We’re considering God’s righteousness and seeing how it works with
mercy specifically in the case of the Jews. Thus far Paul impressed on
us his sorrow that the Jews are not presently believers of the revealed
Christ. Paul has been showing us how important a people they truly are
and has taken us through history showing how and why God’s Word of
Promise was established. We saw how they were kept from Edom’s fate only by God’s mercy. Let's look at this mercy.
Paul would remind us of God’s words to Moses (Rom 9:15; Ex 33:19).
Moses interceding on behalf of the people, right after the Golden Calf
incident, and wanting to see the grandeur of God asks God to consider
that this nation under a sentence were God’s own people. God explains
that He would go with Moses but Moses won’t do it. Moses stands with
the people’s fate and if God’s presence isn’t with the lot of them
their situation is useless. Dim would be fulfilled promises if it was
achieved without God’s presence. God acknowledges that Moses has found
favor in His sight and He would do what Moses asks and Moses takes this
moment to ask to see the glory of God.
It is here that God says that He would be gracious and compassionate
to whom He wishes to be gracious and compassionate to. Mercy, when it
comes from God, is not merely holding back deserved wrath but it is
evidence of graciousness and compassion extended.
So compassionate mercy in itself doesn’t depend on the man who says
“Give me mercy now” or the person who says “I’ll do this for
compassionate mercy” but on the one (in this case God) who extends
compassionate, gracious mercy.
In contrast, Paul shows an example of Pharaoh to whom God explained the
purpose of his high position: “to demonstrate my power in you, and that
my name might be proclaimed throughout the whole earth.” These dire
words reflect that God shows mercy to who He wishes and hardens whom He
wishes to as well.
When? Before the foundation of the World? So God decided, before a
person was even born, to harden him? No, rather Paul’s quote from
Exodus 9:16 is located at an interesting point in Pharaoh’s career.
Note the progression: APharaoh is blessed by Jacob. Pharaoh dies.
Pharaoh puts the Jews under harsh slavery (Ex 1). Pharaoh kills the
Jewish children (Ex 1). God tells Moses what’s going to happen to
Pharaoh: He’s going to harden Pharaoh’s heart (Ex 7:3) making Egypt an
advertisement to Egypt of God being the Lord (Ex 7:4). Moses shows a
sign and Pharaoh hardens his heart (Ex 7:13). God comments on Pharaoh’s
stubborn heart (Ex 7:14). Moses turns the waters to blood but Pharaoh
goes home unconcerned (Ex 7:23). Moses calls frogs onto the land and
Pharaoh asks God to relent and proceeds to lie (Ex 8:9). The Lord
relents but Pharaoh hardens his heart (Ex 8:15). God turns dust into
flies and Pharaoh’s magicians acknowledge that this is by the power of
god and yet Pharaoh doesn’t listen to them (Ex 8:19). Pharaoh lies and
asks God to relent (Ex 8:28). God relents and Pharaoh hardens his heart
again (Ex 8:32). God strikes the cattle in Egypt and Pharaoh hardens
himself again (Ex 9:7). God sends a plague of boils and now God makes
Pharaoh’s heart to harden (Ex 9:12). And God explains that now He would
send plagues on them so that they know that there is no one like Him on
all the earth. Instead of killing them outright, God will make Pharaoh
stand in His self-induced hardness. Pharaoh insists on his position,
God now decides to keep him there and make him famous (Ex 9:14-17).
Pharaoh decides to lie to God again, acknowledging his sin and God’s
righteousness but with no intent of bending the knee (Ex 9:27). He
hardened his heart but the following plague God hardened his heart
again (Ex 10:20) and again (Ex 10:27) and again (Ex 11:10). This last
time, God confirms his word that His wonders will be multiplied: namely
the final plague and the parting of the Red Sea.
So now back to Paul we have two groups of people: The Pharaoh and the
Israelites. Both of them were treacherous. Both of them denied the
Lord. Both of them were a stubborn and stiff-necked people. Both of
them had a role to play in God’s purpose. Was that role eternal
damnation or eternal salvation? No for that generation of Jews went on
to drop dead in the wilderness a stiff-necked people while subsequent
generations continued to stumble on the Word of God. Did those two
people have no chance at choosing? No, for God showed mercy to Pharaoh
several times before hardening him whilst showing mercy to the
Israelites several more times and they still died in the wild.
The point is that God shows mercy or hardens so as to proclaim his name
throughout the whole earth. If we fly down the road northwestwards past
Egypt we’ll get to the home of Rahab the prostitute at the edge of
Canaan who feared the Jews—not of their power but because she had heard
what the Lord had done when they exited Egypt (Josh 2:9-10) proving
that He is God in heaven and earth (Josh 2:11).
So God has mercy on whom He wills and He hardens whom He wills…he does
so to reveal his compassion and power either way. He shows mercy to a
hardened man and if the man persists He chooses to lock him into that
hardened rate to proclaim his power.
So is God right to show mercy or to harden?
-r- more in this series |