As we
look at Romans chapter 9, remember one thing—observation, interpretation,
application. When you are studying scripture, keep the light right on your
feet and take one step at a time. The main things are the plain things,
and the plain things are the main things. That is what we are going to be
looking at in
Romans 9:6-13.
Israel is the focus of the Apostle Paul in Romans chapters 9, 10 and 11.
We are going to see them here as a proud people. We have already seen them
as a privileged people in verses 4-5 of chapter 9. But you see, they
missed the whole promise that God had given to
Abraham (or
here) Oh, many Jews saw it, but as a nation, as a whole,
they missed it. Now, Paul is going to show in verses
6-13 how they became a very proud people. They were proud in
the fact that Israel felt, since they were blood kin to
Abraham (or
here), that gave them a security and a guarantee of
sonship. Of course, that is nowhere in Scripture. This pride blinded them
to the reality that Paul has been teaching in chapters 1-8. Paul, himself
being a converted Jew, knew that the only way to salvation, the only way
to be justified, was by faith alone in Christ alone. Now that will never
change. That was the way of salvation in the Old Testament. That is the
way of salvation in the New Testament. It will always been centered in
Jesus Christ by our faith in Him and what He did for us on the cross.
So
not only were they a privileged people, they became a very proud people. I
want you to know, folks, this pride still exists today. We recently got
back from Israel. While we were there we had the opportunity to watch the
Hasidic Jew. They are ones who are the more orthodox. They wear the hats
and the coats and the prayer shawls and all the different things. You
watch them and you begin to sense that they think, "We are somebody. We
are Jews. We are Israel." My heart goes out to them because there is a
pride there and a blindness there. They think their kinship to
Abraham (or
here) is going to insure sonship in His Kingdom and it
will not.
This
is the dilemma Paul has in
Romans 9. You see, God has not changed His way of salvation. He
is not going to change it for the Jew, and He is not going to change it
for the Gentile. He is the one who initiates salvation. He is the one who
sees to it that it takes place. He is the one who brings the fulfillment
to all of this.
Well,
I want you to look at two problems that Israel had that caused their
pride. Perhaps you can apply this in your own life. First of all, Israel
had a problem as to who they thought they were. The more they thought of
the bloodline back to
Abraham (or
here), the fact that they could track themselves back to
Abraham (or
here) or to Israel or Jacob, they felt like this somehow
guaranteed their sonship with God. But now listen; God’s choice is never
based on physical descent. Look at Romans 9:6: "But it is not as though
the word of God has failed. For they are not all Israel who are descended
from Israel."
Paul
says, "But it is not as though the word of God has failed." The word "not"
means not in any way, shape or form. "The word of God" there refers to the
divine promises that God has made to Israel. In
Jeremiah 31 and
Jeremiah 34and on through, God promised salvation to Israel. It
is not as though His promise has failed. In other words, Paul is saying,
"I am not in any way saying God’s word has failed." The word for "failed"
means that it has stumbled and fallen and now is useless. Oh, no. God’s
word is still there. God’s word has not failed. The problem is not with
God’s word. The problem is with Israel’s understanding of what God’s word
has said.
It
goes on to say in verse 6, "For they are not all Israel who are descended
from Israel." Again, they thought a physical relationship to
Abraham (or
here), a physical descent, a bloodline back to him
somehow insured their standing with God. But that was not true. They are
proud of their physical birth. But physical birth has never saved anybody.
That is why Jesus said to Nicodemus, "You must be born again."
Now
Paul continues to explain in verse 7: "Neither are they all children
because they are Abraham’s descendants, but: ‘through Isaac your
descendants will be named.’" What an important verse. The first part of it
says, "Neither are they all children because they are Abraham’s
descendants."
Now I
want to ask you a question. Does this remind you of a discussion that
Jesus had with the Pharisees back in John 8? You see, the Pharisees were
the most religious of all of them. The Pharisees would have been the
Hasidic Jew of today. They were the ones who had the 613 laws. They were
the religious ones. They came to Jesus with a situation trying to trap
Him, but Jesus turns it back on them. Look at John 8. I want you to see
that Jesus says exactly the same thing that Paul is saying. Just because
you are born a Jew means absolutely nothing when it comes to sonship and
eternal life. Your faith must be Christ Jesus, the Messiah. You must put
your faith in Him and what He did for us on the cross. That is the way a
man is justified. That is the way a person is saved, whether Jew or
Gentile. It doesn’t matter if you are born a Jew. That has nothing to do
with it.
John 8:1-7 gives us the setting:
"But Jesus went to the Mount
of Olives. And early in the morning He came again into the temple, and all
the people were coming to Him; and He sat down and began to teach them.
And the scribes and the Pharisees brought a woman caught in adultery, and
having set her in the midst, they said to Him, ‘Teacher, this woman has
been caught in adultery, in the very act. Now in the Law Moses commanded
us to stone such women; what then do You say?’ And they were saying this,
testing Him, in order that they might have grounds for accusing Him. But
Jesus stooped down, and with His finger wrote on the ground. But when they
persisted in asking Him, He straightened up, and said to them, ‘He who is
without sin among you, let him be the first to throw a stone at her.’"
Now
what is He saying? These are the Pharisees. These are the religious ones.
He is saying, "I know you are kin to Abraham. I know you are religious. If
you don’t have any sin, then you throw the first stone." In other words,
just because you are born from Abraham, you are still a sinner and you
continue to be on the same level as other sinners. This is what He was
trying to get across.
Drop
down to verse 30. He wants to nail the point down. Physical birth does not
guarantee eternal sonship. Faith in Christ is what guarantees it: "As He
spoke these things, many came to believe in Him. Jesus therefore was
saying to those Jews who had believed Him, ‘If you abide in My word, then
you are truly disciples of Mine; and you shall know the truth, and the
truth shall make you free.’ They answered Him, ‘We are Abraham’s
offspring, and have never yet been enslaved to anyone; how is it that You
say, ‘You shall become free’?’ Jesus answered them, ‘Truly, truly, I say
to you, everyone who commits sin is the slave of sin. And the slave does
not remain in the house forever. The son does remain forever. If therefore
the Son shall make you free you shall be free indeed. I know that you are
Abraham’s offspring; yet you seek to kill Me, because My word has no place
in you. I speak the things which I have seen with My Father; therefore you
also do the things which you heard from your father.’ They answered and
said to Him, ‘Abraham is our father.’ Jesus said to them, ‘If you are
Abraham’s children, do the deeds of Abraham.’"
He is
trying to show them something here. Physical descent is not what He is
talking about back in
Genesis 15. Verse 40 of John 8 goes on,
"But as it is, you are seeking to kill Me, a man who has told you the
truth, which I heard from God; this Abraham did not do. You are doing the
deeds of your father.’ They said to Him, ‘We were not born of fornication;
we have One Father, even God.’ Jesus said to them, ‘If God were your
Father, you would love Me; for I proceeded forth and have come from God,
for I have not even come on My own initiative, but He sent Me. Why do you
not understand what I am saying? It is because you cannot hear My word.
You are of your father the devil, and you want to do the desires of your
father. He was a murderer from the beginning, and does not stand in the
truth, because there is no truth in him. Whenever he speaks a lie, he
speaks from his own nature; for he is a liar, and the father of lies. But
because I speak the truth, you do not believe Me. Which one of you
convicts Me of sin? If I speak truth, why do you not believe Me?’"
Now
look at verse 47: "He who is of God hears the words of God; for this
reason you do not hear them, because you are not of God." In other words,
you can track it back to Abraham, but you are not a child of God. You have
nothing to do with Him. You are strictly depending on physical descent and
physical descent has nothing to do with the choice of God in salvation.
Well,
if you will turn back to Romans 9, we will pick up again in verse 7. To
me, Paul is saying the very same thing that Jesus said back in John 8. He
says in Verse 7, "But: ‘Through Isaac your descendants will be named.’"
Now, how many sons did Abraham have? He had two sons. One was named
Ishmael, who we are dealing with here, and the other was named Isaac. "Do
you mean to tell me it was going through Isaac? Why wouldn’t it have been
through Ishmael?" You see, he is trying to show them that physical descent
from Abraham does not qualify you to be spiritual Israel. Israel was to be
something beyond just physical descent. Ishmael was of Abraham, but he
wasn’t an Israelite. Isaac was of Abraham and he was an Israelite. What is
the difference? Well, Ishmael was of the flesh, but Isaac was of faith.
You
see, when Abraham and
Sarah couldn’t have a child, Ishmael was
born of Hagar, the handmaid of Sarah. But then God came to them and said,
"I want the child to be born through Sarah." So it was at old age when he
came. It was by faith that Isaac was born. So you see the flesh with
Ishmael, and you see faith and the spiritual part of this with Isaac.
The
quote that Paul refers to in 9:7 is from
Genesis 21:12. The context is just after Sarah has told Abraham
to cast out Ishmael who was his son with her handmaiden, Hagar: "But God
said to Abraham, ‘Do not be distressed because of the lad and your maid;
whatever Sarah tells you, listen to her, for through Isaac your
descendants shall be named.’" Now listen, when He talks about descendants,
He is talking about spiritual descendants. There are fleshly descendants
of Abraham, yes, but there are spiritual descendants also. This spiritual
seed from Abraham, not only Christ, but those who would be blessed because
of Christ, would come through Isaac, not Ishmael. It is not of the flesh;
it is by faith.
Salvation does not depend on anyone’s physical descent. Verse 8 makes it
so clear. Paul says, "That is, it is not the children of the flesh who are
children of God, but the children of the promise are regarded as
descendants." That to me is as clear as a bell. Ishmael was the result of
the flesh. Isaac was a result of Abraham’s faith. The spiritual seed of
Abraham was to come through Isaac. Salvation is by faith. This is why
Galatians 3:7 says, "Therefore, be sure that it is those who are of faith
who are sons of Abraham." That is his point. You can’t depend on the fact
that you are born physically in the right line. You have got to be born
again. It is by faith. Salvation is by faith. It is not by any physical
descent. God’s choice is not ever conditioned by physical descent.
Verse
9 says, "For this is a word of promise: ‘At this time I will come, and
Sarah shall have a son.’" Oh, to miss the surroundings of this event.
Every time you hear about Abraham being the father of faith, it tracks it
back to
Genesis 17. It doesn’t take you back to
chapter 12 or 15. It takes you back to chapter 17. That is so significant.
Why? Go back to the history of it a little bit. For ten years Abraham and
Sarah tried to have a child. God spoke to him, covenanted with him and
told him that one day a seed would come through his race: the Lord Jesus
Christ. He would have a bloodline. It would be through Abraham, Isaac,
Jacob, through Judah, through David and
on down through Mary. He promised him that. He said you will have a nation
through which the bloodline will come. You will even have a land to live
in.
Abraham knew that the seed was to come through the loins of his own body
and that would start it, so he and Sarah tried. For ten years they tried
and she couldn’t have a child. She came to him and said, "Listen, take
Hagar, my handmaid. Have a child with her." He did, because that was the
only thing he could think of to do. Well, Ishmael was the result. Ishmael
grew up to be 13 years old. By this time, Abraham was 99 years old. That
is not the time that you think about painting the nursery. He is 99 years
old. Sarah is 89 years old, and God just appears in chapter 17. Thirteen
years He has been quiet and now He just appears and ruins Abraham’s day.
Look
at verse 1 of
Genesis 17: "Now when Abram was
ninety-nine years old, the Lord appeared to Abram and said to him, ‘I am
God Almighty; walk before Me and be blameless. And I will establish My
covenant between Me and you, and I will multiply you exceedingly.’" He
simply restates the covenant that He had told him before. But He does
something else. Verse 11 goes on, "And you shall be circumcised in the
flesh of your foreskin; and it shall be the sign of the covenant between
Me and you."
Sometimes you read right on by that. We don’t like to talk about it. But I
want to tell you something, folks, don’t just read past that. Grow up, be
adult in your thinking, understand what He is saying here. He was going to
be circumcised on the part of his body that would pass the seed on down
for generations. Now what does that mean? It meant that God was about to
do something in his life. Ishmael was not going to be the bearer of that
seed. It was going to be a miracle child born to him and Sarah. The next
time he was intimate with Sarah was not based on what he thought he could
do, but based on what God had said would take place. Hebrews even says
that Sarah was given the ability to bear a child past the child-bearing
age because she, by faith, believed God. It is the same thing. So Isaac
was strictly a supernatural, miracle child as a result of faith that
Abraham had in what God had said to him.
But
before He even tells him that he is going to have a son by Sarah, He tells
him to be circumcised. Circumcision was never meant to be just a mark on a
man’s flesh. It was meant to be a mark of an attitude of one’s heart who
totally and wholly trusted God. These are the people who are the spiritual
seed of Abraham, not the people of the flesh who can do it on their own.
They are the people who trust God and believe in the promise that God has
given. In
Genesis 17:21 He breaks the news, "But My
covenant I will establish with Isaac, whom Sarah will bear to you at this
season next year." Now Abraham was 99 years old when he was circumcised in
the flesh of his foreskin. Genesis 21:1 says, "Then the Lord took note of
Sarah as He had said, and the Lord did for Sarah as He had promised. So
Sarah conceived and bore a son to Abraham in his old age, at the appointed
time of which God had spoken to him. And Abraham called the name of his
son who was born to him, whom Sarah bore to him, Isaac. Then Abraham
circumcised his son Isaac when he was eight days old, as God had commanded
him. Now Abraham was one hundred years old when his son Isaac was born to
him."
As a
matter of fact, when God said to Abraham, "You are going to have a child
by Sarah," he laughed and Sarah laughed. God said, "Okay, I will name him
Isaac." Isaac in Hebrew means laughter. God got the last laugh. "Abraham,
you don’t understand. The people born out of your flesh are not it."
Israel is the people of the promise. Israel are those who put their faith
into the Lord Jesus Christ. That is what He intended Israel to be. So, not
all who are descendants of Abraham are truly Israel. You see, it doesn’t
work that way. Physical descent is never the basis of God’s choice. So all
the spiritual seed then would come through Isaac. The seed and the seeds
of all the nation, those who are descendant, have put their faith into the
Lord Jesus Christ. Israel had a problem with who they thought they were.
They thought that physical descent would qualify them for God’s choice.
Let
me ask you a question. You say, "I am not the Israel you are talking about
there. He is pretty much reprimanding a proud people." Now, wait a minute.
What are you putting your faith in that you think will get you into
heaven? "Well, I’ve got the best Grandma and Granddaddy you have ever been
around in your life. They just love Jesus. They just took me to church.
They taught me Scripture. I can quote the New Testament." Well, being born
in a garage doesn’t make you a car. What are you putting your faith in?
What are you basing it on? What is your salvation based on? There is only
one way and that is through Jesus Christ.
That
is the dilemma Paul has. He is a converted Jew. He knows what he is
talking about. He was the very one who persecuted the people called
Christians. But the Christ of all Christianity arrested him on the
Damascus Road, stopped him in his tracks, saved him and now he has a
glorious message. His heart is broken because his kinsmen are as proud as
he was, depending on their physical heritage to somehow guarantee
spiritual sonship with God. That won’t work. It will not work. That is
what the Word of God says.
Well,
they were proud of who they thought they were. Are you proud of who you
think you are? But secondly, they were proud of what they thought they
could do for God. This is not my word, this is what is written in Romans
9:10: "And not only this, but there was
Rebekah also, when she had conceived
twins by one man, our father Isaac; for though the twins were not yet
born, and had not done anything good or bad, in order that God’s purpose
according to His choice might stand, not because of works, but because of
Him who calls, it was said to her, ‘The older will serve the younger.’
Just as it is written, ‘Jacob I loved, but Esau I hated.’"
Now
listen, God’s choice is not based on who we think we are and it is not
based on what we think we can do for Him. Verse 10 says, "But not only
this, but there was
Rebekah
also, when she had conceived twins by one man, our father Isaac." This is
an entirely different situation. This is not like Abraham. Abraham had a
son by Hagar. Then he had a son by Sarah, and God chose to put the line
through Sarah’s son, Isaac. Here is a different situation. This is one man
and one woman, Isaac and his wife,
Rebekah ,
and she had twins. They were yet unborn. Neither twin had done anything,
bad or good. God said the line would pass through one of those twins,
which would be Jacob, not Esau.
The
focus here in these two verses has got to be seen very clearly. The focus
I think Paul is bringing out is in the middle of the verse. He says, "in
order that God’s purpose according to His choice might stand, not because
of works, but because of Him who calls." Now the word "purpose" caught my
attention. It is not the normal word for "purpose", teleos. It is
the word
prothesis. Pro means before
and tithemai means to set. So prothesis means to set
something before, to openly display something. You see, you have to
understand something. God had openly displayed what His purpose was in His
choosing, that He chooses to save on the basis of faith, not any other
way. That purpose is going to stand because of who He is. Nothing is going
to change that. Therefore, he chose Jacob instead of choosing Esau.
Now
why would He do that? Well, remember we studied the attributes of God. God
is omnipresent, He is omniscient and He is omnipotent. Those are the three
main attributes of God. Along with that, He is loving, kind, merciful,
just and long-suffering. All of these are the attributes of God. Now think
with me for a second. When God acts, He doesn’t act in one of those
attributes and then the next day act in another attribute. No way!
Whenever He does whatever He does, He acts out of all of them at the same
time. That is hard for our minds to grasp. When God does something that we
think is bad, we have to remember that He also acted out of His mercy, He
also acted out of His long-suffering, He acted out of His kindness, He
acted out of His love. Even though He may be judging, He is still acting
out of all of His attributes. So when God chose Jacob to be the one
through which the Seed would pass, the spiritual Seed, the true Israel
would pass, He was a sovereign God who could do that.
But
something else goes along with that. He was also a sovereign God who knew
what you and I could never know. He is not only omnipotent, it is His
right to make the choice, but He is omniscient. He knows things that you
and I would never know. If you don’t look at it that way, then God looks
like some vindictive God who just says, "I’ll choose him, but I won’t
choose him." That is exactly the way some people have hammered this
doctrine. No, I don’t buy it. When God chose, as a sovereign God, He knew
what no man could ever know.
What
did He know? He chose Jacob instead of
Esau. He knew what we now know. He knew
it then. He knew that Esau would be an immoral man. Esau would grow up
with no heart towards Him whatsoever. He knew that from Esau would come
the Edomites. Obadiah would prophesy God’s judgment against the Edomites.
He knew that. But He also knew that Jacob, even though he was a deceiver
and a conniver, would strive with Him. He looks upon the hearts of man.
Man looks on the outside, but God looks upon the heart. I do not think
that you can take that piece out of this puzzle. Even though it is going
to continue to be a puzzle, we have to remember when God acts, He acts out
of all of His attributes. He chose Jacob instead of Esau.
Now,
if you can’t see that, then you are going to really struggle with verse
13. It says, "Just as it is written, ‘Jacob I loved, but Esau I hated.’"
Now hold on. I thought God loved everybody. I thought God is love. Isn’t
that what it says? Is there a contradiction here in Scripture somewhere?
You have to understand something. The contrast is that He loved something
else about David. What was David? David was a man after God’s own heart.
Was David a sinner? I imagine. Didn’t David commit adultery with Bethsheba?
You have got the whole story there. But what did he do? He repented and
came back. There was something about the heart of David. God looks upon
the heart.
God
also knew the heart of Esau. You won’t understand this as much now, but
when we get to verse 15 the balance will start setting in. In verse 15 it
says, "I will have mercy on whom I have mercy, and I will have compassion
on whom I have compassion." There is a difference in those two words. They
are not the same word. A very significant difference. One is "mercy."
That’s when somebody has done something wrong and God realizes in their
heart they are sorry, God says, "I will show you mercy." The other word is
used to describe one who does it out of arrogance and spite and rebellion.
Then God says, "I care about you. I have pity for you. I will do nothing
for you." That is the difference in the two words. When you understand the
difference in those two words, you understand that God knew the heart of
Jacob and God knew the heart of Esau. He showed pity to Esau, but mercy to
Jacob because God knows what man does not know.
God
knew something. What has Paul been teaching from chapter 1 through chapter
8? He has been teaching the fact that salvation is by faith according to
grace. That is it. There is no other way. Faith alone in Christ alone. It
has never changed. That is His purpose. His purpose will stand. Why did He
use Jacob? Because He knew something about Jacob that you and I didn’t
know. It was not what Jacob did or didn’t do. He just knew the heart of
Jacob. They were twins. They hadn’t done anything good or bad. But He is
God. Remember this. We are looking at salvation from His eyes, not from
man’s eyes.
So
God sovereignly chose that the seed would pass from Abraham in old age,
through Isaac and then through Jacob. The spiritual Seed, the spiritual
Israel, those who are of faith who are the sons of Abraham. Well, here is
one thing I want you to remember in all those choices that God made. Even
though He knew what their heart would be, not a one of them deserved it.
Not a one of them. Abraham didn’t deserve it. Isaac didn’t deserve it.
Jacob didn’t deserve it.
This
is where I am mixing in something that is going to leave you in a mystery.
I have said it as simply as I know how. But what I am trying to tell you
is, there is another huge piece of this puzzle that I haven’t got a clue
about because it just doesn’t make any sense in my mind. If it ever starts
making that much sense in your mind, be careful. You might be a little too
proud. We have taken the mystery out of salvation. Abraham didn’t deserve
it. "There is none righteous, no, not one." But God sovereignly, as He has
a right to do, chose before the foundation of the world, to save His
creation. Those whom He foreknew, He entered into a relationship with.
Those whom He foreknew He predestined. Those whom He predestined, He
called, He justified, He glorified. God did that and not a one of us
deserve it.
The
illustration is given of a lady who went to Charles Spurgeon and said,
"Mr.
Spurgeon, I don’t understand how a loving God could say in His word that
He hated Esau."
Have
you ever struggled with that? She struggled with it. Do you know what
Spurgeon said? He said,
"That
has never been my problem. My problem has always been, how could God have
loved Jacob!"
Now,
think. When you get into chapter 9, what are we trying to do? We are
trying to figure God out. You won’t figure God out. He is a sovereign God.
But remember, when He acts sovereignly, He acts in the midst of all of His
attributes. That is going to be something that you and I will never figure
out because we are not God. But the thing we ought to be overwhelmed by
is, how could God have ever loved any of us to start with? It even doesn’t
bother me too much that He hated Esau because God is who He is and does
what He does righteously. I don’t see how He loved Jacob.
You
see, folks, we have gotten in this mindset that we think we deserve
something from God. Do you want to know what your flesh and my flesh is
like? Just study Israel. Proud people, blinded to the very truth that God
had put right in front of them. Privileged people, but proud. You see,
this same sin of Israel, I am telling you is rampant in America. What I
think we are seeing happen in these days is that God is bringing us full
circle. He is going to start putting things on us that we didn’t realize
He had put on us to help us realize we are a little bit too proud. God has
a way of bringing you down, folks. God has a way of bringing us down. How
could God ever love us? I think that is the overall thing that hit me.
Paul
goes on in chapter 9 and says, "What is the clay to say anything to the
potter?" I mean, God is not only a faithful God, but He is a sovereign
God. What can we say? We will never fully grasp it. But there are two
things that are main and plain in this text. One is, God’s choice does not
have anything to do with your physical descent. And number two, God’s
choice has nothing to do with good or bad works. That is not what His
choice is based on. But His purpose has been laid before us of His
calling. Remember the word "calling" in the New Testament Epistles not
only has to do with what God does, it has to do with a man’s response to
it. It is the full circle. His calling is all by faith. It is not by any
other way. It will stand. God is consistent. He has not changed His way.
For the Jew or for the Gentile it is the same.
Now,
don’t run ahead of me because in chapter 11 he is going to swing all the
way around and show you that he still has Israel on his mind and the
promises He made to them. We are not there yet. We are just in chapter 9.
Israel, a proud, proud people.
When
we were over in Israel I got a little upset at some of the attitudes that
I sensed, particularly in some of the more religious of the Jewish people.
But God dealt with me every time, showing me in my own life how my own
flesh is the same way. What I was seeing was myself. Folks, we are proud,
aren’t we?
Tomorrow when you go to work and things aren’t going your way and people
aren’t doing things like you would have done them if you were them and you
start gripping and complaining, remember something. A loving God is
sending you a message, you deserve nothing but the pits of hell, but He so
loved you that He sent His Son to die for you. Maybe it will change your
attitude with everybody else. Maybe you might become a little grateful
every now and then. Maybe you might become a little more humble and
realize you are just like the people who you are criticizing. "For thou
that judgest doest the same thing."