True or
False: All Israel Will Be Saved
I do not
want you to be ignorant of this
mystery, brothers, so that you
may not be conceited: Israel has
experienced a hardening in part
until the number of Gentiles
Has come in. And
so all Israel will be saved,
as it is written: The
deliverer will come from Zion: he
will turn godlessness away from
Jacob. (Romans 11:
25, 26, emphasis mine)
Many Christians
use Romans 11: 25, 26 to reach
and support a conclusion that has
nothing to do with Pauls
intent. I would like to
illustrate three reasons for this
aberration:
1. Improper
use of Scripture to support a
paradigm
2. Superficial
treatment of subject
material
3. Lifting
words out of context and/or
imposing a theological
construct
Improper Use of
Scripture to Support a Paradigm
Malachi, the last
book of the Old Testament, was
written about 450 years before
Jesus was born. Consider
Malachis final words: See,
I will send you the prophet
Elijah before that great and
dreadful day of the Lord comes.
He will turn the hearts of the
fathers to their children, and
the hearts of the children to
their fathers; or else I will
come and strike the land with a
curse.
(Malachi 4: 5,
6)
The Bile indicates
that Elijah was taken to heaven
in a fiery chariot around 850
B.C. (2 Kings 2:11) During the
time of Christ, Malachis
prediction fueled the idea that
Elijah would appear before Messiah
could appear. We see this
anticipation when John records
the story of John the Baptist:
Now this
was Johns testimony when
the Jews of Jerusalem sent
priests and Levites to ask him
who he was. He did not fail
to confess, but confessed freely,
I am not the Christ.
They asked him, Then who
are you? Are you Elijah? He
said, I am not.
[Then] Who are you?
Give us an answer to take back to
those who sent us. What do you
say about yourself? John [the
Baptist] replied in the words
of Isaiah the prophet, I am
the voice of one calling in the
desert, Make straight the
way for the
Lord. (John
1: 19-23, insertion mine)
Johns
parents were well known because
his father, Zechariah, was a
priest. The facts about
Johns miraculous birth were
also well known. (Luke 1) The
inquiry into Johns identity
is important because one of the
strongest arguments the Jews used
against Jesus was the prophecy of
Malachi. The Jews concluded that
Messiah could not appear until
Elijah arrived.
Because
Malachis Elijah
prophecy was often used
against Jesus, The
disciples asked him [Jesus],
Why then do the teachers of
the law say [keep saying] that
Elijah has already come
first? Jesus replied,
To be sure, Elijah comes
and will restore all things. But
I tell you, Elijah has already
come, and they did not recognize
him, but have done to him
everything they wished. In the
same way the Son of Man is going
to suffer at their hands.
Then the disciples understood
that he was talking about John
the Baptist. (Matthew
17:11-13, insertion mine)
Jesus could say
that John was Elijah because
spiritually speaking; John the
Baptist was a parallel of
Elijah. The Holy Spirit enabled
Elijah to be a mighty prophet and
the same Holy Spirit enabled John
the Baptist to be a mighty
prophet. In fact, Jesus said no
prophet was greater than John the
Baptist. (Mathew 11:11) Both men
were heralds of Gods
efforts to establish His kingdom
on Earth. Because the Jews
misunderstood Malachis
prediction, they rejected Jesus.
Their failure also illustrates
how an improper use of
Scripture can be devastating.
Superficial
Treatment of Subject Material
Many wonderful
Bible themes are given
superficial treatment today.
Sound bites are
simplistic and worse, they can
produce a concept that is totally
wrong. For example, consider the
role and importance of the Ten
Commandments. Are the Ten
Commandments a religious relic or
a declaration of Gods will
that lives in perpetuity? Of
course, this question cannot,
this question cannot be addresses
in this short article, but I wish
to use this debate among
Christians to illustrate a point.
If the Ten
Commandments were abolished at
the cross, then there is no law
against idolatry, the worship of
images, taking Gods name in
vain, lying, adultery, or
stealing. Many Protestants will
respond that there are laws
against these behaviors after the
cross because nine of the
Ten Commandments are mentioned in
the New Testament. So, many
Protestants want to believe that
just the fourth commandment was
abolished at the cross. They
simply do not want to observe
Gods seventh-day Sabbath;
instead, they would rather
protect an ancient tradition of
Sunday observance. In spite of
what many Protestant believers
say, all of the Ten Commandments
are mentioned in the New
Testament, including the fourth.
(Compare Genesis 2: 1-3 with
Hebrews 4: 4, 9, 10.)
To prove their
claim that the Ten Commandments
were abolished at the cross,
Protestants will sometimes resort
to a superficial treatment of
Bible texts. For example, Romans
10:4 says, Christ is the
end of the law so that there may
be righteousness for everyone who
believes. (Romans 10:4)
What does Paul
mean when he says that Christ
is the end of the
law
? The key is:
Is a sinner declared righteous in
Gods sight after the cross
because there is no law, or is a
sinner declared righteous in
Gods sight after He covers
him with the righteousness of
Christ? Paul did not contradict
himself in the book of Romans.
Paul understood the Ten
Commandments were obligatory after
the cross and this is why he
wrote, Do we, then,
nullify the law [the Ten
Commandments] by this faith [in
Christ]? Not at all! Rather,
we uphold the law. (Romans
3: 31, insertion mine)
When Paul wrote
Christ is the end
[Greek: teleos] of the
law
, he meant
that Jesus met the goal of the
law. The law could not find any
imperfection in Him.
Christs perfect life is so
important because He had to live
a perfect life, overcoming every
temptation before He could go to
the cross. The Father required
Jesus to live a perfect life so
that Jesus could transfer the
righteousness of
Christ to His believers.
Then, after Jesus had established
the righteousness needed for our
salvation, the Father sent Jesus
to the cross so that our death
sentence could be transferred to
Him. There is nothing
within this process that required
the Sabbath commandment to be
abolished.
Romans 10: 4
perfectly align with Romans 1:17:
For in the gospel a
righteousness from God is
revealed [a righteousness
which a sinner cannot achieve or
create], a righteousness that
is by faith from first to last,
just as it is written: The
righteous will live by
faith. [insertion
mine] Jesus created this
righteousness by overcoming every
temptation. Sinners receive this
righteousness through salvific
faith 9faith that results in
salvation) through obeying the
demands of the Holy Spirit
without regard for the
consequences! No sinner can enter
Heaven and enjoy the wedding
banquet unless he first receives
and wears the righteousness of
Christ! (Matthew 22: 11-13)
I have used Romans
10:4 to illustrate how a Bible
text can be distorted and used in
a superficial way to support a
tradition. Remember,
Hebrews 10:31 says that if anyone
willingly and knowingly distorts
the Word of God, God will deal
harshly with that person.
Lifting Words
Out of Context and/or Imposing a
Theological Construct
A sentiment widely
held by Christians today is that after
a pre-tribulation rapture occurs,
the Jews will become believers in
Jesus. They will repent of their
rebellion and recognize Jesus as
the Son of God and all
Israel will be saved at the
Second Coming.
Because this
sentiment is a theological
construct (i.e., a construct is
made up of many supporting
pieces), it is like a house of
cards. Because of space
limitations, we will consider one
doctrine that ruins this
construct, although several
doctrines could be discussed.
This doctrine concerns the heirs
of Abraham. Let us discover how
the Bible describes the heirs of
Abraham.
The Bible teaches
that all believers in Christ are
Abrahams seed. (Galatians
3:29) Jesus said that only those
who live by faith, as did
Abraham, are Abrahams seed.
(John 8:39) Paul reaffirms that
it is not natural children who
are heirs of Abraham. (Romans
9:8) The book of James teaches
that early believers in Christ
considered themselves to be part
of the twelve tribes of Israel.
(James 1:1; 2: 1) And last, but
not least,
Jesus
declared [to Nicodemus],
I tell you the truth, no
one can see the kingdom of God
unless he is born
again. (John 3:3,
insertion mine)
Before the cross,
Jesus made an important
declaration that John recorded in
John 3. If we work
backwards to the days of Abraham,
the following declaration makes
perfect sense just as it reads:
For not all who are descended
from Israel [Jacob} are
Israel. Nor because they are
descendants are they all
Abrahams children. On the
contrary, It is through
Isaac that your offspring will be
reckoned. In other words, it
is not the natural children who
are Gods children, but it
is the children of the promise who
are regarded as Abrahams
offspring. (Romans 9:
6-8, insertion and italics mine)
Who are the
children of the promise who will
inherit Earth made new? One could
say, the children of the
promise are the offspring of
Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob,
but he would be incorrect.
Abraham had two sons and only one
son, Isaac, participated in the
promise. Isaac had two sons and
only one son, Jacob, participated
in the promise! Then Jacob
(Israel) had many sons with four
women and Paul said of them,
not all who are descended
from Jacob are Israel. So,
Who are the children of the
promise? Speaking for the
Father, Jesus defined the heirs
of Abraham when He said to
Nicodemus:
no one
can see the kingdom of God unless
he is born again. (John
3:3)
Given what Jesus
said in John 3 and John 8, as
well as what Paul wrote in Romans
9, it is necessary to take a
closer look at Romans 11 to
determine what Paul meant when he
wrote,
all Israel
shall be saved, just as it is
written. Paul had
something very different in mind
than what millions of Protestants
have in mind today when they read
Pauls words.
Notice the whole
phrase, And so all
Israel will be saved, as
it is written
Paul is not postulating a new
idea in Romans 11 when he says
that all Israel will be saved.
Paul already said in Romans 9
that not everyone descended from
the loins of Jacob are part of
Israel and it is not the natural
children who are Abrahams
offspring. To prove these
two points, Paul quotes from
Isaiah, The
redeemer will come to Zion, to
those in Jacob who repent of
their sins, declares
the Lord. As for me,
this is my covenant with them,
says the Lord. My
Spirit, who is in you, and my
words that I have put in your
mouth will not depart from your
mouth, or from the mouths of your
children, or from the mouths of
their descendants from this time
on and forever, says the
Lord. (Isaiah 59: 20,
21, italics mine)
This is the
problem. Since Adam and Eve
sinned, salvation has always had
a simple qualification: Gods
people are people who obey His
Word, believe His promises, and
repent of their sins. All
people who meet this
qualification are the heirs of
Abraham. Thus, all Israel
will be saved and Isaiah confirms
this!
Paul wrote the
book of Romans and sent it to
both Jew and Gentile believers in
Rome for several reasons. One
important reason was to clarify
the true constituency of Israel.
If we compare Pauls words
in Ephesians 2 and with Romans
9-11, there is perfect harmony.
After the Levitical code was
abolished (Colossians 2),
Gentiles no longer required to
become Jews. They can
be grafted directly into the
family of Abraham through faith
in Christ! Long ago, Isaiah and
Hosea predicted this wonderful
development! (Isaiah 19, 56;
Hosea 1) There is no longer a
distinction between Jew and
Gentile because of Christ! All
that matters to God is going
forward in obedience, faith, and
repentance.
Romans 11 has been
grossly distorted and if Paul was
alive today, he might write
Romans 11:26 this way:
Soon, all of Gods
children those within
every religious system on Earth
will be saved because God
promised Abraham long ago that he
would be the father of many
nations.
Larry Wilson