23. And they also--"Yea, and they"
if they abide not still in unbelief, shall be grafted in: for God is
able to graft them in again--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.
JFB.
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