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Many conservatives spent a year criticizing America for being involved with Russia and Ukraine and focusing on Ukraine's borders. But now, we're told we need to care about Israel's borders? Why is Israel different from Ukraine? Why is Israel different from anywhere else on earth? And why should Christians care? These are the questions we're going to answer this week.
Good morning, welcome to the morning motivation brought to you by Patriot Gold Group Public Square app. I was gone last week with the family on vacation. I always have very grand plans for vacation and just never, nothing ever works out. Sorry about that. But I'm going to make up for it by embarking on a challenge that I feel woefully unprepared for and unqualified for. I'll leave it there, I could go on.
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But usually when I feel that way, I do not proceed. In this case, I'm going to proceed because I think it's important and it's worth starting. I think we need to start in this direction and we'll see what God can do with it, to you, through you. You can ask your pastor for more, do more research on our own and study and help me understand it more. It's in the Bible, so we need to know it.
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Right, you can't just ignore it. Can't table it forever, is what I'm getting at. And I think my goal at the end of this, my initial goal I should say, is to understand why America, I should say why Christians from any country should have a special connection to Israel. And why US supporting Israel is different than America and Ukraine, right? We've gone a year with a lot of conservatives saying, why are we supporting Ukraine? Why are we supporting their borders and not our border, whatever, right? And then all of a sudden, oh, America needs to go support Israel's borders. It's like, why? Well, Israel's different than Ukraine. Okay, how? That was my initial goal and again we'll see at the end of this week where we we end up. But it brings me to Romans 11. This is a section of Paul's letter he wrote in the year 56. A letter to those in Rome who were loved by God and called to be saints. So Paul is Jewish and Roman. So Romans 11 is all about this relationship between Christians and Jews. And it starts a little bit before it, chapter 10. Paul did not write in chapters and he didn't number everything. So he says in chapter 10, Romans 10, everyone who calls on the name of the Lord will be saved. Everyone who calls on the name of the Lord will be saved. And he knew that people would ask, well, what about the Jews? Verse 21, he quotes Isaiah. Of Israel, he says, all day long I have held out my hands to a disobedient and contrary people, the Jews. Isaiah 65, verse 2, I spread out my hands all day to a rebellious people, who walk in a way that is not good, following their own devices. So God is angry with Israel and with the Jews, their disobedience to God. It's all throughout the Old Testament and it's very obvious why God would be upset. So that's the beginning. So Romans 10, hey everyone who calls on the name of the Lord will be saved. What about the Jews? Man, God's very angry at the Jews. Rebellious people. A disobedient, contrary people. Then it goes in Romans 11. Paul says, I ask then, has God rejected his people? If he's so angry with them and so upset with them, has God rejected them? That's a good question. We have God's chosen people. But if they're rebellious, it also says in Isaiah 65, a people who provoke me to my face continually. So a very rebellious people. How about this? How about Hosea 4? My people inquire of a piece of wood, and their walking staff gives them oracles, for a spirit of whoredom has led them astray, and they have left their God to play the whore. So the Jews are making wooden idols and asking these pieces of wood for advice as opposed to going to God. So the Jews were continually rebellious people. So as God rejected His people, Paul knew that that question would come. He knew people would say, what sort of people do you think God rejected? And Paul says, by no means. By no means. Now, this shouldn't be that much of a surprise. The end of Hosea says, I will heal their apostasy. I will love them freely, for my anger has turned from them. They shall return and dwell beneath my shadow. They shall flourish like the grain. They shall blossom like the vine. God has not rejected his chosen people, the Jews. Paul says, for I myself am an Israelite, a descendant of Abraham, a member of the tribe of Benjamin. God has not rejected his people whom he foreknew. Let's stop there. There's a lot this week. Let's be content with just this today. So Christians have a special commitment to Israel and to the Jewish faith and to Jews. One that we should not abandon or as Paul will get to and we'll get to in a minute, we should not think that we as Christians are better than the Jews. We'll get to all that. But the first point today, has God rejected his people the Jews has he rejected it and the answer from Paul is no by no means absolutely not God has not rejected his people okay from Paul is no by no means absolutely not God has not rejected his people okay well now what