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Unreported News, Commentary, Resources and Discussion of Bible Prophecy
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According to prophecy, "all Israel will be saved." That means that in the very last days, every surviving Jew at that time will be saved by Jesus.

The Church is remnant Israel. Through faith in Christ, Gentile believers are no longer excluded from citizenship in Israel, nor from the covenants of the promise (Ephesians 2:12).
Gentile believers are no longer excluded


Blessedayers wrote:The Church is remnant Israel. Through faith in Christ, Gentile believers are no longer excluded from citizenship in Israel, nor from the covenants of the promise (Ephesians 2:12).
This is the only part I can see that I disgree with...Gentile believers are no longer excluded
Gentiles were never excluded in the sense that no gentile was of the body of Christ/Spiritual Israel before He died for our sins.
Abraham was a gentile who came out from amongst the heathen at the call of God....Caleb a gentile...those that came out of egypt werent all of Israelite heritage but where a mixed multitude....
Gen 41:50
And unto Joseph were born two sons before the year of famine came, whom Asenath, the daughter of Potiphera priest of On, bare unto him.
Ruth was a gentile....
Gentiles have always been included in the family of God....the law was the same for the stranger/gentile and the homeborn alike.
Exo 12:47
All the congregation of Israel shall keep it.
Exo 12:48
And when a stranger shall sojourn with thee, and will keep the passover to the LORD, let all his males be circumcised, and then let him come near and keep it; and he shall be as one that is born in the land: for no uncircumcised person shall eat thereof.
Exo 12:49
One law shall be to him that is homeborn, and unto the stranger that sojourneth among you.
Exo 12:50
Thus did all the children of Israel; as the LORD commanded Moses and Aaron, so did they.
Exo 12:51 And it came to pass the selfsame day, that the LORD did bring the children of Israel out of the land of Egypt by their armies.
The only distinction between hereditary Israel and the Gentiles is....
In the beginging the nations went to Israel for the good news.....then in order to provoke Israel to jealousy it was given to a people who were not..that being the gentiles...a mixed multitude who thru belief in Christ went on to become a people/family by adoption...just as for ex. Caleb and Ruth were..... and they now have the responsibility to take the good news to the nations....till the times of the gentiles be fulfilled.
Gentiles who did not meet all the provisions to be included were excluded. I think that is what Paul referred to in part of the letter to the previously excluded Ephesians:
Deu 10:16 Circumcise therefore the foreskin of your heart, and be no more stiffnecked.

Peacebloom wrote:It's been quite a while since I've posted here. I plan to take another look at these ideas and see what I find. I'll try to wait to post until I can be sure that what I say is correct, but I've gotten a lot of things wrong, so don't hold your breath. XD
Much love,
Peacebloom

) I think a good topic of study now would be the prophecies that talk about israel. Which ones are talking about remnant israel or the church and which ones are talking about national israel? Great topic. Thanks guys.



Abiding in His Word wrote:Rom 11:25 For I do not want you, brethren, to be uninformed of this mystery--so that you will not be wise in your own estimation--that a partial hardening has happened to Israel until the fullness of the Gentiles has come in;
Rom 11:26 and so all Israel will be saved..........

OBXBob wrote:Bump... to make it easier for "OBXBob" to find and refresh his memory about what I believe.
Thanks Laz!
My position toward the nation of Israel has not changed! I don't believe God is 'done' in dealing with them.
YBIC,
Bob


There are very serious error in the Remnant Theology teachings.
The third problem is that people usually do not bother to make the necessary distinction between national Israel and remnant Israel, even though the Bible clearly makes that distinction (Romans 9:6-8, 11:1-7).
24 "Seventy 'sevens' [c] are decreed for your people and your holy city to finish [d] transgression, to put an end to sin, to atone for wickedness, to bring in everlasting righteousness, to seal up vision and prophecy and to anoint the most holy.
4Then I heard the number of those who were sealed: 144,000 from all the tribes of Israel.


Then I heard the number of those who were sealed: 144,000 from all the tribes of Israel. Revelation 7:4 (NIV)
AndCanItBe wrote:
Those 144,000 will be saved the same way we are, but they will also be part of national Israel. The problem is Laz, if you combine Remnant theology with a view that the 70 weeks of dealing with national Israel are already done and over with, you essentially become a replacement theologist in practice, though you may not view it that way in your head. The Church and Israel are one, but God is not done with the nation of Israel yet, because of those 144,000 that are the firstfruits. If you think the Church and Israel are one (which I agree with) but also think that God is done with National Israel, which in turn causes you to spiritualize everything said about Israel in prophecy, then you have essentially become a replacement theologist in practice. Like the guy said, it boils down to correctly discerning when national Israel as opposed to spiritual Israel is being spoken about in a passage.


Abiding in His Word wrote:Discussion regarding this topic is fine as long as members are willing to discuss. However, when one refuses to participate in a discussion, but rather simply continues to paste the same response without adequate scriptural foundation, it is finished and will no longer be productive.
If you think the Church and Israel are one (which I agree with) but also think that God is done with National Israel, which in turn causes you to spiritualize everything said about Israel in prophecy, then you have essentially become a replacement theologist in practice.
from "Abiding in His Word" also shows agreement to "AndCanItBe" bringing in the unrelated seventy weeks prophecy "red herring." I will not have time today to put all the passages "Abiding in His Word" quoted back into context today. It is much faster, shorter, and easier to make an out-of-context quote that can lead to a misunderstanding of Scripture than to make a full context quote and explain it.Quoted from http://www.biblestudying.net/logical.htmlRed herring argument: You intentionally digress from the real issue being discussed, introducing a side issue that has nothing to do with the real issue under discussion--in an attempt to remove attention from the real issue. This is often very subtle and the new issue can often seem closely related to the real issue.


AndCanItBe wrote:I'm no debater, Laz, I'm sure you know that. My intention was to cut to the heart of the disagreement, not throw a 'red herring', I've never even heard the term before in reference to debating. I see there is nothing that I can say here that will have any impact on you, considering I don't even know the rules of debate that you like to adhere to. Perhaps a more worthy opponent will come along for you that is schooled in such things. Thanks, and no offense taken.
It is just that I am weary of poor logic being used and dragging a discussion off track.
Now I see. It's okay Laz, I know what I am and I know what I'm not. Logical is not my forte. I will be interested in reading the thread though. I actually do agree with most of what that guy said in the original post also.

"Paul's olive tree metaphor is similar to his human body metaphor (Romans 12:4-5; 1 Corinthians 12:12ff). The fact that he uses the two metaphors so close to one another (Romans 11 and 12) shows he is speaking about the same group of people in both.”

Peacebloom wrote:So the "partial hardening" of Israel until "the fulness of the Gentiles comes in" refers to remnant Israel or the nation Israel? Either way, some from of Israel has been hardened until the full amount of the Gentiles comes into the olive tree.
I absolutely agree!There are still future prophecies to be fulfilled by the nation of Israel. There are too many geo-political indicators in those prophecies for them to be fulfilled by anything other than a literal nation of Israel.
Yes, the Church is made up of both Jews and Gentiles. According to prophecy, "all Israel will be saved." That means that in the very last days, every surviving Jew at that time will be saved by Jesus. I recall a prophecy in the OT saying that 2/3 of Israel will be killed, but the remnant 1/3 will be saved and refined. Although it's important to realize that the Body is not entirely Gentile, it would be erroneous to ignore those future prophecies which speak of Israel being completely saved after the Gentiles have come in and when Jesus removes the scales from their eyes, so that they may see him clearly and fully.
It is written that the gentiles can be graffed in to become part of the olive tree making them spiritual or symbolically Isrealites and it is also written that the natural branches can be broken off due to unbelief making them spiritual or symbolic gentiles.
mark s wrote:Referrencing the 70 weeks of Daniel in this discussion is not a red herring if the 70 weeks are not all fulfilled, since they specifically involve national Israel. Just because it was not raised in the OP doesn’t matter. Neither were several other Scriptures mentioned in the OP that have direct implication with a future status of National Israel.
These are relevant point to this topic. If the Bible prophesies that God will be dealing in spiritual matters with national Israel, i.e. the physical descendants of Jacob, in ways that He is not doing with the gentiles, saved or unsaved, then this shows that the OP article was not complete in its conclusions.
I agree that while what is discussed is being called “Remnant Theology”, as it is presented, it functions as “Replacement Theology” by denying Israel’s special end-times role and disposition.
I think that a definition of “national Israel” is in order. When I use this term, I am specifically referring to the physical descendents of Jacob, whether within or without the borders of the modern-day state of Israel.
Love in Christ,
mark
Referrencing the 70 weeks of Daniel in this discussion is not a red herring if the 70 weeks are not all fulfilled, since they specifically involve national Israel. Just because it was not raised in the OP doesn’t matter. Neither were several other Scriptures mentioned in the OP that have direct implication with a future status of National Israel.
These are relevant point to this topic. If the Bible prophesies that God will be dealing in spiritual matters with national Israel, i.e. the physical descendants of Jacob, in ways that He is not doing with the gentiles, saved or unsaved, then this shows that the OP article was not complete in its conclusions.
I agree that while what is discussed is being called “Remnant Theology”, as it is presented, it functions as “Replacement Theology” by denying Israel’s special end-times role and disposition.
I think that a definition of “national Israel” is in order. When I use this term, I am specifically referring to the physical descendents of Jacob, whether within or without the borders of the modern-day state of Israel.
Love in Christ,
mark


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