Listen "17 Did God Reject His People? (Romans 11:1-32)"
Episode Synopsis
Romans 11 pulls our eyes off ourselves and back onto the mercy and faithfulness of God. In this episode, we trace Paul’s argument that God has not rejected His people, that both Jews and Gentiles stand only by grace, and that spiritual pride—especially religious pride—is one of the most dangerous distortions of all. Through the image of the olive tree, we are reminded that we are not the high point of history but grafted-in branches depending entirely on ancient roots and a future God has promised to complete. In this week’s episode, we explore:How a Calvin and Hobbes strip about being “the purpose of history” exposes our own version of “chronological snobbery” and religious self-importance The ways spiritual pride twists grace into entitlement: devaluing others, celebrating our own accomplishments, and quietly assuming equality with GodPaul’s insistence that God has not rejected His people Israel, and the ongoing presence of a remnant “chosen by grace” in every generationWhat Romans 11:6 means when it says that if grace becomes something we earn or presume upon, it is “no longer grace”The sobering reality of hardening—a “spirit of stupor” with eyes that do not see and ears that do not hear—and how this describes much of Israel’s current spiritual stateHow Israel’s stumbling led to salvation for the Gentiles, and why that Gentile blessing is meant to stir Israel to jealousy, not to feed Gentile arroganceThe olive tree metaphor: deep roots in God’s promises, broken-off natural branches, and wild branches grafted in by sheer mercyPaul’s warning to Gentile believers: “Do not be arrogant, but be afraid”—learning to behold both the kindness and severity of GodWhat Paul means by “the fullness of the Gentiles” and “all Israel will be saved,” and how a richly alive Gentile church may one day awaken Jewish envy for the life of GodThe breathtaking conclusion of Romans 11: God has consigned all to disobedience so that He may have mercy on all, leading Paul into doxology rather than neat formulasBy the end of the episode, listeners will see more clearly that no group—Jew or Gentile, past or present—stands before God on any ground but mercy. You’ll be invited to let go of spiritual superiority, to see yourself as one small stretch of bank along a very long river of God’s work, to honor both the roots and the future of God’s people, and to join Paul in humble worship: “From Him and through Him and to Him are all things. To Him be the glory forever.” Series: Romans: Justification by FaithStart Strong: A New Believer’s Guide to Christianity launches January 9. Pre-order your copy now or buy it on launch day. Visit StartStrongBook.org for more details. Support the show
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