Non-distinct Sinners

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NetChaplain

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Nov 21, 2018
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How amazingly different Paul’s method of “provoking the Jews to jealousy” (Rom 11:11), from that pursued by many Jewish mission workers today! From them the Jew must have a “special” place as a Jew. In some quarters they are even organizing “Messianic assemblies” (the Lord Jesus will not be returning as the Messiah again—NC).

All this, we cannot but feel, is kowtowing to Jewish flesh, and hinders their salvation. Jews now are common sinners, who have for the present been set aside nationally (but will bring them back as always—NC), and must come to rely, as individual sinners, hopelessly guilty and helpless, upon the shed Blood of Christ, and upon Him risen from the dead. It is an awful thing to make present day “Jewish” claims, when God says Jews are, during this present dispensation, no different from Gentiles, before Him: but are just sinners!

There are those who insist that the Jew has a special place right through this dispensation; that he must always be “first,” that there is a difference, although Goad says plainly in Romans 3 that there is no difference as to the Lordship of Christ and the availability of salvation to the “whosevers,” Jew or Gentile. If Paul were among us today, he would abhor and decry the special, esoteric methods of approach to the Jew in vogue in some pretentious quarters today. Become all things” (1Co 9:22) to the Jew, to win him, certainly. Paul did. But tell him the truth that he is just a whosoever.

What the poor, Jewish exiles need this hour is a Paul to go right in among them with a “whosoever” message for sinners, “provoking them to jealousy” (Rom 11:11) by boasting in a Savior whom their nation has lost—a nation to whom God is not now offering a Messiah, but instead salvation, as common “whosoever” no—distinction people, ordinary guilty lost sinners. In Acts 28 God through Paul officially closed the door to the national offer of the Gospel to the Jews; therefor to treat the Jew as having a special place with God, is to deny Scripture.

In Acts 28:25, 28 Paul officially shuts the door to national Israel: “Well spoke the Holy Ghost by Esaias the prophet unto our fathers . . . Be it known therefore unto you, that the salvation of God is sent unto the Gentiles, and that they will hear it” (Rom 2:14, 15).

Since this awful use of Isaiah 6, the Gospel has no Jewish bounds or bonds whatever, and it is presumption and danger now, to give the Jews any other place than that of common sinners! “No distinction between Jew and Greek,” says God (Rom 10:12). Those who preach thus have God’s blessing. Those that would give any special place whatever to Jews, since that day, do so contrary to the Gospel; and, we fear, for private advantage.

Tell Jews the truth! Their Messiah was offered to their nation, and rejected. God is not offering a Messiah to Israel now, but has Himself rejected them: all except a “remnant,” who leave Jewish earthly hopes, break down into sinners only, and receive a sinners Savior—not a Jewish one! Then they become “partakers of the heavenly calling” (Heb 3:1).


—Wm R Newell (1868-1956)




MJS daily devotional excerpt for December 16

“Self-disappointment is a very different thing from self-judgment. Indeed, if there were true self-judgment there would never have to be self-disappointment. If in honesty and sobriety of heart I have judged ‘that in me, that is, in my flesh, dwelleth no good thing,’ I shall certainly not expect anything from myself, and it has been well said that where there is no expectation there can be no disappointment.

“But I feel sure that many young believers, and I dare say some old ones too, are very familiar with the wretched and depressing experience of self-disappointment. They have made many fresh starts; they have often been stirred up, and have made up their minds to be more for Christ; they have thought, ‘I shall do better now; I am more earnest about it than I was before’; but it has all ended in disappointment.

“They have no idea that they are trying to improve themselves; they would repudiate such a thought; they suppose that they know better than to look for good in themselves. And yet their disappointment is the plain proof that, in spite of all their knowledge of Scripture, they have expected to make themselves different, for they are disappointed because they have not succeeded in doing so.”

Charles Andrew Coates (1862-1945)
 
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From the last paragraph of the "Newell" quote:

"God is not offering a Messiah to Israel now, but has Himself rejected them: all except a “remnant,” who leave Jewish earthly hopes, break down into sinners only, and receive a sinners Savior—not a Jewish one"!

Can anyone read the Bible and truly believe God has rejected Israel? Was not our Lord and Savior a "Jewish One"? Does anyone believe God can break His covenant and still be God?

Someone will have to 'splain this one to me cause I just don't understand.
 
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From the last paragraph of the "Newell" quote:

"God is not offering a Messiah to Israel now, but has Himself rejected them: all except a “remnant,” who leave Jewish earthly hopes, break down into sinners only, and receive a sinners Savior—not a Jewish one"!

Can anyone read the Bible and truly believe God has rejected Israel? Was not our Lord and Savior a "Jewish One"? Does anyone believe God can break His covenant and still be God?

Someone will have to 'splain this one to me cause I just don't understand.
Hi S47! Your inquiry has much weight concerning the significance of God's people Israel. There's nowhere in Scripture that manifests the Lord Jesus will return again as a Messiah. Scripture reveals that many of the Jews were not in the faith, only some, "a remnant" of the Jews who sought out the Lord Jesus.

John Gill: Ro 11:11 "I say then, have they stumbled that they should fall?.... This is an objection, which the apostle takes from the mouth of an adversary; and the purport of it is, you say that the people of the Jews being blind, have stumbled at Christ and his Gospel, as was prophesied of them, and to which they were appointed; pray what were God's view and end in this? was it that they should fall and perish eternally? if it be so, is not this doing himself, what he forbids others, namely, "to put a stumblingblock before the blind?" Leviticus 19:14, and can he be excused from cruelty, and rejoicing at the misery of others? or is their stumbling permitted, that they should "all" fall through unbelief, and be cast away? and so it is an objection of the same kind with Romans 11:1; or since they have stumbled, and have thereby fell into a forlorn and miserable condition, are they always to continue in it, as the last clause in the above cited passage suggests? To which the apostle answers,

"God forbid; neither of these are to be admitted of. The end which God had in view, in suffering the Jews to stumble and fall, was not their destruction, but rather the salvation of the Gentiles; and especially not the destruction of "all" of them, blindness had only happened "in part" to them; for there was a remnant among them according to the election of grace, which should be saved; a chosen number, which obtained life and righteousness by Christ; yea, a fulness of them, how small soever their number might be now, which should be brought in; and still less that they should always continue in this sad condition, their unbelief had brought them into; for the time would come, when there would be a receiving of them as life from the dead, when all Israel should be saved. And at present there appeared nothing ill in view,

"but rather through their fall, salvation is come unto the Gentiles. That is, the Gospel; which is sometimes called salvation, the Gospel of our salvation, the word of "salvation"; because it is a declaration of salvation by Christ, and is the power of God unto it; or a means made effectual by the power of God to convince persons, both of their need, and of the worth of it, and also a means of the application of it to them, by the Spirit of God: now this came to the Gentiles by the ministry of the apostles, according to the orders and command of Christ; and that through the fall of the Jews, their unbelief and rejection of the Messiah; for the Gospel was first preached to them, but they contradicting and blaspheming it, the apostles turned to the Gentiles, and preached it to them, as the Lord had commanded them: and thus they came to be acquainted with the doctrine of salvation by a crucified Christ, and to have it powerfully applied to their souls by the Spirit of God; when salvation might be said to "come" to them, in such sense as our Lord says it did to Zacchaeus and his house, Luke 19:9: and another end is to be answered hereby; which is

"for to provoke them to jealousy: that is, to provoke the Jews to jealousy; not in an ill sense, as in Romans 10:19, and as they were provoked upon the first sending of the Gospel to the Gentiles, and the calling of them, when they discovered a great deal of envy, wrath, and bitterness; but in a good sense, as will appear in the latter day, when being convinced of their sin in rejecting the Messiah, and observing the many advantages the Gentiles have received by embracing him, and they have lost by their contempt of him, will be provoked to an holy emulation of them, and be stirred up through their means to seek the Lord their God, and David their King; and thus things will wind about in Providence. The fall of the Jews makes way for the Gospel among the Gentiles; and this having had its effects with them, will be a means of putting the Jews upon serious thoughts about, and a studious inquiry after, the true Messiah, and salvation by him; all which is a full answer to the question, and the objection contained in it."

11:12 "How much more their fulness?" when converts to Christ among them will be as the sand of the sea, a nation of them shall be born again at once, and all Israel be saved. This will be a great accession to the Gentile church, bring much glory to it, contribute greatly to its welfare, and be a means of establishing their faith, and of putting fresh life and vigor into them, and of inspiring them with more zeal for Christ, and for his honor and glory.

Concerning Jesus as a Messiah, it was only to the Jews that He would be titled this; He's returning as the Lord Jesus to all who believe in Him:


The title of Messiah is rooted in Jewish tradition, where it refers to a savior or liberator figure, particularly a future king from the Davidic line. While Christianity adopted the term to refer to Jesus, the concept originated in Judaism and is primarily associated with Jewish eschatology.

Wikipedia jewsforjesus.org

I would recommend viewing the entirety of Gill's commentary of Ro 11!
https://www.christianity.com/bible/commentary/john-gill/romans/11
 
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