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Chapter 18 of 24

02.02. Rom_9:6-13 - Children of Promise

4 min read · Chapter 18 of 24

Romans 9:6-13 - Children of Promise Romans 9:6 - Israel Rejected Messiah

  • Promises and Failure
    Israel has all these privileges:

1. the adoption,

2. the glory, 3. the covenants, 4. the giving of the law, 5. the service of God, 6. the promises,

7. the fathers,

8. the Messiah.

Yet she rejected her Messiah!

Romans 9:6 - God’s Word Hasn’t Failed

  • "it is not that the word of God"
    "It is not" is Ouk hOIon de = "but not such as" or "but not in a similar way." In other words, the Word of God has not stumbled in a similar way as Israel when she rejected her Messiah.

  • "has taken no effect"
    "Has taken no effect" is ekPEPtōken : having fallen away (Galatians 5:4) , to drift off-course and run aground (Acts 27:17).

  • The Question
    Can the church of Jesus Christ--God’s people--rely upon God’s Word when it failed the Jews?

Romans 9:6 - Not All Israel

  • "they are not all Israel who are of Israel"
    A strict superset/subset relationship.

1. Superset: those who are "of Israel " (Jacob’s physical descendants).

2. Subset: those who are "of Israel" , but who are "not Israel" (the faithful remnant among the Jews).

Romans 9:7 - Seed of Abraham

  • "nor are they all children"
    Why is God the God of "Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob" (Exodus 3:6 ; Matthew 22:32), but not the God of "Abraham, Ishmael, and Nebajoth" (Ishmael’s firstborn, Genesis 25:13)? Because the line of promise started at Abraham (Genesis 12:3) , went to Isaac (Genesis 17:19 ; Genesis 21:12), and then to Jacob (Genesis 28:13).

  • "In Isaac your seed shall be called."
    Paul quotes Genesis 21:12 where God promises to build a nation called by God through Isaac. (Ishmael will also father a nation, but not a called nation.) The calling of the Jewish nation is similar to the calling of the individual believer (Romans 8:30) , but differs in that it involves a physical line of descent which individual salvation does not.

Romans 9:8 - Flesh vs. Promise

  • "children of the flesh"
    This refers to the physical descendants of Abraham who were not party to the promise, including the offspring of Ishmael and Esau.

  • "children of the promise"
    These are the physical descendants of Abraham in the line of promise through Isaac and Jacob.

Romans 9:8 - Children of God

  • Not a comparison between Spiritual and Physical
    Paul is making a comparison between two physical lines of descent to illustrate God’s sovereignty. He then uses this analogy to illustrate a difference among individuals within a physical line (the Jews). The believing remnant are the "children of God," the others are the "not all Israel" (Romans 9:6).

  • An Analogy
    The physical line of promise from the line of Abraham is analogous to the spiritually faithful remnant within the line from Israel.

"counted as the seed"
"Counted" is loGIZetai : "to think according to logical rules," "to look on as."
Romans 9:1-33; Romans 10:1-21; Romans 11:1-36; Romans_9 6-13
Romans 9:9 - Word of Promise

  • "Sarah shall have a son."
    Although Abraham longed for Ishmael to be recognized by God (Genesis 17:18) , the promise--initiated by God--identifies Sarah’s offspring, not the offspring of Hagar (Genesis 18:10).

Romans 9:10 - By One Man

  • "And not only this"
    The connective phrase indicates that Paul is giving another, more powerful example to illustrate his point.

  • "by one man"
    "Man" is not the typical anthropos or andras (man, husband), but KOItēn. This is extremely significant. Unlike Ishmael and Isaac who were of a single father, but two mothers, Esau and Jacob had the same mother and father. More than that, they were twins -- conceived in the same act of union (Genesis 25:21-24).

Romans 9:11 - According to Election

  • "the purpose of God according to election might stand"
    "Purpose" is PROthesis : "setting forth," "putting out," "presentation."

    "Election" is
    ekloGEN : "divine selection for a purpose or task."

    "Stand" is
    MEne : "to abide, " "continue, " "remain."

    That the visible divine purpose according to God’s divine selection might continue.

  • "not of works, but of Him who callers"
    "Him who calls" is tou kalOUNtos from kalEō , which recalls the "glory train" which applies to every believer (Romans 8:30).

  • Paul’s Examples Compared

Attribute

Isaac and Ishmael

Jacob and Esau

Father

Abraham

Isaac

Mother

Sarah and Hagar

Rebecca

Sexual Union

Two events.

One event.

Election Declared

After Ishmael born.

Before birth.

Romans 9:12 - Older Serves Younger

  • "the older shall serve the younger"
    Not only is the blessing of Jacob over Esau determined before birth, but it also involves a reversal of the norm (normally the firstborn has precedence). This is true of both of Paul’s examples--further emphasizing the sovereignty of God.

Romans 9:13 - Jacob I Have Loved

  • "Jacob I have loved, but Esau I have hated."
    "Loved" is from agaPAō. "Hated" is from misEō.

  • ComparativeUse: Favor vs. Disfavor.
    These two terms often appear together in a comparative way (Deuteronomy 21:15). Jesus said those who would follow Him must "hate" their father and mother, wife and children, brothers and sisters, and their own life (Luke 14:26). Yet we are clearly to honor our mother and father (Exodus 20:12) and sacrificially love our wife (Ephesians 5:28-33). The election of Jacob over Esau occurred before their birth (Genesis 25:23 ; Romans 9:12). The statement that God "hated" Esau refers to his offspring, the nation of Edom (Malachi 1:1-4) and occurs in response to their sinful actions. Here again, we see the juxtaposition of divine sovereignty and human responsibility.

  • Divine Sovereignty and Human Responsibility
    God is fully sovereign over history and man is fully responsible for his actions. Examples:

1. Judas’ betrayal of Christ (Matthew 26:24).

2. Crucifixion of Jesus by men according to the purpose of God (Acts 2:22-23 ; Acts 4:27-28).

Application 1. God is Sovereign- We can do nothing of substance without His involvement (John 15:5).

2. The Word Cannot be Broken- The Word of God is absolutely dependable. He knows the future. He cannot lie. It will come to pass! We can trust our lives to it.

3. Elect within Israel- Even now, as at all times, God is working with a believing remnant within national Israel. Although they are part of the body of Christ, the Church, His promises to the nation continue in them.

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