Romans 9

May 3, 2026    Sam Kiser

Romans 9 confronts us with one of the most challenging yet liberating truths in Scripture: God is God, and we are not. This passage forces us to wrestle with divine sovereignty and the scandalous nature of grace. We discover that God's choosing has always been the foundation of His relationship with humanity—not our bloodline, not our works, not our merit. From Isaac over Ishmael, Jacob over Esau, to the inclusion of Gentiles alongside Jews, God demonstrates that adoption into His family depends entirely on His merciful choice. The uncomfortable reality is that if salvation were left to our preferences, we would choose condemnation for our enemies while demanding grace for ourselves. But God's grace extends far beyond our limited compassion. He loves people we would exclude, forgives those we would condemn, and welcomes those we would reject. This isn't injustice—it's mercy beyond our comprehension. The gospel offends our sense of fairness precisely because it reveals how ungracious we truly are. Yet this same offensive gospel is our only hope, for none of us would choose ourselves if we truly understood our own hearts. We stumble over the rock of offense when we demand God love only those we approve of, forgetting that we ourselves are undeserving recipients of His radical grace.