Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges
Romans 8 - Introduction
F. ELECTION (Cch. 8, 9 11)
It is almost needless to say that the Election spoken of in ch. 8 &c. is variously explained. A large and important school of Theology (the Arminian) interprets it as a personalelection, but contingentupon foreseen faith and perseverance. Another school [58] interprets it as an election not personal at all, but (so to speak) social;an election, like the election of the Jewish Nation, not to life eternal but to a vantage-ground for attaining it.
[58] Or, more properly, other schools, with important differences among themselves in other respects.
Without forgetting for a moment the awful mysteries of the subject, we yet feel that both these theories, with all (and it is very much) that can be said for them, do not fit the language of ch. 8. and of St Paul's (not to quote St John's) general teaching. "Not according to our works" is surely the tone of this chapter and of the whole previous epistle, and of the next three Chapter s. And it seems to us impossible, on any other theory than that of a Personal Election to Life, antecedent to "our works" and mercifully prevailing in its purpose, quite naturally to explain the tone of rapturous joywhich marks the closing passages of the chapter.
In the Seventeenth English Article, a masterpiece of careful expression, this result of the humble belief in an Election personal and effectual (but, observe, taking effect through moral means,) is strongly stated: "The godly consideration of Predestination, and our Election in Christ, is full of sweet, pleasant, and unspeakable comfort, to godly persons, &c."
See the whole Article; and especially the closing paragraph, in which the word "generally" is technical, and means "with regard to the genus;" i.e. probably, mankind. The Article warns us to begin with faith in the promises to man as man, not with the question of personal election.
G. PREDESTINATION (Ch. 9)
See note on chap. Romans 8:30, on the original word.
On this great mystery, brought up with such stern force in ch. 9, we quote a few sentences from one who certainly spoke from no cold or unsympathetic heart Martin Luther. His Prœfatio in Ep, ad Romanos(translated into Latin from Luther's German by his friend Justus Jonas) is indeed, as Tholuck describes it, "admirable, and breathing the very spirit of St Paul." There is a very noble contemporary English paraphrase of it, by Tyndale, from which we take the following passage (Tyndale's Doctrinal Treatises, Parker Soc. Edition, p. 505):
"In the ninth, tenth, and eleventh Chapter s he (Paul) treateth of God's predestination, whence it springeth altogether whether we shall believe or not believe … By which predestination our justifying and salvation are clean taken out of our hands, and put in the hands of God only. For we are so weak and so uncertain, that, if it stood in us, there would of a truth be no man saved; the devil, no doubt, would deceive us. But now is God sure, that His predestination cannot deceive Him, neither can any man withstand or let Him; and therefore have we hope and trust against sin.
"But here must a mark be set to those unquiet, busy, and high-climbing spirits which begin first from an high (sic) to search the bottomless secrets of God's predestination, whether they be predestinate or not. These must needs either cast themselves down headlong into desperation, or else commit themselves to free chance, careless. But follow thou the order of this Epistle, and noosel thyself[59] with Christ, and learn to understand what the Law and the Gospel mean, and the office of both the two; that thou mayest in the one know thyself, and how thou hast of thyself no strength but to sin, and in the other the grace of Christ; and then see thou fight against sin and the flesh, as the seven first Chapter s teach thee. After that, when thou art come to the eighth chapter, and art under the cross and suffering of tribulation, the necessity [60] of predestination will wax sweet, and thou shalt well feel how precious a thing it is. For except thou have borne the cross of adversity and temptation, and hast felt thyself brought into the very brim of desperation, yea, and unto hell-gates, thou canst never meddle with the sentence of predestination without thine own harm, and without secret wrath and grudging inwardly against God; for otherwise it shall not be possible for thee to think that God is righteous and just … Take heed therefore unto thyself, that thou drink not wine, while thou art yet but a suckling. For … in Christ there is a certain childhood, in which a man must be content with milk for a season, until he wax strong and grow up unto a perfect man in Christ, and be able to eat of more strong meat."
[59] I.e. find shelter, as a child with a nurse. This striking clause is not in the Latin of the Præfatio.
[60] Necessitas, fixed certainty.
And to the last, surely, the dark problems that gather round the central and insoluble mystery of Sin will be safely approached only with the remembrance that "the Judge of all the earth" will "do right;" that He is the Eternal, and that His "ways" must therefore be "past finding out;" and that He "so loved the world that He gave His Only-begotten Son."
H. REPROBATION (Ch. 9)
In the last note but one on Romans 9:22 we have alluded to the tenet that the lost are personally and positively fore-doomed to ruin. To this tenet Calvin was led, not by a passionless rigidity, from which his deep and sensitive temperament, and truly ample mind, were far removed; but by the conviction that it was inexorably demanded by Scripture and reason. But St Augustine, the great patristic teacher of Predestination, carefully avoided such a tenet; teaching that, however little we can fathom the mystery, man's sin, running its proper course, is the only cause of man's ruin; while yet special grace is the only cause of his salvation.