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The Situation of Israel

I sincerely tell you, in Christ, and my conscience assures me through the Holy Spirit that I am not lying:

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I have deep sadness and constant anguish for the Jews.

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I would even prefer that I myself suffer the curse of being cut off from Christ rather than my brethren—I mean my own people, my kin.

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They are Israelites whom God adopted, and on them rests his glory. Theirs are the covenants, the law, the worship, and the promises of God.

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They are descendants of the patriarchs, and from their lineage, Christ was born—he who, as God, is above all distinctions. Blessed be He forever and ever: Amen!

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The Election of Israel

We cannot say that God’s promise has failed because not all Israelites are truly part of Israel,

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nor are they all children of Abraham because they are his descendants, but the children of Isaac will be called your descendants.

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This means that the children of God are not defined by the race of Abraham, but only by the children born to him through God’s promise.

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This text refers to such a promise: I shall return around this time, and Sarah will have a son.

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And that is not all: something similar happened to Rebecca, the wife of our father Isaac, became pregnant,

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and before the twins were born or had done anything, right or wrong, so that God’s purpose of election might continue

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not on the merits but of who is called, she was told: The elder will serve the younger;

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as the scripture says: I loved Jacob, but hated Esau.

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Should we say that God is unjust? Of course not.

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However, God said to Moses: I will forgive whom I choose to forgive, and have mercy on whom I choose to have mercy.

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So what’s important is not that we worry or rush, but that God has compassion.

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And he says in scripture to Pharaoh: I made you, Pharaoh, to display my power in you and so that the whole world may know my name.

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And so God shows mercy to whom he chooses, and hardens the hearts of whom he desires.

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Maybe you say: ‘Why then does God complain if it is impossible to evade his decision?’

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But you, my friend, who are you to question God? Should the clay pot tell its maker: Why did you make me like this?

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Isn’t it up to the potter to make from the same clay a vessel for beauty and a vessel for everyday use?

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Thus, God endures with great patience vessels that deserve his wrath, fit to be broken, and through them, he aims to demonstrate his wrath and the extent of his power.

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But he also desires to reveal the riches of his glory through others, in vessels of mercy prepared for glory.

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And he called us, not only from among the Jews but also from the pagans too,

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as he said through the prophet Hosea: I will call “my people” those who were not my people, and “my beloved” the one who was not beloved.

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And in the same place where they were told, “You are not my people,” they will be called children of the living God.

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Regarding Israel, Isaiah declares: Even if the Israelites are as countless as the sand of the sea, only a few will be saved.

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This is a matter that the Lord will settle in Israel, without fail or delay.

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Isaiah also announced: If the Almighty Lord had not left us some descendants, we would have become like Sodom and similar to Gomorrah.

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What then shall we say? That Gentiles who were not aiming for true righteousness (I speak of righteousness through faith), found it;

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while Israel, trying to follow a law of righteousness, missed the purpose of the law?

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Why not? Because they did not strive for it based on faith, but as if it could be done by works. And they stumbled over the stumbling stone (Christ),

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as it is written: See, I am laying a stone in Zion that will make people stumble, and a rock that will make them fall; but whoever believes in him will not be put to shame.


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