29. For the gifts and calling--"and the calling"
of God are without repentance--"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.
JFB.
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