Children of the Living God
Introduction:
I. The Calling Initiated by God the Father (vs. 24)
Nevertheless, in the midst of words which made definite commitments to Israel, there were hidden promises which must also be applied to the Gentiles. God had made His commitments, but He had reserved to Himself the right to go beyond and make other commitments.
II. The Compassion Illustrated by Hosea the Prophet (vs. 25-26)
So it is not actually of Jews that the words “I will call them ‘my people’ who are not my people” are spoken but of those who have become “Gentiles” by their rejection of God. It is from these Gentiles, both ethnic Gentiles and ethnic Jews who have thus actually become “Gentiles,” that the new people of God is formed
“When the Jews were banished from the family of God, they were thereby reduced to a common level with the Gentiles. The distinction between Jew and Gentile has been removed, and the mercy of God now extends indiscriminately to all the Gentiles.”4
You will notice from a careful comparison of Hosea 1:10 and Romans 9:26 that there is an emphasis in Romans on the words “in the very place.” In this context the words do not refer to Samaria, which fell to the Assyrians in 721 B.C., or to Jerusalem, which fell in 586 B.C., but to Gentile lands, the very places where it was said of the scattered nation, “You are not my people.”