"For I Am
Also An Israelite"
The first answer to the
important question "Hath God
cast away His people?" is the
great Apostle to the Gentiles.
We read in the first verse, "For
I also am an Israelite, of the
seed of Abraham, of the tribe of
Benjamin. God hath not cast away
His people whom He foreknew."
The Holy Spirit points then
first of all to the Apostle and
puts him before us as a proof
that God has not completely and
finally rejected Israel. It is a
significant fact that in each of
the three chapters which compose
the dispensational part of
Romans the Apostle Paul stands
in the foreground. "I say the
truth in Christ, I lie not, my
conscience bearing witness with
me in the Holy Spirit that I
have great grief and
uninterrupted pain in my heart,
for I have wished, I myself, to
be a curse from the Christ, for
my brethren, my kinsmen
according to flesh." Thus the
ninth chapter begins and in the
tenth we read of his prayer for
Israel, not his prayer alone but
surely the prayer of the
Holy Spirit. "Brethren, the
delight of my heart and my
supplication which I address to
God for them is for salvation" (x:l).
In our chapter, besides
mentioning himself in the
beginning, he says: "For I speak
to you, Gentiles, inasmuch as I
am Apostle of the Gentiles. I
glorify my ministry; if by any
means I shall provoke to
jealousy them which are my flesh
and shall save some from among
them" (verses 13, 14). The
instrument used to make known
the mystery of God and the
unsearchable riches among the
Gentiles declares his great love
for his kinsmen and prays for
their salvation. While Gentiles,
the nations' receive blessings,
Israel is still "beloved for the
Father's sake" and not
forgotten.
But why is Paul personally
mentioned immediately after the
question concerning Israel's
position? It is generally said
that by referring to himself he
wishes to prove that it is
possible for an Israelite to
accept the Lord Jesus Christ and
to be saved; he, an Israelite
full of hatred against the
Christ, had been saved, and this
proves that God has not cast
away His people. However, the
question before us is not
whether an individual Jew can be
saved or cannot be saved; it is
a national question with which
we have to deal.
Besides this, the possibility of
the salvation of Jews had been
fully demonstrated on the day of
Pentecost. The three thousand
who believed on that day were
all Jews, as well as the
thousands who believed after the
memorable day of the outpouring
of the Holy Spirit. We have
therefore to look for a deeper
meaning of Paul's name in the
beginning of this chapter.
The key to this deeper meaning
is the fact that the Holy Spirit
makes the conversion of Saul of
Tarsus not alone very prominent,
but also speaks of that event as
a pattern. He has given us three
lengthy accounts of it in the
Book of Acts (chapters ix, xxii
and xxvi). In First Timothy we
read: "But for this reason mercy
was shown me, that in me the
first, Jesus Christ might
display the whole long
suffering, for a delineation of
those that should hereafter
believe on Him to eternal life"
(1 Tim. i:16). And again it is
written: "And last of all He was
seen of me also as of one born
out of due time" (literally "an
abortion") (1 Cor. xv :2). These
are inspired statements which
tell us we have to seek for a
deeper significance of the
conversion of him who calls
himself "a Hebrew of the
Hebrews" (Phil, iii :5). It has
often been remarked that Saul's
conversion is the model
conversion and
the different steps are
reproduced in every genuine
conversion. But this is far from
being correct. Saul of Tarsus'
conversion was an altogether
unique one. There has, up to
this time, never been a
conversion like this one. Never
again were the heavens opened
and a light shone brighter than
the sun; never again did a
sinner, such a blind persecutor,
behold Jesus in glory and hear
His voice, and never again was
one called in such a way "to be
an elect vessel" and to bear the
Name of the Lord "before both
nations and kings and the sons
of Israel." His conversion is
certainly not a pattern or
outline of every other
conversion and yet it is a
delineation, a hypotyposis.
All the great men of the Old
Testament, priests, prophets and
kings, were in their lives and
experiences patterns, types. The
great Apostle to the Gentiles,
making known the salvation to
the nations, himself a Jew, is
no less a type. His wonderful
conversion is typical of the
future conversion of the nation
to whom he belonged according to
the flesh. What God did in his
case He can and will do for
Israel in a future day. The
conversion of Saul of Tarsus is
the type and earnest of Israel's
conversion. In this light the
full meaning of the quoted
passages from
the first Epistle of Timothy and
Corinthians can be easily
understood. In Saul's conversion
Christ showed mercy "the first"
or "as a first one." There are
others to whom that mercy is to
be shown and to whom mercy will
come under the same
circumstances and by the same
heavenly manifestation of the
glorified Son of Man, and the
people to whom this will happen
is Israel. When we read of Paul
that he saw the Lord as one born
out of due season, it is the
same thought which underlies
this statement. The untimely
birth, before the time, suggests
another birth time as well as
another birth, the birth of the
nation, when Israel, the remnant
of His people, will be born
again by looking upon Him in
glory, whom they have pierced.
The comparison of Saul's
conversion with the future
conversion of Israel as revealed
in the prophetic Word is
extremely striking. The
delineation is perfect.
1. Saul of Tarsus in unbelief
typifies the state of Israel as
a nation throughout this present
age. He was a learned Pharisee,
a fierce persecutor, breathing
out threatenings and slaughter
against the disciples of the
Lord, blind and unbelieving.
Such is Israel, another
unbelieving Saul, and, like him,
zealous for God without
knowledge.
2. The opened heavens, the
vision and voice of the
glorified Jesus, by which Saul
of Tarsus was arrested in his
career, are typical of the
coming day when the heavens will
be opened again and the Lord
Jesus Christ will be manifested
in power and in glory. At His
second visible and glorious
coming the remnant of Israel
will behold Him and learn by His
glorious appearing that Jesus is
their Messiah and King
(Zechariah xii: 10-14, Matthew
xxiv:29, 30, Revel. i:7). The
opened heavens, the great light
flashing forth, the vision and
voice of Jesus, the prostrate
Saul there on the road to
Damascus, was but a little
sample of what God will do for
the remnant of His earthly
people and how they shall at
last know Him and receive Him.
3. Paul's service to nations and
kings foreshadows Israel's
coming ministry to the nations
of the earth. All nations are
yet to know the glory of the
Lord, but world conversion is
only possible after Israel is
converted. Through Israel all
the nations of the earth will at
last be blessed.
These three great facts seen in
the conversion of Saul,
typifying Israel's unbelief, the
manner and result of their
conversion, we shall follow
throughout the chapter and learn
from the Scriptures some of the
revealed details. We understand
therefore why the Holy Spirit
puts the Apostle Paul
immediately after the question
of the chapter is asked. What
manifestation of the grace and
wisdom of God! The instrument
chosen to reveal the mysteries
hidden in former ages and to
complete the Word of God, the
one to whom is given the full
knowledge of the Gospel of Grace
to be preached among the
Gentiles, while Israel is set
aside for a time, is also made a
type, a pattern of what Israel
is to be and to receive in the
future, when God will arise and
have mercy upon Zion. |