Has the Church Replaced
It is necessary to consider this
subject because we maintain that the Church came into blessing on the grounds
of a covenant which the Lord made with Israel – a covenant, which
according to Scripture, has not yet been implemented for them as a nation. The
replacement view maintains that the dynamics of the implementation of the New
Covenant has removed Israel
as the beneficiary of the Covenant and substituted them with the Church. They
maintain that this major shift in divine policy was made as a result of Israel ’s
national rejection of Jesus, their Messiah. Stated simply - because they
rejected their Messiah, God rejected them, and replaced them with the Church.
Consequently the Church inherited the covenant blessings originally promised to
Israel .
Thomas Ice said that replacement theology “is the view that the Church has
permanently replaced Israel
through which God works and that national Israel does not have a future in
the plan of God”.[1] Replacement
theologian, Bruce K. Waltke said, “The hard fact (is) that national Israel and its
law have been permanently replaced by the Church and the New Covenant”.[2]
We need to be very sure of our ground here, because we began by stating that a
main feature of God’s glory was His ḥesed ve-ʾemet. Ḥesed is His loving kindness, that
quality that involves acts of beneficence, mutuality, and those obligations
that flow from a legal relationship. ʾEmet, usually translated “truth,”
encompasses reliability, durability, and faithfulness. The combination of the
two terms expresses God’s absolute and eternal dependability in dispensing His
benefactions. If He has, even in the smallest degree, withdrawn any element of
an unconditional covenant with His ancient people, then the concept of the glory
of God being best seen in His faithfulness and reliability must be undermined.
More Next Time :
[1] Thomas Ice, “What do you do with a future National
Israel in the Bible,” The Thomas Ice Collection, n.d., p. 2.
[2] Bruce K.
Waltke “Kingdom Promises as Spiritual”, in Continuity
and Discontinuity, 274 (quoted by Michael J. Vlach in his dissertation ‘The Church as a Replacement of Israel ”
p.12)
[3] Isa.49.6
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