Romans 11:26 promises that all Israel will be saved.
Dispensationalists understand this verse to refer to a national
salvation of ethnic Israel after the fullness of the Gentiles has come
in.
Non-premillennialists
sometimes imply that such an interpretation is a dispensationalist
invention, because it means that God still has a future plan for
national Israel.
But did you know
that many throughout church history, including many in the Reformed
tradition have shared that same interpretation?
None other than John Calvin, in his commentary on Romans 11:25-26,
noted that “when the Gentiles shall come in, the Jews also shall return
from their defection to the obedience of faith.” Other Reformers, such
as Martin Bucer, Peter Martyr, and Theodore Beza similarly concluded that there would be a future calling and conversion of the Jewish people.
A belief in the
future salvation of national Israel was especially strong among the
Dutch Reformed and the English Puritans of the seventeenth century.
Regarding the Dutch Calvinists of that time period, J. Van Den Berg
explains that for “virtually all Dutch theologians of the seventeenth
century, ‘the whole of Israel’ indicated the fullness of the people of
Israel ‘according to the flesh’: in other words, the fullness of the
Jewish people. This meant that there was a basis for an expectation of a
future conversion of the Jews—an expectation which was shared by a
large majority of Dutch theologians” (Puritan Eschatology, 140).
Commenting on the English Puritans, Iain Murray
similarly notes: “This same belief concerning the future of the Jews is
to be found very widely in seventeenth-century Puritan literature. It
appears in the works of such well-known Puritans as John Owen, Thomas
Manton and John Flavel. … It is also handled in a rich array of
commentaries, both folios and quartos – David Dickson on the Psalms,
George Hutcheson on the Minor Prophets, Jeremiah Burroughs on Hosea,
William Greenhill on Ezekiel, Elnathan Parr on Romans and James Durham
on Revelation: a list which could be greatly extended.” (The Puritan Hope, 43). Continue at Nathan Busenitz
1 comment:
Interesting I am now of this very subject in our study in Romans.
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