Chapter 10 develops what Israel got wrong, and what the gospel offers in its place. Paul testifies again to his pastoral concern (vv.1–4) and explains the difference between the "righteousness from the Law" and "the righteousness of faith" using a remarkable allegorical reading of Deuteronomy 30 (vv.5–13). The word is near; it is in your mouth and in your heart — confess Jesus as Lord, believe God raised him from the dead, be saved. Verses 14–17 then describe the necessary chain that delivers this word to the world: God sends, preachers proclaim, hearers hear, hearers believe, believers call. Verses 18–21 close with Israel's culpability — the word has indeed been heard, but most of Israel has refused it, while Gentiles have received it.
Paul again testifies to his anguished love for Israel before pressing the critique. The pattern of chapters 9–11: every difficult word about Israel is bracketed by expressions of love. Paul is not a triumphalist Gentile-Christian gloating over Israel's failure; he is a Jew weeping for his people.
The diagnosis of Israel is precisely calibrated. Israel has:
zeal — yes, in abundance
knowledge — yes, but not epignōsis
righteousness-pursuit — yes, but seeking their own rather than God's
submission to God's righteousness — no
The problem is not moral indifference or rejection of God in general; it is a misunderstanding of what God's righteousness is. Israel sought to construct righteousness through covenantal works; the gospel offers righteousness as received through faith in Christ. The two cannot be combined — to insist on the first is to refuse the second.
Zeal without knowledge is not safer than apathy; it is more dangerous. Religious sincerity that is misdirected can fuel both martyrdom and murder. Paul knows this firsthand — he was a sincere persecutor of the church before Christ confronted him. Mere enthusiasm is not the same as truth.
Paul's reading of Deuteronomy 30 is breathtaking and controversial. In its original context, Deuteronomy 30:11–14 says the commandment of the Law is not far off but near — Israel can keep it. Paul takes this same passage and applies it to Christ and the gospel: the gospel word is not far off; it is in your mouth and heart. Paul reads the Mosaic word about the nearness of Torah as a prefiguration of the nearness of the gospel. The Torah pointed toward the gospel; the gospel fulfills what the Torah promised about accessibility.
Some scholars are bothered by this — Paul seems to make Deuteronomy say something other than what it originally said. Others see Paul doing a deliberate pesher-style interpretation, where a text is read in light of its eschatological fulfillment. Either way, Paul's move is theological: what was true of the commandment in Moses's day is even more profoundly true of the gospel — the saving word is not difficult to access; it is offered directly to mouth and heart.
The simplicity of vv.9–10 is striking. After ten chapters of complex argument, Paul reduces the gospel response to two acts: confess Jesus as Lord; believe in heart that God raised him. The two are joined: confession without heart-belief is hollow; belief without confession is mute. Together they constitute saving faith.
The gospel's profundity is matched by its accessibility. You do not need to climb to heaven or descend to the abyss to find God's saving word; he has come to you, and the word stands in your mouth and heart. The hardest religious quest in history is solved by a near response, not a far ascent.
Three OT quotations frame the gospel's nearness: Deut 30 (the word is near in mouth and heart), Isa 28:16 (whoever believes will not be put to shame), and Joel 2:32 (whoever calls on Yahweh's name will be saved). The last is particularly significant: Paul takes a prophecy about calling on YHWH and applies it to calling on Jesus. Jesus is the YHWH of OT prophecy on whom one calls. The same Joel passage is quoted by Peter at Pentecost (Acts 2:21).
The cascading rhetorical questions of vv.14–15 work in two directions at once:
Toward the present: If Israel is to be saved (Paul's deep desire, v.1), they must call; to call they must believe; to believe they must hear; to hear there must be preachers — which means the church's mission must reach Israel.
Toward the past: But these conditions have been met — preachers have been sent, the word has been preached. The reason Israel has not believed is not lack of opportunity but rejection of the message that came.
Verse 16 makes the second point explicit: "they did not all heed the good news" — citing Isaiah 53:1's lament, "who has believed our report?" Isaiah himself foresaw that the prophetic word would meet unbelief. The same Isaiah who spoke of the beautiful feet of the messenger also lamented that the report was not believed. Paul's deployment of both Isaiah texts in adjacent verses is masterful — the very prophet who promised the messenger also foretold the rejection of the message.
The chapter's most lasting line — "faith comes from hearing" — is sometimes lifted out of context as a generic principle of religious epistemology. In context, it grounds the necessity of preaching. People do not generate faith from within; faith arises in response to a message proclaimed. Hence the church's vocation: to be the carrier of the spoken word that generates faith.
Faith is not a self-generated state; it is response to a message. Hearing precedes believing. Therefore preaching matters — not as an optional Christian activity but as the divinely-chosen means through which faith comes into being. The church's mission is not an add-on to its existence; it is the very mechanism by which God's word produces faith in the world.
Paul brackets his discussion with two adjacent Isaiah texts. Isaiah 52:7 celebrates the beautiful feet of the messenger ("How lovely on the mountains are the feet of him who brings good news!"). One verse later, Isaiah 53:1 begins the Suffering Servant song with: "Who has believed our report?" The juxtaposition is striking: the gospel messenger's feet are beautiful, AND the gospel report meets pervasive unbelief. Both the beauty of the proclamation and the tragedy of the unbelief were foretold in adjacent verses of Isaiah. Paul reads his present mission situation through both at once.
The closing verses of chapter 10 address two natural objections:
Objection 1 (v.18): "Maybe Israel hasn't really heard the gospel."
Answer: They have. The word has gone out widely.
Objection 2 (v.19): "Maybe Israel hasn't really understood."
Answer: They have. Moses already prophesied Gentile inclusion provoking Jewish jealousy; Isaiah prophesied Gentiles finding God while Israel resists.
The cumulative point: Israel's rejection of the Messiah is not because of insufficient hearing or insufficient understanding. Both have been provided. The problem is not external but internal — disobedience, obstinacy, refusal of God's outstretched hands.
This sets up chapter 11. Paul has now established two truths: (a) God's word has not failed because the true Israel includes the believing remnant plus believing Gentiles; (b) ethnic Israel has heard and understood but is currently in a posture of disobedience. The question for chapter 11: Is this disobedience final? Or is there hope for ethnic Israel? The answer Paul will give is one of the most hopeful in all his writings.
The image of God with hands stretched out all day toward a disobedient people may be the most poignant image of God's love in the OT. Israel's rejection of God is not God's withdrawal from Israel. The hands remain outstretched, hour by hour, year by year — patient, longing, refused. This same God will not give up on Israel; chapter 11 will reveal what he intends to do.
"Yahweh" in Joel 2:32 (v.13) — this is the most theologically significant LSB choice in the chapter. Paul writes kyrios, the LXX rendering of YHWH. LSB renders it "Yahweh" because the underlying Hebrew is the divine name. And Paul applies the verse to Jesus. The verse Joel originally wrote about calling on YHWH for salvation Paul applies to calling on Jesus — making the Christological identification explicit. LSB's rendering preserves the divine-name force that English smoothing erases.
"Christ is the end of the Law" (v.4) — LSB renders telos as "end" rather than "culmination" (NIV) or "goal" (CEB). The Greek telos contains both "termination" and "fulfillment/goal" — LSB's "end" preserves the ambiguity rather than choosing one side of the long-running debate.
"Confess with your mouth Jesus as Lord" (v.9) — LSB preserves the simple confession kyrios Iēsous. This was probably the earliest baptismal confession (cf. 1 Cor 12:3, Phil 2:11). LSB's rendering keeps the bare creedal force.
"How beautiful are the feet" (v.15, quoting Isa 52:7) — LSB preserves the OT vivid image rather than abstracting to "how welcome" or "what a beautiful sight." The dusty-runner-from-the-battlefield imagery is the point.
Chapter 11 will return to the central question: "Has God rejected his people?" Paul's answer will be a resounding no. He will speak of a believing Jewish remnant in his own day (vv.1–10), of the Gentile branches grafted into Israel's olive tree (vv.11–24), and of the great mystery: "all Israel will be saved" (v.26). The most contested phrase in Romans. Then the chapter — and this whole section on Israel — will end with one of the great doxologies of Scripture: "O the depth of the riches both of the wisdom and knowledge of God!"