring about a
belief in others that will compound His honor. It adds to the
satisfaction of His honor received through His wrath and power
upon unbelievers, the glory He will obtain in having more
believers.
Paul doesn't blink when he proceeds from the
9:1-23 section of Romans to the 9:24-33 section where it is
again made explicit that faith is taken into account in God's
choice (vv. 30-33). I don't think it's because Paul is
comfortable with antinomies, but because there are no antinomies
in what he has presented. Conditionality and God's purpose are
the warp and woof of Romans 9, 10, and 11. The "if" of Romans
11: 19-23 forcefully expresses those conditions:
You will say then, "Branches were broken off
so that I might be grafted in." Quite right, they were broken
off for their unbelief, but you stand by your faith. Do not be
conceited, but fear, for if God did not spare the natural
branches, neither will He spare you. Behold then the kindness
and severity of God; to those who fell, severity, but to you,
God's kindness, if you continue in His kindness; otherwise you
also will be cut off. And they also, if they do not continue in
their unbelief, will be grafted in; for God is able to graft
them in again. (NASB)
"ALL ISRAEL", ROMANS 11:25-27
For I do not want you, brethren, to be
uninformed of this mystery, lest you be wise in your own
estimation, that a partial hardening has happened to Israel
until the fullness of the Gentiles has come in, and thus all
Israel will be saved; just as it is written, "the deliverer will
come from Zion. He will remove ungodliness from Jacob. And this
is My covenant with them, when I take away their sins."
I promised earlier to get back to my view of
"all Israel" being saved. It would be easy for a Calvinist to
believe that "all Israel" here refers to all national Israel,
and that God, for His own inscrutable purposes, decides to save
part of national Israel early, but all of national Israel at a
later date. After all, from the Calvinist viewpoint, if God
wants to save a person, He merely and irresistibly gives them
faith. God saves as many or as few as He wants. [9]
The context of Romans 11 often contrasts
national Israel with "Gentiles". This gives considerable weight
to viewing the "all Israel" of verse 26 as all national Israel.
There are, however, good reasons for seeing the reference as
being to the "Israel" that includes all the "sons of Abraham by
faith" -- which is to say, all Christians (c.f. Gal 6:16):
) Paul has already introduced this concept in
Romans 4:16, 9:6, and 11:2.
) Paul implies that all Israel is saved at
the time that the Gentiles are added to the Church. He does not
say, in verse 26, "and after that all Israel will be saved",
but, "and thus all Israel will be saved." That is, when the
Gentiles come into the Church.
) Paul quotes Isaiah 59:20 about the
Deliverer removing ungodliness from Jacob. We see this being
actualized in the judgment upon unbelieving Jerusalem which
leaves, in effect, a new purified Jerusalem ( Rev 21:2, Heb
12:22, 1 Pet 2:9) -- the Christian Church. The reference to "My
covenant with them when I take away their sins" reminds me of
the Lord's words concerning "the new covenant in my blood."
) Paul continually thinks of the conversion
of national Jews in a conditional and uncertain sense: He prayed
("wished" NIV) that he were accursed from Christ if that would
have insured their salvation ( 9:3, 10:1). Paul hopes that he
might save some of his countrymen by the provocation of jealousy
( 11:14). Paul casts the Jewish condition in conditional terms
when he says in verse 11:23, "And they also, if they do not
continue in their unbelief, will be grafted in; for God is able
to graft them in again."
All this is much easier than trying to
mitigate the impact of the word "all" as applied to a nation.
Granting that such mitigation is proper in many textual cases,
it is not necessary here, and there's certainly no need to do it
if you're a Calvinist (though some do) because, as a Calvinist,
you believe that whom the Lord wants, He gets, even if it is
"all" of a whole nation.
CONCLUSION
In commenting on Romans 9-11, I have shown
that Paul's main purpose has been to demonstrate that God will
be glorified by the state of affairs in the Jewish nation. Paul
gets to the center of this thesis in 9:15 where he refers to
God's "way" as revealed to Moses. There we see that the way God
chooses, magnifies His glory. If it is a "fast", of showing
mercy ( Is 58) that God has chosen, for instance, then our
following that "way" will assure that "the glory of the LORD
will be your rear guard (v.8)."
If we don't follow God's way it is actually
an attempt to gain our own glory. Apostates can't get away from
trying to make themselves look good by works-salvation attempts.
God thwarts such attempts (e.g. Ishmael, Edom, Pharaoh, and
unbelieving Jews) and in doing so brings even greater glory to
Himself. That's why chapters 9-11 of Romans is largely a theme
of man's honor verses God's honor; "that My name might be
proclaimed throughout the whole earth ( 9:17,23)."
After revealing all of God's scheme in
bringing honor to Himself (and His chosen ones) Paul crowns his
theological work (all of chapters 1-11) with a hymn of praise
eternal ( 11:33-36).
In concluding this chapter, I think I have at
least shown that ones interpretation of Romans 9 depends a great
deal on ones starting presuppositions. At most, I have shown, by
the side by side comparison with John Piper's work, that the
probability of my view of the crucial texts outweighs Piper's.
Of course, the final decision about the correct interpretation
is up to the saints publicly ( 2 Pet 1:20).
NOTES
Donald Guthrie, _New Testament Introduction_,
(IVP, p. 428)
I have discerned three main views concerning
texts like Jer. 31:36-40: The first view was had by unbelieving
Jews of Paul's day. They felt entitled to a continued existence
with God's favor, based on this and other texts. After AD 70,
this notion was shattered, leaving the Jews with a culture
having lots of momentum, but with a lot of agnostic-type beliefs
typical of reformed Judaism today.
Early Christians interpreted the
"not-reject-all" reading (in Jer. 31:37) as referring to a
remnant of believing Jews who were joined by believing Gentiles,
thus expanding the concept of the "nation" (e.g. 1 Pet. 2:9;
Eph. 2:12; Rom. 11:17) and the city ( Heb. 12:22; Rev. 21:2,3).
By citing these texts, I show that I believe this view to be
Biblical. Some Christians, of this and last century, believe
that since the old Jewish nation and city did not remain
established "forever" after the return from Babylonian exile
(because of the AD 70 destruction) that Jeremiah and other
prophets had to be referring to another return from exile yet in
the future (i.e. 1948 Israel). These people, including today's
Dispensationalists, believe there will be two holy nations; the
Christian nation of 1 Peter 2:9 and the old racial Israel as
well. I cite an interlinear text that I have to show that some
translators use "of whom are" instead of "to whom belong" in
this verse. The translation is of a genitive case that might
either be translated in the sense of being "a source of" or
"showing possession".
As a nation, Moab, as well, was under God's
curse, but salvation came to the Moabitess, Ruth, when she
abandoned the "sufficiency" of her former religion.
9:30-33 is Paul's summation of all that he
has been alluding to in chapter 9 - faith!
"At the 1995 Biblical Horizons Summer
Conference, Rev. Jeffrey Meyers suggested that the Reformed
notion that `God does all things for His own glory' requires
Trinitarian refinement. Referring to a number of passages in
John's Gospel, Meyers showed that each person of the Trinity,
far from seeking His own glory, seeks the glory of the other
two. The Father glorifies the Son ( John 8:50, 54; 17:1), the
Son glorifies the Father( 7:18; 17:40), and the Spirit glorifies
the Son who glorified the Father ( 16:14). The Church is caught
up in the mutual exchange of glory: The Son shares the glory
that He receives from the Father with the Church ( 17:22), even
as the persons given to the Son glorify Him ( 17:10). Thus,
while it is true from one perspective that the creation is to
glorify the Creator, it is also true that the Creator glorifies
the creation, even as each person of the Godhead glorifies the
others. As Meyers put it, God doesn't suck glory from everything
else; on the contrary, God (and each of the three persons)
overflows in bestowing glory on others." [From Peter J.
Leithart's essay in "Rite Reasons", No. 43, Jan 95, published by
Biblical Horizons, PO Box 1096, Niceville, FL 32588]
When God grants that men should hear the
gospel, He has linked the dispensing of His mercy to human
agency ( Rom. 10:14; Mt. 9:38), but a response of faith insures
that God's mercy will continue in ones life.
It would be man-honoring, not to mention the
fact that man's choice of works would be unable to come up with
an equivalent atonement for the attempted robbery of God's
infinite honor by our former disbelief of Him (c.f. Anselm).
In the mediocre Arminian view, God merely
sees the future fact that at a later date, all of national
Israel become believers. I have shown that this view is faulty
because a future fact cannot "exist" without God being the
determiner of it. God would not just see an existing truth; He
would be the creator of it if He saw it.