Romans 9 - Part 1 - The Gift of Sonship
The first of the irrevocable gifts or privileges included in Israel’s high calling of GOD, as enumerated by the apostle in this Scripture, is expressed in the Words:
to whom pertaineth the adoption, or more literally, ‘the sonship’. At the very beginning of their national history, when GOD sent Moses to bring them out of Egypt, His Word to Pharaoh was; Israel is My son, My firstborn, and I say unto thee, let My son go that he may serve Me. Thus Jehovah avouched them in a special sense as His peculiar people - His firstborn from among the nations One of the most pathetic complaints of GOD against Israel in this connection is to be found in Jeremiah 3, verse 4. In the first verses of that Chapter, He reminds them of their many grievous sins, and apostasies from Him - of their spiritual adultery, which, if He dealt with them according to law, would be sufficient to separate them from Him forever; but being full of compassion, He is willing to forgive all the past, and cries, Then follow those wonderful Words which give us a glimpse into the yearning and love of His heart for His people, and show us His longing that they should at last understand and enter experimentally into the relations in which He stood to them according to His covenants and promises: Now these were the two great and blessed relationships into which GOD had entered with His people - that of a father to his son; and that of a husband to his wife. In both of these Israel has thus far proved unfaithful. As a Father, GOD has to complain of His disobedient and gainsaying people, that they are It is beautiful to note in that same third Chapter of Jeremiah, where, in the second part, a glimpse is given us of the future - when Jerusalem shall be called, the throne of Jehovah - we read, Not yet has Israel as a nation apprehended that for which they were apprehended of GOD; not yet has the people as a whole responded to their high calling and looked up to the GOD of heaven and earth crying, My Father. But to them pertaineth the huiothesia - sonship, and, in the end Jehovah has pledged Himself to bring them, actually and experimentally, into this blessed relationship.
So also that other near and precious relationship of the Bride to the Bridegroom, or of the Wife to the Husband, to which Israel was called, shall become an actual experimental reality of their history; for after Israel repents of her past unfaithfulness, and returns to her first (or lawful) husband (Hosea 2), we read: Meanwhile, during this period of Israel’s unfaithfulness and disobedience, there is a remnant according to the election of grace from that nation, and a people taken out for His Name from among the Gentiles, who enter into the enjoyment of those very gifts, or high privileges, to which Israel was called. To us too, if we be Messiah’s, belongeth the huiothesia - the sonship - I was asked not long ago by a prominent evangelist, the meaning of the repetition of the word Father in this passage, and also in Galatians 4, verse 6. There is meaning and beauty in it. Abba is, of course, the Hebrew for Father; and Ho Pater, which immediately follows, is the Greek for the same word; and the repetition in the two languages is in keeping with the character of the Church in this dispensation, in which there is no difference between the Jew and the Greek, who through Messiah, have access together by One Spirit unto the Father, for the same Holy Spirit; which creates in the believing Israelite the spirit of sonship and teaches him to cry, in his language, Abba, fulfills the same blessed mission in the heart of the Greek believer - the Greek standing in the New Testament as the representative of the Gentiles - and teaches him to cry in his language, Ho Pater. |