Restoration Fellowship is dedicated to recovering the beliefs of the first-century disciples of Jesus, the Messiah. Sound theology begins with the creed to which Jesus subscribed in Mark 12:28-29 — the creed of Israel (Deut. 6:4) — and the Gospel about the Kingdom of God (Mark 1:14-15). Jesus commanded belief in that Gospel Message in contrast to much modern evangelism which often ignores Jesus' Message about the Kingdom of God.
Friday, August 21, 2015
The Triumvirate of Israel, Egypt and Assyria: Isaiah 19
Isa 11.11-16;
19.16-24;
cp. Ps 47.8-9.
Isa 19.23-25:
“In
that time Israel will be a third with the Egyptians and the Assyrians, a
blessing in the midst of the earth, whom the LORD of hosts has blessed, saying:
‘Blessed are my people whom I brought forth from Egypt; because they sinned
before me I exiled them to Assyria, and now that they repent they are called my
people and my heritage.’” Targum, Isa
19.25.
Isaiah 13-39: A
Commentary,
Otto Kaiser:
“…the
people of God now includes Israel,
Egypt, and Assyria [Isa 19.16-24].”
Biblical
Commentary on the Prophecies of Isaiah, Volume 1, Franz Delitzsch:
“Israel thereafter is no longer alone
God’s people, God’s creation, God’s inheritance, but Egypt and Assyria are all
these three things as well as Israel. To express that, the three titles of Israel are commingled, and each of the three
nations obtains one of the precious names, that applied to Israel…”
Isaiah, John N.
Oswalt:
“The
language of Isaiah 19.20-22 appears
to have been consciously chosen to demonstrate that Egypt will share the same kind of relationship with the Lord as Israel
did. The final expression of God’s positive plans for Egypt is, if
anything, even more shocking that the previous two. He is not merely going to
deliver Egypt and Israel from the Assyrian oppressors, he is going to join the three countries together in the common worship
of the Lord! ...Israel will fulfill the function that God promised to
Abraham for his descendants (Gen 12.3). They will be a blessing to the world, a
means whereby the blessings of God can come to all peoples, a means whereby the election of Israel is extended to
everyone (‘Egypt my people, Assyria my handiwork’, Isa 19.25).”
A New Testament
Biblical Theology:
The Unfolding of the Old Testament in the New, G. K. Beale:
“…the Egyptians will be identified as
Israelite Semites [v.18], a
likely way to connote that such allegiance indicates that one is to be reckoned as a native Israelite [Hebrew speaker]. In
addition, that Egypt is also called ‘My people’ adds to this impression, since
‘My people’ (‘ammi) virtually without
exception occurs elsewhere with reference to God’s people Israel [outside of 19.25 refers to Israel every other
time, 25X]. Similarly, the expression that Assyria is ‘the work of My hands’ may have the same connotation, since the
phrase ‘work of My hands’ (or virtual equivalents with different pronouns)
occurs only 4 times elsewhere in Isaiah, 3 of which refer to Israel as God’s
work.”
An exposition of
the Old and New Testament Vol: 2:
“[Egypt
& Assyria] shall be as welcome to God as Israel. They are all alike his people, whom he takes
under his protection: they are formed by him, for they are the work of his hands; not only as a people but as his
people. They are formed for him, for they
are his inheritance, precious in his eyes, and dear to him, and from whom he has his rent of honour out
of this lower world…they shall all share
in one and the same blessing.”
Matthew Poole
Annotations Upon the Holy Bible:
Isa
19.24: “[Israel will be] the third party, to wit, in that sacred league,
whereby all of them oblige themselves to God. [Egypt & Assyria] are here
put synecdochically for all the Gentiles.”
Isa
19.25: “[Israel, Egypt, and Assyria] of whom he speaks as of one people, in the
singular number, because they are all united into one body and church. My people: this title, and those which
follow, that were peculiar to the people of Israel, shall now be given to these
and all other nations of the world.”
Has the Church
Replaced Israel?
Michael J. Vlach:
“…even
though ‘Israel’ language will be applied to other nations it is not done so at
the expense of national Israel’s identify…The nations who are blessed are not incorporated into Israel, but they
are blessed alongside Israel. Spiritual unity does not cancel national
distinctions.”
Jamieson-Fausset-Brown
Bible Commentary,
Isa 19.24:
third—The three shall
be joined as one nation.
blessing—the source of blessings to other nations,
and the object of their benedictions.
Matthew
Poole’s Commentary, Isa 19.24:
“The third; the third party, to wit, in
that sacred league, whereby all of
them oblige themselves to God.”
Gill’s
Exposition of the Entire Bible, Isa 19.24:
“There
shall be a triple alliance between them; Jew
and Gentile shall be made one, the middle wall of partition being broken
down; yea, Israel, or the Jews, shall be the third, or the Mediator between
them both, or the means of uniting the Gentiles together, since the Gospel of
peace was to go out from them, as it did.”
Cambridge Bible
for Schools and Colleges, Isa 19:
24.
shall Israel be the third]—member of the Messianic League.
Psalm 47.9: Benson
Commentary:
“…almost
all the ancient versions and more modern translators render the former clause
of this verse, The princes of the nations
are incorporated with the God of Abraham: similar to which is the version
of our Liturgy; The princes of the people
are joined to the people of the God of Abraham. “In this prophetical
sense,” says Dr. Dodd, “which seems most proper, the princes of the people mean
the heathen princes, who were to be converted to Christianity, and to join
themselves to the people of the God of Abraham; that is, to the Jewish converts
under the dominion of Christ.
Gill’s
Exposition of the Entire Bible:
“even the people of the God of Abraham;
whom the God of Abraham has chosen for his people, taken into covenant, given
to his Son, and who are redeemed by his blood, and effectually called by his
grace; and who, though Gentiles, belong to the same covenant and the same
covenant God as Abraham did, and have the blessing of Abraham upon them; and are indeed his spiritual seed, being
Christ's. The Targum is, "the people that believe in the God of
Abraham". The words may be rendered in connection with the former clause,
"gathered together unto the people of the God of Abraham" (h); and so
denote the association of the Gentiles converted with the believing Jews, as was at the first times of the Gospel,
and will be at the latter day, 1 Corinthians 12:13.”
Cambridge Bible
for Schools and Colleges:
“The
Massoretic text of the next line must be rendered with R.V., ‘To be the people
of the God of Abraham’: a bold phrase,
reaching the very climax of Messianic hope, and hardly paralleled elsewhere. For though the nations are frequently
spoken of as attaching themselves to Israel in the worship of Jehovah (Isaiah
2:2 ff; Isaiah 11:10; Isaiah 56:6 ff; Isaiah 60:3 ff.; Zechariah 8:20 ff.;
&c, &c), they are not called
“the people of God.” This title is
reserved for Israel, and only in the N.T. are the promises made to Israel
extended to the Gentiles (Romans
9:25). Yet see Isaiah 19:25,
where Egypt receives the title ‘my people.’
The
rendering of R.V. marg. ‘Unto the people,’ is scarcely legitimate. It is
however to be noted that the consonants
of the word ‘am’ ‘people’ are
identical with those of ‘im, ‘with,’
and the LXX read them as the preposition (with the God of A.). It is a
natural conjecture that we should restore the preposition and render;
The princes of
the peoples are gathered together, along
with the people of the God of Abraham.
the God of
Abraham]
The title recalls the promises of blessing to the nations made through Abraham
(Genesis 12:2 f. &c.).”
Pulpit
Commentary:
“The princes of the people (literally,
princes of peoples) are gathered
together, even the people of the God of Abraham; rather, to be the people of the God of Abraham
(Revised Version) - i.e. to form, together with Israel, the one people, or
Church, of God (comp. Isaiah 49:18-23).”
The Restoration of Pagan Nations: Commentaries
Ezek 29; Isa 11.11-16; 19.16-24; Jer
46.26; 48.47; 49.6, 39; cp. Ps 47.8-9.
“The promise of a future repopulation of Egypt
comes as something of a surprise in view of the unrelieved doom and disaster
proclaimed against her in the preceding oracles…the similar passages in 48.47; 49.6; 49.39 [shows that] a
reversal of fortunes is promised to Moab, Ammon, and Elam…The promise of
restoration for Egypt must still be seen in a broader context: the similar
passages in Isa 19.18-25 and Ezek 29.13-16. In the latter passage
Egypt was to be restored and exiles returned, but the new Egypt was to be so
small and weak that never again could she be a reliance for the people of
Israel.” WBC, Jer. 46.26.
“The proclamation of judgment upon those nations
which invaded and plundered Judah is expected, but his proclamation, like that
of Amos 1-2, takes an unexpected
turn: Judah will also experience exile (so Rudolph). Perhaps even more shocking
is the promise to restore the other nations along with Judah, if they will
learn the ‘way’ of God’s people (cf. 10.2).” WBC, Jer. 12.14-17.
“Moreover Yahweh’s sovereignty over other nations was
such that he could promise to restore them to their own inheritances in the
aftermath of the Babylonian ravages if they would turn to him, in terms that
mirror the promise made to Israel in the same context (Jer 12.14-17). So the
conquest of Canaan, through which Israel gained possession of what had been the
inheritance of other nations (Ps 111.6, nahalat
goyim [inheritance nations]), was
not unique in itself…What made it unique was the context of election,
redemption, covenant, and law that surrounded the events (Ps 111.7-9; cf.
147.19-20; also Deut 4.32-38).
The ultimately universal goal of these realities in
the blessings of the nations themselves explains the paradox of the summons to
the nations in Ps 47 to rejoice in the conquest by which God gave their land to
be Israel’s inheritance (47.3-4[4-5]). It was part of a history through which,
eventually they, the nations, would belong to the very people of Abraham themselves
(47.9[10]; cf. 82.8; Isa 19.24-25, and 3, below). Hence, note the baffled grief
when that history seemed to have been thrown into reverse by the nations’
entering into Israel’s inheritance, not in eschatological blessing, but in
destructive violence and divine judgment (Lam 5.2). Beyond that judgment, however,
the climax of God’s purposes is seen by Paul to be the inclusion of the nations
into the people of God through the gospel and in the Messiah, Jesus—a reality
he describes using the strongly OT inheritance language (Eph 3.6; cf. 2.11-22).”
#5706, NIDOT.
Isa
19.23-25:
“In that time Israel will be a third with the
Egyptians and the Assyrians, a blessing in the midst of the earth, whom the
LORD of hosts has blessed, saying: ‘Blessed are my people whom I brought forth
from Egypt; because they sinned before me I exiled them to Assyria, and now
that they repent they are called my people and my heritage.’” Targum, Isa 19.25.
Isaiah 13-39: A Commentary, Otto Kaiser:
“…the people of God now includes Israel, Egypt, and
Assyria [Isa 19.16-24].”
Biblical Commentary on the Prophecies of Isaiah,
Volume 1, Franz Delitzsch:
“Israel thereafter is no longer alone God’s people,
God’s creation, God’s inheritance, but Egypt and Assyria are all these three
things as well as Israel. To express that, the three titles of Israel are
commingled, and each of the three nations obtains one of the precious names,
that applied to Israel…”
Isaiah, John N. Oswalt:
“The language of Isaiah 19.20-22 appears to have
been consciously chosen to demonstrate that Egypt will share the same kind of
relationship with the Lord as Israel did. The final expression of God’s
positive plans for Egypt is, if anything, even more shocking that the previous
two. He is not merely going to deliver Egypt and Israel from the Assyrian
oppressors, he is going to join the three countries together in the common
worship of the Lord! ...Israel will fulfill the function that God promised to
Abraham for his descendants (Gen 12.3). They will be a blessing to the world, a
means whereby the blessings of God can come to all peoples, a means whereby the
election of Israel is extended to everyone (‘Egypt my people, Assyria my
handiwork’, Isa 19.25).”
A New Testament Biblical Theology: The Unfolding of
the Old Testament in the New, G. K. Beale:
“…the Egyptians will be identified as Israelite Semites
[v.18], a likely way to connote that such allegiance indicates that one is to
be reckoned as a native Israelite [Hebrew speaker]. In addition, that Egypt is
also called ‘My people’ adds to this impression, since ‘My people’ (‘ammi)
virtually without exception occurs elsewhere with reference to God’s people
Israel [outside of 19.25 refers to Israel every other time, 25X]. Similarly,
the expression that Assyria is ‘the work of My hands’ may have the same
connotation, since the phrase ‘work of My hands’ (or virtual equivalents with
different pronouns) occurs only 4 times elsewhere in Isaiah, 3 of which refer
to Israel as God’s work.”
An exposition of the Old and New Testament Vol: 2:
“[Egypt & Assyria] shall be as welcome to God
as Israel. They are all alike his people, whom he takes under his protection:
they are formed by him, for they are the work of his hands; not only as a
people but as his people. They are formed for him, for they are his
inheritance, precious in his eyes, and dear to him, and from whom he has his
rent of honour out of this lower world…they shall all share in one and the same
blessing.”
Matthew Poole Annotations Upon the Holy Bible:
Isa 19.24: “[Israel will be] the third party, to
wit, in that sacred league, whereby all of them oblige themselves to God.
[Egypt & Assyria] are here put synecdochically for all the Gentiles.”
Isa 19.25: “[Israel, Egypt, and Assyria] of whom he
speaks as of one people, in the singular number, because they are all united
into one body and church. My people: this title, and those which follow, that
were peculiar to the people of Israel, shall now be given to these and all
other nations of the world.”
Has the Church Replaced Israel? Michael J. Vlach:
“…even though ‘Israel’ language will be applied to
other nations it is not done so at the expense of national Israel’s
identify…The nations who are blessed are not incorporated into Israel, but they
are blessed alongside Israel. Spiritual unity does not cancel national
distinctions.”
Jamieson-Fausset-Brown Bible Commentary, Isa 19.24:
third—The three shall be joined as one nation.
blessing—the source of blessings to other nations,
and the object of their benedictions.
Matthew Poole’s Commentary, Isa 19.24:
“The third; the third party, to wit, in that sacred
league, whereby all of them oblige themselves to God.”
Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible, Isa 19.24:
“There shall be a triple alliance between them; Jew
and Gentile shall be made one, the middle wall of partition being broken down;
yea, Israel, or the Jews, shall be the third, or the Mediator between them
both, or the means of uniting the Gentiles together, since the Gospel of peace
was to go out from them, as it did.”
Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges, Isa 19:24. shall Israel be the third]—member of the
Messianic League.
Psalm 47.9: Benson Commentary:
“…almost all the ancient versions and more modern
translators render the former clause of this verse, The princes of the nations
are incorporated with the God of Abraham: similar to which is the version of
our Liturgy; The princes of the people are joined to the people of the God of
Abraham. “In this prophetical sense,” says Dr. Dodd, “which seems most proper,
the princes of the people mean the heathen princes, who were to be converted to
Christianity, and to join themselves to the people of the God of Abraham; that
is, to the Jewish converts under the dominion of Christ.
Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible:
“even the people of the God of Abraham; whom the
God of Abraham has chosen for his people, taken into covenant, given to his
Son, and who are redeemed by his blood, and effectually called by his grace;
and who, though Gentiles, belong to the same covenant and the same covenant God
as Abraham did, and have the blessing of Abraham upon them; and are indeed his
spiritual seed, being Christ's. The Targum is, "the people that believe in
the God of Abraham". The words may be rendered in connection with the
former clause, "gathered together unto the people of the God of
Abraham" (h); and so denote the association of the Gentiles converted with
the believing Jews, as was at the first times of the Gospel, and will be at the
latter day, 1 Corinthians 12:13.”
Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges:
“The Massoretic text of the next line must be
rendered with R.V., ‘To be the people of the God of Abraham’: a bold phrase,
reaching the very climax of Messianic hope, and hardly paralleled elsewhere.
For though the nations are frequently spoken of as attaching themselves to
Israel in the worship of Jehovah (Isaiah 2:2 ff; Isaiah 11:10; Isaiah 56:6 ff;
Isaiah 60:3 ff.; Zechariah 8:20 ff.; &c, &c), they are not called “the
people of God.” This title is reserved for Israel, and only in the N.T. are the
promises made to Israel extended to the Gentiles (Romans 9:25). Yet see Isaiah
19:25, where Egypt receives the title ‘my people.’
The rendering of R.V. marg. ‘Unto the people,’ is
scarcely legitimate. It is however to be noted that the consonants of the word
‘am’ ‘people’ are identical with those of ‘im, ‘with,’ and the LXX read them as
the preposition (with the God of A.). It is a natural conjecture that we should
restore the preposition and render;
The princes of the peoples are gathered together,
along with the people of the God of Abraham.
the God of Abraham] The title recalls the promises
of blessing to the nations made through Abraham (Genesis 12:2 f. &c.).”
Pulpit Commentary:
“The princes of the people (literally, princes of
peoples) are gathered together, even the people of the God of Abraham; rather,
to be the people of the God of Abraham (Revised Version) - i.e. to form,
together with Israel, the one people, or Church, of God (comp. Isaiah
49:18-23).”
Zech 14.16f.
“Like Ezekiel before him (Ezek. 46:9–12), Zechariah
envisages ongoing festival worship in renewed Israel but broadens this to
include those from beyond Israel’s bounds.”
“While Ezekiel seemed to have understood that
foreigners could become members of the covenant community (e.g., Ezek. 44:9;
but cf. 37:28), Zechariah depicts them as simultaneously retaining their
distinctive identities (cf. Zech. 8:20–23; also Isa. 19:23–25).” ESV
The Restoration/Conversion of Pagan Nations in the KOG
Zechariah visions close with the restoration of
Israel & surrounding pagan/enemy
nations:
14.16 “Then everyone who survives of all the nations [from God’s plagues, vv.12-15] that have come against Jerusalem
shall go up year after year to worship the King, YHWH of hosts, and to keep the
Feast of Booths [cp. Ezek. 46.9-12]."
Fulfillment of the Abrahamic/Gospel promise:
Gen. 12.1-3: YHWH said to Abram: Go out
from your land, your relatives, and your father's house to the land that I will
show you. I will make you into a great nation, I will bless you, I will make
your name great, and you will be a blessing. I will bless those who bless you,
I will curse those who treat you with contempt, and all the peoples on earth
will be blessed through you.
Gal 3.8: In Scripture it is foreseen that God makes right the non-Jews
who believe Him. Thus the Christian Gospel was preached to Abraham ahead of
time with these words: “With faith like yours, Abraham, all the nations will be
blessed.”
Compare:
Zech. 8.12b-13: “Then I will allow the remnant of my people to possess all
these things. Furthermore, house of Judah and Israel, even though you used to
be a curse among the nations, now I will surely save you, and you will be a
blessing.”
Jer. 4.1-2: “If you return Israel, says
YHWH, return to me: put away your abominations out of my sight and no longer
stray away. You must be truthful, honest and upright when you take an oath
saying, 'As surely as YHWH lives!' If you do, then the nations will be blessed, and they will be honored by me."
Ps 72.1, 17: “YHWH, give your judgment
to the King and your righteousness to the King's son…Let his name be blessed
forever and endure longer than the sun: and all the tribes of the earth shall
be blessed in him: all nations shall call him blessed.”
Isa 65.15b-16: “My servants [from the nations? v.1] will be called by a new name which shall be blessed on the
earth; for they shall bless the true God: and they that swear upon the
earth shall swear by the God of truth.”
God’s Judgment restores
their inheritance/blessings: Deut. 2:5,
9, 15
“Don’t
go to war with [Edom], because I am not giving you any of their land, not even
a footprint, for I have given Mount Seir as an inheritance for Esau…Do not ye
quarrel with the Moabites, and do not engage in war with them; for I will not
give you of their land for an inheritance, for I have given Aroer to the
children of Lot to inherit…And when you enter the land of the Ammonites, the
descendants of Lot don’t bother them or start a war with them. I have given the
land of Ammon to them as their inheritance, and I will not give you any of
their land.”
NOTE: “The umbrella term for Israel’s restoration,
[‘reverse the fortunes’, (lit. ‘turning
the turning’), sub sebut], is also
the umbrella term for Yhwh’s restoration of Moab, Ammon & Elam (Jer. 48.47; 49.6; 49.39), and for Sodom
and Samaria (Ezek. 16.53). After
Nebuchadnezzar’s invasion, Egypt ‘will settle down as in former days’ (Jer. 46.26).” Old Testament Theology, v2: Israel's Faith, John Goldingay, p 819.
Ezek. 16.53: “But someday I will restore the fortunes of Sodom and
Samaria, and I will restore you, too.”
Ezek. 29.13-16: “For this is what the
Lord GOD says: At the end of 40 years I will gather the Egyptians from the
nations where they were dispersed. I will restore
the fortunes of Egypt and bring them back to the land of Pathros, the land
of their origin. There they will be a lowly kingdom. Egypt will be the lowliest
of kingdoms and will never again exalt itself over the nations. I will make
them so small they cannot rule over the nations. It will never again be an
object of trust for the house of Israel, drawing attention to their sin of
turning to the Egyptians. Then they will know that I am the Lord Yahweh.” Cp. Jer. 46.26; Moab, 48.47; Ammonites, 49.6, 39
The people of God now include restored pagan nations as His inheritance: Isa 19.
16 On that day Egypt will be
like women. She will tremble with fear because of the threatening hand of YHWH
of Hosts when He raises it against her.
17 The land of Judah will terrify
Egypt; whenever Judah is mentioned, Egypt will tremble because of what YHWH of
Hosts has planned against it.
18 On that day 5 cities in the
land of Egypt will speak the language of Canaan and swear loyalty to YHWH of
Hosts. One of the cities will be called the City of the Sun.
19 On that day there will be an
altar to YHWH in the center of the land of Egypt and a pillar to YHWH near her
border.
20 It will be a sign and witness to
YHWH of Hosts in the land of Egypt. When they cry out to YHWH because of their
oppressors, He will send them a savior and leader, and he will rescue them.
21 YHWH will make Himself known to
Egypt, and Egypt will know YHWH on that day. They will offer sacrifices and
offerings; they will make vows to YHWH and fulfill them.
22 YHWH will strike Egypt, striking and
healing. Then they will return to YHWH and He will hear their prayers and heal
them.
23 On that day there will be a
highway from Egypt to Assyria. Assyria will go to Egypt, Egypt to Assyria, and
Egypt will worship with Assyria.
24 On that day Israel will form
a triple alliance with Egypt and Assyria — a blessing within the land.
25 YHWH of Hosts will bless them,
saying, “Egypt My people, Assyria My handiwork, and Israel My inheritance are
blessed.”
NOTE: This does not cancel national distinctions:
Ps 22.27-31
[future generations…yet unborn];
Ps 47.9: “The princes of the nations are incorporated/joined with/to
the people of the God of Abraham.”
Ps 67.4-5: “Let the nations rejoice and shout for joy, for You
judge the peoples with fairness and lead the nations on earth. Let the nations
thank you, O God!”
Isa 2.1-4: “In the future the mountain of YHWH’s temple will endure
as the most important of mountains, and will be the most prominent of hills. All
the nations will stream to it. People from many nations will come and say, ‘Come,
let us go up to the mountain of YHWH, to the house of Jacob's God. There he
will teach us his ways, and we will walk in his paths.’ For YHWH’s teaching
will go out from Zion; his word will go out from Jerusalem.”
Jer. 16.19-21: YHWH, my strength and my stronghold, my refuge in a
time of distress, the nations will come to You from the ends of the earth, and
they will say, "Our fathers inherited only lies, worthless idols of no
benefit at all." Can one make gods for himself? But they are not gods. "Therefore,
I am about to inform them, and this time I will make them know My power and My
might; then they will know that My name is Yahweh."
NOTE: “While Ezekiel seemed to have understood that
foreigners could become members of the covenant community (e.g., Ezek. 44:9; but cf. 37:28), Zechariah depicts them as
simultaneously retaining their distinctive identities (cf. Zech. 8:20–23; also Isa. 19:23–25).” ESV Bible Study
The conversion/restoration of the nations will be as
a result of Israel's restoration:
Romans 11.11 So am I saying that [the
Jews] stumbled and consequently failed completely and permanently? Not at all!
But as a result of their spiritual failure, salvation has come to other
nations, to “make Israelites jealous.”
12 Now if their failure benefits the
world, and their loss profits the nations, how much more beneficial it will be
if they were to completely fulfill what they were meant to be.
13 Now let me speak to you nations.
Insofar as I am a missionary to the nations, I promote what I am doing for God,
14 that somehow I might make my
physical relatives jealous and save some of them.
15 If the result of God’s rejection of
them is that the world becomes God’s friends, the result of God’s acceptance of
them will be like the dead coming back to life.
NOTE: “Israel will fulfill the function that God
promised to Abraham for his descendants (Gen
12.3). They will be a blessing to the world, a means whereby the blessings
of God can come to all peoples, a means whereby the election of Israel is
extended to everyone (‘Egypt my people, Assyria my handiwork’, Isa 19.25).” Isaiah, John N. Oswalt.
The final point: as the seed of Abraham we must
understand God’s gospel plan so that we can prepare ourselves now to qualify to
be in that great Day coming:
1Peter 1.7 The point of your current
trials is the testing of your faith, which is more precious than gold which
perishes even though it is refined by fire. The object is that your faith may
be found to result in praise, glory, and honor at the 2nd coming of
Jesus the Messiah.
Rom. 2.7 Those who have persisted in
doing what is right will receive glory and honor, and immortality in the Age to
Come.
Get ready to inherit your reward: Matt 19
27 Peter asked Jesus, “We left
everything to follow you. What’s in it for us?”
28 And Jesus replied, “When I, the
Messiah, sit upon my glorious throne in the Kingdom when the world is reborn,
you my disciples shall certainly sit on 12 thrones to govern the 12 tribes of
Israel.
29 And anyone who gives up his home,
brothers, sisters, father, mother, wife, children, or property, to follow me,
shall receive a 100 times as much in return, and receive immortal life in the
Age to come.
Sunday, February 1, 2015
So, what are we exactly working towards in faith?
The
theological hope behind Romans
The church as the new Olive Tree, Israel
of God. That is, “God has chosen and called a people to himself out of all peoples, as Abraham was
called out of Ur, and believers have
been called by the gospel…As such they are his beloved, and they are holy,
placed on God’s side and separated from the world. Just as the name
‘church’…takes the place of Israel as the historical people of God…And all this
because of the gracious character of God’s election and because of Christ, who
is the seed of Abraham as well as the second Adam: the one in whom the whole
church [Jews/Gentiles], has become one body and one new man.” Ridderbos, Paul: An Outline of His Theology, p 333,
361.
“A second striking feature of Paul's talk of the gospel of Jesus Christ
is his concern to insist that this gospel was not an unexpected turn in God's
purposes. Quite the contrary. His opening statement in Romans immediately
defines "the gospel of God" as that "which was promised
beforehand through his [God's] prophets in the holy scriptures" (Rom. 1.1)...the
final catena of scriptures (15.9-12) was for Paul no doubt the most fitting way
to round off his whole argument… Of
course, Paul speaks throughout not only
as a theologian, but as an apostle, as a missionary. And his preaching was
not simply the impartation of information ("knowledge") that his
hearers were spiritual beings who only needed to know the facts for their
destiny to be secure. Paul preached for
a decision, "with a view to the obedience of faith among all the
nations" (Rom. 1.5)…the preacher
must be sent to preach so that the
hearers may believe (10.14-17)…the ambassador must plead on behalf of
Christ,” Dunn, Apostle Paul, p 169,
324.
Romans 15
4 “For whatever was written in
former days [i.e., in the OT] was written for our instruction [i.e., us
Christians].” [NOTE: the LXX
is scripture!]
7 Therefore welcome one another,
as Christ also welcomed you, to the glory
of God.
8 I maintain that Messiah became a
diakonos
of the circumcision [Jews] to show God’s truth, the God who guarantees the promises He made to their forefathers.
9 He also came so that the nations could praise
God for His mercy, as Scripture says,
“Therefore
I will praise
you among the nations; I will sing praises to your name.”
10 And also: “Nations, celebrate with
His people!”
11 And again: “All you nations, praise the Lord; let all peoples
[laoi] praise him.” [LXX, Ps 116.1]
12 And again, Isaiah says, “Jesse’s
descendant will come to rule the nations, and place their hope in him.” [Isa 11.10, LXX; cp. “descendant of
David”, Rom 1.3]
13 May the God of hope fill you
with all joy and peace in believing [faith],
that you may overflow in hope, in the power of the Holy Spirit.
·
Paul’s
favorite prophet:
80+ throughout his letters; almost 20 in Romans [Bible Exposition Commentary: Prophets, p 13; Moyise, Menken, Isaiah in the NT, p 117f.].
·
Nation
[ethnos] used 6 times; in this case means all nations in distinction from Christians [v.11], “the true Israel of God…according
to the spirit” [Gal 6.16; cp. “true
circumcision”, Phil 3.3].
LXX
references:
1. v. 3 [Ps 68.9];
2.
v.
8-9 [2Sam 22.50; Ps 17.49-50,
David’s song of praise for conquering
the nations];
3. v. 10 [“son of Moses”, Deut.
32.43; cp. Ps 67.3,5];
“Rejoice with him,
you heavens, and let all of the sons of God [gods, ESV] worship
him [NLT following LXX]; Praise [Worship,
proskyneo] his
people, O you nations [RSV; cp. DRB; “about His people”, CJB], and let all angels
of God [NLT] strengthen themselves in him...”
“For
the Greek turned the triumphalist Hebrew ("Praise his people, O you
nations" — RSV) into something much more to Paul's point: "Rejoice, nations,
with his people." The
"with" provides just the note of integration which Paul evidently
sought.” Dunn, Apostle Paul, p
530.
4. v. 11 [Ps 116.1, nations will worship];
5.
v.
12 [Isa 11.10, Davidic descendant rules
the nations];
6. v. 21 [Isa 52.15, suffering
servant will be exalted/victorious over
the nations].
Why
the LXX?
Scattered
Jewish-Christians preferred it because it retained its Hebrew flavor and the
common [Koine] Greek was easy to understand. Thus, it appeals to both literate
and illiterate classes.
The
OT theme “alludes to the fact that David will praise the Lord in the presence
of the defeated nations when they, as his subjects, bring their tribute
payments. Ideally God’s chosen king was to testify to the nations of God’s
greatness.” [NET Bible]
“Paul
returns to the theme in what is in fact the climactic statement of the gospel
and theology expounded in the letter.” Dunn, Apostle Paul, p 529-530.
“Paul
takes OT language, which might more
naturally hold out hope of (now
dispersed [v.9]) Israel’s ultimate
dominance over the Gentiles (under the royal Messiah, [v.12]), in fulfillment of God’s covenant faithfulness (v.11), and acknowledged (submissively) by
the nations (v.10)… [transforming]
it into an expression of [an ideal humanity] (Gentile and Jew) united in worship of the same God and
by hope in the same Christ.” WBC,
Romans 15.7-13.
·
The
Jewishness of Jesus, the Davidic Messiah, is most prominent [v.12]. Why?
“…it
means that God’s promises to the fathers
are likewise still in place, still secure, even if complete fulfillment is not
yet; And the promises of God thus confirmed to Israel were precisely the
promises that Abraham would be ‘heir of the world’ and ‘father of many
nations’…”
WBC, Romans 15.7-13.
Isa 10.20-34
·
Isa 10.20: an individual foreign [Assyrian?]
dictator [antichrist?].
·
Isa 10.22: typical “good news [remnant], bad news [destruction for most]”
prophecy; cp. Rom. 9:27–28 using
LXX.
·
vv.27-34: The Assyrians on the march
towards Zion. [They eventually would destroy Samaria & Northern Israel, c.
720s BC.].
NOTE: context calls for a near fulfillment [“in yet a little
while”, vv.25-26].
The
theme: “When
kings rule by the guidelines of their own ambition and power, God’s purposes
are thwarted and judgment awaits.” WBC,
Isaiah 11.1-10.
Isa 11
·
v.
1 [cp. v.10]: “root of Jesse” “root of David”; that is, the descendant [WBC, vol. 52, Part 1]; “stump” descriptive of a broken/cut off
dynasty recognizing the severely reduced status of the Davidic throne.
·
vv.
2-5: skills needed to reign:
“wisdom/understanding, counsel-strategy/heroism-might [cp. el-gibbor, cp. Isa 9.6]
and fear/obedience” [basic terms for faith]. A lack of knowledge is a
grave sin [Isa 1.3; cp. Hos 4.6]
NOTE: The Assyrian claimed these
for himself [power/strength, wisdom/understanding, mighty/valiant one, 10.13].
The
theme is one of unbiased justice and rule!
·
vv.
6-9: once fierce creatures [wolf,
leopard, cobra], symbolizing the nations,
at peace with the saints [lamb]; cp. Dan
7. As well as the restored/re-created world of Eden, from “royal/holy Mount
Zion/Jerusalem” to the rest of the world [“waters cover the sea”].
·
v.
10, 12 Messiah as “the signal
flag/banner [glory] for all nations to seek”.
“These
verses remain among the most beautiful examples of monarchic ritual and poetry
in Messianic literature. They shine as a luminous light. The problems come from
the generations, including our own, that ‘do not know, do not understand’, who
have ‘eyes but do not see, ears but do not hear’, with whom God has to work to
reach these goals.” WBC
·
vv.
13-16 God uses the nations to
inaugurate the rule of them by His people. The reunification of Israel
miraculously removes natural barriers [sea/streams dry up].
NOTE: “That day” 10.20, 27; 11.10-11; Heb. “in the end of the days” [Isa 2.2] yet undetermined future!
Sunday, January 11, 2015
True and False Narratives
By Anthony F. Buzzard
God has a Kingdom of God or Restoration movement under way as His Project for man, Plan for Man. This is God’s response to the failure and disobedience of the first Adam. This Gospel (Good News) of the Kingdom project (God’s logos) is an invitation to all who choose to participate. The narrative goes like this. Each participant must embrace the challenge by first believing in the project (“unless you repent and believe the Kingdom of God Gospel as a child, you won’t enter it”); then he must be forgiven for his past. He must then embark on the journey that ends in immortalization and corulership of the new world order which will be the world inaugurated at the last trumpet to be blown as in Rev 11:15 -18. This is the future return of the Messiah to the earth.
For the narrative to be true, the characters in the narrative must be identified correctly. The Man Messiah Jesus is the pioneer participant in the Kingdom project. He is also the announcer of the Project, the Gospel preacher. And he died to forgive all who believe, on his terms. The God who plans and directs the entire project is the God of Israel. of Abraham (Gal. 3:8 ) and Isaac and Jacob, the God of Jesus. Candidates to participate in the Kingdom Project are men and women of all nations, not just Jews.
False narratives are those which do not match the only true narrative, the Biblical one; False narratives fail because they miss the biblical climax by diverting the narrative, taking a wrong turn, by offering the participants a false hope of disembodied existence in “heaven” at death.
This destroys the actual objective of the Kingdom project, which is to govern and administer the world with the Messiah Jesus, when he comes back. Jesus and his associate administrators will be empowered and authorized to subdue the world, that is, the Messiah’s enemies, led by a final antichrist.
The book of Revelation is a concentrated account of that future encounter of Messiah with hostile, resistant man. This is the climax of the whole Kingdom movement, the object and conclusion of the True Narrative and Project. Psalm. 2, in 12 verses, reveals in advance the end-point of the Kingdom project. The hostile world is bidden to submit to the Messiah whom God will have then placed (at the second coming of Jesus) on Mount Zion. Verse 10 bids the hostile world submit to the authority of the arriving Messiah, and not to resist him, lest they be destroyed by the overwhelming authority of God’s agent the Messiah.
Appropriately then v. 9, “the Messiah will break them with a rod of iron and shatter them like earthenware” is recalled 3 times by Jesus in the book of Revelation (2:26, 27; 12:5; 19:15). These passages declare the goal and reward of the Kingdom project: and they remind the reader of the need for human subjection to the great Kingdom project of the one God of Israel. They also describe the authority conferred on Jesus and the saints, recalling Dan. 7:14, 18, 22, 27 (“obey them”) and Dan. 2:44, 45, the Kingdom or world empire which replaces all rivals. All former nation states will then accept the Kingdom of the Messiah and his saints.
The biblical true narrative is falsified when it is never allowed its climax. The project is falsified when it is reduced, shrunk, to a “dying and rising” Messiah project, which allows for no denouement of the grand project -- which is the subjection of rebellious man and governments to the risen and exalted, and returning Messiah and his saints. Thus Ps. 2 finds its fulfillment as the vision of the returning Messiah who takes control of chaotic human societies and turns them (at the future 7th trumpet. Rev. 11:15-18) into the Kingdom of God, which is the end-game of the entire Kingdom project. This is the Gospel as announced by Jesus (Heb. 2:3) and all the NT Christians.
Briefly, any attempt to describe the Biblical narrative without its climax at the future return of Jesus and the resurrection of all the saints (I Cor 1r:23) is a failed and inadequate narrative. not fully true to the Bible.
God has a Kingdom of God or Restoration movement under way as His Project for man, Plan for Man. This is God’s response to the failure and disobedience of the first Adam. This Gospel (Good News) of the Kingdom project (God’s logos) is an invitation to all who choose to participate. The narrative goes like this. Each participant must embrace the challenge by first believing in the project (“unless you repent and believe the Kingdom of God Gospel as a child, you won’t enter it”); then he must be forgiven for his past. He must then embark on the journey that ends in immortalization and corulership of the new world order which will be the world inaugurated at the last trumpet to be blown as in Rev 11:15 -18. This is the future return of the Messiah to the earth.
For the narrative to be true, the characters in the narrative must be identified correctly. The Man Messiah Jesus is the pioneer participant in the Kingdom project. He is also the announcer of the Project, the Gospel preacher. And he died to forgive all who believe, on his terms. The God who plans and directs the entire project is the God of Israel. of Abraham (Gal. 3:8 ) and Isaac and Jacob, the God of Jesus. Candidates to participate in the Kingdom Project are men and women of all nations, not just Jews.
False narratives are those which do not match the only true narrative, the Biblical one; False narratives fail because they miss the biblical climax by diverting the narrative, taking a wrong turn, by offering the participants a false hope of disembodied existence in “heaven” at death.
This destroys the actual objective of the Kingdom project, which is to govern and administer the world with the Messiah Jesus, when he comes back. Jesus and his associate administrators will be empowered and authorized to subdue the world, that is, the Messiah’s enemies, led by a final antichrist.
The book of Revelation is a concentrated account of that future encounter of Messiah with hostile, resistant man. This is the climax of the whole Kingdom movement, the object and conclusion of the True Narrative and Project. Psalm. 2, in 12 verses, reveals in advance the end-point of the Kingdom project. The hostile world is bidden to submit to the Messiah whom God will have then placed (at the second coming of Jesus) on Mount Zion. Verse 10 bids the hostile world submit to the authority of the arriving Messiah, and not to resist him, lest they be destroyed by the overwhelming authority of God’s agent the Messiah.
Appropriately then v. 9, “the Messiah will break them with a rod of iron and shatter them like earthenware” is recalled 3 times by Jesus in the book of Revelation (2:26, 27; 12:5; 19:15). These passages declare the goal and reward of the Kingdom project: and they remind the reader of the need for human subjection to the great Kingdom project of the one God of Israel. They also describe the authority conferred on Jesus and the saints, recalling Dan. 7:14, 18, 22, 27 (“obey them”) and Dan. 2:44, 45, the Kingdom or world empire which replaces all rivals. All former nation states will then accept the Kingdom of the Messiah and his saints.
The biblical true narrative is falsified when it is never allowed its climax. The project is falsified when it is reduced, shrunk, to a “dying and rising” Messiah project, which allows for no denouement of the grand project -- which is the subjection of rebellious man and governments to the risen and exalted, and returning Messiah and his saints. Thus Ps. 2 finds its fulfillment as the vision of the returning Messiah who takes control of chaotic human societies and turns them (at the future 7th trumpet. Rev. 11:15-18) into the Kingdom of God, which is the end-game of the entire Kingdom project. This is the Gospel as announced by Jesus (Heb. 2:3) and all the NT Christians.
Briefly, any attempt to describe the Biblical narrative without its climax at the future return of Jesus and the resurrection of all the saints (I Cor 1r:23) is a failed and inadequate narrative. not fully true to the Bible.
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