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These articles are reproduced with the permission of Rabbi Loren Jacobs -  http://www.shema.com


Replacement Theology

Its Origins, Teachings and Errors

By Dr. Gary Hedrick, President of CJF Ministries

(With Minor Editing By Rabbi Loren)

These are challenging and confusing times. With all the numerous and varied “winds of doctrine” that are blowing around us these days, many Christians find it difficult to discern the difference between truth and error. Here at CJF Ministries, one error we frequently encounter is Replacement Theology. Actually, it’s nothing new: in fact, it’s been around for centuries. Some of its roots are traceable to the writings of some of the Early Church fathers. And even today, oddly enough, this pernicious error is taught as a fact in many Bible colleges and seminaries worldwide. So let me ask you - how much do you know about Replacement Theology? If you were called upon to refute it, could you?

Definition

Replacement Theology - reduced to its simplest form - teaches that the Church has replaced Israel in God’s plan. The term “Replacement Theology” is relatively new and unfamiliar to many people (in some cases, even those who believe in it). Among theologians, the older and more widely used term is “supersessionism.” The Church “supersedes” Israel. Its proponents teach that God has set aside Israel and made the Church “new Israel,” the new and improved people of God. There are many variations within the broad spectrum of Replacement Theology, but two of the main approaches are these:

1. Israel’s role as the people of God was completed (economic supersessionism). This is the kinder and gentler way of stating the basic thesis of Replacement Theology. It says that once the Messiah came 2,000 years ago, Israel’s mission was completed. A transition occurred at that point, and the Church took over as the people of God and became the focal point for the outworking of God’s plan and purpose in redemption. God is no longer working administratively through ethnic Israel.

2. Israel’s place as the people of God was forfeited (punitive supersessionism). Other Replacement theologians are more straightforward and actually say that the supposed replacement of Israel was a divine judgment on the nation for its rejection of the Messiah in the first century. This is what some writers have called “punitive secessionism.”

Perhaps Martin Luther articulated this position most eloquently when he wrote: “For such ruthless wrath of God is sufficient evidence that they [i.e., the Jewish people] assuredly have erred and gone astray. Even a child can comprehend this. For one dare not regard God as so cruel that he would punish his own people so long, so terrible, so unmercifully … Therefore this work of wrath is proof that the Jews, surely rejected by God, are no longer his people, and neither is he any longer their God” (“On the Jews and Their Lies,” Trans. Martin H. Bertram, in Luther’s Works [Philadelphia: Fortress Press, 1971], p. 265).

Common threads that weave their way through the numerous variations of supersessionism are (1) that God is finished with Israel as a nation, and (2) that the promises He made to Israel in the Old Testament have been inherited by the Church. (However, most Replacement theologians are reluctant to say that the Church - which is largely in apostasy today - has also inherited the curses and judgments that God pronounced on Israel for her apostasy.)

One defender of Replacement Theology writes: “The Jewish nation no longer has a place as the special people of God; that place has been taken by the Christian community which fulfills God’s purpose for Israel” (Bruce Waltke, “Kingdom Promises as Spiritual,” in Continuity and Discontinuity: Perspectives on the Relationship Between the Testaments, Ed. John S. Feinberg [Wheaton, Illinois: Crossway, 1987] p. 275). This is how one evangelical theologian summarized the essence of supersessionism in a paper he presented at the Evangelical Theological Society annual meeting a few years ago: “The issue is whether national Israel as an administrative structure is still in the plan of God” (“A Future for Israel in Covenant Theology: The Untold Story” by R. Todd Mangum, Instructor in Historical and Systematic Theology at Biblical Theological Seminary in Hatfield, Pennsylvania [November 16, 2000], p. 20.

Theological Basis

Replacement Theology is closely associated with Reformed (or Covenant) Theology, the brand of theology historically linked to John Calvin (1509-1564) and the Protestant Reformation. Reformed/Covenant Theology, in turn, is closely associated with amillennialism, an eschatological view with a spiritualized (rather than literal-historical) interpretation of the prophetic Scriptures. The natural affinity these views (that is, Replacement Theology and amillennialism) seem to have for each other is understandable because Replacement Theology relies so heavily on a non-literal and allegorical interpretation of the biblical promises to Israel.

Although many of the early Reformers and Puritans - including even Calvin himself - wrote about the nation of Israel one day being restored by the grace of God and experiencing a national regeneration, that is an increasingly marginalized, minority view in Reformed Christianity today (which is ironic, since we have seen the amazing rebirth of the nation of Israel, just as the Word of God predicted!). And even among those who allow for an end-time work of the Spirit of God among the Jewish people, there is still a reluctance to acknowledge that God is not finished with His people Israel as a nation, or to acknowledge the prospect of a future Kingdom on the Earth.

This view stands in contrast to the teachings of Dispensational Premillennialism, which affirms the continuing role that Israel plays (in tandem with the Church) in the outworking of God’s plan of redemption.

Historical Roots

Elements of Replacement Theology can be traced as far back as Marcion (A.D. 160), who carried on a theological crusade to purge the Church of what he perceived to be dangerous Jewish errors and influences. Later, many of these same anti-Judaic sentiments found their way into the thinking (and writings) of the Early Church fathers. Irenaeus (c. 180), for instance, wrote, “The Jews have rejected the Son of God and cast Him out of the vineyard when they slew Him. Therefore, God has justly rejected them and has given to the Gentiles outside the vineyard the fruits of its cultivation” (The Ante-Nicene Fathers, Ed. Alexander Roberts and James Donaldson, [1885-1887], Volume 1, p. 493).

Over time, statements like these became the basis for full-blown anti-Semitism in some sectors of Christianity. Anything Jewish was renounced as an attempt to subvert and “Judaize” the Church. Teachings like chiliasm (millenarianism), for instance, were denounced as “Jewish fables.” The Early Church, which was clearly and undeniably Jewish, was described as “primitive,” unenlightened, and beset by erroneous notions that were carry-overs from ancient Judaism.

By the seventh century, Jewish people who came to faith in the Messiah were required to denounce their Jewish ancestry and heritage before they could be baptized. Professor Paul Halsall of Fordham University cites the following Visigoth profession from c. A.D. 680-687: “I do here and now renounce every rite and observance of the Jewish religion, detesting all its most solemn ceremonies and tenets that in former days I kept and held. In future I will practice no rite or celebration connected with it, nor any custom of my past error, promising neither to seek it out or perform it. In the name of this Creed, which I truly believe and hold with all my heart, I promise that I will never return to the vomit of Jewish superstition. Never again will I fulfill any of the offices of Jewish ceremonies to which I was addicted, nor ever more hold them dear. I altogether deny and reject the errors of the Jewish religion, casting forth whatever conflicts with the Christian Faith, and affirming that my belief in the Holy Trinity is strong enough to make me live the truly Christian life, shun all intercourse with other Jews and have the circle of my friends only among honest Christians. With them or apart from them I must always eat Christian food, and as a genuinely devout Christian go often and reverently to Church. I promise also to maintain and embrace with due love and reverence the observance of all the Lord’s days or feasts for martyrs as declared by the piety of the Church, and upon those days to consort always with sincere Christians, as it behooves a pious and sincere Christian to do. Herewith is my profession of faith and belief as given by me on this date …” (“Professions of Faith Extracted from Jews on Baptism,’ from the Internet Medieval Sourcebook compiled by Professor Paul Halsall of Fordham University [www.fordham.edu/halsall/sources/jewish-oaths.html]).

The incredible irony here is that only a few centuries earlier, the Church had been almost exclusively Jewish! The Messiah was Jewish; the writers of the Bible were Jewish; the apostles were Jewish; the earliest Christians were Jewish; the first congregation was Jewish (located in Jerusalem); and the first missionaries were Jewish!

In fact, a council of Church leaders - including Paul, Barnabas, Peter and James - was convened at Jerusalem (Acts 15) so the leaders of the new and growing Messianic Movement (known first as “the sect of the Nazarenes,” Acts 24:5) could decide upon what conditions non-Jews would be admitted into the fellowship of the saints! But here, within just a few generations, the shoe was already on the other foot! Non-Jews were in control of the Church now. Jewish doctrines (the earthly Kingdom in particular) were considered erroneous and even seditious. And non-Jewish Church leaders were laying down the terms for Jewish believers in Jesus who wished to be baptized.

Exegetical Problems with Supersessionism

Did the sins of the Jewish nation result in her rejection? Paul’s answer is found in Romans 11: I say then, has God cast away His people? Certainly not! For I also am an Israelite, of the seed of Abraham, of the tribe of Benjamin. God has not cast away his people whom He foreknew (vv. 1-2, NKJV). I say then, have they [Israel] stumbled that they should fall? Certainly not! But through their fall, to provoke them to jealousy, salvation has come to the Gentiles. Now if their fall is riches for the world, and their failure riches for the Gentiles, how much more their fullness! (vv. 11-12, NKJV). For if their being cast away is the reconciling of the world, what will their acceptance be but life from the dead? (v. 15, NKJV).

If the Jewish nation has no future in God’s plan, as the supersessionists claim, then what is the future “fullness” of Israel that Paul mentions in verse 12? And when, exactly, will the nation be resurrected (“life from the dead”) and “accepted” by God (verse 15)? Paul can’t be talking about the Church in this passage because the Church has never died - and never will (John 11:26). The only reasonable answer is that Paul is referring to a yet-future resurrection and restoration of Am Israel (the “people of Israel,” a collective term for the nation), as prophesied in passages like Ezekiel 37:1-14. It doesn’t mean they will automatically be saved simply because they are Jewish; rather, it means that the majority of Jewish people who are living at that time will recognize Yeshua of Nazareth as their Messiah and receive Him as Savior (Zechariah 12:10, Romans 11:26).

They will be saved in the same way believers from all ages and generations have been saved; that is, they will be saved by grace, through faith (Eph. 2:8-10). The problem with saying that God rejected His people Israel is that the term “rejection” implies permanence and finality. Paul’s forceful statements in Romans 11 probably indicate that people were claiming, even in his day, that God had “cast away” His people Israel (v. 1). They were saying that Israel had “stumbled’ and “fallen” from her former position (vv. 11-12). Paul rejected any such notion (“Certainly not!” in verses 1 and 11). Then he goes on to say that even if we insist on saying that they were rejected, then we are forced to the conclusion that the rejection is only temporary. Even if we insist on saying that they did stumble and fall, then it must also be said that their fall brought salvation to the rest of the world (Gentiles) - and Israel’s fall, too, is only temporary because they are destined to be restored one day to a position of “fullness” (v. 12).

The “fullness of the Gentiles” (Rom. 11:25) refers to the time when the full number of non-Jewish believers has been added to the ranks of the Church and the last person has been saved. Likewise, the “fullness” of the Jewish people (v. 12) refers to the time when “all Israel shall be saved” (v. 26). As we saw earlier, that means the Jewish people en masse will recognize and receive their Messiah, Yeshua of Nazareth. There may be some dissenters - and their probably will be - but the Holy Spirit of God will do a powerful work among the Jewish people, and multitudes of them - the vast majority of them - will come to faith in the Messiah of Israel, Jesus of Nazareth.

The truth is that God is no more finished with Israel than He is finished with the Gentiles. Neither one has been replaced by the other; and God’s plan for both remains intact, in spite of their failures. This is really the crux of the issue. Replacement Theology says that Israel was rejected by God and that the rejection was permanent and irrevocable; however, we say that God’s calling on Israel was permanent and irrevocable, in spite of her many sins and shortcomings (Romans 11:29)

What Did the Apostles Believe About the Millennium?

Another problem for supersessionism and amillennialism is that these views are not in harmony with the teachings of the Apostles and the Early Church. Almost without exception, Church historians agree that chiliasm, an early form of premillennialism, was the position of the Early (Jewish) Church. In his classic, encyclopedic History of the Christian Church, Philip Schaff wrote, “The most striking point in the eschatology of the ante-Nicene Age [A.D. 100-325] is the prominent chiliasm, or millenarianism, … a widely current opinion of distinguished teachers, such as Barnabas, Papias, Justin Martyr, Irenaeus, Tertullian, Methodius, and Lactantius …” (Scribner, 1884; Vol. 2, p. 614).

What’s interesting about this admission is that it comes from someone who was neither evangelical nor premillennial. Schaff, in fact, was himself an ardent supersessionist! He wrote, “The carnal Jewish interpretation of the Old Testament is a diabolical perversion. The Christians, and not the Jews, are the true Israel of God and the righteous owners of the Old Testament Scriptures” (Ibid., Sec. 167, “Barnabas”). Yet as a student of history and as a scholar, he had to acknowledge that chiliasm was “prominent” in the Early Church, even though he himself despised it.

It should be noted that Papias (who believed in a future, earthly Kingdom) was a disciple of Polycarp, who in turn was a disciple of the Apostle John who actually penned the passages in the Book of Revelation about the Millennial Kingdom. Premillennialism, then, may be the only eschatological system with an unbroken link directly to the author of the Apocalypse. This means that amillennialism represents a departure from what the Early Church believed. Augustine (354-430), author of City of God, a 22-volume defense of his theological views, proposed ideas similar to what we know as amillennialism (Books 15 to 19). However, even Augustine started out as a premillennialist! It wasn’t until later in his life that he decided that the prophecies about (and promises to) Israel should be interpreted symbolically and applied to the Church, rather than being interpreted literally and applied to Israel.

The Sticking Point: Messiah’s Millennial Monarchy

Evangelicals have been busy for years trying to hammer out an understanding between premillennial dispensationalists and adherents of Reformed/Covenant Theology. Dispensationalists who have been actively pursuing this agenda (and making concessions to the opposing view) are known as “progressive dispensationalists.” The one point, however, that continues to be a fly in the ointment of reconciliation is the Millennial Kingdom. Even Covenant theologians who allow for an end-time mass conversion of the Jewish people still have difficulty accepting Israel’s role in a future, literal Kingdom on the Earth. This shows just how diverse amillennialism and premillennialism are and how difficult it is to bridge the gap between them without seriously compromising one or the other.

Why Is This Error Dangerous?

Is Replacement Theology really worth arguing about? Or is this discussion much ado about nothing? One reason it’s important to call attention to questionable theology, no matter how deeply entrenched it may be in traditional Christianity is that sooner or later, bad theology always leads to bad practice - and in this case, it already has! Replacement Theology has provided the basis for all sorts of mischief, persecution, and atrocities against the Jewish people throughout Christian history.

For example, Martin Luther, the father of the Protestant Reformation, was a supersessionist. Near the end of his life, he said that synagogues and Jewish schools should be burned to the ground, Jewish people run out of their homes, their prayer books and Talmudic writings burned, and the rabbis forbidden to preach or teach on penalty of death (“On the Jews and Their Lies,” Trans. Martin H. Bertram, in Luther’s Works [Philadelphia: Fortress Press, 1971], pp. 268-271). Luther also declared that Jewish people in Germany should be confined to their own homes and neighborhoods - a plan the Nazis implemented literally when they quarantined Jewish families in ghettos in Poland and other places before shipping them to the death camps for extermination. One historian writes: It is difficult to understand the behavior of most German Protestants in the first Nazi years unless one is aware of two things: their history and the influence of Martin Luther. The great founder of Protestantism was both a passionate anti-Semite and a ferocious believer in absolute obedience to political authority. He wanted Germany rid of the Jews. Luther’s advice was literally followed four centuries later by Hitler, Goering, and Himmler (William L. Shirer, The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich [New York: Simon & Shuster, 1960], p. 236).

No one is suggesting that anyone who believes in Replacement Theology is an anti-Semite or would agree with Luther’s statements. That would be an unfair characterization - and it certainly is not the case. It is important, nevertheless, to examine the implications and ramifications of any position, including Replacement Theology: and it is an incontestable fact that ideas similar to those of Replacement Theology have inspired some horrible atrocities against the Jewish people.

We’re Making Progress!

As we observed earlier, the term “Replacement Theology” is relatively new, and is generally avoided by adherents of supersessionism. As far as they are concerned, they’re simply espousing traditional theology - and in a sense, they are! Supersessionist ideas have been widely accepted in mainstream Christianity since the third century or so, as mainstream Christianity was gradually losing its original Jewish character. The Gentile powers-that-be in early institutional (Eastern and Western) Christianity wanted to distance themselves from Christianity’s Jewish origins. And they did!

The good new is that slowly but surely we’re making progress in our battle against Replacement Theology. Everywhere we go, all over the world, (even Arab countries!), we find believers who acknowledge Israel’s unique and ongoing place in God’s plan of the ages, and who are anxiously awaiting that Golden Age when, for the first time, “they shall not hurt nor destroy in all my holy mountain: for the Earth shall be full of the knowledge of the Lord, as the waters cover the sea” (Isa. 11:9).

Most Baptists today are premillennial (except for the most liberal Baptist denominations), as are many Bible churches, particularly those associated with IFCA (Independent Fundamental Churches of America) International and similar groups of independent churches. There are even premillennial Presbyterians! Our ranks are growing with every day that passes. Much of the opposition comes from the more liberal, mainline denominations and their seminaries. And it’s not merely coincidental that these are the same churches and institutions that are aligned with the anti-Israel, pro-Palestinian World and National Councils of Churches.

If you’d like to know if your church leaders believe in Replacement Theology, ask them! If they are not familiar with the term, be patient because it’s entirely possible that they have never heard it before, even if they attended seminary. Also, it’s not likely that they’ve ever knowingly aligned themselves with any view that’s anti-Semitic, anti-Judaic or anti-Israel. This may all be new to them! Ask them, very humbly and sincerely, if they believe that God rejected Israel when Israel rejected His Son in the first century and that as a result, He has no future plan or purpose for the Jewish nation. They may reply that yes, of course, Jewish people can be saved and join the Church - and to them, that means God has a plan for the Jewish people. However, that’s not what we’re asking. We want to know if they believe that God is no longer dealing with the Jewish nation - and don’t be surprised if the answer, ultimately, is in the affirmative. After all, as we saw earlier, this has been the predominant view of mainstream Christianity for centuries - roughly since the time of Augustine, in fact. Sadly, this view has become normative in much of the Church, including many denominations and their seminaries.

Let’s not be afraid to challenge theological tradition when it’s wrong. It’s our responsibility to proclaim and defend the premillennial hope of the Church - and the nation of Israel - in these days of widespread error and apostasy. We should encourage our premillennial Bible colleges and seminaries to take a stand on Replacement Theology and challenge them to produce graduates who are knowledgeable about the historical and theological issues Replacement Theology encompasses. There’s a lot we can do, and we should be doing all we can!









Is God Finished With His People?

Romans 11: God Has Not Rejected His People!

Rabbi Paul systematically outlines the major doctrines of the Messianic Faith in his letter to the Messianic Community at Rome. Paul wrote Romans before he visited the congregation there. As a result he does not address any problems in the congregation, as he does in many of his other letters.

Paul devotes 3 of the 16 chapters (9-11) to the continuing place that the Jewish people have in the plans of God. Obviously his was a very important subject that the Apostle to the Gentiles wanted those in the capital of the Roman Empire to understand. Unfortunately, the Church has neglected this teaching since the first century. It is essential for all followers of Messiah to understand Israel's ongoing role in God's plans. God has called Messianic Gentiles to a special relationship with His original Chosen People. If the Church is to fulfill her calling she must sucessfully deal with the Jewish people.

I say then, God has not rejected His people, has He? May it never be! For I too an Israelite, a descendant of Abraham, of the tribe of Benjamin. Romans 11:1

In Romans 11 Paul raises the question, "Has God rejected His people?" He answers his own question by stating, May it never be! God has clearly not rejected Israel. If this was Paul's only response, it would have been sufficient and should settle once and for whether God has rejected His people. However, throughout the rest of Chapter 11 Paul will give additional arguments why God is not finished with the Jewish people.

The fact that Paul raises this question using the phrase, "His people," tells us that a special relationship between God and the nation of Israel continues to exist. Paul doesn't say that Israel is "His ex-people," but "His people." The covenants that Paul previously referred to as belonging to Israel (Romans 9:4) are still in effect; the Jews are still an unique nation with a special relationship with God. The nation of Israel still has an ongoing covenant relationship with God that causes her to be "His people."

I too am an Israelite. Paul points out that he himself is still part of the people of Israel. Paul's Jewish identity didn't change when he met the King of the Jews. Although he was the Apostle to the Gentiles, Paul never denied his Jewishness. Paul describes himself as an Israelite, a descendant of Abraham, of the tribe of Benjamin. Paul shows that being Jewish and believing in Yeshua are in no way incompatible or mutually exclusive. In spite of Paul's example, the Church has often demanded that Jewish people who believe in the Messiah renounce their heritage.

Paul is a great example that God has not rejected Israel. Once the greatest persecutor of the early Messianic movement, Paul became the greatest propagator of the faith that he once opposed. If God had rejected His people, a Jew like Paul, who at first opposed Yeshua would never have become His Apostle to the Gentiles. Paul can be considered an example in miniature of the destiny of the whole of Israel who, like Paul, initially opposed the messianic claims of Yeshua. Israel will have her own "Damascus Road" experience encountering the risen Lord Yeshua. Like Paul, the Jewish people will eventually fulfill their destiny to be God's apostle and light to the Gentile nations.

God has not rejected His people whom He foreknew. Romans 11:2

Paul reiterates the statement that God has not rejected "His people". Paul goes on to state that the Jewish people were known beforehand by God. God, the One who knows the end of all things from the beginning, foretold through the prophets that the majority of His Chosen People wouldn't receive the Messiah when He first came among us.

Seven hundred years before Yeshua came, God forewarned Israel that Messiah would be "despised and rejected." According to Isaiah 53, the Messiah would be "pierced through for our transgressions" and "crushed for our iniquities." "The Lord was pleased to crush Him" because through His rejection and death, salvation would come to Israel and the nations. God foreknew all of this, yet He loved and chose Israel anyway.

Or do you not know what the Scripture says in the passage about Elijah, how he pleads with God against Israel? Lord, they have killed Thy prophets, they have torn down Thy altars, and I alone am left, and they are seeking my life. But what is the divine response to him? I have kept for Myself seven thousand men who have not bowed the knee to Baal. In the same way then, there has also come to be at the present time a remnant according to God's gracious choice. But if it is by grace, it is no longer on the basis of works, otherwise grace is no longer grace. What then? That which Israel is seeking for, it has not obtained, but those who were chosen obtained it, and the rest were hardened. Romans 11:2-7.

Paul shows a precedent for God's continuing faithfulness to Israel in spite of her lack of faith. He recounts Elijah's lament to God that he was the only Jew left still serving Him. The Lord corrected him and informed him that among the millions of Israelis in his day there was a remnant of seven thousand who had not worshipped the false god Baal. In these verses, Paul elaborates on the concept of the "Remnant." The "Remnant" refers to "those who remain." Throughout Israel's history there have been few times when the majority of God's Chosen People were in a right relationship with Him. The majority of Israel usually went astray, and only a faithful minority or "Remnant" served Him.

In the same way then, there has also come to be at the present time a remnant according to God's gracious choice. Paul shows that the "Remnant Principle" operative in Elijah's day is still in effect since a faithful remnant existed in Paul's day. The faithful remnant of Israel in the time of Paul consisted of men like the Apostles and the 3000 Jews from all over the world who believed in Yeshua on the day of Shavuot (Pentecost). They quickly grew to 5000, and then to tens of thousands (Acts 21:20). Not only were Yeshua's first Jewish disciples the leaders of the Messianic movement, but they were also considered part of the faithful remnant within Israel.

That which Israel is seeking for, it has not obtained, but those who were chosen obtained it, and the rest were hardened.

Paul reiterates the idea that among the Chosen People, of whom a majority are hardened toward God, a faithful remnant exists. The covenants God made with Israel as a chosen nation, do not insure salvation and eternal life for each individual within the nation. Only those chosen individuals who welcomed God's way of salvation have obtained it throughout Israel's history. Since the coming of Yeshua it is Messianic Jews who have obtained salvation within the Chosen People.

Just as it is written, God gave them a spirit of stupor, eyes to see not and ears to hear not, down to this very day. And David says, let their table become a snare and a trap, and a stumbling block and a retribution to them. Let their eyes be darkened to see not, and bend their backs forever. Romans 11:8-10

In these verses Paul relates three additional instances in Scripture that demonstrate the "Remnant Principle." Verse 8 refers to passages written by both Moses in Deuteronomy 29:4 and Isaiah in Isaiah 29:10. Verses 9 and 10 refer to a passage in Psalm 69:22-23 written by King David.

Paul's quotation from Deuteronomy records Moses' lament over Israel's spiritual blindness and deafness in spite of the great signs and wonders she witnessed. After wandering for 40 years in the wilderness, most Israelis couldn't see or hear God. Moses was opposed by the majority of Israel and was faced with a subversive element who wanted to kill him and return to Egypt. In spite of the faithlessness of all but two of the 600,000 men who left Egypt, God did not reject His People during the days of Moses. Nor has God rejected His People because the majority of Israel in the days of Yeshua saw Him do great signs and wonders and went astray.

When God first called Isaiah into His service, he warned him that Israel was spiritually asleep and would not listen to him. "Go and tell this people: Keep on listening, but do not perceive; keep on looking, but do not understand... Then I said, Lord, how long? And He answered, until cities are devastated and without inhabitant" Isaiah 6:9-11. In the time of Isaiah, the majority of Israel was asleep and could neither see nor hear God. But God did not reject His people in the days of Isaiah.

The passage Paul quotes from Psalm 69 is a prayer in which David asks God to punish his enemies. The enemies David refers to were among his own people. David experienced opposition from many within Israel, even though he was a "messiah" or "anointed one." God did not reject His People because the majority of Israel rebelled against David and would not accept him nor has God rejected His People because the majority went astray by not recognizing God's ultimate "Anointed One," the Messiah Yeshua.

God raised up Elijah, Moses, Isaiah and David to lead Israel. All were rejected by the majority of Israel in their generations. Throughout Jewish history the majority of Israel has gone astray but God has never rejected His People for our rebelliousness. Instead, the Lord has consistently demonstrated unilateral faithfulness to Israel. Paul demonstrates that Yeshua, the greatest leader ever raised up for Israel, was rejected by the majority of His generation just as Elijah, Moses, Isaiah and David were rejected by theirs. He concludes, therefore, that God has not rejected His People even though we were unfaithful to Messiah Yeshua.

I say then, they did not stumble so as to fall, did they? May it never be! But by their transgression salvation has come to the Gentiles, to make them jealous. Romans 11:11

Israel's rejection of Messiah did not result in a permanent fall from grace. To the notion that Israel stumbled never to recover Paul emphatically declares, "May it never be!" Israel's stumble is a temporary fall from which we will rise and recover.

By their transgression salvation has come to the Gentiles. Israel plays a special role in the plan of God. God has used Israel's rejection of the Messiah to usher in salvation for the Gentiles. The non-Jewish nations have been forgiven, reconciled to God, endowed with His Spirit and given eternal life because of Israel's stumble over Messiah. As a result of the majority's rejection of Messiah, the doors of God's Kingdom are forever opened to those outside of Israel.

Salvation has come to the Gentiles to make Israel jealous. Because of the way that God has used Israel to bring salvation to the nations, the Gentiles owe a tremendous debt to Israel in return. Paul admonishes all Gentile Christians to guard against reacting with contempt toward fallen Israel. Instead, all Messianic Gentiles have a special obligation to help the Jewish people come into a relationship with Yeshua. Rather than blaming and persecuting the Jews for the death of Yeshua, true Christians should reach out to the Jewish people with love and help them find their Messiah. The Gentiles are called to make Israel jealous by demonstrating the love and reconciliation they have with Israel's God. Israel should be challenged to re-evaluate her rejection of Messiah Yeshua after witnessing the fruits of love and forgiveness in the lives of Messianic Gentiles.

Unfortunately for most of the past 1900 years the Church has failed to do this. Instead of attracting Jews to Yeshua, centuries of anti-semitism in the church has often been a stumbling block that has kept Jews from Yeshua. Persecution in the name of Yeshua by those who call themselves Christians has made it extremely difficult for most Jewish people to hear the Rabbi from Nazareth calling His Jewish people back to Himself.

Now if their transgression be riches for the world and their failure be riches for the Gentiles, how much more will their fulfillment be! But I am speaking to you who are Gentiles. Inasmuch then as I am an apostles of Gentiles, I magnify my ministry, if somehow I might move to jealousy my fellow countrymen and save some of them. For if their rejection be the reconciliation of the world, what will their acceptance be but life from the dead? Romans 11:12-15

In this section Paul describes a time of fulfillment that awaits Israel to replace transgression and failure. The rejection Paul is referring to in this passage is Israel's rejection of Messiah, not God's rejection of Israel. Instead of rejection, there will be acceptance. There will come a time when the entire nation of Israel, not just the faithful remnant, will accept Messiah and reach fulfillment.

God used Israel's failure to receive Yeshua as God's Messiah to reconcile the entire world to Himself and bring untold spiritual riches to the Gentiles. If Israel's opposition to God's plan resulted in reconciliation and untold spiritual riches for the Gentiles, Israel's acceptance of Yeshua will result in greater good for the whole world. When Israel says to Yeshua, "Blessed is He who comes in the name of the Lord," it will mean nothing less than life from the dead. This age of suffering will end and the resurrection and Yeshua's blessed reign will begin. The final redemption of humanity revolves around Israel's relationship to and acceptance of Yeshua. Therefore, Israel's fulfillment means the eternal blessing of the entire world.

Specifically addressing non-Jewish Christians (But I am speaking to you who are Gentiles), the Apostle to the Gentiles explains that the Gentile's highest well being hinges on Israel's relationship to Yeshua. For their own well being (if for no other reason) Gentile Christians should strive to help the Jewish people find Yeshua. Consequently, the Gentiles' highest evangelistic priority should be to make Israel jealous. Paul, God's Apostle to the Gentiles, magnifies or makes much of his ministry to the Gentiles so that Jewish people might be drawn to faith in Yeshua. Paul reasons that since salvation has come to the Gentiles to make Israel jealous, the more his ministry to the Gentiles is blessed with success, the closer we come to the goal of Israel's salvation.

Jewish followers of Yeshua should be interested in Gentile missions. The more the Gentile branch of the Church grows and fulfills its purpose, especially that of making Jewish people jealous of the Gentiles' relationship to the God of Israel, the better it will be for Israel. Israel's destiny and that of the Gentiles are inextricably tied together in the eternal plan of God. What happens to one deeply affects the other.

And if the first piece of dough be holy, the lump is also; and if the root be holy, the branches are too. Romans 11:16

In this verse Paul gives a biblical principle that we might call the "first fruit principle" which is, "what God begins well He finishes well." In the book of Numbers, Israel was instructed: "from the first of your dough you shall give to the Lord an offering throughout your generations." The first piece of dough was to be set apart and offered to God. This ceremony acknowledged that Israel owes all to Him and that He is the One who provides all that we need. If the first piece of bread was holy and acceptable to God, He would provide and bless the rest of our bread as well.

When dough with good yeast is added to a larger lump of unleavened dough, the whole batch will eventually turn into good usable dough. A tree with a strong healthy root will produce good branches and fruit.

Paul's analogy refers to the nation of Israel. God chose the Patriarchs, Abraham, Isaac and Jacob, who are the root and the first piece of dough. He blessed and gave His Chosen People a good beginning by making an eternal covenant with the Patriarchs. Because of this holy beginning, God has a special love for the descendants of the Fathers and will never set Israel aside.

The firstfruits principle operates in both the natural and spiritual realms. Israel, whose origins began with a covenant with God, is thereby destined to be redeemed and consecrated to God. Israel's future restoration will be in conformity with the holy nature impressed on us at the beginning.

But if some of the branches were broken off, and you, being a wild olive, were grafted in among them and became partaker with them of the rich root of the olive tree, do not be arrogant toward the branches; but if you are arrogant, remember that it is not you who supports the root, but the root supports you. You will say then, 'Branches were broken off so that I might be grafted in'. Quite right, they were broken off for their unbelief, but you stand by your faith. Romans 11:17-20

Paul elaborates on his root and branch metaphor. God's covenant with Abraham, Isaac and Jacob guaranteeing that through them all the nations of the world were to be blessed made them the root that sprouted and grew branches - the Jewish people. Throughout Jewish history some of the branches were good and had a relationship with God like the root. Some of the branches were unfaithful and were broken off. Many of the original branches met this fate after rejecting Messiah. Since Yeshua's appearance, a son of Israel must either welcome Yeshua as the Messiah or suffer being broken off from the Olive Tree of God's blessing and salvation.

Some of the branches were broken off. We should never forget that many of the natural branches followed Yeshua and remained part of the tree. They were the ones who spread the Good News to the other nations of the world.

To counteract the human tendency towards arrogance and conceit, Paul exhorts the Gentiles at Rome to remember that they were not the originators of the Messianic Faith. They are the beneficiaries of something that God had been cultivating in Israel for over 2000 years. Gentiles are not native to the original tree - they are wild branches that were grafted into the Olive Tree. The Church is planted in a Jewish tree in Jewish soil. It finds its true identity in connection with Israel.

Paul instructs Gentile Christians to have a humble attitude regarding the place of Israel in the plan of God, pointing out that the Jewish root supports the Gentiles branches, not vice versa. It would be a strange looking tree indeed that was supported by the branches and not by the root! Messianic Gentiles were not intended to supplant the place of the original branches. This is a clear teaching against "Replacement Theology", the erroneous doctrine that the Church is the new Israel and has replaced Israel in the plans of God. Replacement theology is like poison in the bloodstream of the Church that sapped the Church's health and strength.

The Church's neglect of Paul's admonitions over 2000 years of church history has resulted in diminishing the strength and number of the original Jewish branches in the tree of faith. Paul's warning to retain a humble attitude towards God's original Chosen People has been disregarded. The numerous Gentile branches quickly exerted greater influence than the less numerous original branches and made the Church a Gentile institution. For most of Church history, a natural branch was forced to become a wild olive to be regrafted into the Olive Tree. God wants to restore the understanding that the Olive Tree is composed of both natural and wild branches, and that the natural branches have an important function to fulfill in it.

Do not be conceited, but fear; for if God did not spare the natural branches, neither will He spare you. Behold then the kindness and severity of God; to those who fell, severity, but to you, God's kindness, if you continue in His kindness; otherwise you also will be cut off. Romans 11:20-22

Paul exhorts the Gentiles to avoid conceit and fear God. Neither Jew nor Gentile hold a more special place than the other in the heart of God. Both must relate to Him on the basis of humble faith. God can cut off Gentile branches who stray away from a humble faith in the King of the Jews, just as easily as He cut off unfaithful Jewish branches from the Olive Tree.

And they also, if they do not continue in their unbelief, will be grafted in; for God is able to graft them in again. For if you were cut off from what is by nature a wild olive tree, and were grafted contrary to nature into a cultivated olive tree, how much more shall these who are the natural branches be grafted into their own olive tree? Romans 11:22-24

God is able to graft them in again. The original branches, the Jewish people who were severed from the Olive Tree, will be grafted back into the Olive Tree if they respond to God with belief in Messiah. All over the world this regrafting is taking place. God's Spirit is bringing fulfillment to this verse in a unique way that hasn't happened since the sixth century.

How much more shall these who are the natural branches be grafted into their own olive tree? Paul's analogy demonstrates once again that being Jewish and believing in Yeshua are naturally compatible. The Romans and Greeks, who were Paul's contemporary "wild olive branches," were generally hostile to Jews and the religious heritage of Israel. Just as natural branches are easier to regraft into a cultivated tree than wild branches, so God's success in grafting Roman and Greek branches into the Tree of Faith through trust in the King of the Jews guarantees that He will be successful in grafting the natural branches into our own Olive Tree.

The natural branches be grafted into their own olive tree. Paul states that the Jewish people are specially related to the Olive Tree: it is their own Olive Tree. The Church is not by nature a Gentile institution, but rather part of the Jewish Olive Tree. Both faithful Jews and faithful Gentiles will spend an eternity in the New Jerusalem, whose 12 gates are named after the 12 tribes of Israel. There, they will worship the Lion of the tribe of Judah, the Root of David (Revelation 5:5).

For I do not want you, brethren, to be uninformed of this mystery, lest you be wise in your own estimation, that a partial hardening has happened to Israel until the fullness of the Gentiles has come in; and thus all Israel will be saved; just as it is written, The Deliverer will come from Zion, He will remove ungodliness from Jacob. And this is my covenant with them, when I take away their sins. Romans 11:25-27

I do not want you to be uninformed... lest you be wise in your own estimation. The Apostle to the Gentiles drives home the point he made in verses 17-24. The Gentiles are not to have a proud attitude towards the Jewish people based on being uniformed about Israel's future.

Paul informs us that God's plans for Israel were a mystery. Israel's destiny wasn't clearly revealed until Messiah's first coming. When Yeshua arrived it became clear that a remnant of the Jewish people would acknowledge Him as Lord but the majority would reject Him. When the apostles began their ministry after His resurrection, it was further apparent that Gentiles from all nations would be grafted into the commonwealth of Israel. All Israel wouldn't accept Messiah until His second coming.

Paul emphasizes that Israel's hardening towards God is partial. Not all of Israel has been hardened. In keeping with the remnant principle discussed earlier, ever since the time of the apostles there have always been some Jewish people who have believed in Yeshua. Since the Six Day war in 1967 when Jerusalem was restored to Israel, the number has been measurably increasing.

This partial hardening is only temporary and will not last forever. Once the full number of Gentiles from all the nations have been grafted into the Olive Tree of salvation and blessing, God's spirit will be poured out on Israel so that the entire nation will turn to faith in Yeshua as the Messiah. Paul refers back to Isaiah's prophecy (Isaiah 59:20-21) that the Deliverer will come from Zion and remove the sins of Jacob (the Jewish people). All Israel will be saved by turning to Messiah and embracing the "One whom we have pierced" (Zechariah 12:10).

This is my covenant with them, when I take away their sins" Israel's future atonement, forgiveness, salvation and restoration is absolutely sure because the Truthful One, the Amen, Who cannot lie, has guaranteed it to Israel by covenant.

For the gifts and calling of God are irrevocable. Romans 11:29

Paul gives another reason why God has not rejected His People. God does not take back the gifts that He has given to His people, even when they sin against Him. Paul previously mentioned some of the gifts given to Israel: They were made God's children, the Sh'khinah (the glorious dwelling presence of God) has been with them, the covenants are theirs, likewise the giving of the Torah, the Temple service and the promises; the Patriarchs are theirs; and from them, as far as his physical descent is concerned, came the Messiah. Romans 9:4-5 Jewish New Testament translation

Although it is human nature to want to take back a gift if one has been offended, it is not God's nature to do so. God acts on His sovereign initiatives, not in response to our treatment of Him. God will endure a lot of offense rather than disenfranchise or disinherit His people. Yeshua's prayer: "Father, forgive them; they don't understand what they are doing" demonstrates that He was willing to forgive all who were involved in crucifying Him. This characteristic of God should be reassuring to all of Messiah's followers, because all of us sin against Him repeatedly. If He took back His gifts and calling in our lives whenever we offended Him, none of us could hope to accomplish anything. God demonstrates His great faithfulness to all of us by the example of His unfailing love the people of Israel although the majority have repeatedly stumbled.

For just as you once were disobedient to God, but now have been shown mercy because of their disobedience, so these also now have been disobedient, in order that because of the mercy shown to you they also may now be shown mercy. For God has shut up all in disobedience that He might show mercy to all. Romans 11:30-32

As God's Chosen People, Israel was reconciled to God while the Gentiles lived in disobedience to Him. With the coming of Yeshua and His rejection by the majority of Israelis, the roles have been reversed. Now Messianic Gentiles are in a state of obedience, while non-Messianic Jews are shut up in disobedience.

Because of the mercy shown to you they also may now be shown mercy. Paul expresses the relationship that God has established between Jews and Gentiles. Just as God used Israel to bring blessing and mercy to the Gentiles, God's will is to use the Gentiles now to demonstrate mercy back to the Jews and to help them find eternal life that comes only through Yeshua.

Jews and Gentiles must relate to God on the basis of His mercy, not on the basis of our merits. Neither Jew nor Gentile has earned the right to any of God's blessings. Both Jews and Gentiles have had periods of disobedience to God. Both will experience the mercy of God. Israel will again be shown mercy and will turn to faith in Yeshua, her Messiah. God has not rejected His People. It is part of His sovereign plan to shut up both Jews and Gentiles in disobedience that He might show mercy to all.









 
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