ERROR OF REPLACEMENT
THEOLOGY
By Clarence H.
Wagner, Jr.
Perhaps you have heard of the term
Replacement Theology.
However, if you look it up in a
dictionary of Church history, you
will not find it listed as a
systematic study. Rather, it is a
doctrinal teaching that originated
in the early Church. It became the
fertile soil from which Christian
anti-Semitism grew and has infected
the Church for nearly 1,900 years.
What Is
Replacement Theology?
Replacement Theology was introduced
to the Church shortly after Gentile
leadership took over from Jewish
leadership. What are its premises?
1.
Israel (the Jewish people and the
land) has been replaced by the
Christian Church in the purposes of
God, or, more precisely, the Church
is the historic continuation of
Israel to the exclusion of the
former.
2.
The Jewish people are now no longer
a "chosen people." In fact, they are
no different from any other group,
such as the English, Spanish, or
Africans.
3.
Apart from repentance, the new
birth, and incorporation into the
Church, the Jewish people have no
future, no hope, and no calling in
the plan of God. The same is true
for every other nation and group.
4.
Since Pentecost of Acts 2, the term
"Israel,"
as found in the Bible, now refers to
the Church.
5.
The promises, covenants and
blessings ascribed to
Israel in the Bible have been taken
away from the Jews and given to the
Church, which has superseded them.
However, the Jews are subject to the
curses found in the Bible, as a
result of their rejection of Christ.
How Do
Replacement Theologians Argue Their
Case? They Say:
-
To be a son of Abraham is to
have faith in Jesus Christ. For
them, Galatians 3:29 shows that
sonship to Abraham is seen only
in spiritual, not national
terms: "And if you be Christ's,
then you are Abraham's seed, and
heirs according to the promise."
Rebuttal: While this is a
wonderful inclusionary promise for
Gentiles, this verse does not
exclude the Jewish people from their
original covenant, promise and
blessing as the natural seed of
Abraham. This verse simply joins us
Gentile Christians to what God had
already started with Israel.
-
The promise of the land of
Canaan to Abraham was only a
"starter." The real Promised
Land is the whole world. They
use Romans 4:13 to claim it will
be the Church that inherits the
world, not Israel. "For the
promise that he should be the
heir of the world was not to
Abraham, or to his seed, through
the law, but through the
righteousness of faith."
Rebuttal: Where does this
verse exclude Abraham and His
natural prodigy, the Jews? It simply
says that through the law, they
would not inherit the world, but
this would be acquired through
faith. This is also true of the
Church.
-
The nation of Israel was only
the seed of the future Church,
which would arise and
incorporate people of all
nations (Mal. 1:11): "For from
the rising of the sun, even unto
the going down of the same, My
Name shall be great among the
nations, and in every place,
incense shall be offered to My
Name, and a pure offering for My
Name shall be great among the
nations, says the Lord of
Hosts."
Rebuttal: This is great, and
shows that the Jewish people and
Israel fulfilled one of their
callings to be "a light to the
nations," so that God's Word has
gone around the world. It does not
suggest God's dealing with Israel
was negated because His Name spread
around the world.
-
Jesus taught that the Jews would
lose their spiritual privileges,
and be replaced by another
people (Matt. 21:43): "Therefore
I am saying to you, 'The kingdom
of God will be taken from you,
and given to a nation bringing
forth the fruits of it.'"
Rebuttal: In this passage,
Jesus was talking about the priests
and Pharisees, who failed as leaders
of the people. This passage is not
talking about the Jewish people or
nation of Israel. See Teaching
Letter #770008, "Did God Break His
Covenant With the Jews?"
-
A true Jew is anyone born of the
Spirit, whether he is racially
Gentile or Jewish (Rom.
2:28-29): "For he is not a Jew
who is one outwardly; neither is
that circumcision which is
outward in the flesh; But he is
a Jew who is one inwardly; and
circumcision is that of the
heart, in the spirit and not in
the letter; whose praise is not
of men, but of God."
Rebuttal: This argument does
not support the notion that the
Church replaced Israel. Rather, it
simply reinforces what had been said
throughout the Hebrew Scriptures
[the Old Testament], and it
certainly qualifies the spiritual
qualifications for Jews or anyone
who professes to be a follower of
the God of Israel.
-
Paul shows that the Church is
really the same "olive tree" as
was Israel, and the Church is
now the tree. Therefore, to
distinguish between Israel and
the Church is, strictly
speaking, false. Indeed, people
of Jewish origin need to be
grafted back into the Church
(Rom 11:17-23).
Rebuttal: This claim is the
most outrageous because this passage
clearly shows that we Gentiles are
the "wild olive branches," who get
our life from being grafted into the
olive tree. The tree represents the
covenants, promises and hopes of
Israel (Eph. 2:12), rooted in the
Messiah and fed by the sap, which
represents the Holy Spirit, giving
life to the Jews (the "natural
branches") and Gentile alike. We
Gentiles are told to remember that
the olive tree holds us up and NOT
to be arrogant or boast against the
"natural branches" because they can
be grafted in again. The olive tree
is NOT the Church. We are simply
grafted into God's plan that
preceded us for over 2,000 years.
-
All the promises made to Israel
in the Old Testament, unless
they were historically fulfilled
before the coming of Jesus
Christ, are now the property of
the Christian Church. These
promises should not be
interpreted literally or
carnally, but spiritually and
symbolically, so that references
to Israel, Jerusalem, Zion and
the Temple, when they are
prophetic, really refer to the
Church (II Cor. 1:20). "For all
the promises of God in Him
(Jesus) are Yea, and in Him,
Amen, unto the glory of God by
us." Therefore, they teach that
the New Testament needs to be
taught figuratively, not
literally.
Rebuttal: Later, in this
Teaching Letter, we will look at the
fact that the New Testament
references to Israel clearly pertain
to Israel, not the Church.
Therefore, no promise to Israel and
the Jewish people in the Bible is
figurative, nor can they be
relegated to the Church alone. The
promises and covenants are literal,
many of them are everlasting, and we
Christians can participate in them
as part of our rebirth, not in that
we took them over to the exclusion
of Israel. The New Testament speaks
of the Church's relationship to
Israel and her covenants as being
"grafted in" (Rom. 11:17), "brought
near" (Eph. 2:13), "Abraham's
offspring (by faith)" (Rom. 4:16),
and "partakers" (Rom. 15:27), NOT as
usurpers of the covenant and a
replacer of physical Israel. We
Gentile Christians joined into what
God had been doing in Israel, and
God did not break His covenant
promises with Israel (Rom. 11:29).
How Did
The Position Of The Early Church
Fathers Affect The Church?
Let us
look at a brief history of the first
four centuries of Christianity,
which established a "legacy of
hatred" towards the Jewish people,
which was against the clear teaching
of the New Testament.
(For a
complete history of Christian
anti-Semitism, send the equivalent
of US $1 to your nearest BFP
National Office and ask for a copy
of the Israel Teaching Letter
(#779806), "Where Was Love and
Mercy," or download a copy from our
Bridges for Peace website, found
under the Israel Teaching Letters
button at
http://www.bridgesforpeace.com/.
This teaching is also a chapter of
my book, Lessons From the Land of
the Bible with 13 other great
teachings including "Lessons from
the Olive Tree," which can be
ordered from your nearest BFP
national office.)
In the
first century AD, the church was
well-connected to its Jewish roots,
and Jesus did not intend for it to
be any other way. After all, Jesus
is Jewish and the basis of His
teaching is consistent with the
Hebrew Scriptures. In Matthew
5:17-18 He states: "Do not think
that I have come to abolish the Law
or the Prophets; I have not come to
abolish them but to fulfil them. I
tell you the truth, until heaven and
earth disappear, not the smallest
letter, not the least stroke of a
pen, will by any means disappear
from the Law until everything is
accomplished." Before the First
Jewish Revolt in AD 66, Christianity
was basically a sect of Judaism, as
were the Pharisees, Sadducees, and
Essenes.
Separation between Judaism and
Christianity began as a result of
religious and social differences.
According to David Rausch in his
book, A Legacy of Hatred, there were
several contributing factors: 1) the
Roman intrusion into Judea, and the
widespread acceptance of
Christianity by the Gentiles,
complicated the history of Jewish
Christianity; 2) the Roman wars
against the Jews not only destroyed
the Temple and Jerusalem, but also
resulted in Jerusalem's
relinquishing her position as a
center of Christian faith in the
Roman world; and, 3) the rapid
acceptance of Christianity among the
Gentiles led to an early conflict
between the Church and Synagogue.
Paul's missionary journeys brought
the Christian faith to the Gentile
world, and as their numbers grew, so
did their influence, which
ultimately disconnected Christianity
from its Jewish roots.
Many
Gentile Christians interpreted the
destruction of the Temple and
Jerusalem as a sign that God had
abandoned Judaism, and that He had
provided the Gentiles freedom to
develop their own Christian theology
in a setting free from Jerusalem's
influence. Could it be He was
showing us that Temple worship was
no longer necessary as His Holy
Spirit now resides in us (I Cor.
6:19), not in the Holy of Holies?
After the Second Jewish Revolt (AD
133-135) put down by the Roman
Emperor Hadrian, theological and
political power moved from Jewish
Christian leaders to centers of
Gentile Christian leadership such as
Alexandria, Rome, and Antioch. It is
important to understand this change,
because it influenced the early
Church Fathers to make anti-Jewish
statements as Christianity began to
disconnect itself from its Jewish
roots.
As the
Church spread far and wide within
the Roman Empire, and its membership
grew increasingly non-Jewish, Greek
and Roman thought began to creep in
and completely change the
orientation of Biblical
interpretation through a Greek
mindset, rather than a Jewish or
Hebraic mindset. This would later
result in many heresies, some of
which the Church is still practicing
today.
Once
Christianity and Judaism began to
take separate paths, the chasm
became wider and wider. Judaism was
considered a legal religion under
Roman law, while Christianity, a new
religion, was illegal. As
Christianity grew, the Romans tried
to suppress it. In an attempt to
alleviate this persecution,
Christian apologists tried in vain
to convince Rome that Christianity
was an extension of Judaism.
However, Rome was not convinced. The
resulting persecutions and
frustration of the Christians bred
an animosity towards the Jewish
community, which was free to worship
without persecution. Later, when the
Church became the religion of the
state, it would pass laws against
the Jews in retribution.
The
antagonism of the early Christians
towards the Jews was reflected in
the writings of the early Church
Fathers. For example, Justin Martyr
(c. AD 160) in speaking to a Jew
said: "The Scriptures are not yours,
but ours." Irenaeus, Bishop of Lyon
(c. AD 177) declared: "Jews are
disinherited from the grace of God."
Tertullian (AD 160-230), in his
treatise, "Against the Jews,"
announced that God had rejected the
Jews in favor of the Christians.
In the
early 4th century, Eusebius wrote
that the promises of the Hebrew
Scriptures were for Christians and
not the Jews, and the curses were
for the Jews. He argued that the
Church was the continuation of the
Old Testament and thus superseded
Judaism. The young Church declared
itself to be the true Israel, or
"Israel according to the Spirit,"
heir to the divine promises. They
found it essential to discredit the
"Israel according to the flesh" to
prove that God had cast away His
people and transferred His love to
the Christians.
At the
beginning of the 4th century, a
monumental event occurred for the
Church, which placed "the Church
Triumphant" over "Vanquished
Israel." In AD 306, Constantine
became the first Christian Roman
Emperor. At first, he had a rather
pluralistic view and accorded Jews
the same religious rights as
Christians. However, in AD 321, he
made Christianity the official
religion of the Empire to the
exclusion of all other religions.
This signaled the end of the
persecution of Christians, but the
beginning of discrimination and
persecution of the Jewish people.
Already
at the Church Council in Elvira
(Spain) in AD 305, declarations were
made to keep Jews and Christians
apart, including ordering Christians
not to share meals with Jews, not to
marry Jews, not to use Jews to bless
their fields, and not to observe the
Jewish Sabbath.
Imperial Rome, in AD 313, issued the
Edict of Milan, which granted favor
to Christianity, while outlawing
synagogues. Then, in AD 315, another
edict allowed the burning of Jews if
they were convicted of breaking the
laws. As Christianity was becoming
the religion of the state, further
laws were passed against the Jews:
-
The ancient privileges granted
to the Jews were withdrawn.
-
Rabbinical jurisdiction was
abolished or severely curtailed.
-
Proselytism to Judaism was
prohibited and made punishable
by death.
-
Jews were excluded from holding
high office or a military
career.
These
and other restrictions were
confirmed over and over again by
various Church Councils for the next
1,000 years.
In AD
321, Constantine decreed all
business should cease on "the
honored day of the sun." By
substituting Sunday for Saturday as
the day for Christian worship/rest,
he further advanced the split. This
Jewish Shabbat/Christian Sunday
controversy also came up at the
first real ecumenical Council of
Nicea (AD 325), which concluded
Sunday to be the Christian day of
rest, although it was debated for
long after that. Overnight,
Christianity was given the power of
the Imperial State, and the emperors
began to translate the concepts and
claims of the Christian theologians
against the Jews and Judaism into
practice. Instead of the Church
taking this opportunity to spread
its Gospel message in love, it truly
became the Church Triumphant, ready
to vanquish its foes.
After
321, the writings of the Church
Fathers changed in character. No
longer was it on the defensive and
apologetic, but aggressive,
directing its venom at everyone
"outside of the flock," in
particular the Jewish people who
could be found in almost every
community and nation. During this
period, we find more examples of
anti-Jewish bias in Church
literature written by church
leaders:
-
Hilary of Poitiers (AD 291-371)
wrote: "Jews are a perverse
people accursed by God forever."
-
Gregory of Nyssa (died AD 394),
Bishop of Cappadocia: "the Jews
are a brood of vipers, haters of
goodness..."
-
St. Jerome (AD 347-407)
describes the Jews as "...
serpents, wearing the image of
Judas, their psalms and prayers
are the braying of donkeys."
At the
end of the 4th century, the Bishop
of Antioch, John Chrysostom (Golden
Tongued), the great orator, wrote a
series of eight sermons against the
Jews. He had seen Christians talking
with Jewish people, taking oaths in
front of the Ark, and some were
keeping the Jewish feasts. He wanted
this to stop. In an effort to bring
his people back to what he called,
"the true faith," the Jews became
the whipping boy for his sermon
series. To quote him, "the synagogue
is not only a brothel and a theater;
it is also a den of robbers and a
lodging for wild beasts. No Jew
adores God... Jews are inveterate
murderers, possessed by the devil,
their debauchery and drunkenness
gives them the manners of the pig.
They kill and maim one another..."
One can easily see that a
Judeo-Christian who wanted to hold
on to his heritage, or a Gentile
Christian who wanted to learn more
about the parent faith of
Christianity, would have found it
extremely difficult under this
pressure. Chrysostom further sought
to separate Christianity totally
from Judaism. He wrote in his 4th
Discourse, "I have said enough
against those who say they are on
our side, but are eager to follow
the Jewish rites... it is against
the Jews that I wish to draw up my
battle... Jews are abandoned by God
and for the crime of deicide, there
is no expiation possible."
Chrysostom was known for his fiery
preaching against what he saw as
threats to his flock, including
wealth, entertainment, privilege and
outward adornment. However, his
preaching against the Jewish
community, which he believed had a
negative influence on Christians, is
inexcusable and blatantly
anti-Semitic in its content. Another
unfortunate contribution Chrysostom
made to Christian anti-Semitism was
to hold the whole Jewish people
culpable for the killing of Christ.
In the
fifth century, the burning question
was: If the Jews and Judaism were
cursed by God, then how can you
explain their existence?
Augustine tackled this issue in his
"Sermon Against the Jews." He
asserted that even though the Jews
deserved the most severe punishment
for having put Jesus to death, they
have been kept alive by Divine
Providence to serve, together with
their Scriptures, as witnesses to
the truth of Christianity. Their
existence was further justified by
the service they rendered to the
Christian truth, in attesting
through their humiliation, the
triumph of the Church over the
Synagogue. They were to be a
"Witness people" - slaves and
servants who should be humbled.
The
monarchs of the Holy Roman Empire
thus regarded the Jews as serfs of
the chamber (servi camerae), and
utilized them as slave librarians to
maintain Hebrew writings. They also
utilized the services of Jews in
another enterprise - usury, or
money-lending. The loaning of money
was necessary to a growing economy.
However, usury was considered to
endanger the eternal salvation of
the Christian, and was thus
forbidden. So, the church endorsed
the practice of lending by Jews, for
according to their reasoning, their
Jewish souls were lost in any case.
Much later, the Jewish people were
utilized by the Western countries as
trade agents in commerce, and thus
we see how the Jewish people found
their way into the fields of banking
and commerce.
So, by
the Middle Ages, the ideological
arsenal of Christian anti-Semitism
was completely established. This was
further manifested in a variety of
precedent-setting events within the
Church, such as Patriarch Cyril,
Bishop of Alexandria, expelling the
Jews and giving their property to a
Christian mob. From a social
standpoint, the deterioration of the
Jewish position in society was only
beginning its decline. During this
early period, the virulent judeo-
phobia was primarily limited to the
clergy who were always trying to
keep their flocks away from the
Jews. However, later, the rank and
file, growing middle class would be
the main source of anti-Semitic
activity.
The
result of these anti-Jewish
teachings continued onwards
throughout Church history,
manifesting itself in such events
and actions as the Crusades, the
accusation of communion host
desecration and blood libel by the
Jews, the forced wearing of
distinguishing marks to ostracize
them, the Inquisition, the
displacement of whole Jewish
communities by exile or separate
ghettoes, the destruction of
synagogues and Jewish books,
physical persecution and execution,
the Pogroms. Ultimately, the seeds
of destruction grew to epic
proportions, culminating in the
Holocaust, which occurred in
"Christian" Europe.
Had the
Church understood the clear message
of being grafted into the Olive Tree
from the beginning, then the sad
legacy of anti-Semitic hatred from
the Church may have been avoided.
The error of Replacement Theology is
like a cancer in the Church that has
not only caused it to violate God's
Word concerning the Jewish people
and Israel, but it made us into
instruments of hate, not love in
God's Name.
Is the
New Testament anti-Semitic? Was it
Intended That the Church Treat the
Jewish People with Contempt?
ABSOLUTELY NOT!
While
the New Testament has been used by
Gentile anti-Semites, even within
the Church, the writers of the New
Testament were Jewish, and therefore
their arguments, even critical ones,
were from the vantage point of being
an intra-communal debate, not
inter-communal accusation. Even
where the criticism is harsh, it is
directed towards a particular group
or sect of Jews because of their
practices, which needed correcting.
For example, even though Yeshua
spoke harshly to the Pharisees, He
nevertheless said of them, "The
teachers of the law and the
Pharisees sit in Moses' seat. So you
must obey them and do everything
they tell you. But do not do what
they do, for they do not practice
what they preach" (Matt: 23:2-3). He
was distressed that they were
"missing the mark" in their
self-righteousness, which is
something all of us need to be
careful of doing.
The
clear teaching of the New Testament
is that the Church was and is to
love and honour the Jewish people.
In Ephesians 2:11-18, we are told
that "by the blood of Messiah," we
Gentiles are "made near" to the
commonwealth of Israel, the
covenants, promises and hopes given
to Israel. In Romans 11:11-12, 25,
we are told that "blindness in part"
has come to the Jews so that the
message would be forced out into the
nations. Nevertheless, we are told
that a time would come when "all
Israel would be saved" (v. 26),
because the gifts and callings of
God towards Israel and the Jewish
people were given without repentance
(v. 29). God's relationship with
Israel and the Jewish people is
everlasting.
We
Gentile Christians are told that the
Jews are "beloved for the sake of
the Patriarchs" (Rom. 11:28). They
are a chosen people who fulfilled
their calling and brought the Gospel
to the world. They were chosen to:
1.
Be obedient to God's Word and
demonstrate to the world as "a light
to the nations."
2.
Hear God's Word and record it - the
Bible.
3.
Be the human channel for the
Messiah.
The
Jewish people have fulfilled their
role. The promise to the world
through Abraham was that, "in you
will all the nations on the earth be
blessed" (Gen. 12:3). They were to
be a light unto the nations and,
while they made mistakes as we all
do, they did demonstrate the power
of God on earth, they did hear God's
Word and record it so that we have
the Bible, and they were the human
channel for the Messiah, who was
born, ministered, died, rose from
the dead, ascended to heaven and
will return to Jerusalem, Israel, in
a day yet to come.
God
made an everlasting covenant between
the land of Israel and the Jewish
people that must be fulfilled and
completed or His Word, the Bible,
will be proven a lie, which it is
not. God will never forget or annul
His ancient people. If God will not
fulfil His promises to Israel, what
guarantee do we have that He will
fulfil His promises to the Church?
(See Jeremiah 31:35-37).
Are
Jews, Jews, and is Israel, Israel in
the New Testament? Do They Still
Have a Covenant with God?
ABSOLUTELY. THE BIBLE IS CLEAR ON
THIS.
1.
The Jews are Israelites, not
Gentiles (Rom.
9:4).
2.
To
Israel still belong the sonship, the
glory, the covenants, the giving of
the law, the worship and the
promises (Rom. 9:4).
3.
The gifts and calling of God for
Israel are irrevocable (Rom. 11:29).
4.
There are 77 references to
Israel in the NT and none of them
refer to the Church. Try replacing
the words, "the Church," where
Israel is mentioned and the passage
is rendered unreadable and silly,
e.g., Rom. 10:1, "Brethren, my
heart's desire and prayer to God for
Israel is, that they might be
saved." If you put "the Church"
where Israel is mentioned, then it
is redundant. The Church is the body
of saved believers, so how could
Paul's prayer be for the Church to
be saved?
5.
Psalm 105 has a seven-fold
affirmation of God's promises of
Canaan to Abraham. This is an
everlasting promise, as was Genesis
12:1-3.
6.
Jeremiah 31:35-37 speaks of the
everlasting nature of God's promises
to and for
Israel, the Jewish people, which is
as sure as the sun that shines by
day and the moon and stars that glow
in the night.
7.
The end-time prophecies, which speak
of the return of the House of Jacob
to their land (Israel)
and its restoration, have
overwhelmingly been fulfilled in
Israel and the Jewish people in the
past 120 years. (See, Isa. 11:11-12;
Eze. 37:1-14; Eze. 36; Eze. 35:1,
Isa. 43:5,6; Jer. 16:14-16; Isa.
60:9-11; Isa. 49:22-23, etc.).
8.
The Gospel and Yeshua came "to the
Jews first, then the Greek" (Rom.
2:9,10; Matt:10:5-7;15:24). There is
a distinction in roles between the
two. Galatians 3:28 says: "There is
neither Jew nor Greek, there is
neither bond nor free, there is
neither male nor female; for you are
all one in Christ Jesus." This is
speaking of everyone's standing
before God as equals, because we are
all sinners saved by God's grace and
the atoning work on the Cross.
Nevertheless, our roles here on
earth are definitely distinct; e.g.,
men and women, mothers and fathers,
husbands and wives, etc. all have
distinct roles to play. Likewise,
Jews and Gentiles have distinct
roles to play.
What is
the Role of the Church?
1.
"On this rock I will build My
Church, and the gates of Hell will
not overcome it" (Matt.
16:18). The Church is built on the
testimony and understanding of
Peter, who is Jewish. Ephesians
2:11-14 indicates that Israel and
the Jews (we) were chosen, but
Gentiles (you) were also included.
2.
The Church is related to
Israel and partakers of the
covenants, promises, and hopes, but
we have not been called to usurp
them. Our relationship is as
"grafted in" (Rom. 11:17); "brought
near" (Eph 2:13); "Abraham's
offspring" (by faith) (Rom. 4:16);
"heirs" to Abraham's promise as
adopted sons (Gal. 3:29) and
"partakers" (Rom 15:27).
3.
To the world, the Church is called
to preach the Gospel to all nations
and make disciples (Matt. 28:19-20);
to love the Lord our God with all
our heart, soul, mind and strength;
and to love our neighbour as
ourselves (Mk. 12:30-31).
4.
To the Jewish people, we are called
to show God's love "for the sake of
the Patriarchs" (Rom.
11:28), for without them we would
not have had God's Word or our
Saviour who was a Jew from Israel.
We are to show God's mercy (Rom.
11:31). We are to give our material
gifts to help them (Rom. 15:27). We
are to pray for them and for Israel
(Ps. 122:6). We are to be watchman
on the walls to protect them (Isa.
62:6,7). We are to help with the
aliyah (immigration) to Israel and
the building up of Zion (Isa.
60:9-11; Jer. 16:14-16; Isa.
49:22-23).
5.
According to Romans 11, we are two
distinct groups, both grafted into
the same tree, which are the
covenants and promises given to
Israel; grounded in the same root,
the Messiah; drinking of the same
sap, God's Holy Spirit. We do not
hold up the tree, but the tree us,
and we are forbidden from boasting
against or being arrogant to God's
covenant people the Jews (Rom.
11:17-18).
What Happens When the Church
Replaces Israel?
1.
The Church becomes arrogant and
self-centred.
2.
It boasts against the Jews and
Israel.
3.
It devalues the role of
Israel or has no role for Israel at
all.
4.
These attitudes result in
anti-Semitism in word and deed.
5.
Without a place for
Israel and the Jewish people today,
you cannot explain the Bible
prophecies, especially the very
specific ones being fulfilled in
Israel today.
6.
Many New Testament passages do not
make sense when the Jewish people
are replaced by the Church.
7.
You can lose the significance of the
Hebrew Scriptures, the Old
Testament, for today. Many
Christians boast of being a New
Testament (NT) Christian or a NT
Church as in the Book of Acts.
However, the Bible of the early
Church was not the New Testament,
which did not get codified until the
4th century, but rather the Hebrew
Scriptures.
8.
You can lose the Hebraic/Judaic
contextualization of the New
Testament, which teaches us more
about Yeshua and how to become
better disciples.
9.
The Church loses out on the
opportunity to participate in God's
plan and prophecy for the Church,
Israel and the world today.
What
Happens When the Church Relates to
Israel?
1.
The Church takes its proper role in
God's redemptive plan for the world,
appreciating God's ongoing covenant
relationship and love for
Israel and the Jewish people.
2.
We can see the consistency of God's
redemptive plan from Genesis to
Revelation as an ongoing
complementary process, not as
disconnected snapshots.
3.
We show love and honour for God's
covenant people, not contempt.
4.
We value the Old and New Testaments
as equally inspired and significant
for the Church today.
5.
Bible prophecy makes sense for today
and offers opportunities for
involvement in God's plan for
Israel.
6.
We become better disciples of Yeshua
as we are able to appreciate the
Hebraic/Judaic roots that fill in
the definitions, concepts, words and
events in the New Testament that are
otherwise obscured. Why? Many were
not explained by the Jewish writers
of the New Testament, because they
did not feel the need to fill in all
the details that were already
explained in the Old Testament.
Had the
Church understood this very clear
message from the beginning, then the
sad legacy of anti-Semitic hatred
from the Church may have been
avoided. The error of Replacement
Theology is like a cancer in the
Church that has not only caused it
to violate God's Word concerning the
Jewish people and Israel, but it
made us into instruments of hate,
not love in God's Name. Yet, it is
not too late to change our ways and
rightly relate to the Jewish people
and Israel today. Through Bridges
for Peace you can read, study and
learn more, and also give to
demonstrate God's exhortation to us
to bless His Covenant People, whom
He still loves. Not only do we need
to learn and do for ourselves, but
we need to teach others so as to
counteract the historical error that
has been fostered in the Church for
nearly 2,000 years.
Thank
God, He is a God of mercy,
redemption and second chances.
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