★ Romans 9:6–24

Election and the Freedom of God's Mercy — Romans 9:6-24

Paul defends God's freedom in Rom 9:6-24: "Jacob I loved, but Esau I hated," and "he has mercy on whomever he wills." Election does not depend on works or human willing "but on God who has mercy" (9:16). Augustine read this as the charter of sovereign grace against Pelagius, and Aquinas held that election is wholly gratuitous, while no one is condemned except for their own sin. Calvin extended election to a symmetrical decree, a step many Catholic and Arminian readers decline. Barth reframed election as God's choice of humanity in Christ, reshaping modern debate. The shared confession is that salvation begins in God's free mercy. The potter-and-clay image of 9:20-21 recalls Isaiah's workshop in Isa 29:16, while the larger argument presupposes the plight of Rom 8:7. Election is the upstream source of the calling of 8:29-30.

soteriologyelectionpredestinationsovereignty