Both Jews and Gentiles
The equality of Jews and Gentiles before an impartial and just God is pivotal to Paul’s Gospel. They stand or fall before Him on the same basis.
Paul wrote his Letter to the Romans with two purposes. First,
to prepare the ground for his visit to the city and his planned missionary trip
to Spain. Secondly, to deal with conflicts between Jewish and Gentile believers.
In the Letter, Pual explained his Gospel, and he then discussed the status of
the Jewish people and the conflicts troubling the Roman Church.
Paul planned to take
the Gospel to the Iberian Peninsula. Support from the Roman Church would have been
crucial to this effort. He had not been to Rome in his previous missionary
activities - someone else established the faith in the city, therefore, Paul must
establish his credentials with the congregation.
[Photo by Juliana Kozoski on Unsplash] |
The church of Rome was experiencing internal tensions, including disagreements over dietary restrictions and calendrical observations. Based on his years of dealing with Jewish and Gentile believers, Paul was certainly qualified to deal with such matters.
- “I am debtor both to Greeks and to Barbarians, both to the wise and to the foolish. So, as much as in me is, I am ready to preach the gospel to you also that are in Rome… For I am not ashamed of the gospel, it is the power of God for salvation to everyone who believes, to the Jew first, and also to the Greek” - (Romans 1:10-12, 15-16).
In his first
paragraph, Paul points to the role of the Gospel for both Jews and
Gentiles. By the term “first” he does not mean that Jewish believers
have special privileges over Gentiles as his subsequent stress in the Letter demonstrates.
There was an obligation to present the Gospel first to the Jewish people in a
city or province. The Book of Acts documents how Paul would first
introduce his message to the local synagogue when he arrived in an area for the
first time.
The conflict between
Jewish and Gentile believers is key to understanding the Letter. Those
conflicts influenced how Paul presented his Gospel message. He stressed how the
Gospel provided salvation for all men regardless of ethnicity. There is no
distinction based on nationality regarding anyone’s standing before God.
Paul warned, for
example, that “tribulation and anguish will
befall every man who works evil, of
the Jew first, and also of the Greek” – (Romans 2:9-10).
Israel certainly received
a great privilege offered to no other nation, especially possession of the Law
or Torah. However, that also came with special responsibilities and
heightened penalties for failure to keep it. It was not the “hearers of the
law” who were justified before God, “but the doers of the law.”
Though they may not possess the Mosaic Law, many Gentiles “by
nature do the things that are required by the law.”
ALL MEN UNDER SIN
Both “Jews
and Greeks are under sin.” The one God of Israel is also the
“God of the Gentiles.” Both the men who sin “within the law”
(Jews) and “without the law” (Gentiles) will find themselves judged by
the one God of all who will not show partiality on the “Day of Wrath.”
Obedience counts, not ethnicity or nationality.
Paul was certainly
not suggesting that believing Gentiles are better off than Jews. “Are we better
than they? No, certainly not; for we
before charged both Jews and Greeks that they are all under sin.”
All men and women are in the same predicament due to their rebellion against
their Creator.
All have “sinned and therefore lack the glory of God.” Likewise, all will be saved in the same way - “through the faith of Jesus Christ for all that believe, for there is no distinction” – (Romans 3:1-26).
This issue becomes prominent
in Chapters 9 through 11 when Paul responds to the challenge, “Has the word
of God failed?” Despite possessing the legal ordinances and covenant
promises, collectively, Israel rejected her Messiah. So, did God likewise
reject the Jewish people? Paul declares most emphatically, “No!”
Moreover, “not
all Israel are of Israel, neither because they are
Abraham's seed are they all children.” Biological descent does not
determine membership in the covenant people. Responding faithfully to the Gospel
does.
FAITH NOT BIOLOGY
Paul’s life
demonstrated that God had not rejected the Jewish people since he was Jewish
and a follower of Jesus. Likewise, other Jews had accepted Jesus as their Lord
and Messiah.
The many “wild branches” (Gentiles) were “grafted into the olive tree,” singular,
because of their faith. Unfortunately, many of the “natural branches” (Jews) were “cut off” from the one olive
tree “because
of their unbelief.”
However, the “natural branches” may yet be grafted
back in if they come to faith in Jesus, just as the “wild branches” previously grafted
onto the tree may yet find themselves “cut off” in the future if they succumb
to unbelief. Faith is the determining factor, not biology.
Jesus was sent to Israel to “confirm
the promises to the Fathers.” But those promises always envisioned the
inclusion of the Gentiles in God’s one covenant people. Abraham would become
the “Father of a multitude of nations,” and his offspring would be more
numerous than the “stars of the heavens” - (Genesis
17:4, 22:17, Romans 15:8-12).
In all this, Paul
refers to only one Church which is comprised of believing “Jews and Gentiles” who have been
justified “from the faith of Jesus Christ.” The Gospel he preached was the “power of God for salvation for
everyone who believes, to the Jew first, and also to the Greek.”
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RELATED POSTS:
- Salvation for the Nations - (The Gospel of the Kingdom announced by Jesus of Nazareth offers salvation and life to men and women of every nation and people)
- The Gospel Message - (Jesus summoned his disciples to proclaim the Good News of his Kingdom to every inhabited corner of the Earth)
- From Faith For Faith - (Men are not justified before God from the works of the Mosaic Law, but rather from the faith of Jesus Christ)
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