Thou wilt say
then, The branches were broken off, that I might be grafted in. Well; because
of unbelief they were broken off, and thou standest by faith. Be not
highminded, but fear: For if God spared not the natural branches, taken
heed lest he also spare not thee (Rom. 11:19-21)
ARMINIAN
ARGUMENT:
This text has
sometimes been appealed to as saying that it is possible for the saints to lose
their salvation.
(I)
Prof. Herman C. Hanko
[Source:
Covenant Reformed News,
vol. 18, no. 1 (May 2020)]
Rev.
Herman Hoeksema’s interpretation of this (and the entire section of Romans
9-11, which discusses the so-called “Israel-problem”) is found in his
commentary on Romans, Righteous by Faith Alone, which can be purchased from the CPRC
Bookstore (£22, inc. P&P). It is worth every penny one spends to purchase
it.
The
text, so it is claimed, teaches the falling away of the saints. Thus it is not
only man’s choice which determines whether he is converted but also whether he
remains saved or not. He may, once having been truly regenerated, change his
mind and apostatize.
The
text is found in the context of a metaphor, which describes Israel as a natural
olive tree (Rom. 11:16-21). It
is evident that here the whole nation of Israel is being considered
organically. It follows the pattern of Psalm 80, for example.
The
olive tree was cut down when the nation of Israel rejected Christ, although a
stump and part of the tree remained. But here we have an interesting aspect of
the metaphor. Let me refer to my own experience. There is, near the place we
once lived, an orchard that grew many apples. I asked the farmer about the
science of grafting, because it is a part of the figure in Romans
11:16-21 and it is used
to describe faith in Heidelberg
Catechism, Lord’s Day 7:
“Are all men then, as they perished in Adam, saved by Christ? No, only those
who are grafted into Him, and receive all His
benefits, by a true faith.” His answer surprised me, for grafting now is used
to start new trees. It goes like this. A branch, say, from a Macintosh apple is
grafted into a branch of a tree that produces Red Delicious apples. Gradually
the grafted branch produces branches of its own and the farmer cuts away
branches from the old tree. After a while, the old tree is nearly gone, but the
grafted branch, using the same root, becomes a tree in its own right.
This
fits the figure perfectly. The nation of Israel was the olive tree mentioned in
Romans 11. Throughout the Old Testament, branches from wild trees were grafted
into the olive tree of Israel. But they never became part of a new tree because
they became a part of the natural olive tree, the nation of Israel. The
Gentiles became Jews. Thousands of them were thus saved. When the old olive
tree was destroyed at the fall of Jerusalem in AD 70, a new branch of Gentiles
was planted, after having grown in the old tree for 2,000 years. But it was grafted
into the root of the old tree. We know from other parts of Scripture that that
root was Christ (Isa. 11:10; 53:2; Rom. 15:12; Rev. 5:5; 22:16).
Throughout
the old dispensation, Israel carried Christ in its loins—as God said to Adam
after the fall in the Mother Promise, Genesis 3:15. The reason why Jehovah kept the nation of
Israel, then Judah, even through its captivity, was that He was preserving the
Messiah in the line of Adam to Mary to Christ.
In
the new dispensation, the Gentiles become the new olive tree and they are
gathered from all the nations of the earth. Thus the Jewish-Gentile olive tree
is the “world.” God loves that world. Christ died for that world. It is the
world of sovereign election. It is the world that is united to Christ by faith.
It is the world that is Christ’s body and it shall receive its life from Him
into all eternity.
Romans
11 makes another interesting point. Through the history of the gathering
of the nations that are grafted into Christ, some branches are broken off. This
happened too in the old dispensation. Jesus refers to it in John 15:2, 6. God saves in the line of
generations—organically. But He does not save all the physical children of
believers in every branch. Children leave the church, families leave the
church. They are broken off the olive tree, for they depart from God’s ways.
Churches are broken off. Nations are broken off. This is the apostasy that
characterizes our times.
Romans
11 teaches that once a branch is broken off, it can never be engrafted
again. It is gone forever. America and Europe have had the gospel and new
branches were grafted into the new olive tree that was once the old olive tree
with Christ at its root. But now God is turning His back on the US and the
European nations, for they have forsaken His ways. Soon the time will come when
God turns His back completely, for these countries are increasingly
experiencing what Amos calls a famine of the word (8:11). God is turning to the
Orient and is gathering His church among the nations in SE Asia and the
Philippines. God, as He builds the temple of His elect, does not return to
rebuild it when it goes to ruins. When a branch is broken off (pruned) and lies
on the ground, that branch is not an individual but generations. They
are not, later in the branch’s existence, re-grafted into the tree from which
they had been cut.
There
is one exception and that is Romans 11’s theological solution to the Jewish
problem in the history of redemption. It remains a special privilege of the
Jews that, although they have been cut off from the olive tree, individuals and
their generations can be grafted into that olive tree once again. This is
possible because they are being grafted into what was once their “natural”
tree. They, as a nation, were cut off but the root remains. The root is the natural
tree, that is, Christ is that root. They can be and they are grafted in for,
throughout the last two millennia, Jews have been brought into their own olive
tree. They, with the Gentile branches, become part of that universal world of
sovereign election and, being grafted into a tree with new branches from every
nation, they lose their national identity. A former Jew, united to Christ with
the Gentiles, is no longer a Jew. He too is saved with his generations. I know
many in our churches who were in their ancestry Jews. In our dispensation,
there are Hungarian, Chinese, German, Irish, etc., believers. It is the world,
the true world, that God loves and saves.
[follow-up
question …]
…
The reader implies another question: Does not this explanation that I have
given deny that man has any responsibility for being “broken off” the olive
tree? The question suggests that my explanation denies man’s responsibility and
that, therefore, my explanation cannot be the correct one. Further, it is also
implied that, in order to maintain man’s responsibility, man must have a free
will to accept Christ or refuse Him.
I
do not intend to enter into this question in detail. The question of the
relation between God’s sovereignty and man’s responsibility goes way back to
Augustine (354-430). It was at the heart of controversies in the Western Church
through the Middle Ages and at the time of the Reformation. This is evident
from Martin Luther’s battle with the humanist, Erasmus, on man’s will. It was
also the fundamental issue at the Synod of Dordt (1618-1619) when the Arminians
were utterly defeated by the Synod’s Canons. It remains the issue between the
Arminians and the Reformed to this day. The questioner (speaking for another
person) demonstrates with his implied question that to maintain the heresy of
free will is to deny the great truth of God’s sovereignty. If he chooses to do
that, that is his business, but he must admit that he is creating an idol,
instead of the sovereign Lord of heaven and earth. Before he takes a position
on a question that involves the very being and counsel of God, a man ought to
do his homework and read the history of these controversies that bothered the
church.
The
truth of the matter is that Scripture teaches that God is sovereign in all He
does and that man is responsible for his own sin (Acts 2:23; 4:25-28). Whether that defies rational explanation
or not is not now my concern. What Scripture teaches is the truth before which
we all must bow.
To
understand how God works organically in all His absolute control of the lives
of men and angels helps us to maintain His sovereignty, which alone makes our
salvation possible. As an old uneducated farmer said to Hendrik De Cock in the
1834 controversy in the Netherlands, and before De Cock himself was converted
to faith in a sovereign God, “Reverend, if I had to contribute even a sigh to
my salvation, I would be hopelessly lost.”
God
must and will receive all the glory; there is none that is left over for man.
The Arminian shouts, “Man, man, man, man.” The Reformed proclaim, “God is God!”
Let us also bow in worship before the throne of the One who does all things for
His own name’s sake and so for the salvation of His beloved church.
-----------------------------------------
(II)
(II)
More to come! (DV)
No comments:
Post a Comment