God's Redemptive Plan: Jews, Gentiles, and Salvation

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Paul emphasizes the importance of Gentile believers having a right understanding of the position of the Jews and of their relationship to the Jews in the church. There's a danger of misunderstanding this. There was a danger of the Gentile misunderstanding it at the very beginning. [06:46]

The rejection of the Gospel by the Jews sends the gospel to the Gentiles, and the Jews seeing the blessings of the Gospel in the Gentiles are provoked to jealousy by that fact, and so they're made to reconsider the gospel which they've already rejected. [41:38]

The Apostle Paul, though the greatest Theologian that the church has ever learned, was always at the same time the greatest Pastor. Not a dust Theologian, not an abstract theorist. He's always concerned about the people to whom he's preaching. He wants them to see the relevance of it. [10:44]

The rejection of the Jews was the occasion, but it was God's Eternal purpose, and so Christ died for our sins upon the cross. Very well, you see the rejection of the Jews comes in even at that point. [35:28]

The Apostle is saying this: this stumbling of the Jews has taken place partly in order that the gospel might come to the Gentiles. This is a part of God's Eternal will. It's not for us to understand it. He's saying this is something that God has used in this way. [34:22]

The Apostle Paul becomes mainly, as he reminds us in the next verse, in verse 13, the Apostle to the Gentiles. But you see, it was the opposition of the Jews that led him to do that, and there is the specific statement. [32:38]

The Apostle is putting before us is that this stumbling which has taken place in the Jews is something which has been used of God to promote the salvation of the Gentiles. That's his first answer, and we must never lose sight of that particular point. [40:10]

The Apostle Paul addresses the question of whether the Jews have stumbled so as to fall irretrievably. The answer is a resounding "God forbid." Their stumbling is not final but serves a greater purpose in God's redemptive plan. [00:13]

The Apostle Paul, though the greatest Theologian that the church has ever learned, was always at the same time the greatest Pastor. Not a dust Theologian, not an abstract theorist. He's always concerned about the people to whom he's preaching. He wants them to see the relevance of it. [10:44]

The Apostle Paul addresses the question of whether the Jews have stumbled so as to fall irretrievably. The answer is a resounding "God forbid." Their stumbling is not final but serves a greater purpose in God's redemptive plan. [00:13]

The Apostle Paul becomes mainly, as he reminds us in the next verse, in verse 13, the Apostle to the Gentiles. But you see, it was the opposition of the Jews that led him to do that, and there is the specific statement. [32:38]

The Apostle is saying this: this stumbling of the Jews has taken place partly in order that the gospel might come to the Gentiles. This is a part of God's Eternal will. It's not for us to understand it. He's saying this is something that God has used in this way. [34:22]

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