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Towards a Reformed Israelology[1]
Reverend Fred Klett, CHAIM
Ministry
Can one be Covenantal in theology, that is, believe
the New Covenant community is spiritually Israel and as such is
already experiencing in this age the promises of the prophets
to Israel, and yet still maintain in some way ethnic Israel is unique?
Let us consider how the term "Israel" is used.
The word is used in many ways in the Scriptures,
yet all the uses are interrelated. It means "He who has struggled
with God". Ultimately, God is the one who has the right to answer
the question as to who or what is Israel. He determines who or what
is Israel, not man or men's traditions. Here is a provisional list
of some of the uses of the word in the Scriptures.
| 1. |
The man Jacob
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Genesis 32:28 |
| 2. |
Jacob's Physical Descendants
(The Jewish People)
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Gen. 46:8; 48:28; Ex.1:7 |
| 3. |
All Old Testament Believers
(Both Jews and Gentiles)
|
Ex. 12:38,47-49; Dt. 23:8
Nu. 15:13-16; Ruth 1:16 |
| 4. |
The Land |
Josh. 11:16; Jud.19:29
1 Sam. 13:19; Mt.2:20 |
| 5. |
The Northern Kingdom
|
Is.7:1, 9:12 |
| 6. |
Citizens of the North
|
Is. 9:14; Jer. 3:11,17 |
| 7. |
The Spiritual Remnant
among the Jewish People
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Rom. 9:6? Rom. 11:1?
Rom. 11:26? |
| 8. |
All Who are in the Messiah
(A continuation of #3, that
is, all believers, the Church)
|
Eph. 2:11-19; Rom. 4:12-17;
Rom. 9:6,7,8,24-26
Rom. 11:17; Gal.3:29, 4:21-31 |
| 9. |
Modern Ethnic or Political Israel
(Jews and Gentiles!?)
|
Is. 19:24-25; Acts 1:6 (maybe?)
(Israel is certainly one of the nations of Rev. 7:9!) |
| 10. |
The Messiah Himself |
Mt. 2:15; Is. 49:3-6; Gal. 3:16 |
There are then a number of possible Scriptural meanings
of "Israel". But, is there a most ultimate meaning of the
word Israel? There is -- it is the Messiah Himself (#10),
for all the promises of God have their `yes' in Him (2 Cor. 1:20).
Jesus is the ultimate seed of Abraham, (Gal. 3:16)
And if Messiah has the supreme right to the name
Israel, then all who are in Him also have that right, since we are
joint heirs with Him (Rom. 8:17) Indeed this is what Jesus gained
in Redemption, "that the blessings given to Abraham might come to
the Gentiles" (see Gal. 3:14). God can raise up sons of Abraham
from the stones, if He wills. (Mt. 3:9) What else can Ephesians
2:11-22 mean? We are clearly told that Gentile Christians formerly
had been excluded from citizenship in Israel (v. 12) and
now, through the Messiah, are now fellow citizens (v. 19).
If Gentile believers are no longer excluded from citizenship
in Israel, that means they are included in citizenship in
Israel. It's that simple. How can anyone deny that this is the clear
and obvious meaning of the text?
But what of the Jewish people? If all who are in
Jesus Christ are spiritually Israel, does that mean God has replaced
the Jewish people with the Church and is finished with them? Of
course not! There can be several meanings to the word "Israel" which
can exist simultaneously, and there can be some overlapping
of these meanings. The Church has a right to one of the connotations
of the word "Israel". The Church has become an enlargement of and
progression from "All Old Testament Believers" (#3),
and it includes now, as it even included then, all who share
in Israel's faith, both Jews and Gentiles. In essence then, the
Church doesn't replace Israel, rather it expands Israel, that
is the Believing Israel of #3 above.
Remember, Old Testament Israel (#3)
included the physical descendants of Jacob (#2),
but went beyond it and also included Gentiles (such as Ruth) who
were willing to join themselves to the people of God. Today Gentiles
who believe in Jesus, the Jewish Messiah, have in essence converted
to New Testament Judaism. This is what Christianity really is, New
Covenant Judaism. It is the same today, in a sense, as it was in
the Old Testament. All who believe become, in a sense, part of Israel,
the Holy Congregation of the people of God. Both Jews and Gentiles
relate to God on the basis of the same New Covenant. (The denial
of this truth leads to one of two errors: one which seeks to bind
again Jewish believers to the particulars of Mosaic Law, rather
than to the moral principals of the Law which bind all believers
today and the second which sees a separate way of salvation for
the Jewish people.)
We must see the unity of the purpose of God, to glorify
the Son. I contend that the Jewish people, the Messianic Jewish
believers, the Church, and perhaps even the Modern state of Israel
too, (numbers 2,7,8, and 9) will all be brought together under the
Messiah, together with the whole earth (Col. 1:20; 1 Cor. 15:24-28;
Eph. 1:22; Isaiah 11:9). Until the Jewish people return to Messiah,
there is yet a certain incompleteness to Spiritual Israel (#8),
the Church. Therefore the Jewish people should be of great importance
to the Church, as indeed should be the whole missionary enterprise.
The mission of the church must always include the preaching of the
gospel to the Jewish people, indeed it begins there.
Then what of the promises to the Jewish people? Does
the Church take over the promises in such a way as to exclude the
Jewish people from them? No! The promises of God are still valid
for the Jewish people, yet only experienced by those who believe.
The coming of the Messiah and the concomitant salvation he brings
can only be received by faith. This is the most ultimate and most
sacred Hope of Israel! Unbelief and rejection of God and His Covenant
means forfeiture of the promises which are part of the Covenant.
This was the case in the Old Testament, and this is still the same
today. God does not change. The promises have been expanded to include
the all in the Church, even Gentiles, but this does not mean they
are no longer for the Jewish people. But the Jewish people must
come to Messiah Jesus to have access to them, they must rejoin the
faith community of Spiritual Israel.
What of the promise of the Land? This is a sticky
issue. The land promises are also expanded to include all believers.
Jesus promised that "the meek shall inherit the earth" (compare
Ps. 37:11), and in doing so he expanded the promise that God's people
would inherit the land of Israel. Paul says that the promise to
Abraham should be understood as to inheriting "the earth" (Romans
4:13). Does this contradict the idea that the Jewish people should
specifically inherit the land of Israel? God has changed
the order of things and brought the fulfilment of the promises to
Israel in a glorious expanded way. The Temple in Jerusalem is no
longer the center of the worship of the true God in all the earth.
And therefore Israel as a geo-political entity is no longer the
center of God's kingdom and blessing (John 4:21-24). Does this mean
the Jewish people no longer have a right to the land? Does this
aspect of the Abrahamic Covenant cease to be? The New Covenant promise
is an expansion and fulfilment of the land promise, not a
negation of it. Yet Israel is in the land in a state of unbelief,
and belief and obedience were always the conditions for dwelling
in the land. How can it be that the modern state of Israel exists,
then? Perhaps God in His mercy has brought the people back in order
to preserve them and also as a means of facilitating the hope of
Romans 9-11 that the Jewish people should return to faith. The modern
state of Israel can then be seen as part of the providential preservation
of the Jewish people working toward the fulfillment of Romans 11.
Certainly if the Jewish people are to be restored to faith as
a people, one could argue that as a people they also
need to dwell in a place[2]. There are moral,
historical, and political reasons arguing for Israel's right to
exist, yet the Jewish people can in no way claim, while still
in unbelief, any Biblical right to posession of the ancient
borders. When they come to faith as a people again, so will the
surrounding Gentile nations, and I believe in Messiah's peace all
the current border issues can finally be settled. But most basically,
the land promise is realized in the final state when all believers
inherit the earth. If one fails to understand that the land Old
Covenant land promises were the downpayment on a renewed Earth,
the restoration of Paradise lost, one is missing the most important
meaning and purpose of the promised land. The ultimate experience
of this promise certainly includes physical children of Abraham
who believe, along with all other believers!
Is ethnic Israel still properly called Israel? Certainly
no one would deny the name Israel to Jewish believers in Jesus.
But what about those Jews who don't believe? Can they still truly
be called Israel? Paul used this appellation of the Jewish people,
even in unbelief. Romans 11:25 states, "Israel has experienced a
hardening in part...", clearly using the name "Israel" to describe
Jewish non-believers. Could it be that the continued existence
of the Jewish people in spite of centuries of oppression and attempts
at annihilation is a witness to God's faithfulness, sovereignty,
and mercy?
We need to avoid errors in two extremes. Some would
deny Gentile New Covenant believers the right given to Gentile Old
Covenant believers (!), that is, the right to the name "Israel"
and full and absolutely equal status as part of the people of God.
These have claimed that the Church and Israel are two separate peoples
of God and have nothing to do with each other. According to this
view, God has two separate peoples and two separate plans[3].
This view essentially denies full glory to Jesus and the gospel.
In effect it says the salvation which has come in the Messiah is
only a plan, not the plan and all who believe are
not the recipients of all blessings, just some! (But
see 1 Peter 1:3-12; Eph. 1:3!) Those of the other extreme have claimed
that God is finished with the Jewish people as a people (though
not as individuals) and say the Church has replaced the Jewish people
and become the only true Israel[4]. In such a theology
the Jewish people themselves are denied any use of the name Israel!
Neither extreme is correct. The first extreme fails
to see the centrality of Jesus in the meaning of Israel and the
second fails to see the continuation of the Jewish people in the
purpose of God as a people who are still heirs to the Covenants
as taught by Romans 9:4 and 11:28-29. Good theology must be Biblical
rather than a polemical overreaction to errror.
We need to affirm the Biblical position that all
believers are grafted in to the tree of Israel, whether they are
natural or "wild" branches, and that God can, and will, graft in
once again the natural branches, the Jewish people (Romans 11:11-24).
Gentiles need to recognize that they have been grafted into Israel,
and therefore have a certain kinship with the Jewish people. Jews
are no less Jewish for believing in Jesus. Jews do not become Gentiles
when they come to Jesus (quite the opposite!), rather all who trust
in the Jewish Messiah and serve Him are part of that Spiritual tree
rooted in the Patriarchs.
How do these Israels relate to one another? First,
recognize there is a fundamental unity in the purpose of God. Spiritual
Israel is the congregation of witness, the "Holy Priesthood and
Royal Nation" (Compare Ex. 19:6 and 1 Peter 2:9) which brings the
light of God and blessing of Abraham to the world. Those who follow
the Messiah are part of this community, made up of both Jews and
Gentiles. We must recognize that all glory goes to God and that
all creation serves Him. This means that whatever our understanding
of Israel, it must have the Glory of God at heart. Secondly, as
the Rabbis have said, "the world was created for the sake of Messiah".
Therefore Israel, too, is for the sake of Messiah. In the Messiah
are found all who trust in Him, both in the Old and New Covenants
(numbers 3, 7, and 8). The Israel of "All Believers" will only be
fully realized when the fullness of both Jewish and Gentile
believers comes and ethnic Israel is restored to faith. In order
for God to be glorified the Messiah must be exalted. In order for
Messiah to be exalted, His Body, All Believers, the Church, is being
blessed and is prospering. In order for the church to fully prosper,
the Jewish people must be restored to faith and join in the missionary
enterprise (Romans 11:12). In order for them to be restored, they
must, of course, be preserved[5]. I would argue
that in order for the Jewish people to be preserved, the Nation
of Israel needed to be created and needs to exist. We must stand
for the continued existence of the state of Israel and for a
just expression of that existence.
The fate of ethnic Israel and Spiritual Israel,
the Church, are bound up together. The church is to make Jewish
evangelism a priority and must stand by the Jewish people for the
glory of God. We must look with hope and expectation for the glorious
day when the natural branches are grafted in and "all Israel will
be saved." In that day the Root of Jesse will stand as a banner
for the peoples; the nations will rally to him, and the place of
his rest will be glorious (Isaiah 11:10).
Endnotes
1. This is a provisional
statement written as part of a process of theological developement.
It is tentative in nature and subject to further revision.
2. See John Owen's commentary
on Hebrews, Volume 1, 443-455 (2nd edition, 1812).
3. This is the essence
of the dispensational teaching regarding Israel and the church.
4. I would accuse some
of those in the covenantal camp of this position, though they rarely
put it quite this way. Older reformed theologians are much more
positive towards ethnic Israel because they were not reacting against
the errors of dispensationalism mentioned above! See my pamphlet
quoting Calvin, Hodge, Murray, Vos, etc.
5. An additional reason
for Christians to be concerned for the Jewish people is that Christians
have an ethical duty to uphold the cause of oppressed peoples (Amos
2:7). Historically, few have been so oppressed as Jesus' own ethnic
group, the Jews. The Palestinian Arabs have also suffered injustices.
They have been mistreated by their own Arab brothers and are not
always treated fairly in Israel. They have also committed injustices
themselves. The Messiah is the ultimate solution to this conflict.
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Theological Articles:
Toward
a Reformed Israelology
Fred Klett, CHAIM
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