What
About the Jews?
Page 1
Romans
3:1-20, “What advantage, then, is there in being a Jew, or what
value is there in circumcision? Much
in every way! First of
all, they have been entrusted with the very words of God.
What
if some did not have faith? Will
their lack of faith nullify God’s faithfulness? Not
at all! Let God be true,
and every man a liar. As
it is written:
‘So
that you may be proved right when you speak and prevail when
you judge.’ (Psalm 51:4)
But
if our unrighteousness brings out God’s righteousness more clearly,
what shall we say? That God
is unjust in bringing his wrath on us? (I
am using a human argument.) Certainly
not! If that were so, how could God judge the world? Someone
might argue, ‘If my falsehood enhances his glory, why am I still
condemned as a sinner?’ Why not say--as we are slanderously reported
as saying and as some claim that we say--‘Let us do evil that good
may result’? Their condemnation
is deserved.
No One Is Righteous
What
shall we conclude then? Are we any better? Not at all! We
have already made the charge that Jews and Gentiles alike are all
under sin. As it is written:
‘There is no
one righteous,
not even one;
there is no one who understands,
no one who seeks God.
All have turned away, they
have together become worthless;
There
is no one who does good, not even one.’ (Psalm
14:1-3; 53:1-3)
‘Their
throats are open graves; their tongues practice deceit.’ (Psalm
5:9)
‘The poison of vipers is
on their lips.’ (Psalm
140:3)
‘Their mouths are full of
cursing and bitterness.’ (Psalm
10:7)
‘Their feet are swift to
shed blood; ruin and misery mark their ways, and the way of
peace they do not know.’ (Isaiah
59:7-8)
‘There is no fear of God
before their eyes.’ (Psalm 36:1)
Now we know that whatsoever the law says, it says
to those who are under the law, so that every mouth may be silenced
and the whole world held accountable to God. Therefore
no one will be declared righteous in his sight buy observing the
law; rather, through the law we become conscious of sin.” [NIV] Or, the King James renders this last sentence as “For by the law is the knowledge
of sin.” [I.e. the law is our spiritual mirror that shows where
the dirt is. It doesn’t
clean the dirt, just shows where it is.]
“This
morning I would like us to open our Bibles to Romans chapter 3. I’ve entitled my message “What About the Jews?” You
hang in there with me, because you’re going to see the awesome
faithfulness of God. I just pray this knocks us over spiritually. That
we really see how much God loves us and cares for us. But
let us to pick up in Romans 3, verse 9, and we’ll go back and pick
up the first eight verses in a minute. Paul’s
whole point of the first three chapters is now evident in verse
9, as he has been painting this dark picture of the human race. Showing
us of our great need of a savior and of salvation. You know, unless you know you’re a sinner,
you don’t need a savior, unless you’re drowning, you don’t reach
for the life-preserver. Unless
you know that you have a sickness, you don’t reach for the cure,
so that’s what he’s been working on. And
now in verse 9 he says, “Then are we better than
they?” In
other words, “Are we Jews any better than the pagans out in the
world?” “Not at all. For
we have already charged that both Jews and Greeks are all under
sin.” Now
have you ever had accident, and they’ve totaled out your car? Doesn’t take much today, does it, to have your
car totaled? These cars
today are made out of the same stuff that pop cans are made out
of. Leslie was shutting the door, her wrists are
so bad with arthritis that she sort of uses her whole body to do
things like shut the door, and she was shutting the door and I
said, “Oh, be careful honey, you might dent the car, you know.” She’s
a light thing herself, but it doesn’t take much, because they’re
made out of such cheap stuff, you know. And
I’ve seen cars that just had a couple of dings in them, but because
everything’s all tied together [unibody construction], they’ve
totaled the car. And of course you always lose money, generally
when they total out your car. It’s
better not to have your car totaled. I made my way through college with this car
that just kept getting hit. I
had this old Ford Galaxy 500, weighed about 500 tons and every
time I went to school break to
Oregon
somebody would hit me. And
it was never my fault. And
I just never repaired anything, and used the money to go to
college. Things would
get real bad [financially] and I’d start driving, you know,
OK Lord [laughter]. But God provides in mysterious ways, doesn’t
he. Never got a whip-lash
or anything, they were always nice accidents. But
anyway, cars will be written off as a total loss. We say ‘they were totaled.’ Well God estimates the damage done to the human
race by sin, and God says in verses 9 through 20 that it is
a total loss. Mankind
has been “totaled” by sins’ impact. “As it has been written,” verse 10 says, “there is none righteous, not even one. There is none who understands. There is none who seeks for God. All have turned aside, together they’ve become
useless.” The word “useless” could be translated “sour milk”. Ooh. ‘All together, the human race, he says, they
stink.’ ‘There’s none
that does good, not even one.’ “their throat is an open
grave.” That’s
a real bad breath problem, isn’t it. “And with their tongues,
they keep deceiving. The
poison of asps is under their lips, whose mouth is full of
cursing and bitterness. Their feet are swift to shed blood. Destruction and misery are in their paths. And the path of peace they have not known. There’s
no fear of God before their eyes. Now
we know whatever the law says, speaks to those who are under
the law, that every mouth may be closed (or shut up). And
all the world may become accountable to God, because, by
the works of the law no flesh will be justified in his sight. Through
the law comes the knowledge of sin.” And so the grand climax of humanity’s problem being
given to us in Paul’s great letter here to the Romans, and
he’s telling us,
‘Come on, cut the baloney, stop fooling around, nobody is good enough to be saved. By the deeds of the law, nobody can be declared
not guilty in God’s sight. Cut
it out. Get real. The world is going to hell—unless there is
intervention by the gospel of God through Jesus Christ.’ That’s
the whole point, that’s why we’re here, because we believe there’s
no way to get to [into the kingdom of] heaven, but by Jesus Christ. And we believe that because we know we’ve got
a problem. I know that if
I die apart from Christ, I won’t go to heaven. I
know that if I die apart from Christ, I’ll have a load of guilt I’m
going to have to answer to God for someday. Understand
that it is appointed unto man once to die, and after that the judgment. Because
I know that and understand that I’m less than perfect, I know I need
a savior and I know I need Jesus. As
Paul is presenting this great defense of the gospel and presentation
of God’s grace, he anticipates some arguments from his Jewish brothers. He
knows that they’re not going to just swallow this, they have some
concerns and some questions, and so in the first 8 verses he tries
to answer those questions, he anticipates their arguments. In
verse 1, the first argument is ‘Well, what about the Jews?’ ‘Are you saying, Paul, that there are no advantages
to being Jewish? What’s the
use, Paul, of me being a Jew if we’re all sinners? If I’m just like this Gentile, then what difference
does it make if I’m one of God’s chosen people? And Paul, you just said in verse 29 of chapter
2 (or 28), that an uncircumcised Gentile could be more acceptable
to God than a circumcised Jew(?). Well,
if that’s true, then why waste our time? It’s
been a total waste. The Jews
were never God’s chosen people…’ And
Paul responds in verse 2, ‘Hey, there’s great advantage in having
that Jewish background. There
are great advantages to having this Jewish heritage.’ First
of all, he says, “They were entrusted with the oracles of God.” That
means God chose the Jewish prophets to communicate his Divine will
and revelation. In other words,
there were certain things that God could not communicate to us by
[us] looking at a sunset, or by looking at creation, looking at his
power in nature--things that we would never know if he didn’t tell
us. We could never seek these
things out for ourselves and find them. God had to reveal them to us, because he’s
infinitely greater then we. And
so he chose to do that, and he took Jewish prophets, Jewish kings,
Jewish leaders, and finally Jewish apostles to communicate his will,
his Word, his grace, to the world. So
we’re greatly indebted to the Jewish people for giving us our Bible. If it wasn’t for them we wouldn’t have the
written Word of God. God communicated
it through them. Oh, the Jewish
people even to this day, the Orthodox, hold the Word of God in such
awe and reverence, they love God’s Word. Childs
E. Feinberg relates an incident that occurred in
Brooklyn
,
New York
years ago that illustrates this point. He
said, “A member of The Love of Moses congregation, a synagogue,
upon opening the
Ark
of the scrolls, to conduct the rites of the Passover service,
found to his dismay that one of the scrolls had been stolen. A
search began, and in a vacant alley, in a vacant lot not
far from the synagogue, they found the scroll that had been
desecrated, partially burned. They lovingly picked up the scroll. They took it back to the synagogue, and the
people began to mourn. They
cleaned up the scroll the best they could. They
wrapped it in a prayer shawl, they prepared a pine casket
for it, and they conducted a regular funeral service, just
like they would have conducted had a human being died, for
that Scripture portion. And
then the whole congregation fasted an entire week, mourning
the loss of that Scripture.” I
don’t think we appreciate the Word of God like that. I
mean, many of you have lost your Bibles. And
they’re in ‘lost & found’. And
we haven’t had any funeral services around here. You haven’t called, “Where’s my Bible, I’ve
lost the most precious thing to me!’--Aah, we’ve got ten
at home, it’s just one.’ But
oh, how they [the Jews] love the Word of God. And
we’ve lost something there. Feinberg
goes on to say, “I can remember my father and grandfather
on Sabbath eve, as they would read the portion of the Scripture
for that Sabbath, and as they would close the book, they
would kiss it over and over again,” kissing the Law [Torah],
kissing the Word of God, showing the respect for the Word
of God. We don’t have that. “O how I love thy law…” David would say, he
meant the Torah, the Bible they had. “The
Law of the Lord, the Word of God, it’s perfect, converting
the soul, the testimonies of the Lord are sure, enlightening
the eyes, more to be desired are they than gold, yea, than
much fine gold. And sweeter also than honey in the honeycomb.” As
I was raised as a little boy, I remember, and to this day,
it’s my practice, I was trained, ‘You never put anything on top of your Bible. Never put any other book on your Bible. You never do that, because this is God’s Word.’ And I’m
not into Bible worship and superstition
and all of that, but it put in my heart as a little kid this
awe and reverence for the book I didn’t understand yet, and
would some day grow to love, and swear my allegiance to. Do
you realize that held in your hand right now is the only
thing besides your soul that’s leaving this world with you. You
know the Word of God is the only thing of this world that’s
going to go on forever. The world of God and human life [resurrected
to immortal human life] that’s the only thing that’s going
to live forever. And
we have it in our hands right now, a piece of eternity right
here. Isn’t it awesome. I
think it’s neat to think about. David
Hocking told a group of us pastors a few years ago that when
he prepares his sermons he gets down on his knees, he places
his Bible on his chair and he gets down on his knees and
he just falls down in front of the Word of God, and he says,
“Lord, you show me, this is your holy Word Lord, I want
to approach it with fear and trembling. Oh
God, don’t let me mishandle it. Give
me an awe and reverence for it--this is your Word, these
are your commands, this is your gospel…” How
neat, that there are men of God like that, that love the
Word of God. Being
Jewish had many advantages, they had the Bible, they had
the Word of God. Secondly,
Messiah was going to come through them, they were the channel
through which Messiah would come. It was their lineage, David’s lineage through
which the Messiah would come. [There
is a huge misconception that the Jews have suffered down
through history because they helped kill Jesus, the Messiah. This
is totally false. If
anything, the Romans killed the Messiah, the Italians. No, the Jews have suffered down through
history because Satan hates them. Why? Because
the Messiah, the one who would crush Satan, would come
through the Jews, the lineage of David. The Jews were suffering long before Messiah
was born, for this very reason. Satan was trying to kill off the Jews long
before Messiah’s birth. Read
the Book of Esther, also Josephus writing about
Antiochus Ephiphanes IV. Satan’s
hatred of the Jews is intense, and that’s the chief source
of anti-Semitism. Coach Bill McCartney brings this out in his
recent book Blind
Spots (log onto http://www.UNITYINCHRIST.COM/messianicmovement/BlindSpots.htm).] They have
many advantages. Paul
realized that there were other arguments that people would
raise against the gospel. Verse 3, Paul knew that someone objects to
the gospel by accusing of him that God is not going to
keep his word to
Israel
. In other words, the Jews believe that they,
God had made certain promises to them that were irrevocable
and unbreakable. ‘And Paul, you come in here with this church
and stuff. Are you saying
that God isn’t going to fulfill his promises, are you saying
that God is a promise-breaking God?’ Verse 3, “What then, if some did not believe,
their unbelief will not nullify the faithfulness of God, will
it?” Paul responds, “May
it never be. Rather
let God be found true, though every man be found a liar, as
it is written, that thou mightest be justified in thy word,
and mightest prevail when thou art judged.” Some
are reasoning that if God cannot break his word, then how could
it be that any Jew would be lost? ‘We
don’t have to believe in your Jesus, we’re Jews. And God promised to save
Israel
.’ And Paul showed them, ‘Wait a minute, you’ve
got the wrong idea. God
has made irrevocable promises to the nation
Israel
, but to the individuals that
make up that nation, each one of them must be saved individually and
personally. And now that Messiah
has come, they must be saved by putting their faith in Him. The Old Testament talks the same way. God didn’t save Jews differently than he saved
anybody else. But they were
operating under the false assumption that just because they were ethnically
Jewish or had gone through some kind of a ritual, ceremony, a rite,
that they were safe. I told
you last week, they, the teaching of the rabbi’s at the time of Jesus
and the time of Paul was that ‘not one circumcised Jew would ever enter
into hell.’ ‘All you need to have is the rite, the ceremony
performed, and you’ll go to heaven.’ Sadly,
a lot of religious people are that way today, aren’t they. ‘I’ve been baptized.’ What makes you so sure you’re going to heaven? ‘Well,
I’ve been baptized.’ So what. ‘I
was confirmed.’ Well, have you
confirmed your reservation? Confirmed
into what? ‘Into the church.’ Well, do you think church membership will save
you. Did church membership die
on the cross for you? ‘Well,
I’m a Catholic.’ So what. ‘I’m a Mormon.’ So what. ‘Well,
I can trace my lineage back to Joseph Smith.’ So can millions of other people. So what. It’s
not salvation by pedigree. It’s
salvation by personal relationship with Jesus Christ--faith in his
blood atonement for your sins. The
point Paul has been making is that just being born a Jew doesn’t save
anybody. God made this very clear to his people [the
Jews] in Isaiah 55, the Lord said “seek the Lord while he may be found. Call upon him while he’s near. Let the wicked forsake his way”-- that means repent--“and
the unrighteous man his thoughts, and
let him return to the Lord, and he will have compassion on him, and
to our God, for he will abundantly pardon.” You
see, salvation is always for the individual, in Israel, has always been
the same--repentance, turning from your sins, and accepting the gift
of God, the gift of his grace. Salvation
has never changed, it wasn’t different before the cross and after the
cross [look at king David’s life, first of faith in the Lord, then
sinning, then of repentance, and ultimately his salvation]. It’s
always been by grace through faith. Before
the cross it was faith in what would come, the Lamb to come. After the cross it is faith in the Lamb that
has come. And so individuals
in Israel had to be saved by repenting and turning from sins and believing. But the nation, as a nation, is safe and secure. God will never, ever, get rid of the nation
of Israel. Some say ‘Well, wait a minute, isn’t it true, that
because the Jews rejected Jesus, they were scattered and forsaken by
God?’ Well, there are those who teach today, that
because the Jews rejected Jesus, God is finished with them. The teaching
is that they no longer have a right to the special promises that God
made to Israel. But you know,
Israel’s rejection of God and rejection of Messiah, Jesus
(Yeshua), was no surprise to God. God
didn’t see that they were rejecting his son and go “Oh no! I can’t believe it, I killed these people and
they’re doing this?! Oh boy,
did this one catch me off guard! Well,
we’d better come up with a plan, quick. Ahhh,
let’s see, A, B, C—church! That’s
what we’ll do. We’ll make a
church. We’ll build my church, that’s what I’ll…” He
knew. He knew when he made the promise to Abraham,
that they would reject his son, nothing catches God off guard--God
is all-knowing, right? He knows
the future, the past, it’s all right now to him. In
fact, hundreds of years before Jesus was even crucified, Isaiah the
prophet under the inspiration of God’s Spirit declared that the Messiah
would be rejected, despised of men, and he would be pierced through
for our transgressions, that he would be numbered with transgressors,
that he would die, and he would rise again. God
knew. The prophet Zechariah
predicted that they would pierce him, and some day after he was pierced
[at his 2nd coming, literally, Zechariah 12:10] they would
look upon him whom they have pierced, and mourn. But
it would be years after. You
know, nothing catches God off-guard. He
knew his people would reject his son and he knew that he would have
to discipline them because of that. Do
you know that before they even got off the runway as a nation, God
predicted that they would be scattered? Look
at Deuteronomy chapter 4. You
say, ‘Mark, what does this have to…I have, do you know what I’m going
through, and we’re talking about Israel, we’re talking about the Jews.’ Well,
obviously you’re not Jewish, but if you hang with me, you’re going
to see that this has a whole lot to do with you right now today. It has a whole lot to do with you. Hang in there. Deuteronomy chapter 4, we’ll look at verse
27. They’re not even in the Promised Land yet. They haven’t even walked on the real estate
yet, and God’s telling them ‘You’re gonna get scattered.’ Verse 27, “And the Lord will scatter you among
the peoples, and you shall be left few in number among the nations
where the Lord shall drive you.” Look
at chapter 28, Deuteronomy 28, verse 64. Man,
is this ever prophetic. Same
guy writing under the inspiration of God, Moses is still writing. They still haven’t even gotten into the Promised
Land yet. “Moreover the Lord
will scatter you among all peoples, from one end of the earth to the
other end of the earth, and there you shall serve other gods, wood
and stone, which you and your fathers have not known. And
among those nations you shall find no rest. And
there shall be no resting place for the soul of your foot. But there the Lord will give you a trembling
heart, failing eyes, and despair of soul.” And
if you know anything about the history of the Jewish people, you will
know that after the destruction of Jerusalem in 70AD right up until
just the late 1940s this was a picture of those people. They had no rest, they’d removed out to Alexandria,
Egypt, they’ve moved to Rome, they’ve moved to Spain. And then persecution would hit them and they’d
have no rest, they could never put down any kind of roots. They’d go to Spain, the Muslims take over Spain,
persecute them there. They would
finally let up and then the Crusaders pushed the Muslims out and the
Crusaders (Catholic motivated and instigated) set up the Inquisitions
and began to spread vicious lies about the Jews, blaming the Black
Plague on the Jews because they didn’t get the plague. The
only reason they didn’t get the plague is because they practiced the
Mosaic health laws, they washed their hands, and so they didn’t get
it. But since they didn’t have it, they thought
they started it. And the Roman
Catholic authorities said “OK, if you don’t convert, you burn” and
they burned Jews at the stake by the millions. [And
is it any wonder why Jews who are now coming to a knowledge that Jesus
is the Messiah want nothing to do with Gentile Christianity, even once
or twice removed, like the various Protestant or evangelical persuasions,
who still hold predominantly Catholic eschatological doctrines such
as amillennialism and replacement theology.] They’d
flee to Germany, and then in Germany Luther and his gang advocated
that they ought to be wiped out, hunted down [this also happened in
pre-Luther days, as you’ll soon read]. You know, it’s amazing how a reformer can be
used so awesomely by God and have such big blind spots too. And then finally we know what happened in Germany
in World War II, where six million Jews were murdered, exterminated. Is this prophetic or something? It goes on to say in verse 66, “Your life shall
hang in doubt before you. And
you shall be in dread night and day, and shall have no assurance of
your life. In the morning you shall say ‘I would that
it were evening’, and in evening you shall say, ‘wow, I wish it were
the morning’, because of the dread of your heart which you dread, and
for the sight of your eyes which you shall see.’” All
of the horrors that this race of people have seen. “And
the Lord will bring you back to Egypt in ships by the way about which
I spoke to you, you will never see it again, and there you shall offer
yourself for sale to your enemies as male and female slaves, but there
will be no buyer.” That will
happen during the tribulation. [And
some of this happened during WWII as well.]
[Just
to back up what Pastor J. Mark Martin is saying here, I found parts
of the European history of the Jews in “A History of The Jews, From
Earliest Times Through The Six Day War” by Cecil Roth (which I have
on my bookshelf). It is from pages 209-217 and is a part of a
section titled “Diaspora 425-1492”. Diaspora
means “dispersion”, “a scattering”. Historian Cecil Roth says: “Closest akin to the Jews of England in culture,
in condition, and in history, were those of France. Here, ever since the outbreaks which had accomplished
the second Crusade, they had lived a chequered existence. From the close of the twelfth century, the
ruling house of Capet had developed an anti-Jewish attitude which,
for sheer unreasonableness and brutality of execution, was perhaps
unparalleled in Europe as a dynastic policy. At
the outset, owing to the encroachments of feudalism, the royal authority
was restricted to a small area in the immediate neighborhood of Paris. Outside this district its influence was little
more than nominal. Hence the
hostility of the Crown did not affect the Jews much more than that
of any major baron would have done. The
history of the Jews in France is therefore to be understood only
in relation to the extension of royal authority over the whole country,
which, in the end, spelled for them utter disaster.
With Louis IX (1226-1270), better remembered
as “Saint” Louis, religious zeal reinforced ancestral prejudices
in an unusual measure. The
prescriptions of the Lateran Councils were enforced with the utmost
severity. A personal interest was taken in securing converts. It
was under the royal auspices that the famous Disputation was held
at Paris between Nicholas Donin and Rabbi Jehiel, and the Talmud
was condemned to the flames. Finally, before setting out on his first Crusade
in 1249, the King decreed the expulsion of the Jews from his realm,
though the order, it appears, was not carried out.
The sufferings of French Jewry reached
their climax under Philip the Fair (1285-1314), St. Louis’ grandson. From the moment of his accession, he showed
that he considered the Jews merely as a source of gold. Spoliation succeeded spoliation, wholesale
imprisonment being resorted to periodically in order to prevent
evasion. The climax came in 1306, when, the treasury
being once more empty, the policy of Edward I of England was imitated,
with significant differences. On
July 22nd, all the Jews of the country were simultaneously
arrested, in obedience to instructions secretly issued some time
before. In prison they were
informed that, for some unspecified wrongdoing, they had been condemned
to exile, and must leave the realm within one month, the whole
of their property being confiscated to the crown. By this time, owing to the vigorous and unfortunate
policy of the French in recent years, its authority extended over
the majority of France proper, including Languedoc and Champagne,
where the schools of rabbinic learning had especially flourished. The banishment spelled accordingly the end
of the ancient and glorious traditions of French Jewry.
Close