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Look at you! Lots of good content there!LOL!!!!!
LOL!!!!
Oh, my.
Grace and peace to you, Marks.
Faith and obedience! You cannot go wrong! Trust and obey, there's no other way to be happy in Jesus!God sticks with that.
So do I.
Not according to so many of His prophets though.The only nation that He has ever and will ever preserve is His Holy Nation of the faithful and obedient. Matthew 21:43; 1 Peter 2:9.
No others.
No, his point is that some/many who did not descend from Israel are of Israel, even though those who are ethnic Jews will be jealous, which is finally what Paul says in Romans 11, that "...salvation has come to the Gentiles, so as to make Israel jealous... if their trespass means riches for the world, and if their failure means riches for the Gentiles, how much more will their full inclusion mean!" And then in virtually the same breath, "Lest you be wise in your own sight, I do not want you to be unaware of this mystery, brothers: a partial hardening has come upon Israel, until the fullness of the Gentiles has come in. 26 And in this way all Israel will be saved..."Yes that's right. But those who did not descend from Israel also are not Israel.
Abraham believed God, and it was credited to him as righteousness. Yes, there it is... LOL! Wow.Children of faithful Abraham. There it is!
Yes, sometimes people say, um, "stuff," and there are just... no... words... :)Look at you! Lots of good content there!
I'm preaching to the choir, here, I realize, but what Peter says in 1 Peter 2:9 is astonishing, and would have been absolutely shocking to his Jewish hearers. He was speaking to Gentiles using God's exact words through Moses in Exodus 19, just after He brought them out of Egypt and slavery. Just that alone should be enough, here, but alas... :)The only nation that He has ever and will ever preserve is His Holy Nation of the faithful and obedient. Matthew 21:43; 1 Peter 2:9.
No others.
I'm not actually getting into dispensational arguments. I'm pointing to the Scriptures, and in particular a great many prophecies, and am simply saying that they will be fulfilled as written.The dispensational argument has no real merit.
That is our spiritual connection to Isreal. We have the same father, as it were.Abraham believed God, and it was credited to him as righteousness. Yes, there it is... LOL! Wow.
I thought this was covered previously, just the same, Context is king . . .I'm preaching to the choir, here, I realize, but what Peter says in 1 Peter 2:9 is astonishing, and would have been absolutely shocking to his Jewish hearers. He was speaking to Gentiles using God's exact words through Moses in Exodus 19, just after He brought them out of Egypt and slavery. Just that alone should be enough, here, but alas... :)
Grace and peace to you, Covenantee.
Ohhhh... you are. :) Maybe you don't realize it, but... you are. :)I'm not actually getting into dispensational arguments.
The only thing I'm "discounting" ~ discrediting, actually ~ are your (dispensational) arguments, Marks....until you don't have to discount a single passage.
Right, but you discount what the writer of Hebrews says about God having spoken to our fathers long ago, but through Jesus in these last days. Which is to say you're the one discounting, ignoring, not believing... ~ or how ever we might characterize it ~ Scripture. Now, do you mean to be? Well no, of course not, but you are.That is our spiritual connection to Isreal. We have the same father, as it were.
Well that's one way of backing out... :) But yes, probably a good idea that we drop this for now, for sure.It looks like we're done here.
Jews in the exact same sense that Paul did, yes:Peter addressed his letter to the Jews scattered in other lands, actually.
It was and is God's covenant with His Chosen Faithful Obedient People throughout the ages; today, His Church.And of course the holy nation, and a kingdom of priests, was God's covenant with Israel.
They were scattered faithful obedient Israelite Christians, comprised of both Jews and Gentiles.These were Jews that were "scattered like seed" (diaspora) from Israel.
No, in fact, I'm not making dispensational arguments. I'm making arguments based on the sayings of these passages. You may see dispensational idea represented in some way, however, my argument concerns the reliability of God's Word, and how no passage of Scripture negates the prophecies to Israel, God's promises to them.The only thing I'm "discounting" ~ discrediting, actually ~ are your (dispensational) arguments, Marks.
Are you saying it would be racist of God to choose one nation from among, say, 70, to single them out for blessing?God was not and is not a racist.
That's not how that expression was used. It had a very specific meaning in that day. Even now the Jews know exactly what that means.They were scattered faithful obedient Israelite believers, comprised of both Jews and Gentiles.
It would be racist of God to choose any race to the exclusion of any other races.Are you saying it would be racist of God to choose one nation from among, say, 70, to single them out for blessing?
Much love!
Israelites were both Jews and Gentiles, and both were in the diaspora.That's not how that expression was used. It had a very specific meaning in that day. Even now the Jews know exactly what that means.
The Diaspora is a certain thing.
Much love!
From the Greek:That's not how that expression was used. It had a very specific meaning in that day. Even now the Jews know exactly what that means.
The Diaspora is a certain thing.
Much love!
Explain how spiritual discernment (1 Corinthians 2:14) is part of your hermeneutic.No, in fact, I'm not making dispensational arguments. I'm making arguments based on the sayings of these passages. You may see dispensational idea represented in some way, however, my argument concerns the reliability of God's Word, and how no passage of Scripture negates the prophecies to Israel, God's promises to them.
If anything, you are saying that the current dispensation is so completely different from the previous, that nothing from the previous remains, effectively wiping out the entire OT except as an history book.
I've heard it said that over 1/4 to 1/3 of the Bible is prophecy. A great deal of that is contained in the OT, and concerns the earth and it's inhabitants all the way through the end of the age. And a significant portion of this body of prophecy pertains to Israel, all the way through the end of the age.
I'm asserting that in fact these prophecies are to be believed. God authenticates Himself in His being the One and Only who can accurately tell us what will happen before it does. I happen to think this is true, that He IS the only One. Actually it's why I first became a Christian. I learned that what He said would happen does, contrary to all others. So I decided to listen to the rest of what He said.
We take the entire context of Scripture, we listen to every last thing it says, and we add absolutely nothing into it. I believe that as we look at every passage posted as if it somehow said that God was not going to restore Israel as promised, that none actually do say that, and all pertain to something else. And meanwhile we find in both OT and NT the affirmations that God will in fact keep His promises.
So my argument is from the Grammatical/Historical Hermenuetic, and the Reliability of Scripture.
Much love!
Remember . . . the choosing was of Abraham, and his descendants. It was to Abraham that God promised the land, the Promised Land. The promise was repeated to Isaac, and then to Jacob. It was fulfilled when God called Israel out of Egypt, and then into the land, giving allotments to each of the tribes except Levi, to whom God gave Himself.It would be racist of God to choose any race to the exclusion of any other races.
You should review the post describing the racial composition of ancient Israel.