Romeinen 11:5

5 Alzo is er dan ook in dezen tegenwoordigen tijd een overblijfsel geworden, naar de verkiezing der genade.

Romeinen 11:5 Meaning and Commentary

Romans 11:5

Even so then at this present time also
In which the apostle lived, the time of preaching the Gospel, the accepted time, the day of salvation, which then was, and also now is; at that time when the Gospel was sent unto the Gentiles, and God took out of them a people for his name; when multitudes of them were converted, and embraced the faith of Christ; and when the Jews in general had rejected the Messiah, killed the Lord Jesus, persecuted his apostles, and contradicted and blasphemed the Gospel; yet still God had made a reserve of some among them, for himself:

there is a remnant;
alluding either to ( Isaiah 10:21 Isaiah 10:22 ) , or to the oracle delivered to Elijah, saying, "I have reserved", or "left", &c. ( 1 Kings 19:18 ) ( Romans 11:4 ) , that as God had reserved for himself, in Elijah's time, a number of persons, who had not gone into the idolatrous worship of Baal, when the greater part of the Israelites did, so he had taken care to make a like reserve in the apostle's time, when the bulk of the Jewish nation had refused the Messiah, and despised his Gospel. This is a further proof, that God had not cast away all the people of the Jews; and that as Elijah was not the only worshipper of the true God in his time, so the apostle was not the only instance of grace among that people now; there was a number of them; the number of the disciples after our Lord's ascension, was an hundred and twenty; upon the first sermon preached by Peter, three thousand were converted, and added to them; after that, they are said to be about five thousand, and still multitudes were added, both of men and women, and a great company of the priests were obedient to the faith; so that before the dispersion of the church at Jerusalem by a persecution, there might be at least such a number called by grace, as God had reserved in Elijah's time; though these, when compared with the generality of the nation, which remained in unbelief, were but a few, and therefore called a "remnant", or a "reserve", as the word may be rendered; for these were a set of men, whom God had reserved and preserved in his Son, and in the covenant of his grace, from everlasting; and had kept a watchful eye over them in time, reserved them in his providence, and saved them to be called; and by calling them, had reserved them by his grace, and preserved them by his power, from the general unbelief, impenitence, blindness, and ignorance, which prevailed over the people of the Jews; which reserve was not owing to their superior goodness, they being in no wise, with respect to nature, birth, and privileges, better than those who were not reserved; nor to the disposition of their minds and wills, their minds and consciences being defiled, and their wills naturally as obstinate and perverse as others; nor to any good works done by them, since works before calling are not properly good, and those after are the fruits of that grace: but this reverse was made,

according to the election of grace;
God's choice of these persons before the world was, which is the source and spring of all the blessings of grace, both in time eternity: hence these persons were put into the hands of Christ, secured in an everlasting covenant, took special care of by divine Providence, were called by grace, justified, sanctified, and at last glorified: and this choice is owing to grace, for not men's choice of God's grace, but God's choice, owing to his, own grace, is here meant. The Pelagians would have it, that this election is the choice which man makes of the grace of God: whereas such is the enmity of mans nature, and will against God and his grace, that he would never make choice of that, if the grace of God did not first make choice of him, and lay hold upon him: grace here, does not design the object of the choice, but the cause, spring, and motive of it, which is not any habit or quality in men, as faith and holiness, for these are fruits and effects of electing grace, and so not causes, motives, or conditions of it, but the free love and favour of God in his own heart; and shows the sovereignty and freeness of election, which is no ways depending on the will and works of men, but upon the sovereign good will and pleasure of God.

Romeinen 11:5 In-Context

3 Heere! zij hebben Uw profeten gedood, en Uw altaren omgeworpen; en ik ben alleen overgebleven en zij zoeken mijn ziel.
4 Maar wat zegt tot hem het Goddelijk antwoord? Ik heb Mijzelven nog zeven duizend mannen overgelaten, die de knie voor het beeld van Baal niet gebogen hebben.
5 Alzo is er dan ook in dezen tegenwoordigen tijd een overblijfsel geworden, naar de verkiezing der genade.
6 En indien het door genade is, zo is het niet meer uit de werken; anderszins is de genade geen genade meer; en indien het is uit de werken, zo is het geen genade meer; anderszins is het werk geen werk meer.
7 Wat dan? Hetgeen Israel zoekt, dat heeft het niet verkregen; maar de uitverkorenen hebben het verkregen, en de anderen zijn verhard geworden.
The Dutch Staten Vertaling translation is in the public domain.