So far you haven't proven your view. Why don't you get around to proving it?
This is integral to his whole argument that God has not abandoned Israel.
That's right. God has not abandoned natural Israel.
The olive tree doesn't represent Israel.
No such thing as "true Israel." There is only Israel.
No, it doesn't prove that. No.
The term ekklesia, means "the called out assembly", which is true. But the Old Testament refers to Israel as the ekklesia because God called them out of Egypt. God did not call the church out of Egypt. God is calling the church out of humanity. Same word, two different meanings.
Jesus is here acknowledging that salvation would not be limited to the Jewish race. He was predicting that the Gospel would expand out and embrace the nations. He explains that there would then be a fusion of the believing element of both ethnic groups into one cohesive believing sheepfold – with Him as a Shepherd. This indeed happened 2000 years ago.
Yes, but he NEVER refers to them as Israel, spiritual or otherwise.
Your position is such a contradiction. You seem to make it up as you go. My last post totally demolishes your whole argument. The Church is true Israel and true Israel is the Church. This dismantles everything you have been taught. You are clearly out of your depth.
Christ speaking in the gospel that the Dispensationalists say was written solely to the Jews – Matthew – confirms how the term
ekklesia was related to the gathering of God’s people in His day, rather than some post-Pentecost New Testament period of time, as some would try and argue. Jesus said, in Matthew 18:15-17,
“if thy brother shall trespass against thee, go and tell him his fault between thee and him alone: if he shall hear thee, thou hast gained thy brother. But if he will not hear thee, then take with thee one or two more, that in the mouth of two or three witnesses every word may be established. And if he shall neglect to hear them, tell it unto the ekklesia: but if he neglect to hear the church [Gr. ekklesia], let him be unto thee as an heathen man and a publican.”
Here, in this supposed Jewish gospel, the disciples are carefully counseled in the proper way to deal with matters of discipline within the local assembly. Expressly, if the transgressor does not receive the private admonition from a brother, with a witness, or from the ruling elders, the issue should be brought before ‘the congregation’ of God’s people – the
ekklesia – for public exposure. This is historically before Pentecost, where Dispensationalists suggest “the Church” began.
Stephen goes back even further. He takes us back to ancient Israel in the wilderness. He taught in Acts 7:36-38, “he (Moses)
had shewed wonders and signs in the land of Egypt, and in the Red sea, and in the wilderness forty years. This is that Moses, which said unto the children of Israel, A prophet shall the Lord your God raise up unto you of your brethren, like unto me; him shall ye hear. This is he, that was in the church [Gr.
ekklesia]
in the wilderness with the angel which spake to him in the mount Sina, and with our fathers: who received the lively oracles to give unto us.”
Stephen classifies Old Testament Israel in this text as the
ekklesia (or Church or assembly or congregation). This correlates with our previous findings. No one could surely deny this. This passage shows the existence of the Church long before Pentecost. Nothing could be clearer. To deny that is to fight with Scripture.
Speaking on Acts 7:36-38, Peter Ditzel writes: “Like the New Testament
ekklēsia that God called out of this world of sin, God called Israel out of Egypt. In a physical, typological way, Israel was God’s special people, physically assembled before Him. In those places in the Old Testament where English versions refer to Israel as an assembly or a congregation, the Greek Septuagint uses the word
ekklēsia” (What is the relationship between the Old Covenant assembly of Israel and the New Covenant assembly of believers?).
The Roman Catholic Church was the first to change the meaning of
ekklesia from the congregation of God’s people to a religious institution of man replacing physical Israel. This was highly advantageous in reinforcing its apostate religious system. It allowed its clergy to lord over the people. This strategy likewise rubber stamped the whole foundation of its global religious system, its “Holy” Roman Empire, its papal state and its false teaching. But this construal was totally out of kilter with the common usage of the word in ancient times.
William Tyndale recognized this when translating his early English Bible. Despite intense pressure from the Roman Catholic powers that be, he stood strong on his interpretation, suitably and consistently translating
ekklesia as congregation. The Coverdale Bible (1535), The Great Bible (1540), Matthew Bible (1549) and The Bishops Bible (1568) all followed suit, using the word “congregation” to describe God’s New Testament people.
The writer of the Hebrews also quotes and applies the word
ekklesia, as it literally reads in Psalm 22:22 in the Greek Septuagint, to the Old Testament saints, saying:
“I will declare thy name unto my brethren, in the midst of the church [Gr.
ekklesia]
will I sing praise unto thee” (Hebrews 2:12).
Psalm 22:22 reads, “I will declare thy name unto my brethren: in the midst of the congregation will I praise thee.”
This quote is taken directly from the Greek Septuagint, the Bible that was used by Jesus, and Paul, and the disciples in the first century AD. It proves that the
ekklesia (the Church) was alive, kicking, and written about throughout the Old Testament. Wherever people of faith are found or written about in history, the “Church” (
ekklesia) is revealed. Dr. Michael Milton (President, Reformed Theological Seminary) tells us that “Psalm 22 [verse 22] uses the Hebrew word
qahal for congregation … This same verse appears in Hebrews … the Holy Spirit has replaced
qahal with
ecclesia” (Engrafted, Not Replaced).
Just like with Israel in the Old Testament, the New Testament assembly has a visible and an invisible aspect. Those who profess a faith in Christ, and participate in Christian worship, are recognized as the outward visible congregation, but only those who have a saving faith in the Lord Jesus Christ are recognized as being part of the true invisible Church – that which Christ sees and knows – His redeemed. The visible congregation are those who are typically outwardly committed to the Christian faith, whereas, the redeemed invisible congregation are those that have “passed from death unto life” (John 5:24).
When Jesus states in Matthew 16:18,
“I will build my church [Gr.
ekklesia];
and the gates of hell shall not prevail against it” He is only referring to the elect of God. He is describing the faithful remnant that have entered into spiritual union with God. This is the invisible
ekklesia.
The Church describes those who he has redeemed with his own precious blood. It describes all those that have a personal relationship with Christ! Paul instructs the Ephesian elders in Acts 20:28: “Take heed therefore unto yourselves, and to all the flock, over the which the Holy Ghost hath made you overseers, to feed the church [Gr.
ekklesia] of God, which he hath purchased with his own blood.”
The visible
ekklesia is that which gives outward adherence to the Lord and which congregates together in public worship. For example, we see the local churches in Asia Minor mentioned in Revelation chapter 2 and 3. These were local congregations that evidently included believers and unbelievers. We know that because the Lord exposed those that were playing at it in these gatherings. There was “the church [Gr.
ekklesia] of Ephesus” (Rev 2:1-7), “the church [Gr.
ekklesia] in Smyrna” (Rev 2:8-11), “the church [Gr.
ekklesia] in Pergamos” (Rev 2:12-17), “the church [Gr.
ekklesia] in Thyatira” (Rev 2:18-29), “the church [Gr.
ekklesia] in Sardis” (Rev 3:1-6), “the church [Gr.
ekklesia] in Philadelphia” (Rev 3:7-13) and “the church [Gr.
ekklesia] of the Laodiceans” (Rev 3:14-22). This was the visible outward face of the Church, but it did not denote the true elect
ekklesia of God who existed within those congregation.