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"God is not done with Israel and..."

"God is not done with Israel and..."
https://mailchi.mp/beholdisrael/amirs-bible-bites-devotionals-11469440

"I believe that the most significant end-time prophecy is the rebirth of Israel and the rebirth of the fig tree. You have to understand that Israel in the scriptures has been described in three different types of trees: the vine, the fig, and the olive. Each and every one of them was a symbol of something. The vine was a symbol of the spiritual privileges of Israel. The fig was a symbol of Israel’s national privileges, and that’s why it signifies the birth of Israel as a nation. They were still the people of God. He still cared about them. With the olive tree, there was no rebirth as a nation back in the land. The national privileges are the fig, and the religious ones belonged to the olive tree. That tree that had roots deep – the roots of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob.

God said, “I am the Lord, remember my name. I am the God of Abraham, the God of Isaac, and the God of Jacob.” So, when somebody says to you, “Oh, we, the Muslims, we believe in the same God as you, we believe in the God of Abraham,” ask him if he believes in the God of Isaac and Jacob also. That’s the full name of our God. If they say that they stop at Abraham, that’s not the same God, folks.

So, regarding the vine, we have enough proofs in Psalm 80 and Isaiah 5 and Jeremiah 2. As for the fig tree, Hosea 9 talks about the fig tree, as does Jeremiah 24, and of course it’s in Matthew 24. The olive tree is in Hosea 14, Isaiah 17, Isaiah 24, Psalm 52, Psalm 128, and Romans 11. Romans 11 speaks of Israel being the good olive tree and the Gentiles being the wild olive tree. It speaks of how some of the branches of the olive tree were taken and chopped off, and how you, the Gentiles, the wild olive branches, were grafted in. Now you’re not instead of Israel, but you’re partakers of the fatness of the oil. Amazing! So you see that the privileges that Israel had cannot be taken from them. You have been grafted in, and now you are also, in a way, part of the vine. And this is why, by the way, everywhere they will hate Israel. They’re going to hate the believers. Everywhere they will want to get rid of Israel. They’re going to get rid of the believers. They go together. If there are churches that are teaching that God had replaced Israel, then they’re actually mocking God, because they’re saying God is in the business of changing His mind. In fact, the only insurance policy the church has that God will keep His covenant with you is the fact that He is keeping His covenant with Israel. The fig tree is coming back to life. It’s not dead forever.
While the scriptures are replete with rebuttals to the teaching of Replacement Theology, none are more catastrophic to the errant belief than Romans 11:

Romans 11:1
I say then, has God cast away His people? Certainly not! For I also am an Israelite, of the seed of Abraham, of the tribe of Benjamin.


If God has replaced Israel with the church and has cast off the Jews from being His chosen people, then someone forgot to tell the Holy Spirit who, in turn, forgot to tell Paul. Romans was written nearly thirty years after the death, resurrection, and ascension of Jesus. Yet Paul wrote as if God still had a plan for the nation who largely rejected their Messiah.

The three metaphors the Bible uses for the nation of Israel all have significance to our understanding of the faithfulness and mercies of God. The vine reminds us that it was through the Jews that the oracles of God and the world’s only Savior came to the earth. The fig tree reminds us of God’s faithfulness to the whole nation in spite of their national fruitlessness. The olive tree makes a connection between Jews and Gentiles, as seen in Ephesians 2:14-18, and the peace that comes through knowing God, pointing back to Abraham as the father of all who believe.    

Romans 4:11
And he received the sign of circumcision, a seal of the righteousness of the faith which he had while still uncircumcised, that he might be the father of all those who believe, though they are uncircumcised, that righteousness might be imputed to them also.


The olive branch has long been a symbol of peace. Remember when Noah sent out a dove after the flood? The sign that the waters were receding was an olive branch in the beak of the dove when it returned to Noah. This signified that God’s peace had returned to the earth. This gave birth to a saying that is still used today; when someone wants to offer peace or reconciliation they figuratively “extend an olive branch.” 

Romans 11:16-18
For if the firstfruit is holy, the lump is also holy; and if the root is holy, so are the branches. And if some of the branches were broken off, and you, being a wild olive tree, were grafted in among them, and with them became a partaker of the root and fatness of the olive tree, do not boast against the branches. But if you do boast, remember that you do not support the root, but the root supports you.


The "root" of the olive tree represents the Jewish patriarchs (Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob) and God’s covenant promises. Together, they provide the spiritual foundation for both Jewish believers and grafted-in Gentiles. This is also prophetic of the Millennial Kingdom when the Prince of Peace will rule from Jerusalem, and Jews and Gentiles will reign with Him as one in Christ!

God is not done with Israel and they have not been replaced by the church!

Even so, come quickly Lord Jesus",

Kommentare

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Shira 08.06.2026 20:05
Ich verstehe Römer 11 so, dass Paulus hier vom Volk Israel spricht, nicht von einem "geistlichen Israel". Er spricht von seinen "Brüdern nach dem Fleisch" (Römer 9,3), also von seinen jüdischen Volksgenossen.

Auch die "Decke" aus 2. Korinther 3 verstehe ich nicht als etwas Endgültiges. Paulus sagt: "Wenn es sich aber zum Herrn bekehrt, so wird die Decke weggenommen." Und in Römer 11,25–26 schreibt er, dass Israel zum Teil Verstockung widerfahren ist, bis die Vollzahl der Heiden eingegangen ist, und dass dann ganz Israel gerettet werden wird. (die Heiden sollen mal dran denken und dankbar sein)

Deshalb glaube ich, dass viele Juden Gott aufrichtig lieben, Jesus aber noch nicht als den Messias erkannt haben. Wenn Gott die Decke wegnimmt, werden viele ihn erkennen.
 
Komfortzone 08.06.2026 21:17
Ja, Shira, dass sollten sie tatsächlich. Dennoch nennen sie Jesus Christus ihren Herrn.
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