The Bible Recap - Day 344 (Romans 11-13) - Year 4
Episode Date: December 10, 2022SHOW NOTES: - All the info you need to START is on our website! - Join our PATREON family for bonus perks! - Get your TBR merch - Show credits FROM TODAY’S PODCAST: - John 15:1-11 - Article ...1 of 8: Five Reasons I Believe Romans 11:26 Means a Future Conversion for Israel - Article 2 of 8: What Does It Mean That All Israel Will Be Saved? - Article 3 of 8: Perspectives on Israel and the Church: 4 Views - Article 4 of 8: What Does The Bible Mean When It Refers to a Remnant? - Article 5 of 8: What is Replacement Theology/Supersessionism? - Article 6 of 8: The Church and Israel in the New Testament - Article 7 of 8: Israel and the Church: Understanding Some Theological Options - Article 8 of 8: What Your Church is Missing: Understanding Remnant Theology - Titus 3:1 - 1 Peter 2:13 - John 13:34 SOCIALS: The Bible Recap: Instagram | Facebook | Twitter D-Group: Instagram | Facebook | Twitter TLC: Instagram | Facebook | Twitter D-GROUP: The Bible Recap is brought to you by D-Group - an international network of discipleship and accountability groups that meet weekly in homes and churches: Find or start one near you today! DISCLAIMER: The Bible Recap, Tara-Leigh Cobble, and affiliates are not a church, pastor, spiritual authority, or counseling service. Listeners and viewers consume this content on a voluntary basis and assume all responsibility for the resulting consequences and impact.
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Hey Bible readers, I'm Tara Lee Cobble, and I'm your host for the Bible Recap.
When we left off yesterday, Paul was explaining that we must talk about the gospel of Christ,
because people can't believe in a God whose truth they've never heard.
And since God has promised to save people from among every nation, then his people have
got to start spreading the good news.
There's been considerable focus on getting the word out to the Gentiles, so Paul opens
chapter 11 with some details about the future of ethnic Israel.
Has God written them off?
Paul says absolutely not.
The elect among ethnic Israel have been preserved as a remnant, just like God did in a logistic. Those who know God will be preserved, but as always,
the people who know God aren't divided along ethnic lines,
but along faith lines. In verse 2, Paul says God has never
rejected his elect in the past, and that remains true in the
present. In verse 5, he says, so too, at the present time, there is
a remnant chosen by grace. Salvation has always only come to us by the grace given by
God. Some received it, and sadly some didn't. And because God wants His kingdom to be full and diverse,
then their rejection is the opportunity to spread the gospel to the Gentiles. But even with that,
God's using it as an opportunity to entice ethnic Israel back to Himself. He loves them.
Paul compares this relationship to a branch,
which is a familiar image. In John 15, Jesus said, he is the vine and weir the branches, and here
Paul continues the metaphor. He says the original branches are made up of ethnic Israel.
But those who rejected Christ and proved to be dead branches, like Judas, for instance,
they got trimmed off. And in the vacancy they left behind on the branch,
God, the Gardener took some wild branches, the Gentiles, and grafted them into that empty spot,
making the vine lush and full. But Paul warns the Gentiles, don't you dare get boastful about this.
You didn't graft yourself in, you didn't earn this, you were a wild branch. You're only here because
of the Gardener's kindness. He says to pay attention to the kindness and the severity of God.
His severity is displayed in those who are cut off,
and his kindness is displayed in those who are grafted in.
This branch metaphor can be a bit confusing,
because when Paul talks about people being cut off,
it might sound like he's talking about losing our salvation,
but that's not the case.
The terms some theologians use to help distinguish
and clarify this situation are,
the body visible and the body invisible, or the church visible and the church invisible. For example,
Judas had the appearance of being a follower of Jesus, because he was literally following Jesus,
but his heart wasn't in it. Judas was part of the body visible, what could be seen by human eyes.
But God, who sees the heart, sees who really is a part of his body,
the body invisible, and Judas wasn't in it.
In probably every church, there are people who are members,
but who aren't believers, and only God knows.
These are the ones who'll trim off from the vine
in the scope of eternity.
He's not trimming off anyone who truly believes.
So Paul uses this metaphor as a reminder to the Gentiles.
Hey, don't think you had anything to do with this. You're here by God's grace,
sustained by Him. If you think you contributed to this, that's evidence that you don't get the
gospel, which means you might just be dead weight on this fine. Perseverance in the faith is what
reveals our hearts over time, so it's never too late for anyone who has been cut off to be grafted
back in. Paul says God's overarching plan is for many who has been cut off to be grafted back in.
Paul says God's overarching plan is for many of the Jews to resist him until all the Gentiles have been reached. Then the hardening of the Jews will be brought to an end and he will show more mercy
to the Jews. It doesn't give any details about how or when this will happen, but we see again that
God has a plan and a process for everything he's doing. Part of that plan is that a remnant of Jews will continue to be saved
throughout history and future.
There are three or four major perspectives on what 1126 means when it says
all Israel will be saved.
Some believe this refers to all believers, both Jew and Gentile,
but that doesn't seem to fit with the way Paul uses that word in the rest of the context here.
Some think it means all Jewish people for all time ever,
but that doesn't fit at all with what God has said
about salvation elsewhere in Scripture.
Most theologians believe it refers to a vast number of Jews
at some point in the future
when God brings the partial hardening to an end.
This is actually a pretty big doctrinal conversation.
So if you wanna read more about it,
check out the eight articles we've linked to in the show notes.
Paul acknowledges that all this is hard to comprehend with our human minds, because God's
ways are so different from ours. But he trusts that God is working in all these mysteries
to do what is ultimately best. And he says, therefore, that connecting word, like we talked about
yesterday, we should offer up ourselves and our lives to God to resist getting caught up in the
current of culture and to seek God's
glory instead. He says, that is how we will discern God's will. This requires a lot of humility.
Not only do we have to resist thinking that we have better ideas than God, but we also have to
resist thinking we're better than other people. That is hard. We're all really different,
and gifts, and even in the measure of faith God has divinely assigned to us, but his plan is to work through us all individually, yet in unity as well.
We are both God-dependent and interdependent.
Our gifts are given by him and used to build up others.
In the back half of chapter 12, Paul gives us a beautiful list of what that looks like as it plays out.
Chapter 13 starts out by addressing God's sovereignty over authorities.
If you were with us in the Old Testament, we saw this referenced over and over again.
Even with evil authorities who defy God and his ways, he's always working out his plan,
bending their evil back on their own heads while ultimately saving and preserving his people.
So no matter who is in charge, God and only God can be trusted.
And no matter who is in charge,
somehow their position is working out God's goodness toward you in the long run.
As people who trust God,
we should be subject to those who are in authority,
even if we don't like or respect them.
This idea is addressed explicitly into other spots in the New Testament.
Titus 3 says,
be submissive to rulers and authorities.
And 1st Peter 2 says, be subject for the Lord's
sake to every human institution.
God makes no commands about how to feel about their position, only how to behave toward
their position.
So in a way, our actions toward authorities demonstrate how we respond to God, not to
the rulers themselves.
And it's fitting that Paul would follow this up with a reminder to love each other, because
in a body as diverse as the church and Rome was at the time, Jews and Gentiles, new believers
from pagan backgrounds and Jewish believers from fairs' acle backgrounds, there was
sure to be a wide variety of opinions about the local authorities.
It's hard for us to imagine what this might be like today, just kidding.
Paul reminds them of the words of the higher law, love your neighbor as yourself, which
reminds me of the words of the higher law, love your neighbor as yourself, which reminds me of the words of Christ in John 13.
Just as I have loved you, you also are to love one another.
He says the time for complacency has ended.
It's time to put to death the deeds of darkness and walk in the light.
My God shot today was in 1133.
It says,
It says, Oh, the depth of the riches and wisdom and knowledge of God, how unsurczable are His judgments and how inscrutable His ways.
You guys, the idea for the Bible recap came to me because I love God and His word and wanted
to help other people love them both too.
I'd read through the Bible ten times and felt fairly comfortable with the idea of teaching
all the way through it in a year.
I cannot tell you how humbling it has been.
Things I thought I knew that I had to unlearn paragraphs and pages I typed out that I had
to delete when I studied further. It's been so humbling. And at the same time, it has been
so beautiful. The more I get to know him, the more I want to know him better. He's the most
beautiful thing I've ever seen. I don't always understand him, and honestly, I'm grateful for that.
A God who can fit inside my tiny brain is no God at all.
I'm so glad he's so knowable, yet so unsurczable,
that I can always be knowing him better, yet never quite flum the depths of him.
And I want more.
I'm 344 days more confident that without a doubt, he's where the joy is.
You guys, you know I love Israel.
I love the sights, the food, the people, the history of the land, but what I don't love
is how I used to think of Israel before I went.
I pictured it as brown, dull, boring, sepia-toned, no thank you.
But when I went, I discovered that it's a lush, vibrant, Mediterranean paradise.
I tried to capture all of this in my brand new coffee table book called Israel, Beauty,
Light, and Luxury.
This hard-backed book will be full of stunning photos of Israel that highlight all of this,
and I've even included a few devotionals throughout the book.
Now I know I might be partial, but I think this book will be a great Christmas gift, and
if you think so too, you should go to Bakerbookhouse.com
and pre-order your copy today. If you pre-order from Bakerbook, they will give you a beautiful
PDF to print so that you have a physical card to give it Christmas while you wait for the release
of the book in April. P.S. We think you're going to love this book so much as a gift that you'll
want one for yourself. So go ahead, your secret is safe with me.
So go ahead, your secret is safe with me.