
Every Thought Captive Home
Subscribe to ETC
Dispensationalism
Volume 5 - Issue 2 (Mar/Apr 2001)
The Vision
Waiting for Godot
Family Circle
To a Thousand Generations
Ekklesia
Is the Church the True Israel, God?
Rightly Dividing
Two Lips
Tending Your Garden
Lords of the Manor
Culture Matters
Pray for the Peace of Babylon
Practicum
Tools for Dominion
Open Letter
Eyes Wide Open
Leviathan
Gorillas in the Midst
Apologia
Always, Always on Tuesday
Hit and Run
Re:Views
Unless otherwise noted, all content is Copyright © 2008 Highlands Study Center
|
Is the Church the True Israel, God?
by Keith Mathison, author of Dispensationalism:
Rightly Dividing the People of God?, Postmillennialism: An Eschatology of Hope,
and The Shape of Sola Scriptura.
Many people believe that the defining doctrinal characteristic of dispensationalism
is its unique eschatology. It is certainly the eschatology that gains the most
attention. In reality, however, the doctrine that defines dispensationalism,
its sine qua non, is its doctrine of the church. The fundamental tenet of dispensationalism
is that the Church is not Israel. Several things are meant by this statement,
but the most important is the dispensationalist teaching that the church, or
body of Christ, consists only of those believers saved between Pentecost and
the Rapture. The saints of the Old Testament are not part of the Church, the
body of Christ.
Part of the difficulty in evaluating the dispensational distinction between
Israel and the Church is the lack of precise definitions in dispensationalist
literature. Both "Israel" and "Church" are used in a variety
of senses throughout the New Testament, and to simply say that the Church is
not Israel is a gross oversimplification. Obviously, if we mean by "Israel"
the political state of Israel or unbelieving Jews, then the Church is not Israel.
But since within the unbelieving nation of Israel there has always been a remnant,
a "true Israel" it is not accurate to make a sweeping general statement
divorcing Israel from the Church in every sense of the words.
In the Old Testament, the unbelieving nation had a remnant of believers within
it. This true Israel, which included such men as David and Daniel, were those
who were circumcised not only in the flesh but also in the spirit. When Christ
came, we see the same distinction between national, unbelieving Israel and the
true Israel. The Scribes and Pharisees were generally part of the unbelieving
national Israel. The apostles were part of true Israel. At Pentecost, when virtually
all agree a new stage in redemptive history began, the true Israel, the remnant
of national Israel, was the church. In the following decades and centuries,
Gentiles began to be added to this true Israel - the church, but that did not
change the fact that there was and is a continuity between the Old Testament
Israel and the New Testament church. The Church is not national or unbelieving
Israel. But the Church is the true Israel, the remnant of national Israel. There
are several places in Scripture where this truth is clearly taught. Here we
shall focus briefly on three:
Romans 11:11-24 clearly teaches the unity of believers of all ages. The illustration
of the olive tree in this passage is one of the better known sections of the
book of Romans, but its meaning has not always been clear, especially to those
who would separate Old and New Testament believers into distinct bodies. There
are four main points in this text of Scripture that are relevant to our topic:
1. The cultivated olive tree is natural Israel.
2. The natural branches that are broken off are unbelieving Jews.
3. The good branches that remain are believing Jews.
4. The wild branches that are grafted into the good olive tree are believing
Gentiles.
The most important thing to notice here is that there is only one good olive
tree. In the Old Testament it had contained both unbelieving and believing Jews.
But when Christ came, the unbelieving Jews were broken off leaving only the
believing Jews. Believing Gentiles were then, and are now, grafted into this
good olive tree - the believing remnant - the true Israel. Were dispensationalism
true, the illustration would make no sense. Paul does not say that God plants
a brand new olive tree into which He now grafts believing Jews and believing
Gentiles. No, the believing Jews stayed right where they were in their covenant
relationship with God. God brought Gentile believers into this already existing
covenant relationship. The believing remnant of Israel, the true Israel, and
the New Testament Church are one and the same body of believers. These believing
Jews and Gentiles are the one good olive tree.
Ephesians 2:11-19 is a passage of Scripture that also has special importance
for our study. In this text, Paul compares the former state of the Gentiles
in Christ to their previous state apart from Christ. In verse 12, Paul lists
five things that were true of them before they became Christians. The Gentile
believers were formerly:
1. Separate from Christ
2. Excluded from the commonwealth of Israel
3. Strangers to the covenants of promise
4. Without hope
5. Without God in the world
All five of these things are spoken of in the past tense. In other words, all
five were true of the Gentiles prior to their faith in Christ, and all five
are no longer true now that the Gentiles have faith in Christ. What this means
is that Gentile believers are now:
1. In Christ
2. Included in the commonwealth of Israel
3. Heirs of the covenants of promise
4. With Hope
5. With God in the world
According to Paul, all of these things are now true for Gentile believers in
Christ.
Galatians 3:16, 29 emphasizes Gentiles' inheritance in the Abrahamic promises.
We learn in
these verses that:
1. The Abrahamic promises were made to Abraham and to his seed (v. 16).
2. His Seed is Christ (v. 16).
3. His seed is also all who belong to Christ (v.29).
4. Therefore, the Abrahamic promises belong to Christ and to all who are His
(v.29).
According to Paul, the Abrahamic promises belong to all who are in Christ and
only to those in Christ. Since He is the true heir, the true Seed, no one may
inherit the promises apart from Christ. Apart from union with Christ, no Jew
or Gentile has any claim to the Abrahamic promises.
The dispensationalist distinction between two peoples of God is biblically
indefensible. All who are saved are in Christ, and only those who are in Christ
are saved. There is no other way of salvation apart from union with Christ in
the one body of Christ, the church - the true Israel of God.
|