PART TWO
holdon (message #65):
... this new thing ... is clearly stated what ... (in) Ephesians. It is right there in front of your eyes: "that he might form the two in himself into one new man.
Jim (message # 71):
Thats been my point all along !!!!!!! This is what youve been denying all along !!!!!!! One cannot separate the one new man into two separate groups, and yet that is exactly what youve been doing !!!!!!! The saints are one group, not two !!!!!!! This means that if the believing Jews are the believing part of Israel in Romans 11:25-27, then all the saints are the believing part of Israel, because one cannot separate the one new man into two separate groups. This means that if the believing Jews are the Israel in Romans 9:6-8, then all the saints, namely us/we, are this Israel, because one cannot separate the one new man into two separate groups. This means that the Israel in Ephesians 2:12, which is the Israel in Romans 9:6-8 and in Galatians 6:15-16, is all the saints, because one cannot separate the one new man into two separate groups. This is why Paul says in Ephesians 2:12 that the Ephesians were at that time (they used to be, but they are no longer) excluded from the citizenship of the Israel. Now they are the saints fellow citizens (2:19). All the saints (the one new man) are the citizens of this Israel in Romans 9:6-8, Galatians 6:15-16 and Ephesians 2:12. But you keep dividing this one new man into two separate men, only one of which you allow to be the citizens of the believing part of Israel in Romans 11:25, which is the believing Israel in 9:6-8, which is the Israel in Galatians 6:15-16 and in Ephesians 2:12.
holdon:
Oh no, that's not at all what you have said so far. You have repeatedly claimed that this was NOT a NEW thing, but a continuation of the old thing: the thing you call Israel. But the bible says in Eph 2 that there is a NEW thing: not Israel, but the assembly of Christ. Believing Jews are joined to that assembly: added to the Church, etc. ... What you do is joining the Gentiles to the old Israel. which you say is the tree of Romans 11. But, if it is a new thing, it cannot be the tree of Romans 11, because from that tree Israel was natural branches, and therefore existed long before. ... You contradict yourself and Scripture so many times, it is hard to keep a logical conversation.
Jim (this message):
As you can see, the fact that the saints are one group (one new man in Christ), not two groups, and that wherever the Jewish believers are is where the Gentile believers must also be is consistently expressed throughout this thread. This is what Paul consistently expresses throughout his epistles. If the Jewish believers are the Israel in Romans 9:6-8, then so too must be the Gentile believers, because the saints (believers in Christ), both Gentile and Jew, are one body, not two; they are the us (the children of the promise) in Romans 4:16, the we (the children of God) in Romans 8:16, the children of the promise (us) / children of God (we) in Romans 9:8, the us (the vessels of mercy) in Romans 9:24.
We see the same thing in Romans 11:16-24; the saints are all grouped together into one group of believing branches who are fellow partakers of the same Root, whereas unbelieving Jews are removed to be a different group. Paul says in 11:16-24 that part of the tree does not believe until the Gentiles have been engrafted (joined with the believing Jews to be one group in the believing part of the tree), and he says in 11:25-27 that part of Israel does not believe until the Gentiles have entered (joined with the believing Jews to be one group in the believing part of Israel).
The New Covenant IS the new thing. In Ephesians 2:14-16, the Old Covenant division between Gentile and Jew was the old thing, whereas Gentile and Jew being united into one new man in Christ in the New Covenant is the new thing.
Ill say it again. The division of Gentile and Jew into two separate groups is an Old Covenant thing, an old thing, whereas the union of Gentile and Jew into one group, one new man, is a New Covenant thing, a new thing. I address this in message #62 (an excerpt is quoted above).
When Christ (the mediator of the New Covenant) initiated Gods New Covenant with the house of Israel by shedding the Blood of the New Covenant on the cross to remove sin, He began a new thing that was different than the old thing (the Old Covenant) was.
As Jeremiah predicts, God would make a New Covenant with the house of Israel, and it would not be like the covenant that He had made with their fathers; it would be new and different, and it would actually accomplish what the Old Covenant could not accomplish. One of the aspects of this New Covenant that would differ from the Old Covenant, an aspect that Jeremiah doesnt mention because it had not yet been revealed, would be that the Old Covenant division between Gentile and Jew would done away in the New Covenant. Thus, in the New Covenant, the New Covenant people of God are the ones who believe in the mediator of the New Covenant (Christ), both Gentile and Jew united in Christ into one group, one New Covenant man, one new man.
Thus, Gentile believers and Jewish believers are one new man in Christ, and they cannot be divided into two different groups. The division of Gentile and Jew into two different groups is an Old Covenant thing, an old thing. The union of Gentile and Jew into one group in Christ is a New Covenant thing, a new thing. Thus, the New Covenant Israel in Romans 9:6-8, from which all unbelievers are excluded, is comprised of all believers in Christ, both Gentile and Jew united in Christ into one new man in the New Covenant Israel. The ones who comprise this New Covenant Israel are identified in Romans 9:6-8 (9:8) as the children of God (the us in 4:16 [all believers]) / the children of God (the we in 8:16 [all believers]), who are the vessels of mercy (the us in 9:24).
We see the same thing in Romans 11:16-24 / 11:25-27. The believers in Christ are united together into one group of believing branches in the believing part of the tree as fellow partakers of the holy Root, and the Jewish unbelievers are removed (broken off) to be a separate group, to be the unbelieving, broken-off part of the tree. This analogy describes exactly the same thing that Paul says in 11:25-27. Just as Paul says in 11:16-24 that part of the tree does not believe in Christ UNTIL the Gentiles have been engrafted, likewise he says in 11:25-27 that part of Israel does not believe in Christ UNTIL the Gentiles have entered. Just as all believers, both Gentile and Jew, are united (as one new man) into one group in the believing part of the tree in 11:16-24, likewise all believers, both Gentile and Jew, are united (as one new man) into one group in the believing part of Israel in 11:25-27.
This is why it is in the context of the Israel in Romans 9:6-8 receiving what the Israel in Romans 9:31-32 / 11:7-11 is not receiving that the Gentiles are stated in Romans 9:30 / 11:11 to be receiving what the Israel in Romans 9:31-32 / 11:7-11 is not receiving. The reason that Paul can say this is that the Gentiles who believe in Christ are included in the Israel in Romans 9:6-8, whose citizens are the ones who believe in Christ, both Gentile and Jew being included as one new man in this believing, New Covenant Israel.
This is also why Paul can say in Ephesians 2:12 that the Ephesians were at that time (they used to be, but now they are no longer) excluded from the citizenship of Israel. The citizens of this New Covenant Israel are the saints (all believers in Christ). This is the same Israel that Paul describes in Romans 9:6-8. As Paul says Ephesians 2:19, the Ephesians are now the saints fellow citizens.
As I said before, you employ a double definition in order to exclude Gentile believers from the Israel in Romans 9:6-8. You can deny it all you want, but this is what you do. You use the Old Covenant definition of Israel (Israel includes all Israelites and excludes all Gentiles) to exclude Gentile believers from this New Covenant Israel, but you turn around and use the New Covenant definition of Israel (Israel includes all believers in Christ and excludes all unbelievers) to allow the exclusion of Jewish unbelievers from this New Covenant Israel.
You do the same thing in regard to the one new man. You use the one-new-man concept to falsely claim that Gentile believers in Christ are excluded from the Israel in Romans 9:6-8 on the basis of your false claim that the reference to Israel in this passage is an old thing, not a new thing. But in the process of denying the inclusion of all believers in Christ in this Israel in Romans 9:6-8, you deny the one-new-man concept by dividing this one new man into two separate groups; you allow this Israel to include Jewish believers in Christ, but you do not allow it to include Gentile believers in Christ, hence your division of the one new man in Christ (believers in Christ) into two separate groups. But this Israel in Romans 9:6-8 IS a new thing, because this Israel includes all believers in Christ (the one new man) and excludes all unbelievers, which most certainly is a new (New Covenant) concept of Israel that completely differs from the old (Old Covenant) concept of Israel.
Thus, the reasoning that you use to exclude Gentile believers from their union with Jewish believers as one new man in Christ, as fellow citizens of the believing (New Covenant) part of Israel, is manipulative and dishonest. You do this because you put your dispensational theology, which is incorrect and non-Biblical, ahead of what the Bible says.
Jim