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God's Unchangable Plan!
by Sam Nadler |
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For I am not ashamed of the gospel of
Messiah: for it is the power of God unto salvation to every one that
believeth; to the Jew first, and also to the Greek. For therein is the
righteousness of God revealed from faith to faith: as it is written,
‘The just shall live by faith’ (Romans 1:16,17).
Bible scholars agree
that understanding these verses is the key to understanding the rest of
the book of Romans. In truth, the Book of Romans is the key to
understanding the New Covenant, just as the New Covenant is the key to
understanding the Old Covenant (see John 5:39; Romans 10:4). |
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Thus Romans 1:16,17 provides us with
the theme to understand not only Romans, but the whole of Scripture!
God's Righteousness
Revealed
Paul is quick to explain to his Roman readers why he’s unashamed to
preach the Good News in Rome, which was the very center of the Gentile
world! The Good News has the power of God to change lives. It is indeed
“God’s righteousness revealed”, for it speaks of Yeshua*, the Lord our
Righteousness. How does that work? Imagine if you owed a one billion
dollar IRS debt. Ouch! Now imagine if someone put all of Bill Gates’ six
billion dollars into your account! The debt is now covered, right?
Similarly, each of us owes a moral ‘sin-debt’ to God that we can never
repay. Fortunately for us, Yeshua has more righteousness than Bill Gates
has money, and He put all of His righteousness into your account, while
taking all your sins upon Himself. This is why Paul wrote, “He who knew
no sin became sin (offering) on our behalf that we might become the
righteousness of God in Him” (2 Cor. 5:21).
One Size Fits All
Paul is also unashamed of the Good News because the Good News is for
everyone! God is no respecter of persons: He loves the world (see Jn.
3:16, 1 Jn. 2:2). Though Yeshua died for all people, He can only save
those who believe. And He can’t save those who believe just any old
thing, but those who believe the Good News (see 1 Cor. 15:1-4).
Salvation is by faith in God’s righteousness in Yeshua, not our own
deeds. Therefore Paul is unashamed because God’s own righteousness for
everyone is revealed in the Good News.
To the Jew, First?
Why then does Paul bother adding “to the
Jew first, and also to the Greek”? Because the Good News proclaims a God
Who is faithful to the Jewish people: Yeshua is the faithfulness of God
to keep His promises, and therefore reveals God’s righteousness. God
keeps His word! Unfortunately some modern translations make
understanding this passage even more difficult by translating from the
Greek, “first for the Jew, then for the Gentiles. (NIV).” These
translators understood “to the Jew first” as referring to the
‘historical outworking’ of the gospel. As if Paul meant the gospel was
formerly, or once brought to the Jews, but now it is for the Gentiles.
Is this view possible? In a word, no. In Romans 1:16 the Greek word for
first is proton. As Dr. Michael Rydelnik, Professor of Jewish Studies at
Moody Bible Institute writes, “If Paul had meant ‘formerly’ or ‘earlier’
he would have used the Greek word proteron.” The same word for first
(proton) is used non-historically three times in Romans: ‘…tribulation
and distress for every soul of man who does evil, of the Jew first and
also of the Greek, but glory and honor and peace to everyone who does
good, to the Jew first and also to the Greek…’ (Rom. 2:9,10), and “First
of all (“chiefly”NKJ ), that they were entrusted with the oracles of
God” (Rom. 3:2).”
Grammar School
Grammatically, the entire verse is in the
present tense. There are three verbs: “unashamed”, “is” and “believes.”
All are in the present tense. The gospel is, not was, but is the power
of God, it is to all who believe, and it is to the Jew first. The idea
that the Good News was “first for the Jew and then for the Gentile”
implies that the Good News is no longer for the Jew (i.e. “they had
their chance”). Obviously, this cannot be true, for to this very day
Jewish people are still coming to faith in Yeshua! Remember, Paul was
writing ‘to the Jew first’, not regarding a past activity, but as his
present and active ministry (compare Acts 13:46 w/ 14:1). He was not
looking back on the first century advance of the Good News, but stating
it as an ongoing principle for the future flow of history. Even as the
apostle to the Gentiles, Paul’s ministry was always “to the Jew first”.
The Unchanged Call of the
Jewish people
The Good News of Messiah is the
fulfillment of the promises that God made to the Jewish people to redeem
and save them (Rom. 1:2). In Romans the phrase “as it is written,”
referring to the Old Covenant, or Tanakh, is used 14 times (as in v.
17), laying the Old Covenant foundation for New Covenant faith. This is
why Yeshua said in John 4:22, “salvation is of the Jews.” It still is.
This idea of ‘first’ reiterates the idea that the Jewish people are
God’s Chosen People (see Deut. 7:6). God made no promises to the
nations, (see Ps. 147:19,20) but only through the seed of Abraham: Now
the Lord had said unto Abram, … And I will make of thee a great nation,
and I will bless thee, and make thy name great; and thou shalt be a
blessing: And I will bless them that bless thee, and curse him that
curseth thee: and in thee shall all families of the earth be blessed”
(Gen. 12:1-3). But this is no cause for Jewish pride. In choosing the
Jewish people, according to Deuteronomy 7:8,9; 9:6, God essentially
‘picked the runt of the litter,’ the least likely to succeed, in order
to prove God’s ability to keep a people of His choosing. God’s purpose
for the Jewish people was that they would be a blessing to the whole
world (Gen. 12:2,3), ultimately fulfilled in Yeshua. Thus Messiah is the
fulfillment of God’s purpose for the Jewish people, not the replacement
of it (see Gal. 3:8-14). God has no plan “B”: these are a people He
foreknew (Rom. 11:2).
The Unchanged Call of the
Gentiles
God is equally caring toward Gentiles, for
though it is to the Jew first, as writer David Stern puts it, “the Good
News is especially for the Jews, it is equally for the Gentiles”. Paul
wrote as the apostle to the Gentiles (Rom. 11:13) as to why he wasn’t
ashamed to preach in Rome. “To the Jew first” did not refer to Paul’s
personal “Modus Operandi.” Paul wanted the Gentile believers to
understand and express their faith in light of God’s faithfulness to
Israel. For Gentile believers “to the Jew first” was a reminder of their
calling to make Israel jealous (11:11), and to minister to Israel the
very mercy they themselves had received (11:31). God forbid that they
should think that they had replaced Israel (see 11:17-19). Not at all,
but rather, Gentile believers were to be God’s reminders of His
faithfulness to Israel. Any Gentile who diminished the priority of
bringing the Good News to the Jew first would be distorting God's
message of faithfulness revealed in His word. In 2 Peter 3:12 it states
that believers are to be “hastening the coming of the day of God.” So,
if God has no plan B, can neglecting Jewish ministry actually delay the
Kingdom of God? Can neglecting Jewish ministry delay even the return of
Messiah, Who said that His return is contingent upon Israel’s repentance
(see Matt 23:39)?
The Unchanged Character
of God
The Good News is the very vindication of
God’s faithfulness to His own Word and promises. As a Jewish person,
Paul was unashamed, for the Good News is the faithfulness of God to our
people. Some teach that God’s promises to the Jewish people are voided,
or transferred to ‘the Church’, and that God has forsaken the Jewish
people! If that is so, if His promises to Israel are nullified, how
could anyone trust in any of God’s promises? Paul’s point was to
establish the Romans’ confidence in the gospel, not to destroy it! The
only hope for the Gentile world is that the Good News of Messiah is to
the Jew first. Follow the logic: if the gospel is no longer to the Jew
first, then maybe it is no longer to all who will believe; and perhaps
it’s no longer the power of God for salvation either. If this is the
case, then maybe we should be ashamed of our faith in Yeshua, and not
share Him with others. Of course, the answer to all of this is a
resounding NO! The Good News is still to the Jew first, for the Good
News of Messiah is still the power of God unto salvation to all who will
believe! To the Jew first reveals that God is faithful, and all who
believe on His promised salvation in Yeshua will indeed be saved! And
that’s the truth.
Y
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