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The accompanying table was drawn up in order to resolve the difficulties of a
person who insisted that if by the decree or sovereignty of God a certain number
of men only were to be saved, by a natural conclusion, the rest by a similar
decree were lost, it mattered not what their opinions or ways were.
Assuredly, if we draw our deductions according to man's ideas, this would be
the case. But faith does not rest upon deductions, whilst drawing them: we often
meet with plain texts which contradict men. There are many things in nature which
we see and believe, but do not understand, and cannot reason upon. If our minds
are formed by and according to the word of God, we shall find that man is always
held for a responsible being, and is judged and condemned for his own sins, and
not by any predetermined decree of God.
Before proceeding farther, it may be well to examine the table itself, which
exhibits in a marked way the purposes of God, and the responsibilities of man. Of
the nineteen passages in Exodus presented to our view, all the authorities agree,
that nine of them, namely, numbers 1,2,9,12,13,14,15,17,18, attribute the
hardening of Pharaoh to the will of Jehovah. Number 19 says nothing of Pharaoh
himself, but only of the Egyptians in general. Of the rest, numbers 6, 7, 10,
attribute the hardening to the king himself. To these lot however we must add
number 16, which, whether by the rendering of Mr. Young,2 or that of the
Englishman's Hebrew Concordance, is clearly the act of Pharaoh. For the rest,
numbers 4, 5, 8, 11, mention the hardening as a matter of fact without determining
the agency. Eighteen of our numbers are thus accounted for. The only one that
remains, number 3, is exactly of the same form in Hebrew as 5 and 11, and should
be added to those numbers, and are so translated accordingly by Mr. Young, the
Vulgate, and Arias Montanus.3 Thus to sum up the hardening of Pharaoh is in nine
instances attributed to the Lord; with one more number 19, of the Egyptians in
general; four to Pharaoh himself; and five with the agency not stated.
The Lord ever acts for His own glory or name. "For the scripture saith
unto Pharaoh, Even for this same purpose have I raised thee up, that I might show
my power in thee, and that my name might be declared throughout the earth"
(Rom. 9:17). Yet the king of Egypt was responsible, even his own people and the
surrounding nations being witnesses. First we have Exodus 8:19; "Then the
magicians said unto Pharaoh, This is the finger of God." Secondly, (chap.
9:20), "He that feared the Lord among the servants of Pharaoh made his
servants and his cattle flee into the houses." Thirdly (chap. 10:7),
"Pharaoh's servants said unto him, How long shall this man be a snare unto
us? Let the men go, that they may serve the Lord their God." Fourthly (chap.
11:3), "Moreover the man Moses was very great in the land of Egypt in the
sight of Pharaoh's servants, and in the sight of the people."
Sufficient evidence this, that these judgments were telling upon the people of
all classes, increased and deepened eventually by the judgment on the firstborn,
and more terribly still by the overthrow in the Red Sea, when the Lord said (chap.
14:4), "1 will he honoured upon Pharaoh; that the Egyptians may know that I
am the Lord;" and again when the people said (chap. 14:25), "let us flee
from the face of Israel; for the Lord fighteth for them against the
Egyptians." Did not this great deliverance for Israel form the never ending
theme of praise from Exodus 15 to the end of their history? See Psalms 78, 105,
106, etc.
What now did the nations of the earth think of this deliverance, whether as to
spreading the name of the Lord, or as to Pharaoh himself? Did they look upon him
as a stock or a stone, without responsibilities, in short like a beast without any
conscience? Let scripture testify. First, there are the bolts and bars on the
gates of Jericho and the witness of Rahab, "I know that the Lord hath given
you the land, and that your terror is fallen upon us . . . . for we have heard how
the Lord dried up the water of the Red Sea before you, when ye came up out of
Egypt . . . . And as soon as we had heard these things, our hearts did melt ....
for the Lord even God , he is God in heaven above, and in the earth beneath;"
a rebuke indeed to the Israelites for not having gone up in the first instance, as
if God, when He gives a command, does not put things in train for its fulfilment.
This woman mentions the passage of the Red Sea, which had happened forty years
before, as filling the Canaanitish nations with terror, so that from the first the
way was open in the land.
The Philistines afford us another striking witness against Pharaoh. The ark of
God was with them, and it was a question how to get quit of it, and of an offering
to the Lord (I Sam. 6:6). The priests and diviners are called for. They recommend
the people to "give glory unto the God of Israel . . . . Wherefore then do ye
harden your hearts, as the Egyptians and Pharaoh hardened their hearts? when he
had wrought wonderfully among them, did they not let the people go and they
departed?" Here is not only a witness three hundred and fifty years after, of
the fact of the Exodus, but it is an acknowledgment from the priests of a foreign
nation of the perverse conduct of Pharaoh. It is a conclusion drawn by the natural
enemies of Israel, whatever the secret purposes of the Lord might be as known to
Moses, that the king was righteously judged, as having hardened his heart against
the God of Israel. An oppressor before the Lord interfered judicially on behalf of
His people; when this interference took place, Pharaoh still refused to own the
hand of One mightier than he, in spite of the testimony of the magicians and of
his nobles, and of the devastation and misery which his obstinacy was causing. His
feeling still was, "Who is the Lord, that I should obey his voice to let
Israel go? I know not the Lord, neither will I let Israel go" (Ex. 4).
A few words more will suffice on the subject of God’s purpose of sovereignty
and man’s responsibility, which quotation from Romans 9 gives occasion for, as
shewing that whilst the elect are vessels afore prepared unto glory, it is not so
with the wicked, as to being afore prepared to destruction, but they are judged
for their conduct. "What if God willing to shew his wrath, and to make his
power known, endured with much long-suffering the vessels of wrath (margin made
up,) to (or, for) destruction, and that he might make known the
riches of his glory on vessels of mercy, which he had afore prepared unto
glory?" (Chap. 9:22, 23).
In the case of the wicked, so far from being elected to eternal misery, we find
that God endures them -- vessels of wrath -- with much long-suffering, fitted not
by Him but by their own deeds for destruction. The word katartizo means to
correct, repair, mend; then in its participial form fitted, prepared. The word
does not suppose a decree of God, but a work of man. So that whilst it be true
that Christians are "chosen in Christ before the foundation of the
world" (Eph. 1:4), and are "to the praise of the glory of his grace,
wherein he hath made us accepted in the beloved" (ver. 6); and whilst also it
is true that during their lives they receive the call "Whom he did
predestinate them he also called," Rom. 8:30), again "Us whom he hath
called, not of the Jews only but also of the Gentiles" (chap. 9:24), yet it
would never be right to say, that lost sinners were in a parallel way elected to
reprobation. No. Putting aside for the present the case of the heathen, we can say
at all events as to Christendom, "For this cause God shall send them strong
delusion that they should believe a lie, that they all might be damned that
believeth not the truth, but had pleasure in unrighteousness" (2 Thess.
2:11,12). It is evident that the condemned ones are so dealt with because they
believe not the truth, not that they were elect for condemnation. This leads on to
one point further concerning the wicked. It is clear that there is a judicial
hardening after much long-suffering on the part of God. It was so of Pharaoh. It
was so of the Jewish nation when Christ was in the land. "For this people's
heart is waxed gross…. lest at any time they should see with their eyes, and
hear with their ears, and should understand with their heart, and should be
converted, and I should heal them" (Is. 11). This prophecy of their blinding,
written more than seven hundred years before, took effect at last by the mouth of
Christ; and Paul, in pursuing them into distant countries, used it again of them
in Rome, "Well, spake the Holy Ghost by Esaias, the prophet, unto our
fathers, saying, Go unto this people, and say, Hearing ye shall hear and not
understand," etc. (Acts 28:25-28).
And is it not a very solemn fact, that this will be the last condition of
Christendom, as we quoted but now from 2 Thessalonians 2:7- 12? A judicial
blindness and hardening, after much long-suffering on God’s part, yea, for
centuries. Will there be a single person amongst those who have lived in the midst
of gospel privileges -- who will blame God Himself for this condemnation? No,
every mouth will be stopped -- men will depart into a place originally prepared,
not for the wicked and impenitent, but for the devil and his angels (Matt. 25:41).
Let us observe, whilst we believe both statements, namely, of divine
sovereignty and human responsibility, we are not pretending in a logical way to
reconcile them. Perhaps it is never intended as finite beings that we should in
this world. There are abundance of paradoxes within the sphere of our own
existence which we believe but do not reconcile. If this be the case in the
affairs of the lower world, shall there be nothing for us to believe without
reconciling in the regions of the upper? No; let us yield unhesitating obedience
to, and have unshaken confidence in, the word of the living God-- believe what we
find there, and leave to our blessed Lord to explain to us the apparent
discrepancies therein further or not as He will. Difficulties there will be, and
"things hard to be understood," but it is only the unlearned and
unstable who wrest them unto their own destruction (2 Pet. 3:16).
Finally, it may be held as certain that those who are saved are saved by grace,
through the electing love of God, and that those who, in the very precincts where
that grace is operating are lost, are lost by their own fault.
Last edited 06-06-2001
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