No idea of what you're saying here. Please try to communicate more clearly.
I'm sorry if I didn't communicate well. I've typing like crazy for the past week, attempting to answer all the objections and question and I must admit that I kept typing even while I was tired. My apologies.
I'll try to do better. It's a matter of context and focus. What is Paul's main topic in Romans 9 through 11? I take it you think Paul is talking about the church, the body of Christ. Am I right? In your view, Paul is talking about spiritual Israel, which includes both Jews and Gentiles who have circumcised hearts for instance. Okay, please correct me. I will now attempt to give a more complete answer.
I maintain that Paul acknowledges God's promises to ethnic Israel. He doesn't shy away from this idea and neither does he reject it. Paul admits that God made promises to ethnic Israel. He takes that as a given. He then sets out to explain why those promises haven't failed. But although God made promises to ethnic Israel, ethnicity is not the sole condition for salvation and forgiveness.
For eight chapters Paul has argued that justification is based on faith and not works. He has argued that God is saving both Jews and Gentiles on that basis. Ethnicity is no barrier to salvation. Anyone who confesses sin, and approaches God with an honest and contrite heart will be saved, if that person accepts Jesus Christ as savior. We all know that.
But, and this is critical to our understanding, one of God's promises to ethnic Israel is that he would make ethnic Israel into a believing nation. God promised to make ethnic Israel into believing Israel, whereby every person living in Israel will be born again believers, without exception. You will say, but ethnicity doesn't have anything to do with salvation. But this isn't true in every case. Paul argues that ethnicity is no barrier to salvation, but he acknowledges that God promised to save ethnic Israel and so if God doesn't save ethnic Israel, his promise fails.
In case one should believe that God never made promises to ethnic Israel, one can only review passages such as Ezekiel 36, where God promises ethnic Israel that he would clean them up, remove idolatry from them, bring them into their own land, remove their heart of stone and give them a heart of flesh. He will put his spirit within them and cause them to walk in His statutes and they will be careful to observe His ordinances. He says the same thing in Deuteronomy 30:6. In Jeremiah 31:34 He tells Israel that at a particular point in history, Israel will not need to teach his neighbor to know the lord because they will ALL know him. In that context God is talking to the house of Judah and the House of Israel.
Okay? God made a salvation promise to ethnic Israel, and germane to that promise is a spiritual transformation of all hearts. Every ethnic Jew living in Israel at that time will become a believer, by God's will. This is really important. Not only does God promise to save them all, he promises to cause them all to be born again. But, he says, he is NOT doing this for their sake, he is doing this to restore his holy name.
But Paul faces a challenge from those who oppose his message. The fact that ethic Israel remains partially hardened is a problem for Paul's gospel. You see, God's promise was NOT made to "spiritual Israel" because this would imply that Israel was already spiritual. God made a promise to ethnic Israel to make the entire nation into a nation of believers. According to Paul, the New Covenant is in effect. But if the New Covenant is in effect, then why doesn't every citizen of ethnic Israel believe in God? Why hasn't God cleaned them up and put a new spirit in them all? Why does Israel remain partially hardened? Paul sets out to answer that question.
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Romans 9:6
6 But it is not as though the word of God has failed. For they are not all Israel who are descended from Israel;
In the first five verses Paul acknowledges that the promise belongs to ethic Israel. The adoption as sons belongs to his kinsmen, he says. Having acknowledged that fact, he proceeds to explain why ethnicity isn't the
only criteria by which an ethnic Jew stands to inherit the promise. One might expect him to argue that a Jewish man must also confess his sins, and accept Jesus Christ has savior, etc. But he doesn't make THAT argument although he could. Rather, he makes a completely different argument. Remember, according to Ezekiel, God could cause everyone in the entire world to become born again. He simply takes away a man's heart of stone and gives him a heart of flesh. Wiz bang and you have a new believer. So Paul takes another tack; he argues for God's sovereign choice.
Romans 9:11 for though the twins were not yet born and had not done anything good or bad, so that God’s purpose according to His choice would stand,
Here we come to understand that salvation of any individual, whether Jew or Greek, begins with God. If we are being saved, we are saved because he first chose to save us. His purpose; His choice. He saved Isaac because it served his purpose. He saves Jacob because it serves his purpose. If he is saving you, it serves his purpose; if he is saving me, it serves his purpose.
Thus we understand that although God promised to save ethnic Israel, we also know that when he keeps his promise to ethic Israel, every individual in that group will be there by his choice to serve his purpose. Paul talks about a remnant. So when all Israel is saved, the entire nation will be a remnant. Isaiah calls them "survivors." We can get into this more if you like.
Romans 9:18 So then He has mercy on whom He desires, and He hardens whom He desires.
If a Jew has a hardened heart, God hardened it. If a Jew has a soft heart, God hardened it. This is true of everyone. If a man stubornly refuses to believe in God, then God is the one who hardened him. Why? It serves his purpose. If God decides to pour out his spirit on an entire nation, he can and will do that if it serves his purpose.
Again, I don't know what you're saying. You're being far too vague. It's saying that they are not all part of Israel #1 who are descended from Israel #2. That means some of Israel #2 are part of Israel #1, but not all of them. Very simple. You're making something simple into something very convoluted and I think it's because of doctrinal bias.
I maintain that Israel #2 is a man. Paul is saying that not all of those descended of Israel, the man, are going to be included in the Israel #1, i.e. the Israel of promise. God made a promise to ethnic Israel, but not each and every person who descended from the man Israel, will be included in the nation whom God will save.
The children of God who are the children of promise and are Abraham's seed. I showed you who that describes by quoting Galatians 3:26-29. Did you miss that? That passage indicates that the children of God who are the children of the promise and are Abraham's seed are those who belong to Christ, whether Jew or Gentile.
That's right. I agree with that. So then, in Romans 9:6, Paul is saying not all of Abraham's natural children are children of promise. He illustrates this point with the story of Isaac and Ishmael.
Having said all that, we must bear in mind that your comparison between Galatians and Romans is apples to oranges. Why? Because the subject matter in Romans 9 is much different than the subject matter in Galatians 3, where Paul argues against the Judaizers, who teach that one must put themselves under Moses in order to please God. In that epistle Paul asserts that "In Christ there is neither Jew nor Gentile, man or woman, slave or free." Ethnic distinction is removed in Christ. That is on the one hand. On the other hand, in Romans 9, Paul is dealing with God's promise to ethnic Israel. And remember, God is going to save ethnic Israel in order to restore his holy name. In this context, ethnicity is a given assumption. And the question is, how is God going to keep his promise to them as a people? How is that going to play out?
Good grief. No, he is not talking about ethnic Israel in 1 Peter 2:9! Ethnic Israel includes people who reject Christ! They are not holy! I think I need to reconsider what I said about your interpretation of Romans 9:6-8 because this interpretation might be even worse.
Yes, Peter is talking to believers and those of the faith. This is without controversy. At the same time, we know from clues in the text that he is talking to his own kinsmen specifically. What he says to them most likely applies to the rest of us except the fact that God never declared my family line to be "his people" or a kingdom of priests, etc. Peter is quoting Exodus 19:6, which designates the sons of Jacob and refers to THEM as a holy nation and a kingdom of priests. Peter refers to them as the "diaspora". The Greek term διασπορά (diaspora, “dispersion”) refers to Jews not living in Palestine but “dispersed” or scattered among the Gentiles.