And it shall come to pass, that whosoever shall call on
the name of the LORD shall be delivered: for in mount Zion and in Jerusalem shall
be deliverance, as the LORD hath said, and in the remnant whom the LORD shall
call. (Joel 2:32)
God would have us to call on him not only in prosperity, but
also in the extreme state of despair. It is the same as though God had called
to himself the dead, and declared that it was in his power to restore life to
them and bring them out of the grave.
Since God invites here the lost and the dead, there is no
reason why even the heaviest distresses should preclude an access for us or for
our prayers; for we ought to break through all these obstacles. The more
grievous, then, our troubles are, the more confidence we ought to entertain;
for God offers his grace, not only to the miserable, but also to those in utter
despair. The Prophet did not threaten a common evil to the Jews, but declared
that by the coming of Christ all things would be full of horror (v. 31): after
this denunciation he now subjoins, Whosoever shall call on the name of the
Lord shall be delivered.
As Paul cites this place in Romans 10, and extends it to the
Gentiles, we must inquire in what sense he takes the testimony of the Prophet.
Paul means to prove that adoption was common to the Gentiles, that it was
lawful for them to flee to God, and familiarly to invoke him as a Father: ‘Whosoever,’
he says, ‘shall call on the name of the Lord shall be saved.’ He hence proves
that the Gospel ought to have been preached even to the Gentiles, as invocation
arises from faith: for except God shines on us by his word, we cannot come to
him; faith, then, is ever the mother of prayer. (Commentaries)
No comments:
Post a Comment