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The Salvation of Sinners
Paul’s love for his own people is clearly apparent in these verses. How hard it must have been for him to have some of his countrymen fight against him and against the truth of the gospel. And yet, amid it all, he still believed that many would see Jesus as the Messiah.
Read Romans 11:28–36. How does Paul show God’s love, not just for the Jews but for all humanity? How does he here express the amazing and mysterious power of God’s grace?
All through these verses, though a contrast is made between Jews and Gentiles, one point stands clear: God’s mercy and love and grace are poured out upon sinners. From even before the foundation of the world, God’s plan was to save humanity and to use other human beings, nations even, as instruments in His hands to fulfill His divine will.
Read carefully and prayerfully verse 31. What important point should we take from this text about our witness, not just to Jews but to all people with whom we come in contact?
No doubt, through the centuries, had the Christian church treated the Jews better, many more might have come to their Messiah. The great falling away in the early centuries after Christ, and the extreme paganization of Christianity—including the rejection of the seventh-day Sabbath in favor of Sunday—certainly didn’t make it any easier on a Jew who might have been drawn to Jesus.
How crucial, then, that all Christians, realizing the mercy that has been given to them in Jesus, display that mercy to others. We can’t be Christians if we don’t (see Matt. 18:23–36).
Is there someone to whom you need to show mercy, who perhaps doesn’t deserve it? Why not show this person that mercy, no matter how hard that might be? Isn’t that what Jesus has done for us?
THURSDAY | September 9 |
Paul’s love for his own people is clearly apparent in these verses. How hard it must have been for him to have some of his countrymen fight against him and against the truth of the gospel. And yet, amid it all, he still believed that many would see Jesus as the Messiah.
Read Romans 11:28–36. How does Paul show God’s love, not just for the Jews but for all humanity? How does he here express the amazing and mysterious power of God’s grace?
All through these verses, though a contrast is made between Jews and Gentiles, one point stands clear: God’s mercy and love and grace are poured out upon sinners. From even before the foundation of the world, God’s plan was to save humanity and to use other human beings, nations even, as instruments in His hands to fulfill His divine will.
Read carefully and prayerfully verse 31. What important point should we take from this text about our witness, not just to Jews but to all people with whom we come in contact?
No doubt, through the centuries, had the Christian church treated the Jews better, many more might have come to their Messiah. The great falling away in the early centuries after Christ, and the extreme paganization of Christianity—including the rejection of the seventh-day Sabbath in favor of Sunday—certainly didn’t make it any easier on a Jew who might have been drawn to Jesus.
How crucial, then, that all Christians, realizing the mercy that has been given to them in Jesus, display that mercy to others. We can’t be Christians if we don’t (see Matt. 18:23–36).
Is there someone to whom you need to show mercy, who perhaps doesn’t deserve it? Why not show this person that mercy, no matter how hard that might be? Isn’t that what Jesus has done for us?
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