Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Romans 11:33
O the depth of the riches both of the wisdom and knowledge of God! how unsearchable [are] his judgments, and his ways past finding out!
33 36. Doxology to the Eternal Sovereign
33. O the depth ] Here, at the close of this discussion of the case of Israel, in which he has held up for our submission the unfathomable mystery of electing sovereignty, and also the strange ways by which Divine judgment is often made the instrument of Divine mercy, the Apostle turns to the Supreme Object of his thought and love, and utters his ascription of worship and praise to the All-Wise and Almighty. Such a doxology is perfectly in the manner of Scripture, in which the ultimate aim ever is not the glory, nor even the happiness, of Man, (dear as his happiness is to God and His messengers,) but the Glory of God.
depth ] Cp. Psa 36:6, “Thy judgments are a great deep.”
riches ] See on Rom 2:4.
wisdom and knowledge ] Scarcely, in such a passage as this, to be minutely distinguished. They blend into one idea omniscience acting in eternal righteousness and love.
unsearchable ] It is well to weigh, and accept, this word at the close of such an argument. In his very act of praise the Apostle confesses the inability of even his own inspired thought to explain the Divine mercies and judgments, in the sense of clearing all difficulties. “Who art thou that repliest against God?” “Clouds and darkness are round about Him;” and, in certain respects, it is only the intelligent but profound submission of faith that can say, in view of those clouds, “Righteousness and judgment are the habitation of His throne.” (Psa 97:2.)
past finding out ] Same word as Eph 3:8, (E. V. “ unsearchable,” lit. “ not to be tracked by footprints,”) an instructive parallel passage.
Fuente: The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges
O the depth … – This passage should have been translated O the depth of the riches, and of the wisdom, and of the knowledge of God. The apostle has three subjects of admiration. Our translation, by the word both introduced here, confines it to two. The apostle wishes to express his admiration of the riches and the wisdom, and the knowledge of God. So the Syriac, Arabic, etc. Our translation has followed the Latin Vulgate. The word depth is applied in the Scriptures to anything vast and incomprehensible. As the abyss or the ocean is unfathomable, so the word comes to denote what words cannot express, or what we cannot comprehend; Psa 36:6, Thy judgments are a great deep; 1Co 2:10, The Spirit searcheth …the deep things of God; Rev 2:24, The depths of Satan – the deep, profound, cunning, and wicked plans of Satan.
Riches – See the note at Rom 11:12. The word denotes the abundant blessings and mercies which had been conferred on sinful people by the gospel. These were vast and wonderful. The pardon of sin; the atonement; the hope of heaven; the peace of the gospel; all bestowed on the sinful, the poor, the wretched, and the dying; all bespeak the great mercy and rich grace of God. So every pardoned sinner may still exclaim. The grace of God which pardons him is felt to be indeed wonderful, and past comprehension. It is beyond the power of language to express; and all that the Christian can do, is to follow the example of the apostle, and sit down in profound admiration of the rich grace of God. The expression the depth of the riches is a Hebraism, meaning the deep or profound riches.
The wisdom – Wisdom is the choice of the best means to accomplish the best ends. The end or design which God had in view was to bestow mercy on all; i. e., to save people by grace, and not by their own works; Rom 11:32. He intended to establish a glorious system that should present his mercy as the prominent attribute, standing out in living colors in all the scheme of salvation. This was to be alike shown in relation to Jews and Gentiles. The wonderful wisdom with which this was done, is the object of the apostles profound admiration. This wisdom was seen,
(1) In adapting the plan to the condition of man. All were sinners. The apostle in this Epistle has fully shown that all had come short of the glory of God. Man had no power to save himself by his own wisdom. The Jews and Gentiles in different ways had sought to justify themselves, and had both failed God had suffered both to make the experiment in the most favorable circumstances. He had left the world for four thousand years to make the trial, and then introduced the plan of divine wisdom, just so as to meet the manifest wants and woes of people.
(2) This was shown in his making the Jews the occasion of spreading the system among the Gentiles. They were cast off, and rejected; but the God of wisdom had made even this an occasion of spreading his truth.
(3) The same wisdom was yet to be seen in his appointing the Gentiles to carry the gospel back to the Jews. Thus, they were to be mutual aids; until all their interests should be blended, and the entire race should be united in the love of the same gospel, and the service of the same God and Saviour. When, therefore, this profound and wonderful plan is contemplated, and its history traced from the commencement to the end of time, no wonder that the apostle was fixed in admiration at the amazing wisdom of him who devised it, and who has made all events subservient to its establishment and spread among people.
And knowledge – That is, foreknowledge, or omniscience. This knowledge was manifest,
- In the profound view of man, and acquaintance with all his wants and woes.
(2)In a view of the precise scheme that would be suited to recover and save.
(3)In a view of the time and circumstances in which it would be best to introduce the scheme.
(4)In a discernment of the effect of the rejection of the Jews, and of the preaching of the gospel among the Gentiles.
Who but God could see that such effects would follow the rejection of the Jews? Who but he could know that the gospel should yet prevail among all the nations? We have only to think of the changes in human affairs; the obstacles to the gospel; the difficulties to be surmounted; and the vast work yet to be done, to be amazed at the knowledge which can adapt such a scheme to people, and which can certainly predict its complete and final spread among all the families of man.
How unsearchable – The word unsearchable means what cannot be investigated or fully understood.
His judgments – This word in this place evidently means his arrangement, his plan, or proceeding. It sometimes refers to laws; at other times to the decision or determination of God; at others to the inflictions of his justice. In this last sense it is now commonly used. But in the case before us, it means his arrangements for conferring the gospel on people compare Psa 36:7, His judgments are a great deep.
His ways – The word rendered ways properly denotes a path, or road on which one travels. Hence, it comes also to denote the course or manner of life in which one moves; or his principles, or morals; his doctrine, or teaching, etc. Applied to God, it denotes his mode or manner of doing things; the order, etc. of his divine Providence; his movements, in his great plans, through the universe; Act 13:10, Wilt thou not cease to pervert the right ways of the Lord? to oppose, or to render vain, his plan of guiding and saving man; Heb 3:10, They have not known my ways; Psa 77:19, Thy way is in the sea, thy footsteps are not known. Here it refers particularly to his way or plan of bringing all nations within the reach of his mercy in the gospel.
Past finding out – Literally, which cannot be tracked or traced out. The footsteps cannot be followed. As if his path were in the sea Psa 77:19, and the waves closed immediately, leaving no track, it cannot be followed or sought out. It is known that he has passed, but there is no way of tracing his goings. This is a beautiful and striking figure. It denotes that Gods plans are deep, and beyond our comprehension. We can see the proofs that he is everywhere; but how it is, we cannot comprehend. We are permitted to see the vast movements around us; but the invisible hand we cannot see, nor trace the footsteps of that mighty God who performs his wonders on the ocean and on the land,
Fuente: Albert Barnes’ Notes on the Bible
Rom 11:33
O the depth of the riches both of the wisdom and knowledge of God!–Like a traveller who has reached the summit of an Alpine ascent, the apostle turns and contemplates.
Depths are at his feet; but waves of light illumine them, and then spreads all around an immense horizon which his eye commands. The plan of God in the government of mankind spreads out before him, and he expresses the feeling of admiration and gratitude with which the prospect fills his heart. (Prof. Godet.)
The depth of the divine wisdom
As a man wading into the sea, when he comes up to the neck and feels the water begin to heave him up and his feet to fail him, cries out, O the depth! and goes back, so it fares with Paul in this place, and it is as if he should have said thus: O you Romans and my countrymen the Jews, I have writ unto you these things as far as I can; for the rest I am swallowed up, being more unable to pass farther into this bottomless, than to wade through the depth of the sea. Cease, therefore, to put more questions, and admire with me the depth of the wisdom of God. (Elnathan Parr, B.D.)
The wisdom and knowledge of God
The true distinction between knowledge and wisdom is indicated by Theodoret. He foreknew these things from the beginning, and, having foreknown them, He arranged them wisely. Bishop Lightfoot says, While gnosis is simply intuitive, sophia is ratiocinative also. While gnosis applies chiefly to the apprehension of truths, sophia superadds the power of reasoning about them and tracing their relations. To complete the distinction, we must add that, while knowledge is theoretical, wisdom is practical; and while knowledge is purely intellectual, wisdom is also moral; and for that reason is both the most perfect of mental gifts (Aristotle, Nic. Eth. 6.10) and the queen of all the virtues (Cicero, De Off. 1.43). In the present context, gnosis seems to refer especially to Gods foreknowledge of the free determinations of mans will, both in individuals and nations; while sophia denotes the admirable skill with which He includes mans free actions in His plan, and transforms them into so many means for the accomplishment of His good purpose. (Archdeacon Gifford.)
The depths of the Godhead
I. How they stand revealed before us in His–
1. Nature.
2. Works.
3. Ways.
II. How we stand overwhelmed before them in–
1. Humility.
2. Faith.
3. Hope. (J. Lyth, D.D.)
The depth and wealth of Divine grace
I. Wisdom conceived the purpose.
II. Knowledge devised the plan.
III. Judgments prepare the way.
IV. Grace achieves the result. (J. Lyth, D. D.)
The unfathomable depth of redeeming love
I. Wisdom in the plan.
1. In the gift of His Son.
2. In the communication of His righteousness.
3. In the glory of the issue.
II. Mystery is the procedure.
1. With the world at large.
2. With individual believers. (J. Lyth, D. D.)
The depths of salvation
I. Christianity is a system of wonders.
1. The very proposal of salvation for sinners is a matter of wonder. God was not obliged to save. Man deserved to perish; and God could have filled his place instantly with better beings. Moreover, man is the solitary object of saving mercy. When sin broke out in heaven, God hurled the thunderbolt of a just vengeance. Certainly here is ground for amazement.
2. The incarnation of Christ was a miracle beyond any other miracle of God. Deity took upon Himself the form and nature of humanity. Among all Gods wonders, you can find no analogy for the person of Christ.
3. Our ordinary idea of the proceedings of justice is confounded by the sufferings of Christ. We connect suffering with sin; at least, we consider that an innocent being cannot justly be treated as a malefactor. Yet the sinless Son of God was a man of sorrows and died as a culprit, abandoned even by the Father whom He always pleased. Reason can only exclaim, O the depth! at this.
4. Amazement rises higher at the Bible representation that He suffered the just for the unjust, that He might bring us to God. How could justice be satisfied by the sufferings of an innocent One? How can it be a just thing that they should be accepted as a propitiation for our sins? God has taught us the fact, and hence we believe it; but the fact is a wonder. These are only examples. Things of the same marvellous nature run all through the system of redemption. Infidelity is confounded by these depths. But what confounds an infidel comforts a Christian.
II. Those wonders are reasons for our accepting it and being comforted by it.
1. They constitute a feature of our religion which comports with our experience on all other subjects. The facts which we have mentioned are all plainly revealed facts. There is no darkness or depth in them. The depth and darkness meet us only as we proceed to philosophise. The further we investigate the things of God anywhere the more deep and wonderful they become.
(1) The astronomer finds it so. His wonder grows as he passes the known suns and stars; and now, as he casts his keen eye out upon the illimitable space beyond him, he is compelled to feel that he has not yet passed the porch of the temple of God. All he can say is, O the depth!
(2) So in the ever-descending field of microscopic study.
(3) The providences of God, again, are full of wonders. What a marvel is human history!
2. There are many things of importance, but they are not all of equal value. Unorganised matter lies below the organisms of life. Brute life is of a lower rank than human. The mental kingdom, while superior to the vegetable and animal, is inferior to the moral. Now, we are limited creatures, and cannot have an equal understanding of all subjects, and must expect to meet with the highest wonders in the highest departments. An infidel tells us he meets with the most wonders in Christianity. For that reason he rejects it, and for that we glory in it. Consider two arguments here.
(1) God is glorious in everything, but not in everything of equal glory. His highest glory lies in His saving sinners. The angels knew this who sung over Bethlehem, Glory to God in the highest. Well, on that high field of wonders, where God is more glorious than anywhere else, shall we not expect Him to be more amazing than anywhere else?
(2) Consider the soul. It is immortal, and its capacities will expand for ever. It is to be saved or lost. When a soul is perilled, shall God for its salvation work no more wonders than He does about the petty interests of a world of matter and beasts, and threescore years and ten?
3. It is in these deep things of God only that we find provision for our deepest necessities. Reason cannot hope except before the amazing depths of Gods wisdom and mercy. As sinners, we need God to do for us just the wonders He has wrought. Had He not done them, we must have despaired. (I. S. Spencer, D.D.)
Our proper attitude towards the deep things of God
It remains for us dutifully and reverentially to adore that in the Divine counsels and ways which we do not, and, indeed, cannot, understand. There is no government that hath not its arcana; and it would be very foolish for us to imagine that there should be no secrets belonging to the Divine government. (John Howe.)
The contemplation of Gods redeeming purpose
should prompt–
I. Admiration of–
1. His wisdom.
2. His knowledge.
II. The confession of His unsearchableness in respect of–
1. His purpose and procedure.
2. His all-sufficiency.
III. The praise of His grace, which is–
1. Free.
2. Undeserved.
IV. The increase of His glory.
1. He is the end of all things.
2. To Him be glory for ever. (J. Lyth, D.D.)
Gods conduct in the salvation of mankind
This is the conclusion of Pauls argument on this subject. He seems to be overwhelmed with the sense of its unsearchableness. The depths of Gods wisdom and knowledge appear in–
I. The manifestation of His righteousness in the restoration of rebels. Human monarchs have shown their justice in crushing rebels, but God in restoring them.
II. The destruction of the spirit of rebellion in the restoration of rebels, Human monarchs may deliver rebels, but they cannot destroy the spirit of rebellion, God does this.
III. The augmentation of the force of moral government in the restoration of rebels. Human monarchs may weaken their government by saving rebels, but God strengthens the force of His moral administration by redeeming transgressors.
IV. The promotion of all the rights of His subjects in the restoration of rebels. Human monarchs, by delivering rebels, endanger the rights of loyal citizens God, in the restoration of rebels, promotes the rights of all.
V. The election of earth instead of hell as the scene for the restoration of rebels. (D. Thomas, D.D.)
Gods praise
I. Its theme.
1. His wisdom.
2. His knowledge.
3. His judgments and procedure.
II. Its expression.
1. Wonder.
2. Submission.
3. Love. (J. Lyth, D.D.)
Wisdom of God in redemption
No one can be said to meditate aright on redemption by Christ who does not behold Gods manifold wisdom, as well as His other perfections, displayed therein. As we conclude him a very unskilful observer of a curious picture or statue who only takes notice of its dimensions in general, or the matter of which it is composed, its colouring, or framework, without considering the symmetry and proportion of all its parts, the mind, the genius, and intelligence shown in its design–so it is unworthy and below a Christian to be able only to say that Christ is a Saviour, or to have a general idea of this scheme of mercy, without having his thoughts suitably affected with the wonders of love and grace which it contains, and the design of all, and the adaptation of every part, to set forth the glory of the triune Jehovah. (H. G. Salter.)
Incomplete presentations of the gospel
My best presentations of the gospel to you are so incomplete! Sometimes, when I am alone, I have such sweet and rapturous visions of the love of God and the truths of His Word, that I think if I could speak to you then I should move your hearts. I am like a child who, walking forth some sunny morning, sees grass and flowers all shining with drops of dew. Oh, he cries, Ill carry these beautiful things to my mother! and, eagerly plucking them, the dew drops into his little palm, and all the charm is gone. There is but grass in his hand, and no longer pearls. (H. W. Beecher.)
Limitation of human views
There is a striking passage in which a great philosopher, the famous Bishop Berkeley, describes the thought which occurred to him of the inscrutable schemes of Providence, as he saw, in St. Pauls Cathedral, a fly moving on one of the pillars. It requires, he says, some comprehension in the eye of an intelligent spectator to take in at one view the various parts of the building, in order to observe their harmony and design. But to the fly, whose prospect was confined to a little part of one of the stones of a single pillar, the joint beauty of the whole, or the distinct use of its parts, was inconspicuous. To that limited view, the small irregularities on the surface of the hewn stone seemed to be so many deformed rocks and precipices. That fly on the pillar, of which the philosopher spoke, is the likeness of each human being as he creeps along the vast pillars which support the universe. The sorrow which appears to us nothing but a yawning chasm or hideous precipice, may turn out to be but the joining or cement which binds together the fragments of our existence into a solid whole! That dark and crooked path, in which we have to grope our way in doubt and fear, may be but the curve which, in the full daylight of a brighter world, will appear to be the necessary finish of some choice ornament, the inevitable span of some majestic arch. (Dean Stanley.)
How unsearchable are His Judgments, and His ways past finding out!—
The unsearchableness of God
I. When we cannot understand His ways it is enough to be assured–
1. That He knows what He does.
2. That He needs no counsellor.
II. Therefore ought we to resign ourselves to His will, with–
1. Resignation.
2. Obedience. (J. Lyth, D.D.)
The unsearchableness of Gods judgments
These words are the close of St. Paul s disputation concerning God s providence towards His ancient people, in rejecting the greatest part of them, on their refusal to embrace Christianity, and in admitting the Gentiles to favour on their compliance; in which proceeding the Jews could not discern Gods hand, nor allow such a dispensation to be worthy of Him. The apostle, after an able vindication of it, winds up the contest with the modest intimation that in this and all such eases, for entire satisfaction, we should have recourse to the incomprehensible wisdom of God, who frequently orders things in methods beyond our ability to trace. Note–
I. Some causes and reasons of that incomprehensibility.
1. As the dealings of very wise men sometimes are founded on maxims, and admit justifications not obvious to nor penetrable by vulgar conceit, so may Gods. As there are natural modes of being and operation–such as Gods necessary subsistence, His eternity without succession, etc.
so there may be prudential and moral rules far above our reach (Isa 55:9). Some of these we may be incapable of knowing on account of our finite nature; others on account of our meanness and low rank among created beings. In such cases the absolute will, sovereign authority, and pure liberality of God, supply the place of reasons.
2. As the standing rules of Gods acting, so the occasional grounds thereof are commonly placed beyond the sphere of our apprehension. God is obliged to prosecute His own immutable decrees; working all things according to the counsel of His own will: which how can we anywise come to discover? God also has a perfect foresight of contingent events. He observes in what relation and degrees of comparison things stand towards each other; whereas we cannot tell what things to compare.
3. We are also incapable thoroughly to discern the ways of Providence, from our moral defects, in some measure common to all men; our stupidity, sloth, temerity, impatience, impurity, of heart, etc.
4. Again, the nature of those instruments which Divine Providence uses in administration of human affairs, hinders us from discerning it. The footsteps of Divine wisdom are far more conspicuous in the works of nature than in the management of our affairs, and while the one has confirmed faith, the other has bred doubt.
5. As in nature the influence of heaven and of inferior causes, so in the production of special events among men Divine and human agency are so combined, that it is not easy to discriminate what God performs by natural instruments, and what by superior efficacy.
(1) Not seeing the first, we are prone to ascribe too much to the last, which are most obvious.
(2) And this we are the more apt to do because the manner of Divine agency is ever soft and gentle. God so fashions the hearts of men, so manages their hands, so guides their steps, that even they who are most acted on by Him cannot feel the touch.
6. God, in His progress towards the achievement of any design, is not wont to go in the most direct and compendious ways, but commonly takes a large compass, enfolding several other coincident purposes; which moves our impatience, etc.
7. Like every wise agent, He is wont to act variously, according to the state and circumstances of things, or to the dispositions and capacities of persons.
8. There are different ends which Providence pursues in various order and measure, which we, by reason of our dim insight and short prospect, cannot descry.
(1) God permits things, bad in their own nature, having regard to their instrumental use and tendency.
(2) Also the expediency of things to be permitted or crossed, frequently consists, not in themselves singly taken, as particular acts or events, but in their conjunction with or reference to others, with which they may become subservient to a common end.
9. That Providence is sometimes obscure and intricate, may be attributed to the will of God, on many accounts designing it so. He will not glare forth in discoveries so bright as to dazzle or confound our weak sight.
(1) He meaneth thereby to improve and exalt our faith.
(2) It is fit also that He should thus in many things surpass our understanding, that He may appear to be God indeed.
(3) The obscurity of Providence conciliates an awful reverence towards it, as darkness raises a dread of invisible powers.
(4) It is also requisite that God should dispose many occurrences, cross to our notions, and offensive to our carnal sense, that we may thus be prompted to think of Him, and to seek Him.
(5) It is needful that the present course of Providence should not be perfectly clear and satisfactory, that we may be well assured concerning a future account, and forced in our thoughts to recur thither for a solution of our doubts and difficulties.
II. Some practical applications grounded on the foregoing reasons.
1. It should render us modest and sober in our judgment about providential occurrences, since it is plain arrogance or imposture to assume perfect skill in what passeth our capacity to learn.
2. It should make us cautious in passing judgment or censure on events, since it is temerity to give sentence on what is incapable of evidence.
3. It should repress wanton curiosity, which would only make us lose our time, etc.
4. It should keep us from conceit and confidence in our own wisdom.
5. It should preserve us from infidelity, and despair on account of any cross accidents.
6. It should prevent our taking offence at such.
7. It should guard us against security, or presuming on impunity for our miscarriages; for seeing that God does not always fully discover His mind, it is vain to suppose that, because He is now patient, He will always be so.
8. It should quicken our industry in observing and considering the works of Providence: the fainter our light is, the more attentive should we be in looking.
9. It should oblige us to be circumspect and wary in our conversation.
10. Also constantly to seek God, and to depend on Him for protection, and for the conduct of His grace, the only clue in this labyrinth.
11. In fine, it should cause us humbly to admire and adore that wisdom which governs the world in ways no less great and wonderful than just and holy. (L Barrow, D.D.)
Mans inability to find out Gods judgments
1. That which first brought both a present guilt, and entailed a future curse upon mankind, was an inordinate desire of knowledge. And from the fall to this very day, this fatal itch has stuck so close to our nature, that every one is eager to know where he is called only to adore and obey.
2. The Scripture is in nothing more full and frequent than in representing the transcendency of Gods ways above all created intellectuals (Psa 139:6; Psa 36:6; Psa 18:9; Psa 77:19). If we consult its reports, or those of our own experience, about the amazing events of Providence, we shall find the result of our most exact inquiries in the text. I shall demonstrate that the most advanced wisdom of man is incompetent to judge of–
I. The reason or cause of Gods ways. The causes men assign of the passages of Providence are–
1. For the most part false, as e.g.,
(1) That the prosperous are the objects of Gods love; and the miserable of His hatred. And all this in defiance of the Spirit of God Himself who (Ecc 9:1) assures us that no man knows either love or hatred by all that is before him; nor consequently can conclude himself in or out of favour with God by anything befalling him in this life. Otherwise Lazarus would have been in flames, and the rich man in Abrahams bosom. God sometimes curses men with prosperity, and casts His Jobs upon dunghills, and sells His beloved Josephs into slavery.
(2) That the good only must prosper and the bad suffer. A most absurd assertion, for how is it that the good suffer and the bad prosper?–a fact which staggered Asaph (Psa 73:2), and so confounded Jeremiah (Jer 12:1), that he could almost have offered to dispute the point with God Himself. And from the same topic it was that Jobs friends argued, until they were confounded by Gods verdict on the whole matter.
2. Always imperfect. Who would assign an adequate reason of anything which God does, must see as far into it as God sees. There is no action of God but there is a combination of impulsive causes concerned in it, one or two of which man may light upon, but the weakness of his discerning powers keeps him inevitably a stranger to far the greater part of them. God, by one and the same numerical lot of providence, may intend to punish one nation, to advance another; to plant the gospel in a third, and to let in trade into a fourth; likewise to make way for the happiness of one mans prosperity, and for the extinction of anothers; to reward the virtues of sober and industrious people, and to revenge the crimes of a vicious and rebellious; and we are no more able to search into these than we are to govern the world.
II. The issue and event of actions. Men usually prognosticate–
1. According to the measure of the wisdom of second agents. And it must be confessed that it is the best rule were it not controlled by two better, viz., Scripture and experience. The former of which brings in God laughing at the wisdom of the wise; taking and circumventing the crafty in their own wiles (Job 5:12-13). And for the latter, history so abounds with instances of the most artificially-spun contrivances dashed in pieces by some sudden and unforeseen accidents, that to ascertain the event of the most promising undertaking, if we trust but our own eyes, we shall have little Cause to trust anothers wisdom.
2. From success formerly gained under the same or less probable circumstances. But remember
(1) That it is hard, and perhaps scarce possible to repeat any action under perfectly the same circumstances.
(2) That in most actions there are still some circumstances not observed, which may have a surer and more immediate influence upon the event than those which, coming more into view, are more depended upon.
(3) That the success of every action depends more upon the secret hand of God than upon any causes or instruments visibly engaged in it.
3. According to the preparations made for it, and the power employed in it. And yet we find that it is not always the bigger weight, but sometimes the artificial hand managing the balance which turns the scale. And in like manner, when we have raised armies and manned our fleets, we are still in the hand of that Providence which sometimes sets the crown of victory upon the weak and the few, and disappoints the hopes and breaks the force of the confident and numerous Could anything look more invincible than the Spanish Armada? But we find that there is no commanding the sea without being able to command the winds too. And what a painful defence is multitude on the one side, where Omnipotence takes the other!
III. The use and improvement. We may infer–
1. The vanity of making the future event, or presumed success of any enterprise, the rule of our present actings about the same.
2. The absolute necessity of an entire, total, unreserved dependence upon Providence in the most hopeful and promising condition of our affairs.
3. The impossibility of a rational dependence upon Providence with comfort, but in the way of lawful, honest, and religious courses. (R. South, D. D.)
Plans of God not fully known
I should like to hear any man attempt to interpret to a worm what it is going to be when it is a butterfly. Where is there a foreshadowing analogy, or anything to indicate to it what it is coming to in its fuller form? And how can any one disclose what is to be evolved when Gods work is completed in this life? For, although we may know something, our knowledge is fragmentary and limited. And it is a glorious consolation to believe that sufferings forgotten are not less causes of good than those thus are remembered, and that sufferings which apparently leave but little trace are working out in us great and blessed results in the kingdom to which we are hastening. (H. W. Beecher.)
Gods ways inscrutable, but in accordance with the highest reason
Natural instincts, and even moral sense, are no safe guide upon a subject which soars so infinitely above our limited capacity. We are children; and in considering the means by which our Heavenly Father will save us, it is wisdom to accept simply His own instructions, desperate folly and presumption to criticise those instructions by our puerile instincts. E.g., a father, inured to life upon the Alpine mountains, is under the necessity of crossing a very perilous glacier with his children. The children are of such an age that the direction, Hold this, and keep at as great a distance from me as you possibly can, can just be made intelligible to them, while the grounds of it, viz., that the weight of the party may be distributed, and not bear on one particular spot, which might thus give way, are, it may be, out of the reach of a childs capacity. Let us suppose that the children, in fright, begin to reason about this counsel, and to judge of it by their natural instincts; conceive that one of them should think and say as follows: Can our father, who loves to have us close around him, say, Come not near me, child, at the peril of thy life? Say it he may, but I will not believe such to be his meaning, for it conflicts with all my natural instincts, which are to cling round him in the moment of danger. But shortly afterwards night falls, and the wearied children are irresistibly impelled to lie down without any covering, in which case death would overtake them. The father burrows in a snowdrift, and proposes that in the cavities so made the children shall lie, the cold snow piled over them, and only the smallest possible aperture allowed for the passage of the breath. Adults, of course, would be aware that this would be the only method of preserving the vital heat of the body; but not so the children. Snow, applied only to parts of the person, and not as a general wrapper, is bitterly cold; and the children, unable to understand, imagine cruelty in this arrangement. Now, the child who keeps at a distance from his father, and buries himself in the snow, is a wise child, because, renouncing the guidance of his instincts, he places faith in one manifestly his superior in capacity. The child who clings round his fathers neck upon the glacier and stretches his limbs beneath the open sky in distrust of his parents directions is a foolish child; for what is greater folly than to refuse to be guided by a recognised superior in wisdom? And it cannot be too strongly insisted upon, that one who, in investigating such a subject as the method of human salvation, follows the guidance of his natural instincts in preference to that of Revelation, is a weak person, not a man of bold and courageous thought. Simple dependence upon God, where God alone can teach, is the truest independence of mind. (Dean Goulburn.)
Secrets of God
Be not curious to search into the secrets of God; pick not the lock where He hath allowed no key. He that will be sifting every cloud may be smitten with a thunderbolt; and he that will be too familiar with Gods secrets may be overwhelmed in His judgments. Adam would curiously increase his knowledge; therefore Adam shamefully lost his goodness: the Bethshemites would needs pry into the ark of God; therefore the hand of God slew about fifty thousand of them. Therefore hover not about this flame, lest we scorch our wings. For my part, seeing God hath made me His secretary, I will carefully improve myself by what He has revealed, and not curiously inquire into or after what He hath reserved. (T. Adams.)
For who hath known the mind of the Lord? or who hath been His counsellor?–
God all in all
I. The challenge.
1. To human intellect.
2. To human merit.
II. The assertion. God is–
1. The source of all.
2. The agent in all.
3. The end of all.
III. The ascription.
1. To Him be glory.
2. On earth.
3. In heaven.
4. For ever. (J. Lyth, D.D.)
Gods counsels are
I. Deep.
1. Teaching us the feebleness of our understanding.
2. Checking our daring speculations.
II. True.
1. Inviting our confidence.
2. Commanding our submission.
III. Merciful.
1. Soliciting our love.
2. Inspiring our hope. (J. Lyth, D. D.)
Gods independence
Philo, the Jew, compares the great God to a tree, and all creatures to the leaves and fruits, which are all in the tree; but the metaphor is not complete, because you may remove fruit from the tree, but there can be no creature out of the power and will of God by which alone it can exist at all. If you remove the fruits from the tree the tree has at least lost something; but if all creatures were destroyed, yet still the Lord would be as infinitely God as He is now; if the creatures were multiplied, God were no more–and if diminished, He were no less. The creatures, may be likened to the waves, and God to the great sea; the waves cannot exist apart from the sea, nor the creatures apart from God: but no earthly figure of the Divine can be complete, for the waves are a portion of the sea, but the creatures are not God, nor do they contribute to His essence or attributes. The sea would be diminished if the waves were gone, but if you could take all creatures away, God would be no less God, nor less infinite than He is now. (C. H. Spurgeon.)
For of Him, and through Him, and to Him, are all things.—
God all in all
This is perhaps the most comprehensive account of the Deity in His relation to His works that is anywhere to be met with. All things are–
I. Of Him. He is of none. They originate in His will, and but for Him they would never have been.
II. By Him. He creates and sustains all.
III. To Him. All things are intended to manifest forth His glory, and will ultimately serve His purpose. He has made all things for Himself, and it is obviously meet that it should be so, that His will should be the law, His glory the end of the universe of which He is the Creator, the Supporter, and Proprietor. (J. Brown, D.D.)
God all in all
Of Him all things are as their Original Author and Creator; through Him, as the Giver and Conveyer of them to us; to Him, to His honour, for His use, and in His disposal; and no further or longer ours than He is pleased in mercy, not in justice, as a free gift, and not as a debt, to dispense them to us. (Bp. Sanderson.)
God must be all in all
I. Him first.
II. Him last.
III. Him midst.
IV. And without end. Amen. (J. Lyth, D.D.)
God the first cause and last end
I. The explication of the terms.
1. That God is the first cause, signifies–
(1) Negatively, that He had no cause, and is independent of every other being, and is eternally of Himself.
(2) Positively, that He is the cause and support of all things besides Himself (Joh 1:3).
2. The last end; i.e., that all things refer to Him; the aim of all things is the illustration of His glory, and the manifestation of His perfections.
II. The confirmation of the proposition.
1. By natural light.
(1) The notion of a God contains in it all possible perfection. Now the utmost perfection we can imagine is for a being to be always of itself, and to be the cause and support of all other things. From hence follows that all things must refer to Him as their last end. For every wise agent acts in order to an end. Now the end which is most worthy the attaining is the manifestation of Gods being and perfection, which is called Gods glory.
(2) These titles were discovered by the natural light of the heathens. Aristotle called God the first being, the first cause, and the first mover; and Plato calls God the author and parent of all things, the architect of the world, and of all creatures, the fountain and original of all things. Porphyry calls Him the first, from whence he reasons that He is the ultimate end, and that all things move towards God; that all motions centre in Him, because, saith he, it is most proper and natural for things to refer to their original, and to refer all to Him from whom they receive all. Antoninus, speaking of nature (which with the Stoics signifies God), had these words, Of Thee are all things, in Thee are all things, to Thee are all things.
2. From Scripture.
(1) Hither belong all those places where He declares Himself to be the first and the last (Isa 41:4; Isa 43:10; Isa 44:6; Isa 48:12-13; Rev 1:8).
(2) But more expressly, see 1Co 8:6; Act 17:24.
(3) Hither we may refer those texts which attribute the same to the Second Person in the Trinity {Joh 1:3; Joh 1:10; 1Co 8:6; Eph 3:9; Col 1:16-17; Heb 1:2-3).
III. The application of the doctrine.
1. If God be the first cause of all things, from hence let us learn–
(1) With humility and thankfulness to own, admire, and bless God as the author of our being and of all the blessings we enjoy (Rev 4:11; Psa 103:1-4). With patience and quietness to submit to all events that come upon us, as coming from Him (1Sa 3:18; Psa 39:9).
2. If God be the last end of all, let us make Him our last end, and refer all our actions to His glory (Mat 22:37; 1Co 10:31). (Abp. Tillotson.)
The Trinity
1. The Fathers love and purpose the origin of all things.
2. The Sons mediation and rule their continuance and direction.
3. The Spirits agency conducts all things to the end designed. All things of the Father, through the Son, by the Spirit (T. Robinson, D.D.)
Laus Deo
My text consists of monosyllables, but it contains the loftiest sublimities. Our great God alone can expound this verse, for He only can worthily set forth His own perfections. May He do so now! Consider–
I. The doctrine. All things are of Him as their source, through Him as their means, to Him as their end. They are of Him in the plan, through Him in the working, and to Him in the glory which they produce. Taking this general principle, you will find it apply to all things.
1. To the whole range of Gods works in creation and providence.
(1) There was a period when God inhabited eternity in His self-contained and solitary greatness. All things must be of Him in design, for there was no one with whom He could take counsel. Before His works of old, eternal wisdom brought forth the perfect plan of future creations, and every line must have been of the Lord alone. He might have made a different universe, and that He has made it what it is was because He saw fit to do so.
(2) When the plan was all laid down this was not enough; mere arrangement would not create. Through Him must all things be. There was no raw material ready, and there was none to help. He speaks, and the heavens leap into existence. He speaks again, and worlds are begotten with all the varied forms of life so fraught with Divine wisdom and matchless skill. Through Him were all things, from the archangel down to the insect. The same finger paints the rainbow and the wing of the butterfly. He who dyes the garments of evening in all the colours of heaven has covered the kingcup with gold, and lit up the glowworms lamp. Nature is as it is through the energy of the present God. Out upon those men who think that God has wound up the world like a clock, and left it to work for itself. Wherever thou art, thou art in Gods workshop, where every wheel is turned by His hand.
(3) But the great glory of all is that everything is to Him. God must have the highest motive, and there can be no higher motive than His own glory. When there was no being but Himself God could not have taken as a motive a creature which did not exist. The good of His creatures He considereth carefully, but even that is but a means to the main end. And the day shall come when even the fall will be seen not to have marred the Divine glory. His enemies shall bow their necks, whilst His people shall cheerfully extol Him.
2. To the grand work of Divine grace.
(1) Here everything is of God. The plan of salvation is no concoction of priests, but the offspring of a wisdom no less than Divine. None but God could have imagined a plan so just to God, so safe to man. And as the great plan is of Him, so the fillings up of the minutiae are of Him. God ordained the time and circumstances of the first promise, and the hour when the great promise-keeper should come, etc. Every stitch in the noble tapestry of salvation is of the Lord.
(2) Through Him. Through Him the Son of God is born of the Virgin Mary by the power of the Spirit. In the great redemption God alone is exalted. And as through Him the atonement, so through Him the application of the atonement. By the power of the Spirit the gospel is daily preached, and through Him men are called and saved.
(3) All is to Him; we have not a note of praise to spare for another.
3. To the case of every individual believer.
(1) Of whom comes my salvation? That which is born of the flesh is flesh.
(2) Did it not also come through God; through faith, which was the operation of the Holy Spirit? And what didst thou believe in but in Jesus the Lord?
(3) Is it not also to Him?
4. To Christian work.
(1) The power comes from God.
(2) The success comes through God.
(3) The honour is to God.
II. Devotion. To whom be glory for ever, Amen. This should be–
1. The single desire of the Christian. He may desire prosperity or to attain more gifts and graces, etc., but it should only be that to Him may be glory for ever.
2. Our constant desire at our work behind the counter, or in the exchange, or walking in the fields, etc.
3. Our earnest desire. Do not speak of Gods glory with cold words, nor think of it with chilly heart.
4. Our growing desire. You blessed Him in your youth; do not be content with such praises as you gave Him then.
5. Make this desire practical. Praise God by your patience in pain, your perseverance in duty, your generosity in His cause, your boldness in testimony, your consecration to His work. (C. H. Spurgeon.)
To whom be glory for ever. Amen.–As the rivers return again to the place whence they came, they all come from the sea, and they all run into the sea again; so all our store as it issued at first from the fountain of Gods grace, so should it fall at last into the ocean of His glory. (Bp. Sanderson.)
.
Fuente: Biblical Illustrator Edited by Joseph S. Exell
Verse 33. O the depth of the riches both of the wisdom and knowledge of God!] This is a very proper conclusion of the whole preceding discourse. Wisdom may here refer to the designs of God; knowledge, to the means which he employs to accomplish these designs. The designs are the offspring of infinite wisdom, and therefore they are all right; the means are the most proper, as being the choice of an infinite knowledge that cannot err; we may safely credit the goodness of the design, founded in infinite wisdom; we may rely on the due accomplishment of the end, because the means are chosen and applied by infinite knowledge and skill.
Fuente: Adam Clarke’s Commentary and Critical Notes on the Bible
In this and the following verses is the conclusion of all that he had delivered, especially in this and the two preceding chapters. He had spoken of many profound mysteries, and answered many critical questions; and here he makes a pause, and falls into an admiration of God, his abundant wisdom and knowledge. He seems here to be like a man that wades into the waters, till he begins to feel no bottom, and then he cries out:
Oh the depth! and goes no farther.
Oh the depth of the riches both of the wisdom and knowledge of God! i.e. the unmeasurable, inconceivable abundance of his wisdom and knowledge. Some distinguish these two; others take them for the same: see Col 2:3.
How unsearchable are his judgments, and his ways past finding out! Some distinguish betwixt the judgments and ways of God; by the former, understanding his decrees and purposes concerning nations or persons; by the latter, the methods of his providence in his dealings with them: others think the same thing is meant, by an ingemination, which is familiar amongst the Hebrews. He says of Gods judgments, that they are unsearchable; therefore not to be complained of, censured, or to be narrowly pried into; and of his ways, that they are past finding out; the same in sense with unsearchable: it is a metaphor from hounds, that have no footstep or scent of the game which they pursue: nor can men trace the Lord, or find out the reason of his doings; as none can line out the way of a ship in the sea, or an eagle in the air, &c. Some restrain the sense to the ways of God in disposing and ordering the election and rejection of men.
Fuente: English Annotations on the Holy Bible by Matthew Poole
33. Oh, the depth, c.Theapostle now yields himself up to the admiring contemplation of thegrandeur of that divine plan which he had sketched out.
of the riches both of thewisdom and knowledge of GodMany able expositors render this,”of the riches and wisdom and knowledge,” &c. [ERASMUS,GROTIUS, BENGEL,MEYER, DEWETTE, THOLUCK,OLSHAUSEN, FRITZSCHE,PHILIPPI, ALFORD,Revised Version]. The words will certainly bear this sense,”the depth of God’s riches.” But “the riches of God”is a much rarer expression with our apostle than the riches of thisor that perfection of God and the words immediately following limitour attention to the unsearchableness of God’s “judgments,“which probably means His decrees or plans (Ps119:75), and of “His ways,” or the method bywhich He carries these into effect. (So LUTHER,CALVIN, BEZA,HODGE, c.). Besides, allthat follows to the end of the chapter seems to show that while theGrace of God to guilty men in Christ Jesus is presupposed tobe the whole theme of this chapter, that which called forth thespecial admiration of the apostle, after sketching at some length thedivine purposes and methods in the bestowment of this grace, was “thedepth of the riches of God’s wisdom and knowledge” inthese purposes and methods. The “knowledge,” then, pointsprobably to the vast sweep of divine comprehension herein displayedthe “wisdom” to that fitness to accomplish the endsintended, which is stamped on all this procedure.
Fuente: Jamieson, Fausset and Brown’s Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible
O the depth of the riches, both of the wisdom and knowledge of God,…. These words are the epilogue, or conclusion of the doctrinal part of this epistle, and relate to what is said throughout the whole of it hitherto; particularly to the doctrines of salvation by Christ, justification by his righteousness, predestination, the calling of the Gentiles, the rejection of the Jews, and their restoration in the latter day; upon the whole of which, the apostle breaks forth into this pathetic exclamation; the design of which is to show, how much of the wisdom and knowledge of God is displayed in these doctrines, and how small a part of it is known by the best of men, and therefore ought not to be cavilled at and objected to, because of some difficulties attending them, but to be received upon the testimony of divine revelation: and if there was a depth in these things unsearchable and past finding out by so great a man as the apostle, who had by revelation such knowledge in the mysteries of grace, and who had been caught up into the third heaven, and heard things unutterable, how much less is it to be fathomed by others, and therefore should be silent: by “the wisdom and knowledge of God”, one and the same thing is meant; and design not so much the perfections of the divine nature, which are infinite and unsearchable, the understanding of which is too high for creatures, and not be attained to by them; nor the display of them in the works of creation and providence, in which there are most glorious and amazing instances; but rather the effects of them, the counsels and decrees of God; which are so wisely formed and laid, as not to fail of their accomplishment, or to be frustrated of their end; and the doctrines of grace relating to them, in which are treasures, riches, that is, an abundance of wisdom and knowledge; and a depth, not to be reached to the bottom of, in this imperfect state, and in which the knowledge and wisdom of God are wonderfully displayed: thus in the doctrine of redemption and salvation by Christ, wherein God has abounded in all wisdom and prudence; in the person fixed upon to be the Saviour, his own Son; who by the assumption of human nature, being God and man in one person, was very fit and proper to be a Mediator between God and man, to transact the affair of salvation; was every way qualified for it, and able to do it: so likewise in the manner in which it is accomplished, being done in a way which glorifies all the divine perfections; in which the rights of God’s justice and the honour of his holiness are secured, as well as his love, grace, and mercy, displayed; in which Satan is most mortified, sin condemned, and the sinner saved; and also in the persons, the subjects of it, ungodly sinners, enemies, the chief of sinners, whereby the grace of God is the more illustrated, and all boasting in the creature excluded. The wisdom of God manifestly appears, in the doctrine of a sinner’s justification; which though it proceeds from grace, yet upon the foot of redemption and satisfaction, in a way of strict justice; so that God is just, whilst he is the justifier; it is of persons ungodly, and without a righteousness in themselves, and yet by a perfect and complete righteousness, answerable to all the demands of law and justice; and the grace of faith is wisely made the recipient of this blessing, that it might appear to be of free grace, and not of works, and that the justified ones might have solid peace, joy, and comfort, from it. The doctrine of predestination is full of the wisdom and knowledge of God; his choice of some to everlasting life in his Son, through sanctification of the Spirit, and belief of the truth, for the glorifying of his grace and mercy, in a way of righteousness; and his passing by others, leaving them to themselves, and in their sins, justly to perish for them, for the glorifying of his justice, are acts of the highest wisdom, and done according to the counsel of his will. The account just given of the call of the Gentiles, and the rejection of the Jews, is an astonishing scheme of infinite wisdom; that, on the one hand salvation should come to the Gentiles, through the fall of the Jews, and they should obtain mercy through their unbelief; and on the other hand that the restoration of the Jews should be as life from the dead to the Gentiles; and the Jews, through their mercy, obtain mercy; and that both, in their turns, should be shut up in unbelief by God, that he might have mercy on them all, “O the depth”, c. To which is added,
how unsearchable are his judgments! which are not to be understood of his awful judgments on wicked men in particular, nor of the administrations of his providence in general though these are a great deep, and in many instances are unsearchable, and cannot be counted for in the present state, but will hereafter be made manifest; nor of the commands of God, sometimes called his judgments, which are all plain, and may be easily searched out in his word; but rather of the counsels and purposes of God, and the doctrines of grace relating thereunto; which are the deep things of God, and are only searched out by the Spirit of God, who reveals them to us:
and his ways past finding out! not the methods and course of his providence, though his way in this respect is often in the deep, his footsteps are not to be known, discerned, and traced, by finite creatures; but rather the goings forth and steps of his wisdom from everlasting, in his purposes and decrees, council and covenant, which are higher than the ways of men, even as the heavens are higher than the earth; and which are all mercy and truth to his chosen people, and strict justice to others, and not to be found out by any; particularly his ways and methods, and dealings, with both Jews and Gentiles; that he should for so many hundred years leave the Gentiles in blindness and unbelief; and now for as many years his favourite people the Jews in the same, and yet gather in his elect out of them both; these are things out of our reach and comprehension.
Fuente: John Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible
| The Divine Sovereignty. | A. D. 58. |
33 O the depth of the riches both of the wisdom and knowledge of God! how unsearchable are his judgments, and his ways past finding out! 34 For who hath known the mind of the Lord? or who hath been his counsellor? 35 Or who hath first given to him, and it shall be recompensed unto him again? 36 For of him, and through him, and to him, are all things: to whom be glory for ever. Amen.
The apostle having insisted so largely, through the greatest part of this chapter, upon reconciling the rejection of the Jews with the divine goodness, he concludes here with the acknowledgment and admiration of the divine wisdom and sovereignty in all this. Here the apostle does with great affection and awe adore,
I. The secrecy of the divine counsels: O the depth! in these proceedings towards the Jews and Gentiles; or, in general, the whole mystery of the gospel, which we cannot fully comprehend.–The riches of the wisdom and knowledge of God, the abundant instances of his wisdom and knowledge in contriving and carrying on the work of our redemption by Christ, a depth which the angels pry into, 1 Pet. i. 12. Much more may it puzzle any human understanding to give an account of the methods, and reasons, and designs, and compass of it. Paul was as well acquainted with the mysteries of the kingdom of God as ever any mere man was; and yet he confesses himself at a loss in the contemplation, and, despairing to find the bottom, he humbly sits down at the brink, and adores the depth. Those that know most in this state of imperfection cannot but be most sensible of their own weakness and short-sightedness, and that after all their researches, and all their attainments in those researches, while they are here they cannot order their speech by reason of darkness. Praise is silent to thee, Ps. lxv. 1.– The depth of the riches. Men’s riches of all kinds are shallow, you may soon see the bottom; but God’s riches are deep (Ps. xxxvi. 6): Thy judgments are a great deep. There is not only depth in the divine counsels, but riches too, which denotes an abundance of that which is precious and valuable, so complete are the dimensions of the divine counsels; they have not only depth and height, but breadth and length (Eph. iii. 18), and that passing knowledge, v. 19.– Riches of the wisdom and knowledge of God. His seeing all things by one clear, and certain, and infallible view–all things that are, or ever were, or ever shall be,–that all is naked and open before him: there is his knowledge. His ruling and ordering all things, directing and disposing them to his own glory, and bringing about his own purposes and counsels in all; this is his wisdom. And the vast extent of both these is such a depth as is past our fathoming, and we may soon lose ourselves in the contemplation of them. Such knowledge is too wonderful for me, Ps. cxxxix. 6. Compare Rom 11:17; Rom 11:18.– How unsearchable are his judgments! that is, his counsels and purposes: and his ways, that is, the execution of these counsels and purposes. We know not what he designs. When the wheels are set in motion, and Providence has begun to work, yet we know not what he has in view; it is past finding out. This does not only overturn all our positive conclusions about the divine counsels, but it also checks all our curious enquiries. Secret things belong not to us, Deut. xxix. 29. God’s way is in the sea, Ps. lxxvii. 19. Compare Job 23:8; Job 23:9; Psa 97:2. What he does we know not now, John xiii. 7. We cannot give a reason of God’s proceedings, nor by searching find out God. See Job 5:9; Job 9:10. The judgments of his mouth, and the way of our duty, blessed be God, are plain and easy, it is a high-way; but the judgments of his hands, and the ways of his providence, are dark and mysterious, which therefore we must not pry into, but silently adore and acquiesce in. The apostle speaks this especially with reference to that strange turn, the casting off of the Jews and the entertainment of the Gentiles, with a purpose to take in the Jews again in due time; these were strange proceedings, the choosing of some, the refusing of others, and neither according to the probabilities of human conjecture. Even so, Father, because it seemed good in thing eyes. These are methods unaccountable, concerning which we must say, O the depth!—Past finding out, anexichniastoi—cannot be traced. God leaves no prints nor footsteps behind him, does not make a path to shine after him; but his paths of providence are new every morning. He does not go the same way so often as to make a track of it. How little a portion is heard of him! Job xxvi. 14. It follows (v. 34), For who hath known the mind of the Lord? Is there any creature made of his cabinet-council, or laid, as Christ was, in the bosom of the Father? Is there any to whom he has imparted his counsels, or that is able, upon the view of his providences, to know the way that he takes? There is so vast a distance and disproportion between God and man, between the Creator and the creature, as for ever excludes the thought of such an intimacy and familiarity. The apostle makes the same challenge (1 Cor. ii. 16): For who hath known the mind of the Lord? And yet there he adds, But we have the mind of Christ, which intimates that through Christ true believers, who have his Spirit, know so much of the mind of God as is necessary to their happiness. He that knew the mind of the Lord has declared him, John i. 18. And so, though we know not the mind of the Lord, yet, if we have the mind of Christ, we have enough. The secret of the Lord is with those that fear him, Ps. xxv. 14. Shall I hide from Abraham the thing which I do? See John xv. 15.– Or who has been his counsellor? He needs no counsellor, for he is infinitely wise; nor is any creature capable of being his counsellor; this would be like lighting a candle to the sun. This seems to refer to that scripture (Isa 40:13; Isa 40:14), Who hath directed the Spirit of the Lord, or, being his counsellor, hath taught him? With whom took he counsel? c. It is the substance of God’s challenge to Job concerning the work of creation (Job xxxviii.), and is applicable to all the methods of his providence. It is nonsense for any man to prescribe to God, or to teach him how to govern the world.
II. The sovereignty of the divine counsels. In all these things God acts as a free agent, does what he will, because he will, and gives not account of any of his matters (Job 23:13Job 33:13), and yet there is no unrighteousness with him. To clear which,
1. He challenges any to prove God a debtor to him (v. 35): Who hath first given to him? Who is there of all the creatures that can prove God is beholden to him? Whatever we do for him, or devote to him, it must be with that acknowledgment, which is for ever a bar to such demands (1 Chron. xxix. 14): Of thine own we have given thee. All the duties we can perform are not requitals, but rather restitutions. If any can prove that God is his debtor, the apostle here stands bound for the payment, and proclaims, in God’s name, that payment is ready: It shall be recompensed to him again. It is certain God will let nobody lose by him; but never any one yet durst make a demand of this kind, or attempt to prove it. This is here suggested, (1.) To silence the clamours of the Jews. When God took away their visible church-privileges from them, he did but take his own: and may he not do what he will with his own–give or withhold his grace where and when he pleases? (2.) To silence the insultings of the Gentiles. When God sent the gospel among them, and gave so many of them grace and wisdom to accept of it, it was not because he owed them so much favour, or that they could challenge it as a debt, but of his own good pleasure.
2. He resolves all into the sovereignty of God (v. 36): For of him, and through him, and to him, are all things, that is, God is all in all. All things in heaven and earth (especially those things which relate to our salvation, the things which belong to our peace) are of him by way of creation, through him by way of providential influence, that they may be to him in their final tendency and result. Of God as the spring and fountain of all, through Christ, God-man, as the conveyance, to God as the ultimate end. These three include, in general, all God’s causal relations to his creatures: of him as the first efficient cause, through him as the supreme directing cause, to him as the ultimate final cause; for the Lord hath made all for himself, Rev. iv. 11. If all be of him and through him, there is all the reason in the world that all should be to him and for him. It is a necessary circulation; if the rivers received their waters from the sea, they return them to the sea again, Eccl. i. 7. To do all to the glory of God is to make a virtue of necessity; for all shall in the end be to him, whether we will or no. And so he concludes with a short doxology: To whom be glory for ever, Amen. God’s universal agency as the first cause, the sovereign ruler, and the last end, ought to be the matter of our adoration. Thus all his works do praise him objectively; but his saints do bless him actively; they hand that praise to him which all the creatures do minister matter for, Ps. cxlv. 10. Paul had been discoursing at large of the counsels of God concerning man, sifting the point with a great deal of accuracy; but, after all, he concludes with the acknowledgment of the divine sovereignty, as that into which all these things must be ultimately resolved, and in which alone the mind can safely and sweetly rest. This is, if not the scholastic way, yet the Christian way, of disputation. Whatever are the premises, let god’s glory be the conclusion; especially when we come to talk of the divine counsels and actings, it is best for us to turn our arguments into awful and serious adorations. The glorified saints, that see furthest into these mysteries, never dispute, but praise to eternity.
Fuente: Matthew Henry’s Whole Bible Commentary
O the depth ( ). Exclamation with omega and the nominative case of (see on 2Cor 8:2; Rom 8:39). Paul’s argument concerning God’s elective grace and goodness has carried him to the heights and now he pauses on the edge of the precipice as he contemplates God’s wisdom and knowledge, fully conscious of his inability to sound the bottom with the plummet of human reason and words.
Unsearchable (). Double compound ( privative and ) verbal adjective of (old spelling —), late and rare word (LXX, Dio Cassius, Heraclitus), only here in N.T. Some of God’s wisdom can be known (1:20f.), but not all.
Past tracing out (). Another verbal adjective from privative and , to trace out by tracks ( Ro 4:12). Late word in Job (Job 5:9; Job 9:10; Job 34:24) from which use Paul obtained it here and Eph 3:8 (only N.T. examples). Also in ecclesiastical writers. Some of God’s tracks he has left plain to us, but others are beyond us.
Fuente: Robertson’s Word Pictures in the New Testament
O the depth of the riches both of the wisdom and knowledge. So both A. V. and Rev., making depth govern riches, and riches govern wisdom and knowledge. Others, more simply, make the three genitives coordinate, and all governed by depth : the depth of the riches and wisdom and knowledge. “Like a traveler who has reached the summit of an Alpine ascent, the apostle turns and contemplates. Depths are at his feet, but waves of light illumine them, and there spreads all around an immense horizon which his eye commands” (Godet). Compare the conclusion of ch 8.
“Therefore into the justice sempiternal The power of vision which your world receives As eye into the ocean penetrates; Which, though it see the bottom near the shore, Upon the deep perceives it not, and yet ‘Tis there, but it is hidden by the depth. There is no light but comes from the serene That never is o’ercast, nay, it is darkness Or shadow of the flesh, or else its poison.” DANTE, “Paradio,” 19 59 – 62.
Compare also Sophocles :
“In words and deeds whose laws on high are set Through heaven ‘s clear ether spread, Whose birth Olympus boasts, Their one, their only sire, Whom man’s frail flesh begat not, Nor in forgetfulness Shall lull to sleep of death; In them our God is great, In them he grows not old forevermore.” ” Oedipus Tyrannus, ” 865 – 871.
Wisdom – knowledge [ – ] . Used together only here, 1Co 12:8; Col 2:3. There is much difference of opinion as to the precise distinction. It is agreed on all hands that wisdom is the nobler attribute, being bound up with moral character as knowledge is not. Hence wisdom is ascribed in scripture only to God or to good men, unless it is used ironically. See 1Co 1:20; 1Co 2:6; Luk 10:21. Cicero calls wisdom “the chief of all virtues.” The earlier distinction, as Augustine, is unsatisfactory : that wisdom is concerned with eternal things, and knowledge with things of sense; for gnwsiv knowledge, is described as having for its object God (2Co 10:5); the glory of God in the face of Christ (2Co 4:6); Christ Jesus (Phi 3:8). As applied to human acquaintance with divine things, gnwsiv knowledge, is the lower, sofia wisdom, the higher stage. Knowledge may issue in self – conceit. It is wisdom that builds up the man (1Co 8:1). As attributes of God, the distinction appears to be between general and special : the wisdom of God ruling everything in the best way for the best end; the knowledge of God, His wisdom as it contemplates the relations of things, and adopts means and methods. The wisdom forms the plan; the knowledge knows the ways of carrying it out. 60 Past finding out [] . Only here and Eph 3:8. Appropriate to ways or paths. Lit., which cannot be tracked.
Fuente: Vincent’s Word Studies in the New Testament
1) “0 the depth of the riches,” (ho bathos ploutou) “0 depth of riches,” plutocracy. This is an exclamatory doxology of praise regarding the Providence of God’s sovereignty which pervaded the choosing, calling, fore-ordination, and predestination, of God relating to both Israel and the church, 1Co 2:10; Eph 1:7-8; Eph 3:18; Col 2:2-3.
2) “Both of the wisdom and knowledge of God!” (kai sophias kai gnoseos theou) “Both of wisdom and knowledge of God!” Solomon was a man of wisdom and knowledge, a “brain,” perhaps excelling any who had ever lived in wisdom and knowledge, astounding the Queen of Sheba – and Paul himself was a man of much learning; Yet as he probed the already written, and then being written, inspired Word, will, purpose, and work of God in Redemption, he broke forth in the doxology of praise here, 2Ki 4:34; 1Ki 10:1-8; 2Ch 9:22-23; Mat 12:42.
3) “How unsearchable are his judgments,” (hos, aneksereuneta ta trima autou) “How inscrutable (incomprehensive) are his judgments;” which are true, good, and holy, -administered in wisdom, knowledge, and love, in every act and every age, for redemptive purposes. He is too good and holy to do wrong, and too wise to make a mistake, because he knoweth all things, Psa 19:9; Psa 36:6; Psa 119:39; 1Jn 3:20; 2Pe 2:9.
4) “And his ways past finding out! (kai aneksichniastoi hai hodoi autou) “And how unsearchable are his ways!” even past finding out; they can not all be traced in the “footprints in the sand,” or in the sea, Psa 139:18; Ecc 11:5; Deu 32:3-4.
Fuente: Garner-Howes Baptist Commentary
33. Oh! the depth, etc. Here first the Apostle bursts into an exclamation, which arose spontaneously from a devout consideration of God’s dealings with the faithful; then in passing he checks the boldness of impiety, which is wont to clamor against the judgments of God. When therefore we hear, Oh! the depth, this expression of wonder ought greatly to avail to the beating down of the presumption of our flesh; for after having spoken from the word and by the Spirit of the Lord, being at length overcome by the sublimity of so great a mystery, he could not do otherwise than wonder and exclaim, that, the riches of God’s wisdom are deeper than our reason can penetrate to. Whenever then we enter on a discourse respecting the eternal counsels of God, let a bridle be always set on our thoughts and tongue, so that after having spoken soberly and within the limits of God’s word, our reasoning may at last end in admiration. Nor ought we to be ashamed, that if we are not wiser than he, who, having been taken into the third heaven, saw mysteries to man ineffable, and who yet could find in this instance no other end designed but that he should thus humble himself.
Some render the words of Paul thus, “Oh! the deep riches, and wisdom, and knowledge of God!” as though the word βάθος was an adjective; and they take riches for abundance, but this seems to me strained, and I have therefore no doubt but that he extols God’s deep riches of wisdom and knowledge. (374)
How incomprehensible, etc. By different words, according to a practice common in Hebrew, he expresses the same thing. For he speaks of judgments, then he subjoins ways, which mean appointments or the mode of acting, or the manner of ruling. But he still continues his exclamation, and thus the more he elevates the height of the divine mystery, the more he deters us from the curiosity of investigating it. Let us then learn to make no searchings respecting the Lord, except as far as he has revealed himself in the Scriptures; for otherwise we shall enter a labyrinth, from which the retreat is not easy. It must however be noticed, that he speaks not here of all God’s mysteries, but of those which are hid with God himself, and ought to be only admired and adored by us.
(374) It has indeed been thought by many that πλούτου, riches, is a noun belonging to wisdom and knowledge, used, after the Hebrew manner, instead of an adjective. It means abundance or exuberance. The sentence, according to our idiom, would then be, “O the profundity of the abounding wisdom and knowledge of God!” The Apostle, as in the words, “the gifts and calling of God,” adopts an ascending scale, and mentions wisdom first, and then knowledge, which in point of order precedes it. Then in the following clause, according to his usual practice, he retrogrades, and states first what belongs to knowledge — “judgments,” decisions, divine decrees, such as knowledge determines; and then “ways,” actual proceedings, for the guiding of which wisdom is necessary. Thus we see that his style is thoroughly Hebraistic.
It appears from Poole’s Syn., that [ Origen ], [ Chrysostom ], and [ Theodoret ] connected “riches” with “depth,” “O the abounding depth,” etc.; but that [ Ambrose ] and [ Augustine ] connected it with “wisdom,” etc. The use of the term in Eph 1:7, favors the last; for “the riches of his grace” mean clearly “his abounding grace.”
But some, with [ Stuart ], suppose that by “riches” here is meant God’s goodness or mercy, according to Rom 11:12, and Eph 3:8. And [ Stuart ] gives this version, “O the boundless goodness, and wisdom, and knowledge of God!” But this destroys the evident correspondence that is to be found in the latter clause of the verse, except we take in the remaining portion of the chapter, and this perhaps is what ought to be done. But if we do this, then πλούτου means “treasures, or blessings,” or copia beneficiorum,” as [ Schleusner ] expresses it. “Riches of Christ” mean the abounding blessings laid up in him, Eph 3:8. God may be viewed as set forth here as the source of all things, and as infinite in wisdom and knowledge; and these three things are the subjects to the end of the chapter, the two last verses referring to the first, and the end of the thirty-third and the thirty-fourth to the two others, and in an inverted order. The depth or vastness of his wealth or bounty is such, that he has nothing but his own, no one having given him anything, (Rom 11:35,) and from him, and through him, and to him are all things, (Rom 11:36.) Then as to the vastness of his wisdom and of his knowledge; what his knowledge has decided cannot be searched out, and what his wisdom has devised, as to the manner of executing his purposes, cannot be investigated; and no one can measure the extent of his knowledge, and no one has been his counselor, so as to add to the stores of his wisdom, (Rom 11:34.) That we may see the whole passage in lines —
33. Oh the depth of God’s bounty and wisdom and knowledge! How inscrutable his judgments And untraceable his ways!
34. Who indeed hath known the Lord’s mind, Or who has become his counselor?
35. Or who has first given to him? And it shall be repayed to him:
36. For from him and through him and to him are all things: To him the glory for ever. — Amen. — Ed.
Fuente: Calvin’s Complete Commentary
CRITICAL NOTES
Rom. 11:33.Judgments are Gods decrees; and His ways are His ways of bringing them to pass. How just is Pauls reflection upon the whole of his preceding remarks! Gods works in providence and grace are mysterious, and we may well exclaim, O the depth!
Rom. 11:36.God is the centre of all things; they come from Him. He is the universal Worker. All works contribute to His glory.
MAIN HOMILETICS OF THE PARAGRAPH.Rom. 11:33-36
A fathomless deep.What sublime irony is contained in the two questions repeated from the Old Testament prophet! Who hath known the mind of the Lord? or who hath been His counsellor? Imagine the savage, the child of the wigwam and the forest, whose instinctfor it can scarcely be called reasonis little keener than the instinct of the animals he seeks to entrap; presuming to advise the president of the British Association, the savage may plead ignorance in extenuation of his presumption. What plea shall the modern savant advance as he presumes to advise and to arraign infinite Wisdom? The best of us only know in part. Shall men of very partial knowledge and very scanty wisdom arrogate to themselves the high prerogative of being the counsellors of Him the depth of the riches of whose wisdom and knowledge is fathomless?
I. Here is a deep which is unfathomable.Modern man is a marvel. He can plumb the oceans depths and scale the mountains heights with surprising accuracy. Is there any height or depth, length or breadth, placed beyond the bounds of his ken? Modern man is great at material measurements. His scales are nicely adjusted for weighing material substances. What scales has he for moral measurements? What plumb-line can go down to the fathomless deep of infinite wisdom, knowledge, and goodness? He fails; and his failure is seen by his poor attempts at criticism.
II. A deep which is inexhaustible.As soon think of emptying the ocean with a cockle-shell as think of exhausting the treasures of divine goodness, wisdom, and knowledge. Gods material riches in this one planet are wonderfully abundant in supply. The mansions of earth are many, and are marvellously full of material riches. Her ample storehouses have been worked for centuries, and yet there is abundance. The earth is as radiant with beauty, the stars shine as brilliantly, the sun pours forth his rays as plentifully, and the clouds send down their rains as copiously as they did for the benefit of primeval man. If Gods material riches are so vast, what must be the intellectual and moral riches of that Being from whom proceeds all the glorious wealth of time!
III. A deep which is incomprehensible.The depth of the riches of Gods wisdom and knowledge cannot be proclaimed. Poets may sing, but the poets song falls short of the lofty theme. Pulpit orators may declaim, but too often they only darken knowledge by well-sounding words; and sometimes the more darkness which is raised by high-swelling phrases, the better pleased are the unthinking portions of the audience. Philosophers may dream and formulate theories, but they show no right comprehension of infinite riches. If the riches cannot be proclaimed, much less can they be comprehended. I cannot comprehend my own mind. How, then, can I comprehend the mind of the Infinite? I talk about reason, memory, and perception; but who shall tell me what it is that reasons, remembers, and perceives? Who shall settle the disputed point whether conscience be original or derived, whether it be a separate faculty or the resultant of several faculties? Whence comes inspiration? How is it that at some times thoughts flash and burn with lightning-like speed and brilliance, and at other times there are no visions? A mans own mind is incomprehensible. What about the infinite mind? Can I follow the penetrating gaze of Him who seeth all the secret things of darkness? Can I understand the nature of that knowledge to which the words new and old cannot have a meaning in our human sense? Can I comprehend the plans that overarch the sweep of mighty time? Thank God, though we cannot know all, we may know some. Complete knowledge is excluded; partial knowledge is our blessed privilege. The riches of Gods goodness fill the soul with adoring thankfulness.
IV. The human mind cannot counsel the divine mind.For we do not know the mind of the Lord. What is the meaning of mind? What is my mind? Is it a material or an immaterial force? What is the mind of a God? What is the of the infinite Ruler? What are the blessed tendencies of the eternal Spirit? What are the purposes and dispositions of the Godhead looking, as we say, far down the stream of ages? I cannot counsel to good purpose even an earthly statesmen in a critical state of the countrys affairs. A vast assembly of senators deliberate, but they fail to give the proper counsel. Who, then, shall be Gods counsellor? Of all the prime ministers of earth, who is fit to be the prime minister of the universal King? Gabriel himself cannot counsel. God requires no counsellor; He will bring all things to successful and triumphant issues.
V. The human mind cannot enrich the divine mind.We only give what we have received. God is no mans debtor. Still, God does not spurn our gifts. If we do what we can, God will recompense. If we give to Him our hearts, He will give back the gifts vastly improved.
VI. The human mind can glorify the divine mind.Not by making it more glorious, but by proclaiming Gods glory. Let us show forth His glory with our lives as well as our lips; let us believe that thanks-living is the true thanksgiving. Let the adoring song arise. For of Him, and through Him, and to Him are all things: of Him as the source; through Him as the channel, the directing agency; to Him as the great blissful centre of the whole system of things. To whom be glory for ever. Amen.
The splendour of the divine plan.The apostle has been carrying on a very close and elaborate argument, in which, among other things, he proves that Gods intentions towards men are unchangeable. He then points out that if there appear to be any change, it is merely in detail and not in purpose; God has unchangeably adhered to His scheme of mercy for all. Paul then pauses to consider these things, and during that pause there rolls in upon him a sense of the splendour of the divine plan which he has been setting forth. Hence he is moved to exclaim, O the depth, etc. These verses suggest:
I. The unbounded richness of Gods wisdom and knowledge.One can almost imagine Paul unconsciously repeating parts of the old Scriptures to himself: such as Psa. 36:5-6Thy lovingkindness, O Lord, etc.; or passages such as Job. 5:9Which doeth great things and unsearchable, etc; Job. 9:10Which doeth great things past finding out, etc.; Job. 36:22, etc. Gods richness in wisdom seen in all departments:
1. In nature.
2. In the method of His treatment of the helpless.
3. In His care for the dependentthe sparrow, the needy human creature. These all wait upon Him, and are not disappointed.
Too wise to err, too good to be unkind.
As we look around, or into experience, or into the Scriptures, it is all the samethere are indications of boundless mercy, infinite compassion, the most touching care for His creatures. The humblest hearer has a part in this care, can come in all his poverty, temporal or spiritual, and receive a gift. All can say, O the depth, etc.
II. On earth we shall never fully comprehend God.For many reasons.
1. The depths of His riches are so great. Ten thousand mercies only take us a small way down into the sea of His goodness.
2. Our own sense of His tenderness of judgment will never be adequate to His dealings. To man on earth, however wise and far-seeing, the ways of God are beyond discoverypast finding out.
3. In the whole of mans history none have succeeded in finding out the full mind of God, not even Gods friends. He reveals just enough of Himself to serve His purpose, and no more; with that we must be content. A Persian one said, The face of the beloved of God is covered with a veil. Except He Himself remove it off, nothing can tear it from Him. Another has said, From below, out of our misery, no path leads upwards to God. He being all-sufficient in Himself, must descend if man is to know Him.
III. If on earth we can never fully comprehend God, we can surely never fully recompense Him.For:
1. We do not even know the fulness of our debtNow I know in part.
2. What is finite can never reckon satisfactorily with the Infinite. In order to fully recompense we must have wealth equal to the largeness of the gift. And how could that be when we compare ourselves with God? To meet unlimited demands there must be unlimited supply; and only can He who owns all things do this.
IV. Contemplating all this, how can we suppose that we have any claim on God for His mercies?Whatever comes from Him is a gift, pure and simple, without the shadow of a claim. How great, then, the mercy that unfolded the scheme of a free salvationthat blessed the world with forgiveness in return for rebellionthat gave Christ and Christianity, with all their blessings, even to those who had turned away to follow their own wills!
V. Praise, then, is natural when thoughts of Gods goodness come.It is so in other matters. The promptings of the heart are to praise when one has done us a great kindness. Opinion seems to demand it. If one be slow to acknowledge kindness, the world says he is ungrateful and unworthy of any further share. And so in connection with Gods gifts and kind dealings. Some one has said, The right contemplation of divine verities should lead to the ascription of praise. The scheme of the gospel, coldly viewed, paves the way for doubt and cavil, while such an apostrophe as is contained in these verses strengthens our faith. In a word, suppressed praise is perilous to the spiritual constitution. O Lord, we will praise Thee, etc. Finally, service ought to accompany the praise: Lord, what wilt Thou have me to do?Albert Lee.
God His own last end in everything.
I. While God is knowable, He surpasses all our conceptions in His wisdom and His ways.While believing in the radical error which underlies the agnostic philosophy, we must at the same time admit that Gods wisdom and knowledge, His judgment and His ways, are past our comprehension. Just as a child may know, that is be acquainted with, his parent, while at the same time he is utterly unable to follow him into the regions of pure mathematics, comprehend the differential or integral calculus, or the new department of quaternions, so a Christian may know God as He reveals himself in Christ, and yet stand in awe before His unsearchable judgments. It is Gods glory to conceal a thing. If we saw through the whole administration of God, if there were no mystery or perplexity in His dealings, we should be living by reason, and not by faith. It is more consonant with our finiteness in its relation to the infinite God that we should be asked to trust God, even when we see no reason for His action, when clouds and darkness may be round about His throne. What we have to consider, therefore, is the proper attitude of the Christian before the profundities of God. It surely should be one of humility, of reverence, and of thankful praise. Now the partiality of Pauls revelation may be profitably contrasted with the fulness of revelation as claimed by Christ. For He claimed to have all that the Father doeth shown to Him. Nothing was or is concealed from Jesus. Gods ways were not unsearchable to Him.
II. Men should not in consequence dictate to God or try to be beforehand with Him.Now when the matter is put broadly in this way, it seems shocking presumption for men to set themselves up as superior persons, capable of dictating to the Eternal. Yet is this not the meaning of a large amount of the pessimistic literature of our time? If the pessimists had only been consulted, they could have planned a much better world than God has given us. His management has been, in their view, a mistake; and the only redeeming feature in the business is that He has somehow created the pessimists with judgments and powers superior to His own. It is time, surely, that these lamentations over a system of things so very imperfectly understood as yet should cease, and that creatures so finite should humble themselves before the Infinite and acknowledge His superiority in all things.
III. At the same time the apostle concludes that God is His own last end in everything.It seems a hard thing to take in, yet the more it is pondered the truer it appears. The supreme sun of the spiritual universe, the ultimate reason of everything in the world and work of grace, is the glory of God. Whole systems of truth move in subordinate relation to this; this is subordinate to nothing. There was nothing, wrote Robert Haldane to M. Chenviere of Geneva, brought under the consideration of the students which appeared to contribute so effectually to overthrow their false system of religion founded on philosophy and vain deceit as the sublime view of the majesty of God which is presented in these concluding verses of the first part of the epistle: Of Him, and through Him, and to Him are all things. Here God is described as His own last end in everything that He does. Judging of God as such a one as themselves, they were at first startled at the idea that He must love Himself supremely, infinitely more than the whole universe, and consequently must prefer His own glory to everything besides. But when they were reminded that God in reality is infinitely more amiable and more valuable than the whole creation, and that consequently, if He views things as they really are, He must regard Himself as infinitely worthy of being most valued and loved, they saw that this truth was incontrovertible. Their attention was at the same time turned to numerous passages of Scripture which assert that the manifestation of the glory of God is the great end of creation, that He has Himself chiefly in view in all His works and dispensations, and that it is a purpose in which He requires that all His intelligent creatures should acquiesce and seek to promote as their paramount duty. Passages to this effect, both in the Old and New Testament, far exceed in number what any one who has not examined the subject is at all aware of. Now if our idea of God be high enough, we shall conclude that He stands in such perfect relations to His creatures that in seeking His own glory He is at the same time seeking their highest good. Of course we have the power of resisting this claim of God, and setting ourselves in opposition to His glory; yet this will not defeat His purpose, but be overruled for His praise. It is not selfishness in the most high God to seek His own glory; He is so perfect in His love as to be incapable of selfishness. His glory conflicts with the real good of none of His creatures.R. M. E., in Pulpit Commentary.
A magnificent ascription of praise.In this magnificent ascription of praise a long train of reasoning finds its climax. Gods redeeming plan has been traced from its conception in the eternal counsels, through its course in time in the believers call, justification, and sanctification, up to its culmination in the heavenly glory. The apostle has passed under review the relation in which both Jew and Gentile stood to the plan of salvation, arguing that there was no difference in the sight of the righteous law, that God had shut them all up into unbelief that He might have mercy on all. Then he bursts out in words of adoring wonder at the comprehensiveness and grandeur of the plan of divine mercy.
I. The riches of the divine perfections.O the depth of the riches both of the wisdom and knowledge of God. This is a favourite mode of expression with St. Paul (cf. Rom. 10:12; Eph. 3:8; Php. 4:19), and is meant to impress us with the wealth of the grace of God to guilty man. Gods riches are like a mine. The apostle has been digging in this mine, and when he comes to tell his fellowmen the treasures he has found, language seems to fail him, and he exclaims, O the depth of the riches! Like seams of unexhausted wealth in the bowels of the earth, so in the infinite heart of God are deep springs of love, riches of mercy and wisdom and knowledge, which no spiritual surveyor has yet touched. The apostle came back from his survey with a profound sense of the vastness of the field. Each attribute might furnish material for meditation. Knowledge and wisdom are here named, the one devising the plan and the other adapting the means to the end. The redeemed to all eternity will not exhaust the wealth of these attributes. Each new discovery will stir them to new songs of wonder and praise.
II. The unsearchableness of the divine methods.How unsearchable are His judgments, and His ways past finding out! Gods ways are as inscrutable as His perfections. His plans and methods of working are mysterious. The mystery of the call of the Gentiles was kept hid since the foundation of the world, but now made known in His dealings with a lost world without respect of persons, Jew and Gentile alike being included in His all-embracing mercy. Think of His ways towards individualse.g., Moses, Abraham, Saul of Tarsus. And how graciously He has dealt with us personally! He has at His disposal an infinite wealth of appliances and means of leading erring men to Himself. Bless the Lord, O my soul, and forget not all His benefits.
III. The independence of the divine counsels.Who hath known the mind of the Lord? or who hath been His counsellor? These quotations from the Old Testament show the apostles acquaintance with Scripture and agreement in doctrine. The glory of human redemption belongs to God alone. He did not share His secrets with any created intelligence. None could have known His mind till He was pleased to divulge it, for He held counsel with none. He had no instructor. The great thoughts that are gradually taking form throughout the ages owe their conception to His sovereign mind. With whom took He counsel, and who instructed Him? What a lofty view does this give us of Gods unaided wisdom and knowledge and sovereign will! No suggestion from man could improve or alter the divine procedure, or aid Him in working out His plans. Each generation has its little system which lives for a day and ceases to be; but Gods mighty plan lives on and develops from age to age. God is supreme, sovereign, independent of human wisdom or knowledge; and when His plan is complete, He alone shall bear the glory.
IV. The manifestation of the divine glory.For of Him, and to Him, and through Him, are all things: to whom be glory for ever. The gracious purpose which runs through the ages will, when completed, show the glory of its Author. Revelation is essentially an unveiling of God, the manifesting of His perfections being the ultimate end of the scheme of grace. The glory of human redemption belongs to Him alone. This is the goal to which the whole creation moves. God will be all and in all.
1. For of Him are all things. He is the first cause, the fountain-head of the stream of grace that flows through time. It originated in His eternal love and purpose.
2. Through Him are all things. It is through His sole presiding agency that the purposes of His love and grace are brought about. He that began the good work will carry it on to perfection.
3. To Him are all things. The redemptive forces which He launched on the world will seek their source when their work is done. The stream of grace which broke out from beneath His throne will, after refreshing generations of weary men, return to Him in circular flow, bearing on its bosom all that is worth saving from the wreck of a ruined world. And so the end and the beginning will meet in the far-off divine event. All things will be redeemed and reconciledthings in heaven and things on earth. And throughout eternity a redeemed and reconciled universe, viewing the height and depth and length and breadth of the redeeming plan, will ascribe all the glory to Him who reigns, Jehovah God alone.D. Merson, B.D.
SUGGESTED COMMENTS ON Rom. 11:33-36
A vast survey of the world.Like a traveller who has reached the summit of an alpine ascent, the apostle turns and contemplates. Depths are at his feet; but waves of light illumine them, and there spreads all around an immense horizon which his eye commands. The plan of God in the government of mankind spreads out before him, and he expresses the feelings of admiration and gratitude with which the prospect fills his heart. The word to Him does not refer to Gods personal satisfaction, an idea which might undoubtedly be supported; for, as Beck says, the egoism of God is the life of the world. But it is more natural to apply the term to Him to the accomplishment of His will, in which His own glory and the happiness of His sanctified creatures blend together as one and the same thing. It has been sometimes attempted to apply these three prepositional clauses to the three persons of the divine Trinity. Modern exegesis (Mey., Gess, Hofm.) has in general departed from this parallel, and rightly. When Paul speaks of God, absolutely considered, it is always the God and Father he intends, without of course excluding His revelation through Christ and His communication by the Holy Spirit. But this distinction is not raised here, and had no place in the context. What the apostle was concerned to say in closing was that all things proceeding from the creative will of God, advancing through His wisdom and terminating in the manifestation of His holiness, must one day celebrate His glory, and His glory only. Never was survey more vast taken of the divine plan of the worlds history. First, the epoch of primitive unity, in which the human family forms still only one unbroken whole; then the antagonism between the two religious portions of the race created by the special call of Abrahamthe Jews continuing in the fathers house, but with a legal and servile spirit, the Gentiles walking in their own ways. At the close of this period, the manifestation of Christ determining the return of the latter to the domestic hearth, but at the same time the departure of the former. Finally, the Jews, yielding to the divine solicitations and to the spectacle of salvation enjoyed by the Gentiles as children of grace; and so the final universalism in which all previous discords are resolved, restoring in an infinitely higher form the original unity, and setting before the view of the universe the family of God fully constituted.Godet.
ILLUSTRATIONS TO CHAPTER 11
Rom. 11:33. Mysteries not to be pried into.Arriving in the city, says the Rabbi Josuah, I met a little boy carrying a covered dish. What hast thou in that dish, child? demanded I. My mother would not have covered it, master, had she wished its contents to be known, replied the little wit, and went on.From the Talmud.
Fuente: The Preacher’s Complete Homiletical Commentary Edited by Joseph S. Exell
Text
Rom. 11:33-36. O the depth of the riches both of the wisdom and the knowledge of God! how unsearchable are his judgments, and his ways past tracing out! Rom. 11:34 For who hath known the mind of the Lord? or who hath been his counselor? Rom. 11:35 or who hath first given to him, and it shall be recompensed unto him again? Rom. 11:36 For of him, and through him, and unto him, are all things. To him be the glory for ever. Amen.
REALIZING ROMANS, Rom. 11:33-36
502.
What would prompt the doxology in Rom. 11:33-36?
503.
Show the difference between knowledge and wisdom as here used. cf. Rom. 11:33 a.
504.
Since we cannot know the mind of the Lord, what should be our attitude toward his will?
505.
We are so much in debt to God. Explain how this is true, and the response we should make to the debt.
506.
Concerning God, we are of him, through him, unto him. This calls forth a response on our part which is to him. Explain each.
Paraphrase
Rom. 11:33-36. In surveying the divine dispensations, instead of finding fault, We ought to cry out, O the greatness, both of the wisdom of God in contriving and ordering these dispensations, and of the knowledge of God in foreseeing the effects which they would produce! How unsearchable are his determinations, and his ways past finding out!
Rom. 11:34 For what man or angel hath comprehended all the reasons of Gods determinations, so as to be able to judge of his ways? Or who hath given him advice, respecting either the planning or the managing of the affairs of the universe?
Rom. 11:35 Or has any one laid an obligation on God, by first conferring a favor on him? Let him show the obligation, and he shall have full recompense.
Rom. 11:36 For from him all things proceed, and by him all things are governed, and to his glory are all things both made and governed. To him alone be ascribed the glory of the creation, preservation, and government of the universe, for ever. Amen.
Summary
Great is the depth of Gods resources, and wisdom, and knowledge in working out the redemption of the world. We cannot know beforehand what his decisions are, nor how he moves in effecting his ends. No one has ever been privy to his counsels, nor any appointed to aid him. All things originate in him, and all things are for his honor and glory.
Comment
d.
Conclusion: Rom. 11:33-36
We can think of no better words to express the thought of this conclusion than the paraphrasing of these verses as given by W. Sanday on p. 333 in the International Critical Commentary. Rom. 11:33 When we contemplate a scheme like this spread out before us in vast panorama, how forcibly does it bring home to us the inexhaustible profundity of that Divine mind by which it was planned! The decisions which issue from that mind and the methods by which it works are alike inscrutable to man. Rom. 11:34 Into the secrets of the Almighty none can penetrate. No counsellor stands at His ear to whisper words of suggestion. Rom. 11:35 Nothing in Him is derived from without so as to be claimed back again by its owner. Rom. 11:36 He is the source of all things. Through Him all things flow. He is the final cause to which all things tend. Praised forever be His name! Amen.
Rethinking in Outline Form
5.
This rejection neither total nor final. Rom. 11:1-36.
a.
Their rejection not total. Rom. 11:1-10.
(1)
Reasons for concluding it was not total. Rom. 11:1-5.
(a)
Paul was an Israelite, but he was not rejected. Rom. 11:1-2 a.
(b)
Conditions then were like those in the days of Elijah. Rom. 11:2 b Rom. 11:5.
(2)
Reasons for their rejection. Rom. 11:6-10.
(a)
Acceptance is by grace. Rom. 11:6.
(b)
The elect found itnot Israel. Rom. 11:7 a.
(c)
The rest were hardened. Rom. 11:7 b Rom. 11:10.
b.
Their rejection not final. Rom. 11:11-24.
(1)
Their fall was an advantage to the Gentiles. Rom. 11:11.
(2)
Their fall was a blessing to the Gentiles but it does not compare to the blessing their fullness will be to the Gentiles. Rom. 11:12.
(3)
The Jews will one day turn to Christ. This will be like life from the dead. One day God will graft in the branches that are now broken off. The rejection of the Jews should be a warning to the Gentiles. Rom. 11:12-21.
c.
Mercy to all the ultimate purpose of God. Rom. 11:25-32.
(1)
The hardening of Israel will last only until the fullness of the Gentiles comes in. Rom. 11:25-26.
(2)
God is able to show mercy to all. Rom. 11:27-32.
d.
Conclusion. Rom. 11:33-36.
We can cry out in amazement at the great wisdom and love of God. Rom. 11:33-36.
Fuente: College Press Bible Study Textbook Series
(33) Riches.The two substantives which follow may be taken as dependent upon riches. This is the construction adopted in the Authorised version, and is expressed by the use of the word both. Or all three substantives may be independent, O the depth of the riches, and of the wisdom and knowledge of God! In either case, riches means inexhaustible resources, implying either that the wisdom and knowledge of God are inexhaustible, or that the materials at their command are inexhaustible. By means of these infinite resources God is able to bring good even out of evil.
Judgments.Decisions, such as that by which Israel was excluded and the Gentiles admitted.
Fuente: Ellicott’s Commentary for English Readers (Old and New Testaments)
(33-36) This grand and comprehensive view of the divine purposes makes so deep an impression upon the Apostle that he breaks out into an impassioned ascription of praise, with which the first (doctrinal) portion of the Epistle is brought to a close.
Fuente: Ellicott’s Commentary for English Readers (Old and New Testaments)
4. The Doxology closing the Argument.
33. Riches Tholuck and others, including Alford, hold riches, wisdom, and knowledge to be three coordinates, dependent upon depth. It would then read, “O the depth of the riches, and wisdom, and knowledge of God!” Riches would then imply affluence of goodness and blessing; as rich in Rom 10:12, and riches, Php 4:19. That this is the true sense is probable from the parallelisms (well shown by Dr. Forbes) which follow. (See our Introduction to Romans.)
This passage is at once a sublime, rapturous apostrophe, and a rich commentary by the apostle on his whole previous argument. But it is plain that Paul is not a Calvinistic commentator. When Calvin surveyed his own scheme his shuddering comment was, “A horrible decree, I confess!” When Paul surveys this his own grand argument he exultantly exclaims, “O the depth of God’s bounty and wisdom!”
Riches Both from its own force and from the parallel passages, to be taken as meaning God’s infinite resources for good to his creatures. His is a deep, yea, a bottomless treasury, pouring forth its streams of perpetual bounty. His wisdom is absolute skill in planning, as his knowledge is absolute accuracy in perceiving. As God’s knowledge foresees and comprehends all the possibilities of all possible things and courses, so his wisdom devises from himself the best course of all possible courses; and from the riches of his power and goodness he carries that course into perfect and glorious execution.
Judgments Not so much his judicial is all his providential decisions as his ways are his modes of executing them.
Fuente: Whedon’s Commentary on the Old and New Testaments
‘O the depth of the riches both of the wisdom and the knowledge of God! How unsearchable are his judgments, and his ways past tracing out!’
As Paul considers the amazing nature of God’s plan, to leave the Jews in unbelief so that the way might be opened to the Gentiles, and then sees how this in turn will result in the Gentiles going to the Jews with the Gospel, he cries out in amazement. How deep are the riches both of the wisdom and knowledge of God. How unsearchable are His judgments, how untraceable are His ways. He may also have had in mind the mystery of election, and indeed the mystery of God’s whole way of salvation. For all are a matter of wonder and praise. They defy human comprehension, and must therefore be accepted by faith..
Fuente: Commentary Series on the Bible by Peter Pett
Paul Marvels At The Amazing Wisdom And Knowledge Of God As He Considers God’s Way Of Working As Revealed In What He Himself Has Said (11:33-36).
Paul now marvels at the wisdom and knowledge that God has demonstrated in what He has done in using the unbelief of the Jews to bring about the evangelisation of the Gentiles, and then using the Gentiles to evangelise the Jews. It may also have in mind wonder at God’s method of salvation in chapters 1-8. But his verdict is that God’s judgments are truly unsearchable, and that His ways are beyond the ability of men to explain or trace out. And this is because there is no one in Heaven or earth who can understand the mind of God, or give Him advice on what to do. Nor is there anyone who can contribute something to God that puts Him in their debt. God is over and beyond all.
Fuente: Commentary Series on the Bible by Peter Pett
Conclusion: Praise to God for His Love for Mankind Rom 11:33-36 serves as a conclusion to the exposition of the doctrine of justification by faith in Jesus Christ, and as summary of the Gospel of Jesus Christ. This burst of praise and glory to God is the result of being overwhelmed with the grace and mercy of God for redeeming a fallen race of depraved humanity. This revelation into the depths of God’s love in Rom 11:33-36 is the result of the revelation of God’s divine plan of divine for Israel and the Gentiles through His divine foreknowledge of predestination, calling, justification, and glorification (Rom 8:29-30). Earlier, in Rom 8:31-39, Paul burst forth into similar praise as a result of the first eight chapters in which Paul examines the depths of man’s sinfulness and the extent to which God went to reconcile mankind back to Himself.
Paul began this passage on the divine election of the nation of Israel (Romans 9-11) with the words, “I have great heaviness and continual sorrow in my heart. For I could wish that myself were accursed from Christ for my brethren, my kinsmen according to the flesh:” (Rom 9:2-3) But his examination of God’s redeeming love for them brings him out and into a moment of praise and glory to God for orchestrating such a marvelous plan of redemption. Paul’s burst of praise for God’s redemptive work for his people Israel and the Church in the closing remarks in Rom 11:33-36 is the result of Paul’s intense love and sorrow for his nation as a fellow Jew; so that Paul’s sorrow will be followed with joy as prophesied in Psa 126:6 and Isa 51:11.
Psa 126:6, “He that goeth forth and weepeth, bearing precious seed, shall doubtless come again with rejoicing, bringing his sheaves with him.”
Isa 51:11, “Therefore the redeemed of the LORD shall return, and come with singing unto Zion; and everlasting joy shall be upon their head: they shall obtain gladness and joy; and sorrow and mourning shall flee away.”
Rom 11:33 O the depth of the riches both of the wisdom and knowledge of God! how unsearchable are his judgments, and his ways past finding out!
Rom 11:33
(1) the unsearchable riches of Christ Jesus (Eph 1:18; Eph 3:8), and
(2) to the wisdom and revelation that the Holy Spirit imparts into our spirit man (Eph 1:17), and
(3) to the knowledge of God the Father that transforms our minds and anchors our soul in the hope of His calling (Eph 1:18).
Thus, we see the Trinity in each of their roles in God’s Plan of Redemption for mankind. They are listed in the order in which redemption works in the life of every believer; for he is saved through Christ Jesus, sanctified through the Holy Spirit, in hope of eternal life which has been planned by God the Father.
Rom 11:33 “ how unsearchable are his judgments” Word Study on “unsearchable” Strong says the Greek word “unsearchable” ( ) (G419) literally means, “not searched out,” and by implication, “inscrutable.” This word is used only once in the New Testament.
Note a word study of other Greek words in this family. The Greek word (G2045) means, “to seek, to investigate.” This word is used six times in the New Testament.
Joh 5:39, “ Search the scriptures; for in them ye think ye have eternal life: and they are they which testify of me.”
Joh 7:52, “They answered and said unto him, Art thou also of Galilee? Search , and look: for out of Galilee ariseth no prophet.”
Rom 8:27, “And he that searcheth the hearts knoweth what is the mind of the Spirit, because he maketh intercession for the saints according to the will of God.”
1Co 2:10, “But God hath revealed them unto us by his Spirit: for the Spirit searcheth all things, yea, the deep things of God.”
1Pe 1:11, “ Searching what, or what manner of time the Spirit of Christ which was in them did signify, when it testified beforehand the sufferings of Christ, and the glory that should follow.”
Rev 2:23, “And I will kill her children with death; and all the churches shall know that I am he which searcheth the reins and hearts: and I will give unto every one of you according to your works.”
The Greek word (G1830) means, “to explore.” It is used only once in the New Testament:
1Pe 1:10, “Of which salvation the prophets have enquired and searched diligently , who prophesied of the grace that should come unto you:”
Comments – His judgments refer to His decisions, if we use this word in its broadest sense of meaning. The translation “decisions” fits the context of this verse better since it is placed in parallel meaning with the word “way,” as this verse is structured poetically in Hebrew parallelisms.
Rom 11:33 “and his ways past finding out” Word Study on “past finding out” Strong says the Greek word “past finding out” ( ) (G421) means, “not tracked out, untraceable.” There are two uses of this word in the New Testament (Rom 11:33, Eph 3:8).
Eph 3:8, “Unto me, who am less than the least of all saints, is this grace given, that I should preach among the Gentiles the unsearchable riches of Christ;”
Rom 11:33 Comments – Rom 11:3 describes the character of God’s wisdom ( ), knowledge ( ), and judgments ( ) being unsearchable and beyond man’s ability to fully understand. The understanding of his ways are beyond depth of deepest seas, beyond height of mountain peaks, beyond the farthest reaches of outer space, the universe, beyond the smallest particles of an atom. There are a number of Old Testament passages that say the same thing.
Job 5:9, “Which doeth great things and unsearchable; marvellous things without number”
Psa 145:3, “Great is the LORD, and greatly to be praised; and his greatness is unsearchable.”
Isa 40:28, “Hast thou not known? hast thou not heard, that the everlasting God, the LORD, the Creator of the ends of the earth, fainteth not, neither is weary? there is no searching of his understanding.”
These riches are embedded in His Word, particularly the Gospel of Jesus Christ, and through the Gospel we can now partake of these endless riches. However, no man has ever exhausted the study of all sixty-six books of the Holy Bible in a single lifetime because its content is too vast and its insights too deep.
Rom 11:34 For who hath known the mind of the Lord? or who hath been his counsellor?
Rom 11:34
Isa 40:13, “Who hath directed the Spirit of the LORD, or being his counsellor hath taught him?”
Rom 11:35 Or who hath first given to him, and it shall be recompensed unto him again?
Rom 11:35
Job 35:7, “If thou be righteous, what givest thou him? or what receiveth he of thine hand?:”
Job 41:11, “ Who hath prevented me, that I should repay him ? whatsoever is under the whole heaven is mine.”
Rom 11:36 For of him, and through him, and to him, are all things: to whom be glory for ever. Amen.
Rom 11:36
The phrase “For of him, and through him, and to him, are all things,” reveals that there God has a purpose and a plan for everything that happens, for both the good and the bad. There is nothing that God will not use for His ultimate glory and for our good, which Paul states in this same verse by saying, “to whom be glory for ever.” For example, God took the fall of man in the Garden of Eden and wrought something good out of it. He is at work daily in our lives doing the same. He once said to me after one of our family members experienced a difficult time, “I use the sweet and the bitter to mould and shape your life.” Everything has a purpose, and it is because of the sacrificial death of Jesus Christ on Calvary that God is able to work and redeem our lives in such a marvelous way, as He works with every detail of our lives.
Thus, in Rom 11:36 Paul concludes his exposition of the Gospel of Jesus Christ which began in Rom 1:16-17 when he states, “For I am not ashamed of the gospel of Christ: for it is the power of God unto salvation to every one that believeth; to the Jew first, and also to the Greek. For therein is the righteousness of God revealed from faith to faith: as it is written, The just shall live by faith.” Paul took us through the foreknowledge of God the Father (Rom 1:1-15) and the depravity of mankind (Rom 1:16 to Rom 3:20), through justification that can only be found in Christ Jesus (Rom 3:21 to Rom 5:21), through the sanctification of the Holy Spirit (Rom 6:1 to Rom 8:16), and thorough the glorification of the Church and of Israel (Rom 8:17 to Rom 11:32). Thus, Rom 11:36 serves as a summary of the Gospel of Jesus Christ, as it states God’s plan of redemption in a brief nutshell. The context of this closing passage of Rom 11:33-36 simply states that God the Father has initiated this great plan of redemption because of His unsearchable love for us.
Rom 11:36 Scripture References – Note a similar verse:
1Co 8:6, “But to us there is but one God, the Father, of whom are all things, and we in him; and one Lord Jesus Christ, by whom are all things, and we by him.”
Fuente: Everett’s Study Notes on the Holy Scriptures
A concluding doxology:
v. 33. O the depth of the riches both of the wisdom and knowledge of God! How unsearchable are His judgments, and His ways past finding out!
v. 34. For who hath known the mind of the Lord? or who hath been His counselor?
v. 35. Or who hath first given to Him, and it shall be recompensed to him again?
v. 36. For of Him and through Him and to Him are all things; to whom be glory forever! Amen. The apostle has brought the historical part of his exposition to a close. And with all the miracles of God’s grace and mercy in mind as they appear in His dealing with both Jews and Gentiles, Paul feels constrained to break forth in a hymn of praise and thanksgiving. What depths, unplumbed and unknowable depths of His riches, both of wisdom and of knowledge, are here spread out before our eyes! His essential wisdom is such that He always knows how to reach His object, that He always chooses the proper means. The knowledge of God is so rich that no man can possibly grasp or measure it; His wisdom is so deep that no human reason can sound its depths. His judgments are beyond the investigation of men, and His ways beyond their comprehension. The judgments of God are principally His sentences of hardening and condemnation. The very fact that God permits obstinate sinners to be caught in the meshes of their own opposition and then turns their rejection in favor of the vessels of His mercy, exceeds our power of comprehension and leaves us in helpless bewilderment. The very fact that God’s providence upholds the world until He has carried His designs of mercy into execution with regard to the elect, shows such unsearchable, incomprehensible wisdom and mercy that we can only stand in adoring admiration; we cannot lift the veil that would uncover the wonder of these mysteries of God.
That the judgments and ways of God are unsearchable and incomprehensible the apostle now emphasizes in three questions, taken from Isa 40:13; Job 41:3. Whoever understood the mind of the Lord? Or who became His counselor? Or who first gave to Him, and it will be given back to him in return? Who has the knowledge of the mind and designs of God, and the reason of His decrees? Who, then, stood by His side to give Him advice as to the mode of their execution? How would it be possible for any man, for any creature, in fact, to place God under obligations? Only three cases could be conceived of in which a man might know what God has planned and how He intends to carry out His plans: If he had access to the mind, to the thoughts of God; if he had taken part in the planning; if he were able, from the merits of his own relation toward God, to figure out what he may expect of God in return. The creature has absolutely no merit with respect to God, for God is Himself all in all: From Him, and by Him, and to Him are all things. All things that happen in the world, particularly all circumstances connected with man’s salvation, have their origin in God, are put into execution by God, and serve the purposes of God. Instead, therefore, of trying to penetrate the mysteries of God and to uncover His unsearchable, incomprehensible wisdom, all men, and especially all believers, shall bow their knees in praise and adoration and say with the apostle: To Him be glory forever! Amen.
Summary
The apostle laments the fact that the Jews rejected their salvation, shows that the rejection of the Jews, in turn, served for the benefit of the heathen, as well as the saving of the remnant in Israel, the elect from both Jews and Gentiles finally making up the fullness of the spiritual Israel; he finally adds a prayer of wondering thankfulness to the wisdom of God.
Fuente: The Popular Commentary on the Bible by Kretzmann
Rom 11:33. O the depth, &c. This emphatical conclusion seems in an especial manner to regard the Jews, whom the Apostle would hereby teach modesty and submission to the over-ruling hand of the all-wise God, unfit as they are to call him to account for his dealing so favourably with the Gentiles. “His wisdom and ways are infinitely above their comprehension; and will they take upon them to advise him what to do? Or is God in their debt?Let them say for what, and he shall repay it to them.” This is a strong rebuke to the Jews, but delivered, as we see, in a way very gentle and inoffensive: a method which the Apostle endeavours every where to observe towards his nation. See Locke.
Fuente: Commentary on the Holy Bible by Thomas Coke
Rom 11:33 . The great and holy truth containing the whole divine procedure in preparing bliss (Rom 11:32 ), with which Paul now arrives at the close of his entire development of doctrine in the epistle, compels first an enraptured expression of praise to God from his deeply-moved heart, before he can commence the exhortations , which he then (chap. 12) purposes to subjoin.
] , , Chrysostom.
The depth is an expression of great fulness and superabundance , according to the very prevalent mode of expressing also in the classics greatness of riches by (Soph. Aj . 130, and Lobeck, in loc .; but comp. with Ellendt, I. p. 286), (Ael. V. H. iii. 18), (Tyrt. iii. 6), , very rich (Aesch. Suppl . p. 549, Crinag . 17), (Poll. iii. 109). Comp. Dorville, ad Charit . p. 232; Blomfield, Gloss. ad Aesch. Pers . 471. By this sense we are here to abide, just because is added, and without deriving the expression from the conception of subterranean treasure-chambers (van Hengel); and we are not to find in it the sense of unsearchableness (Philippi), which is not expressed even in 1Co 2:10 , Jdt 8:14 , and is not required by the following . . . ., since this rather characterizes the from the point of view of human knowledge, to which it must necessarily be unfathomable, but in a peculiar relation. In its reference to . , namely, is the depth of wisdom, i.e. the fulness of wisdom, which is acquainted with the nature and the connection of its objects not superficially, but exhaustively and fundamentally, and is therefore incomprehensible by human judgment. See on and , as applying to mental depth (Plat. Theaet . p. 183 E; Polybius, xxvii. 10. 3, vi. 24. 9, xxi. 5. 5), Dissen, ad Pind. Nem . iv. 7, p. 396; Blomfield, ad Aesch. Sept . 578; Jacobs, ad Anthol . XI. p. 252. Comp. , Pind. Nem . vii. 1; Plut. Sol . 14; , Aesch. Pers . 138.
] is either regarded as opening the series of genitival definitions of : O depth (1) of riches, and (2) of wisdom, and (3) of knowledge of God (so Origen, Chrysostom, Theodoret, Theophylact, Grotius, Bengel, Semler, Flatt, Tholuck, Kllner, de Wette, Olshausen, Fritzsche, Philippi, Ewald, Hofmann, Mangold, and others); or the two other genitives are subordinated to (Augustine, Ambrosiaster, Luther, Calvin, Beza, Wolf, Koppe, Reiche, van Hengel, and others), in which case, however, . . is not to be resolved into deep riches , but is to be taken: O depth of riches in wisdom as well as in knowledge of God; comp. Col 2:2 ; Rom 2:4 . The decision between these two suppositions is given by what follows, of which is the theme . As Rom 11:33-34 describe the and , and Rom 11:35-36 the , the former view, which also primarily and most naturally presents itself, is to be preferred. , however, is usually understood of the divine riches of grace (comp. Rom 2:4 , Rom 10:12 ; Eph 1:7 ; Eph 2:7 ); see Rom 11:32 . To this Rom 11:35 aptly corresponds; and see Rom 10:12 . But since no genitival definition is appended, we must content ourselves simply with the sense of the word itself; how superabundantly rich is God! Phi 4:19 . Comp. Rckert, Fritzsche, Philippi, Hofmann.
and are certainly to be distinguished (comp. on Col 2:3 ), but popularly , so that the former , the more general, is the wisdom of God (comp. Rom 16:27 ; Eph 3:10 ), ruling everything in the best way for the best end; while the latter , the more special, is the knowledge pertaining to it of all relations , and thus especially of the means which He therein employs, of the methods which He has therein to take. To the latter the are to be referred , i.e. His measures, modes of procedure , , Chrysostom (comp. Heb 3:10 , Act 13:10 , according to the Heb. , and also to classical usage); to the former the belong , i.e. decisions , resolves formed, according to which His action proceeds (comp. Zep 3:8 ; Wis 12:12 ), as He, e.g. , has decided, according to Rom 11:32 , that all should be disobedient, in order that all might find mercy. On account of the deep of God His are unsearchable for men, etc.
, unsearchable , is found only in Heraclitus as quoted in Clement and Symmachus, Pro 25:3 , Jer 17:9 , Suidas; , untraceable (Eph 3:8 ), (Suidas), corresponds to the metaphorical . Comp. Job 5:9 ; Job 9:10 ; Job 34:24 ; Manass. 6; Clement, ad Cor . Rom 1:20 .
Fuente: Heinrich August Wilhelm Meyer’s New Testament Commentary
DISCOURSE: 1902
THE UNSEARCHABLENESS OF GODS WAYS
Rom 11:33. O the depth of the riches both of the wisdom and knowledge of God! how unsearchable are his judgments, and his ways past finding out!
ON whatever side we look, we are surrounded with mysteries; yea, we are a mystery to ourselves. The works of creation, and providence, and redemption, are all mysterious; and the more we know of them, the more we shall be disposed to exclaim, O the depths! Perhaps no one of the children of men ever had so deep an insight into the great mysteries of the Gospel as the Apostle Paul: yet, when he had unravelled them in a way that no other man ever did, he was constrained to acknowledge, that there were in the Gospel, treasures unexplored, and mines unsearchable, and riches of wisdom that far surpassed the conceptions of any finite intelligence. This is a truth which we ought to be well acquainted with: for, till we are made sensible of it, we shall never regard the Gospel with that reverence and admiration which ought ever to exist in our minds towards it. Let us then contemplate the unsearchableness of Gods judgments, that is, of the means he has appointed for our salvation, and the incomprehensibility of his ways, by which he dispenses that salvation to fallen man.
He is altogether incomprehensible,
I.
In the way he has provided for the salvation of men
Consider,
1.
His sending his only dear Son to he the surety and substitute of fallen man
[From having been early instructed in that great mystery, the incarnation of the Son of God, we hear of it without emotion: but when we contemplate, that the Creator of heaven and earth became a creature, in the likeness of sinful flesh; that in order to his being formed immaculate, he was born of a pure Virgin through the operation of the Holy Ghost; and that, being so born, he did actually become a curse for us, and bear our iniquities in his own body on the tree; we are lost in wonder. We are not only at a loss to comprehend it, but seem as if we could not believe it; so strange, so almost impossible, does it appear: and if it were not confirmed in such a way that it is impossible to withhold our belief, we should be ready to account it blasphemy to assert such a fact, and madness to believe it. But the fact is so: and as, at the first revelation of it, it filled all heaven with wonder, so will it do to all eternity: the height and depth and length and breadth of the love displayed in it, will never be explored.]
2.
His saving men by a righteousness not their own
[This seems no less unsearchable than the former. Supposing that God had sent his Son to expiate our guilt, we should at least expect that he would require man to work out a righteousness for himself, and to obtain salvation by his obedience to the law. But, blessed be his name! he has not required any such thing. He requires men indeed to be righteous, and to obey his law: nor will he save any man who does not in these respects endeavour to fulful his will. But he does not require man to fulfil his law, in order to work out a righteousness whereby he may be justified: on the contrary, he requires men to renounce all dependence on their own righteousness, and to seek for acceptance solely through the righteousness of Christ. A perfect righteousness of our own we could not have: and therefore God sent his own Son to obey the precepts of the law, as well as to suffer its penalties, and by his own obedience unto death, to bring in an everlasting righteousness, which should be unto all, and upon all, them that believe. Thus the vilest sinner in the universe, the very instant he truly believes in Christ, becomes possessed of a righteousness commensurate with the utmost demands of Gods perfect law, a righteousness in which he stands before God without spot or blemish. How wonderful is this! how inconceivable to any finite capacity, that God should, I had almost said that God could, appoint such a way for the restoration and salvation of fallen man!]
3.
His bringing out of mans fall more glory to himself, and more good to man, than if man had never fallen
[The dishonour done to God by the fall of man was beyond all conception great: yet is the honour done to him by mans recovery infinitely greater. True it is, God would have been equally glorious in himself, if man had never been restored: but his perfections would never have been so displayed in the sight of his creatures. It would never have been known that mercy constituted any part of his character; whilst it is, in reality, that perfection in which he most delights. Nor would his justice have appeared so awful in the destruction of the whole human race, as it appears in inflicting death upon his only dear Son, when standing in the place of sinners. But suppose that mercy might have been exercised towards sinners in some other way; how could justice have borne any part in their salvation? But now justice is as much engaged on the side of a believing penitent as mercy itself; and the penitent, whilst he entreats God to be merciful to himself, may entreat him also to be just to his Beloved Son, who paid the full price for his redemption: yes, he may hope in the very justice of God, who is a just God and a Saviour, and can be just, and yet the justifier of all them that believe. What an inscrutable mystery is here!
But we must notice also the good that accrues to man. Suppose man had never fallen, he would have had but a creatures righteousness, and consequently a reward only proportioned to it: but now the believer has the righteousness of the Creator himself, even the Lord Jesus Christ, who is made righteousness unto us, and is therefore called, The Lord our Righteousness. I may add too, that the believer is actually more safe than Adam was in Paradise. Adam had his own safety, and that of all his posterity, committed into his hands: and what the event was, we know by bitter experience. But God has now committed his chosen people to the hands of his own Son, that he may redeem them by his blood, sanctify them by his Spirit, and preserve them blameless unto his heavenly kingdom. Now Jesus himself tells us, that of those who were given him, he lost none, nor ever would lose one; for that none ever could, or ever should, pluck them out of his hands. The Father has no longer trusted us, so to speak, with our own destinies: he has treasured up our life and strength in Christ Jesus: our life is hid with Christ in God: and because Christ himself is our life, we, at his appearing, shall appear with him in glory.
Say, now, brethren, whether these judgments be not indeed unsearchable, and these ways past finding out? ]
Glorious as that part of our subject is, we leave it, in order to mark the mysteriousness of Gods dealings with men,
II.
In the way in which he imparts that salvation to them
And here we would notice his conduct,
1.
Towards the world at large
[This is the point to which St. Paul in our text more especially refers: he has throughout the whole chapter expatiated upon the rejection of the Jews, the calling of the Gentiles, and the final restoration of the Jews themselves: and from the view of those mysterious dispensations he is led to make the exclamation before us. Consider then these points. Consider his first separating to himself a people in the person of Abraham, who was an idolater, like all the rest of the world. Yet he took not all of his seed; but only the seed of Isaac, excluding Ishmael from all participation of the promised blessings. Yet neither did he take all of Isaacs seed; but rejected Esau, the elder, and took Jacob, the younger; and that too by a special order, whilst they were yet in their mothers womb, and consequently could have done neither good nor evil. Is there nothing wonderful in this? Who could have conceived that God should vouchsafe such mercy to any; or that, vouchsafing it, he should dispense it in so sovereign a way? Yet so he did; and the fact is undeniable. In due time he multiplied the posterity of Jacob, and brought them out of Egypt, and led them through the wilderness, and put them into possession of the promised land, and communicated to that family exclusively the means of salvation for the space of two thousand years. Here we might ask, If God was not merciful, why did he choose any? and if he was merciful, why for so long a period did he exclude any? But Gods ways are in the great deep. He giveth not account to us of any of his matters.
At last, for their iniquities he cast off his chosen people; and made the rejection of them the occasion and the means of calling in the Gentiles. Who shall explain this mystery? Who shall tell us the reasons why God acted thus? Who shall tell us why the Gentiles were not called before; or why they were called then; and especially why God made the fall of the Jews to be the riches of the Gentiles, and the salvation of the world? Will any one undertake to account for these things?
But the deepest part of this mystery yet remains to be noticed. God has still purposes of love towards his rejected people, though he has cast them off almost eighteen hundred years; and intends to make the more general awakening of the Gentiles the means of bringing back again to him the lost sheep of the house of Israel, and of engrafting them again upon their own stock, from which they have been so long broken off, and on which the Gentiles have been so long graffed in their stead: and then he will make that very restoration of the Jews the means of converting the whole world; so that it shall be as if there were a general resurrection of all the saints to live again upon the earth, all mankind being united under one head, the Lord Jesus Christ, and all constituting one fold under one Shepherd. What shall we say to these things? Was there not reason for Paul, in the prospect of them, to exclaim, O the depths! Truly Gods judgments are a great deep [Note: Psa 36:6.]: He doeth great things and unsearchable, and marvellous things without number [Note: Job 5:9.].]
2.
Towards individual believers
[In reference to these also we must say, that Gods ways are not as our ways, nor his thoughts as our thoughts; but as high as the heavens are above the earth, so are his ways high above our ways and his thoughts above our thoughts. Observe the objects of his choice: Who arc they? Are they such as human reason would select? He takes a Manasseh, who had filled Jerusalem with the blood of innocents; a Mary Magdalen, who had been possessed by seven devils; a Saul, that was a proud, blaspheming, cruel, blood-thirsty persecutor; and he leaves the young man, who, in his own opinion at least, had kept all Gods commandments from his youth up: yes, publicans and harlots were admitted into his kingdom freely and in vast multitudes, whilst the Scribes and Pharisees were given over to final obduracy. What shall we say to this? The fact is unquestionable; and we can only say, as our Lord did in the contemplation of this great mystery, Even so, Father, for so it seemed good in thy sight.
Mark farther the manner in which he calls them to himself. Some he calls with terror, as the jailor; and others with the gentle drawings of his love, as Nathanael: some by the instrumentality of his ministers; and others by the secret operations of his Spirit, without the intervention of any outward means: some suddenly, as Matthew; others gradually, as Apollos: some in early life, at the third or fourth hour; and others on a dying bed, at the eleventh hour.
His mode of completing in them the good work must also be noticed. Some he leads through deep waters, as David; whilst others have comparatively a smooth and easy passage: some, like Peter, are suffered to fall into grievous sins; whilst others, like Paul, persevere in an unblemished course even to the end.
In all these things the sovereignty of God is most conspicuously displayed: and St. Paul has a peculiar reference to that in the exclamation before us. He asks, Who hath first given to the Lord? Who has laid him under any obligation to confer his blessings upon him? If any such person can be found, let him come and prefer his claim; and I pledge myself, says he, that it shall be recompensed unto him again. And then he goes on to declare, that God, as a mighty Sovereign, does every thing purely of his own will, and for his own glory: for that of him, (as the Author,) and through him, (as the Disposer,) and to him, (as the End,) are all things: and that to him must all the glory be given for ever and ever [Note: ver. 35, 36.].
Such are Gods judgments, and such his ways: but how little a portion of him is known [Note: Job 26:14.]! This however we must say, that though clouds and darkness are round about him, righteousness and judgment are the basis of his throne.]
See then from hence,
1.
What is the proper posture of a sinners mind
[We should not presume to sit in judgment upon God, arraigning either the declarations of his word, or the dispensations of his providence. What know we either of the one or of the other? We were but of yesterday and know nothing: and if any man think that he knoweth any thing, he knoweth nothing yet as he ought to know [Note: 1Co 8:2.]. We are not to imagine, that, because there are many things in Gods word above our ability to comprehend, they are therefore not true; or that, because in his providence there are many things which we cannot account for, they are therefore not good. We should remember, that the wisdom of man is foolishness with God: and that though vain man would be wise, he is born like a wild asss colt [Note: Job 11:14.]. Let a sense of our extreme ignorance then lead us to a meek submission to our God; and let us, whenever difficulties occur, satisfy ourselves with this reflection, that, what we know not now, we shall know hereafter.]
2.
What is the truest felicity, both of saints and angels
[To search into the great mystery of godliness is right, provided we do it with humility and godly fear. And, if we look to God to teach us, he will by his Spirit shew us, what no unassisted eye ever saw, or ear heard, or heart conceived. Yes, He will teach us the deep things of God: he will exhibit to our view the unsearchable riches of Christ, and give us an insight into that mystery of a crucified Saviour, in which are hid all the treasures of wisdom and knowledge. What do we suppose were the feelings of the Apostle, when, from a view of the unsearchableness of Gods judgments, he cried out O the depths! Can we conceive a sublimer joy than he at that time experienced? The angels are constantly employed just as he was at that time. We are expressly told, that they are always desiring to look into the great mysteries of redemption; and, no doubt, from every discovery they make, their joy is exceedingly enhanced. We cannot doubt but that the felicity of the saints in glory will very principally consist in this, in admiring and adoring those dispensations of grace and mercy, which here they so superficially beheld, but which then will he more fully unfolded to their view. Let this then, brethren, be your employment now: it will be a heaven upon earth: and the more enlarged are your discoveries of your Redeemers glory here, the more will you be prepared and fitted for the enjoyment of it in a better world.]
Fuente: Charles Simeon’s Horae Homileticae (Old and New Testaments)
33 O the depth of the riches both of the wisdom and knowledge of God! how unsearchable are his judgments, and his ways past finding out!
Ver. 33. O the depth of the riches ] The Romans dedicated a certain lake, the depth whereof they knew not, to Victory; so should we admire the unsearchable counsels of God, being subdued to that which we cannot subdue to our understandings. God, saith one, is like the pool Polycritus writeth of, which in compass at first scarcely seemed to exceed the breadth of a shield, but if any went into it to wash, it extended itself more and more. (Aristot. de Mirab. Auscult.) And Chrysostom speaking of the love of God in Christ, Oh, saith he, I am like a man digging in a deep spring; I stand here, and the water riseth up upon me; and I stand there, and still the water riseth upon me. Oh, dive we not into this deep; for here (as in the salt waters), the deeper, the sweeter.
Past finding out ] It is with us here as with hounds at a loss, having neither footsteps nor scent left of the game they pursue ( ). Let it satisfy us for present, that at the last day of judgment we shall see a harmony in this discord of things; and that the reason of God’s ways, now hidden, shall then be made manifest. In the meantime know, that Arcana Dei, Arca Dei (Augustine), secrets of God and the ark of God, of pry not into it, lest ye perish; but hold this for certain, God’s judgments are sometimes secret, always just.
Fuente: John Trapp’s Complete Commentary (Old and New Testaments)
33 36 .] Admiration of the goodness and wisdom of God, and humble ascription of praise to Him .
Fuente: Henry Alford’s Greek Testament
33 .] There is some doubt whether and are genitives after , as in E. V., or parallel with it. The former view is adopted by Thom. Aquin., Luther, Beza, Calvin, Estius, Reiche, and al. The grounds on which Reiche supports it are thus given and refuted by Tholuck: (1) “If these three genitives are co-ordinate, must stand either before all , or before the last only.” But in the case of three nouns placed co-ordinately in this manner, is prefixed to the two latter only, see ch. Rom 2:7 ; Rom 12:2 ; Luk 5:17 . (2) “ is no qualitative idea, but only a quantitative idea.” But wherein the riches consist , is ordinarily indicated by the context; and here there can be but little doubt on the matter, if we compare ch. Rom 10:12 ; in Php 4:19 we also read of the of God. This also answers (3) “that without an adjunct expresses no definite attribute of God.” (4) “in the following citation, Rom 11:34-35 , two only of these, and , are mentioned.” But this may be doubted. Chrys. says, on Rom 11:36 , , , . , , . ; , . . Hom. xix. p. 653. Perhaps this latter is altogether too finedrawn: but it is favoured by Bengel, Olsh., and Tholuck.
I prefer therefore the view of Chrys., Theodoret, Grot., Bengel, Tholuck, Kllner, and Olsh., to take , , , as three co-ordinate genitives: . denoting the riches of the divine goodness , in the whole, and in the result just arrived at, Rom 11:32 ; ., the divine wisdom of proceeding in the apparently intricate vicissitudes of nations and individuals: . (if a distinction be necessary, which can hardly be doubted) the divine knowledge of all things from the beginning, God’s comprehension of the end and means together in one unfathomable depth of Omniscience.
How unsearchable are His judgments (the determinations of His wisdom, regarded as in the divine Mind; answering perhaps to . So Thol.: De W. however denies this meaning to , and renders it decrees , referring it to the blinding of the Jews) and His ways unable to be traced out (His methods of proceeding, answering to , Thol. But this is perhaps too subtle).
Fuente: Henry Alford’s Greek Testament
Rom 11:33 . . . . In Rom 11:32 the content of the chapter is no doubt condensed, but it is more natural to regard the doxology as prompted by the view of God’s Providence which pervades the whole discussion than by the one sentence in which it is summed up. : a universal figure for what is immeasurable or incalculable: cf. 1Co 2:10 , Rev 2:24 , Eph 3:18 . The genitives , and are most simply construed as co-ordinate. For used thus absolutely see Eph 3:8 , Phi 4:19 . Perhaps the key to the meaning here is to be found in Rom 10:12 : what Paul adores is the unsearchable wealth of love that enables God to meet and far more than meet the appalling necessities of the world; love less deep would soon be bankrupt at the task. In and the intellectual resources are brought into view with which God has ordered, disposed and controlled all the forces of the world and of man’s history so as to make them subservient to His love. The world, with its conflict of races, religions, passions and even vices, may seem to be a realm of chaos; but when we see it in the light of God as Paul did, we see the signs of wisdom and knowledge, of a conscious purpose transcending human thought, and calling forth adoring praise. For the distinction of and , which especially in relation to God is to be felt rather than defined, see Trench, N.T. Synonyms , lxxv. : except 1Co 6:7 which is different, this is the only example of (plural) in the N.T. It is probably used not in the narrower sense (which would be illustrated by reference, e.g. , to the “hardening” of Israel), but in the wider sense of the Hebrew , to which it often answers in the LXX. In Psa 36:6 we have : where Cheyne’s note is, “Thy judgments in their various effects of destruction and salvation”. This is Paul’s thought; hence and are practically the same. As Moses says (Deu 32:4 ), All His ways are judgment .
Fuente: The Expositors Greek Testament by Robertson
NASB (UPDATED) TEXT: Rom 11:33-36
33Oh, the depth of the riches both of the wisdom and knowledge of God! How unsearchable are His judgments and unfathomable His ways! 34For who has known the mind of the Lord, or who became His counselor? 35Or who has first given to Him that it might be paid back to him again? 36For from Him and through Him and to Him are all things. To Him be the glory forever. Amen.
Rom 11:33-36 This is one of Paul’s marvelous extemporaneous doxologies. Paul is overwhelmed by the ways of God: covenant faithfulness, covenant inclusion, covenant consummation.
Rom 11:33 “the riches” This is a favorite idiom for Paul (cf. Rom 2:4; Rom 9:23; Rom 10:12; Rom 11:12; Rom 11:33; Eph 1:7-8; Eph 2:7; Eph 3:8; Eph 3:16; Php 4:19; Col 1:27). The thrust of the gospel and the hope of mankind is the merciful abundance of God’s character and plan (cf. Isa 55:1-7).
“How unsearchable are His judgments and unfathomable His ways” This is an appropriate doxology to the paradoxical truths of Romans 9-11 (cf. Isa 55:8-11).
Rom 11:34 This is a quote from the Septuagint of Isa 40:13-14, where God delivers His people by bringing them back from exile. In 1Co 2:16 Paul quotes this same passage but attributes the title, “Lord,” to Jesus.
Rom 11:35 This is a loose quote from Job 35:7 or Job 41:11.
Rom 11:36 “for from Him and through Him and to Him are all things” These phrases refer to God the Father in this context (cf. 1Co 11:12), but are very similar to other NT passages which refer to God the Son (cf. 1Co 8:6; Col 1:16; Heb 2:10). Paul affirms that all things issue from God and return to God.
“to Him be the glory forever” This is a characteristic NT blessing on deity. It referred
1. sometimes to the Father (cf. Rom 16:27; Eph 3:21; Php 4:20; 1Pe 4:11; 1Pe 5:11; Jud 1:25; Rev 5:13; Rev 7:12)
2. sometimes to the Son (cf. 1Ti 1:17; 2Ti 4:18; 2Pe 3:18; Rev 1:16)
See full note at Rom 3:23.
“Amen” See Special Topic at Rom 1:25.
Fuente: You Can Understand the Bible: Study Guide Commentary Series by Bob Utley
riches. See Rom 2:4. This verse is an example of the Figure of speech Thaumasmos. App-6.
knowledge. App-132.
unsearchable = inscrutable. Greek. anexereunetos. Only here.
judgments. App-177.
past finding out = untraceable. Greek. anexichniastos. Only here and Eph 3:8.
Fuente: Companion Bible Notes, Appendices and Graphics
33-36.] Admiration of the goodness and wisdom of God, and humble ascription of praise to Him.
Fuente: The Greek Testament
Rom 11:33. , O the depth) Paul in ch. 9 had been sailing, as it were, on a narrow sea; he is now embarked on the ocean. The depth of the riches is described in Rom 11:35, and has respect to ch. Rom 9:23, Rom 10:12. (wherefore it (of the riches) ought not to be resolved into a mere epithet); the depth of wisdom is described in Rom 11:34; the depth of the knowledge, in Rom 11:34. Comp. concerning riches and wisdom, Eph 3:8, note, and Rev 5:12. The different meanings of biblical terms are worthy of being well noticed and collected. Wisdom directs all things to the best end; knowledge knows that end and issue.-, how) No one examines, no one searches out, but He Himself. Here and in Rom 11:34, there is a Chiasmus;[126] as is seen by comparing the antecedents and consequents together. The depth is described in the second part of Rom 11:33 [How unsearchable, etc., answering to the depth]. Knowledge itself, as we have said, is described in Rom 11:34, for who [hath known, etc.]-wisdom itself is described in the words or who [hath been His counsellor]: riches themselves, in Rom 11:35 [who hath first given to Him, etc.]- , His judgments) respecting unbelievers.- , His ways) respecting believers. A gradation. His ways are as it were on the surface, His judgments more profound; we do not even search out His ways [much less His judgments].
[126] See Appendix.
Fuente: Gnomon of the New Testament
Rom 11:33
Rom 11:33
O the depth of the riches both of the wisdom and the knowledge of God! how unsearchable are his judgments, and his ways past tracing out!-Inexpressibly wise and deep is the wisdom that could so arrange that the punishment of the Jews for their unbelief would open the way for the Gentiles to believe in Christ, and that the reception of the Gentiles would be the means of bringing Israel back to God. [Thus they were to be mutual aids until all their interests should be blended and the human race should be united in the love of the same gospel and the service of the same God and Savior. When, therefore, this profound and wonderful plan is contemplated and its history traced from the commencement to the end, no wonder that the apostle was fixed in admiration at the amazing wisdom of Him who devised it and who has made all events subservient to its establishment and spread among men.] Such wisdom is beyond searching out by human beings, but it is an outburst of wonder and delight in contemplating a glorious revelation of wisdom and goodness surpassing all that the heart of man could have conceived.
Fuente: Old and New Testaments Restoration Commentary
the depth: Psa 107:8-43, Pro 25:3, Eph 3:18
riches: Rom 2:4, Rom 9:23, Eph 1:7, Eph 2:7, Eph 3:8, Eph 3:10, Eph 3:16, Col 1:27, Col 2:2, Col 2:3
how: Job 5:9, Job 9:10, Job 11:7-9, Job 26:14, Job 33:13, Job 37:19, Job 37:23, Psa 36:6, Psa 40:5, Psa 77:19, Psa 92:5, Psa 97:2, Ecc 3:11, Dan 4:35
Reciprocal: Deu 29:29 – secret Jdg 20:25 – destroyed 2Ki 23:29 – slew him 1Ch 16:12 – the judgments 1Ch 17:4 – tell Est 2:22 – and Esther certified Est 6:1 – that night Job 4:17 – Shall mortal Job 9:4 – wise in heart Job 10:13 – hid Job 17:8 – astonied Job 21:5 – lay your Job 23:14 – many such Job 28:7 – a path Job 28:14 – General Job 28:23 – General Job 37:5 – great Psa 73:16 – When Psa 104:24 – in wisdom Psa 106:2 – utter Psa 131:1 – high for me Psa 139:6 – knowledge Psa 145:3 – and his greatness is unsearchable Psa 147:5 – his understanding is infinite Pro 8:12 – I wisdom Pro 8:14 – Counsel Pro 25:2 – the glory Pro 30:3 – nor Ecc 5:8 – matter Ecc 7:24 – General Ecc 8:17 – that a man Ecc 11:5 – even Isa 19:12 – let them Isa 28:29 – cometh Isa 40:28 – no searching Isa 45:15 – a God Isa 46:10 – My counsel Jer 32:19 – Great Jer 32:25 – for Jer 51:15 – by his wisdom Eze 1:16 – a wheel Eze 10:10 – General Mic 4:12 – they know Mat 11:26 – for Act 2:23 – being Rom 8:39 – depth Rom 11:12 – the world Rom 16:27 – only 1Co 1:21 – in 1Co 1:25 – the foolishness 1Co 2:10 – the deep 1Co 2:11 – even Eph 1:8 – in Phi 4:19 – according Rev 15:8 – no
Fuente: The Treasury of Scripture Knowledge
:33
Rom 11:33. No wonder the apostle exclaims on the depth of the riches of God, in providing a way for the exercise of His mercy. Unsearchable means the judgments of God are beyond the full comprehension of man.
Fuente: Combined Bible Commentary
Rom 11:33. O the depth of the riches and wisdom and knowledge of God. With Chrysostom and most modern commentators, we prefer this view of the passage to that followed in the E. V. Either is grammatical, but the former is not only more natural, but agrees better with what follows. The depth of the riches may refer to the fullness of Gods grace, as shown in the preceding discussion, or be taken in a wider sense, as if to say: How superabundantly rich is God! (Meyer). The depth of Gods wisdom is in his wise ordering of all the means for his own gracious ends; the depth of His knowledge, in His all inclusive fore-knowledge of ends and means. These constitute an ocean, the depths of which we should ever explore, but can never fathom. In these three words Origen found an allusion to the Trinity (as in Rom 11:36), but however applicable the terms might be to the attributes of Jehovah manifested by the Father, Son, and Holy Ghost, it is not proper to assert that the Apostle intended to make any such distinction in this verse.
How unsearchable, etc. The discrimination between wisdom and knowledge seems to be implied here; judgments are the decisions (not exclusively judicial) of Gods wisdom, according to which He acts; these are unsearchable.
His ways, the general modes of procedure, in accordance with His infinite knowledge, are untraceable; the adjective, from the word meaning foot-print, is aptly used with ways. Precisely because this is true, God is an inexhaustible object for our minds as well as our hearts.
Fuente: A Popular Commentary on the New Testament
Here the apostle concludes the chapter with an awful admiration at the depth of the abundant grace and goodness of God in bearing with the infidelity of the Jews, and the obstinacy of the Gentiles; as also of his unsearchable wisdom in making first the rejection of the Jews a mean of calling the Gentiles, and then working upon the obstinate Jews by his mercy unto the Gentiles.
By judgments here, some understand the degrees and determinations of God’s will; by ways, the administration of his providence, in order to the execution of those decrees: both which are secret, unsearchable, and unfathomable. There are mysteries of providence, as well as mysteries of faith, and both of them transcend our human understanding.
Fuente: Expository Notes with Practical Observations on the New Testament
Rom 11:33-36. O the depth The unsearchable, inconceivable abundance; of the riches, &c. In the ninth chapter, Paul had sailed but in a narrow sea, now he is in the immense ocean: of the wisdom and knowledge of God The depth of his knowledge is described in the latter part of this verse; the depth of wisdom in Rom 11:34. Wisdom directs all things to the best end; knowledge sees that end, and the way that leads to it. Or, the divine wisdom was exercised in contriving and ordering these dispensations, and knowledge in foreseeing the effects which they would produce. By applying the word depth to the riches of the wisdom and knowledge of God, the apostle represents those perfections as forming a vast ocean. How unsearchable are his judgments With regard to unbelievers; and his ways With regard to believers; are past finding out Or being traced. The word comes from , which signifies the mark of a foot. The metaphor is taken from animals which pursue and find out their prey by tracing their footsteps. By judgments here, Macknight understands Gods determinations, or methods of directing and governing all things, both generally and particularly. Agreeably to which interpretation of , judgments, the apostle adds, and his ways are past finding out. Men are not capable of penetrating into the depths of the divine wisdom, because revelation hath made known only what God hath willed, and said, and done, without disclosing the reasons either of his general or his particular conduct. The knowledge of whatever is above our present childish conceptions is to be sought for, not here, but in the future state. The apostle, in this part of the conclusion of his discourse, as Locke observes, had an especial regard to the Jews, whom, in an elegant but inoffensive manner, he rebuked for their presumption in finding fault with the divine dispensations; as if God had done them an injury in admitting the Gentiles into his covenant and church. For who hath known the mind of the Lord Before, or any further than he has revealed it; or who hath known what he intends to do, or hath comprehended all the reasons of his determinations or proceedings, so as to be able to judge of them? Or who hath been his counsellor? Who hath given him advice respecting either the planning or managing of the affairs of the universe? Or, who hath first given to him either wisdom or power, or any thing, or conferred any obligation upon him? Let him show the obligation, and make out the claim, and we may answer for it that it shall be exactly repaid him again. The apostle here very properly asks the Jews, if God was in their debt for any obligation they had conferred on him? Or, if he was, let them say for what, and they should have an ample remuneration made to them. For of him As the Creator; through him As the Preserver; to him As the ultimate end, are all things: to whom be , the glory, of his power, knowledge, wisdom, and of the effects thereof, the creation, preservation, and government of the universe, and the redemption and salvation of mankind, for ever. Amen A concluding word, in which the affection of the apostle, when it is come to the height, shuts up all.
Fuente: Joseph Bensons Commentary on the Old and New Testaments
Vv. 33. O the depth of the riches both of the wisdom and knowledge of God! How unsearchable are His judgments, and His ways past finding out!
Like a traveller who has reached the summit of an Alpine ascent, the apostle turns and contemplates. Depths are at his feet; but waves of light illumine them, and there spreads all around an immense horizon which his eye commands. The plan of God in the government of mankind spreads out before him, and he expresses the feelings of admiration and gratitude with which the prospect fills his heart.
The word , depth, applies precisely to that abyss which he has just been exploring. The genitive , of riches, by which the word depth is qualified, is regarded by most commentators as a first complement, co-ordinate with the two following: of wisdom and of knowledge. In this case it must be held that the abstract term riches applies to a special divine attribute which can be no other than divine mercy; comp. Rom 10:12; Eph 2:4, etc. The two , and…and, which follow, would furnish an instance of a construction like that of Luk 5:17. And one might make these three complements, riches, wisdom, knowledge, parallel to the three questions which follow, Rom 11:34-35, as in fact the first refers rather to knowledge, the second to wisdom, and the third to grace. But if this latter relation really existed in the apostle’s mind, why should the questions be arranged in an opposite order to that of the three terms corresponding to them in our verse? Then is not the notion of mercy too diverse in kind from those of wisdom and knowledge to allow of the first being thus co-ordinated with the other two? Finally, would not the abstract term riches have required to be determined by a complement such as or (mercy, grace)? The apostle is not afraid of such accumulations of genitives (Rom 2:5 and Eph 1:19). It rather seems to me, therefore, that the second of these two abstract terms (depth and riches) ought to be regarded as a complement of the other: a depth of riches, for: an infinitely rich depth, that is to say, one which, instead of being an immense void, presents itself as embracing contents of inexhaustible fulness. Calvin has well caught this meaning: This is why, says he, I doubt not that the apostle exalts the deep riches of wisdom and knowledge which are in God.
This depth is rich, not in darkness, but in light; it is a depth both of wisdom and knowledge.
The two , both…and…, have the disjunctive sense; they distinguish the two following substantives very precisely, however closely allied their meaning may be. The second, , knowledge, refers especially in the context to divine foreknowledge, and in general to the complete view which God has of all the free determinations of men, whether as individuals or as nations. The former, , wisdom, denotes the admirable skill with which God weaves into His plan the free actions of man, and transforms them into so many means for the accomplishment of the excellent end which He set originally before Him. We cannot reflect, however little, without seeing that the very marked difference which Paul here establishes between these two divine perfections, is by no means indifferent; it is nothing less than the safeguard of human liberty. If the omniscience of God, especially His foreknowledge, were counfounded with His wisdom, everything in the universe would be directly the work of God, and the creatures would be nothing more than blind instruments in His hands.
Paul sees these two attributes of God shine forth in two orders of things which, combined, constitute the whole government of the world: judgments, , and ways or paths, . Here the general sense of decree is sometimes given to the former of these terms. But the word in every case implies the idea of a judicial decree; and what Paul has just been referring to, those severe dispensations whereby God has successively chastised the ingratitude of the Gentiles (chap. 1) and the haughty presumption of the Jews (chap. 10), shows clearly that we are to keep to its strict sense.
Ways, , do not really denote different things from judgments; but the term presents them in a different and more favorable light, as so many advances toward the final aim. The term judgments expresses, if one may so speak, the because of the things, as the word ways points to their in order that. We may thus understand the twofold relation of the events of history to knowledge on the one hand, and wisdom on the other. From the knowledge which God possesses, there follow from the free decisions of man the judgments which He decrees, and these judgments become the ways which His wisdom employs for the realization of His plan (Isa 40:14 : , ).
These two orders of things are characterized by the most extraordinary epithets which the most pliant of languages can furnish: , what cannot be searched to the bottom; , the traces of which cannot be followed to the end. The former of these epithets applies to the supreme principle which the mind seeks to approach, but which it does not reach; the latter to an abundance of ramifications and of details in execution which the understanding cannot follow to the end. These epithets are often quoted with the view of demonstrating the incomprehensibility to man of the divine decrees, and in particular of that of predestination (Aug.). But it must not be forgotten that St. Paul’s exclamation is called forth, not by the obscurity of God’s plans, but, on the contrary, by their dazzling clearness. If they are incomprehensible and unfathomable, it is to man’s natural understanding, and until they have been revealed; but, says the apostle, 1Co 2:10. God hath revealed them unto us by His Spirit; for the Spirit searcheth () all things, even the deep things ( ) of God. It is therefore in view of the unveiled mystery that the exclamation is raised, as is done by Paul here: O the depth of the riches! A fact which does not prevent the mind which understands them in part from having always to discover in them new laws or applications.
Fuente: Godet Commentary (Luke, John, Romans and 1 Corinthians)
[Guided by the revelations imparted by the Holy Spirit, the apostle has made known many profound and blessed mysteries, and has satisfactorily answered many critical and perplexing questions, and has traced for his readers the course of the two branches of the human family, the Jew and the Gentile, from their beginning in the distant past, in a condition of unity, through the period of their separation by reason of the call of the Jews into a Theocracy, followed by a continuation of the separation, by the call of the Gentiles into a Theocracy, on into the future when both are to be again brought together in unity (Mat 15:24; Joh 10:16). “Never,” says Godet, “was survey more vast taken of the divine plan of the world’s history.” As the apostle surveyed it all, beheld its wisdom and grace, its justice and symmetry, he bursts forth in the ascriptions of praise which follow.] O the depth of the riches both of the wisdom and the knowledge of God! [We prefer the marginal reading, “O the depth of the riches and wisdom and knowledge,” etc. Either of the readings is perfectly grammatical. It is objected against the marginal reading that the reading in the text is “simpler and more natural” (Dwight); that the context following says nothing about riches (Brown); that the notion of riches is too diverse in kind to be co-ordinated with knowledge and wisdom (Godet). To these it may be added (as suggested by Meyer) that the style of the apostle usually follows that of the text. Compare “riches of his grace” (Eph 1:7; Eph 2:7; Phil 4:19). Nevertheless, depth of riches and wisdom and knowledge is the best reading here, for riches, as we have just seen, imply, with reference to God, his wealth of grace, or some kindred virtue; as, goodness, forbearance, longsuffering, etc. (Rom 2:4; Rom 10:12; Eph 2:4). Now, in this instance the mercy of God was the thrice-repeated and last idea (in the Greek, the last word) dropping from the apostle’s pen (Rom 11:31-32), and it is these riches of mercy and grace that move him to praise, and that give birth to the section before us. Moreover, these riches are the burden of what has gone before. See Rom 9:23 for “riches of glory upon vessels of mercy,” and Rom 10:12 for “rich unto all,” and Rom 8:35-39 for a description of the saints’ wealth in God’s love. As, therefore, the mercy or lovingkindness of God is uppermost in the apostle’s thoughts, and as it is the main inspiration for all human praise (Psa 107, 118, 136), it is hard to conceive that Paul would turn from it in silence, and burst forth in raptures over God’s wisdom and knowledge, for the wisdom and knowledge of God stir us to highest raptures only as we see them expended in merciful lovingkindness. “Depth” is a common Greek expression for inexhaustible fullness or superabundance. It is so used by Sophocles, schylus, Pindar and Plato (see references in Gifford). It is so used here, though, as employed by Bible writers, it generally means that which is so vast or intricate as to be incomprehensible to the common mind (Psa 36:6; 1 Cor 2:10; Rev 2:24). The superabundance of God’s knowledge has been made apparent in this Epistle. It, as Plumer describes it, “is his perfect intelligence of all that ever is, ever was, or ever shall be, and of all that could now be, or could heretofore have been, or could hereafter be on any conceivable supposition.” It enables God to grant perfect free will to man, and still foresee his every act, and empowers him to combine men of free will in endless social, political and commercial complications, and yet foresee results arising from myriads of combined free agencies, thus enabling him to discern the effects upon the Gentiles wrought by the rejection of the Jews, and the results, proximate and ultimate, wrought upon the Jew by the acceptance and rejection of the Gentiles. Such are samples of the knowledge of God exhibited in Romans. The wisdom of God enables him to design the best purposes, the most blessed and happy results, the most perfect and satisfactory ends, while his knowledge empowers him to choose the best means, employ the best methods or modes of procedure, devise the best plans, select the most perfect instruments, etc., for accomplishing of those holy and benevolent purposes. In short, the wisdom of God foresees the desired end, and his knowledge causes all things to work together for the accomplishment of it. Refraining, for the moment, from describing the riches of God, the apostle proceeds to give a parallel setting forth of the excellency of God’s wisdom and knowledge, thus:] how unsearchable are his judgments, and his ways past tracing out! [Job 5:9; Job 11:7]
Fuente: McGarvey and Pendleton Commentaries (New Testament)
11:33 {17} O the depth of the riches both of the wisdom and knowledge of God! how unsearchable [are] his {g} judgments, and his {h} ways past finding out!
(17) The apostle cries out as one astonished with this wonderful wisdom of God, which he teaches us to revere in a religious manner, and not curiously and profanely to be searched beyond the boundary of that which God has revealed unto us.
(g) The course that he holds in governing all things both generally and particularly.
(h) The order of his counsels and doings.
Fuente: Geneva Bible Notes
4. Praise for God’s wise plan 11:33-36
This doxology corresponds to the one at the end of chapter 8 where Paul concluded his exposition of God’s plan for bringing His righteousness to humankind (Rom 8:31-39). There the emphasis was on the people of God. Here it is on the plan of God.
"Here theology turns to poetry. Here the seeking of the mind turns to the adoration of the heart." [Note: Barclay, p. 167.]
Fuente: Expository Notes of Dr. Constable (Old and New Testaments)
God’s "wisdom" is His ability to arrange His plan so it results in good for both Jews and Gentiles and His own glory. His "knowledge" testifies to His ability to construct such a plan. His decisions spring from logic that extends beyond human ability to comprehend. His procedures are so complex that humans cannot discover them without the aid of divine revelation.