This week we have been looking at Romans 9.
In this post, we will look at the sixth and final argument against the
deterministic interpretation of this famous chapter.
Argument #6: It’s About Wisdom, Not Power
When Paul responds to the charge of injustice by asking, “who… are you, a
human being, to argue with God?” (vs. 20), he is not thereby appealing to the
sheer power of the potter over the clay. He is rather appealing to the sovereign
wisdom of the potter in refashioning clay in a manner that fits the kind of clay
he has to work with. When “clay” yields to his influence and has faith, he
fashions a vessel of honor. When “clay” becomes “spoiled” (Jer 18:4) and resists
his will, he fashions a “vessel of ordinary use” that is being prepared for
destruction.
Again, this fashioning looks arbitrary to Jews who believed that they were
the “vessel of honor” by virtue of their national identity or good works – Jews
who did not “strive for [God’s righteousness] on the basis of faith, but as if
it were based on works” (Rom 9:32). It is to these people, expressing this
sentiment, that Paul sarcastically asks, “Who are you…?” In truth, God’s
fashioning is not arbitrary at all. It is based on whether or not one is willing
“to seek” after the righteousness of God that comes by faith, not works
(9:30–32; 10:3–5, 12–13; 11:22–23).
Conclusion
On the basis of these six considerations I conclude that the deterministic
interpretation of Romans 9 is as misguided as it is unfortunate. It is misguided
not only because it misinterprets Paul, but because it fundamentally clashes
with the supremacy of God’s self-revelation in Christ. And it is unfortunate
because it tragically replaces the unsurpassably glorious picture of God as
Jesus Christ dying on the cross for undeserving sinners with a picture of a
deity who defies all moral sensibilities by arbitrarily fashioning certain
people to be vessels fit for eternal destruction — and then punishing them for
being that way. It exchanges the picture of a beautiful God who reigns supreme
with self-sacrificial love and flexible wisdom for a picture of a God who reigns
by the arbitrary exercise of sheer power.
I unequivocally affirm that the sovereign God “has mercy on whomever he wants
to have mercy, and he hardens whomever he wants to harden.” I would simply add
that the “whomever” he has mercy on refers to “all who choose to believe” while
the “whomever” he hardens refers to “all who refuse to believe.” The passage
demonstrates the wisdom of God’s loving flexibility, not the sheer determinism
of God’s power.
- Greg Boyd
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