By: Dr. Wayne Barber; ©2007 |
Is God finished with the nation of Israel? Dr. Barber says the answer is a resounding “No!” He gives the first two of five reasons this month. |
Is God Through With Israel?
We begin a very, very exciting chapter. I am simply going to entitle the study of this chapter, “Is God through with Israel?” That is going to be the main topic of Romans 11. It doesn’t look good for the nation of Israel when it comes to salvation by faith. God has allowed the Gentiles to come in. The church—the parenthesis between the 69th and the 70th week of Daniel—has been flooded by the Gentiles. They are accepting this righteousness by faith. It doesn’t take much for a Gentile to understand that he is a sinner and that he can’t live up to it. He has not had the benefit of what Israel has had. But that brings up the question, “Is God through with Israel? Since Israel has rejected Him and His offer, since all the blessings have been laid in front of them and they have turned their backs on it, has God rejected Israel?” We are entering a very controversial subject. I want you to know from the outset, it will be immediately clear as to where I am in the midst of this controversy. I am on the side of those who believe God has not finished with Israel yet. I will try to explain to you why. If we disagree, then let’s continue to believe that God, the Holy Spirit is the same in both of our lives. Whoever is wrong, God will bring us into a unity. But I definitely, adamantly stand that God is not finished with Israel. He has promised certain things to them that He as God is faithful to perform. God will bring those things to pass. I read an illustration of something that happened over a hundred years ago. The King of Prussia was talking to the chaplain of his army and said, “Listen, can you give me one word that would somehow, in some way, validate the inerrancy of God’s Word, that would validate the fact that it is the truly inspired scripture?” The chaplain looked back at him and said, “Absolutely, with no problem whatsoever.” He was sort of taken back and said, “Well, what is that word?” The chaplain said, “Israel. Israel. Israel.” Look at it. It is from the first part of Genesis all the way through the book of Revelation. Israel. Israel. Israel. You pick up your papers today and you will recognize the smallest country in the world is the very center of everybody’s attention right now. It is the focus. Everything seems to somehow revolve around Israel. Israel. Israel. You say, “Well, they rejected His offer of righteousness by faith.” That is true. You are going to see today that there has never been a time in Israel’s history that they have not rejected God and rebelled against God. Moses said that they were stiff-necked, rebellious people. The First Baptist Church of the Wilderness! They were that way from the very beginning and it has never been any different. Listen to their history. In a great sin against God they said, “We want a king. We don’t want a prophet.” Do you know what that is equal to? Israel was saying, “We don’t want you, God, to rule over us. We want man to rule over us.” That was a terrible sin of rejection to God’s leadership in their nation. The prophet Samuel said these words after God had said to him, “Samuel, don’t be distraught. They have not rejected you. They have rejected Me as being King of their lives.” Then Samuel the prophet said this to the nation of Israel: “And Samuel said to the people, do not fear. You have committed all this evil, yet do not turn aside from following the Lord. But serve the Lord with all of your heart, for the Lord will not abandon His people on account of His great name [Not on account of them, but on account of His great name] because the Lord has been pleased to make you a people for Himself.” Listen to the Psalmist David. Of course, the Psalms is the hymnbook of the scriptures. They sang these songs. The singer there had an inspired cry of anguish that goes up because of the people of God that were being broken. The rumor had gotten out to the enemy that God had forsaken and forgotten His people. The Psalmist sings in Psalm 94:11, “The Lord knows the thoughts of man that they are a mere breath. Blessed is the man whom Thou doest chasten, O Lord, and dost teach out of Thy law that Thou mayest grant him relief from the days of adversity until a pit is dug for the wicked, for the Lord will not abandon His people, nor will He forsake His inheritance.” Listen to Nehemiah. Nehemiah is talking about a time in Israel’s life when they got into prosperity and turned away from God. That sounds like the Gentile world of today, doesn’t it? They turned away from God and turned to their prosperity and blessings. Well, God would have to raise up an enemy to punish them. When He did, they would be chastened for a while, but as soon as the punishment drifted off, they would immediately go right back to the same sin. It was almost like a cycle. They just kept going through that. Nehemiah brings that account to our attention beginning in Nehemiah 9:26:- But they became disobedient and rebelled against Thee and cast Thy law behind their backs and killed Thy prophets who had admonished them that they might return to Thee. And they committed great blasphemies. Therefore Thou didst deliver them into the hand of their oppressors who oppressed them, but when they cried to Thee in the time of their distress, Thou didst hear from heaven, and according to Thy great compassion Thou didst give them deliverers who delivered them from the hand of their oppressors. But as soon as they had rest, they did evil again before Thee; therefore Thou didst abandon them to the hand of their enemies, so that they ruled over them. When they cried again to Thee, Thou didst hear from heaven, and many times Thou didst rescue them according to Thy compassion, and admonished them in order to turn them back to Thy law. Yet they acted arrogantly and did not listen to Thy commandments but sinned against Thine ordinances, by which if a man observes them he shall live. And they turned a stubborn shoulder and stiffened their neck, and would not listen. However, Thou didst bear with them for many years, and admonished them by Thy Spirit through Thy prophets, yet they would not give ear. Therefore Thou didst give them into the hand of the peoples of the lands. Nevertheless, in Thy great compassion Thou didst not make an end of them or forsake them, for Thou art a gracious and compassionate God.
- “For this is like the days of Noah to Me; when I swore that the waters of Noah should not flood the earth again, so I have sworn that I will not be angry with you, nor will I rebuke you. For the mountains may be removed and the hills may shake, but My lovingkindness will not be removed from you, and My covenant of peace will not be shaken,” says the Lord who has compassion on you. “O afflicted one, storm-tossed, and not comforted, behold, I will set your stones in antimony, and your foundations I will lay in sapphires. Moreover, I will make your battlements of rubies and your gates of crystal, and your entire wall of precious stones. And all your sons will be taught of the Lord; and the well-being of your sons will be great. In righteousness you will be established; you will be far from oppression, for you will not fear; and from terror, for it will not come near you...no weapon that is formed against you shall prosper; and every tongue that accuses you in judgment you will condemn. This is the heritage of the servants of the Lord, and their vindication is from Me,” declares the Lord.
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